6 rashes The Battalion WEATHER FORECAST for WEDNESDAY: Sunny and hot, with mild temps in the evening. HIGH: 90s LOW: 70s Vol. 88 No. 158 USPS 045360 8 Pages College Station, Texas TY (AP) -1 icopter crasheo he Panama Ca U.S. soldiers,) kesman said, spokesman Ter said “we doni w” the acciden: ; that it “appar- ident” ana did sstile lire, helicopter wen: m. EOT, Knee helicopter and urged to the m vision fromFon the victimswert g notification of eebone said, tas among ate t to Panama fof rnment’s null- y 7 elections and dence in whic't candidates wen ropter crashed, escort for a mi isporting troop: ryton, on the Pi 1 Canal, to Fon ■ Atlantic, Knee ident causedtk ension of traffrg City with die Ion. ators -88 and critkffi mailings are ib| poses by mem Tovide incumber ,nd discriminam :heir challenger! President Ft! “The use oft! nailings shouli ■ply curtailed." le Senate chan >anded from til r of franked id can make toe ate. Gramm and Be>| xans use frail reach const™ i them about 4 sman Larry m :an has never ig addressed sir: i.”. Gramm it igs to specific at Texans who 1? t the need foral mendment - < ressed to the reC s-mailings are; y carrier route,a' 1 re cheapest Tuesday, June 20,1989 Blacks continue freedom struggle, A&M official says By Holly Beeson STAFF WRITER College Station Mayor Larry Ringer, left, and the Rev. Lee Groce listen to a speech by Felicia James of the A&M Affir mative Action Office during the Bluesfest Juneteenth Cele- Photo by Phelan M. Ebenhack bration at the Lincoln Recreation Center. Juneteenth com memorates the day in 1865 that Texas slaves learned of the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation. Juneteenth is a time for blacks to celebrate their freedom, but the struggle for equality, continues, a spokesman for the Texas A&M Af firmative Action Office said Satur day during a Juneteenth celebra tion. The celebration, at the Lincoln Recreation Center, marked the 124th anniversary of the day slaves in Texas heard of the Emancipation Proclamation, the document issued by Abraham Lincoln that freed the slaves. Even though the document was signed on Jan. 1, 1863, the news didn’t reach the Texas cotton fields until June 19, 1865. Felicia James stressed that al though blacks have come far since 1865, they still have far to go. “We found out we were free in 1865, but in 1989, 124 years later, are we really free? I think not,” she said. “No, we don’t have chains around our feet and, yes, we have many more opportunities today than in 1865.” This year’s theme, “Forward For ever, Backward Never,” is quite timely, she said. “As blacks, we must move forward — not backward,” James said. “If we don’t look back, however, we wouldn’t know that blacks made sig nificant contributions to the forma tion of this great country.” She said that like Martin Luther King Jr., all blacks must have a dream. “If we didn’t have a dream, we wouldn’t have any goals,” she said. “Hold that dream; for when dreams go, life is a broken-winged bird fro zen in the snow.” To keep the dream alive, James said, blacks must strive to be the best through education and strong Chris tian values. “We must continue our education past high school,” she said. “Educa tion is not just for the young. Old dogs can learn new tricks if you have the patience and support to teach them.” Barents must instill in their chil dren certain helpful values such as dignity, character and honesty, James said. “Children live what they see,” she said. “If you don’t place values in your children, how will they survive? Your life should be an example of how to live. “As blacks, we must have pride in ourselves because surely no one else will.” Prosecutors urge judge to give North prison term last thing on i the last thing i said. WASHINGTON (AP) — Iran- Contra prosecutors Monday asked the judge to sentence Oliver North to prison, arguing that the former presidential aide lied at his trial, shows no remorse and sees himself as “above the law and beyond re proach.” In a memo filed four days before North’s sentencing, prosecutors urged U.S. District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell to consider North’s “breach of public trust and misuse of public power, the destructive effect of his criminal behavior on the func tioning of government . . . his per jury and his total lack of remorse.” A prison term would also help counteract the political appeal that North has gained on the lecture cir cuit — a popularity that prosecutors argued only “reinforces his lack of remorse.” Independent counsel Lawrence E. Walsh charged that “with supreme faith in his ability to deceive, North took the witness stand and perjured himself’ with a false story to explain away a charge that he pocketed $4,300 in traveler’s checks entrusted to him by a leader of the Nicaraguan rebels. “His unsupported claim that he had a $15,000 fund in a steel box in his closet echoed the flimsy lies of fered by corrupt municipal officials in the days of Tammany Hall,” Walsh said. “North’s attempt to use the steel box to explain his cash purchase of a car in two installments graphically demonstrates North’s penchant for weaving a tale that by its conclusion is preposterous.” The retired Marine lieutenant col onel faces a possible 10-year sen tence for aiding and abetting the ob struction of Congress, destroying or mutilating government documents and accepting an illegal gratuity — a GOP criticizes Clayton Williams for contributions to Democrats FROM STAFF & WIRE REPORTS Oliver North $13,800 security system outside his home that was paid for by arms dealer Richard V. Secord. North, 45, was acquitted of nine other counts, including a charge he stole the traveler’s checks. AUSTIN (AP) — Republican gubernatorial hopeful Clayton Williams, Class of ’54, on Monday continued to be criticized for making campaign contributions to Democrats, with one Republican saying the contribu tions were “obscene.” “I am disturbed by Mr. Williams’ desire to be our party’s gubernatorial nominee while he contributes money to our opponents,” s,aid Diane Rath, secretary of the Republican Party of Texas. In a letter to State Republican Executive Committee members, Rath, of San Antonio, said, “I urge each of you, as I will do, to question Mr. Williams about any other contributions to Democrats.” Williams, a Midland millionaire and namesake of the Texas A&M alumni center, has contributed to Demo cratic gubernatorial hopefuls Ann Richards and Jim Mattox, U.S. Senate contender Hugh Parmer and members of the Legislature, according to a report by the Houston Post. On Monday, Williams said he made those contribu tions as a businessman and is willing to take the heat over them now that he’s entered politics. “I made them, and I made them as a businessman and job creator, not as a politician,” he said. “I will take my lumps from this now that I am in the political arena.” Williams also said his GOP credentials are long, say ing he joined the Republican Party on April 11, 1951, when Democratic President Harry Truman fired Gen. Douglas MacArthur. Williams, who has scheduled his gubernatorial an nouncement for Wednesday, also said his political do nations aren’t the issue now. “This gubernatorial race is about who can win this war on drugs, lead Texas into the 90s and which Re publican can win the general election,” he said. Frank Walter, a spokesman for Williams, said Wil liams was a prolific campaign contributor for Republi cans and Democrats alike for years but that his alle giances lie strictly with the GOP. Williams was also criticized Monday by Richard Har vey, a 1988 Republican nominee for the Texas Senate. Harvey, of Tyler, said Williams gave $1,000 to the Texas Senate Democratic Campaign Committee, which funnelled money to his opponent, Sen. Ted Lyon, D- Rockwall, who won. isinj Peng honors 3 soldiers killed in massacre as martyrs f his associates ymbolizing ; iference with! Wednesday, itfl dependent its initials P year’s events in : ed official vie" er Gyula Hop » one in the Cerj 1 have known uld happen, lat would leadr ank s, were involved ; began, gan car patrols ; as “archaeolof ejections, through the"» half-hour until 1 mtside the P vid, a tall, thinf > Judiasm,care!' i a burst of tl* e wall,” he she'” 1 firing their Uj p the hill, beltf is the bullets I*! ee minutes, H cars and the T .rnfire range, rg “V” for vie! 1 ] ’ said settler D” spattered blue s windows. BEIJING (AP) — Premier Li Peng said Monday that none of the nations criticizing China’s suppres sion of dissidents would have shown as much restraint, and he honored as martyrs three soldiers killed in the crackdown. i “For more than 50 days our gov ernment, army and party were re strained,” Li told the families of the dead soldiers at Communist Party headquarters, apparently referring to the weeks preceding the June 3-4 crackdown. | “Some countries have attacked us, abused us and created rumors,” he said. “Can their governments be so 1 tolerant? You won’t find one that is.” Since troops attacked central Beij ing to crush seven weeks of protests, imore than 1,000 people have been | arrested and at least 11 have been I sentenced to death. Western intelligence sources and jChinese witnesses say up to 3,000 I people were killed in the crackdown. Morning News journalist expelled from China DALLAS (AP) — The Chinese government ordered a free-lance journalist working for the Dallas Morning News out of the country by revoking his tourist visa Monday, a newspaper official said. Joseph Kahn, 24, went to China on May 30 and has filed up to 15 stories for the Morning News since then, said Managing Editor Bill Evans. “We, the Dallas Morning News, are extremely disap pointed in the Chinese government’s action in revoking Kahn’s visa,” Evans said. “He’s done an outstanding and thoroughly professional job there.” Evans said he spoke Monday morning with Kahn, who had been notified of his expulsion. Kahn was given 72 hours to leave the country and was expected to de part by about 9 p.m. CDT Monday for Hong Kong, Evans said. In revoking his visa, Evans said, the government cited Kahn for inciting unrest, spreading rumors and identifying himself as a British correspondent. “This is simply not true,” Evans said. “He has not ag itated. He in no way incited anyone. And he didn’t identify himself as a British journalist.” In recent weeks, Kahn’s stories for the Morning News detailed the riots that led Chinese officials to de clare martial law and clear Beijing’s Tiananmen Square with troops who massacred hundreds, perhaps thou sands, of protesters demanding democratic reforms. The government says fewer than 300 died, half of them soldiers. Since declaring martial law May 20 in Beijing, Li has emerged as the chief spokesman for the govern ment’s hard-line position against the student-led movement for greater freedoms and an end to government corruption. Meanwhile, a special session of the national legislature headed by a more moderate official was post poned. Wan Li, the chairman of the Na tional People’s Congress, had sched uled a congress session beginning Tuesday “to discuss issues of peo ple’s common concern and prompt the government to improve its work.” Wan, who has a reputation as a moderate, called the session before the June 3-4 crackdown. Some stu dents had hoped it would approve some of the democratic reforms they were demanding. But the congress’s press office said the session was postponed be cause Beijing had not yet returned completely to normal. No new date was set. The legislature may be waiting until the Communist Party holds an anticipated Central Committee meeting to formally oust party Gen eral Secretary Zhao Ziyang. Zhao re portedly already has been stripped of his power for opposing the crack down. He and party propaganda chief Hu Qili are the only top officials be lieved purged. Wan has supported the crackdown publicly. Former prof indicted for failure to keep records on drug research By Kelly S. Brown SENIOR STAFF WRITER A former Texas A&M University irofessor has been indicted after ailing to produce records docu- lenting the usage of narcotics in his esearch measuring the biological ef fects of cocaine. Michael Trulson, who was a pro- essor at A&M from 1984 until Ipring of 1988, was named by a Bra- :os County grand jury June 8 in an indictment charging failure to keep controlled-substance records. Department of Public Safety In- vestigator Von Allen said an arrest warrant has been issued for Trulson, who they believe to be working in the Dallas area. Allen said narcotics officers in the DPS began the investigation in March of 1988 after being notified by university officials of a possible problem with Trulson’s inventory records. Trulson was doing research in the anatomy department working with cocaine, morphine, LSD and heroin, Allen said. Dr. Jackson Wagner, head of the anatomy department in the College of Medicine, said he did not feel it was appropriate to comment on the case. ii Frulson couldn’t show us any records after we confronted him on two occasions in March of 1988.” — Von Allen, Department of Public Safety Investigator Allen said that by law, individuals who work with controlled substances are required to register with the U.S. Federal Drug Enforcement Agency, and maintain records of the dates the narcotics were ordered and re ceived and how they were used. The records are to be kept for two years, Allen said. Trulson did not abide with the FDEA regulations on at least two counts, Allen said. “First, we noticed his license had expired in November or December of 1987,” Allen said. “And then Trulson couldn’t show us any re cords after we confronted him on two occasions in March of 1988.” Ed Walraven, with the Universi ty’s news service, said part of Trul son’s research involved studying the biological effects of cocaine use. “His research basically centered around health-orientated areas,” Walraven said. “The drugs were used on rats and mice.” Walraven said Trulson did most of the research by himself, with maybe one or two graduate students assisting. Allen said failing to maintain con trolled-substance records is a second degree felony, and that if Trulson is convicted, he faces a maximum of 20 years in prison. Rival Greek parties hint at coalition ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Conservative leader Constantine Mitsotakis offered Monday to form an interim government with rival leftists for the sole purpose of cleaning up scandals left by the regime of Premier Andreas Pa- pandreou. Mitsotakis’ center-right New Democracy party finished first in Sunday’s elections, defeating Pa- pandreou’s Panhellenic Socialist Movement, but failed to win a majority needed to govern. A leftist-communist coalition, which finished third, has emerged as the likely power bro ker in the battle to form a coali tion government. Both Mitsotakis and Papan- dreou earlier said they would re ject support from the coalition, but both made conciliatory over tures to the group after the bal loting. The possibility remained that Papandreou, despite Sunday’s second-place finish, could return as premier if Mitsotakis cannot form a government. Papandreou met Monday with President Christos Sartzetakis, the ceremonial head of state, and submitted his resignation. But he was asked to remain as caretaker premier until a new government was formed. Mitsotakis meets with the presi dent on Tuesday to receive a three-day exploratory mandate to form a government. If he fails, Papandreou will receive the same opportunity to build a coalition.