Today is the last day for Q-drops See page 4 Another EDB warning is released to public See page 3 ocon Hamilton takes the gold for the U.S. See page 16 mm Texas ASM ^ — . V| A The Battalion Serving the CIniversity community |ol 78 No. 97 USPS 0453110 16 pages College Station, Texas Friday, February 17,1984 roop withdrawal plan announced United Press International SASHINGTON — President jan received a final plan for (drawing most of the U.S. Ma- b from Lebanon within 30 days Jrsday, and a senior White House [final said the first troop ements could come within 48 r me report, prepared by Defense Jetary Caspar Weinberger, is de- [npd to implement a pivotal deci- Jset into motion by Reagan more an iwo weeks earlier. Reagan will This formal approval later today, elfficial said. |4though the timetable remained fwhat ill-defined, the official said pullout will take place “in a stable jorderly fashion” and completion within 30 days “remains the presi dent’s expectation.” “I’m very confident that we will be able to complete this redeployment in the projected timetable,” the offi cial said. The official disclosed the process was accelerated after a major push by Moslem militiamen last weekend in order to remove a major point of contention between the government and its sectarian opponents. The official said about 200 of the 1,100 Marines now surrounded by Druze militiamen in their position at the Beirut airport will remain ashore to provide security to the U.S. Em bassy and the residence of U.S. Am bassador Reginald Bartholomew. All told, the official said, about 500 American military personnel will re main in Beirut, including an ex panded contingent of Army advisers and security and support units. The official said the Marines moved offshore will continue to function as a peace-keeping force, despite unresolved questions over their precise role and mission while stationed off the Lebanese coast on ships of the 6th Fleet. The proximity of the fleet to the coast is a factor in discussions on re placing the dwindling multinational force in Beirut with a U.N. peace keeping force. However, the official indicated the United States will not accept restrictions on the movement of the fleet, as advocated, for exam ple, b^the Soviets. “We are interested in a U.N. force — under terms that ensure its effec tive function there,” the official said. The Weinberger report was sent to Reagan only after a final round of cbnsultations with the Lebanese gov ernment and the other members of the multinational force. Vice President George Bush con ducted the consultations over the last week in London, Rome and Paris, and returned to Washington early Thursday. Britain, Italy and France all contributed troops to the multina tional force established in September 1982. All three have announced similar plans to reduce their military pres ence on the ground in Lebanon. In announcing a pullout of Italian troops Thursday, Defense Minister Giovanni Spadolini said, “There are no winners m Lebanon, only losers.” But the Reagan administration sought to put the best face on what top officials insisted on calling a “phased redeployment,” rather than a retreat. The official who briefed reporters at the White House denied the move reflects a failure of U.S. policy in Lebanon. “There certainly have been setbacks — bad ones — but there also have been gains,” the official said. In the former category, the United States has lost 264 servicemen in Leb anon. In the latter category, the offi- iller, panel iscuss rights By ROBIN BLACK Staff Writer [he right to know vs. the right to alone: two fundamental rights feat are inevitably going to cross, iaTvard law professor Arthur Miller pid. lliller mediated a panel discussion injmedia and privacy after an ad- pess Thursday as part of the Stu- }t Conference on National Affairs ‘Media: Behind the Headlines.” )ne of the most interesting and things about being an Ameri- fencitizen,’’Miller said, “is our rights. jThe United States has more [jus than anywhere else on the face If the earth. But whenever you give la lot of rights, there will always be of them somewhere that cross, bump heads in the night; espe- y the right to privacy and free Jss/f'ree speech.” Miller illustrated this conflict of Imping rights” to the panel in Ne hypothetical situations. [ Pacing back and forth across the Miller supplied the panel jtembers with the facts of each situa- ji, then challenged them to publish ost facts or keep the information fetjfidential. The fictitious cases he presented fenged from a former government Icial who is now a womanizing, ntally-ill, drug-abusing, alcoholic official to a factory owner who T a nazi death camp officer to a f er who had an abortion 25 Irsago. j Miller told the panelists that they lad obtained the facts about those in- [ividuals, all verifiable but not pre- |tsly known, from an anonymous Btjrce. [He then questioned them on the lit of whether it was fair for the Mic to be made aware of those ft or fair for the individual in- fed to maintain his privacy. When he got an answer from a panelist, he became the devil’s advo cate, countering the answers with the opposing stand. As a result, most of the panel members became increasingly con fused, changing their answers and struggling with the conflict of the rights that Miller called “two of the basic rights Americans consider most important.” When one panelist used the First Amendment to defend his decision to publish the facts, Miller said “I love it when you guys wrap your selves in the flag.” Miller, who said he advocates the individual’s right to privacy, con cluded the debate with the possibility that the public prefers to take a hands-off stance in deciding what should be kept private and what should be published. He said most people are aware of the moral difficulty in making that distinction, and therefore embrace the attitude of “let them decide.” From the present trend, he pointed out, the press seems to be “deciding” with more regularity. “We’re living in a period of post- Watergate euphoria,” Miller said, where the press is becoming more aggressive and intrusive, resulting in a kind of Woodward-and-Bernstein complex. He said free press is “uniquely American,” and the media are the only business institutions in the United States that “own a constitu tional amendment.” Miller argued that privacy rights are endangered by this. “Privacy doesn’t have its own press agency or corps of journalists out touting its virtues,” he said. With modern technology making the media’s intrusive abilities that much easier, Miller said that a pri vate citizen pulled into the public arena by chance is “informationally raped.” Photo by JOHN MAKELY Harvard law professor Arthur Miller mediates a SCON A panel discussion ‘Journalists do lie,’ SCONA speaker says By ROBIN BLACK Staff Writer Journalists do lie, Reed Irvine, founder and chairman of the board of Accuracy in Media, >said Thurs day. Irvine cited the American media as a “transmission belt for disinfor mation” in his address on domestic news reporting for the Student Con ference on National Affairs. Inaccuracy and deception are run ning rampant in the press, and it has emerged as a serious problem in so ciety, Irvine said. “You’re always hearing people quote Jefferson as a young man when he said ‘If I had to choose between government without newspapers or newspapers without government, I would choose the latter,”’ he said. “What you don’t hear a lot of peo ple quoting is what he said after he gained the experience of the presi dency. T am indifferent now as to whether I ever see another newspa per.’” Irvine defined three areas of “mis representation of the truth:” total and flagrant fabrication, refusal to check out questionable sources and slanted reporting, or “not telling both sides of a story.” Irvine said that the reporter usually “takes the rap,” when the edi tor who decides the fate of the story should take the blame as well. Is there a cure? He said that what America needs most is a press that supports the government and its ac tions. cial said, the multinational force helped hasten a departure of Pales tinian troops and efforts “to establish a government reflective of the demo graphy of the country.” However, the official also inti mated the U.S. role — once that of a mediator and active participant — has changed, and that the fate of Lebanon is now in the hands of Saudi Arabia and, to a large extent, Syria. Several hours earlier, White House spokesman Larry Speakes in dicated Reagan would give his final approval to the plan by the end of the day. But the official at the White House Thursday said the details were discussed on the assumption Reagan would do so Friday. Jury gives Jones 99 years United Press International GEORGETOWN — A jury Thurs day rejected defense pleas for mercy and probation for Genene Jones and sentenced the nurse to 99 years in prison for the drug injection death of a baby girl. Prosecutors contended the thrill seeking nurse killed 15-month-old Chelsea McClellan — as well as seve ral other children who survived simi lar drug injections — to show a need for a special unit for critically ill chil dren at a small hospital in Kerrville. Although some jurors cried as de fense lawyers begged for mercy for Jones, it took the jury little more than an hour to assess the maximum pun ishment. “Essentially the facts were so over whelming we could not ignore them,” said jury foreman Edwin Ed wards of Georgetown. He said the fact the crime involved a child “was tough. We all have chil dren or grandchildren or would like to have children.” The former vocational nurse was convicted Wednesday of killing Chel sea with the powerful paralyzing drug succinylcholine at a Kerrville pediatric clinic on Sept. 17, 1982. Edwards said jurors agreed from the start of their deliberations on both the conviction and the 99-year sentence. Jones, a 33-year-old mother of two, must serve at least 20 years be fore becoming eligible for parole. Defense attorneys said they would appeal the conviction on grounds it was improper to allow testimony about other children allegedly in jured by Jones. They said the appeal also would be based on the “circus at mosphere” created by the intense media coverge of the trial. Jones, red-eyed and visibly upset, stared stunned at the jury as the sen tence was read. She sobbed violently Wednesday when her conviction was announced. not-sa-comman experience SCONA delegates ‘impressed’ By MICHELLE POWE Staff Writer It seemed like a typical college tty. There was a dim roar of peo- yelling over loud music and each er. Visibility was minimized by the frnmed lights and smoke-filled air. College and high school students Inced, drank and were merry. ■But though the evening’s activities re like those of any college party, conversations were probably a lemore varied and intellectual, tudents from several universities several countries were at the rty. They discussed, among other ngs, the speeches they have heard he past two days. They are among the 145 delegates Texas A&M’s Student Conference National Affairs going on this lek. MEDIA MSC SCONA 29 The students represent universi ties located from New York to Cali fornia, Canada to Honduras. There are students from universities in El Salvador, the Dominican Republic, Guatemala and Mexico, and students from Bangladesh and Kenya who are going to school in Canada and the United States. Besides hearing speeches in the past two days by numerous experts in communications, the delegates also have gotten a chance to see some of Texas A&M. Wednesday they went to the Dixie Chicken. Thursday evening, the del egates went to a review of the Corps of Cadets and ate dinner with the Corps in Duncan Dining Hall. Some checked out the local bars. Tonight they are being treated to a barbeque dinner and a square dance. And what trip to Texas would be complete without barbeque? All of the delegates seem im pressed by the hospitality of their Texas A&M hosts and by the friend liness of the student body. For some, the number of “how dy’s” they have gotten walking across campus has been suprising. For all, it has been an experience. One delegate said the people and the weather in Texas are marvelous. “I love it here,” he said. “I’d love to live here.” Another said Texas A&M students are “very friendly and patriotic.” The delegates to SCONA have had the opportunity, in a couple of days, to meet new people and make new friends. They have had the not- so-common opportunity of learning about people from different societies and cultures. In Today’s Battalion Local • The Director of the A.P. Beutal Health center has called the propsed $1 lab fee ‘pointless’. See story page 3. • Texas A&M vet students are taking weekly trips to Austin to help the Humane Socity. See story page 6. State • The parents of Eliseo Moreno, the man accused of killing a College Station couple, say that he was insane with jealousy during his five-hour rampage. See story page 3. • The former bubble boy David’s condition has wors ened and doctors are not sure of the prognosis. See story page 4.