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WALL CLOCK TRAY WITH FREE T-SHIRT 19 95 15 95 Add $2.00 for postage and handling. AMERICAN 1 MasterCard • VISA ■Money Orders Made in Texas by Texans. 1 800 442 4799 ext 831 Page 4/The Battalion/Wednesday, November 19,1986 A&M historian denies U.S. tried to overthrow Soviets By Scott Redepenning Reporter During World War I, soon after the Bolshevik Revolution started a civil war to replace czarist Russia with the Soviet Union, President Woodrow Wilson sent thousands of U.S. troops into the area in what seems to have been an attempt to choke the government in its birth. Dr. Betty Unterberger, a Texas A&M historian, said Tuesday night in Rudder Tower that this charge is simply untrue. In her University Lecture Series presentation, “Intervention Against Communism: Did the United States Try to Overthrow the Soviet Gov ernment?†Unterberger, a specialist in Soviet-American relations in Asia, said that Wilson never tried to stifle the fledgling Soviet government. In fact, she said, he encouraged its development and growth. forced by war allies England, France and Japan into involvement. Unterberger supported this claim with a detailed account of the events surrounding the turbulent period that gave birth to the Soviet Union. She said Wilson adamantly re frained from entering Russia until Bolshevik leader Leon Trotsky in vited U.S. troops to help protect the nation’s arctic ports. This presented Wilson with a dif ficult dilemma, Unterberger said. If he decided to leave the troops, he would risk further involvement in the budding nation’s affairs, a direct contradiction to his policy of non-in tervention, she said. If he pulled out, however, eastern Russia would be left completely un der the control of Japan, a nation in which he had little trust. She explained that Wilson had de clared a strict policy of non-interven tion in Russia, but was ultimately Under pressures of the allies, she said, Wilson later reluctantly ex panded his troop’s duties to include helping evacuate Czechoslovakian soldiers who had been fighting on the eastern front before it was dis solved. Troops also helped protect the Trans-Siberian Railroad. England and France used this need for protection as an excuse to get the United States further in volved, she said, when it was really a facade for their intentions to reopen the eastern front against the Ger mans. Japan, she said, was simply seek ing a foothold in eastern Russia. Wilson chose to let his troops re main, and in protecting the railroad, they incidently came into conflict with Bolshevik forces. This is what has become widely known to Soviets as the United States trying to crush the Soviet Union in its infancy, she said. Unterberger said that while Wil son’s intentions had always been to let the Bolshevik Revolution take its own course, the Soviet Union contin ues to use the event as a propaganda tool to warn its people about the threat of capitalist containment. She said that no Soviet child grows up without learning of the event. Police B< The following were n to the University Police Del ment through Monday: T MISDEMEANOR THEFI • Eight bicycles were reT stolen. • Five wallets were rep stolen. FELONY THEFT: • A videocassette recorde reported stolen from a cow eiu e room in the Ocean Dri Building. GRIM INAL TRESPASS: • Two students were ant* and jailed at the Brazos Col Sherif f’s Of fice for trespassi: the Gain Bool area. Thert:| said an officer spotted the students as they were climiL the ladder to the divingplatf.l • A professor reported', someone damaged eight ctJ tiles and broke a paper t|: holder off the wall in a r| bathroom in the AcademicILI ing. IIARASSMENT: • Some employees at the moii.il Student Center snad® reported that they have bean < ri\ ing harassing phonecalhdL ing peak business hours. B-CS trying to stop drunken drivers Off-duty police will patrol for DWIs By Robert Morris Reporter They are there. Whether watch ing from the parking lot of the Zephyr Club or following their sus pects along a winding path from the Dixie Chicken back to campus, they know their target — the drunken driver. “They†are off-duty police offi cers who soon will be patrolling the streets of Bryan-College Station with the sole intention of bringing drunken driving to a stop. It is not a surprise attack. have adopted a policy of response instead of prevention — which in other words means unless an acci dent occurs, the likelihood of getting caught is minimal. The city councils of Bryan and College Station both recently ap proved the program. The Texas A&M University Police Department followed suit earlier this week. Kristi Matthews, coordinator of the Brazos County anti-DWI pro gram, said the focus of the campaign is to let people know that getting caught is a real possibility. However, he said he supports the new program and hopes it will have some effect in reducing the number of drunken drivers in the county. Matthews said the program, which has been in planning since last October, will involve the police de partments of College Station, Bryan and Texas A&M. Up to four off-duty officers will patrol each city. Two officers from A&M and pos sibly two officers from the sheriffs department will patrol the campus, Matthews said. She said the program began a year ago in 10 Texas counties as a general attack on the DWI problem. Brazos County was selected for funding because of the large num ber of young people in the area, Matthews said. the National Highway Trans lion Safety Association. However, she said, there was not a disproportionate amount of DWIs in the area; the problem is simply the large number of drivers on the road in such a small geographical region. T he money, $.‘100,000 ton l>e spent in several areas, inrii added patrols ■$25,000) and ing to cover the new strains • added prosecution will cause: personnel of t he judicial syslec College Station Police Maj. Ed Feldman said the most important factor of the program is the atten tion it will put on drunken driving. Kirk Brown, president of the Bra zos County chapter of Mothers Against Drunk Drivers, said the de terrence factor leaves much to be de sired. Brown, who has held his position for the past four years, said he thinks the task force is a great idea. He said, however, he hopes the College Station police will not view it as the complete solution to the drunken driving problem. He said College Station police The police officers will be em ployed for “dedicated enforcement patrol.†Their specific assignment —find drunken drivers. Feldman said the officers will not answer ordinary dispatch calls. Instead, they will cover areas that they feel warrant special attention, depending on the situation. Matthews said the goal is to make at least one arrest for every four hours on duty. As coordinator of the effort, Mat thews was allowed to set her own agenda and attack the problem as she saw fit, she said. Funding for the program comes from the traffic safety section of the State Department of Highways, but the money the state distributes origi nates from a general fund set up by One manifestation of this‘ the use of a full-time warrant of Matthews said. A public information air.: also will t>egin later this year further research, Matthewssaid Mattl lews added that shewn convince people it’s not jusi other poor caught.†lamn fools tfc: The city will provide the vehicle and pay for the cost of fuel as well as for maintenance and repair of equipment while the program funds will cover the overtime costs of the officers. The patrols will be used one week end every month, with the Thanks giving holiday targeted as the proba ble starting date, Matthews said. Homosexual rights group calls slaying ‘gay bashint KYLE (AP) — A national ho mosexual rights group says the slaying of an Austin businessman, whose body was found in a burn ing auto, may be an extreme ex ample of “gay bashing.†But a police investigator said the motive is only one possibility in the murder of Edward Schif- fers. Schiffers, 39, was found dead in the front seat of his burning car at an Interstate Highway 35 rest stop in Kyle last week. His hands were tied behind his baa he was partially clothed andi: had been struck in the head,p| lice said. A preliminary autop gave the cause of death assraoi inhalation. Jeff Gutierrez, a spokesnu for the Cay and Lesbian Sens Center of Los Angeles, said iK rest stop where Schiffers w killed may have drawn peopleiij tent on attacking homosexuai because it had a reputation aii meeting place for gays. Everything a mall shoe store has, except high prices. COMPARE! MIA... sells flats in mall and department stores for $32 to $35 ...Our dress flat by GWYNNE AVE. tm in Genuine Leather ONLY.. .1 3 88