Wednesday, February 3, 1988/The Battalion/Page 3 State and Local Editor: Europe will help U.S. economic recovery By Mary-Lynne Rice Stuff Writer Even as the world’s largest debtor Ination, the United States will recover from its economic slump, with the [help of Western European nations, [Dudley Fishburn, executive editor of [the Economist, said Tuesday night. Fishburn, a Harvard graduate land regular broadcaster for the [BBC, spoke to about 150 people at |the MSC Great Issues Economic symposium. As the United States directed Eu- irope toward economic recovery with Ithe Marshall Plan after World War III, Fishburn said. Western Europe [will provide the economic and politi- [cal support necessary to bring the [United States a new era of prosper- |ity. “1 hat lesson you gave us in how to [conduct ourselves (the Marshall [Plan) is one I hope we ll never be [forgetting,” he said. "And as in |a- Jpan, rather than behaving like other [conquerors, you stooped and helped Japan to its feet and set it on its way Ito its present prosperity." The United States mav lament |a- Ipan’s economic prosperity now. and [it probablv will continue to do so — [Fishburn said he does not see any [immediate evidence that the balance [oftrade may tip toward equilibrium. “More American »rade is now [crossing the Pacific than the Atlan tic,” he said. “That shift in trade is |fairly irreversible." Although Japan's import restric tions put eastern-bound trade at a [disadvantage, Fishburn said, West- [ern Europe remains receptive to [trade and w illing to support the U.S. [economy. Yet Americans often do not recognize their Western Euro- [pean economic allies, he said. "The United States seems to pre- |fer to hear about people kicking them in the shins than about those giving silent, positive support," he said. “When thev look at the world, they see competitors instead of Ifriends." What the United States overlooks, [lie said, are the massive amounts of Photo by Roy D. Parsons Dudley Fishburn, editor of the Economist, speaks about the world economy Tuesday night. financial support flowing from Western European nations. He cited West Germany 's buving of U.S. trea sury bonds, especiallv, as an exam ple. With a recently balanced na tional budget, he said. West Germans are f inding investment op portunities in the United States gov ernment. “They're putting their money where their faith is," he said. "And imagine when the dollar starts to rise . . . that will be counterbalanced when the United States again invests in Europe." However, since the dollar has not vet regained its strength, the United States must examine the shortcom ings that led to its loss of economic power, he said. Fishburn attributed part of the United States’ economic decline to its own crippling mistakes. “The United States is losing some of its self-confidence," he said. “ That comes mostly from self-inflicted wounds — Vietnam, Watergate, Irangate, Jimmy Carter, you name it." Still, Western Europe remembers the titles the United States once un conditionally held, Fishburn said — wealthiest, most powerful — and recognizes its dependence on the na tion even in its international decline. “We Europeans laugh when Un cle Sam stumbles, but oh, how we would cry if he fell," he said. “(Eco nomic relations) is a two-way street. That should be cause For optimism. It’s a way oi life coming together. “With all this interchange, the world is coming together — not as a bland mix, but as a place where peo ple have common views about trade, about what’s interesting, and about what’s good.” Meanwhile, nations must realize their interdependence, he said, and work to maintain trade relations de spite imbalance and disadvantage. “The reaction is not to stop tra de,” he said. “That way is not the so lution; that way is toward poverty.” / // ., More bytes, less bucks. $568. There is no reason to pay full retail price for a “name brand” computer when you can buy a compatible that works exactly the same for less money The CA 88/2 is the IBM compatible com puter that will save you hundreds of dollars. 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Cadet charges racism in handling of incident By Janet Goode Assistant City Editor A sophomore regiment clerk in the Corps of Cadets claimed prej udice played a role in charges that he violated the Aggie Code of Honor. Tim Bailey, charged with vio lating the Aggie Code as a result of phone theft from University Communications, was found “not guilty” Tuesday evening by the Cadet Court. Although Bailey admitted to stealing and using a number from the phone company, he said he was also a paying customer of University Communications and had his own phone number. Bailey said there were calls charged to him on his phone bill that had been made by someone who had stolen his number. Bailey paid the company for his illegal calls in addition to the calls that he hadn’t made, amounting to over $300. Mike Jumper, judge advocate general, said the court didn’t ob tain enough evidence or reach a “moral certainty” to find Bailey guilty. He said this means that the case now will be dropped from his record. Bailey said he feels since he made restitution with the phone company that he shouldn’t have been taken to court. Bailey said he was a victim of prejudice. “I’m a black regiment clerk,” he said, “and there are people that don’t like that.” Bailey said it was Sam Thomp son, his commanding officer, that discriminated against him by tak ing him to court. However, Thompson said Uni versity Communications con tacted him about the theft in or der for the. Corps of Cadets to take action against him. Bailey said he feels discrimi nated against because of numer ous incidents of a more serious nature in which other Corps members were not brought to court. Bailey cited an incident in which a Corps member took a girl’s car without her permission. “The girl called the campus cops and they called our company in,” he said. “The guy had taken the car and gone to San Antonio.” Bailey said it’s illegal for a Ca det to leave within a 15 mile ra dius of Texas A&M. “This guy was 200 miles away and at a concert,” Bailey said. “This was serious,” he said. “And it was overlooked.” In another incident, Bailey said that during “call-to-quarters” (a mandatory three hour study pe riod for Corps members), two of his friends went to the movies on an honor pass rather than to the library. “My commanding officer was there when they walked in, and nothing was done,” Bailey said. “That may not sound serious, but it’s also a violation of the Ag gie Code Honor,” he said. Bailey said the case should’ve been handled within the Corps company, as were most of these other cases. Thompson said it’s “utterly ri diculous” that Bailey feels dis criminated against since Thomp son’s interest in the case was not a personal one. Thompson said he was only in terested in upholding the Aggie Code of Honor. “It really irritates the hell out of me that he thinks I’m prejudi ce,” Thompson said. “I have three adopted brothers from El Salvador. I went to a high school that was 30 percent black and I had several black friends.” Thompson said he has two other cadets in his unit that are black, along with some Vietnam ese and Hispanics. “I treat them all the same,” he said. Mexican farmers free killer bees from traps HOUSTON (AP) — Mexican farmers frantic for money are taking the so-called killer bees from traps and putting them in hives for their honey, researchers say. But trying to snatch the African ized bees can be dangerous. One farmer already has been hospitalized from stings he received when he dis turbed a hive of killer bees he had set near his home. The farmer’s chickens, ducks and turkeys were killed by bee stings, and his pigs ran away to escape the bees, the Houston Chronicle re ported Monday. Gerald Loper of the Carl Hayden Bee Research Center in Tucson, Ariz., said he saw a video tape of the aftermath during a visit to the area. Africanized bees, released by acci dent in Brazil in 1956, have spread over much of South America and are moving steadily north. The bees are expected to reach the Texas bor der near Brownsville in late 1989, said Orley “Chip” Taylor of the Uni versity of Kansas, who has studied the bees for years. Correction The man in the page-one pho tograph on Tuesday, Feb. 2 was identified as Mike Barrett. The name should have read Mark Barrett. o MSC Political Forum Saigon The Tet Offensive Viet Minh Hanoi Ho Chi Minh Gulf of Tonkin Diem Vietnamization Vietnam Today Dr. Terry Anderson A Lecture and Slide Presentation February 3 7:30 p.m. Rudder Theater ^Tr