Thursday, February 4, 1988/The Battalion/Page 5 — ^Soviets write story for newspaper about travels by A&M professor Jr parents':^ PublicaM the semestrl By Mark Gee Staf f Writer Op.m.ii assodato 139MSC6 Texas A&M history professor rry Anderson said an article writ ten about him in the Soviet Union la Foods*B ws P a P er I zves tia was accurate ex- Ramada ■ icept f° r a misquotes, and that it gives Texas A&M world exposure. 7 Pm.inflBAnderson, a Vietnam veteran, re- Brned to Vietnam in October 1987 3t| onalWe?|tq look at the country as a historian. In 1966, he was a gunfire-control UrsociC: terlinician in the U.S. Navy. glthgn^H Anderson was interviewed by Igor ^Bidrevev, a spetial correspondent p.m.|n§|foi' lives tin, during Anderson’s two- «ek tour of Vietnam. in 402R a :HThe Soviet headline “Tourist from the U.S.A. No. 77,” the story about Anderson and a picture of him and his traveling companion, JRose Eder, appeared on Page 5 of He Dec. 15 issue of Izvesda. ■ Anderson was suprised and eager ‘-iH get a translation of the article when he found it in his mailbox. ■ “Most of the article was accurate Hid entertaining,” Anderson said, lied “but there were some mistakes. I was HHcited about having a story in a So ught alf'Het newspaper and the international '^tposure it gave A&M.” ■ The article was translated by ■arie Godfrey, who has a degree in [ussian studies from T exas A&M. “The interview was very good,” [odfrey said. “There is some misqu- ing as Terry (Anderson) said, but herwise, the interview is above use to’T bo n d. I consider it a very positive h^vtide. It’s not anti-American.” 10 Paving The Russian journalist Andreyev, ^Hho did not speak English, came ‘nd^Hross Anderson’s story b\ chance, vMnderson said. Anderson and Eder Het Andreyev through Vladimir Haslov, a professor of economics at Hie Soviet Academy of Science. AfcftmiH Anderson spoke to Andreyev n/yP^Hrough Maslov, who was an inter- Id ■refer in the trial of Matthias Rust, ^^JJHie West German teen-ager who Hnded a plane on Red Square. ■ “It was one of the best interviews Tchad,” Anderson said. “It was en- 1 livable. The two Russians were great Imversationalists. We talked about f Joviet-American relations and Gor- < lachev’s glasnost and its impact on * Soviet academia and journalism.” IH Anderson said he likes the article jHecause it has the potential to im- jHrove. American-Soviet relations. Anderson said a Vietnam veter- li’s views are important to Soviet cit- ^ens because the SovietUnion is in- rolved in a similar te audiKi 'day in X: j sheelsa: Tinglon ixeratSlt Students see Vietnam of ’80s By Mark Gee Staff Writer From Hanoi to Ho Chi Minh City, an associate professor of history on Wednesday gave 500 A&M students a slide-by-slide look at his October 1987 tour of Vietnam. Terry Anderson, who toured Vietnam last year, presented “Vietnam Today,” a look at the country two decades after the war from a historian’s perspective. “I’m here to talk about the reconstruction and present conditions in Vietnam, not the war,” Anderson told the audience at Rudder Theater. Anderson said even though the Soviet Union supplies the Socialist Re public of Vietnam with almost $1 billion a year, the country still lacks basic consumer goods and industry. Even with the extreme poverty, Anderson said there was very little crime because the citizens fear re-education camp. In Hanoi, he said, electricity is rationed to homes at night from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. so factories can have electricty during the day. He said the city is dark at night, with only a single light bulb hanging at street corners. Anderson said the vice director at a 1,200-family agricultural cooper ative near Hanoi told him proudly that 40 percent of the homes had a tele vision. Anderson said there were two television stations in Hanoi. “One sta tion played Russian sit-coms; the other played test bars,” he said. He said free enterprise is developing in Vietnam. “After cooperatives have filled their quotas,” Anderson said, “they are allowed to sell their sur plus on the free market and make a profit.” Anderson said he hopes to return to Vietnam with a group of Viet- namese-Americans and write a book about the return. I run. war i n Ifghanistan. “It relates to the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan and issues that their future veterans will face,” Anderson said. Godfrey said the lead of the arti cle — which calls the 41 -year-old An derson a “pink-cheeked youth” — puts the professor in a good light. “The youthfulness of Americans is always suprising,” the Izvestia arti cle began. “It often catches people off guard and creates awkward situ ations. Such an occurance happened on a hot and humid evening in Da Nang ...” Godfrey said Soviets often portray Americans as youthful. “It is impossible to get into some one’s mind,” Godfrey said, “but most Soviets will take it (Anderson de scribed as youthful) as cute, but oth ers will look at it and think the rea son Americans look youthful is because they have an easy life and all they do is watch MTV.” Anderson said the Soviet journal ist asked him, “How old are you, you pink-cheeked youth?” After the journalist tells the reader about his suprise that Ander son is 41, has his Ph.D and has fought in the Vietnam War, he puts Anderson’s 1966 military duty in a Vietnam perspective. “In the memorable year of 1966, in the spring of which the first mas sive bombardments of the D.R.V. was made by B-52s . . . the people (Viet Cong) who manned the anti aircraft guns of the D.R.V. shot down the one-thousandth American Thunder Chief (fighter plane),” An dreyev wrote. Anderson said that claims of 1,000 planes being shot down in 1966 is an exaggeration. He said less than 1,000 planes were shot down during the 10-year war. “The Soviet journalist must have been using Vietnamese statistics,” Anderson said. He said while in Ha noi, he was told the North Vietnam ese claimed to have shot down 3,500 American planes. “I don’t want to use the word propaganda, because it happens on both sides and does nothing to im prove American-Soviet relations,” Anderson said. Anderson also says there is a po tential fabrication in the article. Anderson says that he told the So viet journalist that Thailand’s econ omy was better than Vietnam’s. But the article directly quotes An derson as saying, “For example, in Thailand, as in many other coun tries, one is surrounded by sick peo ple, the majority being children. There is nothing like this in Viet nam. Therefore, the government has been able to eliminate this im portant problem.” Anderson said this statement is in correct. “Unless there was a problem in translation about Vietnam’s being better than Thailand’s, then that was fabricated,” he said. “No one who has visited Bangkok and Saigon would ever think the economy in Vietnam is better than Thailand’s.” Anderson has been to Bangkok four times and has traveled to 25 countries. “I’d like to give them (the Soviet journalist and translator) the benefit of the doubt,” Anderson said. “Em thankful he put it in there because I’d love to give them a slide show. It woi dd be a blast.” Anderson has more than 500 pic tures of Vietnam, some of which he showed to A&M students during a Political Forum program in Rudder Theater. “Many of my slides,” Anderson said, “show the poverty, hunger and need for medical and humananita- rian aid.” Immediately after the statement comparing Vietnam and Thailand, the article quotes Anderson as say ing, “Of course, there are still many E roblems and I would like to know ow the government intends to solve them.” Anderson said he never made that statement. “That is a typical question of a Russian, but he quotes me as saying it,” he says. “The point is that the So viets want to know why there are so many problems — why they spend so much money and why the com munist government has not solved them.” Since 1975, the Soviet Union has given massive amounts of aid to reb uild Vietnam, he said. Anderson said the men who inter viewed him were engaging and talk ative. Anderson, Eder, Andreyev and Maslov talked for four hours and drank Heineken beer for 50 cents a bottle. “They really got a kick when I told them, ‘Well, we had our Vietnam and you have your Afghanistan. The only difference is that our men spent time in the tropics and your men are on some cold mountain,’ ” Ander son said. Rain ;SWi Checkpoint really scam for tourists EL PASO (AP) — A federal | Mexican official was in Juarez, [ Mexico, this week to investigate a phony highway checkpoint set up by immigration agents who ille gally confiscated travelers’ prop erty, authorities said. Six Mexican immigration agents were arrested Saturday at the checkpoint at the intersection of two highways in Janos, 130 miles southwest of Juarez. The agents had illegally confis cated two trucks, jewelry, fire arms and about $8,300 cash, Juan Aguilar Garcia, Mexico’s deputy director of immigration, said Tuesday. About $7,000 of the money was U.S. currency, but Aguilar said the agents preyed mostly on a nearby Mennonite community. The seven agents are likely to face charges of extortion, rob bery, unauthorized use of arms and conspiracy, authorities said. Nude (Continued from page 1) that sexual gratification was acquired and in this case it was not. “Unless someone files a criminal complaint no one can be arrested and names do not have to be revea led,” Wiatt said. “However, if some one does file a complaint then the case becomes public knowledge and the person so charged can be identi fied.” According to Wiatt, some ot the men were turned over to the resi dent official in Cain Hall, Dr. Steve Attack Crews. Wiatt added that the athletic department is conducting its own in vestigation. “We are seeing if anyone of fended by the incident would want to file appropriate charges and as of now, no one has,” Wiatt said. Holly Becka, a sophomore journa lism major from Killeen, said she saw three naked men and three clothed men running through the Commons lounge area. One of the clothed men said the three naked men were freshmen going through a football initiation, she said. An athlete who asked not to be identified said on the first cold night of February upper classmen on the football team round up the new re cruits, mainly underclassmen and transfer students, and have them strip. The new recruits are taken to Rudder Fountain where they sing “The Spirit of Aggieland.” The source said this makes the new play ers’ first year easier because they don’t get harassed as much as they would otherwise. (Continued from page 1) the Corvette, grabbed Barclay and threw him into the rear bumper of his car, knocking him unconscious and breaking his collarbone. The attacker then turned to Voigtman and asked him if he wanted “some of this too,” the report says. The man then threw Voigtman into the open passenger door of the car he had just exited, the report says. Voigtman sustained bruises to his chest, ribs and lungs, according to the report. Mary Barclay said she approached the man asking, “What are you doing?” and he responded by grab bing her blouse and hitting her in the face with his fist, the report says. SUBMIT TO m categories: Collage, Drawings, Paintings, Pastel, Miscellaneous (no photographs) entries: judging will be accepted in the MSC Gallery from 11:00 a.m. until 3:00 p.m., February 22-24. Entry fee is $3.00 per piece, limit 4 pieces. February 25, 1988. 4^ MSC VISUAL ARTS E elxil Patch Florist 707 Texas Ave. 696-6713 All major cards accepted by telephone RANDY SIMS Bar-B-Que House FAMILY PAK SPECIAL-TO GO $9.99 Indues 1 lb. of beef, 1 pint of beans. 1 pint of potato salad. 4 pieces of garlic bread, sauce, pickles and onions. (Feeds 3-4 people). Monday thru Thursday 3824 Texas Ave., Bryan 4:00 p.m.-8:00 p.m. 848-8016 Transmission • Clutch Drive Shaft • 4X4 Front Wheel Drive Full Service-Import-Domestic ryan Drive Train Visit our location across from the Chicken Oil Co. 3605 S. College call us 268-AUTO A COMMUNITY SERVICE PROJECT MARCH 5s 1988 Applications available in Pavilion Room 221 And due February 19 by 5:00 pm For more information: Call 845-3051 GO VSTUDENT VEFfeNMENT s .university Barclay said she was unconscious for a few seconds and when she re gained consciousness she saw the two men driving away in the Cor vette. The Barclays and Voigtman were admitted to Humana Hospital Sun day and were released later. The po lice report says that Andy Barclay will need surgery for his broken col larbone. ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ £ Special Effects #1 { * * * * * ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ Check out our Tanning Special ^ j, $28.50/month unlimited tanning -jt. * N- * * * * * * * * * * * * Hair Salon New Location: 3616 E. 29th 846-0202 50% off services with coupon/with participating hairstylists Hairstylists: Loraine Gott Brenda Odom Teresa Riley Zippy Woodard Jim Barrett Kristi Liebengood Lillie Wiley Annette Tarver Jackie Swanner Debbie Todd Kim Long Ginger Magoon Set your ph*scr* on for this special 8H#« presentation of rare seldom seen Star Trek footage! A 2-HOUR TREK ★ A ★ THON! STRIP TREK ★ STAR TREK BLOOPERS ★ All Three Outrageous Reels In Colort ★ Animated Star Trek ★ Previews &. Behind-tfie-Scenes ★ The Making of Star Trek IV The Voyage Home" * Special Three-Season Retrospective * 2nd Pilot Outakes—Never Shown on T.V. * Phis—Official Star Trek Trivia Quiz — ONE NIGHT ONLY- SAT. FEBRUARY 6 COLLEGE STATION HILTON 801 UNIVERSITY DRIVE EAST SHOWS 7 & 9:30 p.m. ADMISSION $5.00