Thursday, June 16,1988/The Battalion/Page 3 State and Local ig$3 A&M students publish bout reforms in Soviet eded roads mid simply lasses outsidsfi am pus lesstl the new n or athletes By Catherine Zudak Reporter espite recent economic reforms c , Bthe Soviet Union, three Texas ' ^nernll students have concluded in >er Road, Parffljlications that the reforms have falls outof(a;H significantly improved the Soviet (Otilevard or economy or the availability of con- igstone Lane Juhiergoods. Hbhelia Amin and David Park, both robably appjBnomic students, produced “Quo lions of camBdis, Comrade Mikhail?,” a docu- rn could be P? nt d 63 ** 11 !? "'ith economic reforms .. n[ Biposed by the Soviet Union’s pre- , . ’ Mikhail Gorbachev and ratified ;d in cnarje« t he Plenum of the Central Com et Brooks ®I||tee of the Communist Party, h writing. Hknita van Tilburg, a graduate stu- ■ll Bt- te if s what it is like to live in the it, SherrillUnion in, “An American at a eplacetheebiBiiet University: A Personal Expe- d be out of a B 106 - Tfm booklet details van Til- t good planrBs’ s experiences while she studied Bhe Leningrad State University in uk tenioragricij Purlin, an A&M graduate, and nd editorofllark, a senior, reviewed magazine ■journal articles that analyzed the Biet economy and political reform. Bey con tpded a few with their anal ysis to create “Quo Vadis.” m? Bkinin and Park concluded from th$ir research that Gorbachev’s re- fetins could not radically improve fhl Soviet economy. ■min said Gorbachev would have tol-eorganize the Communist party B c hieve results. Bfor him to get the results he Graphic by Taani Baier wanted he was going to have to gain complete party control and then de centralize the party,” Amin said. “He has to change the whole system and he can’t. To change the system would be to change what the Soviet Union is.” But the reforms could help Gor bachev secure needed changes in East-West relations. “The Soviet economy is in shamb les,” Park said. “He wants the West to think he’s making progress eco nomically — he needs to cut military spending substantially and expand production of consumer goods.” Amin agrees that defense spend ing should be cut. “Gorbachev needs to make a posi tive attempt (at economic reform) before we’ll (United States) go to a summit and agree to cut our defense spending,” Amin said. “It’s in his best interests to cut defense spend ing because their economy is going down the tubes.” Supply and demand in the Soviet economy is determined by state planning rather than the consumer. Priority is given to the production of military goods often at the expense of consumer goods. “The Soviet economy is a centrally planned military-industrial complex with total lack of concern for con sumer goods,” Park said. “This eco nomic system doesn’t work.” Van Tilburg, in her publication, said consumer goods were difficult to get when she visited the Soviet Union in 1984, 1985 and 1986. “One of my chapters is entitled ‘The Workers’ Paradise is the Con sumers’ Nightmare,’ ” she said. “If you’re not one of the privileged peo ple, life there is very hard.” She said that living in the Soviet Union gave her an appreciation of capitalism — of being an American. “The real reason I wanted to write about my experiences was to encour age people to learn to speak Russian and to go to the Soviet Union and find out what it is really like there,” she said. “You get an extremely false image of what it’s like there from the media. You see either the absolute worst of the Soviet Union or you see what the Russians really want you to see. “It’s only when you can speak the language, go out on the streets, meet books Union people and live like a Russian that you really see what it’s like — to be a Russian and stand in line four or five hours a day for the basic necessities of life. You see how unfair it is. “Russia isn’t the evil empire in terms of everything there is bad, but it also is not the workers’ paradise.” Van Tilburg has a bachelor’s de gree in physiology from the Univer sity of California-Davis. She is a mas ter’s degree candidate at Middlebury College and has taken undergrad uate courses in economics at A&M. The students published their work with A&M’s Center for Educa tion and Research in Free Enter prise. Van Tilburg met Steve Pejovich, director of the center, while taking his Marxism class last fall. “I mentioned I had been to the Soviet Union and Dr. Pejovich asked if I would be interested in writing about my experiences,” Van Tilburg said. Amin and Park were already working for the center’s newsletter, Pathfinder, when Pejovich delegated “Quo Vadis, Comrade Mikhail” to them. The center was created to pro mote understanding of the Ameri can free enterprise system and the ideology that supports it. Amin said that the center’s publi cations are targeted for the Texas secondary school system in an at tempt to expand economic thought in the high schools. By Staci Finch Staff Writer Whew. Two weeks down and three to go. It’s time to celebrate, and here’s what’s available. EASTGATE LIVE: Thursday: Killer Bees. Reggae from Austin. $5 cover. Friday: Kerouacs. Local rock ’n’ roll. Opening is Soul Survi vors. $3 cover. Saturday: For Cryin’ Out Loud. Local rock ’n’ roll. $2 cover. Tuesday: Krank. Local heavy metal. $2 cover. Wednesday: Lippman Jam. Open stage. No cover. HALL OF FAME: Thursday: Texas Unlimited. $4 cover. Friday : Night Life. $4 cover. Saturday: Midnight Express. $4 cover. BRAZOS LANDING: Friday: Frenndz. Reggae. $5 cover. Saturday: Mannish Boys. Blues. $4 cover. COW HOP EXPANSION: Thursday: Street Pizza. Local punk metal. $2 cover. Friday : Bad Habit. $2 cover. Saturday: Texas Twisters. $2 cover. Wednesday: Sneaky Pete. $2. Kay’s Caberet Thursday: Blue Hounds. No cover. Friday: Sneaky Pete singalong. No cover. Saturday: Don Overby. No cover. High school student admits to forgeries for Du Pont petition lenate okays $221.5 million for Texas ■VASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate ap proved Wednesday a $221.5 million spending package for military construction projects in Ifxas, including $23 million for a full-sized re placement to Brooke Army Medical Center and $31.85 million for the Ingleside Homeport near ■pus Christi. B‘This bill provides the down payments on the full-sized 450-bed replacement hospital for Brooke Army Medical Center,” Sen. Lloyd Bent- sen, D-Texas, said. “It’s a relief to have the con- tro\ersy over sizing behind us. “Today’s Senate action guarantees initial con struction of the Central Distribution Center at the Red River Army Depot without any more de lay. This bill fully funds the second phase of Homeport construction at Ingleside and Galves ton and I am confident that we will have no trou ble getting the third phase money next year.” The funds are for the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1, and Bentsen’s office said construction should begin sometime that year on the Brooke Army Medical Center replacement in San Anto- The Texas funds are contained in an $8.7 bil lion spending package approved by the Senate 93-2. The bill also includes $14.5 million for the Gal veston Homeport and $31.85 million for Ingle side Homeport. Of the $10.4 million appropriation for the Red River Army Depot, $10 million will be used for the second phase of moderization efforts at the military distribution center — only one of three in the nation. SAN MARCOS (AP) — A high school student testified Wednesday he knew the law was being broken when a political consultant gave him beer and told him to forge names on a political petition. But Jay Harmening, 18, said the consultant, Rocky Mountain of Houston, told him it was all right to sign the names on the petition that put former Delaware Gov. Pete Du Pont on the Texas Republican pri mary ballot last March. “Don’t worry about it,” Harmen ing said Mountain had told him. “You won’t get caught. Drink up and start signing.” Mountain, 27, is on trial for 64 misdemeanor counts of forgery stemming from a “forgery party” prosecutors say he staged on Dec. 19, 1987 after temporary workers hired by his firm failed to collect enough signatures on the Du Pont petitions. The company, Southern Political Consulting, Inc., also is on trial on 64 counts of forgery. Southern Polit ical Consulting was paid $5,000 by the Du Pont campaign to handle the petitions. Du Pont has denied any knowledge of the forgeries, and no one associated with him has been charged in the case. Each count against the firm car ries a maximum penalty of $10,000. Mountain could be sent to county jail for one year and fined up to $2,000 on each count if convicted. Defense lawyers have said Moun tain may be guilty of “poor judgment and stupidity,” but has broken no laws. The trial was moved here because of extensive publicity about the case in Houston. News reports also have said the firm had phony signatures placed on ballot petitions for Republican presi dential candidates Alexander Haig and Robert Dole, but the misdemea nor indictments refer only to the Du Pont petitions. Harmening, a student at San Mar cos Academy, was the second stu dent to testify about the purported forgery party. Party Line I received fc who happe: up with wail ve yet to meti d that he or while out of students belit tment couldfr is problem ents have gh this shame that ve not been towards a ough I n sonal ex e that this Foreign s, and that hemistry estion of ? is a real mm/m mst ‘m cmem\ minm ivmic form fmest' Think what you can do with the money you save using the IBM student discount. Call Little Caesars: Well handle any size party.) Northgate Now Delivers to Campus Only Delivery Charge $1 00 BUY ONE PIZZA... ONE FREE! Bvy any size Original Round pizza m r«gufar price, get identical pizza FR**! B-Th-6-16-88 Expires: 7-14-88 jttMC . -r—— ~ | ■2 Medium > 2 Pizzas SHfeEW 3 Items 8 and 1 Item 55 onl 75 9 Medium $7^ k$9- ■ BUY ONE SANDWICH firr ONE FREE! ADDmOmF ITEMS AND ^ ADDITIONAL ITEMS AND i j EXTRA CHEESE EXTRA g EXTRA CHEESE EXTRA fli B-Th-6~ 16-88 g Expires: 7-14-88 M <■».,»« .Mi 1.1.~ B-Th-6-16-88 Expires: 7-14-88 OFFER GOOD WITH COUPON ONLY B-Th-6-16-88 Expires; 7-14-88 NORTHGATE COLLEGE STATION 268-0220 696-0191 Jniversity & Stasney SW Parkway & Texas itdoor Seating Available BRYAN 776-7171 E. 29th Briarcrest little Caesars Pizza Pizza for the dorm. A ski trip. Tickets to a concert. They’re all possible with the savings you’ll get with the special student discount on members of the IBM® Personal System/2™ family. More important is what’s possible when you use the systems themselves. They can help you graph economic problems. And write and revise long papers with ease. Even illustrate your points PJ by combining words and graphics. So your professors will draw favorable conclusions about your work. But remember, order your Personal System/2 before graduation. After that, we can’t deliver your discount. , Texas A&M University Micro Computer Center Mon.-Fri. 7:45-6:00 Sat. 9:00-5:00 Memorial Student Center 845-4081 IBM is a registered trademark and Personal System/2 is a trademark of the International Business Machines Corporation. © IBM Corporation I987