Texas A&M Battalion 1988 College Station, Texas Vol. 88 No. 46 USPS 045360 Pages rfg's^ n ? rea : Birnm Ivisbr tha! i. worst fe divers: hovsev tened r Putting up tradition ■Company B-2 hollers out their outfit yell after they helped secure the center [pole in place for bonfire Friday afternoon. The center pole went up at its Photo by Mike C. Mulvey scheduled traditional time as it has every year since the bonfire tradition be gan. Officers arrest, Dlan police lineup for Huntsville man By Fiona Soltes Staff Writer College Station and University police officials are planning a lineup today or Tuesday to identify a suspect arrested in connection with the Oct. 20 rape and at tempted murder of a Texas A&M stu dent. Bob Wiatt, director of security for the University Police Department, said offi cials must await the release of the victim from Humana Hospital Brazos Valley before the lineup can be held. The 21- year-old victim is in stable condition, a hospital spokesman said. Wiatt said Daniel Lee Corwin, 30, of Huntsville, was arrested at his home Fri day night and has been charged with at tempted capital murder, sexual assault, aggravated kidnapping and unauthorized use of a motor vehicle. He was being held at Brazos County Jail as of Sunday night. Bail was set at $50,000 on the each of the four charges. Officers from the University, College Station and Huntsville police depart ments and Walker County Sheriffs Of fice assisted in the arrest, he said. Corwin became a suspect on Oct. 22, two days after the attack, Wiatt said. Madison County Sheriff Ed Fannin called Wiatt at the Kyle Field press box during the Texas A&M-Rice game to re port on an anonymous Crime Stoppers tip from that county. Fannin identified Corwin in connection with the tip and told Wiatt that Corwin had been attend ing A&M on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Wiatt said he became suspicious when he discovered Corwin had not attended the University since withdrawing with fail ing grades in May 1987. Wiatt soon discovered Corwin had been convicted of sexual assault in Bell County in 1976 and spent nine years in the Texas Department of Corrections in Huntsville. Wiatt said Corwin has been on parole for his conviction since 1985. Police officials put Corwin under sur veillance Monday when they saw a com posite sketch of the suspect, drawn by a Texas Department of Public Safety artist from a description given by the victim. The sketch looked surprisingly like Cor win, Wiatt said. After more than 100 tips to the police, there was not enough evidence for an ar rest until Friday afternoon, when Cor win’s fingerprints were matched to a set of latent prints from a Chevrolet Subur ban involved in the assault, Wiatt said. A witness who had called the police earlier in the week with a description of a man having lunch at Olsen Field with a woman the day of the attack was asked to identify Corwin in a photographic line up and did so. Police officials obtained a search war rant and seized several articles of evi dence from Corwin’s apartment, Wiatt said. He would not comment on what items were found. The assailant abducted the victim at knife-point from a parking lot near Olsen Field at about 12:30 p.m. Oct. 20. The assailant then forced her to drive to Lick Creek Park, south of College Station, where he raped her and stabbed her in the neck, she said. The assailant left her tied to a tree, but she managed to free herself, she said. A county employee found her a short time later near Rock Prarie Road. ety sup* jary imid itional the U pne dead, 21 hurt Democrats second-guessing Dukakis campaign strategy in Israeli gunfire s, nt i endorse*: i, NAACP lat was tei; :luctantly e ire to : e J. Mitcft lid jeoparc : status as: JoumilF urces sauf for the t® nt of those ' veysaidtl*! icices, antt :d other cat n of ew BEIT SAHUR, Occupied West Bank l (AP) — Israeli troops shot and killed a Palestinian on Sunday, and hospital offi cials and Arab sources said at least 21 Palestinians were wounded by army gun fire in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. [ Extra soldiers were deployed through out the territories for fear Tuesday’s na tional elections would bring more vio lence. Troops in black berets were seen moving into a girls high school in Beth lehem. f The military would not say exactly how many extra soldiers were put on pa trol. Underground Palestinian leaders called a general strike Tuesday to coin cide with the parliamentary elections, and they joined Moslem fundamentalists in urging another strike for this Wednes day. 1 Their leaflet, sent to news agencies in Cyprus, repeated an appeal to Israeli citi zens to vote for “voices of peace’’ and promised to persist in the uprising until an of an independent state state is estab lished with Jerusalem as its capital. |s Israel has declared Jerusalem its capi- In the Gaza Strip, 18 Palestinians ranging in age from 12 to 70 were shot by soldiers, hospital officials said. The army said it had reports of six woundings in the Gaza Strip and was checking the other reports Two Palestinians, ages 12 and 14, also were shot and wounded when Israeli troops opened fire on stone-throwers in the village of Salem near Nablus, the West Bank’s largest city, according to Arab reporters. They said the 12-year- old was shot in the head. Most clashes have pitted young, stone-throwing Palestinians and Israeli occupation forces. The Palestinians are demanding that Israel withdraw from the territories it seized from neighboring Arab states in the 1967 Middle East war. T he uprising and the future of the oc cupied territories have become the major issue in Israel’s upcoming parliamentary elections. WASHINGTON (AP) — Even as Mi chael Dukakis insists there is time to score an upset in the Nov. 8 balloting, many Democrats already are second- guessing his campaign strategy in antic ipation of another national election de feat. “After the election, this may be the campaign considered the worst managed in this century,” Democratic Sen. Terry Sanford of North Carolina said. Like many people in his party, San ford insisted he thought Dukakis still had a chance to defeat Republican nominee George Bush, but he didn’t sound overly optimistic. “I’d bet money on it,” he said of the chances of a Dukakis upset. “But I wouldn’t bet my law license on it.” Other prominent Democrats have urged Dukakis openly for weeks to sharpen his responses to Bush’s steady attacks. “Dukakis has really got to take off the gloves,” Sen. Sam Nunn of Georgia said. “He’s got to defend himself. ... I wouldn’t have been a punching bag on some of these issues.” Democrats have lost four of the last five presidential elections, and current polls point to the likelihood that Dukakis will make it five of six. Even Dukakis recently conceded he didn’t get his message out clearly enough and was too slow in responding to neg ative commercials from the Bush cam paign. But as he headed into the final week of the campaign, Dukakis pro claimed, “There is time to do it.” “They’re running a beautiful cam paign right now,” said Ed Martin, exec utive director of the Texas Democratic Party. “But a proper campaign for three months has been compressed into three weeks. ’ ’ Among those in the ranks of the sec- ond-guessers was New York Gov. Mario Cuomo, who told reporters he thought the Dukakis campaign had failed to fig ure out a general election strategy. “They did so well by the end of the Democratic convention, they said, ‘OK, now we’ll take it easy, get some rest, take our breath,”’ Cuomo said. “The other guy started landing jabs and upper cuts and picking up points. ’ ’ “Every campaign has a jillion things go wrong with it,” said John White, a Texan and former Democratic Party chairman who backed Jesse Jackson for the presidential nomination. “And if you’re behind, everybody points them out.” “Our timing has just been terribly off,” White said. “In August nothing happened, so we started August work in September, September work in Octo ber.” Gore slams GOP, hails Dukakis during CS visit U* !^ 5 E 0 AlS I Foreign Minister Shimon Peres, leader of the left-leaning Labor Party, has , backed the idea of exchanging occupied lands for guarantees of peace with the Arabs. The rightist Likud coalition, led by Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir, re jects the idea. I Israeli officials have said election day may bring an upsurge in violence in the 10-month Palestinian revolt against Is raeli mle At least 305 Palestinians and six Israe lis have died since the uprising, known by its Arab name “intefadeh,” broke out Dec. 8. If An army spokesman said a Palestinian teen-ager died when soldiers fired plastic bullets on youths in the Christian village of Beit Sahur, the site of the fields where the Bible says shepherds first learned of the birth of Jesus. Ilprhe clash occurred after church serv ices when youths organized a demonstra tion and dozens of military jeeps entered the village. The soldiers ordered the demonstrators and nearby residents to go inside their homes. ■Instead, many took to rooftops and threw stones at the Israeli troops, while others waved Palestinian flags. Soldiers opened fire with plastic bullets, which are intended to injure without killing. IpVillage residents said lyad Bishara Abu Sada, 18, was shot in the chest with alblastic bullet and died instantly. A sec ond Palestinian was reported shot in the right arm. ■Uoters set fires, shouted and whistled troops, who declared the village a closed militaiy area and ordered report ers out. RHA sponsors alternative plan for Halloween By Sherri Roberts Staff Writer Although trick-or-treating and ghost stories may be forsaken Hal loween traditions for many people, Texas A&M students can indulge in a variation of the festivities tonight with RHAlloween. Sponsored by the Residence Hall Association, RHAlloween will fea ture such attractions as a scream con test, pie toss and costume contest, Veronica Simmons, RHA programs director, said. Each booth, sponsored by two resi dence halls, will offer various prizes, including gift certificates from Gar- fields Restaurant, she said. The event is free and will take place from 9 p.m. through midnight at the Grove tonight. Although RHA no longer sponsors trick-or-treating among the campus halls, the practice is still allowed un der certain conditions, Nyla Ptomey, RHA housing program supervisor, said. Four to five halls can trick-or- treat together if they receive approval from their individual resident director and assistant area coordinator, she said. Trick-or-treating among hall resi dents has become increasingly regu lated in the last few years because of complaints that it had become a drunken brawl. Shots of alcohol were often passed out as treats, which led to a high level of intoxication among participants. RHA began RHAlloween in 1983 in an effort to provide a safe and legal alternative to the infamous hall tradi tion. Safety has become an increasingly visible issue at Halloween due to the rise in candy tampering and other ille gal activities overshadowing it in re cent years. Bob Price, a police officer with the College Station Police Department, recommended that individuals keep their homes attended, locked and well-lighted on Halloween. He sug gested that items such as bicycles, garden tools and lawn mowers be put away and locked up. Candy that is unwrapped or tom should be thrown away, he said, while fruit should be cut into small pieces. Several local hospitals and medical clinics are providing free screening of candy. By Richard Tijerina Staff Writer U.S. Senator Albert Gore Jr. stopped for a brief visit in College Station Friday to campaign for Democratic Congressio nal candidate Greg Laughlin and to urge voters not to give up Michael Dukakis. Gore, D-Tenn., landed at Easterwood Airport and spoke for close to 20 minutes about the upcoming election on Novem ber 8. He emphasized the fact that even though Democratic presidential nominee Dukakis trails Vice President George Bush in the polls, the election is far from over. Gore recalled the 1948 presidential election in which Democratic nominee Harry S. Truman overcame a large defi cit in nationwide polls and defeated Re publican nominee Thomas Dewey. “This election is not yet over with,” Gore said. “I remind you that Harry Tru man was a lot further behind in his cam paign, and he didn’t even have Lloyd Bentsen on the ticket. He came back from much further behind in 1948. I be lieve Mike Dukakis and Lloyd Bentsen will be the Kirk Gibsons of 1988 and hit a home run in the bottom of the ninth in ning.” Over the past few weeks, Dukakis himself has been reminding the nation of Truman’s come-from-behind victory of 1948. Going into the final days of the election, nationwide polls show him nar rowing Bush’s lead across the country, particularly in key swing-states such as Texas, California, Pennsylvania and Ohio. Gore, a former presidential candidate himself, said he would be working harder than anyone else for the Demo cratic ticket in the Final days of the elec tion. He encouraged the partisan crowd not to give up hope and told them to be sure to vote on election day, because Texas would be a crucial state for Duka kis to win. Gore attacked the Reagan-Bush ad ministration for running up a huge na tional deficit, pointing out that ten years ago eight of the top ten banks in the world were located in the U.S., but nowthe highest ranking U.S. bank is 27 th. “You can’t keep borrowing money and writing hot checks like the Republi cans have been doing for the past eight years and get away with it,” he said. “It’s like an Olympic athlete taking steroids—you can win the 100-yard dash, but it does permanent damage to your system.” Gore criticized Bush for running a dirty campaign, pointing out Bush’s at tacks on Dukakis’ patriotism and Massa- chussetts furlow system. “I served in Vietnam and saw young men come home in caskets that were draped in American flags,” Gore said. “No one asked if they were Democrat or Republican, they were American. I’m not going to let Dan Quayle and George Bush turn the American flag into a politi cal issue.” He also pointed out that it was unfair to lament on the tragedy surrounding Du kakis’ Massachussetts furlow program, where convicted murderer Willie Horton raped and stabbed a woman. Gore said Ronald Reagan had a similar furlow pro gram that ended in similar tragedies, and that even the federal government has a furlow program that releases convicted murderers and drug pushers. Gore was introduced by Laughlin, who is running against Republican in cumbent Mac Sweeney for the 14th Con gressional District, which includes Bur leson, Washington and Austin counties. Sen. Albert Gore Jr. “I know his (Laughlin) opponent scraped up $10,000 for Gerald Ford to come here and support him,” Gore said in reference to Sweeney’s campaign visit by the former president. “I want you to know that I’m doing it for free.” Gore said he is supporting Laughlin because they are both for a strong de fense, and strong economic and educa tion policies. “I have been reverberating the need for a strong national defense everywhere I speak,” Gore said. “Greg Laughlin is a part of that strong national defense. He knows first-hand what it takes to insure a strong national defense. “He also knows we must have a strong economic policy, and that can only come from investing in a strong education pol icy. Today’s youth will be tomorrow’s leaders, and they’re not getting the kind of education they should. We’ve got to reverse that trend and reorganize the edu cation system.”