Texas A&M Battalion \.Y \! / /// y WEATHER Frfjl WM 'V///77TTv\\ FORECAST for SATURDAY: Sunny with a 20 percent chance of afternoon showers HIGH: 90s LOW: 70s ol. 88 No. 167 USPS 045360 6 Pages ubmitted he A&M errill dit did not I’s exaniiii| Smith ti he recantf: >ns after || lately $; .'1 hasten ByKellyS. Brown Ind Richard Tijerina n and exM,, College Station, Texas Friday, July 7,1989 ourt’s abortion ruling sparks fighting spirit sh startfo|STAFF WRITERS errill res- | placed at IB ‘It’s a woman’s right.’ ‘It’s mur- tantcoadiiioer.’ 'avid Crovfe These two widely different views irector. Bn abortion continue to spark the said tie | b attle in Bryan-College Station be- ttterres tween pro-choice and anti-abortion groups after the U.S. Supreme l ourproi; fonrt Monday upheld a Missouri that wef^w allowing states to regulate abor- rection,"| |ions. 1 Organizations on both sides of the Issue have accelerated their fnovements and say they will keep a ivatchful eye on future elections. I Proponents of abortion on a na- excellenct h ona l level say they will collect funds l complnll 0 help low-income women obtain Igtionsoi'Tbortions, while locally they will west Cori vr ‘ te l etters to their congressmen as 'foblevsM bey await the debate during the 7 text regular session of the Texas legislature. 1 Katherine Hinson, co-founder of ’ro-Choice Aggies and a senior po- )sei [itical sc nce/Russian major, said she ears that after the July 3 ruling. Roe I k Wade is in jeopardy, but pro- tipf :hoice supporters are ready to light md willing to do everything to save vomen’s rights to abortion. Meanwhile, plans for an anti- ibortion “rescue” in Austin July 29 ire underway. Texas Rescue is part a 57,000 member Pro-Life Action n to 1* Network. “Rescuers” block entrances to °rts Rules ibortion clinics by forming human hat way, ;hains around the front of the build- nominate j n g S , Their stated purpose is to shut iveringly itutional fidence t i place ii d stressed idn’t have ion. Nine st vote lot ; floor i vote. If then we ry demo- dodellol another sources ;, who it iresidef ts took ; 1 a win-|j sar exis- ind 10-61 fact, the he can’t om the im so as Just be- ion. down the clinics. They also have counselors who approach pregnant women to discuss abortion alterna tives. Michele Stanfield, a senior lan guage major and president of Ag gies for Life, was arrested at a rescue in February along with 140 pro-life E irs! )N! Four juveniles held by police for crime spree IRVING (AP) — Four teen-agers were held in the Dallas County Juve nile Detention Center on Thursday in connection with a 13-hour crime spree that included murder, kidnap ping, sexual assault and robbery. Police arrested the teen-agers Wednesday after a Garland man and his girlfriend were abducted from an Irving motel, an area man was shot to death while following the car carrying the kidnap victims and their kidnappers, the kidnapped man’s family was held hostage while the girlfriend was sexually assaulted and the family was robbed. Formal charges were expected to be filed against the teens Thursday, said Janice Warder, chief of the ju venile division of the Dallas County i district attorney’s office. Officers said they planned to jeharge all four with juvenile delin- quency relating to murder, aggra- ' vated sexual assault, aggravated rob- : bery and aggravated kidnapping. Garland Police spokesman Larry Rollins said Kenneth Carroll, 30, of ISachse, apparently was following the I kidnap victims’ car and was warned ionce to stop his chase before he was I killed with a single gunshot wound to the head after he stopped on a j residential street to talk with the kid nappers. Rollins said officers were attempt ing to determine why Carroll was following the car. “I don’t know if he just saw some- | thing suspicious and started follow ing them or what,” Rollins said. “Af ter he was warned once, I don’t know why he continued to follow them instead of calling police.” supporters, 10 of whom are Aggies. “What we’re doing is responding to the situation in a peaceful and prayerful means,” Stanfield said. “We’re sitting peacefully outside these killing centers, taking a stand and trying to rescue children that are being led to slaughter like an ani mal being led to a meat market.” Hinson said the resuers are “im posing morality on other people, when it is none of their business — they’re giving Christianity a bad name.” Rex Moses, a spokesman for Texas Rescue, is a pro-life activist who has paid a price for acting on his convictions and doesn’t “dare to quit even after giving up my job, be ing jailed and rejected by my com munity.” Father Marvin Kitten, a priest at St. Mary’s Catholic Church who con siders the Court’s ruling a hopeful sign, said although he would not take Moses’ approach, he would be slow to condemn what the rescuers are trying to do. “They’re calling attention to a reality in a dramatic way,” Kitten said. “In the history of mankind, we’ve always needed prophets of some sort to shake us up and point us in the dramatic direction we should be going.” The direction of the pro-choice movement is on shaky ground, Dr. Judith Baer, an A&M political sci ence professor who teaches constitu tional rights and liberties, said. Baer said she considers the 5-4 ruling a blow to the Roe v. Wade de cision. “Basically what the Court has done is allow the state to restrict the use of public money, medical per sonnel and facilities in performing abortions,” Baer said. “As well as making fetal testing harder to at tain.” “The ruling has given an invita tion to legislatures to decide the fate ol pregnant women who want an abortion,” she said. But as the pro-life and pro-choice movements continue their battles, Texas legislators are fighting the same war. A spokesman for state Sen. Kent Caperton, D-Bryan, said the senator is in full support of the Roe v. Wade decision and is against the recent modifications of the ruling. The spokesman said Caperton has no plans to introduce legislation on abortion rights, but will work to make certain that abortion be left up to the woman and her family. Mike Hachtman, administrative assistant to state Rep. Richard Smith, R-Bryan, said although the issue will not be discussed in the Legislature during special session, if Gov. Bill Clements calls another session later in the year, Smith will be ready to support the Court’s ruling. The law regarding abortions in Texas requires abortion clinics be li censed and that all abortions be re ported to the Texas Department of Health. The state law also limits third-tri mester abortions to those where the physical or emotional health of the mother is in danger or where the fe tus is diagnosed with severe abnor malities. Publicly-funded abortions in Texas are prohibited except to save the life of the mother. The Texas Department of Health See Abortion/Page 6 Clements: Issue won’t make agenda AUSTIN (AP) — Abortion won’t be added to the agenda of the Legislature’s current special session, but the issue might be brought up later in the year, Gov. Bill Clements said Thursday. “I definitely will not add it to the call (of the special session) now,” said Clements, who controls the agenda for all special sessions. But the governor, who says he opposes abortion in most cases, indicated that abortion could be placed be fore lawmakers if another special session is called this fall. “The speaker, the lieutenant governor and I, we’ve all been considering when we might have another ses sion — might, I said. “If we do, then probably a study group would report in the interim,” Clements said. “We’d be prepared then to consider what we might do with respect to our partic ular (abortion law) situation.” The governor said he doesn’t favor holding the ses sion next spring, because it would come during the 1990 primary elections. Clements’ statement was immediately hailed by anti abortion leaders, but House Speaker Gib Lewis said he thought it “foolish” to put the topic before lawmakers until the U.S. Supreme Court has considered its several pending abortion cases. “You don’t just run in and start passing laws when the issue has not been finally resolved,” Lewis, D-Fort Worth, said. “I think it’s an issue that’s still very cloudy,” he said. “There’s still decisions to be made, court opinions to be rendered. I think until all that’s cleared up it would be Under stress Michael Lloyd, a senior environmental design major strings wire as he puts the final touches on his Design Media 404 final pro ject in the Langford Architecture Building Thursday afternoon. Photo by Phelan M. Ebenhack Lloyd is designing an outdoor pavilion composed of maple wood pieces. The project, which is a cable tensile structure, is due to day, the last day of classes for the first summer session. Anti-abortion advocate recruits for Austin ‘rescue’ By Richard Tijerina and Kelly S. Brown STAFF WRITERS very foolish to run out and try to introduce some type of abortion bill. I just think it would be very unwise.” Clements acknowledged that concern, saying, “There are some pros and cons and differences of opin ion. . . . We haven’t made our mind up.” Lewis earlier said he thought the next regular session of the Legislature, in 1991, would be the time to con sider any abortion measures. The Supreme Court this week upheld a Missouri abortion law, a ruling that gives state legislatures added powers to regulate abortions. Texas’ abortion laws require annual reporting of abortions to the state health department and disallow abortions during the last three months of pregnancy unless the mother’s life is in danger, according to the at torney general’s office. Clements has said he opposes all abortions, except in cases of rape, incest or when the mother’s life is endan gered. Bill Price, president of the Dallas-based Texans United for Life, said Clements’ latest comments were good news for abortion opponents. “We are very pleased that Gov. Clements is seriously considering opening a special session of the Legislature to deal with the abortion issue,” Price said. “This is entirely consistent with the promise he made to our group and the people of Texas to do everything within his power to stop abortion on demand,” he added. The Legislature is in special session until July 20 try ing to reform the state’s workers’ compensation system. Women who have abortions are nothing more than “convenience ad dicts” who don’t want to face reality, Rex Moses, the spokesman of Texas Rescue, an Austin-based anti-abor tion group, said Wednesday. Moses, who was in Bryan-College Station to gather support for his pro-life movement and recruit vol unteers for a scheduled “rescue” July 29 in Austin, said he tells women who plan to have an abortion the problem is with them, not their unborn children. “Like a drug addict who needs a hit, you don’t want to deal with reali ty,” Moses said. “Killing a baby is like a narcotic of convenience — it’s a quick solution to an immediate prob lem.” “Rescues” are demonstrations in front of abortion clinics in which anti-abortionists, risking arrest, try to deter pregnant women from going in to have an abortion. He said Texas Rescue is a nonvio lent organization that protests some what differently from others. He said it doesn’t use ropes or chains to bar the doors of abortion clinics which Moses called “killing centers.” Instead, demonstrators block en trance to the clinics and hold a group prayer while counselors tell women seeking abortions about See Rescue/Page 6 Fourteen die when man steers bus into ravine ABU GHOSH, Israel (AP) — A Palestinian shouting “God is great!” grabbed the steering wheel of an Is raeli bus Thursday and veered it into a 200-foot ravine where it ex ploded in flames, killing 14 people, police said. Twenty-seven people were injured. Helicopters brought up victims from the gutted chassis of the bus, which lay in a circle of burned grass below the Tel Aviv-Jerusalem high way, eight miles west of Jerusalem. Also hauled up were bags of victims’ belongings, including glasses, shoes, purses and wallets, and a Book of Psalms. “I can’t describe it. . . . You see something black that just a few min utes ago was a human being,” said Rami Yaffe, head of the fire brigade that helped in rescue operations. U.S. officials said seven of the in jured were Americans, including a woman who was visiting Israel to watch her daughter compete in the Maccabiah Games for Jewish ath letes. Another of the injured was identified as Canadian. The injured were not identified. Officials also said two people were unaccounted for. Police arrested an Arab bus pas senger from the occupied territories. “We know for certain that this man is the attacker,” Police Commis- ssioner David Krauss said. “Maybe he was the one who also planned it. Inside the bus, he acted alone.” The man, in his mid-20s, was seen by photographers lying on the ground with a bandage on his head. A&M joins UT, Baylor at Texas Med Center Texas A&M will make its con tribution to the Texas Medical Center, the largest medical center in the world, with the Institute of Biosciences and Technology pos sibly as early as January 1991. A&M’s institute will join other universities such as Baylor and the University of Texas, which also have branches at the center in Houston. Gen. Wesley Peel, vice chan cellor for facilities planning and construction, said that the con tracted amount of the addition to the Texas Medical Center is $21,512,348. “The building is funded by proceeds collected from the Per manent University Fund,” he said. “PUF earns money from bonds that the University owns which can’t be spent, but the divi dends from them can be used to fund major projects.” Peel said that the current con tract completion date is Jan. 30, 1991. “The contract completion date is very tentative,” Peel said. “It can be moved up or back, but from a realistic standpoint we will probably have to extend it due to bad weather and other problems that might occur.” Peel said if everything goes as planned, the building can be fur nished by February and have oc cupants as early March 1991. Bush says Soviet proposal to reduce arms remains on backburner of NATO agenda WASHINGTON (AP) — President Bush to day deflected Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorba chev’s call for swift negotiations over reductions in short-range nuclear weapons, noting that NATO leaders said they would not entertain such talks until agreement had been reached on conventional forces. Bush said he didn’t want to get off track by re opening the issue of short-range nuclear forces that Western leaders agreed to in Brussels in May. The president made his comments as he fielded questions from reporters in preparation for his trip to Europe beginning Sunday. The president said he hoped to use his visits to Poland and Hungary to nudge both communist- controlled countries toward economic democ racy. “Our challenge is to help create the conditions under which the Hungarians and Poles can re cover economically and make the transition,” he said. Bush also said he is happy that former Marine Lt. Col. Oliver North did not draw a jail term for Iran-Contra crimes. He sidestepped a question of a possible pardon for the former White House aide, noting the case is being appealed. North was given a suspended sentence and a $150,000 fine, and was ordered to perform 1,200 hours of community service in an anti-drug pro gram for his conviction on three counts. Bush fielded reporters’ questions in the Exec utive Office Building across the street from the White House. The president departs on Sunday for his two stops in Eastern Europe before heading for an economic summit meeting in Paris and a follow up visit in the Netherlands. He said he hoped the summit would deal with worldwide environmental concerns and make a contribution toward non-inflationary growth. Bush’s reply to a question about Gorbachev’s proposal appeared carefully worded. “The answer is to please read carefully what happened in Brussels,” he said. “To look at the united NATO position and to go forward . . . with the agenda at hand. That will be the mes sage. I don’t want to get off the track by re opening the short-range nuclear forces pack age,” he said. In a speech earlier in the day in Strasbourg, France, Gorbachev offered to make additional and rapid cuts in his country’s nuclear arsenal if NATO accepts negotiations on tactical nuclear weapons. The NATO agreement calls for negotiations to reduce short-range nuclear missiles only after an East-West agreement has been reached to re duce conventional forces and reductions are ac tually underway. “I see no reason to stand here and try to change a collective decision taken by NATO,” the president said today.