e Battalion WEATHER TOMORROW’S FORECAST: Partly cloudy and mild HIGH: 75 LOW: 49 N sure Vol.89 No.91 USPS 045360 10 Pages Borm !V cl -5l lall tliaii T the ; College Station, Texas Friday, February 9,1990 let woii ’iitions; oviets demand elimination f total Communist control Sng ii| MOSCOW (AP) — Communist maverick Rudy [Moris N. Yeltsin and progressive activists Fa ^JMid Thursday the party’s decision to re- don’t |^■ounce its legal claim on power is not bl^m se ei ough to end Soviet political repression centralized control. I “It is necessary to eliminate (Communist) ily itjtjBiirty organizations in the army, the police, 'Active-® 6 KGB, the courts, in all the state institu- Ro wildj 0118 ’ sa * f ^ Yuri Mityunov, a spokesman for IgHie would-be opposition party, the Demo- e 'si 12 nMatic Union. ! rt L ^vised f I Yeltsin was the sole member of the par- el_ u n t) s policy-making Central Committee to ^miHpP ose ^ ie P°li t ' ca l reforms Wednesday. n| illion ■H esaid they failed to go far enough. c %ittH "I h a d grounds to vote against,” he said :i(L ai ii an interview in his office near the Krem- artgy a ,jBn. “But I think, however, that the platform deed ( ^presents if not a step then a half-step for- Of r know- n 0wing s on in () Ur in is. lining year a nda 28,320 ed for c ould i lc l post ward, and that lessens the tension before the (party) Congress.” He recommended the formation of a sec ond party if the Communist Party fails to excise conservatives at the Congress to be held in early summer. Yeltsin was a keynote speaker at the larg est pro-democracy rally in decades at the foot of Red Square last Sunday. Several hundred thousand people rallied and de manded the party abandon its guaranteed leading role in Soviet society. At the Central Committee meeting that ended Wednesday, the party did just that, approving President Mikhail S. Gorba chev’s party platform that calls for revoking the party’s constitutional guarantee in favor of a multiparty system wnere Communists would have to compete for power. “The discussion was very hot,” Yeltsin said, gesturing .expansively before depart ing to take the political temperature among activists in Leningrad. “The proposals were diametrically opposed. It was not easy.” Mityunov said pressure for reform is now moving to the streets and pointed to the growing number of incidents of angry crowds across the Soviet Union demanding the ouster of hard-line local Communist leaders. Party secretaries in Volgograd, Tyumen, Chernigov and Sverdlovsk were removed in recent weeks, and activists said 6,000 peo ple gathered in front of the party headquar ters in Donetsk on Wednesday with a simi lar demand. Reformers in Saratov plan to rally Sun day to demand removal of their party lepd- ers. Voter registration will end Monday The last day to register to vote in the March 13 primary election is Monday. To register, a voter registration must be completed and received by the tax as- essor’s office by 5 p.m. Applications are available at the tax assessor's office in the county court house on Texas Avenue and E- 26th (o^ Street in Bryan, the Democratic Party of Brazos County headquarters in Green- jT| ltsl( field Plaza in Bryan, and the Republican Party of Brazos Count Harvey Road in the 1 ping Center in College Station. Applications also are available from a College Republicans table in the Com mons today from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and atSbisa Monday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. On the application, a Brazos County address must go in the space for the per manent residence address. This address must be an actual residence, not a post office box. Other information needed for the application includes a Social Se curity number, hirthdate and birthplace. Absentee polling will be available from Feb. 21 to March 9 at the Brazos County Courthouse. Additional absen tee voting that may he available will be announced next week. In the March 13 primary election, the offices that will be chosen include gover nor, lieutenant governor, attorney gen eral, comptroller and treasurer. Speaker: Eastern Europe needs course in capitalism By JULIE MYERS Of The Battalion Staff The new non-communist governments in Eastern Europe must do in months what it took the West centuries to accomplish if they want to ride the train of global capital ism and prosperity into the 21st century. Dr. Morgan Reynolds made that obser vation Thursday night at the Wiley Lecture Series-sponsored program, “The Phoenix Reborn: Will Free Market Economics Reju venate Eastern Europe?”. Reynolds said there is no semi-socialist route to a rational, consumer-responsive, efficient economic system. “Eastern Europe needs shock therapy,” Reynolds said. “They should institute pri vate property, individual rights, sound money, the rule of law, and limited govern ment. In a word, capitalism.” Some of Reynolds’ specific policy sugges tions include: • privatizing state enterprises, housing, land, all farm assets, banking and credit. • legalizing underground economic transactions. • adopting an independent judiciary. • reducing taxes to low uniform rates on production and consumption of national income. • adopting a sound monetary policy us ing convertible money. • attracting western investment with no restrictions. “In sum, trust the people,” Reynolds said. “The economy must be completely lib eralized quickly. This will proauce ‘eco nomic miracles’ on the scale of the 1948 ‘German economic miracle’ following World War II. There is a substantial history of free in terprise and liberty in central and eastern Europe, Reynolds said. Prior to World War II, Czechoslovakia was as vibrant, prosperous, sophisticated and productive as anywhere on the conti nent, Reynolds said. Forty years of social See Reynolds/Page 10 Moving mountainf Photo by Phelan M. Ehen hack Health and Physical Education Department employees Matt Shea and Johnnie Townsend, Jr. begin tearing down Mt. Aggie Thursday to make room for a new parking garage across from Rudder Tower. Eastern markets attract U.S. interest fers rage 0% ■Out for blood’ challenge Iraws to end today By CHRIS VAUGHN Of The Battalion Staff Today is the last day to donate blood for die Texas A&rM-University of Arkansas I lllood drive challenge sponsored by the American Red Cross. I Two bloodmobiles will be in front of ■udder l ower from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., and [eds are set up for donors at the Commons Tom 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. The winner of the Arkansas-A&M blood Jliallenge will be determined on a percent- |ge basis of the populations at the campuses since A&M has 25,000 more students than Arkansas. ■ Arkansas was leading the contest as of 5 p.m. Thursday. ■ Men’s and women’s residence halls at ■&M, as well as on-campus organizations, )rps of Cadets dormitories and Greek or ganizations are vying to see which will do- Tate the most blood. The winner from each iategory will receive a plaque from the Red Cross. 5S3; — J Donors can receive Domino’s Pizza and ____J|ee cups designed with OT Sarge and the words, “Aggies are out for blood for the led Cross.” ideo lore es and -90, spy .25 148 ion jur ay! With the sweeping reforms going on in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, an expert on foreign aid believes the United States will forget about Latin America. David Black, a representative of the Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture, said America will turn its eco nomic power to the recently opened markets in Eastern Europe in stead of helping its neighbors to the south. “The U.S. is going to forget about Latin America for probably 10 years,” Black said Wednesday after his speech to tne MSC SCONA XXXV convention. “Latin America will be on the back burner until there is a major war or something drastic happens.” Black, who has worked with the World Bank, the Inter-Ameri can Development Bank and in the 21-nation Organization of American States, delivered his speech about foreign aid to the Stu dent Council on National Affairs. The dismantling of the Communist party monopoly in Czecho slovakia, Poland, East Germany, Romania, and most recently, the Soviet Union has prompted the Defense Department to begin trim ming its budget. Black said more economic aid to Eastern bloc countries is possi ble now since the United States and other Western nations have a new market of skilled laborers, Black said. The amount of money earmarked for foreign assistance to Latin American countries in Congress’ 1990 fiscal budget, how ever, is not very much, Black said. Congress has appropriated $3.2 billion for foreign economic assistance out of the $14 billion allocated for foreign affairs, little of which will reach Latin America, he said. “El Salvador receives the lion’s share of that money for Latin America, too,” he said. Black said rebuilding must occur very soon in Panama or the Panamanians support for the invasion, however necessary, will sour. President George Bush said last month that the United States will provide Panama with $ 1 billion in assistance to rebuild its shat tered economy as a result of the invasion. Conservative figures, however, estimate the damage to be $2.2 billion. Black said the United States is likely to ignore Latin America until the countries lower their huge debts to other nations. Black said foreign economic assistance is important to the United States, even though he said it is unpopular with most Amer icans. “For every dollar we send to Latin America, the public sees that as a dollar less that we’re spending on our own social programs,” he said. “But, fortunately, our congressmen know that foreign assis tance ultimately helps us.” When Latin American countries receive assistance, they are more willing to buy U.S. goods and more willing to support the pol icies of the United States government, Black said. Black said the American government will have to form a long- range foreign policy plan in order for its foreign aid programs to work correctly. “Foreign aid is a function of foreign policy,” he said. “Unfortu nately, our country does not have a coherent long-range foreign policy plan. It is long past time the U.S. developed one instead of reacting to events as they happen.” Off-campus dorm offers alternative in student housing By NADJA SABAWALA Of The Battalion Staff PART 3 OF A 3-PART SERIES For A&M students wanting an alterna tive to dormitory and apartment living, University Tower could be the answer. At the corner of University Drive and Texas Avenue, University Tower is a pri vately owned building serving as a resi dence tower, hotel and conference center. Owner Leonard Ross said he believes stu dents choose to live at the tower because services and amenities offered there are un available in either dormitories or apart ments. “We help the University with their hous ing shortage and we give the students an al ternative,” Ross said. Jeff Simmons, a freshman economics See Tower/Page 10 xpert: ‘Killer bees’ will swarm into Texas, misconceptions y BILL HETHCOCK Df The Battalion Staff The sky is full of deadly insects that block xit the summer sun. The flying attackers earch for unsuspecting prey, descending swarming, stinging assaults of victims >vho struggle, shriek and swat at the lethal 3ests. As the scene ends, a victim sinks to the round, another casualty of “killer bees.” Fortunately for Texans, the arrival of the \fricanized honey bee, popularly known as he “killer bee,” will not be as dramatic as lorror movies depict, Dr. John Thomas, Texas Agricultural Extension Service ento- lologist, said. “They’re not going to cause the kind of problems that a lot of people perceive, be- ause they’ve seen too much TV or too any films about the killer bees,” Thomas aid. “They visualize these things as coming n in great swarms and stinging anything hat moves. That just doesn’t happen.” The Africanized honey bees, expected to nter South Texas in 1990 or 1991, do not ieserve the name “killer bees,” Thomas aid. However, behavioral studies of the in- ects show that when Africanized honey 'ees are disturbed at their hive, they will sting 10 times as much as do mestic honey bees, he said. “These honey bees defend their colonies, so defensive is the more accurate adjective to de scribe the Africanized honey bee,” he said. “It very actively de fends its colony. If a predator or man appears to threaten that col ony you’ll have more of the bees attack and sting, and the bees will respond more quickly.” When Africanized bees are not protecting the hive, they are no more likely to sting than the do mesticated European bees that are common in Texas now, Thomas said. Even if the Africanized bee does sting, a single sting from this bee is no more harm ful than a common honey bee sting, he said. “The venom of the Africanized honey bee is chemically identical to the European bee,” Thomas said. “The Africanized bee is a wild tropical bee with a personality prob lem compared to the gentle, domestic Euro pean bee.” Thomas said he expects the number of deaths in Texas due to honey bee stings to increase to two or three people a year when Illustration by Doug LaRue the Africanized honey bees arrive. Texas now averages one bee-related death a year, he said. The exact date of the bees’ arrival in Texas depends on weather conditions and wildflower growth, which will attract the bees into South Texas, Thomas said. Experts in the field have predicted the bees will reach the Rio Grande Valley in March 1990 at the earliest. Thomas said this is a conservative estimate of the arrival date. “My bet is that we’ll pick up the first swarms in March, April or May of 1991, based on movement and knowledge of terrain in that area,” he said. The bees are expected to mi grate north at a rate of 200 to 300 miles a year after crossing the Texas border, Thomas said. Their ability to adapt to different climates will determine how far north they will travel, he said. Most problems with the Afri canized bees will occur in urban areas, Thomas said. This is be cause there is a wider variety of flowers and plants from which bees collect pollen and nectar, and there are more places to set up colonies in cities, he said. “Bees in a city have more resources and more places to set up housekeeping in all the human structures,” he said. “Of course we don’t like to think about this, because that’s where there’s a greater probability of the bees running into people. But that’s where we’re going to nave most of our problems.” Thomas said a Texas Africanized honey bee management plan has been developed to minimize the negative impacts of the bees, and to provide the public with accu rate information. “If you do encounter a swarm, and they perceive you to be a threat, get out of the re,” Thomas said. “You can outrun a bee. Get in* a car, get in a house or zig zag through brush. “Don’t stand there and swat at them be cause they will recruit more bees from the colony. Africanized bees respond very quickly and in large numbers, and you can’t win that battle.” Africanized honey bees are a cross be tween European and African races of the honey bee, Thomas said. The bees were first crossed during breeding studies in Brazil in 1957, and have since spread throughout South and Central America and into Mexico. The leading swarm of Africanized bees is now 150 miles south of Brownsville, Thomas said.