i't'-A' . ■ T^xasA&M^J ■ ■ * • tie Battalion WEATHER TOMORROW’S FORECAST: Cloudy and sultry with a 60 per cent chance of showers HIGH: 72 LOW: 60 Vol.89 No.110 USPS 045360 12 Pages College Station, Texas Thursday, March 8,1990 unease d elsewhei mgingt lion. Iionie. K d the ion jeopj iy ANDY KEHOE 3fThe Battalion Staff >y demarc urrent ba mor a ISj k a reneit; Kohl mtl ue. and Gei :rat had ab: would c ’olandam mi confei IS ion P)-m •ed prob eners usef 3-2 steat parts a 1 ic aircnf ration, of icction ■present ng- ■ong bin, pokes® Product )t knot had bee: ive it ej oeganbej found •” of niid sends safe message fiend remembers trip, Kilroy tragedy With spring break just around the orner, students may be prone to )ver-indulge in their partying. Designed to promote a safe vaca- ion, the Texas A&M National Drug rights ofwareness Week Committee spon- ored the all-university “Spring tr and ®reak-Fest ’90” party last night at he Memorial Student Center. The rarty, as fun as it may have been, ad a rather serious message for stti- lents. As part of National Collegiate tompam D ni g Awareness Week, the party emphasized responsible decision naking and safe behavior during he University’s vacation, which be- ndicatedi S' 08 at conclusion of classes on Friday and continues through Vlarch 18. Spring Break-Fest ’90 activities in cluded music, dancing, stand-up comedy by Thursday Night Live’s ason Porter, door prizes and a pre- ientation by A&M junior engi- icering major, Bill Huddleston. Huddleston was the best friend of Jniversity of Texas student Mark Gilroy, who was one of the victims in he Matamoros, Mexico, drug-cult ilayings of spring break 1989. Hud- ^ Heston traveled to Brownsville last cear with a group of friends, includ- ng Kilroy. He is believed to have )een the last person to see Kilroy be- ore his abduction and murder. In a pre-party news conference, duddleston stressed the need for afety during spring break. “I owe it to Mark to get the mes- age out to students,” Huddleston aid. “They need to keep in mind hat bad things can happen, even to the LTV A:: p ,ant ' C • u 1 , b ofFo*P nn g break partying, offered sug- estions for a safe vacation. People who are going to drink, he aid, need to make the decison be- ie impeW ore start drinking. They need . 0 (,| e n o stay in groups, and designate a _ t |j iriver before it may be too late. Also, le said that people who are going nto Mexico need to realize that hey’re going into a foreign country. “We felt pretty safe going into datamoros late at night,” he said. We were in a group, knew what we ivere doing. It was just a freak acci dent.” Huddleston said that he still con- |iders the border town of Matamo- os, with its drug problems, to be a io spokf he best of us.’ Huddleston, realizing that stu- ents will continue the traditional Kilroy’s parents say some good has come from son’s slaying MATAMOROS, Mexico (AP) — Mark Kilroy’s disappearance a year ago during the height of spring break ended with the dis covery of a twisted cult’s “human slaugnterhouse” that stunned even seasoned lawmen. Yet Kilroy’s parents say some good has come from the ritual slaying of their 21-year-old son: greater awareness of the evils of drugs they blame for his death. Tne University of Texas stu dent dropped out of sight about 2 a.m. on March 14, 1989, while out bar-hopping with three friends in the border city. After a month-long search, his mutilated corpse was found buried at a ranch west of Matamoros. Fourteen other victims also were unearthed there and at a nearby farm. A drug-smuggling cult allegedly performed the rit ual slayings seeking magical pro tection from the law and rival smugglers. Alex Perez, sheriff of Cameron County in Brownsville just across the Rio Grande, described the scene of Kilroy’s murder as a “hu man slaughterhouse,” the most gruesome crime he has investi gated in 14 years of law enforce ment. The case still haunts him, he said. “In my life. I’ve seen a lot of it, but this was the one that got me not to sleeping at night,” he said. Several books on the Matamo ros case have been rushed to the market over the past year, includ- ing one with the title “Hell Ranch.” Kilroy’s parents said they haven’t read them. “From what people have told us, it was strictly to sensationalize what happened there rather than for people to see that from such an evil tiling that a lot of good has come out from that,” said Mark’s mother, Helen. Mrs. Kilroy said the positive re sult of her son’s death is a grow ing awareness of the dangers of drug abuse and the drug trade. She and Mark’s father, James, are writing their own book about Mark’s slaying. “In our book we intend to tell the true story, and exactly what all went on. how we felt aoout it all,” James Kilroy said. The Kilroys, who live in Santa Fe, near Houston, have waged their own war on drugs through speaking engagements and their and-drug Marlt Kilroy Founda tion. Mrs. Kilroy said they some times feel overwhelmed, “And at that point it seems like we always hear from somebody who asks us not to give up, to keep working at trying to make a difference, try ing to let people know the de- strucdon of drugs.” The slayings make up case No. 89-110 in the Fourth State Dis trict Court in Matantoros. Judge Francisco Salvador Perez has the task of sorting through the evi dence and pronouncing verdicts on the seven people accused of the murders. dangerous spot. “Looking back, I think that stu dents can have just as much fun on our side of the border,” he said. Huddleston admitted that he has heard of several people who won’t be going south for vacation because of last year’s incident. As for himself, he would find it hard to return. “I’m not saying that I’ll never go back to Matamoros, but for now it would only be a painful reminder,” he said. Huddleston, who met Kilroy dur ing high school, said he has seen some positive results come from the tradgedy. Mark’s death, he said, spurred ac tion, not words, from the govern ment. “With all of the recent action, 1 feel that Mark did not die in vain.” A year later, Huddleston said he has been able to put most of it be hind him. Being busy with school, he said he doesn’t wish to relive the ex perience. This year, he has planned a snow skiing trip to New Mexico with a friend. He said this year he will be more aware and take greater pre cautions. Chow time Students walk down the dual staircases leading to the Commons dining area for dinner Wednes- Photo by Phelan M. Ebenhack day. The dining area was closed last semester for renovations. nity indicail bund ii I Polls to close .he LT' i Corp with tin lar-evi o in ant Jy devd- jtandint airpM the of- Absentee voting will end Fri day. On-campus absentee voting in the Democratic primary will be in 146 MSC. Republican primary on-campus absentee voting will be in 138 MSC. The other three county absen tee polling sites are the Brazos County Courthouse on 26th Street in Bryan, Ben Milam El ementary School on Ridgedale Street in Bryan and the College Station School District adminis tration office on Welsh Avenue in College Station. All four precincts will have a complete list of registered voters, so voters who have moved or lost their voter registration cards and don’t know where they should vote can vote absentee. Sandinista forces provide guns for civilians JINOTEGA, Nicaragua (AP) — Sandinista leaders say they’ll hand over the government on April 25, but their local’ forces don’t appear ready to hand over their guns. The army, a party organ, is deliv ering truckloads of assault rifles to civilians in Jinotega and Matagalpa provinces who live in the poor neighborhoods the leftist Sandinis- tas regard as their “social base.” “All the barrios have guns. They are all defending their land,” Fran- cisca Castileblanco, a 52-year-old tortilla vendor, said showing off her new AK-47. High-ranking Sandinista officials in Jinotega and Matagalpa at first denied civilians were being armed. When confronted with evidence, the officials asserted they were cre ating a self-defense network to fend off possible attacks by Contra forces that the Sandinistas have been bat tling for years. But they also acknowledged that guns are going to people living on land confiscated after the 1979 revo lution, areas the party regards as its grassroots. The Sandinistas have said they will “defend the conquests of the rev olution,” including opposing any ef forts to return land to previous own ers and possibly other aspects of the conservative economic policies of the new government of President-elect Violetta Barrios de Chamorro. Officials of the United National Opposition say they won’t dislodge peasants from land that is being worked, even if it was expropriated under Sandinista rule. “There is a little tension,” ac knowledged Col. Manuel Salva- tierra, the regiotlal military com mander. “There is a lot of uncertainty about what will happen when the new government takes International observers, ‘ diplo mats and opposition officials are worried about the large-scale distri bution of weapons at a time when tensions are so high. “It’s a time bomb,” said Luis Ser rano, part of the Organization of American States observer team mon itoring Matagalpa and Jinotega provinces. Officials of the United National Opposition, the conservative coali tion that defeated the Sandinistas in the Feb. 24 elections, say they have reports of arms being distributed in several other provinces and that the issue is on the agenda for transition negotiations between the Sandinistas and UNO. UNO representatives have also met with top-ranking regional offi cials of the Sandinista party and the Sandinista army, Santiago Rivas, UNO’s legal adviser in Matagalpa, 78 miles north of Managua, said. “We’ve argued that they shouldn’t give arms to civilians,” Rivas said in an interview. “It could provoke a civil war.” Their rallies resound with politi cal battle cries such as “One Single Army,” a slogan expressing the revo lutionary goal of melding the peo ple, the party and the military into a united armed force. “They are trying to intimidate,” Rev. Eliar Pineda, a Roman Catholic priest in Jinotega whose family backed UNO, said. Sandinista gangs known as “tur- bas” have demonstrated in Jinotega, 100 miles north of Managua, and in Matagalpa since the Feb. 25 election. Intimidated UNO supporters have stayed at home rather than celebrate the coalition’s resounding victory at the polls. Correction A story in Tuesday’s edition of The Battalion incorrectly identi fied the television station that airs “Campus Journal,” a weekly news magazine produced by student TV journalists. “Campus Journal” appears on cable access channel 31. Miss Texas A&M prepares for University promotional tour By SUZANNE CALDERON Of The Battalion Staff Horn Photo by Eric H. Roalson For someone who just entered the Miss Texas A&M University Scholarship Pag eant in 1989 because she wanted to sing in front of an audience, Rhonda Jo Horn, the newly crowned Miss Texas A&M 1990-91, has come a long way. “I’ve always liked to sing, that’s why I en tered the Miss Texas A&M pageant last year,” Horn said. Horn was the first runner-up in last year’s pageant and she said that after enter ing one pageant she had to keep trying. “You get what you call the bug, the pag eant bug, and you want to keep doing it (en tering pageants) because it is so fun,” Horn said. As Miss Texas A&M, Horn will represent the University at events around the state and go on a promotional tour for A&M. “This is my last year at A&M and I want to give my final push for the University and represent them in this way because A&M means so much to me and has such a special place in my heart, that I want to give back what A&M has given to me,” Horn said. “I know that sounds like what everyone says about A&M, but I feel that many people have the same feelings about A&M.” Some students, however, feel differently about the pageant, and protested outside Rudder Auditorium before the pageant, saying that beauty pageants discriminated against women. Horn said she felt the protestors had ev ery right to protest, but felt they were a little off-the-mark. “They argued freedom of choice and that this pageant exploits women,” she said. “It was my choice and the other contestants’ choice to be in the pageant. It builds self-es teem, it builds friendships — there are a lot of advantages to this pageant. “I don’t feel exploited or that I’m a sex object or property ... I go out there because I have confidence in myself.” The argument of the protestors that the pageant is judged only on physical beauty is unjustified, Horn said. “Seventy percent of the competition is based on talent and intelligence, not physi cal beauty,” Horn said. “Thirty percent of the pageant is based on health mainte nance. “I respect their right to protest — I just regret that they were a little bit misin formed about how the pageant works.” Horn said physical beauty comes second ary to presence, poise and talent. The judges are not looking for genetic qualities that make you a beauty, she said. In the talent portion of the competition, Horn sang “Sunday Kind Of Love.” The song has been performed by Reba McIn tyre, but Horn said she performs it differ ently. “I have my own style of voice which is quite different from hers,” she said. Before the pageant, Horn said she was basically a shower singer. She said she took voice lessons in high school, but never per formed in front of an audience. Horn will be performing in front of one less audience this year because she will not be participating in the Miss Texas-America pageant as did former Miss Texas A&Ms. The Miss Texas A&M pageant defran- chised from the Miss America Scholarship Pageant due to lack of funds and a high turnover in the MSC Pageant Committee. Instead, Horn said, the MSC made a pos itive move by sending Miss Texas A&M on a promotional tour for the University. Another reason, she said, for defranchis ing is that the Miss Texas and Miss America pageants concentrate on world events and issues, and the A&M pageant has toned that aspect down. “We’ve made sure contestants were fa miliar with those types of issues, but we are concentrating more on poise, personality and basic intelligence,” Horn said. “It was more of a concentration of A&M as a uni versity and what A&M means to you.” Along with her new title, Horn is a sub chairwoman for the Aggie Muster Commit tee and a volunteer at the Rape Crisis Cen ter. Horn is a speech communications major from Seymour, Texas. Although she has been at A&M for only three years, Horn will graduate in December 1990. She said she plans on working on her teaching cer tificate in Spring 1991. Horn said she would like to go into pub lic relations or sales in the health care field, but would like to teach secondary school eventually. “There are so many things I want to do — I want to try my hand at the corporate world first, then teach later,” she said.