Texas ASdVI Battalion Spiking the wine □ A&M has a men’s volleyball team? □ Messina Hof toasts season’s new wine. See Page 4 'ol. 90 No. 51 USPS 045360 10 Pages College Station, Texas Monday, November 12, 1990 to double .S. gulf forces ■ WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi- ■ent Bush decided to nearly double Hf.S. forces in the Persian Gulf as a Hgnal to Iraq — and the rest of the ■odd — that "the United States has Biore than enough firepower to »rce Saddam Hussein out of Kuwait lnecessary, U.S. officials said. “We had to show the international immunity we were serious,” one of- cial said. The decision also was prompted y Bush’s determination to match iddam’s own military buildup, the fficials said. The officials, who spoke on the ndition of anonymity, said Bush’s ecision to send in more troops and quipment was not made overnight, ut evolved over a period of weeks. “The situation has been evaluated nd re-evaluated as time went on,” ne official said. The administration announced T hursday that massive ground, sea nd air reinforcements would be dded to the combat power already n the gulf region. That could mean is many as 200,000 new forces will added to the some 230,000 U.S. nilitary personnel already there. ush said they were needed for in “adequate offensive military op- ion” — words chosen carefully as a ignal to Hussein. U.S. forces now in place in Saudi Irabia and on ships m the gulf al- I leady had a limited offensive capa- I fcility, officials said. But they said the I president wanted to send a forceful I lew message to Saddam by em- 1 Ihasizing the word “offensive.” H I Bush’s decision to bolster U.S. J torces was motivated, in part, by |||1 Saddam’s own buildup in sending |lfj| Nearly half of his million-strong army to face the United States across the Saudi border. Saddam’s dogged refusal to yield to world condemnation, or to four months of international economic sanctions, was also a factor in Bush’s decision to up the stakes. It wasn’t that Bush decided at some point that the economic sanc tions weren’t having an impact, aides said. “We’ve always placed an emphasis on the sanctions,” one official said. But, he added, “we want to maintain our credibility.” “The sanctions are not changing his (Saddam’s) mind, even though they are having an effect on his so ciety,” the official said. “The degree of seriousness with which Saddam takes international efforts is ques tionable.” The United States also is caught between conflicting pressures — be ing urged by Britain, Saudi Arabia and Turkey to put more emphasis on military action and by the Soviet Union to exercise restraint. “The Soviets are the lynch pin of the coalition,” one official said. Soviet leaders have acknowledged that force “could not be ruled out” but said they prefer to give diplo macy more time before pulling the trigger. However, Secretary of State James A. Baker III noted that the in ternational consensus against Iraq was “solid and unified” as he ended a seven-nation diplomatic mission last week to shore up support for po tential military action in the gulf. Sending new reinforcements into the region, but announcing that they would take up to two months to get there, was Bush’s way of trying to ac commodate both sides. Rockin’ in the field house Photo by DENNIS SANCHEZ The Indigo Girls, Amy Ray (left) and Emily Saliers, performed at Deware Field House. Please see a review of the concert in the their brand of folk-rock music for about 1,300 fans Saturday night Lifestyles section on page 5. Japan prepares to enthrone new emperor j ■ r H 0 3 > ® §* 2 o 1 rt> o H i 2 £ 3 £ i TOKYO (AP) — In a solemn, centuries-old ite at Tokyo’s Imperial Palace, Emperor Akihito formally accedes to the (Chrysanthemum Throne |>n Monday, becoming the first Japanese mon- rch enthroned as a symbol and not a living god. Clad in ancient court costume, seated atop an llaborate lacquered platform under a curtained anopy encrusted with gold phoenixes and circu- r mirrors, Akihito will face a courtyard lined ith ceremonial banners. Next to him on a smaller platform will be Em- ress Michiko. Prime Minister Toshiki Kaifu will ad the 2,500 guests in three cheers of “Banzai!” |-“May you live ten thousand years!” Critics say the 30-minute ceremony — and a cries of accompanying rites to be held in coming eeks — are based too closely on the traditional eligious rituals used for Akihito’s father and randfather, who were enthroned as living gods. Under Japan’s postwar constitution, the em- eror is simply a national symbol. Leftist radicals have vowed to disrupt the cere- aonies and have claimed responsibility for a se- ies of bombings and arson attacks in recent eeks. Two bombs exploded Sunday at the house of I.S. Consul General Gregory L. Johnson in Ni- shinomiya, in western Japan. Police said they Monarch to be treated and Princess Diana. as a symbol, not god RHA to sponsor week of multicultural activity caused little damage and no injuries. It was not immediately clear whether the explosions were connected with the enthronement. The government is reportedly spending $95 million on the rites, much of it for security. Op ponents say state funding of the ceremonies, linked to Japan’s indigenous Shinto religion, vio lates the constitutional separation of religion and state. In one controversial element of the rite, Akihi to’s raised dais is said to be patterned after one used by the sun goddess, from whom tradition says the Japanese imperial line is descended. Critics say that is an implied symbol of divinity. A record 37,000 police, including reinforce ments from a majority of Japan’s 47 prefectures, have been mobilized for security surrounding the rite. Dignitaries from 158 countries expected to at tend the ceremony include Vice President Dan Quayle, United Nations Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar, Supreme Soviet Chairman The government has not released the names of Japanese dignitaries invited to the ceremony, because of fear of radical attacks on their homes or businesses. On Sunday, police vehicles lined the entrances to the palace, hotels and other key areas, and of ficers checked the bags of passers-by. Manholes were sealed near the palace and police used a low-flying blimp to search for signs of terrorist activity. Frogmen searched the moats surround ing the palace. Riot police buses and trucks with water cannon stood guard. Officers stopped passing cars, checking licenses and using mirrors to look un derneath some vehicles. Traffic was sharply restricted or halted along highways and in areas around the palace, but few tie-ups were reported, in part because enthrone ment day was declared a national holiday and many Tokyoites took advantage of the three-day weekend to leave town. Airlines reported many flights were booked close to capacity. Akihito became emperor immediately upon the death of his father, Emperor Hirohito, in January 1989, but a period of mourning was ob served before his formal enthronement. By ELIZABETH TISCH Of The Battalion Staff ransplant recipient emembered by friends * H 0 <4 0 | \ ft s % 5 J % * 0 im WHITE SETTLEMENT (AP) — |For almost seven years, Stormie Jones battled to live a life free of the Imedical complications and media Jglare that had resulted from her his- |tory-making heart-liver transplant. That fight ended Sunday when Ithe 13-year-old died in a Pittsburgh Ihospital where she had been flown jSaturday after complaining of flu- llike symptoms. Stormie, who didn’t like all the at- Stention focused on her, wanted Jmore than anything to be treated |like a normal teen, friends said. ‘She wished everybody would Itreat her normal instead of like she [had an operation, because she didn’t [like everybody asking her how she [felt or if she was feeling OK,” Crystal [Millikan, Stormie’s best friend, said. “Nobody in the world was as sweet lor kind as her,” Crystal said. There’ll be nobody like her.” Stormie made medical history on [Valentine’s Day 1984 when she be came the world’s first heart-liver [transplant at the age of 6. The oper- [ation was necessary because she was [born with a congenital condition that [left her cholesterol levels 10 times [higher than normal. Before the first transplant, itormie suffered two heart attacks md underwent two triple coronary )ypass operations. She had no serious complications From the first transplant until Octo- ;r 1988, when doctors at Children’s [Hospital in Pittsburgh removed a >ile duct obstruction. Hepatitis dam- iged that liver, and this year she re turned to Pittsburgh and received a second liver on Feb. 20. In July, she was again treated for hepatitis, which damaged her second trans planted liver. Doctors, family and friends often marvelled over Stormie’s determin ation to recover from each of the set backs caused by liver rejection, med ication changes and a host of other illnesses. “I guess it’s just hope. There’s a thing in the back of your head that says, ‘Get up,”’ Stormie once told re porters. “I just wanted more for her,” said Crystal’s mother, Teresa Millikan, who spearheaded efforts to raise funds for Stormie’s expenses. “She deserved more. She was God’s walk ing angel. She touched so many peo ple’s hearts.” “I’m going to miss her a lot,” Crys tal said Sunday afternoon at the apartment complex where her fam ily and Stormie’s lived in this suburb of Fort Worth. Friends shielded Stormie’s sister, Misty, from the media Sunday. “We got so close to the family,” Kenneth Millikan, Crystal’s father, said. “It’s real rough.” Crystal, also 13, said she and Stormie often went to the mall, went “cruising” or had sleepovers. In the last week or so, Crystal said Stormie gave her a poster she had drawn with a bear and jack-in-the- box with the caption “Friends are forever.” Crystal said when Stormie gave her the poster, she said, “Don’t forget me.” §■» isj rn i 1 Sillwi » HUY THANH NGUYEN/The Battalion Seven-year-old Jacob Siever waits for the start of the 5-mile portion of Beta Theta Pi’s Race for Life at the A&M Research Park Sunday. The event benefits Young Life of Brazos Valley. Texas A&M Residence Hall Asso ciation is sponsoring multicultural week with events scheduled Tuesday through Friday. “Cornucopia of Cultures” specif ically was designed to create multi cultural awareness among residence halls. RHA Director of Programs Kathy Hopkins says although there aren’t necessarily any problems among stu dents living in residence halls, multi- culturalism does exist and people should be aware of it. “Our point is trying to create an awareness, and we are targeting the residence halls because RHA is al ways trying to improve life in the halls,” she says. “And this is just one way of doing this.” - “Cornucopia of Cultures” will be gin with a reception for campus leaders at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at Rud der Exhibit Hall. Aggie Cinema’s in ternational movie “Kagemusha,” co sponsored by RHA, will follow. Stu dents with an activity sticker can re ceive a discount on tickets to the movie. RHA will feature a forum Wednesday to address campus-re lated multicultural issues as well as ways to unify the student body. The forum will be led by a student panel. Hopkins says he hopes the event will allow problems dealing with multiculturalism to surface so stu dents can put a stop to them. The forum will be at 8:30 p.m. in 601 Rudder. Voices of Praise will perform at noon Thursday in the MSC Flag- room. Later that evening, a cultural entertainment extravaganza featur ing a variety of dance and musical groups will be from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Flagroom. The Second Annual Multicultural Drive-In Workshop, sponsored by the Department of Student Affairs, will take place Friday and marks the end of “Cornucopia of Cultures.” The workshop will focus on cre ating a multicultural environment in residence life. For more information call the RHA Office at 845-4768. Soviets retain guns illegally after decree MOSCOW (AP) — Law enforce ment authorities estimate that Sovi ets have 3.6 million illegal guns in their hands, leaving the increasingly restive population “armed to the teeth,” a newspaper reported Sun day. The article in Komsomolskaya Pravda was the latest in a series of re ports about rising lawlessness in the country and appeared less than a week after a gunman opened fire in Red Square while President Mikhail S. Gorbachev and other leaders were reviewing Revolution Day festivities. Four months ago, Gorbachev or dered illegal firearms to be turned in, but the newspaper reported widespread disobedience of the de cree, with the Interior Ministry say ing that individuals surrendered only 20,100 guns, 700,000 rounds of ammunition and 3 tons of explo sives. Of the 3.6 million illegal firearms in circulation, 25,000 are rifles, the Interior Ministry said. The article was a follow-up to a re port in Komsomolskaya Pravda last week in which the newspaper of fered to buy firearms from black marketeers while keeping their names confidential. Since the Communist Youth League newspaper began its offer in late October, it reported it has been offered “whole arsenals of various types of modern weapons,” includ ing heavy machine guns, hand gre nades, grenade launchers, portable anti-tank launchers and “a railway car full of weapons.” “Our impression is the country is armed to the teeth,” correspondent D. Muratov wrote. The newspaper said it had turned its investigation over to Gorbachev, who has deemed it “very important,” and forwarded it to Defense Min ister Dmitri Yazov, Interior Minister Vadim Bakatin and other officials. Weapons are stolen not only from arsenals, but also from armament factories, assembled or in pieces, the newspaper reported. In addition, weapons that are deemed obsolete or irreparable are intercepted by black marketeers before they can be destroyed, it said. In a separate report Sunday, the Communist Party newspaper Pravda said police captured three service men who had deserted from an Inte rior Ministry unit in Omsk with three submachine guns, five revolv ers and a large amount of ammuni tion that may have been headed for the black market. Gorbachev’s order on surren dering illegal weapons appeared to be aimed at armed volunteers in such ethnic trouble spots as Armenia and Azerbaijan, where nearly 500 people have been killed.