6 ' '.X,', The Battalion The Heisman chase comes to final review BYU’s Detmer, ND’s Rocket make last bids See Page 7 Vol. 90 No. 59 USPS 045360 1 0 Pages College Station, Texas Monday, November 26, 1990 The Battalia assic this iati, Kent i State. ticipate oi s past suit- ng camps iter m M •ison ovei CLA. ERIC H. ROALSON/The Battalion The Bolshoi Ballet-Grigorovich Company has captivated audi ences with their premiere this weekend just as Texas A&M has captivated the company, interpreter Ellen Zelidin {above left) translates for Oksana Konobeyeva who plays Marie and Dmitry Tuboltsev who plays the Nutcracker Prince while they look at a group of pictures of the dancers in The Battalion. (Left) Dancer German Rubchikhin smokes an American cigarette backstage after Friday’s debut. Tickets are still available for performances this week. The MSC Box Office has more information at 845- 1234. For complete coverage of the world premiere, please see pages 4 and 5. Walesa leads Polish election Polls predict runoff WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Lech Walesa, who united Poles in their struggle against communism, won the initial round in Poland’s first popular presidential election Sun day but appeared headed for a run off, according to state TV exit polls. The Solidarity chief had 41 per cent of the vote, a 2-to-l lead over Prime Minister Tadeusz Mazowiecki and political unknown Stanislaw Tyminski, according to the polls. The polls indicated Mazowiecki and Tyminski each had 20.5 percent of the vote, far ahead of the remain ing three candidates. It was a stunning setback for Ma zowiecki, a former Walesa ally who instituted unpopular economic aus terity measures after taking Poland’s first postwar non-Communist gov ernment. Pollsters questioned every 20th voter at 404 polling places around the country, or up to 15,000 people. The results were issued on nation wide TV minutes after the polls closed at 8 p.m. (1 p.m. CST) Sun day. The poll indicated that farmers, who represent 40 percent of Polish society, deserted Mazowiecki en masse. Only 4 percent of the farm vote went to the prime minister, accord ing to the poll. Farmers have been angry at the abolition of guaranteed prices for their produce under the government’s shock economic re form plan. If no one wins 50 percent in the vote, a runoff must be held between the two top vote-getters Dec. 9. At Mazowiecki national headquar ters in Warsaw, a spokeswoman said Walesa seemed far ahead in several areas around the country but that supporters were not discouraged. Walesa himself expressed opti mism after voting in Gdansk with his wife, Danuta, and their second son, 18-year-old Slawek. “I voted for the candidate who is supposed to win,” he said, smiling. “Tyminski conducted an American-standard campaign, breaking every rule.” — Ryszard Legutko, political commentator Mazowiecki walked to the polling station in his central Warsaw neigh borhood, accompanied by his daughter-in-law wheeling his 4- month-old granddaughter in a strol ler. “I am happy it stopped raining. Otherwise the turnout would have been much worse,” said the prime minister, the East bloc’s first non- Communist head of government. Tyminski had been considered a dark-horse candidate. An emigre businessman, he returned to Poland this fall after 21 years in Canada and Peru. “Tyminski conducted an Ameri can-standard campaign, breaking every rule,” political commentator Ryszard Legutko said on state tele vision. During the campaign he was accused of slander for charges that Mazowiecki had committed treason against the nation. The new president will take over from President Wojciech Jaruzelski, the Communist general who or dered martial law to crush Solidarity and imprisoned Walesa and Mazo wiecki in December 1981. He also is expected to receive the symbols of authority from the still- existing World War II government in exile in London, which never rec ognized the Soviet-backed state. Walesa, 47, is the charismatic leader of Solidarity, the first inde pendent labor federation in the So viet bloc, which led the anti-Commu- nist rebellion. He contends even more reforms are needed more quickly or a social explosion is com ing. History professor chosen for Advisory Committee By TROY HALL Of The Battalion Staff mmedi 316 ' ,s led * ie in earn' 1 i mart ninge Four Israelis killed; gunman escapes 3lemen$i r your Itf" ’nttowM 1 By n^'l not g etl:: ' im.tttt'" Cleif f i iroatf;'. sornetl 1111 ' g to Itt 111 king tfjl em ^ EILAT, Israel (AP) — A lone gunman slipped across the Egyptian border Sunday and fired an auto matic rifle at a bus and three military vehicles, killing four Israelis and wounding 27, the army said. The attack was the third from Arab territory in two days. At least four Palestinian guerrillas were killed and two Israeli soldiers in jured in other incidents in Israel’s self-declared security zone in south ern Lebanon and off the Mediterra nean coast. The dead in the border attack, three soldiers and a civilian bus driver, were shot on a road running along the Israeli-Egyptian border about 15 miles northwest of the Is raeli Red Sea resort of Eilat, the army said. It said most of the wounded were civilian workers at an Israeli air base. The gunman, who was described as wearing a uniform, escaped back into Egypt. He was shot by an Israeli security guard and trailing blood, the army said. An Israeli army patrol chased him, firing, but did not pursue him across the frontier, the army said. A senior Egyptian security source in Cairo said an Egyptian border po liceman stationed in the area had been arrested as the suspected assail ant. Israel army radio said the assail ant’s blood-stained flak jacket with “Allah” written on it was found in the area. It said the attack was claimed by the Moslem fundamen talist group Islamic Holy War-Jeru- salem in a statement issued in Am man, Jordan. Israeli and Egyptian reports said the attacker was armed with the So viet-designed Kalashnikov assault ri fle. The gunman fired intermittently for about a half-hour as vehicles drove along the road, the national news agency Itim said. Apparently he remained undiscovered because drivers were unaware of what hap pened or thought a traffic accident had occurred. Egypt and Israel have been at peace since 1979, and the border is less heavily defended than other Is raeli frontiers. Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir called on Egypt to capture and pun ish the assailant and to prevent fur ther attacks. Egyptian Foreign Minister Esmat Abdel-Meguid called the attack “very regrettable” and said he hoped it would not affect relations between the two countries. Also Sunday, a pipe bomb ex ploded at a bus stop Jerusalem but no one was injured, police said. A Texas A&M University history professor recently was appointed to serve on the Advisory Committee on Naval History. Dr. Betty Unterberger was se lected from distinguished U.S. histo rians, librarians, curators and ar chivists to serve on the nine-member committee. The selection process took about three months, Unterberger says. “Nominees had to fill out many long and involved forms to be sure there are no competing business in terests or anything that might impair objectivity,” she says. Although Unterberger has not re ceived all the information concern ing her committee duties, she relates this appointment to other distin guished committees on which she served in the past. While serving on the Historical Advisory Committee to the Depart ment of the Army and Department of State, Unterberger advised the committee about many different topics. “I really did a lot of advising and the advice was seriously considered by the committee,” she says. “I was usually sent a great deal of material before meetings so I could familiar ize myself with issues and problems, so I could be in a position to offer suggestions and advice.” She has been particularly inter ested in declassifying government documents since graduate school. While serving as chairwoman of the U.S. State Department Historical Advisory Committee, Unterberger labored to secure legislation making government documents more acces sible. “The year I chaired the state de partment committee was the year the Department of State introduced a totally new program of declassifi- “I really did a lot of advising and the advice was seriously considered by the committee.” — Betty Unterberger, history professor cation,” Unterberger says. “The pro gram was onerous, and I knew it would seriously inhibit the efforts of scholars to do research on American foreign relations about issues that were of crucial importance. “I spent a great deal of time mak ing every effort to try to modify the process so it would not be so oner ous, so there would be greater op portunity for scholarly access to im portant documents.” She says she believes the Freedom of Information Act has not helped a great deal to secure more rapid de- classification or broader declassifica tion of government documents. She also says scholars and journal ists could write more authentic work if they had access to these important documents. Unterberger says she hopes her appointment to the Advisory Com mittee on Naval History will put her once again in a position to influence changes in the declassifying process. She says she believes the same problems obtaining government documents will arise while on the Advisory Committee. Unterberger’s interest in interna tional history has earned her a repu tation as a prolific international writer. Her newest book, “The United States, Revolutionary Russia and the Rise of Czechoslovakia,” published by the University of North Carolina Press, has been well received by his tory experts in both Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union. Dr. Betty Unterberger “I received a letter from the Soviet Union, which had indicated they were very impressed with it, and they were going to immerse them selves in it for ‘purposes of self-crit icism,”’ she says. She says her latest book has gener- JAY JANNER/The Battalion ated considerable interest from many A&M students. Unterberger says she looks for ward to working on the nine mem ber Advisory Committee, which will have its first meeting early next year in Washington, D.C. Pan-Hellenic Council receives charter By TROY HALL Of The Battalion Staff The Texas A&M Pan-Hellenic Council now is integrated with similar college councils nation wide after receiving its charter from the National Pan-Hellenic Council. The A&M Pan-Hellenic Council was honored with the national charter during November’s re gional convention in Houston, making the coun cil officially part of the national organization. A&M’s council is the governing body of five service fraternities and sororities. Fraternities under the Pan-Hellenic Council are Alpha Phi Alpha and Kappa Alpha Psi. Soro rities affiliated with the council are Alpha Kappa Alpha, Delta Sigma Theta and Sigma Gamma Rho. The A&M Pan-Hellenic Council coordinates activities between service fraternities and sorori ties much like the Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic Councils, Felicia James, student ac tivities adviser for the A&M Pan-Hellenic Coun cil, says. “The three governing bodies of the Greek sys tem have been working together to program dif ferent things as a Greek body,” she says. The organization has been recognized by the University since 1989 although it only recently received its national charter. James says official recognition by the national office is just a formality since the council has been fully operational since it was recognized by A&M. Receiving the national charter shouldn’t change the way the council is operated, she says. “Each Pan-Hellenic Council on each campus is different, is run autonomously and is tailored to the campus’s culture,” James says.