) — Bobbv e winning led him lo n League’s Thursday will keep rs uniform tract, wish l is worth includes a «s, breaks this year, S3 million on in 19SM i $500,000 0 last year 12 straight ting streak since Bos- acted 1986 ■ were sec- tind team en eligible the 1992 arbitration million in rs offered earned [uer Rich erms with rsday. He act and ac- itation to ion-roster bed inja- make the ■ was im- >uts at Ar te want to ly way we i he Battalion Certainly Super Giants win closest Super Bowl of all time, 20-19 See Page 7 Vol. 90 No. 81 GSPS 045360 10 Pages College Station, Texas Monday, January 28, 1991 unce yes .arry Smitl is third 20- he last fivt Rockets de tberwolvei l rebounds rebounded ers with 2! Smith w :s and Ver- points and or more games and his last 3! ing scorei ie second d by and Sam the D ,, one real ■ son s 2 '" -ne’s out« -ht be sd -mpson' 1 tougli one’s $ tvouW e' tough ^ SO hopi r ‘: =e k loss mp r f ssl - at ’ " to 11^ d hope Saturda! n'e a cord a f d■ ■ U U■ ■ wC?B Whitney Young, a former drives her Acura Integra student from Austin, around the course at RICHARD S. JAMES/The Battalion Texas A&M Sports Car Club’s first autocross of the semester. Allied ground troops prepare for offensive DHAHRAN, Saudi Arabia (AP) — American ground forces will be ready to attack the Iraqi army within a month, and an air strike seems to have thwarted Iraq’s effort to flood the Persian Gulf with more oil, U.S. officials said Sunday. Massive allied bombing raids con tinued over Iraq, and in one dog fight two American warplanes downed four Iraqi fighters, they said. On the ground, U.S. Marines learned how to negotiate deadly minefields and penetrate elaborate fortifications. Afterward, they crowded around radios and tele visions for Super Bowl XXV. Defense Secretary Dick Cheney announced U.S. soldiers will be pre pared “before the end of February” to launch the ground offensive. Cheney said that although relent less allied air attacks against Iraq have been successful, they alone will not drive Iraq from Kuwait. If all servicemen and women in the region were used, such a con frontation would pit 675,000 alliec. troops, including 480,000 Ameri cans, against 540,000 Iraqi soldiers in and near occupied Kuwait. Cheney also announced U.S. forces had taken military action to stop a colossal oil spill in the north ern Persian Gulf that he blamed on Iraq. The spill, part of which was re ported burning, threatened water supplies in Saudi Arabia, where most of the U.S. forces are based, and could hinder an amphibious as sault on Kuwait, if the allies choose to launch one. Allied officials contend the slick would not hamper military opera tions in the northern gulf, where a U.S. Marine landing is considered a possibility to drive the Iraqis out of Kuwait. But other officials have said the thick sludge could gum up the engines of amphibious assault snips. Cheney left it to Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf, the commander of Operation Desert Storm, to describe the U.S. raid on the Iraqi-held facili ties in Kuwait that have been leaking millions of gallons of crude oil since last week. Schwarzkopf told reporters in Ri yadh that U.S. warplanes using “smart bombs” blew up the facilities late Saturday. He showed videotape of the F-l 11 fighter-bombers attacking a coastal linking oil fields ore loading buoy for complex of with an offs! tankers. Oil and environmental officials suggested such an attack to halt the flow of crude, which has left a slick 35 miles long and 10 miles wide. U.S. military officials have said Iraqis turned on pumps at a Kuwaiti offshore oil loading facility and fed the spill with five idle tankers hold ing a total of 125 million gallons of crude oil. A Saudi environmental official said as much as 84 million gallons of oil a day might have been pouring into the gulf, a disaster a dozen times larger than the Exxon Valdez spill in Alaska. Schwarzkopf said the videotap< indicated much less oil was flowinj from the loading buoy. Schwarzkopf said the air assault which had encountered no Iraqi re sistance, set off fires that would bun for at least another day. Environmental experts say then is no way to stop the slick. Oil, ship ping and environmental experts sai< the oil cannot not be contained be cause of the rough gulf waters, thi size of the spill and the war. Regents seek funds to make Corpus Christi 4-year college By MIKE LUMAN Of The Battalion Staff The Texas A&M University Sys tem Board of Regents agreed Friday to seek funding through the Texas Legislature to finance the transition of Corpus Christi State University to a comprehensive four-year institu tion. The vote came after a speech by State Sen. Carlos Truan, D-Corpus Christi. He told the Board that South Texas universities do not re ceive their share of state funds. “The southern region pf the state has been historically neglected,” Truan said. “If you don’t join us, you might regret it.” Board Chairman William A. McK enzie, however, told Truan he was “preaching to the choir.” McKenzie said the Board sup ports increased funding for South Texas universities, and will do every thing it can to work with several “The southern region of the state has been historically neglected. If you don’t join us, you might regret it.” — Carlos Truan, state senator South Texas institutions that have requested increased funding. Truan told the Board that South Texas has only one doctoral pro gram, compared to hundreds in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. The League of United Latin American Citizens sued the A&M and University of Texas systems in 1987, claiming they discriminate against areas of the state with large Hispanic populations. Reacting in part to the suit, the presidents of Texas A&I University and Laredo State University also asked the Board for its support. Corpus Christi State, Texas A&I and Laredo State joined the A&M System in 1989. In other business, the Board unanimously authorized the estab lishment of the A&M Health Science Center, a research and service fa cility with the College of Medicine. Richard A. DeVaul, dean of the College of Medicine, will assume the additional title of executive director of the health science center. The Board also approved the cre ation of the A&M Race and Ethnic Studies Institute and the Center for Presidential Studies, both within the College of Liberal Arts. To honor Aggies in the Middle East, the Board approved a resolu tion commending ’ A&M graduates involved in Operation Desert Storm. The resolution credits Lt. Col. George Walton, Class of ’71, with be ing the lead pilot in the first strike against Iraq Jan. 16. A&M President William Mobley told the Board that as of Friday, 57 students have withdrawn from the University after being called to ac tive military duty. Mobley said tuition will be re funded for any reservists called to duty in the Middle East. Sheriff’s office investigates professor’s disappearance By JULIE MYERS Of The Battalion Staff An investigation into the disappearance of a Texas A&M bioengineering professor by the Brazos County Sheriffs office has not yielded any information. Dr. Peter John H. Sharpe’s van was found abandoned Thursday night one-tenth of a mile from a Brazos River bridge on Highway 21 West by the Texas Department of Public Safety. Sharpe was last seen on the A&M campus Thursday at 4:30 p.m. His family already had reported Sharpe’s disappearance to the University Police De- f >artment Friday when DPS officers again ound the van and called the Sheriffs depart ment to investigate the matter, Sheriff Ron nie Miller said. Sharpe’s wife told Miller her husband had been having professional problems related to his A&M job. “I hope he’s with a friend,” Miller said. The sheriffs department took fingerprints from the van, looked for tracks and started dragging the Brazos River Saturday, Miller said. The sherrifs department will continue to drag the river one-half mile from the bridge for Sharpe’s body today. UPD is assisting in the search. Miller said there was no sign of foul play and the van seemed to be in good running condition. Dr. G. Kemble Bennett, industrial engi neering department head, said a replacement had been found to teach Sharpe’s graduate bioengineering seminar class. Bennett said he had not seen Sharpe since the beginning of the holiday break. He said he had no indication from Sharpe that any thing was bothering him. Sharpe has been at A&M since 1972 and also works for the Texas Engineering Exten sion Service as a Senior Fellow. Miller said anyone having information about the case or anyone who has seen Sharpe since Thursday afternoon is encourr aged to call the sheriffs department at 361- 4100. Black leadership conference NAACP official: Don’t judge people by their race By ISSELLE MCALLISTER Of The Battalion Staff The executive director of the NAACP implored Texas A&M students to be serious about their academic studies and not to judge people by their race. Dr. Benjamin Hooks delivered a powerful address Friday inspired by the memory of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. as part of the Southwestern Black Student Leadership Conference this weekend. Hooks said black men and women “are a great people” and can accomplish whatever they set their minds to. His message, however, was aimed at more than Blacks. Hooks said men and women of all races should strive to improve themselves and not permit racism to destroy their lives or society. People should emulate individ uals like Nelson Mandela and not fall into the trap of hatred, he said. Mandela, jailed for more than 20 years for speaking out against the South African government, did not succumb to his situation with drugs and alcohol, Hooks said. Instead, the South African civil rights leader “stretched his mind” and triumphed over oppression, Hooks said. “Don’t judge a man by the color of his skin but by the con tent of his mind,” he said. Young men and women should develop their intellects and learn all they can, Hooks said. Young people are the future of the world, he said, and should seek to expand their intellectual hori zons. “Don’t be satisfied,” he told the audience. “Always strive to be the best.” Hooks emphasized his point by using the words of Dr. King: “If you can’t be a mountain, be a hill, but be the best hill you can be. If you can’t be a tree, be a bush, but be the best bush you can be.” Hooks said he regretted that today’s students never will have a chance to listen to the great civil rights advocate. “Martin Luther King was truly a great man,” he said. “Non-vio lence is not a tactic; it is a way of life.” The audience gave Hooks a standing ovation, after which they joined hands and sang “We Shall Overcome.” Writer urges Blacks to use talents, opportunities By KATHERINE COFFEY Of The Battalion Staff Blacks in the American work force are too good to have to rely on affirmative action or quo tas, an award-winning journalist said Saturday at Texas A&M. Tony Brown, a producer, writer, educator and film director, spoke during this weekend’s third annual Southwestern Black Student Leadership Conference. Brown, host of a syndicated show on PBS, is known for his plan for the economic revitaliza tion of the black economy. “It is not a matter of affirmative action and quotas,” he said. “It is not a matter of somebody giving you anything, but it’s a matter that it’s your time in history to take advantage of your opportunities. If you rely on others, then you have conned yourself out of the competition.” Brown told the crowd that the opportunities are there if they are great and prepared. “Don’t think this is another welfare program, and all you have to do is be black,” he said. “That’s not going to work. Your place is where your talents will take you.” Blacks should not attempt to be minorities, but should train to be governors, presidents, doctors, senators and heads of major corporations. Brown said. “We are not poor, and we are not a minority,” Brown said. “We are a cultural economic market that has been trained to behave as a poor minori- ty” Brown said the United States is a culturally di verse society in which people live side by side in respect and equality. However, Blacks have to get their own identity together first, he said. “Racism can only take you hostage if you give up your soul,” he said. Black student problems are not tuition, getting through college, getting into college or being middle class because they’re already there, Brown said. He said the problem today is helping black communities. “The bottom line is our communities must come first or you have restricted your opportuni ties,” he said. “You are the best educated Afro-Americans in the world,” Brown said. “You are America’s bridge to her future or she’s not going to have a future. If America does not turn to Blacks and help train them into the work force of technolog ical capacity, then corporate America will not be able to compete with the rest of the world. “If it wasn’t for Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King and the great black men and women before them, then this meeting would not have taken place today,” he said. “They created your oppor tunities and you’re supposed to create opportu nities for the next generation. That’s what it is all about.” . ; ; j c C Don’t be satisfied. Always strive to be the best. 3 3 — Benjamin Hooks Entrepreneur stresses importance of economics By ELIZABETH TISCH Of The Battalion Staff The founder and director of one of the nation’s largest black- owned businesses said at a Texas A&M conference Saturday that “being a minority entrepreneur is like being at the tip end of a Roto- Rooter. “You don’t know where you’re going, but you’re probably not going to like it,” Joshua Smith, chief executive officer of the Maxima Computer Corp., said. Smith spoke to students from more than 100 universities and high schools during the South western Black Student Lead ership Conference. A&M was host to the annual three-day conference Thursday through Saturday. Smith, who also serves as chair- ' man of the National Committee for Minority Business Devel opment, said many people do not think Blacks can be successful in today’s business world. He said, however, minorities possess this same negative atti tude about their capabilities. “Don’t blame it on the white man,” Smith said. “We don’t even support ourselves. We don’t even buy from ourselves.” The entrepreneur said 100 years ago, Blacks progressed greatly despite oppression but are inactive in today’s business. “How can this happen under oppression, but now undef free dom, we are eroding,” Smith said. “We generate three-tenths of 1 percent in businesses.” He stressed that if a Black wants to survive , in a capitalistic world, the “them vs. us attitude” must go. “You get emotional and that doesn’t do anything,” he said. “You must create a plan.” Smith said the problem of low minority participation in business cannot be solved through social problems alone. It must be bal anced through economics. “If we put 80 percent of our energy into economic commit ment, we would solve all our problems,” he said. He said the nation’s gross na tional product of $250 billion should prove this is no poor country. “We are not a poor people,” he said. “We must stop thinking like poor people.” He told the crowd of more than 700 students and faculty members that “you must either find a job, create a job or die.” He said there are 50 million unemployed Americans today, and that before people can help each other, they must help them selves. “We must transform our dreams into reality,” he said. C i If we put BO percent of our energy into economic commitment, we would solve all our problems. 3 3 — Dr. Joshua Smith