The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 19, 1991, Image 6

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    6 WORLD and NATION
Tuesday, February 19, 1991
The Battalion
Tuescic
Terrorist bombs rock London train stations
LONDON (AP) — A bomb exploded at
Victoria Station during morning rush hour
Monday, 45 minutes after a caller claiming
to represent the Irish Republican Army
warned of bombs at all of London’s train
stations, police said. One man was killed
and 40 people were wounded.
The explosion at 7:46 a.m. sent scream
ing commuters running from the train ter
minal, some trailing blood across the con
course. Rush-hour rail traffic was halted for
hours as police searched on their hands and
knees for clues.
No
> group immediately claimed responsi
bility for the blast at Victoria, one of Lon
don’s two main train stations.
The warning was delivered by a man
with an Irish accent who said: “We are the
Irish Republican Army. Bombs to go off at
all mainline stations in 45 minutes,”
saidScotland Yard’s anti-terrorist chief,
Commander George Churchill-Coleman.
It came less than three hours after a
bomb exploded at Paddington station, the
city’s other main station. Only a dozen em
ployees were on duty, and no one was in
jured.
Churchill-Coleman said the call was only
one of a number of threats following the
Paddington explosion, and that the others
“transpired either to be false or malicious.”
Iain McGregor, deputy chief constable of
the British Transport Police, said his de
partment gets half a dozen bomb threats a
day.
Churchill-Coleman said the warning was
passed to the British Transport Police, who
already were searching all the main railway
terminals when the blast at Victoria oc-
cured.
The bomb, which was hidden in a trash
can on the concourse, “was quite deliber
ately intended to maim and kill,” he said.
British Rail Chairman Robert Reid said
the caller’s timing may have been a deliber
ate attempt to make his warning appear to
be a hoax.
“Let’s face it, as soon as you have an inci
dent, your telephone lines are choked with
hoax calls,” Reid said in an interview on
British Broadcasting Corp. radio. “Sintt
these two incidents we’ve had hoax calls!
the way up the line.”
British Rail closed all mainline station!
af ter the bombings, suspending service that
carries half a million people into the capital
every day.
Several hours after the Victoria
Heathrow Airport, Britain’s busiest, wai
evacuated briefly Monday after police rt
ceived a vague bomb threat, an airpott
spokeswoman said. Police searched anil
found nothing.
All
say
Toi
1
The Battalion
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ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) — A bill
that would protect a woman’s right
to abortion in the event Roe vs.
Wade is overturned won final pas
sage Monday in the Maryland Legis
lature, ending intense lobbying and
a yearlong battle.
The House approved the bill on a
vote of 84-52 and sent the measure
to Gov. William Donald Schaefer,
who was expected to make it law
later Monday.
A proposed, anti-abortion “con
science amendment” to bar lawsuits
against people who refuse to refer
patients for an abortion was rejected
on a vote of 61-73.
The bill already contained a pro
vision barring such suits. It also in
cludes a parental notification provi
sion, but one that doctors may opt to
ignore.
In the hours leading up to the
House session, lobbyists for the Ro
man Catholic Church and other
anti-abortion groups sought support
for the amendment, which would
have sent the measure back to the
Senate.
The Senate approved the bill Feb.
11 on a vote of 29-18.
The bill was at the center of a
year-long legislative fight over at
tempts by pro-choice legislators to
write into Maryland law key el
ements of the U.S. Supreme Court’s
Roe vs. Wade decision. The move
was launched in response to indica
tions the high court might reverse
the Roe vs. Wade ruling.
Both houses of the Legislature are
heavily dominated by Democrats
and have tended to be pro-choice on
abortion in recent years. Last year,
an abortion rights bill was killed by a
filibuster in the Senate after the bill’s
supporters failed by just one vote to
get a two-thirds majority to cut off
debate.
The pro-choice bill grants adult
women unrestricted access to abor
tions up to the time when a fetus is
able to survive outside the womb.
After that, abortions could be per
formed only to protect a woman’s
health or in cases where the fetus is
deformed.
The measure also includes what
both sides agree is a weak parental
notification clause. It requires that at
least one parent must be notified
when an underage girl seeks an
abortion. Doctors would be allowed
to ignore the requirement if they
deemed it to be in the best interests
of the girl.
“Only Connecticut has passed a
pro-choice bill since Webster,” said
Delegate Samuel I. Rosenberg, D-
Baldmore, referring to a U.S. Su
preme Court decision in 1989 that
allowed states to restrict access to
abortions.
Karyn Strickler, director of the
state chapter of the National Abor
tion Rights Action League, de
scribed the measure as “a step back
ward.” She complained that the
parental notification provision could
force some teen-agers into risking il
legal abortions.
“To view this bill as a very liberal
bill is simply erroneous,” she said.
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SCOTT D. WEAVERThe Battalic
Showing the colors
Leanne South, an editorial assistant for the U.S. flag at a pro-troops rally held on the Texas
Texas Transportation Institute, peers around her A&M campus early last Saturday morning.
Marines prepare for landing
Seaborne assaults have roots in ancient warfare
WASHINGTON (AP) — An am
phibious landing on the oil-stained(
shores of Kuwait would be the larg
est such undertaking since Gen.
Douglas MacArthur ordered 40,000
troops into action at Inchon harbor
in Korea 40 years ago.
Amphibious warfare, attacking
from the sea, is a weapon honed on
the seawalls of Inchon, the bullet-
torn coral of the Pacific and the gale-
lashed rocks of Normandy.
Dress rehearsals for a seaborne in
vasion of Kuwait have been under
way for months on the beaches of
friendly nations nearby. A task force
of about 17,000 Marines is poised on
ships in the Persian Gulf, backed by
a flotilla of support vessels.
The operation they have been
practicing requires precision.
It uses bombing runs and battle
ship guns to beat up targets on
shore, landing craft to bring in
troops, helicopter gunships and low-
flying jets to support them, special
equipment to clear away mines and
obstacles, and tanks, armored vehi
cles and howitzers to drive the attack
home.
Amphibious landings have their
03805001 roots in the warfare of an
cient times. The Persians brought an
army in by sea to face the Athenians
at Marathon in 360 B.C.
Amphibious war in the modern
world dates from one of the darkest
episodes of World War I — the Brit
ish attempt in 1915 to force a pas
sage up the Dardanelles, the narrow
I
Balance of Power in the Gulf i
Th« U.S.-donwiatad 2fl-a*6oo lore* In thn n Gutf to •nmctmi tc
rtav« a strvngtti at mot* man 550, OCX) pnreonnaJ by tha and at
January. Iraq haa an a«imaia<1 510.000 troop* in occupiad Ktnntot
and yxitham Iraq and has metotoxad tana ot mouaands mora man.
IRAQ
I U.S.
allies
N
Troop* I
$55,000
regular army
jtSO.OOO resarvaa
m iN KUWAIT
m 290,000
dspioysd
m 230,000 in
soumarn Iraq
I 370.000
(430.000
profactad *n
tha fottowing
waa*»)
254.430
Tftnfcs
5.500 Including:
■ 500 T-72s
■ 1,000 T-52a
1.000
(approx.)
1,570
(appro*.)
^fl
Como— ;
Ata-cran
700
800
444
(appro*)
No significant
navy
80
(appro*.)
95
(approe*.)
Me**: Tunu**» troop* no* mcA>d*d. Ph*n** by o+tm com**— la
Turfcay no* ncAA—d
straits that separate European and
Asiatic Turkey.
Major amphibious landings were
ordered at Gallipoli in April follow
ing the sinking or disabling of six
British and French warships in an
undetected mine field.
Once ashore, the British, Austra
lian and New Zealand troops were
plagued by the mistakes of their
commanders and bogged down in
murderous trench warfare. They
never broke out of their beachheads.
London withdrew its forces in
January 1916; British casualties to
taled 214,000. Amphibious landings
as a method of war were largely dis
credited.
But in the United States, Gallipl
was seen in a more positive lig. 1
The Marine Corps, attempting li
carve out a future role for itsfi
viewed Gallipoli in terms of posst
ties not failure.
In 1921, Maj. Gen. JohnJ.li
Jeune, then the Marine Corps co:
mandant, recognized the grom;
military power of Japan and cot
missioned a study that resulted
the first detailed plans for ample
ious operations in the Pacific.
Lejeune was convinced that 6
failure at Gallipoli was due to thee
competence of commanders andr
the nature of amphibious waritst
according to Edward L. Bead*
1986 history of the U.S. Navy.
By 1929, it was accepted that
Marines’ role was to provide anit
phibious assault force to seize
occupy overseas bases.
By the mid-1930s, the corps hi-
landing operation doctrine and*-
developing flat-bottomed lands
craft, modern attack aircraft
amphibious tanks. It also
mounted a series of landing esf
cises.
After Pearl Harbor, all of this*
put to the test of war.
Beginning at Guadalcanal ini
gust 1942, the Marines and theNi
conquered the Pacific in a series*
amphibious assaults, most of th
fiercely opposed by Japanese tm
who preferred death to surrendet
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International Experience
See - Peace Corps represen
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9:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.
or call 845-1496.
Spring Break!
Cancun
Suspects in church robbery remain in custody
Officer arrests seven in high-speed chast
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WHEAT RIDGE, Colo. (AP) —Five men and
two women — all Vietnamese — were being held
in a Kansas jail Monday under suspicion in a
weekend robbery and shooting at a Vietnamese
Catholic church here, officials said.
Five were from Houston and one from the
Houston suburb of Pasadena.
One member of the group had “provided
some information in regards to the shooting and
robbery at the church,” Randall Jones, Colby,
Kan., chief of police, said.
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The group, driving in two cars, was stopiped by
a Kansas Highway Patrol officer about 9 a.m.
Sunday for driving in excess of 90 mph, Jones
said. After running a check on driver’s licenses,
one of the men, Hoang Nguyen, 20, was found to
be wanted by Houston authorities for a Feb. 8
robbery and shooting at a residence there.
“He was supposedly armed and dangerous,”
Jones said.
Also held by Kansas authorities Monday were:
Tai Kim Pham, 22, of Denver; Vinh Tran
Nguyen, 20, of Houston; Khai Kinh Nguyen, 20,
Houston; Tarn Hoang Nguyen, 18, Houston;
and two women identified as Lily Nguyen, 20, of
Houston, the wife of Hoang Nguyen; and Joo
Yum Back, 19, of Pasadena, Texas.
Aside from the Texas felony warrant for the
arrest of Hoang Nguyen, Jones said, there have
been no charges filed against seven people.
The seven were being held at the Thomas
County Law Enforcement Center in Colby. Jones
said diamond rings, gold jewelry and money
were found in the car. A red ski mask and four
handguns were found under the hood of one of
the cars, tucked into an engine part, he said.
The jewelry, some with initials and names in
scribed, matched the description of some that
were taken during the church robbery here,
Jones said.
Wheat Ridge Police were en route to Col*
Monday afternoon to investigate, said Peg?
Rowlett, a spokeswoman of the Wheat RidgeF
lice Department.
A gang of Asian gunmen stormed the Que
of Vietnamese Martyrs Catholic Church just £
ter midnight Saturday, shot a handyman i
robbed about 30 members. Parishioners nf
cleaning up after a Vietnamese new year’s cel*,
bration.
The Nguyen, 57, a volunteer at the chuft
was hit by a shotgun blast during the attack, D* 1
tors amputated his right leg and he was in sent
condition Monday at St. Anthony Hospital Cf
tral in Denver.
Several other parishioners were treated
minor wounds after they were pistol-whipped
the robbers.
Jones said Kansas authorities heard news
ports of the Wheat Ridge robbery and shoe
Monday morning and called police there.
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