'Pump Boys and Dinettes' - review by Julia E.S. Spencer Planetary Grub replaces Pa Taq page 5 The Eighth Annual National Night Out Celebration The Battalion bl. 90 No. 179 USPS 045360 6 Pages College Station / Texas "Serving Texas A&M since 1893" Thursday, August 1, 1991 dlson J nd orbachev's plan retains communist ideals, expert says By Greg Mt.Joy The Battalion Mikhail Gorbachev's new Commu nist platform, recently approved by the party's central committee, is a move to renovate a sagging party image, not a rejection of communism, a Texas A&M international affairs expert said Wednesday. Cory Ortigoza, a research associate at the A&M Mosher Institute for De fense Studies, said Gorbachev is not dropping Communism but challenging its stagnant leadership. "The Central Committee has become a refuge of old thinking," Ortigoza said. "This new platform may provoke a split in the party." Ortigoza said the Communist party is no longer a real political entity but a collection of three or four different fac tions. "It's like a husband and wife that share a bed, but aren't really married anymore," he said. "There is so much diversity in the party, that it can't really be called a party." Ortigoza said 4 or 5 million Soviets have left the party in the last year, prompting Gorbachev to ask for change within the party. "Gorbachev is using the argument that the nation's people no longer trust theparty to demand change," he said. The new platform is more along the lines of a Western European social de mocracy, Ortigoza said. He said the new platform would cre ate a more liberal stance for the party, including more freedom of religion and the press. The need for a mixed econ omy and private property was also rec ognized. The platform received the approval of the Central Committee last week and will go to the Soviet Congress in November. Ortigoza said the hardliners in the committee were reluctant to approve the platform but were given little choice by Gorbachev. "The leadership does not back the reforms," he said. "Gorbachev saw this and told them to look at the alterna tive, radical reform under Russian President Boris Yeltsin. He told them they had to follow him or face the con sequences." Ortigoza said, however, the plat form's approval would only buy the Soviet president short-term security. "There are many unanswered long term questions," he said. "It remains to be seen for how long Gorbachev has si lenced his critics." Ortigoza said dissatisfaction with Gorbachev could reach the same level as in April, when Central Committee members called for his ouster. "Trouble could erupt in November," he said. "If there is a bad harvest, and it appears there will be, the mood in Moscow could change." Change could come in the form of a new political party, Ortigoza said. "Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze hopes his Movement for Democratic reform becomes a party when Congress opens in September," he said. "This will be the thing to watch in the Soviet Union." Ortigoza said although dozens of po litical parties have sprung up recently, none has a viable chance to oppose the Communist party. "The communists are everywhere," he said. "They control everything, and no other group has had a prayer against them. Shevardnadze's alterna tive party, however, could be the straw that breaks the camel's back." Ortigoza said a new party could draw as many as 7 million Soviets away from the Communist party. "This is only the opening challenge," he said. "We may soon see the total re shaping of politics in the Soviet Union." budget at ighout ft iy in high: Vertigo Bentley Tibbs, a senior environmental design major from Mississippi, works on a project in the Langford Architecture Center Wednesday. off ore hree mail 1 ed with a mit on an- said. tax monel 1 gi ve it . ; ! educate e areas in fl ch is W San Antonio conference Staff members plan to attend DWI talk By Susan Maguire troversial one, Dennis said Tho UnHniirm Texas has several ways to deal ^ ° with DWI and education is one of them. Severn! Texas A&M staff members will participate in a "In Texas, DWI offenders national safety conference fo- have to take a safety course af- cusing on the problems of ter they're caught," he said, drinking and driving and de- "It's been found that 50 per- priving high school dropouts cent of those who take the of their driver's licenses. course are less likely to be Dr. Maurice Dennis, coordi- reanested for DWI." nator of A&M's Safety Educa- The discussion on denying tion Program and director of dropouts their driver's li the Texas host committee, said censes will help legislators de- the 35th American Driver and termine the best way to ad- Traffic Safety Education Asso- dress the dropout rate, Dennis ciation Conference (ADTSEA) said, is expected to attract more than 500 safety professionals "Few people know that de- from across the nation. n ying licenses to dropouts un der 18 has been in effect in The conference will be in Texas for about two years," he San Antonio from Aug. 11 to said. 14. "It is an incentive to keep The topic of how to handle people in school, but they drinking and driving is a con- See Dusty/Page 4 Committee OKs lottery Fight erupts over which stores sell tickets; opponents hope to kill bill before House AUSTIN (AP) — A House committee Wednesday voted to set up a state lottery, but a fight developed over what stores would be allowed to sell the gambling tickets. Meanwhile, lottery opponents said they believed they still had enough votes to kill the measure before the full House and accused the House Ways and Means Committee of adopting the legislation without proper public hearings. Setting up a lottery would require changing the state constitu tion. That requires two-thirds approval in the House and Senate and approval by Texas voters. Under the current proposal, voters would decide the issue Nov. 5. "I certainly feel the tire tracks on my back at the moment as the train just came running over us," said Sue Cox, executive director of Texans Who Care, after Ways and Means approved lottery mea sures 8-2. "We are still confident that we can stop it on the floor" of the House, she said. Lottery bills were rejected in 1983, 1985, 1986, 1987,1988, 1989, 1990 and earlier this year. But State Rep. Ron Wilson, lottery sponsor, said legislators are searching for ways to increase revenue, and "lottery has basically taken on a life of its own. We need the revenue, and it's going to drive itself." Budget experts have said a lottery would raise about $450 mil lion over the next two years. House members probably will have another chance to vote on the lottery early next week, Wilson said. Official predicts University Center will open this spring RICHARD S. JAMES/The Battalion By Robin Goodpaster The Battalion Texas A&M students can look forward to using the new Uni versity Center as early as Spring 1992, said Dennis Busch, assis tant manager of the University Center. Construction on the new cen ter began during February 1990. The final result includes renova tions to the MSC, an extension to Rudder Tower, a building used to consolidate student opera tions and a parking garage. The new L-shaped building across the street from Rudder Tower, unofficially called the Student Activities and Services Building, will house the Athletic Department, the 12th Man Foun dation, Student Activities and Student Services, the Off-cam- pus Housing Center, Multicultu ral Services Department, the Of fice of School Relations, meeting rooms and a small catering kitchen. A bridge will connect the MSC and Rudder Tower second floors. It will contain a browsing library, a student art gallery and RICHARD S. JAMES/The Battalion Construction continues on the University Center. This bridge will connect the MSC and Rudder Tower. a print and copy center. Some of the renovations have been completed. For example, the Hullabaloo Food Court in the basement of the MSC already has been opened. The book store on the first floor also is being ex panded. Busch said the new University Parking Garage will be conve nient for students as well as visi tors. It will be finished by Sept. 1. Entrance to the MSC is easier than it used to be, said Steve Hodge, University Center man ager. People wishing to enter the MSC can use the bookstore en trance on Joe Routt Boulevard. "Student activities operations has been very cramped for some time," Hodge said. "Hopefully, this will help somewhat." A&M department advisers help students work through degree plans By Melinda Cox The Battalion Working through a degree plan can be an overwhelming process, but many people at Texas A&M can help students understand and decide the best route to choose. Advisers are part of every de partment and can be useful sources of information and ad vice. Les Fiechtner, director for un dergraduate programs for the College of Business, said coun selors can be found throughout the University. "There are advisers in Student Activities and the MSC," Fiechtner said. "The University is structured to provide advice in all areas and curriculum." The College of Business also employs people to advise stu dents, Fiechtner said. These peo ple, hired because of their educa tional and previous experience, have at least a master's degree in an area involved with advising or counseling. This experience enables advis ers to evaluate students' needs and help them work their way through the requirements of a degree plan. "The advisers act as a sound ing board for questions primarily dealing with the curriculum and also any non-academic ques- See Advisers/Page 4