^ (AMA): Cost is n Blocker patino al [nile ^gan the '.4060 for across 3. e and run id course, nex. Call jtion. iELlEVE ly. Brass nd for the i Rudder i. Supper 6 Martin at U. AGE): ly's. Call irmation. VALLEY ion of the ! of small I Medical University aldson at for more Cloudy with a 60 percent chance of thunderstorms and a high in the 70s BAYLOR STEALS TWO FROM A&M Aggies lose ground in SWC race after weekend series Page 7 George Bush and Bill Clinton deserve their parties’ nominations -Battalion Editorial Board Page 9 The Battalion Vol. 91 No. 110 College Station, Texas ‘Serving Texas A&M since 1893" 10 Pages Monday, March 9, 1992 Candidates mobilize for Super Tuesday Senator Harkin to end bid for Democratic nomination d to The han three We only contact H e that lists ns are run ere is no questions, WASHINGTON (AP) — President Bush and Democrat Bill Clinton headed toward delegate-rich Super Tuesday" races claiming big boosts from weekend victories. The Democratic field was expect ed to narrow by one as Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin decided to call it quits. Harkin scheduled news conferences for today in Washington and Des Moines after a series of disappoint ing finishes, including a 6 percent showing in South Carolina on Saturday. Two Iowa Democratic Party officials said Harkin would announce his with- Cv Ij drawal from the race today. Nevada Democrats, meanwhile, held party cau cuses Sunday to begin the delegate selection process. Republican challenger Patrick Buchanan remained winless but vowed to take his insurgent candidacy all the way to the GOP convention in Houston in August. "This campaign ... is about more than piling up delegates," Buchanan said in a TV interview. However, Buchanan strategists are now looking beyond Super Tuesday — where they are not opti mistic of scoring wins — to the March 17 showdown in Michigan as a make-or-break state for the conserva- Sen. Tom Harkin rea sale/reta: lecreasef :ed in ed: J survey lent c tive TV commentator, liege £4 Bush's 67 percent win over two conservative GOP ower In 'challengers and Clinton's 63 percent dominance of the jl locatio Democratic field in South Carolina's primary on Sat- jtion, tk urday are likely to spill over into this week's Super ial Librai Tuesday. There are 11 Democratic races and eight Republi- t econonii|can ones on Tuesday, most of them in the South. "We've got a good victory out of South Carolina m-Collegland Wyoming and Arizona. But I need Texas on Tues- iploymen day," Clinton said while barnstorming across Texas, hat bettf inths ago, ren percer | w workei d plannei the stud) ib opporf* instruct wices wit id west an ils tions I BILLY MORAN/The Battalion Two injured in auto accident John Harrison of New York is removed from a car by the Texas A&M Emergency Medical Services after the car he was riding in collided with a truck at the intersection of Wellborn and Joe Routt Saturday. Two of the five passengers were treated for minor injuries at Humana Hospital. Instructors voice anger at monitors 'Thought police' use illegal means to evaluate alleged political bias By Gina Howard The Battalion Texas A&M liberal arts instruc tors expressed their displeasure Friday over a classroom monitor ing program set up by a conserva tive student group, calling the concept a case of thought-policing and censorship. David McWhirter, an assistant professor of English, said he is not sure one group is qualified to de cide what political bias actually is. "I think they understand very little about teaching and about what a university ought to be," McWhirter said. "They pretend to be speaking from an unbiased po sition and see truth as their own bias. In a way, they are thought police." The monitoring carried out by the A&M chapter of Young Con servatives of Texas involves plac ing members in classrooms to scrutinize instructors suspected of teaching in a politically biased manner. At least two monitors sit in unannounced on each targeted class for three days. The group plans to publish their results for student use in the fall. The observation methods the group uses are not allowed under University Rules and Regulations, said Dr. William Perry, dean of faculties and associate provost. "If a person is going to visit a class, then they should secure per mission," Perry said. "That is the rule of the University and we are bound by these rules. My point of view is (if someone attends) with out permission, a professor is free to ask any person to leave." Randy Keetch, Chairman of YCT, said his group wants to let students know which professors " teach with academic honesty and which largely preach ideology - especially when their grades might lie in the balance." Dr. Larry Hill, head of the his tory department, said professors try to be objective, whatever their ideology. "Why should I trust their (Young Conservatives of Texas) judgment on what political bias is when they are going on only one perspective," Hill said. "We all See Professor/Page 6 Capturing the Spirit' fund-raiser kicks off with $185 million By Karen Praslicka The Battalion Texas A&M has already raised $185 million of the $500 million University of ficials and volunteers hope to raise with the "Capturing the Spirit" campaign - and the fund-raising has just begun. The multi-year campaign is Texas A&M's first volunteer-led Fund-raising campaign, and the largest effort undertak es, a receifen by any public university. It is intended tk to reach the goal by August 31,1996. jthout^ jld still =>ople Lildbeu" 3 es on surged , many' -t be av ;igni K would p ^imal ft 7:00 2:00 Ml Day Ml Day Ml Day Menachem Begin dies; leaves legacy of peace «as by ; LaboratJ srsity nt the rovec medical i* ian 83 p e ’ ting has i* nt medi fl TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - For- Texas , mer p r i me Minister Menachem Resean t ^ e pugnacious Israeli lead er who made peace with Egypt but led his nation into war in Lebanon, died yesterday. He was 78. Begin died in Tel Aviv Ichilov Hospital, where he was on a respi rator in the intensive care unit fol lowing a heart attack on Tuesday. Doctors installed a pacemaker Thursday but his condition took a turn for the worse Friday. The hospital's director, Dan Michaeli, said Begin died at 3:30 a.m. (7:30 p.m. CST Sunday). Be- gin's two daughters and son were at his bedside, Israel radio said. The government announced the news in a statement on Israel Ra dio 11/2 hours later, and said it would hold a special session to de cide funeral arrangements. Begin was a giant of the Jewish state. A Polish Jew whose parents were killed by the Nazis, he came to political power labeled by many as a terrorist for his part in the un derground that helped found the At a formal gala Friday night to pub licly kick off the campaign. University president William Mobley announced a $52 million gift commitment from former student Dwight Look of Sinajana, Guam. University officials and campaign leaders say the pledge is the largest gift to any public university and the rourth-largest to any institution of higher education. "We can indeed be proud of capturing the spirit of that Aggie," Mobley said. Look wrote in a letter to Mobley that he intends to give A&M 1000 acres of real estate on the Island of Guam. Details are not finalized, but Look wrote that he be lieves the gift should benefit A&M with a minimum of $52 million. The property will be deeded to the De velopment Foundation over the next sev eral years, and is adjacent to the largest real estate development currently under way in the Pacific region. Look's gift will establish endowments for the College of Engineering and Ster ling C. Evans Library, and for other high- priority University projects. Mobley said the campaign is the largest undertaking of any public univer sity in the nation, and the program will challenge everyone involved. He said A&M is on the verge of being Widely rec ognized as one of the top ten universities in the nation. "In a number of respects we're already there, but in some we're not," he said. "The challenge is to offer support, pro vide the facilities and offer a margin of ex cellence you can't get from state support." "Aggies obviously have always been fond of challenges," he continued. "We want to be number one." Frederick D. McClure, a former A&M student body president, spoke to the crowd during dinner at Duncan Dining Hall about why it is important to give to the campaign. McClure, also a former Assistant to President Bush for Legislative Affairs, said the reason the guests were there was plain and simple-"to convince you either to sign on the dotted line or commit your selves further to the cause." He said believers in A&M must cap ture the spirit and make it work for them. See A&M fund-raiser/Page 6 state of Israel. Begin shared the Nobel Peace Prize with Egypt's President An war Sadat for leading his country to its first, and so far only, peace treaty with an Arab country. For that 1979 treaty, he sacri ficed the Sinai Desert, one of the most precious prizes of the 1967 Mideast War. But he clung tena ciously to other territories cap tured by Israel, annexing the Golan Heights of Syria and filling the West Bank with Jewish settle ments. He took an aggressive posture toward Israel's enemies, bombing Iraq's nuclear reactor to rubble in 1981. The following year, he sent the army into Lebanon to wipe out the PLO in what became Israel's most unpopular war. Then, after six tumultuous years, hq resigned without expla nation and spent his remaining years in virtual seclusion. His 1983 resignation, some the orized, was driven by guilt over being abroad on state business when his wife died. Thumbs Up For Spring Break Koldus reflects on hitchhiking home during brief spring vacation of 1950 Spring break memories KARL A. STOLLEIS/The Battalion Dr. John Koldus, vice president for student services at Texas A&M Editor's note: This is the first of a four-part se ries on Texas A&M administrators reflecting on their past and present spring break experiences. By Bridget Harrow The Battalion Spring break of yesteryear. No beaches, no babes, no beer. Just two young college men heading home. No planes, no trains, no transportation at all. Thumbs up, luggage light, the two freshman friends decide to hitchhike. The year was 1950. And one of the young men was John Koldus, now Dr. John Koldus, vice president for student services at Texas A&M University. The other young man was Koldus' college buddy, Rudy Wagner. Koldus says now as he thinks back, it was the most exciting and unusual spring break he ever had. "Spring break was not a week long like it is now," he says. " It was shorter and it tied ■ Dr. John Koldus, V.P. for student services - Monday □ Tony Barone, basketball coach - Tuesday □ Dr. William Mobley, A&M president - Wednesday □ R.C. Slocum, head football coach - Thursday in with Easter. You had Good Friday, Easter weekend and the following Monday off from school. So you did not have as much time to do as many things;" Since he went to school at Arkansas State University in Jonesboro, Ark., and his home was 570 miles north, in Gary, Ind., Koldus didn't go home for spring break after his freshman year. The reason he went home that one time was because his parents were giving him a 1937 Chevy. It was the first time See Koldus/Page 6 Special Section: BATTALION VOTER’S GUIDE