'i'm issiif ny of our an d swelling t'rod that th e s " a wetblajl 'n the eeonom ls h was poll of the vote in which» legates. Thfi ed or t0 the state Q convent! I backing! Perot,- Texas 1 a ire and tential i pendent. didate. Pi also was ing up a tered Dei era tic supp Clint did notci paign ini mont. Bro stopped by or the lift oh ' the Democti ;o with hisoi primary upsi The Battalion bl. 91 No. 122 College Station, Texas ‘Serving Texas A&M since 1893’ 12 Pages Thursday, April 2, 1992 Bush pledges $24 billion to finance international aid fund President Bush refuted allegations that the timing of $24 billion in U.S. aid to the former Soviet Union was spurred by election year politics. ont coordina! t victory for governors behind in dt headed ini mpaign boasl ements, inch i Gov. How ov. Madelt Speaker Rai WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush pledged Wednesday the United States will help finance a $24 billion inter national aid fund for the former Soviet Union. “This isn't any Johnny-come-lately thing and this isn't driven by election year pressures," Bush said at a White House news conference. “It's what's right for the United States." Democrat Bill Clinton accused the president of moving too slowly on eco nomic and humanitarian aid to the former Soviet republics. At a speech in New York, Clinton called Bush's foreign policy "reactive, rudderless, and erratic." Earlier this month, former President Richard Nixon had said U.S. support for Russia was "pathetic." Bush, at the White House, said, "Some people will attack you for doing too much and some for not doing enough. I think this is right." The $24 billion aid fund would be ex tended by financial institutions such as the International Monetary Fund with principal backing from the Group of Sev en — Germany, Japan, France, Britain, Italy, Canada and the United States. Bush said the United States would pro vide $600 million in new credit guaran tees for grain purchases by Russia and a total of $500 million for Ukraine, Armenia and other former republics of the now de funct Soviet Union. The money would be in addition to the $3.75 billion in agricultural credits ap proved by Bush since January 1991. Boris Yeltsin, president of the Commonwealth of Independent States, plans to reduce its armed forces to 1.2 million troops/ Page 12 dates iews ial brm Yell leader, senator create furor over comments Letter takes swipes at Ansbach, Battalion By Jayme Blaschke The Battalion DN (AP) - vs of the# arvdidaM wiMStr >uch astel ire, i? If so, vhat typeo! rown: ^ I Brown health care r all Amen f age or eco- [e does nal require dug welfare nton: •'j Clinton m : position ot S h: Has sale ible-bodie» ;ovemnier> ave respor- ix payer. qnsifelff ition ori' ver, he n angesint ram, whi >rd numtej n the So# -ferecdl f)0 bilW , thatmf jdicare ■ •haiian: Buchana' 1 ubli#*' Student leaders are questioning the conduct of a member of the Texas A&M Student Government and a yell leader the night before student body elections. Copies of a letter signed by Ty Clevenger, a student senator and also A&M's student body presi dent /or 1990-91, and Trent Kelley, a senior yell leader this year, were distributed to residence halls and placed on car windshields across campus Tuesday night. In the fliers, Clevenger accused student body president candidate John Ansbach of attempting to dis credit fellow student body presi dent candidate David Brooks' by filing charges of mail tampering against Brooks. Kelley joined Clevenger in at tacking The Battalion's coverage of the entire student election, claim ing the student newspaper partici pated in character assassination and manipulated the student body. Election Commissioner James Phipps said the distribution of the letter did not break any campaign rules, but it is an embarrassment to Student Government. "I think this is a case of Ty shooting his mouth off/' Phipps said. "The statements Ty made in the letter show he is very unin formed about what is going on. "Ansbach's removal from the Student Senate and the charges of See Student /Page 9 ROBERT J. REED/The Battalion He’s doing WHAT? Rehan Walgama, a history major from Henderson, impersonates a sperm cell at the MSC fountain Wednesday for A&M’s Funniest People, sponsored by AggieVision. Participants received a free AggieVision video yearbook. Prizes and gifts, donated by local merchants, also were given away in drawings. The video yearbooks for 1991-92 can be ordered at the AggieVision office in the basement of Reed McDonald. Sexual assaults increase, alarm local officials By Alysia Woods The Battalion An alarming increase in the number of sexual assaults this year has troubled local police offi cials and left volunteers at a rape crisis center with their hands full. Lt. Mason Newton with the College Station Police Department said a sexual assault that occurred last Saturday behind Kinko's in Northgate marks the eighth rape this year. Around 6 a.m., a woman was attacked and driven to an un known location where she was sexually assaulted. The woman was then left in the trunk of her car and was found on a road off Hwy. 60 east of College Station two hours later. Last year a total of nine sexual assaults were reported in Bryan- College Station. "This is scary," Newton said. "We don't want to make light of this whole thing because we are already up to eight reported as saults this year." Newton said of the eight rapes that have been reported, four have been acquaintance rapes and four have been rapes in which the vic tim did not know the assailant. The numbers, however, only reflect the rapes that are actually reported to police. Most rapes are not reported, he said. Only one out of 10 rapes are ever reported, said Paula McCune, volunteer coordinator for the Bra zos County Rape Crisis Center. "We can see how all this has alarmed our community, but we get calls everyday from women who never report it," she said. Due to the recent sexual as saults that have occurred, McCune See Center/Page 9 TWC gives Atochem 30 days to finalize clean up strategies AUSTIN (AP) - The Texas Water Commission Wednesday gave Atochem North America Inc. 30 days to resolve negotiations on cleaning up its Bryan facility be fore a hearing that could lead to the state's largest environmental penalty. Atochem and the commission staff are discusing 22 technical rec- ommendations to clean up the company's Bryan pesticide manu facturing plant, where the com mission says arsenic-contaminated ground water ran off the property. The commission staff has sug gested the board levy a record $10 million penalty for the infractions. The largest assesment by the TWC is $1 million against Dal-Tile Corp. Commission spokesman Bill Colbert said the $10 million fine would be the nation's largest ac cording to his research. Attorneys representing Atochem at Wednesday's commis- See Environmental/Page 9 Representative talks about homosexuality Expresses difficulties of hiding feelings By Robin Roach The Battalion A Texas state representative ex pressed the difficulty he experi enced as a result of hiding his own homosexuality Wednesday night as part of Gay and Lesbian Awareness Week. Texas State Rep. Glen Max- ey, a former stu dent of A&M, discussed poli tics regarding the gay and les bian community and the emotional and social as pects of being homosexual in to days society at the lecture "The Courage to Make a Difference." "I feared that if people knew I was gay, I would not be able to run for public office," Maxey said. At almost 40 years of age, Max ey has been open about his homo sexuality for six years. He dis- Glen Maxey played this by wearing a pink tri angle on his bolo tie. The pink triangle is the gay symbol, historically based on the symbol worn by gay men in Nazi concentration camps during World War II. One of the first issues Maxey dealt with as a political lobbyist was the quarantine proposal for AIDS sufferes, which he success fully fought to withdraw. "Up until 1985, the quarantine law in this state meant that public health authorities could pick you up — and under the law, lock you away until you were no longer contagious," he said. When the position for state rep resentative became available in 1991, Maxey contemplated run ning. Maxey said he was discour aged by Gov. Ann Richards be cause he would be viewed as a single-agenda candidate for gays and lesbians. Maxey campaigned for candi dacy regardless of Richards' pre cautions and succeeded in becom See Gay /Page 9 IT’S NOT TOO LATE TO VOTE Student body elections end today. Polling places will be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the following locations: Blocker Building Kleberg Center Sterling C. Evans Library MSC foyer (between the Sweet Shop and Rudder Tower). Runoff elections will be held Tuesday, April 7 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the same locations. Wiley Lecture Series DARRIN HILUThe Battalion (From left to right) Dr. Antoni Kaminski, Dr. Vitaly Shlykov, Adm. William J. Crowe Jr., Dr. Jean-Rene Gehan, Mr. Tamas Katona and Catherine Crier discuss the complexities of a post-Cold War world. European security remains complex issue By Sharon Gilmore The Battalion Although the Cold War has ended, a panel of experts from around the world said security in Europe and America's presence in the area remains a complex issue with unclear answers. Catherine Crier, anchor of CNN, acted as moderator for the discussion sponsored by the MSC Wiley Lecture Series entitled "New World. New Europe. New Defense?" Before becoming a CNN an chor, Crier was the youngest dis trict judge judge in Texas and the first woman initially elected to a civil district bench in Dallas Coun ty- Security should be defined in the broadest sense, and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization should play a big role in it, said Adm. William J. Crowe, Jr., former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. "NATO offers the best prospects for keeping America deeply engaged in the region," Crowe said. "Together it will offer the most promise to all the coun tries in Europe and North Ameri ca," he said. In Crowe's 43 year career he has served as commander of the United States/Middle East Force in the Persian Gulf, NATO Com mander in Southern Europe and commanded all United States forces in the Pacific. Crowe said the most important steps in developing security in Eu rope are creating a democracy and See World /Page 9