inhood" ' 1st Floor Weekend Partly cloudy Highs 75-78 Lows 57-63 Bryan’s future alcohol and drug treatment center provides a good example of how a community and a college can help each other - Battalion Editorial Board Page 7 Draft decisions NFL evaluates potential of A&M football players for next season Page 5 What’s in a name? The Department of Engineering Technology’s name change creates dissent among some engineering students Page 2 The Battalion Vol. 91 No. 138 College Station, Texas ‘Serving Texas A&M since 1893” 8 Pages Friday, April 24, 1992 of the universe ove louse lony, Alpha irk Area 4 hley Beach VISC, Rooms2 i Alpha House I Park simony, satellite locates LOS ANGELES (AP) - A spacecraft has discovered the largest and oldest structures in the niverse, wispy clouds that show ow creation's "big bang" led to : ormation of stars and galaxies, dentists said Thursday. "If you're religious, it's like ooking at God," said research [earn leader George Smoot, an as- rophysicist at Lawrence Berkeley aboratory and the University of alifomia, Berkeley. The discovery was made by NASA's Cosmic Background Ex- )lorer (COBE) satellite during its >400 million mission to study the universe's origins. Researchers say more than 300 million measurements by the pacecraft answer a question that possible origin has long vexed scientists: How did matter that was uniformly spread out in the newborn universe start clumping together to produce stars, galaxies and clusters of galaxies? If the research is confirmed, "it's one of the major discoveries of the century. In fact, it's one of the major discoveries of science," said physicist Joel Primack of the University of California, Santa Cruz. Smoot and his team presented the findings at an American Physi cal Society meeting in Washing ton, D.C. NASA also issued an an nouncement. "We have observed what we believe are the largest and most ancient structures in the uni- of 'big bang' verse," extremely thin clouds or ripples that represent the earliest stages of matter starting to clump together in the newborn universe, Smoot said during a Washington news conference. He said the clouds were formed only about 300,000 years after the big bang, the primordial blast sci entists believe created the uni verse 15 billion years ago. The largest clouds stretch across two-thirds of the known universe, or 59 billion trillion miles, Smoot said. That's roughly 120 million billion round trips be tween Earth and the moon. "If they are right, it is a very big deal," said Joseph Silk, a professor of astronomy and physics at UC- Berkeley. Perot expands efforts for presidential bid H. Ross Perot says he will seek the presidency without being on all 50 state ballots DALLAS (AP) — H. Ross Per ot is moving steadily toward a full-fledged presidential bid, ex panding his political staff and laying on an increasing number of appearances. At the same time, the Texas billionaire is scal ing back his 800-number because it has fulfilled its main purpose. "At this point, there is more than an ample number of volun teers to get petitions signed" to get him on the ballot as an inde pendent candidate nationwide, Perot told reporters Thursday. In an interview a day earlier with The Associated Press, Perot said he has dropped his insis tence that his name be added to ballots in all 50 states before he'll run — although he still expects to get on all the ballots. He raised the possibility that an active campaign to keep him off the ballot in New York — which has strict rules on inde pendent candidacies — might succeed. "I'd probably go ahead and run" even without New York, Perot said. He conceded that would present "an interesting problem," given the state's large number of electoral votes. ;a House eception, m. Room 144 College Stati my, Student SdM Presbmi' 1 College Station Disen Field vilion Tie °rs oor ium wer Lobby ouse 1st floor Hall Alumni Centc 1 ■ pe Bull University centralizes resources A&M investments earn larger returns By Karen Praslicka The Battalion The Texas A&M University System is increasing returns on its investments through a centraliza tion program adopted from the corporate world. The program allows individual universities and agencies within the system to benefit by pooling all of their funds. The system can now invest a large amount of money and get a bigger return, in stead of each entity investing sepa rate smaller amounts. Greg Anderson, interim system comptroller and director of trea sury services, said the program has increased the money returns to the A&M system by $11 million since its implementation in 1990. "There was a need to combine returns to bring forth a big re turn," he said. Each university and agency within the A&M system used to handle its own funds and invest ments, with 14 different accounts used for daily operating expenses and investments. "We had lots of cash and secu rities, which isn't as efficient as when we combined the parts," Anderson said. Now that the funds of all the parts of the A&M system have combined, the funds go through one master concentration account. Each university and agency has its own disbursement account, which is set to a zero balance each night. Each morning, the system See Creative/Page 4 Wrapped Roughneck The Roughneck statue outside the Richardson afternoon sometime before 3:30 p.m. No one Building was covered in toilet paper Thursday has claimed responsibility. Earthquake awakens anxiety in Californians LOS ANGELES (AP) - Hun dreds of aftershocks sent ripples of anxiety through Southern Califor nia on Thursday, hours after a strong desert earthquake caused isolated damage and dozens of in juries. Earthquake experts cautioned there was a slight chance Wednes day night's magnitude 6.1 tremor could be a precursor to the long- dreaded "Big One." "We're long overdue for one — a 7.0 or greater ... so we're advis ing communities ... to be on their toes," said Lt. Ben Nottingham, spokesman for the Los Angeles County Office of Emergency Man agement. Authorities estimated damage from the quake at about $1 million in the Morongo Basin, which in cludes the communities of Joshua Tree and Yucca Valley about 100 miles east of Los Angeles. Nevada California Earthquake rocks S. California, and was felt over 400 miles away in Phoenix. Arizona Phoenix RACHEL HYMEL/The Battalion "There are no two-story build ings out here and that could con tribute to the low damage fig ures," said Sgt. Ben Boswell, com mander of San Bernardino Coun ty's disaster preparedness divi sion. Mexican officials evacuate residents from explosion site GUADALAJARA, Mexico (AP) — Fearing more explosions, au thorities Thursday evacuated a neighborhood near a working- class district wrecked a day earlier by sewer-line blasts that killed as many as 202 people and injured over 1,300. Moving quickly to control po litical damage. President Carlos Salinas de Gortari gave his attor ney general 72 hours to determine who was at fault for Mexico's deadliest explosion since 1984. The state governor blamed three city officials for taking no action on residents' complaints of leak ing gas. The national oil company Pe- mex continued to deny blame for the blasts, but suspended its natu ral gas deliveries to industrial cus tomers in the Reforma neighbor hood and closed its gas stations there as a "safety precaution," said Pemex's director-general. Exxon official discusses Valdez oil spill cleanup "Of the 1,100 miles of coastline By Jayme Blaschke The Battalion Oil-eating bacteria tested dur ing the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill in Alaska have greatly increased oil spill cleanup capabilities Worldwide, an Exxon researcher said Thursday night at an Ameri can Chemistry Society seminar in College Station. Dr. Edward Stiefel, a scientist with Exxon Research and Engi neering, said the cleanup of Prince William Sound in Alaska was the largest use of bioremediation (oil consuming organisms) ever at tempted and would not have been possible without EPA cooperation. The supertanker Exxon Valdez ran aground on Bligh Reef March 24,1989, spilling about a quarter of a million barrels of oil into Prince William Sound. contaminated, about 300 miles were heavily hit with oil a couple of inches to a couple of feet deep," Stiefel said. "Chemical oil disper sants were not allowed at all, so we got permission to try bioreme diation. "The bulk of the oil was taken up manually and by washing it off the beach so it could be collected by skimmer ships, but that still left a lot of oil on the beach," he said. "Our studies however, showed the oil on the beach was already being degraded." The oil on the beaches was be ing degraded because the area al ready was a haven for oil-consum ing microbes, Stiefel said. Around Prince William Sound there are 28 natural petroleum seeps, where oil deposits leak into See Scientist/Page 8 Rape — 'a tragedy of youth' 62% of victims were minors when attacked Parents’ Weekend SUMMARY OF EVENTS FOR FRIDAY: • 3 p.m. - Who's Who Award Ceremony (MSC 205-206) • 7 p.m. - RHA Casino (MSC) and MSC Variety Show (Rudder Auditorium) begin • Midnight - 01' Army Yell Practice (Kyle Field) Parents' Weekend schedules are available in the MSC. WASHINGTON (AP) - A gov ernment-funded study released Thursday found 683,000 American women were raped in 1990 — a far higher number than other gov ernment reports have said — and that 12.1 million women have been rape victims at least once. In addition, the National Wom en's Study said almost 62 percent of the rape victims said they were attacked when they were minors, with about 29 percent saying they were younger than 11. "Rape does seem to be a tragedy of youth in America," said Dean Kilpatrick, who direct ed the research and is co-author of the report, "Rape in America." The study, funded by the Na tional Institute on Drug Abuse, in volved female interviewers talk ing to some 4,000 women by tele phone about rapes in the previous year and earlier. The survey also found that: — Of the estimated 12.1 million women who have been raped, about 6.8 million were raped once, 4.7 million more than once and about 600,000 were unsure of the number of times. -Twenty-nine percent of per petrators were non-relatives known to the victim, such as neighbors or friends. Twenty-two percent were strangers; 16 percent were relatives other than immedi ate family; 11 percent father or stepfather; 10 percent boyfriend or ex-boyfriend and 9 percent hus band or ex-husband. Three per cent were not sure or refused to answer. — Seventy percent of rape vic tims were unharmed, while 24 percent suffered minor injuries and 4 percent were seriously hurt. The survey did not account for rape-murder victims. — Rape victims' most impor tant concerns after the assault were the family finding out, being blamed by others for the attack, and others knowing about it. Those worries declined slightly among those raped in the last five years. But there were increased fears of having their name become public, getting AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases and becoming pregnant. The study's estimate of 683,000 forcible rapes in 1990 — based on an estimate of 0.7 percent of the adult female population — was more than five times larger than the National Crime Survey figure of 130,000 attempted and complet ed rapes that year.