! lc STKirf \lol 92 No. 68 (6 pages) The Battalion ‘Serving Texas A&M Since 1893’ Friday, December 4, 1992 Russian prime minister fights for job, policies THE ASSOCIATED PRESS £y rtorw). THtie. *en!? mi ° ar of >Y TO Flttl MOSCOW — Acting Prime linister Yegor Gaidar told a jeer- ig Congress on Wednesday that the Russian people are smarter Inci more patient than the hard- iners who are trying to dump his lovemment and block reforms. I Gaidar, fighting for his job and le economic policy he has cham- lioned for President Boris Yeltsin, conceded that the government's Irogram had failed to tame infla- lon, now 25 percent a month. I But he said a declining number strikes and public protests indi ted growing public acceptance if the switch from seven decades communism toward a free-mar- ket economy. "There is no threat of hunger and cold. We have passed through the period of adaptation to re forms without social upheaval," Gaidar said. "Despite all the hardships re sulting from the changes, despite all the obstacles that still must be overcome, the Russian people turn out to be smarter than politi cians think." "The people clearly understand the need for reform and are ready to work, rather than rock the boat of our well-being and future," he said. The opposition was not swayed. "Gaidar is a con man," said Mikhail Astafiyev, a leader of the hard-line Russian Unity faction in Congress. "He will almost certainly have to resign," said Dmitri Stepanov, another Russian Unity member. Hard-liners want to slow Yeltsin's economic changes and drop Gaidar, the architect of the reforms. Yeltsin has resisted lawmakers' demands that he nominate a prime minister for approval by the Congress. Because Gaidar is only "acting" prime minister, Yeltsin has not had to submit his nomination. But Vladimir Shumeiko, first deputy prime minister, said Yeltsin had decided to nominate Gaidar, even though he may not have the votes to push the ap pointment through. Gaidar's speech was met by jeers and stony faces from the rows of burly, middle-aged former Communists — holdovers from the old regime who were elected in March 1990, 17 months before the coup attempt that led to the collapse of the Soviet Union. Deputies interrupted his mes sage of optimism with derisive laughter, but Gaidar quickly re sumed his rapid-fire defense. His arms were stiffly spread as he gripped the sides of the wide lectern of the Grand Kremlin Palace, which still bore the ham- mer-and-sickle seal of the Soviet Union. Yeltsin sat behind and above him on the podium, calmly over looking the 1,041-member Con gress of People's Deputies, Rus sia's highest parliamentary body. Hard-liners want to force changes in the Cabinet and slow the market reforms, which have brought soaring prices and plung ing living standards. But neither Yeltsin nor the hard-liners have a clear majority. Both sides are maneuvering for support from about 300 undecid ed and unpredictable deputies, known in Russian as "the Swamp." Outside the Kremlin's crenelat ed red brick walls, about 200 Cos sacks in traditional long cloaks adorned with polished silver bul lets demonstrated in support of Yeltsin, and bearded Russian Muslims danced and chanted for the president. A dozen yards away, by the onion domes of St. Basil's Cathe dral, about 200 pro-Communist supporters waved red flags. Police barricades separated the opposing sides. Gaidar, a 36-year-old former economics researcher, only occa sionally glanced down at his notes during the 55-minute speech. He said that in addition to hardships, his reforms had yield ed some positive results, noting the increased production of televi sions, videocassette recorders and other consumer goods. In the most fiery moment of his speech, he shot back at Congress speaker Ruslan Khasbulatov. Welch egislature ibandons chool bill THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ho has shep- Ke harbored i Pennsylva- arade. the program recognition pends lunch )lunteer am- :uyvesantto Sharon Tate. 1, i AUSTIN — The Texas Legisla te adjourned Thursday without reducing a school finance plan in ■ special session marked by parti- pn wrangling. "It's a disappointment for the :hools and the schoolchildren of lis state," said Democratic Gov. nn Richards. "We have seen very cynical partisan politics layed " [ Rep. Tom Craddick of Midland, lead of the House GOP caucus, aid the session was "more politi- al on the other side." I "From a political aspect, she Richards) is the one that's played te school issue like a yo-yo. And I think there's been a real void in ier leadership," Craddick said. Richards defended her role. "I think I did everything I uld do," she said. The end came when House Re- [Publicans, with few exceptions, hnained united against a pro- osed constitutional amendment acked by Democratic leaders. The House voted 90-57 for the roposal, 10 short of the 100 votes quired for passage in the 150- lember chamber. A two-thirds vote of the Legis- ( ure is needed for a proposed endment to be put before Texas ers for ratification. Fifty-three House Republicans ted against the leadership- :ked proposal, out of 58. Three were absent, and two ed for it. Four Democrats also aposed the amendment. The amendment would have lowed some local property tax ioney to be shifted statewide tom wealthier to poorer school istricts. ; The Texas Supreme Court in nuary ruled unconstitutional the irrent system of shifting funds mong school districts, within aunties or groups of counties. The court has given lawmakers ntil June 1,1993, to come up with constitutional system to equalize inding between property-rich nd poor school districts. Public schools are funded mainly by local property taxes fid state aid. Mary Folse, a sophomore elementary education major from Bellaire, Texas practices DARRIN HILl/rhe Battalion her archery in her archery class in the Read Building on Thursday. Folse enjoys her class. A&M actively recruits ethnic minorities By GARY P. CARROLL City Editor of THE BATTALION NASA faces decreased funds THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — NASA's successful launch of Discovery on Wednesday capped a stellar year of eight shuttle launchings, the most since the Challenger explosion. But while NASA finally seems to have its act to gether, funding is down, costs are up, the military is out and a White House task force is urging speedy replacement of the fleet. "The evidence has been building for years and years and years. There's just nothing for them (shut tle astronauts) to do up there, at least nothing that's worth the risk and the cost of putting them up there," said former NASA historian Alex Roland, now a history professor at Duke University. But for NASA, hope springs eternal. "Pretty soon somebody's going to notice that (im proving record) and say, 'Shoot, it looks like those folks know what they're doing, maybe this is a good deal we've got going here and maybe it can serve the country for some time in the future,"' deputy shuttle director Brewster Shaw, an ex-astronaut, said Wednesday. Two weeks ago, the White House task force rec ommended a new launch system — manned and un manned — that would be cheaper, safer and more re liable than the shuttle, which is based on 1970s tech nology. To pay for this new family of rockets, the panel recommended reducing shuttle flights as soon as possible. NASA estimates each shuttle mission costs about $500 million, assuming a rate of eight flights a year, the goal for the foreseeable future. Some analysts, however, say the cost is closer to $1 billion. Although Texas A&M Univer sity has fallen under heavy scruti ny for recent allegations of racist activity, there is no denying that the University continues to take an active role in minority recruit ment, according to statistics pre pared by University officials. With a 1992 student enrollment of 42,988, representing students from all 50 states and 116 coun tries, A&M has been active in re cruiting minorities. A Texas A&M Office of Plan ning and Institutional Analysis re port shows an 89 percent increase in the total enrollmeht of minority students at A&M since 1985. Since '85, enrollment of black and Hispanic students has increased frpm 2,448 to 4,634. ) Corey Anthony, vice chair for tHe Memorial Student Center Black Awareness Committee latids the efforts of the University, but he would like to see more. "We haven't reached our goal," Anthony said. "(The University) is making an effort to increase (minority) recruitment, but I don't think that we've gotten where we need to be yet." Anthony said he would like to see the University take a more ac tive role recruiting minority stu dents by going out to the high schools. A&M ranks in the top 20 in the number of National Achievement Scholars, competitive scholarships for African-Americans and has the highest minority retention rate in the Southwest Conference. According to the 1990 Higher Education Coordinating Board re port (the last year the board re leased figures) A&M retains more than 80 percent of its minority stu dents. Up until spring 1992, 63.6 per cent of all black students at A&M, and 56.1 percent of Hispanic stu dents who entered A&M by fall 1986, had graduated - compared to 66.3 percent for Anglos. These figures regarding minor ity performance at A&M can be attributed in part to University ef forts aimed at attracting minori ties to A&M. The Office of Admissions Counseling actively recruits mi norities from from Texas high schools and junior colleges. Also, University President William Mobley visits predominantly mi nority high schools to stress to students the importance of educa tion. Anamaria Salinas, a freshman from Dallas, said she was im pressed with the University's mi- fiority recruitment program. A re cruiter visited her high school and made her feel that she would not be alone at A&M, she said. The recruiter, who was also a minority, emphasized that A&M has support groups and the orga nizations to help minorities ad just, Salinas said. Salinas said she was scared about attending A&M at first be cause her high school had a large number of minorities. "When I came to A&M, I knew that there were minority organiza tions, but once I got involved I was a lot better," she said. "When I wasn't involved, I felt alone. "If you seek it, it's there for you." Since Mobley became president in 1988, the enrollment in the President's Achievement Award Scholarship Program - a program that provides yearly $2,500 stipends to academically success ful black and Hispanic students for four years - has increased from 1,010 to 1,275. A&M has been awarded nu merous honors including Dow Chemical's Valuing Diversity Award, The Retention Excellence Award, Certificate of Apprecia tion from the Texas Higher Educa tion Coordinating Board for con sistently increasing minority and enrollment and retention from 1983 -1989. S. to command Clinton makes inaugural plans UNITED NATIONS - U.S. ilitary commanders will have to ve up the free rein they had in e Persian Gulf War and accept >tne U.N. oversight of troops in imalia, diplomats said Wednes- oreign relief effort THE ASSOCIATED PRESS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS But a U.S. draft resolution for e Security Council leaves the )or open for a U.S. general to >mmand a proposed American rce in the famine-wracked na- >n. Diplomats also said daily op- ations will probably be left to Id commanders. "The United States is likely to commanding the operation," r David Hannay, Britain's am- ssador, told reporters on Tues- iy. Pentagon sources have said ,000 to 20,000 U.S. troops might ! sent to Somalia to get food to more than 1 million Somalis threatened by starvation. The Bush administration had offered up to 30,000 troops. An international relief opera tion has been hamstrung by feud ing Somali warlords and bandits in the lawless East African nation. The State Department says 1,000 people in Somalia are dying every day of starvation and disease. The death toll already exceeds 300,000. The draft resolution is part of a compromise Washington is forg ing to win the support of China, which has threatened to veto a free-wheeling U.S.-led operation. African nations are also worried about U.S. domination of their continent. The compromise was one of the issues to be discussed in a closed- door Security Council meeting Wednesday. WASHINGTON — President-elect Clinton will start his inaugural celebration with a trademark bus trip and end it with a White House open house, mixing invitation-only af fairs with lots of free events for ordinary Americans, organizers said Wednesday. Clinton wants "an open inaugural, an acces sible inaugural and a dignified inaugural," said Democratic National Committee Chair man Ronald H. Brown, who also chairs the Presidential Inaugural Committee. "It very much reflects the kind of campaign that Bill Clinton and A1 Gore ran." The five days of festivities — running Jan. 17-21 — will cost less than $20 million, paid for by private contributions and sales of tickets and souvenirs. Brown said. There will be at least eight free events, in cluding a concert and fireworks at the Lincoln Memorial, an outdoor festival nearby on the Capital mall, as well as several events aimed at young people. Clinton will cap Inauguration Day, Jan. 20, with 10 invitation-only, black-tie balls for about 65,000 people. Tickets will sell for $125. But Brown said the bus trip Jan. 17 — not the balls — will set the tone. The ride will begin at Thomas Jefferson's Virginia home, Monticello, and be a mini-ver sion of Clinton's campaign bus tours, complete with stops along the way and a well-publi cized route so crowds can gather by the road side. The decision to begin the festivities outside the capital was designed to show the inaugur al is not just a Washington insiders' affair, com mittee members said. "It is not just meant to signify what touched the American people during the course of the campaign but to really touch American history and the fact that it is more than just what hap pens in Washington but how we bring our na tion and our people together," said Brown. When Clinton arrives in Washington, he will go to the Lincoln Memorial for a public concert and fireworks. Like Clinton, both Jefferson and Abraham Lincoln were presidents "at a time when gov ernment and the people were estranged," not ed Rahm Emanuel, the committee's co-direc- tor. Clinton's middle name ^Iso happens to be Jefferson, and 1993 marksithe 250th anniver sary of Jefferson's birth. i The day after his swearing in, Clinton and his wife, Hillary, will wind up the inaugural festivities by welcoming dhj^ public to the White House. f % "We hope that as many people as can fit show up," said spokesman George Stephanopoulos, from transition headquarters in Little Rock, Ark. The theme of the inauguration, "American Reunion — New Beginnings, Renewed Hope," is designed to echo Clinton campaign themes of coming together and healing divisions. The campaign will also be remembered Jan. 18 when the Clintons host an "American Citi zen's Lunch" for some of the people whose lives and stories touched them during their campaign travels. Brown said. Clinton's undergraduate alma mater, Georgetown University, will be the site of a re ception for the diplomatic community that same day. Organizers did not announce the names of performers at any of the events, but Emanuel said producer Quincy Jones would put togeth er the concert at the Lincoln Memorial. . Singers Judy Collins and Barbra Streisand have been mentioned as possible performers at inaugural galas.