' , *uuy cftOOl Vol. 93 No. 31 (8 pages) The Battalion 1893 — A Century of Service to Texas A&M — 1993 Monday, October 11,1993 w eekend rap-up Israeli hikers die in guerrilla attack JERUSALEM — Palestinians shot and stabbed two Israeli hik ers in a gorge in the occupied West Bank on Saturday in the first fatal guerrilla attack on civilians since the signing of the Israel-PLO peace accord last month. Israel radio said there were re ports a woman hiker was also hurt, possibly killed, and that searches would continue Sunday. The killings came only hours after the Israeli navy thwarted an infiltration attempt from Lebanon claimed by a radical PLO faction opposed to reconcil iation with Israel. Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin on Saturday condemned the attacks, but vowed to stick with the peace process. The two Israelis were stabbed, bludgeoned with stones and shot at about 2:30 p.m., the army and media reports said. American stabbed in South Africa CAPE TOWN, South Africa - An American math teacher was in stable condition Saturday after being stabbed several times at the school where she worked. Police said robbery appeared to be the motive for Friday's at tack on Danielle Marlin, 23, of Brattleboro, Vermont. She was be ing treated at Groote Schuur Hos pital for stab wounds in the neck and left side. Marlin was due to return to the United States next month after volunteering for a year at the Zon- nebloem Nest School in District Six, a sprawling black township near Cape Town. Marlin, who is white, had come to South Africa as part of a community service program orga nized by her alma mater. Brown University, said Zonnebloem Nest principal Geoff Jacobs. No peace plan, no NATO, U.N. says ZAGREB, Croatia — NATO won't commit forces to Bosnia un less a sweeping peace plan is signed and its terms are met, the U.N. commander in the former Yugoslavia said Saturday. "If, starting on the day of signa ture of the agreement, things go fairly well, then we can probably count on NATO's arrival," said Gen. Jean Cot of France, who heads a United Nations peacekeep ing force of nearly 25,000 troops. But he added: "If, conversely, things go badly, NATO will not come." Cot's remarks came a day after the presidents of Bosnia and Croatia appealed for a deploy ment of NATO troops in disputed Bosnian territory, followed by ar bitration on a partition plan. Beavis, Butt-head blamed for fire MORAINE, Ohio - MTV said it will take another look at its show "Beavis and Butt-head" after a woman whose 5-year-old son set a fatal house fire blamed the cartoon for promoting burning as fun. Austin Messner, whose 2-year- old sister died in the fire, watched an episode in which the cartoon characters said fire is fun, said Moraine Fire Chief Harold Sigler. "According to the mother, right after that she caught him playing with matches," Sigler said. Austin; his mother, Darcy Burk; and her boyfriend, Steve Sears, escaped. His 2-year-old sis ter, Jessica Matthews, died in the fire Wednesday. "Beavis and Butt-head" fea tures animated two teen-agers who comment on rock videos and spend time burning and de stroying things. Officials work to avoid oil spill after ship blast The Associated Press GALVESTON — Salvage crews Sun day scrambled aboard a fire-ravaged gasoline tanker where an explosion peeled part of the deck back "like a sar dine can" and is believed to have killed three people. At the same time, Coast Guardsmen strung hundreds of yards of containment booms in hopes of averting an environ mental disaster off the coast of Galveston. Two men were confirmed killed and one other was missing and presumed dead after the explosion and fire Satur day night aboard the 660-foot tanker OMI Charger. At least a dozen others were hu' t and required some hospitalization Coast Guard officials said they were convinced none of the 8,700 barrels of Bunker C fuel oil used to power the ship — the equivalent of more than 365,000 gallons — had escaped into the Gulf of Mexico. Booms were set up protectively around the ship and along nearby sensi tive wetlands on the Galveston shoreline about 50 miles southeast of Houston until crews could remove the fuel. "There is a potential for a major spill," Capt. Paul Prokop, commander of the Coast Guard station at Galveston, said. "We have deployed a major amount of boom." Three of the 35-member crew remained hospitalized Sunday although only one was considered to be in serious condition. The others were treated and released. Owners of the ship and the Coast Guard would not say what caused the fire, which broke out about 8 p.m. Satur day and burned out of control for some 5 12 hours. "We don't know at this at this point what happened," Robert Klawetter, an at torney for New York-based OMI Corp., owner of the ship, said. Cajuns credited with rescuing crew The Associated Press GALVESTON - The Coast Guard says it was a boatload of heroes who saved more than two dozen crew mem bers from perishing aboard an exploding oil tanker. But Allen LeBlanc, 54-year-old captain of the Louisiana supply boat Tim McCall, says he and his crew are no heroes, only a bunch of Cajuns who did the right thing. "You try to help the other guy, 'cause you never know. One day it might be you," the Abbeville, La., resident said Sunday, a day after his 145-foot boat pulled alongside the blazing tanker OMI Charger and rescued its crew. LeBlanc said the Tim McCall was re turning from delivering supplies to -an offshore oil platform Saturday and was a few hundred yards from the 660-foot tanker when the first of two explosions occurred. Residents up to four miles in land reported feeling and hearing the blast about 8 p.m. Saturday. "When we got abreast of the ship, we just heard the explosion," LeBlanc re called Sunday aboard his boat docked at nearby Pelican Island. "By the time I turned around there were flames." LeBlanc said he immediately steered toward the tilting tanker to help douse flames already engulfing the ship's mid section. But as he approached, he saw dozens of people huddled on the tanker's stern. LeBlanc backed the Tim McCall up to the ship's deck and 27 stranded seamates See Rescue/Page 4 Secretary of State: Pro-military effort in Somalia 'unbalanced' The Associated Press Amy Browning/The Battalion EMS trainees learn to remove crash victims from vehicles Sunday morning in the Zachry parking lot. 'Rescue day' tests emergency skills Medics take part in training opportunity By Geneen Pipher The Baitauon M edics and trainees from Texas A&M University's Emergency Medical Service and Emergency Care Team took part in a rescue day put on by for mer A&M Emergency Medical Technicians (EMTs) Sunday. The training, which started at 8 a.m., consisted of lectures and practical skills training in removal of victims from vehicles, confined space rescue and mass casualty in cident situations. Paramedic Grant Kirby, a senior biomedical science major and captain of the training division, said the drill provides an opportunity to practice skills that are not often used. "We are continuing education and training of our medics," he said. "Ve hicle extrication and confined space rescue are not skills we get a lot of practice in because we don't get a lot of those types of calls. Most of our calls are sickness and minor injuries." The training also allowed the medics and trainees to build confi dence in their performance of tricky skills, Kirby said. "We are really good at certain types of calls because we do them all the time," he said. "When we get a big car accident, we often don't have the con fidence in our abilities. That is another reason why we are having this event, to build that confidence, refresh our skills and build our knowledge of how to deal with those situations.' Medics practiced vehicle extrica tion in parking area 51 during the first half of the day. They rotated be tween three different training sta tions: a truck, a mid-sized car and a wrecked compact car donated by an area wrecking service. Paramedic Michael Fraley, a senior poultry science major and chief of Texas A&M University's Emergency Medical Service, said proper handling of accident victims is crucial, and cre ativity on the scene is often necessary. "All accidents are different," Fra ley said. "Remembering that every person and every situation is differ ent is important. There are so many variables associated with accidents that you can never have one set way to approach a wreck, so the medics have to be creative. They have to put together everything they have learned and figure out a way to deal with the problem." After lunch, the medics met in the Zachry Building to perfect their con fined space rescue skills. Kirby said the medics used the building to create situations that might be difficult for emergency rescuers. "We set up situations where the EMT's had to take patients over ob jects and down fights of stairs and past various obstacles," he said. "We practiced putting patients on the backboards, practiced spinal immo bilization and protecting the cervical spine (C-spine) area, which is very important because one of the most life-threatening injuries a victim can sustain is injury to the C-spine area." Paramedic Emily. Bacon, a senior biomedical science major, said the rescue day helped to polish her skills and give her knowledge to make im portant decisions on the scene. "These drills are showing us the proper way to get victims out of diffi cult situations, so we don't make the injury worse than it already is," Bacon said. "These drills will help us keep calm in real situations, help us to feel more confident in our skills and then we can provide better patient care." WASHINGTON — American decision-makers "right up to and including the president" were re sponsible for the now-discredited tilt toward military action in Somalia, Secretary of State Warren Christopher said Sunday. The effort to apprehend Somali warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid and his followers after they began their attacks on U.N. forces last June "was a sound and natural re sponse," Christopher said on NBC's "Meet the Press. But, he said, "I think it did get out of balance" with too much fo cus on the military and not enough on the political side of the problem. "I think we're all responsible for that, right up to and including the president," Christopher said. Retired Adm. Jonathan Howe, the U.N. special envoy to Somalia, said a $25,000 reward for Aidid's Christopher See Somalia/Page 4 Earthquake in India Student group plans fund-raiser for victims By Jan Higginbotham The Battalion Victims of one of India's worst earthquakes in his tory will receive aid from a group of interested stu dents at Texas A&M University. The India Association will sponsor a Food Festi val in early November to help raise funds for those people affected by the devastating earthquake that shook southwest India on Sept. 30. Rajani Nair, vice president of the India Associa tion, said the group has already sent a $100 check to help victims, but Nair said, "we want to send more." The Food Festival will be held on Nov. 10 in the Pavilion, and Nair said the organization is plan ning to ask members of the community to assist with the program. Nair said the student group is asking students and members of the community to take part in the Food Festival and help raise much-needed money for the earthquake victims. Tickets will be sold for the festival, which Nair describes as an event that will provide "a taste of In dia for A&M." Nair said because India has such diverse tastes and eating habits, the country will be divided up into sec tions, and various regions of the country will be repre sented by different members of the local community. All of the proceeds from ticket sales and other do nations will go toward helping the earthquake vic tims of India. The Food Festival will be a part of a week-long celebration by the India Association to increase stu dent awareness of the Indian culture. Ferry capsizes off South Korea coast, 100 passengers missing, presumed dead The Associated Press -The Associated Press SEOUL, South Korea — A ferry capsized in rough seas off South Korea's west coast on Sunday, and police said up to 150 people were dead or missing. Police said Monday that 44 bodies were recov ered and more than 100 others were presumed dead. Reports of survivors varied from 67 to 94, as did the reported number of people on the ferry. "The ship sank in less than 30 seconds," said Lee Sang-mun, who broke a window to escape his second-floor cabin. "There were many women and young people in my cabin and rew came out." Television reports quoted survivors as saying most of the passengers were inside the cabins be cause of the bad weather and were trapped when the ferry capsized. Most of the survivors had been on the upper decks and jumped or were thrown into the water before the ship went down, survivors said. The West Sea Ferry sank off the coast of north ern Chollabukdo province, about 140 miles southwest of Seoul. It was carrying passengers bound for a day of fishing and hiking on islands in the Yellow Sea. There were conflicting reports on the number of people aboard the ferry because no passenger list was available, police said. State television quoted witnesses as saying there were 200 to 250 people on the boat, which had a capacity of 207. Inside Campus • Beam me up! TCA to begin airing Sci-Fi channel Tuesday Page 2 Sports •Aggies whomp Houston, 34-10, Greg Hill returns Page 5 Opinion • Editorial: A&M must learn from mistakes in construction Page 7 Weather •Monday; mostly cloudy, slight chance of rain ♦Forecast for Tuesday: partly cloudy, highs in 80s Texas Lotto •Saturday's winning Texas Lotto numbers: 2, 12, 27, 29, 38,41