The Battalion 't/uuy cjjOOI Wol. 93 No. 98 (8 pages) 1893 — A Century of Service to Texas A&M — 1993 Monday, February 21,1994 | Artillery withdrawn under U.N., NATO threats The Associated Press I WASHINGTON — Encouraged by the with drawal of Serb artillery from the hills around Sara jevo, the White House said Sunday that "no air strikes are necessary at this time," even though some weapons remained after a NATO deadline. I After a brief meeting with President Clinton shortly after the deadline. National Security Advis er Tony Lake said all known Serbian weapons were either withdrawn, under control of the United Na tions "or should soon be." I "Therefore, the United Nations and NATO com- ipanders have concluded that no air strikes are nec essary at this time," Lake said. I The announcement at an unusually crowded weekend White House came after the U.N.'s senior official in former Yugoslavia said he saw no imme diate need for air strikes. I President Clinton, who was in his White House Residence as the deadline passed, said earlier he was optimistic that the bombings would not be VV JL* W . A W •, A ^ A J. U.N. declares aggressive Bosnian policy a The Assnriated stage for me to request NATO to use air power," deadline passed, the roaj success HMHPmi The Associated Press SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — Bosnian Serbs pulled back enough heavy guns from snowy hills around Sarajevo to stave off immediate air strikes as a NATO deadline for removal passed ear ly Monday, Bosnia's Muslim president, Alija Izetbegovic, urged NATO to bomb the remaining guns. But Yasushi Akashi, the U.N.'s senior official in for mer Yugoslavia, said he saw no immediate need for air strikes. "I have decided that it is not necessary at this Stage for me to request NATO to use air power," Akashi said in a statement released at his Zagreb, Croatia headquarters and at NATO headquarters in Brussels. "1 am pleased to announce that as a result of U.N. and NATO initiatives, there has been a sub stantial withdrawal or regrouping of heavy weapons in and around Sarajevo," Akashi said. NATO, after nearly two years of painful debate over whether to get involved in Bosnia's war, had demanded all heavy weapons pull back that dis tance from Sarajevo or be placed under U.N. con trol. Otherwise it would launch air strikes. As the midnight GMT (6 p.m. GST) Sunday deadline passed, the roar of a solitary jet could be heard in misty skies. A C-130 which has been flying over on nightly surveillance also droned through the skies. Some five hours before the deadline, the U.N. commander for Bosnia said the situation remained unclear at nine of 41 Serb gun sites around Sarajevo which U.N. soldiers have not yet visited. But Lt. Gen. Sir Michael Rose said then "T find it hard to imagine" that air strikes would go ahead immediately. In Sarajevo, skies cleared Sunday for the first time in days of snowy weather. After dark, over flights by NATO planes increased. needed. artillery sites were still not under U.N. control, al- in place: air strikes could be summoned if the Serbs "Fm hopeful because of what I see happening," though U.S. officials were confident they could be fall out of compliance, he said. secured Monday. "If they re-arm, they will be at risk," said a se- As the deadline passed, a small number of Serb White House officials said the ultimatum is still nior administration official. Phe Asscai- ■ Zoo wte breedip: ilia popi. ■M .eci would k cial legist d gives® irties - z CwaZulii- a nee toes- eir areas: aid the AN the new: msiderat* fter the eis details, t •ted havii ent chang to incors rnmentat oppo mg raciai ar if 1' ed a i ted wheih al cones really t sion. released t indela fears thai ; 2 d byths > new cod ers of /Vednesd- raft con# substa fi vernffl^' a's state ore thaL 3 and de- id. Viljoen- 1 dksfrG; tC einent icized his vm Oh my gawd ... MSC directors refute Student Senate charges of abusing funds By Kim McGuire Dyanna Wilson, a sophomore political science major from Pearland, was elated by her win in Roger Hsich/Tm Battalion the Miss TAMU Scholarship Pageant Saturday night at Rudder Tower. The Battalion Memorial Student Center leaders rebutted the allegations of wasteful spending within the MSC that erupted during the closed session of the Feb. 9 Student Senate meeting. After the closed session, the Senate voted to cut the MSC's student service fee allocation by $400,000. The Senate recom mended $220,000 be allocated from the Student Service Fee re serve and the MSC reserve to offset the initial cut pending the approval of Dr. J. Malon Southerland, vice president of stu dent affairs. The Senate met in closed session for twenty minutes during this meeting while at least three senators told the Senate of discrepancies in the MSC's budget as well as other informa tion given to them by an MSC student leader who wished to remain anonymous. After the minutes of the closed session were obtained by The Battalion, two of the senators who spoke during the closed ses sion agreed to elaborate on the allegations. Sen. Ben Dale said an MSC student leader told him the bud get the MSC presented to the Senate Finance Committee was not the correct budget. He said two budgets existed. "The informant told me the budget we had was not what they operated on," Dale said. "He took some papers out of a file cabinet and said 'Here, this is the real budget. And then went on to say (MSC Director) Jim Reynolds would have his butt if that got out." Dale said the informant also told him the MSC would request more money than it needed. "They requested money for programs they don't need, mon ey for staff they don't need," Dale said. "They said by us cutting their budget we're hurting students, but their budget is so over inflated they knew it wasn't going to hurt them." However Chris Cowan, MSC vice president of finance, said he thought the alleged "two budgets" may have resulted from Senate Finance Committee representatives misinterpreting the budget recommendation process. "When we plan our budget we plan it nine months in ad vance and plan for the optimal," Cowan said. "Sometimes we meet our goals and sometimes we don't, so we make adjust ments accordingly. Perhaps they saw budget adjustments and misconstrued that as two budgets." Similarly, MSC Director Jim Reynolds denied the allegation. "There are absolutely not two budgets," he said. "First of all, there would be a paper trail. The budget that was given to the Senate Finance Committee was the only budget." Sen. Tracey McAllister said the MSC has some "useless committees" that have no committee chairmen, no members or no real purpose for existing other than to "pad" the MSC's budget. She said both the Literary Arts Club and Recreation Club have not operated in the past two years but have been allocated funds. MSC President Heather Hartman said funds have been allocated for the two committees. "We feel there is a need for literary programming so we budget for the Literary Arts Club in hopes we will be able to offer programs," Hartman said. "Yes, it's true some years the club isn't active, but we want to have that money in case we're able to bring in some one like W.P. Kinsella, the author of "Field of Dreams," like two years ago. But it depends on student initiative." Reynolds said the MSC Council has activated and terminated these programs based on productivity and student leadership efficiency. "It's all a part of streamlining the MSC," he said. McAllister also alleged the MSC had no viable means to evaluate program performance and implied the programs were inefficient. "I had heard a complaint from a MSC officer that there was no evaluation process for the programs," she said. "They end up wasting a lot of money on ineffective programs. A lot of the programs are so poorly attended, the only people there are the committee chairman and their dates." However, Keith Sundstrom, MSC vice president of. programming, said every committee is asked to fill out a program evaluation form after every program. "We ask them things like 'How many people attended?', 'What kind of people attended?', 'What did See Spending/Page 4 Walker to name panel to review allocation policy Student Body President Brian Walker will appoint a committee this week to review the Senate Fi nance Committee and the process by which it make its recommenda tions for student service fee alloca tions. "Twill concede there are some things that could be improved," Walker said. "The committee will look into how this might be ac complished." Heather Hartman, MSC presi dent, agreed with Walker that the process should be examined. "I wish they would review how the Senate Finance Committee members are selected, train them, educate them and enforce uniform guidelines by which to review the departments," she said. Currently members of the Sen ate Finance Committee arc select ed by application and are inter viewed. Cnee selected, the committee members select their top three choices of departments to review, and the committee chairman makes the final selection. Committee representatives in terview department officials, stu dents and staff within the depart ment, tour the department and re view the department's previous budgets. ^ Ambassador: Bosnian war linked to fascism By James Bernsen -lines tels The Battalion The war in Bosnia is not a result of ethnic land religious intolerance, but rather the result r of a new wave of fascism in Eastern Europe, Muhammed Sacirbey, Bosnian ambassador to the United Nations said Friday. ; Sacirbey told Texas A&M students and fac ility members that the region, particularly I Sarajevo, were almost perfect models of mul ticultural societies before the war. i "I come to you knowing you'll understand ; what it means to be part of a multicultural soci- lety," he said. "There wasn't so much hatred pind rivalry as there was respect and tolerance." Sacirbey said the West likes to see Ser bians and Muslims as "cats and dogs" that I can't live together. But he said the real cause of the war is a new nationalist Serbia that arms the Bosnian Serbs. "There is a regime in Serbian Belgrade that is trying to preserve its absolute power and privileges on the basis of converting itself from a communist philosophy into an ultra nationalist and fascist philosophy," he said. Sacirbey said ethnic violence is a tool of this fascism. "It's very easy to use religion, or to use his tory, as a tool for fascism," he said. Sacirbey said people in’ the West believe giving Serbia what it wants would solve the problems in the region. "The West is only too willing to separate us and forget about the problem," he said. Sacirbey stated that even NATO threats to Bosnian Serbs will not do much to end the suffering in Sarajevo. "Even if the guns are removed, Sarajevo re mains besieged," he said. Sacirbey said the introduction of Russian troops as peacekeepers will only help the Serbs because the Russians and Serbs have long felt a kinship. The Serbian model of neo-fascism could even become a model for a future Russia, with ultra-nationalists like Vladimir Zhiri novsky rising to power in the economic tur moil, he said. Zhirinovsky recently claimed that any at tack on Serbian positions in Bosnia would be seen as an attack on Russia. "Bosnia was the place to stop the new fas cism of Eastern Europe, and the West has failed to confront it," he said. "They have now encouraged it and legitimized it in other nations, perhaps in Russia. "The Bosnians will have to pay for this for quite some time. The world may have to pay for it too." Inside Sports •Lady Aggie softball win UTA tourney •A&M basketball impressive over Rice, 75-61 Page 5 Opinion •Editorial: Ronnie Earle shouldn't have played politics •Vasquez: Job fair is a discouraging event Page 7