The Battalion 1893 — A Century of Service to Texas A&M — 1993 Tuesday, February 22,1994 awaits Clinton's next move in Bosnia officials to talk with European leaders about extending NATO's ultimatum in surrounding areas The Associated Press ■WASHINGTON - It took 22 months and the slaughter of 68 people before NATO mustered the will to act decisively to end the siege of Sarajevo. ■The question now is whether President .Clinton and Western allies will go a step further and extend their bombing ultima tum to other cities in war-torn Bosnia. ■The apparent answer is, not immedi ately. ■In view of NATO's strong reluctance to take the first step, there's likely to be stiff resistance to doing more. H"Our first and most important objective is to secure the gain we've already made and we will not seriously consider taking more op tions until we are certain that this one is really se cure/' Defense Secretary William Perry told a Pen tagon news conference Monday. "So, those options are certainly weeks away; they're not days away," Perry said. More warplanes and more pilots would be required to expand the demilitarization formula and the threat of air strikes. Clinton The risk of retaliation against allied forces on the ground would grow. There would be a threat of deeper and deeper involvement. Clinton, at a news conference, would go no further than to say that U.S. offi cials would talk with European leaders this week about extending NATO's ulti matum to other parts of Bosnia. He said the United States must be sure its allies are prepared to back up any fur ther ultimatums, guaranteeing that "NATO not undertake a mission it is not fully capable of performing." Secretary of State Warren Christopher said "Let's wait and see" if a wider com mitment is prudent. He said the emphasis should be on the peace table. "This situation is not going to be re solved on the battlefield," Christopher said. Muhamed Sacirbey, Bosnia's ambas sador to the United Nations, pleaded with the West to protect other cities, such as Bihac, reported to be under Serb attack. He said weapons removed under threat from Sarajevo are being rushed to other battlefronts. "It seems to us that the focus on Saraje vo has somehow encouraged the Serbian forces to attack in Bihac," Sacirbey said on NBC's "Today" show. "But there is also, for instance, Zepa, Srebrenica, Gorazde, Tuzla, not to men tion Mostar and several other Bosnian cities that are suffering quite badly right now," he said. It was not until the world was re- vulsed by the massacre of 68 people by a single shell in a marketplace that NATO laid down an ultimatum for the with drawal of heavy guns and the end of the shelling of Sarajevo. Bosnian Vice President Ejup Ganic said life would have been normal in Sarajevo if NATO had issued its ultimatum two years ago. Ganic sadly wondered "why they needed 10,000 graves in Sarajevo in order to write one page of NATO resolutions." .84MB .845-36 .8454S ,845-M [sFour Kappa Alpha members accused of assault begin trial By Angela Neaves The Battalion Attorneys gave opening statements Monday in a civil case involving the al leged assault of a former Texas A&M stu dent by four fraternity members. The assault occurred April 9,1992 after I former student John Walker left Zephyr night club with two females, prosecuting attorney Chris Kling said. The three were followed by the four students, all members of Kappa Alpha fraternity. I The prosecution alleges that Walker was misidentified as a man that assaulted a female friend of one of the defendants, Kevin Ormston. The four followed Walker to Redstone Apartments where he was beaten, kicked and hit. The beating resulted in a broken nose, seven stitches and multiple bruises and abrasions, Kling said. One female witness also sustained in juries, he said. "Walker never threw a punch," Kling said. "He never hit anyone. He was the only male hurt." The four defense attorneys maintain that only Ormston assaulted Walker, claiming that the three other men, Stephen Swan, Earl Dyke and Gregory Pappas were only bystanders. It was a case of being at the wrong place at the wrong time, defense attorney Judith Foster said. "College students go places together," Foster said. "I did it when I was a stu dent. There doesn't necessarily have to be a plan. The others did not go along with intent to become involved in the sit uation. It was a situation that simply got out of hand." College Station Police Officer Jay Ma son said he saw the four men leaving the scene and blocked the entrance with his police car. After securing the scene. Ma son observed Walker's injuries. "He had no shirt on," Mason said. "He had blood on his face and arms and a cut around his eye. In my opinion, all four of the students were involved in the assault one way or the other." Mason said he does not believe alcohol played any part in this case. Two of the men, including Ormston, have already pleaded guilty to criminal charges of assault. Survey says close down Lubbock Street for walkway By Karen Broyles The Battalion The majority of Texas A&M students and faculty members are in favor of closing Lubbock Street to automobile traffic and adding a pedestrian walkway, according to a survey released Monday. The survey, conducted by the Texas A&M Public Policy Resources Laboratory, found that 76 percent of students and 64 percent of faculty members polled were in fa vor of closing the street that runs in front of the Commons and the Quadrangle. The Public Policy Resources Laboratory will give the results of the survey to the Texas A&M Board of Regents, who will make the final decision. David Godbey, assistant director of Engineering Design and Services for the Physi cal Plant, said the closing of the street to automobile traffic will relieve the conflict be tween pedestrians and automobiles. "We are out of buildable sites on the main campus," he said. "Workers who need ac cess to the street and service and emergency vehicles will be allowed access to the street." A&M officials are considering closing the street to make an addition to the Sterling C. Evans Library and also building a student computing center and a parking garage. The proposed library addition and computing center would extend toward Nagle St. between the Heldenfels and Peterson Buildings. The parking garage would be built between the Pavilion and Heep Building. Parking lot 34, which is between the Peterson Building and the Pavilion, would lose some parking spaces if the new parking garage is built. The intersection of Lubbock and Nagle and the intersection of Lubbock and Spence will remain open for access to the parking garage. Cars will have to go through gates or checkpoints at the intersection of Coke and Lub bock, the intersection of Bizzell and Lubbock and the intersection of Bizzell and Lamar. Lubbock Street was closed temporarily from Jan. 24 to Jan. 28 to determine the ef fects of closing the street permanently. The two-part study consisted of calling 202 students and 100 faculty members at random and the random interviewing of 333 pedestrians and 570 motorists. A&M baseball player saves man's life at local restaurant By Jennifer Smith The Battalion Texas A&M baseball player Lee Fedora came up with the biggest play of his ca reer Monday, as his timely reaction saved the life of a man choking at an area restaurant. Fedora, who plays third base and outfield, was eating lunch at Double Dave's Pizzaworks on George Bush Dr. when he heard a man gasping for air. "I saw a guy beating on his own back," he said. "He was gasping and slobber ing." Fedora said he jumped up and ran over to the man. "I asked him if he was choking, but he didn't reply," Fedora said. "You could tell he was panicking." Fedora performed the Heimlich maneuver on the man five or six times without any results. See Fedora/Page 6 Woman promotes adoption, not abortion for fellow rape victims By Angela Neaves The Battalion Babies should not get the death penalty for their father's crime, said a rape victim at the Brazos Valley Crisis Pregnancy Service's annual fund-raising banquet Monday night. Lee Ezell discovered 20 years ago that she had become pregnant after being raped. She decided to give birth to the baby and put it up for adoption instead of having an abortion. Pregnancy/Page 10 ■|FCC expected to cut cable television fees again fore Sprfe The Associated Press Rcc Spotf I H WASHINGTON — Responding to com plaints that its first attempt to cut cable televi sion rates didn't work, the Federal Communi- EL! cations Commission is expected to order an- Free other reduction this week. Free 11 ^ s not Y et c l ear how much the rates for *20 ■rvice and equipment will be cut when the j’/ ccimmission meets Tuesday. But cable indus- tree try executives said rate cuts could range from Free 5 percent to as much as 15 percent. $20 H When the FCC adopted cable price rules p ree last April, it predicted that rates for regulated services would go down at least 10 percent for Bjyo-thirds of the 57 million cable subscribers. - Thurs./B Some did. Other rates went up — an unin- fCard/f- tended consequence of the regulations, which cqver virtually all 11,000 cable systems, the FCC has said. The 1992 Cable Act gave the FCC authority to oversee rates for channels not included in the basic package — channels like ESPN and MTV — and any special equipment needed to deliver these channels. Rates for premium ser vices, such as HBO, are not regulated. Basic service generally consists of broad cast signals and public, educational and gov ernmental access channels, and a few cable channels, such as CNN. Rates for that service are regulated by local governments, who also regulate rates for more common equipment, such as convertor boxes and remote controls. FCC economists and attorneys were refin ing the new rate structure late last week and none would discuss either the size or scope of the expected cuts. What the economists has been wrestling with is how best to estimate what price a local cable system would charge if it had competi tion. Only 3 percent of the nation's cable sys tems compete with another cable provider. Cable rates were virtually unregulated un til Congress in 1992 directed the FCC to craft a rate structure that was unveiled last April. Not only was there no regulation, there were no records of what cable companies were charging, which has made it difficult to determine a fair rate structure. The cable industry has been furiously lob bying the FCC not to cut rates dramatically, warning it could cripple cable investment in a national information superhighway and stifle jobs creation. The Consumer Federation of America has been urging the FCC to slice cable rates by an other 18 percent. "We want the whole enchilada," said Bradley Stillman, CFA's general counsel. Inside Sports •Olympic highlights Aggie life Page 3 Review of Reality Bites Page 7 Opinion •Hill: Practicing golden rule good for soul Page 9