tober 13, ■ Alvart 5 WOR^INt? Campus Opinion Margaret Rudder to help in unveiling of statue honoring her husband Gen. James Earl Rudder. COLUMNIST DEBATE: Should candidates' religions matter to voters? Sports Dennis Allen's father watches his son carry on the tradition of play on the gridiron. Page 9 FRIDAY October 14, 1994 Vol. 101, No. 34 (14 pages) “Serving TexasA&Msince 1893” U.T. outranks A&M in total crime rate Brad : s 4 Himt anhunt ends for viss cult member >p mtfH! (rllfl THOUGHT, MM) SUCH BAD.EVIL <1 HOULD RHAllf i MORE PERM- \UITH THEPTT BEAUTlfOC fKAE; GENEVA (AP) — His life was a itradiction. His death was louded in a bloody mystery that lithe lives of 52 of his disciples. Swiss police said Thursday that ;Jouret, the guru of the Order of iSolar Temple cult, was among the irred corpses found in an Alpine ilet last week. The identification ended the jrnational hunt for the 46-year-old jlgian homeopath. It also dimmed |pes of uncovering the reason hind the deaths of five cult mbers in Canada and 48 others Switzerland. Did Jouret lead them into suicide? did murder play a bigger role? Chief pathologist Thomas ompecher said Jouret’s body bore trace of bullet holes. Many of the iims found in a Swiss farmhouse d multiple shot wounds. Three of idead in Canada were stabbed. There are no witnesses to the igedy. The cult’s mastermind, seph di Mambro, its treasurer and inadian branch leader are dead. nmigration lottery lanned for Cubans WASHINGTON (AP) — Hoping to iter would-be boat people, the inton administration is planning to ild a lottery to select 5,000 to 6,000 ubans wishing to emigrate to the nied States. The lottery also is seen as an lay arm with a eteorological Societl ivering ver. So it these sa Hut on the ) designates very area. ducement for the return home of !,000 Cubans being sheltered at the uantanamo naval base and at U.S. iary facilities in Panama. The administration has said the olyhope these Cubans have for migrating to the United States is to iturn home and apply through stablished channels. Until now, visas have been largely efeted to Cubans who qualify for >fi/gee status or those with close lalives in the United States who are nerican citizens. I Details on the operation of the pry will be announced by Nov. 1. I Doris Meissner, commissioner of ie Immigration and Naturalization ervice, told reporters the lottery will be nited to Cubans who would be self- Icienton arrival in the United States. lew trial set for heerleader mom HOUSTON (AP) — An appeals aurt Thursday upheld a judge’s iling ordering a new trial for Wanda olloway, the woman accused of ying to hire a hitman to kill the other of her daughter’s cheerleading ral. Holloway was convicted in eptember 1991, but the presiding idge ordered a new trial after jreeing with defense attorneys that juror should have been disqualified scause he was on probation for a fig offense. The Harris County District Itorney’s office appealed, and both ties had been waiting for a ruling tmthe Texas 1st Court of Appeals i Houston. Mrs. Holloway, eanwhile, has been free on bond. "Now, we do it again,” prosecutor lasey O’Brien said. "My personal pinion is we will have the same itcome.” imbaugh faces law- uitfor playing song OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — ley, hey, Rush, you shouldn’t have sed that song. So says the writer of the 1963 hit Hey, Paula,” who’s suing Rush imbaugh for playing the song on his idio show to poke fun at President Hinton. -2512 :ive& Texas Ave East Campus \RRYOUT • Dim-in -3222 iarcrestDr, ' • CARRYOUT Limbaugh used a version of the mein July and August with a Clinton tipersonator singing new lyrics about Asexual misconduct allegations veled against the president by Paula mrbin Jones. Songwriter Ray Hildebrand of Iverland Park filed a copyright ifringement lawsuit Tuesday in ■deral court in Kansas City, Mo., eeking unspecified damages. N WINGS! Ity Pizza&| oing Pizza | |991 e: sme, Iyer's®, hd OUT )ne coupon per party per Jliels. Mention coupon I reo. Drivers carry no mort ■ iply in some areas. Not I ()T™ pizza or ony other I 3c cash redemption value. ■ mmmui Passified 10 Classified 10 jtra Mail Call 12,14 Opinion 1 3 >ports 9 loons _5 >ports 9 loons University Crime Rates In a 1993 crime report, The University of Texas leads Texas colleges and universities on the level of crime reported to the Texas Department of Public Safety. Texas A&M comes in second out of 64 schools included in the report. 785 Source: Texas Department of Public Safety Graphic by Mark Smith/XHE Battalion By Stephanie Dube The Battalion Texas A&M University ranked second in total crime reported out of 64 Texas uni versities in a 1993 report from the Texas Department of Public Safety’s Texas Crime Report. However, university police officials say the high number is due to population and should not worry students. Lt. Bert Kretzschmar, crime prevention specialist for A&M’s University Police De partment, said the statistics originated from the Uniform Crime Report (UCR), a program aimed at providing reliable crime statistics. Every month, UPD reports its crime statistics to the UCR, he said. Despite the findings, A&M students do not need to be concerned, he said. “We have our share of everything,” Kretzschmar said. “But it is nothing that other universities aren’t experiencing. There is nothing in the report to really alarm anyone.” Statistics can often be misleading, Kret zschmar said. “You need to be very careful when you look at the statistics,” Kretzschmar said. “Statistics can lie; it depends on how you interpret them.” In 1993, 721 total crimes were reported by UPD. Out of 64 colleges listed in the re port, A&M was second only to the Univer sity of Texas, which reported 785 crimes. Kretzschmar said the statistics do not account for many crucial factors, such as the college’s population. In addition, whether the university is located in a city or a rural area can account for the crime rate, he said. If a university’s campus is located in one area or split throughout a city, it can also affect the crime rate, Kretzschmar said. UT, for example, has a main campus and other campuses scattered throughout Austin, making crime prevention more dif ficult, he said. “It is to our advantage at A&M that we have all this acreage and are not divided up,” Kretzschmar said. “This increases our ability to control patrolling and keep an eye on things.” Kretzschmar said, despite the statistics, A&M’s crime rate is not any worse than the other universities’ rates. However, A&M may have a high number of reported crimes partially because UPD strongly encourages students to report the crimes, he said. “We encourage people to report thefts, so you may see a slight increase in the number of crimes reported,” Kretzschmar said. “Some of this is due to more people coming forward.” According to the report, A&M had 53 reported burglaries in 1993, while UT had 18 burglaries. The greatest number of re ported burglaries in 1993 was from Prairie View A&M with 108. The burglaries cov ered only burglaries of habitation and buildings, Kretzschmar said. Sgt. William VanHom, the sergeant in charge of crime prevention with the Uni versity of Texas Police Department, said UT’s low number of burglaries is partially due to its definition of burglaries. If a burglary at UT occurs without forced entry, such as when a building is open to the public or if a student leaves his door unlocked, it is recorded as a theft, VanHom said. “We have a lot of opportunity crimes,” VanHom said. “The majority of our crimes are theft.” Most of these thefts occur in both the university’s library and its largest dormi tory, Jester, VanHorn said. The thefts from these two areas account for the ma jority of the reported crimes which gave UT the greatest number of crimes out of the 64 colleges in the report, he said. Under larceny theft, A&M’s UPD re ported 648 incidents in 1993, second only to UT, the report indicated. “Theft on most college campuses throughout the country is their biggest problem,” Kretzschmar said. Statistics which showed the rate of crime per student would be more reliable, he said. Minority leaders question College Republicans officer By Amanda Fowle The Battalion Several minority student leaders told College Republicans’ President Chad Walter at a forum Thursday that his organization should edu cate themselves about minorities to prevent offending them. The controversy surrounding the College Republicans’ recent distrib ution of fliers that many minority students found offensive was the main topic of discussion at the Mi nority Student Leadership Forum, which consists of minority student leaders who meet monthly to dis cuss issues affecting minority stu dents at Texas A&M. Kevin Carreathers, director of the Department of Multicultural Services, said that if the College Republicans had educated them selves about minorities, they would have known that the fliers offended minorities. “People have to work to under stand why the myths about minori ties exist,” he said, “until there are no more myths.” He urged the minority groups to diversify their membership. “Martin Luther King, Jr. said that easiest way to educate yourself is through contact,” Carreathers said. Ferleshare Starks, vice president of the NAACP, said the College Re publicans should not try to educate themselves about minorities, though, out of punishment. “I would not want you to educate yourself because you feel you have to,” she said, “but do it with an open- mind, so that you learn something.” Walter apologized to the group for the fliers and said he-did not agree with what they said. “I would like to put this behind us because it is going to hurt minor ity recruitment,” he said. The students also asked Walter why two College Republican fliers are still up around campus. One of the fliers has a quote from Martin Luther King, Jr. at the top and says at the bottom that the College Republicans support Martin Luther King, Jr. The students said that the flier patronizes African-Americans. Starks said that it insinuates that since the College Republicans support Martin Luther King, Jr., African-Americans should auto matically join. The students said they were also offended by the flier that lists sever al minority groups with boxes be side them. The word-“American” is written in and is checked. Nikki Guerra, a member of the Mexican American Engineering So ciety and the Prime Time Posse, See Leaders/Page 7 Zany zebra overzealous, zig-zags out of grassy zone By Michele Brinkmann and Constance Parten The Battalion An eight-year-old “criminal” wearing black and white stripes was transported to Waco Thursday afternoon after causing a disturbance on Bittle Lane in Bryan Wednesday night. The escapee had not committed a crime, was not taken to jail, nor apprehended by the police. After he was shot four times, he was taken to Texas A&M’s Large Animal Clinic where his face wounds were treated. Yes, this “criminal” was a large animal; a zebra, to be exact. A University Police officer called the Brazos County Animal Shelter to get the animal. When shelter officials arrived, they called Dr. James Jensen of the Large Animal Clinic, who shot the zebra four times with a tranquilizer gun before the zebra settled down. The zebra, who had cuts above both eyes, was treated at the clinic before it was picked up and sent to the Texas Safari and Wildlife Park in Clifton, northwest of Waco. This zebra had lived at his new home for one day before being sent to the wildlife park near Waco. Patti Stepp, Brazos Animal Shelter field super visor, said a man, who wanted to remain anony mous, saw an ad in the Thrifty Nickel about a pet zebra. He bought the zebra for $200. “These animals should not be kept as pets,” Stepp said. “They are still wild animals.” Stepp said she is thankful Texas Safari and Wildlife Park officials were coming to College Sta tion to pick up the animal. “It can’t be any sweeter and easier than that,” Stepp said. The people who sold the animal to the man dropped it off at a location he had specified. The man bought the zebra for his kids because they said it would make a great pet. Shortly after the animal was dropped off, an eight-year-old told his parents there was a zebra outside their home, but his parents did not believe the boy until they looked outside. The zebra crossed into an adjoining pasture and fought with the horses there. He then crossed an other fence line into the pasture where he was fi nally captured. “He created a lot of havoc,” Stepp said. Stepp said the animal shelter was concerned about keeping the animal. “We tried to get A&M to take it, but they don’t really have the facilities for it either,” she said. “Everyone was concerned for the staffs safety dur ing his capture.” Erin McLeash, a Bryan County Animal Shelter control officer who was on call last night, went out to the pasture where the zebra was and then called Jensen. “We’ve never dealt with a zebra before,” McLeash said. McLeash said she loves animals but thought it was best for the zebra if he went to the wildlife park. A Texas Safari and Wildlife Park spokeswoman said she did not know why she was called to pick up the zebra. “I don’t know why they called us, but we do raise zebras,” she said. “We would love to have the ani mal; we will set it loose with the rest of the herd of zebras we raise.” Constance Parten/THE Battalion This zebra was taken to Texas A&M’s Large Animal Clinic for treat ment after receiving injuries when it tried to escape from a pasture.