ontiers tober 14,155) M researchers discover a new method of synthetically Icing drugs. 3y printing not enderson pr# dve stereotp ion does notle re (white) “pop- a be Is African' failures" aai iderson, hersel ? an entire ratf taking the ini t. an, I’m ;her. I have it it home, notit agrams. | ing family ^ c up to. We, as ed to provide a that does Ml types and fa and cultural Page 2 THE Opinion JAY ROBBINS: As a high school kid, I developed a great deal of resentment about affirmative action and minorities. But what if I were black? How "easy" would I really have it? Page 9 Sports Kathie Cepia Class of'Si by the College gainst affirmt a for equal op nent, but as a 3 flier offends do not lower irements for have to meet ients as ever}’ ) offended be- ael agrees to resume ;s with Palestinians on and quotas all minorities, females, His- black men, so males singled ning against employment, blem with the ans chose to :t. ies ha Johnson y 34 signature ERUSALEM (AP) — Israel ed Sunday to resume talks with Palestinians on extending omy in the occupied lands, after were suspended last week over Snapping of an Israeli soldier by ic militants. spokesman for Prime Minister lak Rabin said negotiations would me in Cairo, Egypt, on Tuesday, tie Israeli Cabinet also reopened 3aza Strip, sealed off during the apping crisis. But ministers ihasized they expected PLO er Yasser Arafat to continue with irackdown against Hamas, the ant fundamentalist group that ured the soldier. ■alks were suspended following I abduction of 19-year-old hshon Waxman, who was killed lis captors Friday night when eli commandos stormed their soul near Jerusalem. A nmando and three militants also in the raid. ixas Tech to hold cords of Vietnam >u rages letters lo irint as many is )0 words or less ar's name, class, to edit lettetsfor acy. V7 .tamu.edu UBBOCK, Texas (AP) — Texas ^University has broken ground on IW$9 million building to store what me experts say is the largest rction of Vietnam War documents ethe federal government, the meantime, Vietnamese is, political posters and framed lary medals hang on the walls of floor of the school’s campus sty awaiting their new home, lech, known for its collections of ilhwestern artifacts and literature, stablishing itself as the major hive for records from the only war is United States ever lost. |Among donors to the collection are liam E. Colby, who shaped the »sprograms to “pacify” South Vtaris villages and rid them of jl|lCong during the war. ®ech dropout Daniel Siewert, who IK a Navy medical corpsman pifided in the Vietnam War, also aMonated mud-splattered letters he ftietohis parents in 1967. sembly of Christ re els ordaining gays :i/r on flfiHKKSW tmomovw) THfIR TRff CWf 1 100 ItSTHM WTO order The Aggie football team tames the Baylor Bears 41-21 on Kyle Field Saturday. Page 7 MONDAY October 17, 1994 Vol. 101, No. 36 (10 pages) “Serving Texas A&M since 1893” WICHITA FALLS, Texas (AP) — ngregations at the southwest Igional Assembly of the Christian lurch have rejected ordaining twed, practicing homosexuals. In two majority votes Saturday the assembly of the Christian ch — also known as Disciples of fist — decided it will not ordain fflosexuals. But a third vote iffirmed the church’s policy that ows individual congregations to Dose their own leaders. each church given one voting legate for every 100 members, lost 60 percent opposed ordaining mosexuals. On another ballot, Dost 65 percent voted against a olution that said the church would prevent an avowed, practicing inosexual from being ordained. a third resolution, almost 55 cent favored leaving a decision on listers to individual congregations. esidents angry over tyointment refusal FOREST HILL, Texas (AP) — lout 75 residents in a predominantly ack Fort Worth suburb are testing the City Council’s refusal to the hiring of Texas’ first black inian police chief. Former chief Rebecca Coleman, o was appointed by the city anager, resigned Oct. 7 after council ambers refused to formalize her log because she wasn’t a licensed face officer in Texas. Forest Hill residents took to the eels in protest Saturday. Led by a ick hearse, residents in more than odozen cars rode through the mets to “bury racism” and monstrate against the City ’s action. All three white council members id two of the four black council ambers voted against the approval Ms. Coleman, who had been on the jfor three months. [bday'sT V\ ii lassified 8 rentiers 2 )pinion 9 ports 7 oons . __ 4 Vhat's Up Crash victims remain hospitalized Pair in stable condition; official cause of crash still unknown By Michele Brinkmann The Battalion Two people remained hospitalized Sun day following Saturday evening’s plane crash at Easterwood Airport that left one Aggie dead and four other people injured. The private plane, a single-engine Cess na, was headed for San Antonio when it crashed at Brayton Fireman Training Field shortly after takeoff. Bob Wiatt, director of University Police Department, said witnesses told police they saw a cargo door come open as the plane was taking off. However, the official cause of the crash has not yet been determined by the Nation al Transportation Safety Board. Four of the five passengers in the crash are Aggies. Two passengers, 44-year-old pilot Ed Ebrom, Class of ’72, and sixty-three-year- old James H. Uptmore, Class of ’53, both from San Antonio, have been released from the hospital. Paula Jo Wamke, 39 and Class of ’77, was also in serious but stable condition Sunday night at St. Joseph Hospital and Health Center in Bryan. Wamke’s father said his daughter, who is from Val Verde, near San Antonio, was still unconscious Sunday but her vital signs were stable. “She is holding her own and is respond ing to family members talking to her,” he said. “We’re thankful for that.” Frances Shannon, 58, was in serious but stable condition Sunday night at Brazos Valley Medical Center in College Station. Her husband, Billy Wayne Shannon, 64, and Class of ’54, was killed in the crash. The group’s plane landed shortly be fore the Texas A&M football game and took off about 5:30 p.m., shortly after the game ended. The plane hit some electrical wires be fore crashing into a wooded area just east of the airport. After crashing, the plane broke apart, but did not catch on fire. Investigators are on the scene and UPD will maintain site security until the wreck- Blake Griggs/THE Battalion The wreckage of a private, single-engine Cessna that crashed Saturday lies at the Brayton Fireman Training Field, near Easterwood Airport. One person was killed and four others were injured in the crash. age is removed. Wiatt speculated it will take a couple of days for the removal. “The rain is holding investigators up,” Wiatt said. Dr. Malon Southerland, vice presi dent for student affairs, said Uptmore was named Aggie Parent of the Year in the mid-80s. “It is really sad to have something like this happen,” Southerland. JR l Fi Stew Milne/THE Battalion Statue of an Aggie Legend Margaret Rudder unveils the statue of her late husband and ex-president of A&M Saturday morning. Bonfire Committee adopts new music playing policy By Lisa Messer The Battalion The Bonfire Advisory Committee has adopted a new policy requiring all music played at the Bonfire site to be screened before it is played. Zack Coapland, chair of the Bonfire Ad visory Committee, said that redpots will listen to any cassette tape that is submit ted prior to playing it at the Bonfire site. “In the past, redpots accepted tapes from any participant at stack,” Coapland said. “In the future, they’ll screen the mu sic so they can be more aware of what’s be ing played.” This policy change comes after Steven Sims, Class of ’92, complained to redpots Oct. 5 about racist music being played at Bonfire site. “I heard three songs played,” Sims said. “They had words like ‘if they don’t like our southern ways, move them niggers north.’” Sims said the songs contained racial slurs about minority groups other than just African-Americans. In response to Sims’ complaints at the site, a junior redpot apologized and stopped the tape. Ryan Gehrig, senior redpot, and Michael Owens, head civilian redpot, sent apologies that were run in Mail Call Oct. 12 and Oct. 13, respectively. “I would like to apologize to Sims and to the Texas A&M student body for the offen sive lyrics that were heard at Bonfire stack recently,” Owens wrote. “The leadership of Aggie Bonfire does not condone discrimination in any form. This was an incident that never should have occurred.” Coapland said it is difficult for the red pots to regulate the activities that go on at the Bonfire site. “The leaders organize it,” Coapland said, “but the participants aren’t mem bers. The leaders work hard to ensure that the activities are appropriate because it reflects on the organization. That’s dif ficult to do.” Claudio Sosa, chair of ExCEL, said he is glad to see that the Bonfire leadership See Bonfire/Page 3 Killer of Miller, Broadus sentenced to life in prison From staff and wire reports Jimmy Ray Hardy was sentenced to life imprisonment Thursday for the May slay ings of Texas A&M students Reginald Broadus and Crystal Miller. A Dallas County jury convicted Hardy, 16, on two capital murder charges after de liberating for about 90 minutes before de ciding the sentence. Hardy was tried as an adult, but his age prevented prosecutors from seeking the death penalty. A petition was circulated at A&M last July requesting that Hardy be tried as an adult. Norman Kinne, first assistant district attorney for Dallas County, said the pe tition played a key role in U.S. District Judge Hal Gaither’s decision to try Hardy as an adult. “I’m sure it was more than that,” Kinne said, “but the petition made a difference; the state used that in its case.” Gaither said the petition gave credibility to the argument that Broadus and Miller were innocent victims. “It pointed out how well thought of the students were,” Gaither said. Broadus was a senior psychology major, intending to pursue a doctorate in psycholo gy, and Miller was a junior accounting ma jor. Broadus was awarded a posthumous degree in August, and Miller’s degree will be awarded in May 1995. Broadus and Miller were considered outstanding by their peers, professors and university administrators at A&M. Kevin Carreathers, director of multicul tural services, said in a previous interview that Broadus and Miller were outstanding as leaders and people. “They were people with bright futures ahead of them.” See Sentencing/Page 3 Exiles from Kuwait wait in Iraq near border Banners reading ‘We Are Coming' send veiled warnings to emirate KHOR ZUBEIR, Iraq (AP) — The distinctive Iraqi army-issue orange tents stretch for two miles from the demilitarized zone, housing thousands of stateless Arabs seeking to pour back across the border into Kuwait. “Dear Kuwait, We Are Com ing,” reads one banner at the camp, while another sends a veiled warning to the emirate’s ruling family: “Oh Al-Sabahs, sooner or later tomorrow is com ing.” The return of the stateless ones is the stuff Al-Sabah night mares are made of. Kuwait expelled about 100,000 bidouns — the Arabic word for “without” because they are without citizenship — after the 1991 Gulf War, accusing most of being an Iraqi “fifth col umn.” About 100,000 still remain in Kuwait. Their sudden appearance on the border two weeks ago, when Iraq was moving troops south ward, indicates that despite Iraqi claims that the troop movements were standard maneuvers, Bagh dad sought to set the Gulf on the boil again. Iraq feels its plight under U.N. economic sanctions, which bar it from exporting oil, is being ignored despite its cooperation with U.N. cease-fire terms im posed after the 1991 Gulf War. It has allowed U.N. inspectors to dismantle its weapons of mass destruction and monitor its weapons sites. However, it has resisted recog nizing Kuwait’s sovereignty and a new U.N.-demarcated border. Baghdad offered to do so through Russia last week, but Kuwait wants U.N. guarantees that Iraq would never threaten it again. With Iraqi troops and tanks seen headed northwards on Sat urday, the bidouns remained be hind to keep up the pressure. There appeared to be about 10,000 of them, mostly men; U.N. officials said there are 4,000. Many of the banners set up in the camp on Saturday were in English, and when bidoun lead ers saw TV crews they yelled out things like “There is another television team over there, can we get a demonstration going!” Information Minister Sheik Saud al-Sabah has said the camp contains “Iraqi soldiers and intel ligence agents dressed in civilian clothes.” He warned Kuwait would use force, if necessary, to keep them out. But the camp residents prof fered hundreds of Kuwaiti police See Iraq/Page 3 I