^tober 20, if ■clubs within the International Students Association are participating their own Mini-Olympics. aiservative, m y applicnj sking ' Opinion Page 2 MELISSA MEGLIOLA: More important than changing admissions for business schools is that the new GMAT points out the need for candidates with better writing skills. ^ ^ . b Page 11 wneih p I o | tSA I FA I TON a , recent edit) ^ ' n that sentg the right let, sexuals.buts ave Sports The Texas A&M soccer team is defending their title in the Post Oak Mall Soccer Classic. Page 7 FRIDAY October 21, 1994 Vol. 101, No. 40 (12 pages) “Serving Texas A&M since 1893” heard o[| | 'c WM: ^ ^ ‘-.Irikfs E-Mail messages outrage networkers insitioatoses at the heart trade dispute IVASHINGTON (AP) — Brutal lumn about ■ness, noses. tuse. AsIrB he ultimate symbol of love is at for her. LoriB heart a bitter dispute between t study stl' and Latin American growers “■could make romance a bit more Sh ’ Bensive. 1 nes PratjM n industry graced with variety cannot have»es like Only Love, Joy and 1 such a fnerAing is showing its thorns, caught iought,sin( | n accusations of marketplace ? deadlinecaiii ffhisf and other florid rhetoric, topic. ri stake ma Y be tbe survival of an >s no friends | ac *y diminished industry, relations 1 Leen hemispheric neighbors, and T j price and choice Americans see i at lexasASi l n buying their favorite flower, ly 18 goingt«merican growers are attacking t all yoursel! ■orts of Colombian and Ecuadorian o make some, pes, believing unchecked 1 fun. Bments from those countries will she saidlh’M them out of business as surely as t friends,ac!# carna tions have withered. ge is still tel re, but she i liicides plague U.S. (le fun. Gd'| rv j cemen j n H a j|;j statements i d that ‘No ig infourye® itional stale; to prepare rue thatmai no firm cai nd are er career pel r or to the Sti rson Hall, te Catalog, yourself, wliii P. Starr, ; A&M Full H£‘ ORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) |The U S. military geared up for ti with flak jackets and malaria Is, expecting casualties from ifnbat or disease. [The only three U.S. servicemen to so far all took their own lives, and cialists are struggling to prevent her suicides. |Battalion chaplains and mental professionals are sounding out fe ranks for signs of stress and iression that could lead to another cide among the 18,000 icemen and women in Operation |hold Democracy. Commanders are also trying to up morale by making available jjio and TV broadcasts, the asional steak or day on a beach, concerts next week by country- stern stars The Gatlin Brothers. change leads to big stress,” ij Eric Cipriano, 33, of the 528th Combat Stress Control Detachment Hm Fort Bragg, S.C., said mrsday. “We want to make sure Jt people understand that suicide jl$| a permanent solution to a porary problem.” . lush, Richards to hold televised debate AUSTIN (AP) — The Texas gu- rnatorial candidates, separated by single percentage point in the most cent opinion poll, head to Dallas iday night for a televised debate. The prime-time showdown on blic station KEFIA-TV likely will be e only face-to-face meeting be- een Democratic Gov. Ann Richards 9nd Republican challenger George Bush before the Nov. 8 election. U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison and Democratic nominee Richard [isher also will debate, the second of three such sessions in their cam- ign. The event consists of separate, )e-hour programs for each race be- hning at 8 p.m. y lew Down Syndrome est proven safe | MONTREAL (AP) — A test for ! own syndrome that can be done a : II month earlier than the standard ethod of finding fetal abnormalities 9s proved safe in a study of more (an 150,000 women, researchers i ported Thursday. Some research had suggested tltat the test, chorionic villus j ampling, or CVS, could slightly crease the risk of birth defects. But e study found no evidence of that. Amniocentesis, the standard test, goes not provide results until the 1th to 16th week of pregnancy. VS can help ease parents’ fears arlier; it provides results in the 10th eek of pregnancy. The findings are important ! ecause demand for the test, which Snow available in many large ssearch hospitals, is likely to grow s other advances in genetics icrease its usefulness, said one of le study’s authors, Dr. Laird ackson of Thomas Jefferson niversity in Philadelphia. J % % Baxx Campus 2 Classified 8 iports 7 Toons 3 leather 5 A/hat's Up 5 Illegally accessed account used to send racist messages By Lisa Messer The Battalion Computer users across the nation re ceived white supremacist messages Mon day through the electronic mail account of a professor at Texas A&M University-Cor pus Christi. Grady Blount, a professor of environ mental science at Texas A&M in Corpus Christi, said someone stole his Internet password and broke into his E-Mail ac count Sunday night to send 20,000 racist messages nationwide. “The more time passes, the madder I get,” Blount said. “They’re trying to stir up racial strife between people. They’re trying to stir up racial strife in us.” The messages urged readers to send “minority parasites packing to fend for themselves” and condemns community de velopment funding as support for black “breeding colonies.” The message, titled “Free Money” and signed “Crusader,” said the federal govern ment funds “80 IQ welfare mothers” and “Jewish organized crime gangs.” “And if you bum down your own neigh borhood when a court decision doesn’t go your way, don’t worry. Truckloads of mon ey will soon arrive to build you new breed ing colonies - er, I mean houses, apart ments, community centers, swimming pools, etc.,” the message said. Blount said he has received harsh re sponses, including death threats, from 1,000 E-Mail users who thought he was the sender. Blount said many of those responses in dicate that people believe he is a professor at Texas A&M University. “The messages say things like, You Ag gies, I always knew y’all were a bunch of racist rednecks, and now we have proof,’” Blount said. “Outside of Texas, everyone just recog nizes the A&M part. I want everyone to know that those racist messages have nothing to do with the A&M System at all.” The messages resemble a flier produced by the white supremacist group National Alliance in Mills Point, West Virginia. Franklin Pierce, the founder of National Alliance, said he was unaware of the mes sage. Pierce said his group did not send the electronic message, but a group mem ber could be responsible. Blount said there is little hope of identi fying the message’s sender. “The sender was logged on in Wisconsin late Sunday, early Monday,” Blount said. “Someone at the university noticed a large amount of messages being sent out and checked on it. When they saw what the message was, they cut the sender off.” The sender came into A&M at Corpus Christi’s computer network from the Uni versity of Texas at Austin and sent the message out from Corpus Christi, Blount said. “They could be in Bangladesh and log on to UT-Austin and log off in Corpus Christi,” Blount said, “or they could’ve been sitting right here on this island.” George Kemper, project director in See E-Mail/Page 10 Kim Smith/Special to The Battalion Who put that hut there? An A&M physical plant employee works to remove the wreckage left after a bus ran into the hut near Fish Pond Thursday afternoon. Bowen: decision on multiculturalism to wait until By Amanda Fowle The Battalion Incidents of racism at Texas A&M have sparked concern about the status of a multicul turalism class requirement. Last November, the Faculty Senate approved a U.S. Cul tures and International Re quirement for all students. The requirement is now awaiting President Bowen’s approval. Dr. Mark Weichold, speaker of the Faculty Senate, said the Senate spent a long time work- requirement ing on the proposal. “We tried to prevent prob lems that other universities have had with their multicul turalism requirements,” he said. “Our proposal represents lots of compromises.” Weichold said that many people who disagreed with the course requirement did not un derstand it. The proposal requires stu dents to take one three-hour class to meet a U.S. Cultures requirement and one three- hour class to meet an Interna- understood tional requirement. Weichold said that some peo ple thought that only one class would be offered to meet the re quirement, but there are about 250 classes to chose from. “If you had the entire stu dent body required to take a single course,” he said, “you face the problem of students be ing subjected to a particular po litical agenda.” Weichold said that the re quirement will not add any See Requirement/Page 3 Houston: from flood to fire HOUSTON (AP) — Leaking gasoline from a ruptured interstate pipeline exploded Thursday, sending 100-foot flames snaking across an al ready flooded San Jacinto River. “It looked like hell opened up on the water and the whole river was gasoline,” said Mike Nor man, who was on the riverbank trying to retrieve his sailboat from the river when the explosion occurred about 10:20 a.m. The explosion at the mouth of the nation’s interstate pipeline network known as “The Spaghetti Bowl” also caused gasoline future prices to jump in trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. “At this point, we believe the force of the floodwaters caused the pipeline to break, that is the best information we have right now,” said Ed Schaefer, assistant coordinator for the Texas Department of Public Safety’s emer gency management division. Norman said he smelled gas an hour before he saw a house explode, setting off an inferno on the river’s surface that was sheened with gasoline. “The house exploded and it started down to the water and it went all over,” Norman said. “The whole river was cascading into flames.” He estimated he was about 400 yards away from the explosion. The area already had been evacuated because of the floods, although six area schools were emptied today af ter the explosion. “There were three loud booms and then an immediate black cloud,” said a witness, Doug Trowbridge. “It just began to spread like wildfire.” Although no deaths or serious injuries were immediately re ported, television footage showed mobile homes and boats ablaze. Widely separated columns of smoke could also be seen throughout the forested area lin ing the river. “This is not unusual for a flood,” said Trans portation Secretary Federico Pena, in Houston to observe the flood damage. “We have seen this in other parts of the country where you have mas sive flooding and pipes are hit, tanks get loose and you have ruptures and you have explosions. So this is not atypical in that sense.” Pipeline explosion Store s decision to sell liquor gets favorable response from customers By Stephanie Dube The Battalion Randall’s Food and Drug store’s decision to sell beer and wine has been a profitable one for the College Station store. Bill Tusing, assistant store director of the Randall’s in College Station, said since the store began selling beer and wine Sept. 16. business has boomed “There has been a great increase in business since we began selling beer and wine,” Tusing said. “It was a business decision based on convenience, competition, and cus tomer needs.” A survey of College Station Ran dall’s customers indicated 79 percent of the people surveyed wanted the store to carry beer and wine, Tusing said. Since the beer and wine were first of fered, the store has received approxi mately 20 pleased comments for every complaint issued, he said. Tusing said customers did not want to buy their groceries at Randall’s and then have to go to another store to purchase their beer or wine. The decision was meant to make shop ping more convenient for the customers, he said. Cindy Garbs, corporate vice president of public relations for Randall’s Food Market Inc., said the Randall’s in College Station is not the first Ran dall’s to sell beer and wine. In 1992, Randall’s took over the Austin Tom Thumb stores, Garbs said. Because beer and wine were already being sold at these stores, Randall’s continued to sell the products, she said. The stores also did this when Randall’s took over AppleTree in Austin. “College Station is the first original Randall’s store to sell beer and wine,” Garbs said. Garbs said there has been a strong demand in all the Randall’s stores for beer and wine. “A good percent of people are pleased with our decision,” she said. “There are people who have been disappointed in the deci sion, but they understand the business reasons for it.” Before the College Station Randal l’s began selling beer and wine, stores in Austin, Dallas, and Fort Worth were already selling them, Garbs said. College Station began selling before Houston because of geographic reasons only, she said. “We just picked up College Station on the way into Houston,” Garbs said. Originally, Randall’s stores did not sell beer and wine for personal rather than religious reasons, Garbs said. “It was a personal reason with the founder and CEO Bob Onstead,” Garbs said. “A family member had a difficulty with alcoholism which caused family heartache.” Onstead and his two business partners agreed, when they began the first two Randall’s stores in 1966, not to sell beer and wine in respect for Bob Onstead’s family member, she said. Israel seals Gaza Strip, West Bank after bombing TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) — As an guished Israelis on Thursday buried their dead from the Tel Aviv bus bombing, authorities ordered sweep ing arrests of suspected terrorists and sealed the autonomous Gaza Strip and occupied West Bark. Facing public demands for a crackdown on militants in the wake of Wednesday’s bombing, the govern ment also ordered the demolition of the home of a Palestinian suspected in the suicide attack that killed 21 people. The fledgling self-rule government in Gaza deplored the decision pre vent Palestinians from going to work in Israel as collective punishment that could slow the peace process. “This is an attempt to make the Palestinian people kneel down,” said Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat. Speaking at a ceremony for fallen soldiers Thursday evening, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin vowed Israel will outlive the Islamic fundamental ists who seek its destruction. “To those who are trying to harm us, the kidnappers and gunmen and See Israel/Page 10 West Bank and Gaza Strip closed off Following the tragic bombing of a commuter bus in Tel Aviv, the Israeli Cabinet approved the unlimited closure of the two Palestinian autonomous regions on Thursday. The closure denies 65,000 Palestinians entry permits to Israel, keeping them from their jobs. Other measures being considered: H Jailing Hamas activists without a trial. M Wrecking or sealing homes of Hamas activists. H Internationa! campaign to cut off donations to Hamas from the U.S., Britain, Iran and other countries. Autonomous regions 20 miles 20 km Detail map ISRAEL West Bank / JORDAN 25 miles 25 km Jerusalem Gaza Jericho ISRAEL