September H aphuket, TSl and an engir: student, said a tie-breakei cause of the! e competition the girls frot ennis balli n won that," >r fun.” n both the all toumamen! on all three e 1 isakchaikuz, industrial engi ident, said k come out on to; rin Houston, lament,” hes i do it again The Battalion jme 103 • Issue 12 • 12 Pages Tuesday, September 17, 1996 The Batt Online: http://bat-web.tamu.edu uayle rallies support )r Republican Party Melanie D. Smith The Batt alion onon ,vay from our o say no whei y, a Dallas m rho doesn’t home park, ep hitting the m,” she says, jple to get all ig families, eat itself, in fai the June and rmer Vice President ^uayle urged students Republican in the November elections during his Monday appearance at Rudder fountain. Quayle’s rally, sponsored by Texas A&M College Re publicans, was an effort to Troops await orders Clinton does not seek confrontation with Saddam Stew Milne, The Battalion iQuayie speaks at Rudder Fountain Monday afternoon. drum up support for local Republican candidates and encourage voter turnout for students. Quayle endorsed Pete Ses sions, a 5th District Republi can congressional candidate and praised Texas Agricultur al Commissioner Rick Perry. But most of Quayle’s speech focused on Bob Dole’s presi dential campaign. “We need our public offi cials to tell the truth,” Quayle said. “Pete Sessions will tell you the truth. Rick Perry will tell you the truth. Wouldn’t it be nice to have a commander in chief who will tell you the truth?” Quayle said the character of the candidates should play a vital role in the presidential See Quayle, Page 10 WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States is not out to force a showdown with Iraq, President Clinton said Monday, as administration officials cooled their rhetoric over a potential clash with Saddam Hussein. Meanwhile, 3,000 U.S. soldiers at Fort Hood, Texas, waited to see whether they would be or dered to Kuwait for a new round of desert exercises. “We have sought no con frontation with Saddam Hus sein. We never did and we don’t now,” the president told reporters in the Oval Office. “My concern is that we limit Saddam Hussein’s abil ity to threaten his neighbors, that we do it with the no-fly zone and, in so doing, we keep our pilots safe,” Clin ton added. On Friday, Saddam said he would no longer shoot at coalition planes patrolling the two no-fly zones over Iraqi soil, which are de signed to cripple Saddam’s ability to mount threats against his neighbors. Army officials said Friday that 5,000 members of the 1st Cavalry Division at Fort Hood, Texas, had been or dered to deploy to Kuwait to take part in an ongoing exer cise. By Monday, officials said they expected no more than 3,000 would be going — but insisted no final order had been issued. “We have not gotten an execution order, and when it comes — if it comes — it might even be something less” than the 3,000, said III Corps spokesman, Army Lt. Col. Randy Schoel. In a telephone interview, Schoel said soldiers at Fort Hood were continuing with their normal routine, includ ing practicing putting ar mored vehicles on a ship at Beaumont, Texas. “It is just an exercise,” Schoel insisted. A senior military official, asked about the delay, said, “We’re in a watch-and-wait mode. We’re watching to see if Saddam’s words match his deeds.” To the embarrassment of Pentagon and administra tion officials, Kuwait balked over the weekend at ac cepting the latest troop de ployment, apparently miffed at a lack of consulta tion prior to its announce ment late Friday. White House spokesman Mike McCurry told re porters Kuwait decided to accept more U.S. troops, but he declined to say ex actly how many. America’s reluctant allies YEMEN A 400 miles , ; I 11 " 400 km Q] Turkey has barred the use of its southern air base in Incirlik for the launching of air strikes against Iraq. [|] Kuwait has agreed to the deployment of additional U.S. troops to add to their 1,200-strong contingent. [3] Bahrain will allow U.S. F-16s to be based on its territory to help enforce Iraq’s southern “no-fly" zone. [4] Saudi Arabia has not permitted the Americans to launch air strikes against Iraq from their territory. AP/Wm. J. Gastello j Jr. ory professor iport cites negligence Saudi Arabia bombing Savage Jr., a hi! Jahoma. 1 attract the est, people whi storical likeliho! happen, he land runs people lured 10 isers" who w notes. And better. mu,WASHINGTON (AP) — A fail- SnvJlr.ahi the Pentagon and key field manders to locus on terror- contributed to the death toll he bombing in Saudi Arabia killed 19 U.S. airmen in June, tiding to a task force report ased Monday. nresponse, Defense Secretary liam Perry ordered a review of Z itheranyAir Force personnel Tild becourt-martialed. resident Clinton praised the "/think we need to lo a great deal ore to protect our |oung men and fomen.” Come fooi 1 a pass ton want. Newt Gingrich Speaker of the House ondo d meet MoW d Tuesday^ ?ec Center. irt as “unvarnished, blunt, {forward.” f e intend to do everything an” to protect troops in the Id Clinton said. “We’re going gressively implement the ... it.” ouse Speaker Newt Gingrich, .campaigning in his home accused the Clinton admin- tion of being “consistently tin its approach to protect deans from terrorism.” think we need to do a great more to protect our young and women,” he said, focus of Perry’s review is ex- d to be Air Force Brig. Gen. 1 J. "Terry” Schwalier, com- der of the 4404th Wing and fficer responsible for the se- y of the roughly 2,000 ser vicemen living at Khobar Towers in Dhahran, site of the bombing. "Khobar Towers was identified to Gen. Schwalier as one of the three highest priority soft targets in the region,” the report notes. But Schwalier seems not to have made terrorism a top priori ty, the report said, contending that he “never raised to his supe riors force protection matters that were beyond his capability to correct. Nor did he raise the is sue of expanding the perimeter or security outside of the fence with his Saudi counterparts.” An end-of-tour memo written by Schwalier the day before the June 25 bombing does not even mention the terrorist threat as a focus of his tenure. Perry was not specifically criticized by the task force, which was commissioned by the Pentagon and headed by retired Army Special Forces Gen. Wayne Downing. However, the Down ing report cites as its first find ing the Pentagon’s failure to is sue orders on protecting forces housed in buildings. “I am concerned that insuffi cient attention is being given to anti-terrorism measures and force protection,” Downing wrote in a memo to Perry accompany ing the task force report. With thousands of Army troops packing bags for possible deployment to Kuwait, Gen. John Shaliicashvili, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the mili tary is taking steps to coordinate its response to terrorism. Still, the four-star general admitted to be ing caught off guard. “All of us have been surprised by the size and sophistication and the destructiveness of this attack,” Shalikashvili said. Council unites student groups By Ia.ura Oliveira The Battalion A student body executive council comprised of repre sentatives from different cam pus organizations has united to tackle major problems that Texas A&M students face. The council was created by Carl Baggett, student body president and a senior ac counting major. Baggett said the council heightens interac tion among organizations on campus and fulfills his vision to give a voice to diverse groups. Chris Reed, speaker of the Student Senate and a senior finance major, said the council serves as a platform for expressing a variety of student viewpoints. “I think it is a great organization because it allows student leaders that have different per spectives to come together and talk about issues that are important to students,” he said. The council is led by Amy Bigbee, Student Government chief of staff and a senior chemical engineering major. Bigbee said the council’s main goal is to develop solid solutions for com plex problems. “We have a goal of tackling problems that do not have immediate solutions,” she said. The council wants to deal with two major issues a year and create strategic plans for problems. One goal is to bring a new convention center to College Station because the Memorial Stu dent Center and Rudder Tower do not provide ample space for meetings and conferences. The council is working on a list of guaranteed events that would be scheduled at the new cen ter. They will also lobby potential developers. Nikki Guerra, executive director of Minority Student Affairs and a senior civil engineering major, said she is pleased by the council’s effec tiveness. She said cooperation is the key to the council’s success. “We can pull resources together and work as one big group to face problems,” she said. “I think we can really make a difference.” Baggett d meet Mow n. and Tuet :03 Rec Cei idents cae 1 class sessio ts ie Battalion TODAY d intermed 1 St Kick It , 30, & Ocl: 5/d at Pent* hael J. Pejo, tae c Member^ i nc j 0 team instruc- 5wn clubs;b tads a lire in krek- and punching. Aggielife, Page 3 the Clutcl yAggie netter tie Smedsrud ting accolades t ti’s go-to player. Sports, Pag€ GOP loses traditional edge on crime politics WASHINGTON (AP) — Law and order was a powerful refrain for Re publican Richard Nixon in the 1968 presidential campaign, and again for George Bush two decades later. But Bob Dole can’t bank on party tradition as he tries to use the crime issue against President Clinton. Mindful of the Democratic Par ty’s painful lessons in crime politics, Clinton has spent much of his first term trying to neutralize the long standing Republican advantage on the issue. Monday’s timely endorsement by the national Fraternal Order of Police was one sign of that. The nation’s largest police organiza tion backed Bush over Clinton four years ago, but the Democrat ic incumbent basked in a sea of blue uniforms this time in Cincinnati, just as Dole tried to push the crime and drugs issue to the forefront of the campaign. “We have a straightforward ap proach: more police on the street, guns and drugs off the street,” Clin ton said earlier Monday at a White House ceremony, where he joined Attorney General Janet Reno in claiming credit in the war on crime and in rattling off a string of statis tics he said proved his point. Begging to differ, Dole argues that rather than fight, Clinton has surrendered, particularly in the war on drugs. And on this latter point, he has statistics of his own: Clinton shrunk the staff of the drug policy director’s office, and the president’s own administration recently report ed alarming increases in drug use among 12- to 17-year olds. Dole says this is no accident, and his television ads will soon feature some powerful footage to help make the point: video of Clinton laughing on MTV when asked if he would inhale marijuana if given the chance to relive his college years. “Sure, if I could,” Clinton said. It is a startling image Dole hopes will shake up the race, one aimed at eroding Clinton’s sup port among the suburban parents that Dole must win over if he is defeat Clinton. “I will make the moral issue clear,” Dole said Monday, in Pennsylvania as he pledged to cut drug use at least in half if elected and to double federal funding for prison construction. “There is right and there is wrong, and drug use is wrong.” This was the opening foray in a new Dole effort to focus voter atten tion on what he considers America’s moral decline. There is plenty of evi dence to suggest voters share his concern, but little to suggest they blame Clinton. An ABC News-Washington Post poll earlier this month, for exam ple, showed Clinton with a nar row 46 percent to 40 percent edge when voters were asked which presidential candidate they trust ed more to fight crime. The num bers are testament to Clinton’s task in escaping his party’s past — not only on crime but on wel fare and other so-called “wedge issues” used by Republicans in past national elections. During the 1992 campaign, Clin ton returned home to Arkansas to sign execution papers for a convict ed murderer — and overcame op position from liberals to put the De mocratic Party on the record in fa vor of capital punishment. As president, Clinton overcame Republicans and the National Rifle Association opposition to pass two major gun-control measures, one banning certain assault-style weapons, the other requiring a wait ing period for handgun purchases. These laws are popular among working women and suburban moderates, perhaps the two most critical constituencies in the presi dential election. As Dole tries to turn the crime issue in his favor, he is turning to the familiar liberal vs. conserva tive rhetoric of Republican cam paigns past. Speaking at Villanova Universi ty, Dole said Monday: “From pack ing the federal court with ideologi cal liberals to running up the white flag in the war on drugs to taking a go-easy approach in prosecuting criminals, this administration’s crime policies can be summed up in the phrase, ‘Speak loudly but carry a small stick,’ or probably no stick at all.”