"IA - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, December 4, 1997 NATEONILD Any officials concerned about release of names Los Angeles Tunes WASHINGTON - The upcoming court- martial of the Army's former top enlisted person is sending shudders of anxiety through the ser- vice because of a growing possibility it will force public disclosure of the names of dozens of others - including generals - who have been accused of sexual infractions. In an attempt to prove their client has been unfairly treated, defense attorneys for former Sgt. Maj. of the Army Gene McKinney have compiled a list of six generals who have alleged- ly escaped punishment for sexual violations. They have forced the Army to provide names of some 30 other senior service members - offi- cers and senior non-commissioned personnel - who have been formally investigated on such charges in the past two years. So far, the judge in the case has ordered the names and other pretrial information held secret. But with McKinney's court-martial now one month away, news organizations and other inter- ested parties are considering filing court papers seeking release of the names. Army officials, already in agony over the 10- month-old case, fear disclosure of the names could harm innocent people and renew the painful debate over whether the brass are treated more leniently than their subordinates in such cases. The issue has distracted Pentagon leader- ship for the past year. Thedebate began with sexual misconduct cases at Maryland's Aberdeen Proving Ground and continued with the case of former Air Force bomber pilot Lt. Kelly Flinn, who - accused of adultery and disobeying orders - eventual- ly accepted a general discharge rather than face court-martial. In June, the scandal reached the top ranks with the disclosure that Air Force Gen. Joseph Ralston, vice chairperson of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, once conducted an adulterous affair. "You can imagine how disruptive this would be," one Army official said of disclosing the names. "And unfair." McKinney, a 29-year Army veteran whose former position is one of the most visible and prestigious in the service, faces 20 counts stem- ming from accusations by six women who are current and former members of the military. The counts include adultery, indecent assault and obstruction ofjustice.7 McKinney's lawyer, Charles Gittins, has argued that the Army's decision to take the case to a court-martial shows a double standard, since no Army general has been court-martialed at least since military law was codified in 1951. On Nov. 6, Gittins gave the court a list of six Army generals he alleged have broken sexual misconduct rules without punishment. And last month, at the court's instruction, Army officials filed a list of officers and senior enlisted per- sonnel who have been formally investigated for alleged sexual misconduct violations in the past two years. A source said the list included 10 generals and about 20 others at about McKinney's rank or higher who had been investigated sinde 1995. Some on the list had acknowledged their guilt, others had invoked their right to make no statements and still others may have been innocent. According to this source, the most severe p ' ishment any of the 30 received was a letter reprimand, and none of them was court-mar- tialed, A spokesperson for the Army's Military District of Washington, which is administering the trial, declined to comment on the list. Most military disciplinary proceedings are conducted without attracting publi notice, so publication of the list could -be deeply embarrassing for many of the sol- diers involved. t I Yeltsin speech A * 4ay Compaq Presario 1090ES Notebook CntiCzed, by aides MOSCOW - President Boris Yeltsin's latest series of surpiso announcements on Russia's disarm+ ment plans, made on his current stat visit to Sweden, have once again bewil- dered the West and exasperated ai*4 trying to persuade the increasingly eccentric leader to keep to an official script. His spokesperson, Sergei Yastrzhembsky, tactfully down- played Yeltsin's first startling ge- ture on Tuesday night - a pronise to cut Russia's nuclear warheads-by a third and seek a total world banon atomic weaponry - by ha1il explaining that the Russian le was "tired" after a long day and thet he had done no more than shed some light on talks underway with the United States.- - But, first thing yesterday morning, Yeltsin resumed his ways, this time with a second dramatic promise t the Swedish parliament to unilaterally -cut Russia's ground and naval forces by at least 40 percent from Jan. 1, 1999.. "Listen to this, and evaluate it exhorted, looking up with a sudden grin from his text. His audience - conw fused lawmakers and an anxious Yastrzhembsky - answered with silence. Later, Yastrzhembsky issued -his gloss on the presidential offer.. The huge arms cuts Yeltsin had talked 'of were only the same armed forces' pe- sonnel cuts that Russia has planned for years, he said. "The reduction will9 within the limits that have been announced," he said. ROSE BOWL Continued from Page 1A - already a line of 500 people deep," said Nathan Nilles, a Washington State senior. While the Washington Stte Athletic Department did not guara tee tickets for every interest Washington State student, as' the University of Michigan did, t .e 9,000 student season-ticket holders at Washington State were eligible for one $75 Rose Bowl ticket each. "We've had over 300,000 ticket requests," said Cougars football coacih Mike Price at a press conference yes- terday. "Can we expand the stadium? It's been just unbelievable. T Cougars are coming out of the wr work." Washington State received a total. bf 35,000 tickets from the Tournament of the Roses, about 7,000 more tickets than the University's allocation. Thousands of Washington State'st dents are booking flights and chates ing buses to see this year's Rose Bowl. This year marks the last time the match is guaranteed to join the winners of t Big Ten and Pac Ten championshiph New Year's Day battle. -: "There are quite a few fraternities and sororities that have chartered buses," said Nilles, who is the prop grams director for the Interfraternity Council at Washingtop State. "We're lovi Campus involvement is f' booming. We have a great team' But Bartell, who supervises Couger Pawthe tic, the athletic ment's clothig store, said' although business is great, too 'd people have jumped on the Co bandwagon this season. "Sales are phenomenal. But we h$ a lot of bandwagon people," B said. "It's an interesting social phed make next year easier? With the Compaq Presario 1090ES, you can download photos off the Web, grab facts from the CD encyclopedia, drop them into your report and e-mail it to your professor. And at only 7.3y pounds, you can do it at school, at home, even at the pizza shop. 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