Page 6 THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1979 IVE A hoot; DON'T POLLUTE Woodsy Owl. Mob might cause high price United Press International President Carter recently com plained about the great difference between wholesale food prices and the final cost to consumers. Many law enforcement officials believe part of the difference is the price being paid to the mob. The payoff comes in many forms — kickbacks for labor peace; hijack ing, which means higher insurance rates for the legitimate businesses, and even mob control of some distri bution points. “Somebody is going to have to pay and you know as well as I do who’s going to,” says an FBI agent. “It’s going to come out of the consumers’ pocket. ” A classic organized crime method of gaining control of a business is through loansharking. A businessman who for some reason cannot get a loan through legitimate means is approached by someone who offers to provide the money at interest rates of 2 to 3 per cent per week. Over a period of a year, the weekly interest payments — called the “vigorish” or “vig,” from the Russian for winning or profit — exceed 100 percent. money from loansharks believing that with a little boost they can grab the gold ring,” says Special Agent John Morris of the FBI’s Boston office. “But then they find they can’t make their payments and soon the alternative is to let the mob in for a piece of the action. ” Genovese crime family. a „ The General Tutino.said, of the top heroin supplj ersi ., York — were indicted inastWi take over legitimatp L ■ ’I through loansharking. Failure to pay a mo b l oans | also can mean death. “Some businessmen, particularly when money is tight, will borrow Recently, 12 men — including John “Buster” Ardito, the reputed No. 2 man in the New York City Vito There are many reasonswk bis^r gc,si "‘° l « G RADU ATfNG 1 SENIORS IF YOU HAVE ORDERED A 1980 AGGIELAND, PLEASE STOP BY THE STUDENT PUBLI CATIONS OFFICE, ROOM 216 REED MCDONALD, AND PAY A $2.50 MAILING FEE ALONG WITH YOUR FORWARDING AD DRESS SO YOUR AGGIELAND CAN BE MAILED TO YOU NEXT FALL WHEN THEY ARRIVE. POWs to testify against Marin UP 1 u United PMRESS International CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C. — Marine Pfc. Robert R. Garwood emerged from Vietnam last March, ISVz years after disappearing outside Da Nang. Today he faces survivors of Vietnamese POW camps who have branded him a traitor. The Marine Corps is opening the military equivalent of a grand jury hearing to determine if Garwood should face a court-martial. Unlike a civilian hearing, however, military authorities generally allow reporters at the proceedings. Fifteen witnesses, most of them former POWs, were expected to give testimony supporting charges that Garwood, 33, turned on his own countrymen and collaborated with the Vietnamese. Garwood’s side of the story re- December 1 st 1979 -Tc etc CIC c u o o o u NEVER LET THEM FORGET!! TETIr Christmas Shoppers Special In r> Chopped Beef Dinner with Choice of 2 Fixins Beans Potato Salad Cole Slaw 19 Coupon good till Dec. 21 CATTM CQMFAKY 3li7 T»m if. W-3172 FcTc cTc cTc cTc cTc cTc cTc-c-. O o o n n n o h -H O o o D o ^etatsfiacsncssKcwcsx i One Year Anniversary Sale A SUN T B h B WR0NGH0RNS 13-7 o u a i l AVAILABLE ON T-SHIRTS AND BUMPER STICKERS IN THE TEXAS A&M BOOKSTORE msc 2305 S. Texas Selected long and short dresses for your holiday occasions from 10-20%. 693-9358 U 1979-80 Campus Directory is IN Pickup in Room 216 Reed McDonald Building Students MUST have fee slips mains a secret. His attorney has not yet decided if Garwood will testify, but says his client is eager to tell his story. "Bobby has an almost uncontroll able desire to give what he calls an accounting to the American people, ” said attorney Dermot Foley. Word of Garwood first came out of Vietnam in 1968, three years after he disappeared, when freed POWs told of an American who helped interro gate and guard prisoners. One report said Garwood was once seen in the jungle, armed and walking a patrol with communist troops. T he formal charges againstk elude desertion, absence without thorization, soliciting Ameri troops to throw down theirweap accepting a position with anew army, attempting to caUseinsuh* nation, and attacking fellow both verbally and physically. If found guilty, he couldre« the death penalty. Garwood, who spends hiss working as a clerk at this spmi | and isolated Marine base in east: I North Carolina, maintains his a cence. Health official tries to stof Cajuns' Christinas bonfm United Press International NEW ORLEANS — Claiming his motive is health and not a desire to be a Christmas Scrooge, the state director of the American Lung Asso ciation vows to snuff out a French cajun tradition of lighting bonfires to illuminate a path for "Papa Noel.” Thousands of cajun children living along the Mississippi River and on the banks of bayous throughout South Louisiana believe the French Santa Claus rides a pirougue — a flatbottomed, shallow draft boat — pulled by magical alligators to deliv er gifts, a local adaptation of the more traditional sleigh and reindeer. To aid Papa Noel on his journey, children and their parents build huge bonfires along the river levee each year and light them after dark on Christmas Eve illuminating the river’s curves with thousandsoll But Finley W. Raymond, ei tive director of the American Li Association of Louisiana, tires, plastics and chemicallytrei wood burned in the bonfires*! discharging poisonous chemi into the air, and he said he WJ court action to forbid the light® fires this year unless local ments took steps to remove her and plastic items from thep> “If necessary, I shall recomiE CHI' Chicagi isn’t wc The 1 trains a sit wor At leas the lur The now. A cannot million p; The ci ready to contract. may go o Teams v; have bee gasoline c causing s pumps. The cit ged triple in the nai Lat< refl' to our board that we take legalad WASH and obtain court injunctions to vent the burning of the pyres! unless immediate action is tab prj ce by 5 eliminate the rubber, creosote other materials centered stacks that are dangerous to bo health,” Raymond said Monday Yesterday's a fine billiards establishment OPENING SOON 4423 S. Texas Ave. between Luby’s & Chelsea St. I S , Y, Merry Christmas nation’s b day boost latest roui increases. “The re price incr pliers reti Exxon sp< Exxon, crude froi Happy Holidays the Battalion