The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 06, 1981, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Page 8
THE BATTALION
WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 1981
FLY CESSNA...
THE CPC WAY!
GET STARTED
WITH A SPECIAL
DISCOVERY FLIGHT...
$20.00 PAYS
FOR EVERYTHING!
Here’s a “Get Up and Get Going”
Spring and Summer offer:
Spring and Summer is the time to get up, get outside and get going! A
great way to make the most of the warm days of Spring and Summer
is to learn to fly. Now you can take the first step to your own private
pilot’s license by way of a special introductory offer... the exclusive
Cessna Pilot Center Discovery Flight. For only $20 you can actually
fly an airplane under the expert guidance of a professional Cessna
Pilot Center flight instructor. And you’ll also get valuable instruction
before and after the flight. Come out and let's fly!
Cessna^
PILOT CENTER
m
BRAZOS AVIATION
696-8767
EASTERWOOD AIRPORT
COLLEGE STATION
State / National
Gun lobbyist once involved in killing
United Press International
LAREDO — Gun lobbyist Har
lan G. Carter, a National Rifle
Association executive, was once
convicted of killing a Hispanic
teen-ager whom Carter wanted to
question about a theft, court re
cords showed Tuesday.
Carter, then 17, was convicted
in a Webb County (Texas) court for
the March 13, 1931, murder of
Ramon Cassiano, 15. He was in
dicted on March 21, 1931, con
victed on April 16 and sentenced to
a three-year jail term for the
killing.
Carter appealed the murder
conviction that was eventually
overturned by a Texas appeals
court.
The 67-year-old executive vice
president for the NRA was re
elected Saturday at the gun group’s
national convention in Denver. He
was elected NRA executive vice
president in 1977.
The Laredo Times first reported
Carter’s murder conviction, and
Times managing editor Odie
Arambulano said the decision to re
vive the murder trial was made be
cause Carter is an important public
figure.
“When you have a person in a
high position calling the shots, you
should know his entire back
ground,” Arambulano said. “When
Carter applied for his job with the
NRA, I doubt whether he told
them he had killed a man.”
Arambulano said reporters disc
overed Carter’s previous murder
conviction while investigating re
ports of alleged Border Patrol
abuses against illegal aliens. He
said the anti-gun lobby was not in
volved in the story about the 50-
year-old murder.
The Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals overturned Carter’s con
viction in December 1931, saying
the lower court had not given a fair
hearing to Carter’s plea of self-
defense, court records show.
The late State District Judge
J.F. Mullally dismissed the mur
der charge against Carter on Jan.
19, 1933, and accepted the self-
defense plea.
Carter, a former U.S. Border
Patrol chief, could not be reached
Tuesday for comment.
According to accounts of the
slaying in 1931 editions of the Lare
do Times, Carter had returned
home from school when his mother
told him she had seen three or four
teen-agers hanging around a family
shed near their house. The Carter
family car had been stolen a few
weeks before the shooting, and
Carter said his mother was con
cerned about an attempted theft of
the family cow.
three-day trial that he le|||
house with a shotgun and),
fronted four youths, including!-
siano, as they were returning! I
a local swimming hole.
Carter, whose father was al;
Border Patrol officer, said heij
to force the youths to his hoimi I
be interrogated by his mother,!]
Cassiano drew a knife. I
Carter testified during the
“You think I won’t use tin
Carter said, telling thecourtrfl I
warning to Cassiano. He saidj
fired the shotgun from point-big
range and hit Cassiano iij
shoulder.
‘Store wars’ predicted for the future
United Press International
DALLAS — Groceries will be
in such fierce competition in the
1980s that raiding customers will
FREE BIKE CHECK
WITH THIS AD
Howard
Racing Inc.
Specials on Spring Tune-ups
on All Bikes, Street Tires now
Available
Cali for Quota* on your BIKa
693-7604
Vi mile South Texas World Speedway
9-5:30 M-F 9-12 Sat.
THECPCUMY!
•MSC AGGIE CINEMA*.
MSC AGGIE CINEMA
presents
PIRANHACON II
featuring ”
"THE TERROR OF TINY TOWN"
(A MIDGET WESTERN?) -
"CAN'T STOP THE MUSIC"
(VILLAGE PEOPLE VITALITY)
"ATTACK OF THE
KILLER TOMATOES"
(VEGETABLE VENGENCE)
"I WAS A TEENAGE
FRANKENSTEIN"
(CLASSIC SATIRE?)
AND
Starring
LINDA BLAIR
A GIRL WHO CAN MAKE
YOUR HEAD SPIN
COMING MAY 8
Te
w-^TwnrE
o IPHTICAE
Prescriptions Filled
Glasses Repaired
216 N. MAIN
BRYAN
Mon.-Fri.
Sat.
822-6106
8 a.m.-5 p.m.
8 a.m.-l p.m.
We Gets What Ya
Likes
In The WayOf Bikes!
Takara - Ross - Campagnolo
Cinelli - Shimano
and much more
Cycles,
Plus the Bes
Etc.
*lus the Best Repairs &
Prices Around — Call Us!
403 University — 846-7580
Nortfigate (Acrou from Poet Office)
Also
Robert Duvall
In
THE GREAT
SANTINI
Remember:
Every Thursday
Night All Tickets
1.50 on Regular Show
Thursday Midnight
Thursday Only
Female
Atheltes X
All Tickets $3
GOOOOOOOOO<
be the key to success, an industry
analyst told the annual convention
of the Food Market Institute
Tuesday.
The “store wars” will be the
result of a saturated market. Jay
Kurtz of the Kappa Group of
Miami, Fla., said. Kurtz also told
store owners to take quasimilitary
strategies in their approach to
competition.
“The only way a store can grow
in a saturated market is by under
standing that you must take away
more business from a competitor
than he takes away from you,”
Kurtz said. “Expanding into un
penetrated markets doesn’t work
any more, because there are no
unpenetrated markets.
“If you aren’t prepared to fight
for what you have, you will lose it.
The key concern today is competi
tion. You must develop strategies
to take away business from a com
petitor.”
Kurtz’ presentation was built
around a military theme with re
ferences to Normandy, fire fights,
counter attacks and smashing
competition. He presented
“offensive, defensive, flanking
and guerrilla” schemes for grocer
ies and urged the leaders in a mar
ket area to “burn, rape and pillage
the competition as it’s coming
up.”
Strong No. 2 competitors must
attack the leaders’ weak points —
be it prices, service or quality, he
said. Less competitors should
“flank” the leaders by seeking
areas where their following is
weak and move in. The “guerrilla”
strategy requires finding a small
market segment that can be de
fended, but can provide a quick
escape if necessary.
Leo Kahn, chief executive!
Boston-based Purity-Suprei
Co., said the winners
stores that offer consumers!
best opportunity to stay witii
their established food
Kahn’s groceries are
house” stores that offer i
E rices in lieu of sacks,
oys, free bags, check cashings:
vice and variety.
“Despite inflation,” he!
“consumers are still deten
not to spend more on food,’
Vietnamese lawsuit questioned
United Press International
HOUSTON — Ku Klux Klans-
men and Texas fishermen Tuesday
asked a federal judge to dismiss a
lawsuit by Vietnamese shrimpers
seeking government protection
from hostile Texans who want the
refugees to leave the coast.
The defendant Klan members
and fishermen also asked U.S.
District Judge Gabrielle K.
McDonald, a black woman, to
withdraw from the case because of
alleged “bias” in favor of the Viet
namese.
The Vietnamese filed the law-
Bother's Bookstore
PAYS
TOP DOLLAR
FOR USED BOOKS)
At the Southgate
696-2111
The Best Pizza In Town! Honest
suit April 16 complaining of
harassment and threats of violence
by Klan members and Texan
fishermen seeking to reduce what
has become stiff refugee competi
tion in Texas coastal waters.
In documents filed Tuesday,
lawyers for the Klan and the Texas
fishermen denied threatening vio
lence against the refugees and
charged the lawsuit was filed in
bad faith because the Vietnamese
complaint was "speculative.”
The defendants said the Viet
namese can fish in peace when the
season opens May 15.
“There are no immediate or
past threatening or dangerous acts
which defendants have engaged
in,” the defendants’ documents
said.
“Plaintiffs are currently fishing
and selling catch without any in
timidation, threats or interference
from defendants.”
The defendants’ request that
the judge turn the case over to
another judge made no mention of
her race. Rather, lawyers focused
on an occurrence in the federal
building Monday.
They charged the judge sent
her law clerk to ask
whether Louis Beam’s wi
white Klan robes to thedeposil
hearings bothered them
said the judge did not infomiJ
fendants of the inquiry and sail
showed bias.
The Vietnamese, who also b
requested special protection fra
the U.S. attorney general and i
FBI, complained in the law;
the defendants threatened tie a
fugees with violent expulsion
the coast..
Tin
fit’s
whi<
The lawsuit cited a Feb. life
ta Fe, Texas, rally at which ft
leader Beam and Seabrai
Kemah Fishermen’s Coali ■.
leader Gene Fisher denouatt
the Vietnamese, demanded lli
they leave the coast and burned
cross and a boat.
all
4
N<
NATC
schools
iighdeh
means c
The Vietnamese also said sett order,
al of their boats had been bun:
in yet unsolved cases of arson
The defendants admitted
cross and boat had been bumeli
the Feb. 14 rally. They said; [ nee,: j n S
boat-burning was not intended
intimidate anyone and the®
was burned for religious purpose
WE DELIVER
846-3412
Mr. Gatti's Pizzamat
AFTER 5 P.M. — MIN. $5.00 ORDER
MANOR EAST 3
MANOR EAST MALL
823-8300
•■..IIs .m.vl siKnn!
■ ^ r
“HEAVEN’S GATE”
9:35 only
She taught them to sfxuik. They taught her to tone.
Walt Disney
Productions
1:30 4:50 7:50
3:15 6:30
BALLROOM
Snook, Texas
JERRY
JEFF
WALKER
Sat. May 9th
8 p.m. to 1
Also Appearing:
MESQUITE
Advance Tickets
$9.00
At the Gate
$10.00
Tickets available at
all Courts locations
The
closing s
forced b
The
Scott’s c
integrate
Ttwi
tendent
a motioi
instead
Levy
the mot
would b
You Get What You Pay For.
And Then Some.
spacious apartments»super summer rates*cabletv
connections»shuttle bus service*swimming pools*
laundry rooms*parties*large walk in closetsTull-
time maintenance*security guards • tennis courts
METRO PROPERTIES
A professional apartment management company
8 locations in Bryan/Col lege Station • 693 4242/6916505
THE ADVENTURE IS JUST BEGINNING
PIRANHACON II
coming May 8
WE KNOW YOU ARE FEELING THE PINCH THESE
DAYS, BUT TAKE A BREAK AND WORSHIP WITH!
THIS WEEK.
University Lutheran Chapel
3T5 N. College Main
Hubert Beck, Pastor 846-6687
WORSHIP SERVICES AT 9:15 A.M. AND 10:45 A M.
Fellowship Supper 6 p.m. Holy Communion (Folk Setting) 7 pm
CANDLELIGHT COMMUNION SERVICE
WEDNESDAY EVENINGS AT 10 P.M.