Tuesday, May 31, 1983/The Battalion/Page 3 ‘Aggies make up 70 percent’ Student shoplifting increases by Christine Mallon Battalion Reporter |The number of students pro- I Dcuted for shoplifting in Col lege Station is increasing and | one supermarket manager says that students make up 70 per- II cent of the problem in his store. I Safeway assistant manager Dan Feldman estimates that ab- ikit 35 percent of his customers are students. “But they’re about 70 percent of our shoplifting problem,” he said. I Feldman, who has been the : assistant manager at the Safeway in Culpepper Plaza for five years, said there has been a huge Rcrease in the number of stu dents his store prosecutes for College Station policeman Lt. Bernard Kapella said that be muse of the large increase in the Indent population and in the Rnount of retail stores in the area, there has been a large in- ■ease in the number of Texas A&M students arrested for sho plifting. I “Females are the worst,” Kapella, head of crime preven tion and community relations, said. “More than 80 percent of the shoplifters brought in are females,” he said. This high percentage can probably be attributed to the assortment and high prices for cosmetics, Kapella said, which are the items most often taken by female shoppers. The Kroger store located in Southwest Parkway Shopping Center is one of the three local supermarkets that employs security guards. Skaggs Alpha Beta manager Oliver Bishop said his store has almost a 100 percent prosecu tion rate of shoplifters, but it is not his company’s policy to dis cuss the methods of catching them. “If we told people how our security system operates, then it wouldn’t be very effective,” Bishop said. Feldman said he does not mind making the public aware of how Safeway’s security system against shoplifters works. “Hopefully, once shoppers know how much time and money we spend to safeguard against thefts, they’ll think twice before they steal something,” he said. Safeway hires off-duty police officers from the College Station Police Department to work in the store undercover. Feldman said officers hide in catwalks which run throughout the store and use binoculars to closely watch shoppers. Once a shopper is seen con cealing an item, Feldman said, the officer continues to watch him to see if he leaves the store with the item. When he is out side the store an awaiting officer approaches him. The officer asks the suspect if he has some thing in his possession that he didn’t pay for. If the shopper can’t prove that he paid for the item, he is brought back into the store and arrested. “Once an arrest is made, it’s out of our hands and into the police department’s,” Feldman said. “The rest is just like Adam- 12,” he said. “They’re taken to either the city or county jail, de pending on the value of the item Senate OKs House changes in bill creating state ethics commission m ini ess datil ons. In sted dial □grams the hoi onsulta United Press International AUSTIN — The state Senate Saturday agreed to House tanges in a bill to create a state thics commission, clearing the |ay for the measure to go to }ov. Mark White. The compromise bill, jfashioned by a joint conference jCommittee, drew some opposi tion from Sen. J.E. “Buster” Brown, R-Lake Jackson, be cause it contained no provision requiring immediate reporting of contributions during the final nine days before an election. But Sen. Ted Lyon, D- Rockwall and sponsor of the bill, accused Brown of supporting the provision — which has wide spread opposition among legis lators — merely as a means of killing the bill. Currently, campaign contri butions received during the fin al nine days before an election are not required to be reported until a month after the vote. The major provision in the bill approved by both Houses would prohibit for the first time the personal use of campaign funds. The conference committee also altered the bill to specify that only one of five citizens on an Ethics Advisory Commission could be a lobbyist. k and Ft| mputer nese coi opmeni ters. i new nations ir and nd indi i s vied h coraeil l, “The! thamoii :com[ dy are i Actor ’Brien alls ill United Press International SAN ANTONIO — Actor Pat • Brien became ill during the linal act of a weekend theater berformance and was taken to a hospital, authorities said Tonday. He was listed in stable condi tion in Humana Hospital of San Antonio early Monday, a hospit al spokeswoman said. Another pokesperson said preliminary Ftests on the actor, 83, indicated he was suffering from anemia. rlVat JlM, O’Brien was hospitalized late enzecT'Samnlay after he started to stag- ans can Fger and had to leave the stage owntollfduring the final act of “On Gol- \ Tden Pond” at the Fiesta Dinner nd ins® Playhouse, the spokesperson xchangt Sa ‘^- The actor was to have oacities mished the four-week per- ofonel formance Sunday, the Nai 1 O’Brien, cast as a fast-talking veryoiif Irishman in most of his more family- ^ an HO pictures, appeared in such movies as “Boy Meets Girl,” SAngels with Dirty Faces” and The Fighting 69th." puter he cot notl hen st : In a chnolof nitivei with oud the te we sot ation jmcalioni ing anf :eed 300 n f they artk to edilki® iffortto® Isobesigi* xr of tilt* ire welffl* strainlsa^ lence to: f texasAtf phone ,Wedn«fl’ regular 1(1 nitration ester, JSF Mvertishf Reed Me® liege Su , i f led exciitf spatdier' er matter* ege Stat* 4 Villa Oaks West apartments i i V ■ .• ’ • v • Convenient to campus • Brand new • Spacious floor plans • On-site leasing and management • Pool, fireplaces, laundry room Now preleasing! 1107 Verde Drive between FM-2818 and Villa Maria Road 779-1136 Investing in the future. A sound education is her best guarantee of happiness later in life. And that education should go far beyond school books. Allen Academy is Texas’ oldest boys’ pri vate college preparatory school. Our stu dents leam to succeed in a rapidly changing world. Our curriculum includes computing and the modem sciences. But our educa tional program focuses on each student as an individual. Allen offers students with average to superior ability the opportunity to develop mental, physical and moral competence in a structured, yet friendly environment. Our day school program is co-educational in grades 1-12. The boarding program is for boys in grades 9-12. Our goal is to teach our students integrity, self-discipline, responsibility and an active desire to leam and to succeed. For information on enrollment for the 1983-84 school year, call or write the Headmaster. ALLEN ACADEMY A distinguished school for modern youth Box 953 ♦ Bryan, Texas 77806 ♦ (409) 779-0066 stolen.” The city jail handles all Class- C misdemeanors. Thefts under $5 fall into this category. Two hundred and six dollars must be posted to be released. “That $206 is used to pay the fine in most cases, but all juris diction is left up to the judge,” Kapella said. However, $206 is the maximum fine in these cases. The Brazos County jail hand les all Class-B misdemeanors, in cluding theft from $5 to $20. A maximum fine of $ 1,000 and/or a small jail term is assessed. A Class-A misdemeanor for theft includes items valued between $20 and $200. The maximum fine for a Class A is $2,000 and/ or a maximum jail sentence of one year. Any theft above that amount is a felony. Michelle McDonough, a gra duate student in the psychology department, has talked with sev eral students who have been arrested for shoplifting. She said most of them admitted to shoplifting before, but this was the first time they were caught. McDonough said she is aware there are some people with problems who steal for atten tion, because they’re compelled to or because they have a serious problem and don’t realize what they’re doing. Feldman, Class of‘66, said he realizes that Texas A&M stu dents are a major asset to the community and because of that, he gives them special considera tions when it comes to pro secuting. “Usually, we’ll prosecute a student under a Class-C no mat ter how much the stolen goods cost,” he said. He also said that on rare occa sions he’ll completely drop all charges on a Texas A&M stu dent if he feels the student has learned a lesson without being arrested. European companies agree on missile pact United Press International DALLAS — The LTV Cor poration announced Sunday at the Paris Air Show that its Vought aerospace subsidiary has signed an agreement with three European firms for in ternational marketing of Vought’s Improved Lance missile. The agreement includes Wegmann & Company of West Germany, BPD Difesa Spazio of Italy and the Royal Ordinance Factories of the United Kingdom and calls for an evaluation of the European market and a preliminary production analysis to assess the feasibility of European production, said a Vought spokesman. Improved Lance is a highly advanced version of the Lance battlefield missile currently deployed by the United States and five other NATO coun tries. BODY WORKS “AT THE BODY WORKS, THE BODY WORKS!” THE FUN WAY TO WORK YOUR BODY INTO SHAPE. YES! WE ARE HAVING A SUMMER SPECIAL! Exercise for $20 a month! 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