Page 6/The Battalion/Wednesday, February 6,1985 i ■ ■ i ■ Bryan police program uses dog to teach children about crime Texas’ oldest wargaming convemiom Wareoo will be held Friday through Sunday. S|x>nsored by MSC Nova, over a dozen tourna- mems will be held including Dungeons and Dragt>n^..Abo there wilt fee a dealer's room, movies, seminars, demonstrations and ojpengano mg. Featured this year is Project Warrior, a clbse# Ogre/Gev tourna ment For several Air Force sponsored teams and four corps teams. Registration will be held oh tire fnd Floor of Rudder Tower S p.m.-9 p,m. Friday, For details and more information, call $45-1515V.' After Hours offers driving course The TAMU After Hours Program will s|Kwis<»f a Driver Sahey Course on Friday and Saturday. This course ntay be used to have certain traffic violations dismissed and to receive a it>% discount on automobile insurance, Registration is held $ a.m.-5 p.m. Monday ] through Friday in 216 MSC. For more Information, call 845-1515. * \ ^ s ^ V || '• s \ - s ^ p? I ^ v Casino night applications due Friday Ike in 215 Pavilion. You'must live oft cam and information, call ig Valdes at 26d-21 i2v : 'yy- -. .. s to apply. For details “asino Night is April inglish Department offers mini-courses The Department of English is sponsoring a Writing Outreach ■f&rgmgfaout the spring semester. The program consists of several one hour sessions designed to offer assistance to those wish- skills. Each sessions focuses on a panic- charge. | students, staff and faculty at no ^ The courses ate not a tutoring service nor are credit hours offered. dbgMgMfMiabottt each session will be printed in the What’s Up col- By LEIGH FORREST Reporter “Take a bite out of crime.” When McGruff the Crime Dog barks, kids listen. Or at least that’s what the Bryan Police Department is hoping. McGruff the Crime Dog is fea tured in a new crime awareness pro gram starting in the Bryan elemen tary schools, Police Sgt. Choya Walling said. The program, aimed at children in kindergarten through sixth grade, calls for a McGruff puppet and audio tapes of McGruffs mes sage in every classroom to teach ba sic crime prevention during a 15- minute presentation. The presenta tions are given once a week. Walling said the convenience of having McGruff in every class is im portant to the success of the pro gram. “If it’s convenient, the teachers will use it,” he said. “If it’s not, it’s so easy just not to do it that week. And if the teachers don’t use it, then we’ve wasted our lime.” One week after the start of the program, Walling said about 147 puppets are still needed for the esti mated 315 classrooms in Bryan schools. The puppets are paid for by local businesses, organizations and indi viduals who sponsor a McGruff package, Walling said. The $68 package includes a pup pet, puppet stand, audio tapes and a teachers training guide. Sponsors can request a specific school and/or classroom for their puppet, Walling said. He said the program provides constant contact between the chil dren and crime prevention, teaching them what the police would teach if they could be in the classrooms that often. “Each one of these rascals (the puppets) represents me or my part ner in one of those classrooms 15 minutes a week for the whole school year,” Wallings said. “We still do programs for the schools, but now when we go in, we’ve got a founda tion to build on.” Walling said it’s harder to change adult views, but he hopes the pro- g ram will affect the children as they ecome adults. “You start working with the kids now so that when they grow up, you will have affected their thinking processes and hopefully molded their attitudes and habits so that they conform better to a crime preven tion-type atmosphere,” Walling said. McGruff was chosen because of the national attention he received as spokesperson for the National Crime Prevention Coalition, Walling saids, and that the television appear ances and puppets reinforce each other. “The kids recognize McGruff,” he said. “He’s a lovable character and they listen to him.” Legislators backstiffer criminal laws Associated Press AUSTIN — Saying Texans want to get tough with criminals, a group of legislators Tuesday vowed to push bills to expand the death penalty, block early release of many prison inmates and improve the treatment of crime victims. “The Legislature’s chief obliga tion is to provide for the safety of the citizens of the state,” said Sen. J.E. “Buster” Brown, R-Lake Jackson. “That’s what the people ... were say ing over and over and over again.” Brown and other lawmakers joined the Associated Texans Against Crime in backing bills to stiffen criminal laws. He said the rec ommendations followed 14 public hearings ATAC held around the state. A key bill, endorsed by House Speaker Gib Lewis, D-Fort Worth, would expand the death penalty to include killers who slay more than one person—either in sequence or at one time. Current law allows the death sentence for killing a law offi cer or killing while committing some other felonies. “In Texas, the dedth penalty may be imposed under certain narrow circurrtstances,” said Rep. Patricia Hill, R-Dallas. “Unfortunately, per haps the most shocking circum stance—not killing one person but killing more than one person—is not one of those conditions. “We’ve all seen many cases re cently in which people embark on killing sprees,” she said. “They can not receive the maximum sentence, the death penalty. They can receive only life imprisonment.” A second bill would allow judges to tell jurors—before they consider C unishment—the effects of parole iws that allow convicts early release from prison. “All too often, we’ve had juries who are surprised at the net result of when somebody comes out of prison,” said Rep. Ray Keller, R- Duncanville. Keller, chairman of the House Law Enforcement Committee, said the law should be changed “so we can ensure that the bunders are taken off juries and that the punish ment is guaranteed to be equal to the crime committed.” Brown said another bill would clamp down on the early release of prison inmates, but he said details of that plan aren’t yet ready. However, he insisted that ways can be found to curb early releases without overburdening an already crowded prison system and without raising taxes to build more jails. The senator said other propoals would improve the treatment of vic tims. The measures would “allow the victim prior to sentencing to make a statement to the judge or jury about the effect of that crime on their lives” and permit victims to remain in court throughout a trial to help prosecutors. Photo by PETER RO Sgt. Choya Walling holds McGruff. Coors beer to lecture on marketing tactics jive three separa hursday at 8 ail By Doug Hall Reporter Representatives from the Adolph Coors Go. will lectures about marketing strategies and “Beer Wars” 11 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. in 165 Blocker. Larry Lightfoot, division manager for the Gulf States division, i Don Marable, West Texas drea manager, will address three Marketine classes to discuss Coors’ approach to various marketing strategies. Botii former students. Mark Jameson, campus representative for Coors and anofficerini Management Society, said the lectures are sponsored in conjunction* Business Week and are provided by Coors as a “friend to the commuiii idea.” Promotion techniques and marketing ideas are among the schedu! topics for Lightfoot and Marable to discuss, Jameson said. Get cadi anytime. Use any card. Banking is automatic at 7-Eleven. All PULSE® cards are accepted, including Anytime, Boss, Quick Silver, First Net (Teller 2), Dough Boy, Ready Bank and Money Card at participating 7-Eleven stores. If you don’t see your activated banking card listed, try it! If the transaction is not completed, the ATM will simply return your card to you. 1NYADS, BUT REAL HEAVYWEIGHIS WHEN RESULTS REALLY COUNT. ALL: The Battalion 845-2611