Wednesday, March 12, 1986/The Battalion/Page 11 3rle Gun control House bill would revise federal law of 1968 Associated Press WASHINGTON — The House Judiciary Committee . on Tuesday sent to the House floor a compromise gun control bill that the gun owners’ lobby argues would fall far short of easing burdensome provisions in the his toric safe streets law of 1968. The committee bill, approved 35-0, would be the First major revision to the nation’s 18-year-old federal gun control law. House Majority Leader Jim Wright, D- Texas, said it could be scheduled for a vote as early as next week. The measure includes a provision for interstate sales of rifles and shotguns — but not handguns — and a re cords check, but no waiting period, for firearms cus tomers. The National Rifle Association, calling the bill too re strictive for law-abiding gun owners and sportsmen, vowed to continue backing a rival Senate-passed bill which would significantly weaken the 1968 law. Representatives of law enforcement and handgun control groups said they could support the House Judi ciary bill, although they said they prefer a waiting pe riod before a customer could pick up the gun he had purchased. Both sides said they’ll lobby heavily in the next several days, when the committee bill will be in a virtual race with a discharge petition that would send the rival McClure-Volkmer Senate bill to the floor. The petition needs 218 signatures, half the members in the House, and reportedly needs about 10 to reach that goal. Both Republican and Democratic supporters of the House bill said it would balance the needs of police offi cers, who want to make it more difficult for criminals to obtain weapons, and sportsmen and gun dealers who seek to rid the current law of what they view as unduly burdensome restrictions. The major provision of the committee measure would allow sales of rifles and shotguns from a dealer in one state to a customer from another state, providing that state and local gun laws from both areas are fol lowed. Interstate handgun sales would be banned, as they are under current law. As a substitute for a waiting period, the measure would require that when a sale is made, the information filled out by the customer would be given to law en forcement authorities for a records check. However, the customer could immediately walk out of the store with the gun. Gun control advocate Sarah Brady, wife of presi dential press secretary James Brady, called the bill a “good compromise.” Her husband was shot, along with President Reagan, in a 1981 assassination attempt by John W. Hinckleyjr. greemeri| isulate i isulatti terly far- .S. claim! . worken increased j .N. work - of com- Police shoot, kill two teens, wound 81 in South Africa History today Today is Wednesday, March 12. On this dale: In 1664, New Jersey became a British colony as King Gharles II granted land in the New World to his brother James, the Duke of York. In 1912, Juliette Gordon Low founded an organization in Sa vannah, Ga., called the Girl Guides, which later became the Girl Scouts. In 1925, Chinese revolutionary leader Sun Yat-sen died. In 1930, Mohandas K. Gandhi began a 200-mile march to pro test a British tax on salt. In 1932, Ivar Kreuger, the “Swedish Match King,” com mitted suicide in Paris, leaving behind a financial empire that turned out to be worthless. In 1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt broadcast the first of his so-called fireside chats on ra dio, telling Americans what was being done to deal with the na tion’s economic crisis. In 1940, Finland surrendered to the Soviet Union during World Warll. In 1947, President Harry S. Truman established what became known as the Truman Doctrine to help Greece and Turkey resist communism. In 1969, Beatle Paul McCart ney married Linda Eastman in London. In 1980, a jury in Chicago found John Wayne Gacy guilty of the murders of 33 men and boys. In 1985, the United States and the Soviet Union opened new arms control talks in Geneva with a get-acquainted session. Mean while, Vice President Bush ar rived in Moscow for the f uneral of the late Soviet leader Konstan tin Chernenko. Associated Press JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Police said they shot dead two teen-agers and wounded 81 other blacks Tuesday in scattering a crowd of about 2,000 outside a courthouse near South Africa’s eastern border. They said the blacks wielded sticks and ignored warnings to disperse, but the Star newspaper of Johannes burg said riot squads fired after the crowd agreed to leave. The shooting occurred in Kabok- weni, a black township near the Mo zambique border, where thousands had gathered for the trial of eight blacks on riot charges, a police statement said. The statement said that after the crowd refused to leave, police fired tear smoke and then birdshot, killing a 15-year-old boy and wounding 80 people. In two other cases, birdshot killed a 14-year-old boy and wounded a 17-year-old, it added. On a day that saw authorities in a conciliatory mood on some issues re lated to the country’s anti-apartheid unrest and unyielding on others, the government: • Lifted expulsion orders against three CBS journalists accused of vio lating a police ban on filming a black funeral; • Imposed tough restrictions on two leading anti-apartheid cam paigners despite a chorus of disap proval from both white and black communities; • Permitted the Rev. Allen Boe sak, an anti-apartheid activist facing subversion charges, to travel to Swe den for the funeral of assassinated Prime Minister Olof Palme; • Announced the arrest of Mar ion Sparg, 27, a white South African journalist who espoused the cause of the African National Congress guer rilla movement, on suspicion of planting bombs in South African po lice stations. Two officers and two passersby were wounded in blasts at two police stations last week. The government served five-year “banning” orders on Henry Fazzie and Mkhuseli Jack, leading cam paigners in the eastern Cape prov ince against the system of racial seg regation through which 5 million whites govern 24 million blacks. Banning means the two must stay home from dusk to dawn and may not attend political meetings or dis seminate campaign literature. The two men, prominent in the multiracial United Democratic Front, were banned as “a threat to law and order,” the government said. But the action provoked anger and astonishment in Port Elizabeth, their south coast home city. Fazzie and Jack had played in fluential roles in suspending black consumer boycotts that were crip pling white business in Port Eliza beth. The United Democratic Front, South Africa’s largest anti-apartheid group, said the banning proved that lifting the seven-month state of emergency Friday was “merely an at tempt to placate international opin ion.” Jewish man lynched in 1915 pardoned ATLANTA — The Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles on Tuesday granted a posthumous par don to Leo Frank, a Jewish business man accused of murder whose lynching in 1915 was a catalyst for the resurgence of the Ku Klux Klan. The board, which had denied Frank a pardon in December 1983, issued a one-page decision which did not address his guilt or innocence in the 1913 slaying of Mary Phagan, of which he was convicted. The ruling said the action was taken “in recognition of the state’s failure to protect the person of Leo Frank and thereby preserve his op portunity for continued legal appeal of his conviction, and in recognition of the state’s failure to bring his killer to justice, and as an effort to heal old wounds.” Frank, a pencil merchant, was convicted and sentenced to death for the murder of Phagan, who worked in Frank’s downtown Atlanta pencil factory. Frank was lynched in 1915 after then-Gov. John Slaton commuted his sentence to life in prison. The lynching has been cited as the worst single incident of anti-Semitic vio lence in the United States. il, to t- 5 | FREE! FREE! FREd} I SPRING {BREAKERS:] PRESENT THIS COUPON AT idOjjcteea Street J3ub| I in CORPUS CHRISTI FOR ONE ORDER OF NACHOS | FREE/ FREE! 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