i The Battalion '01.83 No. 143 (JSPS 075360 12 pages College Station, Texas Monday, April 28, 1986 omb found t Embassy n Mexico MEXICO CITY (AP) — After ^activating a powerful homemade mil) outside the L'.S. Embassy :re, Mexican police said Sunday ev are looking for those responsi- I'or leaving it in a car parked near edowntown diplomatic mission. Embassy press attache Vincent lovanec said the device was deacti- ited Salurdav afternoon and is tlte rst time a bomb has been found cat the Embassy, although it has re ived numerous bomb threats in lepast month. Mexico City Police spokesman lejaudro Ortiz said authorities still nr not determined who left the Imibin the truck of a small, blue car Inked on a side street between the nibassv and the fashionable Maria label Sheraton Hotel. ■ The car was parked about 25 lids from the Embassy and il it had iploded probably would have used damage to one side of the [lilding and the rear of the em- ssy. Hovanec said there are several of- eson the five floors on that side of le building, but added the offices IT.S. Ambassador John Gavin are rated elsewhere in complex. Ortiz confirmed reports pub- hed by La Jornada newspaper that if bomb contained a gelatin explo it, was about two feet in diameter id weighed between 20-30 pounds 0-15 kilos). The bomb was found ithecar truck wired to a battery. “Effectively, these reports are ue." he said, adding the Federal idicial Police also are investigating, here were no answer Sunday at the tess office of the Federal Attorney ■eneral’s Office, which oversees the idicial police. La Jornada said a caller, claiming represent a group calling itself t he imon Holivet International Com- land. telephoned the newsroom uurday afternoon to report a omb was set to explode in 50 min- tesand asked the newspaper to ad-, se workers remodeling a section of lie hotel to leave the area immedi- Jely. The newspaper Excelsior re- lurted that some city newspapers re- eived calls from a group claiming ivo names — the Command of the olivar Army and (lie Simon Bolivar hternational Front. The newspaper ported the caller took responsibil- y for the bomb threat and said it fas it in protest to U.S. aggression gainst Libya and U.S. interference l Nicaragua. La Jornada said it notified the po ke bomb squad, known as Zorros or bxes, who found the device about :30 p.m. (7:30 pan. ED I ), cleacti- ated it and carried it away in a spe- iallv-huilt bomb squad truck. The Embassy was closed at the [me, with only security personnel nd maintenace employees in the mlding, Hovanec said. Police made 30-minute search of the Embassy ind reported “all is well.” Asked about increasing security at if Embassy, Hovanec said, “We onld hope the present security will See Bomb, page 8 ^ ; - T5.M . 7r ' Marcos tells Filipinos he’s legitimate ruler Photo by Greg Bailey Over Easy Greg Bell, a Special Olympics participant, dears the high jump bar with a winning jump of 5 feet, 1 inches. Bell of the Corrigan- Canulen Bulldogs and other area students met at Bryan High School to compete in track and field events. Sec stoi v, page 3. MANILA, Philippines (AP) — Ousted President Ferdinand E. Mar cos told 12,000 followers Sunday he was the legitimate president of the Philippines and urged them to keep demonstrating against the govern ment of Corazon Aquino. He urged that they keep their protests peacef ul and avoid violence. “I am healthy ... I am ready to fight,” Marcos, speaking by tele phone from Hawaii, told a cheering crowd that gathered for a rally at Manila’s Rizal Park. His wife, Imelda, referred to her self as “your first lady” and sounded in tears as she told the crowd she and her husband “will do everything” to return to their homeland. At the rally, Marcos spoke for 20 minutes in a pre-arranged call to a former aide, Lito Gorospe, who hooked up the receiver to a loud speaker. Some people sobbed as Marcos’ voice boomed out at them. Led by former government offi cials and some film celebrities, loy-, alists rallied for the third straight Sunday to demand Marcos’ return. For the past two weeks, Marcos supporters also have staged vigils on the lawn in front of the U.S. Em bassy, accusing the United States of kidnapping Marcos from his former palace. Marcos urged supporters to go ahead with a planned rally on May 1, which he said was not only a day for workers, but also the anniversary of his marriage to Imelda in 1954. During Marcos’ 20 years in power, thousands of Filipino workers marked May Day each year with ral lies to protest low wages, Marcos’ ban on strikes and alleged military brutalities against workers. As in previous speeches, Marcos accused the Aquino government of illegally confiscating his personal property. “I will get even,” he said in T’aga- log. “I do not mean 1 will exact ven geance, but I will get even with their cruelty, their abuses and their thiev ery.” The government has said Marcos, his family and associates amassed from $5 billion to $10 billion by plundering public coffers, through kickbacks, and the like. Government officials seized prop erty he has left behind and are try ing to track down his holdings in other countries. Marcos has denied charges he ob tained his property illegally. Reagan, ex-Philippine chief talk HONOLULU (AP) — Deposed President Ferdinand Marcos indi cated in a telephone conversation with President Reagan that he would like to return to power in the Phil ippines, but Reagan said nothing to encourage him, a senior U.S. official said Sunday. The official, speaking on condi tion he not be identified, described what he called an emotional conver sation between the two on Saturday after Reagan arrived in Hawaii, where Marcos has been in exile since he was ousted by Gorazon Aquino in February. Marcos, the source said, got a lot off his chest in the 10-minute talk initiated by Reagan. The former Philippine president knew' Reagan would be calling and prepared what he wanted to say, the official said. The source said Reagan was sym pathetic and listened quietly as Mar cos spoke. But the president told the 20-year ruler of the Philippines, whom he regards as an old friend and ally, that “the Philippine people have made their decision and ulti mately it is their decision” to make, the official recounted. The source added, Reagan said nothing to encourage Marcos to think a return to power was possible. A source in Manila, who called Marcos on Saturday, quoted Marcos as saying the talk with Reagan was “friendly, congenial, productive and fruitful.” I he two men discussed Mateos’ situation realistically, but Marcos did not elaborate, according to the source, who spoke on condi- tion of anonymity. After Reagan and Marcos spoke, die men’s wives came to the phone and spoke privately for several min utes. A local television crew record ing the Marcos’ end of the conversa- tion showed Imelda Marcos weeping, as she often has in public since the ouster. The U.S. official said White House stall members were dis turbed and surprised to learn Mar cos had permitted a television crew to witness the conversation, which the source said was arranged as a private talk between friends. See Marcos, page 8 Landscaping incentive spurs Texas city cleanup AUSTIN (AP) — They’re picking up fertilizer sacks in Whitew right. They’re finding old love letters in the litter piles of Muenster. They’re shaping up the ship channel in Houston. T exans in 191 cities are cleaning up their hometowns in an effort to get some of the $700,()()() in land scaping the state is offering as an in centive. The prizes, offered this year for the first time, have made a big difference in a program that began in 1969. “We’ve seen a 1,000 percent in crease in entries,” said Mary Ellen Shoop, executive director of Keep Texas Beautiful, which is coordinat ing the effort. T he contest is divided into eight categories. For example, 55 cities with population up to 2,500 are competing for $20,000 worth of highway department landscaping. On the other end, four cities with more than 300,000 people are com peting for $285,000 In landscaping. "Instead of using- it (the money) to pick up litter, the] decided to try to put it into prevention.'’ — Marv Ellen Shoop, ex- ecutiye director of Keep 1'cxas Beautiful. “This is monev that had been spent on picking up litter on the highwavs, " Shoop said. “Instead of using ii io pick tip litter, they de cided to trv to put ii into preven tion.” The winners will he announced in June. Muensn i insurance agent Gary Fisher is the head of Operation Clean Sweep in his Gooke County to wn of 1.110 near the Oklahoma border Thev take their litter se riously in Muenster, which has a par ticular problem with liquor bottles. “We’re a wet town in a dry county,” Fisher said. The “March Against Trash” in March netted 8,000 pounds of picked-up litter, including every thing from fish heads, billfolds, and $20 hills, lie said. “We found mostly the trash that blows out of the back of pick-up trucks,” Fisher said. “We found a love letter written by'a local girl and she’s not married to the guy she wrote it to. It was written in 1955. It came out of a pick-up on the way to die dump.” The city of Whitewright, near Sherman in Grayson County, is com peting in the same category as Muenster. Martha Dollarhide is in charge of the Whitewright ef fort. “We have a committee of five peo- pie and we wrote everybody in town a letter and asked them if they would check the things they felt they could do to help,” she said. “We have the problem like they do in any farm com munity. We have so many fertilizer sacks that blow off the pick-ups. ” — Martha Dollarhide, Whitewright cleanup su pervisor. The response has been great and Whitewright gives itself a good shot at winning. “We have the problem like they do in any farm community,” Dollar- hide said. “We have so many ferti lizer sacks that blow off the pick ups.” Houston is competing against Austin, San Antonio and Dallas in the big city category. The Houston ef fort is a hit more formal than those in Whitewright and Muenster. “Good afternoon. Glean Hous ton,” a very proper-sounding woman tells phone callers. Houston’s effort includes a ship channel clean-up, trees for down town and the addition of Victorian trash receptacles that match historic light posts. Robin Blut, Glean Houston’s di rector of public relations, said, “We want to w'in.” Blut said, “We’ve always been ex cited about the program. We’ve won in the past. But this year w'e are par ticularly interested because Houston does have some needs.” Dollarhide said $20,000 worth of landscaping would have landmark importance for Whitewright. “We don’t have money for that kind of thing,” she said. “We do good to plant the planters down town. It would be the greatest thing that ever happened to Whitewright.” Captain Midnight’ hacker interrupts HBO broadcast 3rd British tourist 28, killed in Jerusalem I NEW YORK (AP) — A video lacker calling himself "Gaptain Mid- light” startled cable television view- rs from Maine to the Plains early unday when he interrupted a lovie on Home Box Office with a 'tinted message protesting HBO’s [rambling of its satellite-to-earth V signals. “It’s a criminal, willful interfer- nceofa government-licensed satel- te broadcast," fumed David Prit- hard, an HBO vice president, w ho aid the cable system had received abotage threats in recent months. Pritchard said HBO planned to eport the incident to the Federal ZMnnninications Gommission. The message, printed in w hite let- ers on a color-bar test pattern back- ;found, read: “Good evening HBO rom Captain Midnight. $12.95 a month? No wav! (Showtime-Movie (diannel Beware.)'' Greg Mahanv, who was watching in Middletown, Ohio, when the mes-' sage interrupted “The Falcon and die Snowman," said that at first the picture flipped hack and forth be-' tween the message and the movie, making it seem like “HBO was trying to get its signal hack. ... It looked like a Tight for control of the micro- wave beam.” The message appeared at 11:30 a.m. GST and remained on the ait about five minutes. It was seen in the eastern two-thirds of the nation, which accounts for more than half of HBO’s 14.6 million subscribers. Pritchard said the hacker, appar- entlv w ith the use of a satellite dish and a powerful transmitter, replaced HBO’s signal with his own. JERUSALEM (AP) — A 28-year- old British tourist was shot to death Sundav outside a ( Jn istian holy site and an Israeli leader denounced ihe mill del as an attempt In terror ists to scare away visions. Ii was the third shooting of a tmiiist in six weeks in predomi- uantlv Arab east Jerusalem. The two other v ic tims surv ived. Jei usalem police spokesman Rail Lew said Paul Applebv of Bristol was shot once in the back of the head with a small caliber pistol near |he Garden Tomb shrine, revered In some Protestants as the hilltop where Jesus was crucified and bur- Police sources, who insisted on anonviiiitv. aid thev were investi gating whether the attack was meant as retaliation for Britain’s al lowing U.S planes to take off from British soil two weeks ago to bomb Libva. The v ictim carried papers indi cating he was a British citizen, po lice said, declining to give his iden- titv immediately. Israel radio identified him as Paul Applebv of Bristol, England. He was shot in an isolated alley- wav just outside the gate of the Gar den T omb shrine, which is adminis- lered bv a British-based foundation. Protestants believe the hilltop is where Jesus was crucified and bur ied. Gatholics, Greek Orthodox and most other Christian groups believ e the Church of the Holy Sepulchre inside the Old (Tty is the site of the crucifixion and burial. The Garden Tomb shrine bor ders on the Old (Tty, which was crowded Sunday with those observ ing the eight-day Jewish Passover commemorating the biblical Israel ites’ escape from Egyptian bond- age. The Rev . William White of Dor set, England, a chaplain at the site, said a woman heard a shot ring out around 12:50 p.m. and he ran to call the police. Military sources said last week thev were trying to uncover four terror gangs operating out of Jeru salem's Old (Tty and the occupied West Bank. The sources said the gangs were responsible for recent attacks in and around Jerusalem, including the March 2 assassination of the Is raeli-appointed mayor of Nablus, Zafer al-Masri. As news of the shooting broke. Tourism Minister Avraham Sharir noted that recent attacks have re duced tourism to Israel by 40 per cent since January, said ministry spokeswoman Oi Iv Yegoro. The loss has cost the troubled Is raeli economy $30 million in lost revenues, Sharir said, urging American Jewish leaders “not to surrender to terrorism and to come visit Israel now.”