Wednesday, June 4, 1986/The Battalion/Page 3 State and Local Christian boys' home to be sold ot auction ■ FOREST HILL (AP) — A Christian boys’ home whose di rector is trying to avoid obtaining aptate license has been put on the auction block by the state attor ney general’s office. I Most of the buildings at Com munity Baptist Church are sched uled to be sold at a public auction July 1 at the Tarrant County Courthouse in Fort Worth. ■ The home’s director, the Rev. W.N. Otwell, has resisted efforts by the state to force him to obtain ajlicense for the home. Attorney General Jim Mattox authorized the sale and papers from Sheriff Don Carpenter notifying the church were mailed last week. H Otwell said the proposed sale includes the home’s auditorium, educational building, apartment complex, residences for the chil dren and the church office. I “This will be the first church building sold in a sheriffs sale for practicing faith in Jesus Christ,” he said. “That’s the first case I know of in America.” ■ Otwell said $100-per-day fines assessed against him, his wife and seven others operating the home without a license now total more than $100,000. The home has been put up for sale to pay the fine. Although Otwell said he would not protest the sale, he doesn’t plan to move. "We’re going to stay right here,” Otwell said. “We’re going to see what (Mattox) is going to do.” Mattox has said he does not want to force the home to close and only is trying to make it ad here to state requirements that it be licensed. A state district judge in Austin has ruled that the home must be licensed. Otwell filed an appeal last month, but it was too late to be valid, officials said. Mattox said he had been ha rassed at home by late-night phone calls. A group of Otwell supporters took credit last week for draping highway signs with anti-Mattox slogans, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram reported. Pilot killed in twin-engine plane crash BARTLETT (AP) — A twin-en gine airplane plunged into a rural pasture, killing the pilot and scatter ing wreckage across a field near this Central Texas town. Federal Aviation Administration officials said the pilot, David L. Os man, 41, of Dallas, had radioed he was in trouble before crashing Mon day night. FAA spokesman Gerrie Cook said, “Shortly after he leveled out, he reported to approach control that he had a possible autopilot malfunction and was descending rapidly. “Shortly thereafter, they lost all radio contact with him.” The pilot’s body was found near the wreckage. Martinaire Flight 245, a commeri- cal air taxi, departed from Austin at 9:44 p.m, Cook said. I he pilot of the Mitsubishi MU-2 turboprop reported he was alone at the time en route to Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport, Cook said. Storms were in the area and some officials said severe weather could have caused the crash. However, a Martinaire employee who did not wish to be identified said Tuesday it was not raining at the time of the crash. “There were not thunderstorms at the time. Weather was not a fac tor,” the employee said. Witnesses said heavy thunder- storms had not reached Bartlett when the plane crashed around 9:45 p.m. Monday. The crash disintegrated the plane, said David Wells, a spokesman with the Texas Department of Public Safety. “When it struck the ground, it dug about a three-feet-deep hole, in dicating it was on a very steep route of decline before it crashed,” Wells said. A woman who witnessed the crash reported it to Granger police, but of ficials were unable to Find anything because of a thunderstorm, darkness and muddy fields. “We saw some red flashing lights going straight down,” said Eloise Fuentes Corona. Corona said she heard a loud boom, “then there was a shadow of flames.” Corona and her husband found the wreckage Monday morning in a pasture off Texas Highway 95 and about a mile east of Bartlett, a town about 50 miles north of Austin. I he National Transportation Safety Board is investigating the ac cident, said Mitch Barker, an FAA spokesman in Fort Worth. Houston proposal could mean death for vicious dogs HOUST ON (AP) — The Houston City Council, reacting to a recent string of attacks by vicious dogs in the area, approved a proposal Tues day that can mean death for a canine that attacks someone. The proposal allows the city to deem a dog dangerous if the animal inflicts serious injury during a first offense or if they bite people twice in a year. The proposal does not single out a specific breed of dog. Dr. James Haughton, director of the city’s Health and Human Serv ices Department, said, “Clearly, from the complaints we’re getting, there are people who have dogs that are attacking people.” Haughton said he was surprised the final version of the proposal drafted by city lawyers would assess the death penalty against dogs the first time they inflict serious injuries. “That’s what I wanted when I started, but I was told that was a little too summary,” he said. Before a dog would be lethally in jected, owners would be allowed to go before a health official to make the city prove the animal is danger ous, officials said. Assistant City Attorney Paul Bibler said the definition of serious bodily injury singles out only the most severe cases, involving life- threatening or permanently disfi guring injuries. The ordinance exempts police dogs and guard dogs doing their duty. Animal control officials say they investigate about 2,500 animal bites each year. The proposal is the second get- tough measure proposed in the wake of several attacks by pit bull dogs. 1 A&M prof predicts poor future for Texas shrimpers of ' ■ - —- - University News Service The future looks bleak for Texas , shrimpers who have been broadsided by 1 federal agents enforcing fishing boundaries - between the U.S. and Mexico, says a Texas •ii Sand: A&M sociologist studying the Gulf of Mex- i AngoL ico shrimp wars. he spiritoif Associate Professor Ben M. Crouch said, ie (called ■The shrimpers are pretty w-ell beaten now, n r | lt n()l > and they’ll tell you so. It’s a very depressing I situation down there.” e ! s ( Crouch said many of the shrimpers, who > footlwi are forbidden to fish in Mexican waters, are both G facing serious financial problems now that n and vie the territorial limits are strictly enforced by side, dr!:. U.S. officials. piCompared to years past, only a few are , attempting to break the law by shrimping in 1 1 ! Mexican waters, Crouch said, i he sees:' ;. shabbv - and dies; umphstl® course, die* seen am I Union si» :ls product plumbing, nation/ hese tte' ante. It' r ; eniding/ e and slit £ uid — a ise ends. He is in the midst of a two-year study funded by the Sea Grant College Program to examine the continuing confrontation that began in 1982 between the federal gov ernment and the shrimpers over the Mexi can fishing boundary. Crouch is chronicling the history of the dispute to determine what impact enforce ment policies have had on the shrimpers. He is interviewing federal officials, U.S. Coast Guard officers and shrimpers, as well as examining federal records for enforce ment figures. Crouch said he has been able to gain ac cess to both sides of the dispute because he is looked on as an objective observer. Until 1976, American fishermen cvere permitted by Mexico to fish in the Gulf up to 12 miles off the country’s coast. That freedom was particularly important to T exas shrimpers, who follow the shrimp as they swim south from their hatching are near Galveston down toward Mexico. When Mexico extended its fishing boundary to 200 miles in 1976, little was done by either U.S. or Mexican authorities to stop the shrimpers from entering Mexi can waters. The situation changed dramatically, however, in 1981 when the U.S. Congress passed the Lacey Act, forbidding any prod uct that was obtained illegally on foreign territory to be inside the United States. The law was brought to bear against the shrimpers in 1982, when armed federal agents began boarding fishing boats in the Gulf to check on shrimp catches. Tensions escalated immediately, especially because the shrimpers refused to see that what they were doing was illegal, Crouch said. Far from backing down, officials of the National Marine Fisheries Service and the U.S. Coast Guard have toughened their en forcement and increased the penalties in recent years. Shrimpers caught with illegal shrimp on board now face a $10,000 fine and the loss of their catch, which often can be worth as much as $10,000. Crouch, who has interviewed shrimpers in the Port Isabel-Brownsville area, said fishermen told him that as late as 1984, about 50 percent of the shrimpers were still venturing into Mexican waters. I his year, however, the figure dropped to about 10 percent when the fisherman faced the double whammy of the fine and loss of their catch. . Particularly odious to ftre shrimpers, Crouch said, is that U.S. agents are enforc ing Mexican law against American citizens. VV orse yet in the eyes of the shrimpers — is that most of the shrimp are hatched in American waters and therefore could be looked on as American products. These were ordinarily law-abiding folks who found that not only were they being fined and called criminals, but their liveli hood was being thwarted,” Crouch said. You have the emergence of a criminal population that is not linked with criminal intent.” With neither U.S. nor Mexican govern ments showing any signs of changing course, Crouch said the shrimpers have no choice but to curtail their business. The fishing limits combined with soaring in- surance rates and suff competition among themselves and with infand shrimp farms will drive many to bankruptcy, he pre dicted. 1 asm :■ siii liift ii iiiiiii The Houston Chronicle Special discount now for students, faculty, staff. Make your summer sizzle with the best news, views and reviews in town, direct to you daily and Sunday from The Chronicle. The Chronicle helps you size up movies, music, fashion and fads. It spots the best in business, the supreme in sports, and the hottest headline news from around the world. It’s a sure fire way to fire up your summer studies. Ready for the sizzle? Don’t waste a minute. We’ve got special sizzling prices right now just for students, faculty and staff. 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