Thursday, August 6,1987/The Battalion/Page 5 MSC Dinner Theatre 4^ and Aggie Players present SAVING GRACE August 5, 6, 7, 8 A zany tale of a warmhearted girl who mistakes a telephone repairman for a burglar. She tries to convert him from his life of crime and ends up having to pretend he is her husband. All of this causes a stir with her straight-laced sis ter’s fiance, who just happens to be an evangelist. isticede if the end jrtssWi t which W response al Appeal! onations for victims of tornado h Saragosa discovered missing mocrat. rsity of ity laws ■ PECOS (AP) — Two truckloads of glods donated for victims of the May 22 tornado at Saragosa are missing, and both the Reeves County omeyfapjeriffs department and leaders of lealsandSthc small farming community say trictattonjtlfe other should take the responsibi- utive (fejlitjy. id Count'iHThe goods were being stored in a Hirehouse at Pecos, about 20 miles art Chief jndrth of Saragosa. ocatedcM“We don’t want to be blamed for which * it, that we couldn’t handle the things d McConsthat were given us,” assistant disaster some forcjcoordinator Felipe Lopez said, for appe^jLopez said the sheriff s office had ion of fc taken charge of the church-group he said shipment and five tractor-trailer Pads from northeast Louisiana do nors, one of which was stored in Pe cos after arriving in mid-June. “They were in charge of distribu tion and now something has gone wrong, they know nothing about it,” Lopez said. The sheriffs department is inves tigating the apparent theft of the items, which were sent by groups in Austin and Monroe, La., to benefit residents in their recovery from the tornado that killed 30 people and in jured 161 others. Reeves County Sheriff Raul Flo rez said that responsibility had been turned over to the residents of Sara gosa. “We didn’t take control,” Flo rez said. “We just found places to store it.” The missing goods are under in vestigation now, he said. “If it is gone illegally, I’m respon sible, just like I’m responsible for ev erything in the county,” Florez said. “But if it was given out, there’s noth ing we can do.” Saragosa officials discovered the goods missing from the warehouse about a week ago when Lopez was looking for air-conditioning units, he said. Most of the items, ranging from toys and clothes to appliances, came from a batch of donations sent by the church group Saragosa-Aus- tin Cares. The Rev. Ray Noble, who coordi nated the Austin drive, said more than a thousand donors had sent down everything from designer clothing to washers, driers and med ical supplies. Reeves County Community Coun cil Director Mary Mitchell said the disappearance of the goods disap pointed and saddened those in volved with the Saragosa effort, but she wasn’t sure anyone could be as signed blame for the situation. Meanwhile, earlier this week the Saragosa Building Committee de cided to send a check to victims of the tornado that devastated Edmon ton, Canada, last week. Lopez said $250 would be sent on behalf of Saragosa residents as soon as they found someone to send it to. For more information, call MSC Box Office 845 1234 t Agencies * |o search for youth i|ainedio| after GK| e change; •iting letij ;thing,tl' ( | janspW] an occaiij :dical pol 1 ] ■ AUSTIN (AP) — Two state agencies will help in the search for the remains of a 17-year-old youth who was washed away two weeks ago by the rampaging Gua- Halupe River, Gov. Bill Clements’ rclusion ani 2 ou need Wednesday. •fvlifpltjl John Bankston Jr. has been !/ jjjMiissing since July 17, when flood- jijHaters swept away a busload of Ballas-area church campers re aid the® 1 ™ 11 ® fr om a cam P near Com- t was foelwT', . , . , , ■ The youth was last seen help ing others to safety during the river’s worst flooding in 55 years. that co«j P 61156 piJhe bodies of nine other teen-ag- were recovered from the river 0 usl and 33 people were rescued. ■ “We’re real grateful for the ex- . tra two days,” said Dwight Prather, pastor of the New Haven Baptist Church in Mesquite, Bankston’s home church. “We’d -a»|Teally like more.” ^/kIB Prather said a group of volun- # ^ Bers was being put together in Balias and appeals were being Bade on San Antonio radio sta- mebegf . tions for volunteers to assist in the said. Barch today and Friday. M Bankston’s father, John is with/j Bpnkston Sr., on Monday visited ; y° u i Bth Hillary Doran, the gover- “Mr. b nor’s chief of staff, to ask for the ,e freed- state’s help in finding the body, ay juO l ||5 Reggie Bashur, Clements’ ^ascoH press secretary, said the state jntinuii’fl Highway Department would as- cocaitfjsig’i heavy equipment and crews cnnii 1 to search debris piles along the ies an^rherbanks today and Friday. 1 a po si|t B The Texas Forest Service also Bll donate equipment for the Barch, Bashur said. 5‘ n 8 a $M“If there are no results, on rney • Monday and Tuesday the Texas oted d Association of General Contrac- jinpoi 11 tors has agreed to send in volun- ,alued : teers and equipment to continue cocaifl e th< search,” Bashur added. 40 Experts: Persian Gulf perils may cause higher oil prices HOUSTON (AP) — Panic oil buying, hoarding, sky rocketing prices and huge economic disruption could follow a choking off of petroleum supplies from the Persian Gulf, two oil experts said Wednesday. “You’re going to go through the ’70s cycle of gas lines, school shutdowns and problems all over the na tion,” said George P. Mitchell, chairman of Mitchell En ergy & Development Corp. “The national security is at stake.” During a news conference, Mitchell and Houston economist Arved Teleki, president of Hydrocarbon Consultants Inc., presented their view of Persian Gulf perils facing the United States and the global economy. Teleki estimates chances of a total cutoff of supplies from the Strait of Hormuz now stand at about 30 pe cent, up from about five percent earlier this year. “We are up against a very, very confused, confusing, disturbed, complicated situation,” Teleki said. “To an extraordinary extent, the decision-making process has been lost by us and has been transferred to one of the most dangerous areas of the world.” Iran has threatened to attack Kuwaiti oil tankers and per- U.S. military convoys escorting them. Iran and Iraq have been at war for seven years. Teleki estimated that a 90-day disruption of access through the Strait of Hormuz could drive oil prices as high as $55 per barrel, assuming roughly 8.5 million barrels per day are taken off the market as a result. If a short-term crisis passed with no major conflagra tion, prices would stabilize around $30 per barrel, he said, emphasizing that a number of factors could change this scenario. Mitchell has long argued for government support for the domestic oil industry, beginning with repeal of the windfall profits tax and an increased national emphasis on lowering imports. “The greater our dependence on imports, the greater will be the effect of a disruption on our econ omy,” Mitchell said. “Now we’re importing nearly 40 percent of our needs. “Last year, the United States consumed more oil than the year before and produced less, with imports filling the void. This year will be the same: higher consump tion, lower production and increased imports.” Lawmen in Kerr County continue search for missing wife of banker KERRVILLE (AP) — Foul play is suspected in the disappearance of a banker’s wife, whose clothing and jewelry were found in a creek near her ranch home, authorities said Wednesday. Law enforcement officials are continuing their search for Joyce Louise Walters, 44, said Kerr County Sheriff Cliff Greeson. “We do not have any concrete sus pects. We do have some clues and are following up on them,” he said. Greeson declined to say whether there was a struggle at the house or creek or whether blood stains were found at either place. He also said no ransom note was found and did not know if anything was missing from the house. Texas Rangers, Department of Public Safety troopers, FBI agents and local officials were searching for the woman Wednesday in the Verde Creek area, about 5 miles from her Prison Canyon Ranch home and where the clothes and jewelry were found Tuesday, Greeson said. The woman’s husband, Roland Walters, chairman of the board of the Bank of Kerrville, called Gree son Tuesday morning to report his wife missing. Walters was on a business trip in Houston and became concerned when he was unable to reach his wife by telephone about 10:30 p.m. Mon day, the sheriff said. A dress Mrs. Walters was last seen wearing, a bracelet, watch, belt, un dergarments, shoes and a purse with credit cards and identification were found in or on the banks of the creek, which is less than a mile from a store she owns, authorities said. The search for the items began af ter a bicyclist, a doctor from Temple, saw a bracelet on the creek bank. The man gave the jewelry to con stable Tommy James at the Camp Verde store at about 2 p.m. Tues day. When officers returned to the creek, they found the other items. James contacted the sheriffs de partment, which notified Greeson, who was enroute to Prison Canyon Ranch to check on Mrs. Walters. Greeson said Waiters told him his wife was alone in the house Monday night. The last person she was known to have talked to was a Camp Verde store employee about 9:30 p.m. Monday on the telephone. Return of The Thursday wst special 8-IOp FRIDAY NIGHT CHARTERS COMPETITION • 3 Players/Team • $5 00 Entry Fee • Free Beer to Competitors FINALS TO BE HELD SATURDAY NIGHT SHIRTS AWARDED TO WINNERS! Call Battalion Classified 845-2611