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THIS AMAZING PRICE INCLUDES: •640 KB RAM (1 MB RAM OPTIONAL) •2-360 KB DSDD disc drives •TTL HiRes Hercules •Print Port •AT-style keyboard •180 Watt power supply •8 Regulation expansion slots •Expert Support Nobody Beats Our Prices! UorTyburfeAs', (Sto. 409-693-7599 707 Texas Ave. S., Bldg C, #308 p u bjixtaI nom| L V e UMSS NUT Ulf’S 0 a r 3 k BLDG -B* PMtim Uif I wril onj I IE XAS South TEXAS A&M POi.g CSRnnN O S Battalion Classified 845-2611 Page 6/The Battalion/Monday, September 28, 1987 Experts: People shoot first, call for help later DALLAS (AP) — A growing num ber of Dallas residents are exercising an option to shoot first, then call po lice when someone breaks into their home or property, authorities say. While authorities say they do not keep separate statistics on citizens shooting suspects, police acknowl edge there has been a recent in crease in people protecting their homes and property. Last year, Dallas had the highest crime rate in the nation among cities with populations of 500,000 or more, according to FBI statistics. Ex perts say that as crime increases, so do the number of people who use deadly force to fight back. Peter Lesser is a criminal lawyer and a board member of the Dallas American Civil Liberties Union. “We have a frontier state of mind, and it automatically carries over to our laws,” Lesser said. “There’s been a greater tendency on the part of the penal code when it was rewritten to make sure that peo ple have the right to protect them selves and their property,” Lesser told the Dallas Morning News. Although grand juries often vin dicate their actions, few people know the Texas Penal Code well enough to know what circumstances consti tute a permissible use of deadly force, prosecutors say. “We have a frontier state of mind, and it automat ically carries over to our la ws. ” — Peter Lesser, criminal la wyer Texas laws permit citizens to use deadly force not only in self-defense but in a variety of other situations, including stopping someone who is about to commit burglary, robbery, nighttime theft or criminal mischief. State laws also permit citizens to use deadly force to stop someone from escaping with their property. In recent months, grand juries in Dallas counties have declined to in dict the following people: • A 29-year-dld woman heard her former boyfriend pounding on her apartment door, demandingm be let inside. A court had issued a protective order barring him from contacting her. After words were ex changed, she fired one gunshm through the door to scare him. It didn’t. He kicked in a window and started to climb through and she fired another shot, mortally wound ing him in the chest. • A '47-year-old Dallas County grand jury bailit t shot and killed a 20-year-old man who tried tofleeaf- ter an apparent burglary attempt at his home. Hearing a noise in his back yard about 6 a.m., the bailiff grabbed a gun and confronted tht man. When the man attempted to run away, the bailiff fired two shots, hitting him in the back and chest. In another recent case, a woman in Arlington shot and killed a 25- year-old University of Texas at At lington student who lived next door She said she fired at someone she saw through her window screen in the belief he might have been trying to break in. Police say that case prob ably will be turned over to a grand jury within a month. El Paso police chief plans to revise use of officer’s fees EL PASO (AP) — El Paso’s police chief, John Scagno, said he plans to revise a decades-old practice of police officers receiving fees for answering questions about traffic accidents. The city’s top elected officials previously were un aware that officers have been charging fees for provid ing testimony and information about traffic accidents. The fees, now $35 and up, are routinely paid by in surance adjusters, private investigators and lawyers. Written police and sheriffs department policies allow the practice, but it has not been examined or actively regulated for years, the El Paso Times reported. But Scagno was quick to recognize potential prob lems with the practice. “We’re going to change it,” Scagno said. “It’s one of those things that lies on the books dormant until some one complains.” Mayor Jonathan Rogers has been in office more than six years but didn’t know police were authorized to ac cept such fees. “It just doesn’t ring right, and as such it will probably be stopped,” Rogers said. El Paso County Judge Luther Jones and Sheriff Leo Samamego said they would re-examine the county pol icy. Jones, like Rogers, said he had never heard of the policy. Louie Akin, a former El Paso police officer who no* is a private investigator and also chief investigator for the Texas attorney general’s consumer protection divi sion, believes the policy needs work. Akin said he routinely pays $35 and has paid as much as $50 for interviews with police officers, including some who were on duty. “I don’t mind paying them for their time,” Akin said “I just want to be sure I’m doing it in an ethical man ner.” Private investigators often are hired by lawyers who have a client considering a lawsuit over personal inju l ies or property damage caused by a traffic accident Insurance adjusters usually are the first to interviewthe officers who filed initial accident reports, to confirmor expand on information in those reports. “In 10 years of investigation in San Erancisco, I never once paid an officer for a statement,” Akin said. “In seven years in El Paso, I have never once taken i statement from an officer whom I did not have to pay’ Increase in demand helps timber industry (AP) — Texas’ timber industry, which fell on hard times during the early 1980s, is coming out of the woods as worldwide demand has in creased and housing starts nationally have risen. Jay O’Laughlin is an associate pro fessor in Texas A&M University’s Forest Science Department. “The industry has certainly weathered the storm of the early 1980s and the companies that sur vived are in good shape for the fu ture,” O’Laughlin said. While worldwide demand for tim ber increases, resources around the globe are declining and more tim- berlands are being converted to food production or eaten away by urban sprawl. In addition, settlement of a trade dispute with Canada last year is ex pected to slow the flow of cheap Ca nadian lumber across U.S. borders, increasing the market share for U.S. production. Demand for pulpwood also has increased. For paper mills, 1987 is expected to be a record production year as the demand increases for an array of products, including baby diapers, napkins and computer paper. The events spell good news for Texas’ $6 billion-a-year timber busi ness. J.D. Perryman is managing direc tor of Forestry Investment Man agers in Houston and president of its parent company, Texas Gulf* Timber. “We are the Arabs of the timber business,” Perryman said. “We have the timber resource. Most of the rest of the world does not.” The state has 12 million acres of forest starting in east Harris County, running north to the Red River and encompassing all of East Texas, Per ryman said. Meanwhile, he said, a U.S. State Department report says 25 percent of the world’s timberlands will be harvested and not replanted over the next quarter-century. Prices for standing timber have more than doubled from May 1986, Perryman said. Citizens learn to accept nuclear dump FORT HANCOCK (AP) - The proposal for a low-level ra dioactive-waste dump caused a furor here when it was first intro duced, but now the plan draws mostly ambivalent reactions. More than a year ago, when ge ologists were drilling test holes to see if the desert 11 miles north east of town was suitable for the site, townspeople talked about little else. But now, concern seems to be fading in the community of 500. Dan Barton, who owns a gro cery store near the exit on Inter state 10, said he thinks there is nothing residents can do about it. Yet Barton says residents re main opposed to the dumn. “Everybody’s pretty much ac cepted that,” he told the El Paso Times. “It’s very unpopular to be for it. If that thing would provide 20 jobs, I’d be for it. I think we'd be lucky to get one job out of it." Royal couple from Spain visits Son Antonio SAN ANTONIO (AP) — King Juan Carlos I and Queen Sophia of Spain were greeted Texas-style Sun day with cowboy hats, country music and a visit to the Alamo on the first stop of a week-long visit to the Southwest. King Carlos noted the Spanish le gacy at his first stop, a visit to the In stitute of Texan Cultures, where the king and queen were greeted by country-and-western music and by about 800 people waving small yel low and red Spanish flags. “My first words are to express the profound satisfaction that the queen and I experienced at the beginning of our trip to Texas, New Mexico and California, three states ... in which there exists many important Hispanic minorities that strive for their identity, their future and that of this great nation,” the kingsakb the institute. “Spain is also very happy to havf contributed in the passage to forgf that identity as you today contributt to make this state one of the raosi prosperous, beautiful ... in tht United States,” he said. Mayor Henry Cisneros and hii wife, Alice, greeted the royal couplt and accompanied them on the tout of San Antonio. Listen Up, Ags! Get Your Brass in Gear! Don’t Go to the Game with Naked Brass. 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