Thursday, November 19,1987rThe Battalion/Page 7 Residents of Pasadena protest opening of new parole offices PASADENA (AP) — Residents, angry that the Texas Board of Par dons and Paroles did not hold public hearings on the planned opening of its regional office near a high school and skating rink, are mounting op position to the plan. “It just surfaced Saturday,” Bob Doley, leader of the Parkview Estates Community Association, said. “That’s the first anybody really heard about the facility. There was no public hearing or anything. “It’s horrendously bad planning. We don’t want ex-convicts mixing with our children. Some won’t have cars and there’s no public transpor tation, so they’ll be walking right through our subdivision.” City officials, including Mayor John Ray Harrison, say they too were uncertain until recently who the tenants of the new office build ing would be. Parole officials, however, say they were not required to hold hearings on the matter and are simply open ing a much-needed office in an area already heavily populated with paro lees. The office will be less than a block from Skating America, a popular teen-agers’ hangout, and several houses. It also is about one-quarter mile from Sam Rayburn High School. An overflow crowd turned out for a Pasadena City Council meeting Tuesday, when several anti-office petitions were presented to the panel. Residents and city officials say the parole office took them by surprise mostly because city records only mention plans for an “office build ing.” The city on Aug. 12 granted McAllen-based Williamson Con struction Co.’s request for a permit to build a 12,000-square-foot, building. The records mention of the parole its specific construction $230,000 make no board plans. or Mayor Harrison, who is studying the parole board’s plan, said: “I drove up the street three or four times and saw the building, but didn’t know a whole lot about it. I was glad someone was building an office building.” Robert Tapscott, parole supervi sion director for the parole board, said the state recently awarded the construction project to the low bid der in a public bidding process, and that no public hearings are required. Tapscott said his decision to place a regional office in Pasadena was based on economic reasons and the population of parolees in southeast Harris County. “The parolees are already there,” he said. “We are not bringing paro lees into the area. People go to the pen from Pasadena every day; and when they leave, they go back to Pa sadena, whether it be under manda tory supervision or parole.” He said state law requires home and office visits between ex-convicts and parole officers, and that the Pa sadena office will reduce parole offi cers’ travel expenses. The office will not handle inmates freed under the Texas Department of Correction’s early release pro gram. Those inmates are sent to halfway houses, said Jack Sutton, di rector of the parole board’s regional office in Houston. First City Bancorporation stockholders critical of $1.5 billion restructuring plan DALLAS (AP) — Several stockholders of First City Bancorporation have criticized a $1.5 billion restructuring plan designed to rescue the ailing organization, a newspaper reported Wednesday. Some of the largest holders of two issues of tne Houston company’s preferred stock — including San Antonio banker and rancher Frederick Erck — are unhappy with the plan First City an nounced Sept. 9, according to the Dallas Morn ing News. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., under the rescue plan, would contribute nearly $1 bil lion to the transaction, and Chicago banker A. Robert Abboud and his investment banker — Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette Securities Corp. — would raise $525 million through the sale of se curities. The plan, if successfully completed, would be the largest bank bailout since the $4.5 billion res cue of Continental Illinois Corp. of Chicago in 1984. In the deal, preferred stockholders would re ceive $30 million in cash, plus the right to pur chase $10.7 million of First City common stock and 40.5 percent of the common stock of a new workout bank that would be created to hold at least $ 1.79 billion of First City’s bad loans. The newspaper said one of the larger pre ferred shareholders said the $30 million cash payment equals about $8.50 a share, an amount he said is far shy of the $45 and $48.50 that First City would be required to pay to redeem the shares normally. When the bank announced the restructuring, federal officials said First City was “clearly in danger of failing.” If the Abboud proposal is rejected, Keim said, he believes the FDIC will be forced to present shareholders a better deal. “I do not believe they (FDIC) would let First City go down because of the rippling affect in Texas and throughout the country, especially during this time when the capital markets are in such an uneasy condition,” he said. First City has about $12 billion in assets and 62 separate subsidiary banks. Police charge SWTSU student with hazing SAN MARCOS (AP) — A Southwest Texas State University student has been charged with engaging in hazing after being found in a rural area wearing no shirt and covered with motor oil, authorities said. The student, Joseph D. Chris tian II, 20, was arrested after he refused to tell police about other fraternity pledges who officers believed were in the area. University officials said Chris tian was a sophomore from Georgetown and was pledging Kappa Sigma fraternity. Police said Christian was charged under a law enacted ear lier this year requiring anyone with firsthand knowledge of hazing to report it. John Garrison, Southwest Texas dean of students, said the fraternity chapter faced “severe” penalties if a university investiga tion finds it sanctioned hazing. Bureau questions firm’s offer of free recreational vehicle DALLAS (AP) — Better Business Bureau officials caution that a com pany’s offer of a free Winnebago Chieftain with purchase of three dozen imprinted ballpoint pens will net customers a sleeping bag, not a recreational vehicle. Businesses around the country have made 243 inquiries since June asking if the offer, which requires a purchase of up to $498, is legitimate, bureau president Ronald P. Berry said Tuesday. No written complaints have been filed with the bureau against the Dallas firm, International Promo tions, which is offering the package. “There is nothing wrong with companies offering premiums as an inducement,” Berry said. “What is wrong is when they mislead prospec tive customers about the nature of the prize or the value of the prize.” Michael Farnsworth of the com pany’s customer relations division declined comment Wednesday. A spokesman for the firm said Monday the company sells business gifts and gives away trips and other items as an inducement for people to make purchases at the company. International Promotions told the . BBB that in addition to receiving a sleeping bag, customers get a chance to win a Winnebago recreational ve hicle, Berry said. He said the bureau contacted the company that manufactures Winne bago recreational vehicles and offi cials there said the sleeping bag is an authorized product made by an other company with their permis sion. “They also are aware that this product has been misused by certain companies,” he said. Regardless of whether the sleep ing bag was connected with Winne bago, “the bureau would object to the offer of the Winnebago Chief tain without an affirmative disclo sure that it is a sleeping bag, not a recreation vehicle,” he said. The bureau began investigating International Promotions in June when it received calls that the firm was offering a trip to Hawaii, Berry said. But the bulk of the calls did not come until after the first of Novem ber. ■■■■■■ ■■■■■■ I cut here I ■■■■ ■■ ■■ Hi Defensive Driving Course Nov. 23, 24 and Nov. 30, Dec. 1 College Station Hilton For information or to pre-register phone 693-8178 24 hours a day. ■§■■■■■■■■■■■■ I cut here | ■■■■mi Marines We’re looking for a few good men. Captain R. Mahanv 846-9036/8891 Benefield & Co. 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Ragupathi is happy to announce the opening of his office for the practice of gas trointestinal and liver diseases. (Diseases of the stomach, colon, liver and pancreas) 2701 OSLER BLVD., BRYAN OFFICE HOURS MOM.-FRI. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. OFFICE: 774-7666 AFTER HOURS: 775-3133 Diplomate American Board of Internal Medicine & Gastroenterology SKI Winterpark JAN. 8-15 Nutritionist studies eating habits, diet of various animal species at Dallas Zoo DALLAS (AP) — To look at Demba the gorilla, who sits innocent and Buddha-like before a dinner of celery, the casual observer might not notice that she is uniformly tubby, monstrously pot-bellied and a thief. But there is no mistaking the grumpiness manifest in her mate. Fubo has suffered the indignity of having his own Demba steal his pri mate biscuits in the morning. He has taken his irritation out on his keepers at the Dallas Zoo and has beaten up Demba. At feeding time, Demba and Fubo have sustained mi nor wounds — all over sweet pota toes and spinach. The problem confounded Bonnie Raphael, the zoo veterinarian. After an unsuccessful attempt with a re duction diet for Demba, she called Dave Baer, a prominent animal nu tritionist from Silver Spring, Md. Recently, Baer roamed the zoo with a duffel bag of weighing scales and clipboards, trying to get to the bottom of dietary problems such as Demba’s. “People think of nutrition at zoos as being real simple,” Raphael said. “But it’s complicated.” The 401 species and 1,519 ani mals at the Dallas Zoo kept Baer busy. But this was not his first visit. He came to the zoo two years ago to help train some keepers. Baer has a bachelor’s degree in zoology and a master’s degree in ani mal nutrition. He is also well-versed in the latest research. Take Papa the hippopotamus. “He is looking a little thin,” Baer said. “This is something I wouldn’t see, but the keepers have.” Weighing Papa is almost impossi ble. He’s close to several tons, and it would take a truck scale to do the job. But his keepers have noticed his backbone and hip bones are pro truding. Normally, he is completely spherical. Papa is about 32 years old, which for a hippo is rather old. Baer said his teeth could be going bad, or his system may be less effi cient. Most hippos in captivity live only into their 40s. “We can give him a diet easiei to digest,” Baer said. “We’ll sample dif ferent feeds and see what happens.” Baer is not sure what to do about Demba and Fubo. At 17, Demba is getting up in years and she has yet to bear off spring. Fubo, who at 20 has fathered two gorillas, cannot be blamed. “Gorillas spend 40 percent of their waking hours foraging for food,” Baer said. “Demba doesn’t move enough and I think she’s bo red.” Demba’s obesity may be contribut ing to her infertility, Raphael said, and the zoo would like the gorillas, which are a vanishing species, to bear some progeny. Man lives up to promise to become ‘river rat’ SILSBEE (AP) — Pete Reed always told his kids that as soon as he got them grown and mar ried off, he was going to become a river rat. A man of his word, he started building a houseboat not long after that happened and has been on the water ever since. He and his wife, Lois, stay on the floating home underneath the Neches River bridge on U.S. 96, and their two years there have convinced them of one thing: “If I ever had to live on land again, I wouldn’t know what to do,” Lois says, echoing Pete’s views. It’s easy to see what they mean. Inside the modest houseboat, the lazily flowing brown water and tree-lined shores are visible through every window but one. Ferns wave gently in the breeze on the fenced-in porch, decorated with flower boxes and furnished with rocking chairs for eve ning philosophizing. A gentle, barely noticeable rocking motion re minds you you’re on the water, not land. And the minute you step aboard, although you’re just feet from the shore, you feel different. “There’s a peace on this river, it’s something about the river,” Pete says slowly, looking out his kitchen window. “You don’t have some things other people have, but you sure have something they don’t have.” The rent may be free, but the Reeds must haul their drinking water and wood for their wood- burning stove. Their biggest expenses are coal oil and butane, and, of course, materials for their ongoing carpentry projects, one of which starts right after the last one is finished. “How long did it take to build this thing?” Pete echoes a visitor’s question. “Heck, we’re still not finished.” While most people start from the ground up, the Reeds started from the water up. Once they built the basic barge, or what is now the floor, they stayed in a tent on board as they built the walls and finally the roof. They located a butane-powered refrigerator so they didn’t have to make trips to the grocery store every day. And they have running water, sort of. Pete’s father, Charlie Reed, while trotting to the sink, says, “See, you run over here, and then you pump your water and then you run back.” The water he pumps into the sink, though, is river wa ter used for baths and washing dishes. Their drinking water is in a yellow cooler by the door, next to a large glass jar full of candy. The candy is for Molly Moore, “the youngest river rat,” as Lois calls her 4-year-old grand daughter who spends as much time as she can on the houseboat with her grandparents. “It’s nice being out on the water and all be cause it is so peaceful,” Lois says, watching the sun stretch colorfully over the water at dusk. “But the best part is the freedom. We’re free.” Spans, by Weigh tl ifting club Steve Buras 845-5020 $300. Includes: "TrnNSpprf a+ioM Coudos Shi Reu-tals LifV TtcViefs THE cASCTS TN XT=ALt) TWO LECTURES By P^OLO B AHUCCHIE'RX Texas A&TT. Professor at La Poggerina TATTU's Ttatian Study Center Giotto. Uffizi, Florence Dante & Giotto: Literary Space & Pictorial Space Friday Nov. 13 2:00 pm Room 510 Rudder The Medieval City as a Contemporary Solution Friday Nov. 20 2:00 pm Room 510 Rudder L Study Abroad Office 145-0544 161 Biwell West