£ Page 4/The Battalion/Monday, January 18,1988 USL SUMMER SCHOOL IN FRANCE University of Southwestern Louisiana June 27-August 6, 1988 TOULON, FRANCE The University of Southwestern Louisiana will offer its Third Annual Summer School in Toulon, France. The following courses taught in En glish by USL Faculty are available: Anthropology, Architecture, Commu nication.Dance, Economics, English, Finance, French, Geography, Ge ology. History. Home Economics, Humanities, Management, Marketing, Music, Political Science, Sociology, Visual Arts. COST OF THE PROGRAM $3,500-including airfare, tuition, fees, lodg ing in single rooms, two meals on school d^ys. A LONDON PRE-STUDY TOUR-is available at an additional cost of S275.00 DEADLINE FEBRUARY 29, 1988 For futher information and application forms contact: Dr. Frans Amelinckx Department of Foreign Languages University of Southwestern Louisiana Lafayette, LA 70504-3331 Tel. (318) 231 -5449 Evening (318) 269-1604 ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ judi Sheppard Missett's i # iazzei*eise i i * ONE WEEK OF UNLIMITED * JAZZERCISE FREE You are entitled to one week of unlimited Jazzercise, FREE. Offer expires Jan. 30, 1988. Free offer for new students only. Special Semester Rates Available No Membership Fee MW 4:30* & 5:35* TTH 9:15* & 6:00* Sat 9:00am ♦Childcare Available Jazzercise Studio Wellborn @ Grove (1 block South of Jersey) 776-6696 764-1183 Serving B-CS for 8 years 3° \ FILM DEVELOPING SPECIAL C41 COLOR PRINT FILM ONLY STANDARD SVzxS SINGLE PRINTS 12 Exp. $1.99 24 Exp. $2.99 15 Disc $1.99 36 Exp. $2.99 OFFER GOOD JANUARY 15-20 1988 PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES AT GOODWIN HALL & THE TEXAS A&M BOOKSTORE IN THE MSC O Clear Lake deal drowns in sea of allegations of forgery, fraud 1 Democratic officeholders involved in mess HOUSTON (AP) — Clear Lake area land deals involving some top state Democratic officeholders de generated into a multimillion dollar mess amid allegations of forgery, fraud and misapplication of project funds, the Houston Chronicle re ported Sunday. The projects were among those put together by former state Rep. William J. Caraway and unsuccessful Houston mayoral candidate E.W. “Bill” Wright III and their partners. Both turned to real estate devel opment in the wake of political losses. Texas Land Commissioner Garry Mauro’s business manager and a Clear Lake attorney claimed that Mauro and the lawyer never signed bank notes totaling $5.5 million that bear their purported signatures and were used to fund the real estate ventures. A handwriting expert sup ported their claims. Caraway and Wright, now the deputy director of the Democratic Party’s presidential fund-raising ef fort, denied anyone other than the investors had signed the notes. “Nobody would sign anybody’s name for them,” Wright said. The developers, who packaged and sold tax shelter investments to a who’s who of Democratic officehold ers, including Mauro, Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby and U.S. Rep. Mike An drews, have since seen their business fall apart. Their company. Intertec Finan cial Group, has collapsed, plunging Wright and another partner into bankruptcy and causing embarrass ment for a number of politicians who have lost money in the unsuc cessful projects. Allegations of fraud at Intertec have attracted the attention of the FBI and the Harris County District Attorney’s Office. Their business dealings are the subject of a flurry of lawsuits, including one by a former partner who accuses the developers of misrepresenting their land deals and fraudulently mismanaging pro ject monies. Glimpses of their business deal ings include: — Caraway and Wright were di rectors at banks that made several million dollars in loans to their pro jects. After Wright was elected to the board of directors at Western Bank- Downtown, the bank made the $850,000 loan that Mauro now disa vows. “I never signed anything,” Mauro said, referring further ques tions to his business manager and cousin, Don Mauro. — The developers bought a 14.5- acre cow pasture for $436,000 and then sold it ten weeks later for $1.3 million to a partnership they formed. The loan that Mauro says he didn’t sign financed $850,000 of the transaction. — Kenneth D. McConnico, a Clear Lake area lawyer who was one of Caraway’s first partners, said his name was forged on two mortgages totaling $4 million for earlier pro jects. A handwriting expert confirmed that McConnico never signed the documents. Caraway, Wright and another partner, David A. Frasier, defended Ex-Brazoria commissioner recollects his fullfilling history WEST COLUMBIA (AP) — If variety is the spice of life, D.E. Grandstaff has had a flavorful one. The 89-year-old has worked at a wide range of professions from coaching football to building oil rigs to raising cows to teaching school. He has even been involved in politics and served as a Brazoria County commissioner for 10 years. He spent most of his high school years in Louisiana where he had to ride nine miles every day on a horse or a mule to get to school. “I alternated between the mule and the horse,” he said. “It just de pended on which one needed the rest. With the mule, I spent about half the time pulling it.” The summer of 1916 he worked for a company in Louisiana making $3 a day. “That’s $3 a day, honey, not an hour,” he reiterated. They had talked about getting married and he had written her fa ther asking for permission. The girl’s father had told Grand staff that it was okay with him but he would have to get his daughter’s permission. “I don’t remember ever propos ing," he said. Olive’s family was moving to West Columbia from Humble and it seemed like a long way to have to go to visit, he said. It was pretty good money back then, and with his “investments,” he bought an extra suit of clothes, a jersey milk cow and a jersey heifer. About that time his family de cided to move, and in the long jour ney, Grandstaff learned a valuable lesson. “I never will forget it,” he said. “We’d been on the road about two weeks and we’d been making pretty good time. We stopped and were drinking a cup of coffee, and I bragged to Dad about what good luck we had been having.” “There’s many a slip between cup and lip,” GrandstafFs father wisely replied. “When we started up again, my jersey cow wouldn’t get up. She was so tired, she just laid down and died,” Grandstaff said. “Five miles down the road, my jersey heifer laid down and died. A whole sum mer’s work, gone. Dad was right. There’s many a slip between cup and lip.” In 1917, the year he was to grad uate from high school, the United States entered World War I and Grandstaff wasted no time enlisting in the Marine Corps. But upon returning, he went right back to school and graduated in Humble. Grandstaff was dating his high school sweetheart at the time. Her name was Olive Stokely and she later became his wife. “We asked him if he would marry us, but he said wed have to wait till the meeting was over. It was about 11 when he was through. He asked us if we wanted to get married that month or the next. We told him that month, but he had to hurry to make it by midnight. ” — D.E. Grandstaff So, one night they just decided to get married. Grandstaff had won a race in high school and had received $2.50 for a prize. Olive exchanged it for a quarter eagle, which was a small gold coin about the size of a dime, and they had kept it to buy their marriage li cense. On Sept. 30, 1920, Ringling Brothers was having a circus, but it was sold out. “So, I said, ‘Let’s get married.’” And they did. They went to a “picture show” with each of their best friends, and when it was over, they sought out a former pastor who was in a meeting in Houston. “We asked him if he would marry us, but he said we’d have to wait till the meeting was over,” he said. “It was about 11 (p.m.) when he was through. He asked us if we wanted to get married that month or the next. We told him that month, but he had to hurry to make it by midnight.” West Columbia the next morning to tell her family. They were not upset, but were not quite sure what to think about the young couple. “We lived in West Columbia be cause it set in raining,” he said. “The roads were all dirt roads back then and we couldn’t leave town.” The Grandstaffs lived in West Columbia off and on for nine years before moving there permanently in 1929. He taught school and coached in West Columbia for four years be fore he was “voted out.” It was not his record that cost him his job, he contends, but petty politics. The first year his football team only won one game and the next year was not much better, but in 1931, it won the county championship. “None of tne teams in our county even crossed my goal line,” he said. After working for the school, Grandstaff worked for area oil companies until World War II broke out. He tried to re-enlist in the Ma rines but was told he would not be eligible for foreign service. “I told them if I couldn’t go with the rest of them, I’d just go on home and work in a defense plant,” he said. He worked at the Dow Chemical Co. until 1944, when he was elected county commissioner. Grandstaff and his wife, Olive, had three children. His youngest daughter, Kathryn, married Bing Crosby, but Grandstaff said the fact that his son-in-law was famous never affected him too much. “He was a top-notch fellow as long as I knew him,” Grandstaff After the death of his first wife, Olive, Grandstaff married his sec ond wife, Clair. Most of his time now is spent ba Grandstaff said they went to They’re big fis hunting, fishing and watching ball- games. Recently he took a hunting and fishing trip to British Columbia where he hoped to kill a grizzly bear but did not. “We caught some pretty big trout, though,” he said. “Dolly Var- den trout. That’s Varden not Par- ton. They weigh 15, 17, 20 pounds. “sh.” O* i MSC MSC DISCOVERY WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 20, 10:00 am. to 3:00 p.m ioI Me ol. Ci lU JA, larsal i IDENT Kind ap their business dealings, sayiflDENT investors, including the Maun McConnico, were well aware involvement in the projects said that the signatures on tlii| guarantees that Mauro and nico now disavow, were colli the banks involved, notbytheict 3 J m opers. The developers say that the same investors who nowaifc ing to distance themselves fi iGGIES f financially ailing land dealsf^ sent federal income tax sta:r,P^ and other correspondence th;&| _ ' vided details about the pj They produced certified maigfjhip dr eipts that they said showedthtfal busin tors were informed about thtlWTK for ject. 0 let? 1 \riame The developers’ attorney]^ Holland said that some of disgruntled investors have Jjk other complaints to the state ney General’s Office, the dar#* torney’s office and the FBI Ip nothing has come as a resultof’i ili Dallas Ballet|j c offers merger^ to Fort Woif DALLAS (AP) — The a£ORPU ridden Dallas Ballet has talk st Poin formally with its Fort th counterpart to the west abor s, claim possibility of creating a revihe acai company, a spokesman for Me fre: Dallas group said. )n Jan, “I believe firmly that, betwjnd, Dallas and Fort Worth, weej.T Mil together create a ballet corrjistmas that would be of major iir:*i dismi tance,” Jay Vogelson, a ‘pfe man for trustees of the fmancHanj troubled Dallas Ballet said. “The Fort Worth Ballet A done some great things w^MTlOl cally,” Vogelson said, the two of us there is anaude , that could support a balletc/Joke pany of that scale.” |||„ r / Serious finacial problems:^, plagued the Dallas comparj-f/) f) recent months, threatenintjl;^,,. troupe’s existence. Several tc companies around the countr^ThtCt similar straits have merged it cent years, with varying detnrnmmam of success. Merging the troupes Edward would combine donors, crea: de poii greater financial stability, Vcjsed be son said. Bssni A study of the Dallas Ballet! 1 acade nancial problems urged tem.' troupe to ask its creditors to ^’s son f ive its $ 1.8 million debtandtJzing.’ 1 million immediately to insfHe ha the opening of programs sc® fit t! uled for February and Marc!) »nien Vogelson said the comp® psyc existing debt would not besfe'vanls ; by the Fort Worth Ballet infe des case of a merger. bating “It’s best to start out wit, VC)Vvec combined company that do«^L Foil have the burdens of either# 0 his i rate company, but has theadr^dwarc tages ancl attractions of both, * u ppei said. ^ a»'oi But merging the smaller 1 ^equh nancially stable Fort Worth ctfhon, r pany with the larger Dallas ctH like pany would involve niiJstanth accommodations, Vogelsonsa remer ^ Officials of the Fort Worth:* let did not immediately reii| , telephone calls by the AssociaEj|T| I Press on Sunday. The artistic styles of the c(V * panics vary considerably. T| | (O Fort Worth Ballet stages mode ^ dance works, while Dallas is w classical. HAR jJF h ‘ SCHULMAN THEATBI#,fc th 2.50 ADMISSION* *e 1. Any Show Before 3 PM 2. Tuesday - All Seats 3. Mon-Wed - Local Students V Current ID s 4. Thur - KORA "Over 30 Nile •DENOTES DOLBY STEREO 1 I MANOR EAST 3 Manor East Mall 823! ‘THREE MEN & A BABY pg COUCH TRIP r PLAZA 3 226 Southwest Pkwy 693-l : ‘FATAL ATTRACTION r 6000 MORNING VIETNAM r ‘WALL STREET r SCHULMAN 6 2002 E. 29th 775-24fi1 FOR KEEPS pg-13 PLANES, TRAINS & AUTOMOBILES r $ DOLLAR DAYS $ FLOWERS IN THE ATTIC r DIRTY DANCING pg-13 BABY BOOM PRINCESS BRIDEpg