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SH September Special Reg. $300.°° value SALE $249. 00 includes Free standard install AUDIO 707 Ave 5719 Cash or Check Prices Credit Cards Accepted Free Layaway Limited Quantities Full Service Judge changes scheduled date for execution LUFKIN (AP) — A state district judge delayed the scheduled execu tion of convicted killer Willie Mack Moddon after defense attorneys filed lengthy documents in the case, officials said. Moddon, 40, was to die by injec tion before dawn Thursday, but state District Judge David Wilson re scheduled the execution date for Dec. 8, 1988. Wilson’s action came after defense attorney W. Alan Wright filed a peti tion for writ of habeas corpus con taining 25 claims for Moddon’s re lease. Wilson ruled late Friday that he did not have adequate time to ex amine the more than 150 pages of documents and respond prior to the scheduled execution date. The petition questions Moddon’s mental competency both now and during the time of his trial, claiming that his confinement, conviction and death sentence are illegal and un constitutional, Wright said. Although Wilson approved the stay of execution, the state Court of Criminal Appeals will still have to decide the merits of the defense pe tition, District Clerk Jimmie Robin son said. Moddon was convicted of the July 29, 1984, death of Deborah Daven port, a Lufkin gas station clerk who was stabbed 16 times with a pocket knife during a robbery. Storms in Gulf responsible for brownings SOUTH PADRE ISLAND (AP) — Officials are blaming strong cur rents from the storms in the Gulf and dangerous undertow for the ap parent drownings of two people on South Padre Island this week. Tracy D. Wall, 22, of Lubbock was pronounced dead Tuesday at a park on the beach by the local justice of the peace. The woman was in the water about 20 minutes near a jetty at Isla Blanca Park, Justice of the Peace Bennie Ochoa III said. Wall was vacationing with her fi ance, Ochoa said. A 20-year-old San Benito man has been missing from the same area since Monday, a U.S. Coast Guard official said. Coast Guard Petty Officer Kurt Karow said storms in the Gulf of Mexico and the undertow from the jetties made swimming dangerous. Local Briefs Student IDs to replace library cards Beginning Sept. 19, Texas A&M library cards will be filed away and not recalled for future reference. The library will switch to a completely automated system of using student identification cards to check out books and reference materials, says Sherrie Schmidt, assistant director for collection and bibliographic services in the Sterling C. Evans Library. “In the past, we found it nec essary to issue a separate library ~ard in order to get an optical character readout of the student: H card number,” she says. “By now, since we realized food sen .fj ices was using a magnetic striper k||f learn the back of student II) cardsyests vou b read student information, wede ippssible t ided we would do the same.” course thr ' With c< Schmidt says the new systejdefensive will save time for both the libran^ff urr ' cu and ^^B)ana vensity Ph “Students will definitely find faculty me easier to keep up with one an)HDurut) instead of two,” she says. pie sign enough st could be owt Bangladesh students take donations ountr The Bangladesh Student Asso ciation has started a fund raising drive for the victims of flooding in Bangladesh. Association President Hasan Imtiaz Chowdhury said all do nated funds will be used to help those left homeless by the flood. Donations can be sent to the MSG Student Finance Center, P.O. Box 5688, Aggieland Sta tion, College Station, Tx. 778H The association also will take do nations at a booth in the Memo rial Student Center on Friday. The Associated Press has rt ported that at least 21 niilfo people are homeless as a resultol the flooding. Officials discuss local interests Texas A&M and College Sta tion officials met at an informal lunch Wednesday to discuss is sues of mutual interest. College Station City Manager Ron Ragland said the discussion includecT the possibility of A&M’s occupying the Woodbine office building in College Station, the success of A&M’s satellite parking program and potential sites for a College Station train platform. The representatives discussed letting A&M use College Staiioc park sites to expand the Universi ty’s new satellite parking pro gram. Ragland said. Among those represemint A&M at the informal meetint were Robert Smith, vice preside for finance and operations, and Gen. Wesley E. Peel, vice duo cellor for fac ilities planning and construction. HOU ounty minary abai thai ■nthe cc estimate The anted |> the ta One ). of 4 lillion i |or the i lubber p jjomobile Ie.i. E Ko. may to $50 m nake a j Backagiu Bany’s aj Bould be Clements to speak at local meeting Gov. Bill Clements will be in College Station today to deliver the keynote address at a confer ence on economic development. Clements will begin the 38th Annual Texas Industrial Devel opment Conference at 9 a.m. in the ballroom of the College Sta tion Hilton. The conference, sponsored by the Texas A&M University Sys tem, the Texas Engineering Ex tension Service and the Texas In dustrial Development Council, will present ideas for economic leadership during the next dt cade. More than 250 meinltersofdif TIDC will learn about new ap proaches to economic dew opment. Presentations will bt given on research, marketing and fundraising, computer applio tions and education and relate: legislative issues. A tribute will be paid to James Bradley, director of the engi neering extension service. Brad lev was one of the founders of the TIDC in 1961. Federal grant program gives A&M sea research funding By Holly Becka Staff Writer The Texas A&M Sea Grant College Program, the only sea grant program in Texas, was awarded a federal grant of $1.58 million for continued marine research in 1989. A&M is in its 21st consecutive year as a member of the program and is one of 29 coastal and Great Lakes state institutions to receive the annual award from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The money is awarded to individual faculty research ers. “A&M received the top money because we have more researchers and a very successful research program,” Program Director Thomas J. Bright said. “But this is not an exclusive A&M program. Funding is provided to other universities as well as Texas A&M.” About 150 schools submit a research summary and cost proposal to A&M’s Sea Grant program every two years. A&M selects those it is willing to support — about half — and asks for full details on each project. After it receives all of the proposals, A&M sends an institutional proposal to Washington D.C. for evaluation by re searchers and scientists. The top 29 proposals from around the nation are awarded grants. The $1.58 million A&M received this year is the sec ond grant from a funding cycle for 1987-1989. The university already has spent the $1.7 million it received for 1987-1988. This grant money is being “trickled” down fr A&M to Texas A&M at Cal vest on, the Universit) Texas, the University of Houston and others univei ties that submitted an approved proposal to A&M. “We’re currently working on the next cycle," Bn: said. “We’ll have to go through the process again* propose for what we’re going to do for the next: years. It takes about a year and a half to evaluate fori next cycle.” Bright said the money will be used to support to and applied marine research. “The money will go toward maricuiture, tflcludi research on biology, genetics, ecology, reprodm and other questions as to suitability and performance a marine subject, of shrimp, redfish, oysters, dams a others,” he said. “It will also go toward fisheries issues - research shrimp, oysters and finfish, which are important sport and commercial fisheries,” he said. “We’reah primarily interested in ecology of fisheries sped stock identification, recruitment and larval transport Environmental studies, coastal engineering and cial, political and policy studies also are among thep mary research programs. About $36 million is spent on the sea grant progra nationwide. “We get our fair share,” Bright said. Apartments violate gas regulations AUSTIN (AP) — Thousands of apartment complexes statewide vio late Texas and U.S. safety regula tions regarding natural gas, one state official said, adding each has the potential for an explosion. State inspectors found numerous violations of natural gas safety regu lations during their last inspection at a Southeast Austin apartment com plex that was heavily damaged by a gas explosion over the weekend, au thorities told the Austin American- Statesman Tuesday. A September 1986 evaluation of the Candlewick Apartments by Texas Railroad Commission inspec tors found more than a dozen gas- related safety violations, including numerous hazardous leaks, Milton Fegenbush, director of pipeline safety for the agency, said. Gas to the complex was turned off for 20 days until safety regulations were met, officials said. The Railroad Commission eval uates and inspects gas metering sys tems at apartment complexes, mo bile home parks and housing projects, Fegenbush said. An explosion Sunday at the com plex blew up most of a 46-unit build ing and sent six people to hospitals in San Antonio and Austin. and Railroad Commission enipkj ees were trying to pinpoint The explosion occurred after sev eral tenants said they repeatedly re ported gas leaks to maintenance workers, who failed to correct the problem. Candlewick Apartments rep resentatives said the company is con ducting its own investigation. They said reports of leaking gas are of paramount importance and should be resolved immediately. They said they believed maintenance workers responded to such reports. Fegenbush said violations of safety regulations in apartment com plexes that use natural gas is com mon. “There are an extremely large number of apartment complexes — the vast majority — not in compli ance with safety regulations,” Fegen bush told the newspaper. “I’d say 75 (percent) to 80 percent violate the law.” Austin Fire Department officials source of the explosion. Fegenbush said the Austin coi plex is one of as many as 40 apartment complexes, housing velopments and mobile homepaf in Texas that use what are known master meter operations. Such opt ations purchase gas from a maj supplier and redistribute it to the customers. That makes them, in esseff small gas companies, Fegenbtf said. He said apartment com] are responsible for the maintenan 8 of all pipelines within the com Fegenbush said the 28 state i* spectors assigned to evaluate mast 1 meter operations cannot keep «| with the thousands of complex® developments and mobile hoi parks. He said state inspectors try evaluate each site every two to lot years. The Candlewick complex owned by Southwest Savings,wB foreclosed upon the 584-unit coi plex in June. Ba Qh 84