f Wednesday 21, 1988/The Battalion/Page 7 | Warped ••con't; nofcJ froiw 4.^ by Scott McCuiiar Garage owner wonders who pinched sub fnlFP SWIFF, Waldo by Kevin Thomas AND >50 WALDO 5 TARTS HEADING FOR THE METEOR IN THE GRAVEYARD... IF HE CAN SURVIVE THE ATTACKING ZOMBIES AND PUT THE CURTAIN ROD IN THE METEOR... LIGHTNING FROM THE APPROACHING STORM CAN THEN STRIKE, THUS DESTROYING THE METEOR AND PREVENTING ITS ENERGY FIELD FROM REJUVENATING THE LIVING DEAD... SUDDENLY, WALDO RUNS INTO ELVIS... OH,FOR CRYING OUT LOUD/ AUSTIN (AP) — Garage owner Ray Ritchie is trying to figure out why anyone would have stolen his yellow submarine. “It was very heavy and very ugly,” he says. Ritchie purchased the one-man sub cheap at an Internal Revenue Service auction last month, then dis played it in front of his shop, Bry- kerwood Garage. “That sucker weighs over 600 pounds. I would have given the sub to anyone — if they would have al lowed me to watch them load it,” he said. His story began in August, when Ritchie went to the IRS auction after hearing that the submarine was available. He was the only person in terested in th^sub. “It went down but it would not go up. It was for ex-wives,” Ritchie said. Late last week, somebody stole the sub. Since it was so heavy, Ritchie said he’s wondering how the thieves made off with it, and why. “That’s why I haven’t reported it stolen, because I’m afraid if the po lice find it, they’re going to make me come get it,” Ritchie said. ome Abilene citizens worry alcohol sales ruin community ABILENE (AP) — Liquor is here to stay, 10 years after the city went wet following a long election battle and prolonged court fight, and resi dents said alcohol sales are a part of their economy and lives. The Texas Supreme Court al lowed non-membership sales and beer sales at liquor outlets on Sept. 20, 1978, after legal haranguing lover the slim 122-vote wet victory. Some consider that the day Abilene was ruined. “We had a real great place where people wanted to raise their kids,” said Neil Fry, a leader of the dry proponents and now a Taylor County commissioner. “And when it was decided that Abilene could sell alcohol we lost something special.” “We used to be known as the best city in Texas to raise kids. Now we can’t say that,” he told the Abilene Reporter-News. “This is the worst problem in this town, and we openly agreed to allow it.” Officials said liquor has been avail able in Taylor County since 1962. Even before the 1978 election, resi dents could buy drinks simply by purchasing memberships from any of 30 private Abilene clubs. Or they could drive north to Im pact or south to Buffalo Gap, where drinks were available without mem berships. The ruling prompted a few cele brations, including reports of people dancing on cars outside convenience stores newly stocked with beer. I Honeymooners trapped by Gilbert Mark Beebe, then owner of the downtown Sound Barrier club, raced to Austin when the court’s rul ing was known to get his license for liquor sales to non-members. Then he raced back to become the first non-member to purchase a mixed drink. “Having the first drink didn’t feel any different,” he said last week. “But there was a feeling of cele bration. Abilene was gonna get pro gressive.” He said many businesses were ex cited about the idea of selling alcohol because they thought making Abi lene wet would improve the econ omy by getting fine restaurants, ho tels and other businesses to come to Abilene. The city can claim to have earned at least $1.2 million in mixed drink tax revenues that it didn’t have ac cess to before. Residents also have more restau rants and entertainment options from which to choose. They can buy liquor in 210 locations, 83 of which are clubs or restaurants. Opponents of more liberal alcohol laws said at the time that Abilene would lose its reputation for clean living, and would be struck by in creased crime and drunkenness. Several local ministers now say they have encountered many more families with alcohol-related prob lems. Arrests for driving while intoxi cated went from 517 in 1977 to 710 in 1987, an increase of almost 200 arrests, law enforcement officials said. Asked if open liquor sales had made crime a bigger problem, Police Chief Dwain Pyburn said, “I couldn’t tell, and as far as I know there’s no way to make a real assessment.” HOUSTON (AP) — A Seattle couple whose dream honeymoon turned to a fight for survival blames Mexican hotel operators and offi cials for their problems more than the winds and rains of Hurricane Gilbert. Brent and Carol Cady were trapped by the hurricane, spending three days without food, water or electricity, and had to spend $6,800 for a flight to a Houston hospital to treat the injuries that left Mrs. Ca dy’s right leg partially paralyzed and her back possibly sprained. “I kept wondering if cameras were rolling,” Mrs. Cady, 23, said Monday in her room at Houston’s Methodist Hospital. “I felt like this should be a television movie.” Doctors said the woman was im proving after being treated for a back sprain, internal contusion in the pelvic area and kidney, and leg numbness and problems more se vere than usually seen with back in juries. “I was so scared,” she said of the ordeal. “I kept thinking, this is going to end someday.” The couple were returning from a boat tour the evening of Sept. 13 when they were told their hotel, the Beachclub Cancun, had begun to evacuate because of the approaching storm. They were among about 300 guests who were bused to a power plant that served as a refugee center. But because the place was crowded and uncomfortable, they left for a rundown hotel about six miles away. After a night of lizards, insects and lack of food or water, they headed back to the Beachclub Can cun. At the hotel, the windows of 27 rooms had been shattered and nearby buildings had collapsed. Ho tel management said they could re trieve their luggage from their room. While in the room, Mrs. Cady was pinned to the floor by a 6-by-4-foot wood entertainment center knocked over by a gust of wind. A few hours later, her right leg was numb. That night, they slept on the floor of the hotel lobby. She was in pain and could move only her arms and hands. Brent Cady had a fever and virus. The next day she was moved into a back room — on a stretcher. “They said we would be on the first plane out of here,” she said. “I heard the planes flying over me, and I just laid there and cried.” On Friday, the couple found a taxi to take them to the airport. The drive that cost $2 days earlier cost them $50 that day, plus another $50 to let Mrs. Cady keep her stretcher. At the airport, the couple met a pilot, travel agent and Mexico City consulate official who helped them get on a plane back to the United States. $8.5 million unpaid as health plan fails AUSTIN (AP) — The attorney general’s office and the State Board of Insurance are investigating the recent financial collapse of a statewide health insurance program that left nearly 7,000 teachers and school employees facing about $8.5 million in medical bills. Officials said the bills were sup posed to have been covered by the insurance plan. While the two state agencies look at the program, the Texas State Tea chers Association said it may file a lawsuit in the case. “People got taken for their money and have been left hanging out there on the line, swinging in the breeze, so to speak,” said Charles Beard, TSTA president. Any legal action will be aimed at the individuals and entities that the teachers’ organization believes are also liable for those unpaid medical bills, said lawyer David Richards, representing the TSTA. “Conceivably, the school districts themselves are liable to the extent they were promoters of the health trust,” Richards said. The Educators Group Health Trust, a 5-year-old self-insurance TRAVEL LONDON $569.00 PARIS $608.00 MADRID $678.00 ROME $718.00 DELHI $1199.00 HONG KONG $829.00 TOKYO $759.00 BANGKOK $969.00 SINGAPORE $885.00 KUALA LUMPUR $885.00 CARACAS $290.00 PANAMMA CITY $290.00 SANJOSE $290.00 RIO $599.00 ST. CROIX $220.00 SYDNEY $954.00 KATHMANDS $1209.00 THE TRAVEI. DIVISION OF CIEE EXPERTS IN STUDENT TRAVEL SINCE 1947 3300 W. MOCKINGBIRD #101 DALLAS. TX 75235 • ALL FARES ROUND-TRIP FROM HOUSTON • WE ISSUE EURAILPASSES, HOSTEL PASSES AND INTER- N ATI ON AL STUDENTS ID CARDS. CALL OR WRITE FOR A FREE COPY OF OUR STUDENT TRAVEL CATALOG. * A&M Steakhousel Delivers 846-5273 SERVICE For a resume that can do the job, depend on Kinko’s. kinko's the copy center 201 College Main 846-8721 The Battalion Since 1878 XII3IM31l?SIOIMSl IX PARTH ENON T«*Ji > f Tart a TOT MAOT MM MAMA I OTf TONITE Free Beer 9-10 No Cover All Nite Woodstone Center 764-8575 eu program serving the Texas Associa tion of Community Schools, was de clared insolvent by its trustees on Sept. 2.The following week, the health trust filed for liquidation un der federal bankruptcy laws, listing assets of $363,663 and liabilities — essentially the unpaid medical claims — of $8.48 million. Unlike instances where state-reg ulated insurance companies fail, non-regulated self-insurance pro grams such as Educators Group have no industry-financed assistance to payoff claims. Ron Dusek, spokesman for Attor ney General Jim Mattox, declined to give details of that office’s investiga tion. But he said the direction was generally under the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act or under the in surance code. “The attorney general is very con cerned because there are people who have insurance claims that have not been paid,” Dusek said. Although the Texas Board of In surance doesn’t have jurisdiction over Educators Croup, the agency said it is looking at complaints against the trust’s administrators. £*1UvniIHI AUL SPECIAL GUEST GENE WATSON Friday October 14,1988 8:00 p.m. G. Rollie White Coliseum GOOD SEATS STILL AVAILABLE TICKETS ON SAL£ NOW TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE MSC BOX OFFICE FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 845-1234 Large 16” One Topping Thin Crust Pizza Eat In or Take Out Free Delivery 846-0379 Best Pizza in Town Northgate 99 + tax expires 9-27-88 Eat In or Take Out Free Delivery 846-0379 Best Pizza in Town Small 12” One Topping Thin Crust Pizza M-F 1 lam-12am Sat lpm-2am Sun lpm-12am Northgate 99 -I- tax expires 9-27-88 Did You Forget To pick up your 1987 (Fall ’86, Spring ’87) Aggie- land? You can still pick up your copy by coming to the English Annex between 8:30 and 4:30. Bring your I.D. The 1988 (Fall ’87, Spring ’88) Aggieland will be available in October. Look for announcements in The Battalion. Ti*r Interested in the Visual Arts? Tired of a mediocre existence? Well then, w y | <— (this is not art) MSC Visual Arts Annual 1st Meeting Wednesday, September 21,1988 7pm, MSC 145 and remember: be happy