I DOOR POSTERS, TAPESTRIES NOW OPEN! 100s of posters to choose from Decorate Your Dorm or Apartment Mon.-Sat. 10-9 Sunday 12:30-5:30 Post Oak Village • 900-3B Harvey Rd. • 693-0901 Page lO/The Battalion/Friday, September 30, 1988 Dallas’s ‘Ruff House’ shelters those other agencies do not 'musKsP? & CHUN KING | *■ CHINESE RESTAURANT ^ LUNCH BUFFET $4 75 per person ALL YOU CAN EAT Sun-Fri 11:30-1:30 SUNDAY EVENINGS BUFFET 5:00-8:00 DINNER SPECIALS Chosen from our most popular item. Served w/soup, rice, 8c egg roll Daily Lunch Specials $2 95 Different Special Each Day i$0 _ We serve beer & wine 1673 Briarcrest Drive At Ardan Crossing A cross from Steak & Ale 774-1157 Open 7 Days a Week Lunch 11-2 Dinner 5-10 philosophy, officials say, iff House apart and Fills a I Eat In or Take Out Free Delivery 846-0379 - Best Pizza in Town Northgate g tax expires 10-4-88 Small fj 12” One Topping ca’ In or Take Out Free Delivery 846-0379 Best Pizza in Town Northgate 99 Thin Crust Pizza M-F 1 lam-12am Sat lpm-2am San lpm-12am + tax expires 10-4-88 I 1 I I I .1 DALLAS (AP) — People live at Ruff House because they’re out of money, out of work or out of op tions. They come to the eight little frame buildings on rural Langdon Road in Dallas to get back on their feet. Or to dry out. Or to grow up. Or because nobody else wants them. Often, it’s a combination. Ruff House is a place for people who don’t belong in the hospital or in jail or in a mental facility — peo ple who don’t fall under the jurisdic tion of other helping agencies. “We take anyone who needs a home for any reason,” George Ruff said. It is this that sets Rufl Mouse apan need in a city where homelessness is a constant problem, especially dur ing very hot or very cold weather. This summer, with its oppressive heat, was a busy one for George and Alice Ruff. “Police take a lot of people there, and Parkland sends people there when they’re not sick enough to stay in the hospital but uot well enough to be out on the streets,” said Dan Alaniz, a manager in the Dallas De partment of Health and Human Services. “It’s not a real slick operation. It’s not real pretty. But they tend not to turn anybody away. I have so much respect for the work they do.” On a recent day the Ruffs said was average, there were 94 people at Ruff House.That is considered a ca pacity crowd, but as many as 150 have stayed there at times, some sleeping on the floor of the small chapel. “Our primary objective is to offer shelter and food for the mentally, physically and emotionally hand icapped,” Jim Bidelhausen, a former management consultant, said. Bidelhausen came to Ruff House several years ago to recuperate from heart surgery and stayed to help the Ruffs handle public relations and manage the home. There is nothing lavish about the accommodations at Ruff House. Used, donated furniture sits on lino leum or worn carpeting inside the tiny buildings, connected by tar-pa per walkways in need of repair. Small window units provide scant air conditioning in some of the buildings; fans battle the heat in oth ers. Dallas is funneling $72,776 in fed eral money into Ruff House this year for renovations to help it com ply with city codes, Alaniz said. Bidelhausen said the home’s an nual operating expenses are about $300,000, all of which comes from individual and church donations. Ruff House gets food from the North Texas Food Bank, and indi viduals and groups donate clothing, furniture and cars. A question about staff draws a shrug from the Ruffs. “Staff?” asked Alice Ruff. “There is no staff.’’There are only the resi dents of Ruff House, who are ex pected to contribute to the house hold by cooking, cleaning or doing other assigned chores. George Ruff, wheelchair-bound by childhood polio, said he began helping people in Kansas, where he grew up. “People have helped me,” he said, “so I help others in return.” He and Alice Ruff married on July 28, 1967. She had a license to care for abused children, and Ruff House Ministries grew out of that. The couple moved to Dallas 13 years ago because of Alice Ruff’s asthma. They bought a small house on Langdon Road in Dallas, south of Interstate 635. “We started expanding,” Ruff said, “and we’re still expanding.” There are no neighbors to com plain. State officials consider Ruff House a shelter rather than a care home, so they don’t press the Ruffs to get an institutional license. The Ruffs have adopted or ob tained legal guardianship of five re tarded or handicapped residents. One is Vincent, 33, who has lived with the Ruffs since 1970. ★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★A- — B ,l, — B H ■ Mike s Discount Liquor? Candidates claim 900-2E. Harvey Rd.College Station 693-8012 case 12 oz. Bottles case 12 oz. Longnecks Cuervo Max Pack (750 mi Cuervo Gold 80° Tequila & 1L Mix) S Seagram 7 -k 80° American Whiskey 750ml :£ Bacardi jjim Beam 80° rum 1.75L 80° Whiskey * Fleishman's •K ° Vodka 1.75L 9" 5" 12" J59 15 49 14 59 799 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Hispanic support Credit cards on beer add 4%, while supplies last,J sale ends 10-3-88,Keg beer available. * -k k- See Mike for all your party plans jf 4- £ Mike's Discount Liquor #2 * * 3519 S.Texas Ave. Bryan i t 846-7553 * AUSTIN (AP) — Republicans and Democrats both claimed Thurs day that Texas Hispanics will help put their presidential candidates over the top on Nov. 8. Gov. Bill Clements and a new His panic Republican group predicted that Vice President Bush will receive the 35 percent of the Texas Hispanic vote they believe he needs to win the state. “Unquestioablly, the Hispanic vote is going to be critical to this elec tion. I don’t think this election can be won in the state of Texas without the Hispanic vote,” said Ernesto An- cira of San Antonio, co-chairman of the newly formed Hispanics for Bush organization. Clements said President Reagan received between 37 percent and 38 percent of the Hispanic vote in 1984, and he said 35 percent was a good target this year. “I think that our goal of 35 per cent is realistic and that we’ll achieve it,” Clements said. But state Sen. Carlos Truan, D- Corpus Christi, in a staement distrib uted by Gov. Michael Dukakis’ cam paign, said Texas Hispanics increas ingly are supporting the Democrat. “Eight years of Republicanism has blocked entry to the middle class for large numbers of Hispanics and made it increasingly difficult to maintain a middle-class family life style,” Truan said. Truan said Census Bureau fig ures indicate that 353,000 Hispanics fell below the poverty line between 1986 and 1987. He said the number of Hispanic students entering col lege is falling and that Labor Depart ment statistics show an increase in Hispanic unemployment over that of the general population. “The drive to enter the American middle class mainstream has faltered because of the Republican adminis tration’s total lack of concern for the bread and butter interests of the vast majority of Americans,” Truan said. Clements, co-chairman of Bush’s Texas campaign, took a swipe at Du kakis’ ability to speak Spanish as he argued that Texas Hispanics share the vice president’s beliefs. “On issue after issue — from tra ditional family values to tough anti crime measures — the vice president shares the views held by the majority of the people of this country and, es pecially, the people in our state of Texas,” Clements said. “He knows it takes more than speaking Spanish to understand the needs of our His panic citizens.” But Truan saw it differently. “Both Dukakis and (Sen. Lloyd) Bentsen speak our language — on education, on health care, on jobs, on child care, on expanding the rights of all Americans,” he said. “On top of all this, one half of the Republican ticket, Sen. Dan Quayle, voted to abolish the bilingual provi sion of the Voting Rights Act, even though it was publicly supported by President Reagan.” In other political developments: — Judge Paul Pressler of the Houston-based 14th Court of Ap peals said he was switching from the Democratic to Republican parties. Pressler, 58, also is a member of the executive committee of the Southern Baptist Convention and served in the Texas Legislature from 1957 to 1959. “Judge Pressler, like many people searching for the true conservative party, is welcome in the GOP,” said state Republican Chairman Fred Meyer. “This sends a clear signal that the Democrat Party is out of touch with the people of this state.” Democratic Party executive direc tor Ed Martin said Pressler’s declara tion Thursday was no surprise. }f ped f. tombac If Professional Pool Emporium NOW OPEN East Gate Ruff House to escape an abusive relationship. He now works for Lancaster Resi dential Center for the retarded. He recently got a raise, and last month the couple had a baby. Diane Atkinson has no physical problems when she arrived at Ruff House in 1976. Her handicaps were emotional. “I was going through some per sonal problems and had contem plated suicide,” she said. “I got laid off from my job.” She’s living on her own now and working as a security guard, hut she frequently conies back to visit “Mamma and Pappa,” which is what everyone at Ruff House calls the Ruffs. Darlys Sager left Ruff House, had problems and returned. Before she first came two years ago, she was living in the hack of a pickup at Lake Ray Hubbard. “My kids’ daddy abandoned us at the Salvation Army and I went into premature labor,” Sager said. After she h >rt the baby, Parkland officials called the Ruffs, whogai her a home. “Every time I’ve tried toleavej'i fallen flat on my face,” she said. To end that cycle, the Ruffs sen her to a Dallas County Commui® College job training program. “1 am now qualified totakeanen try-level accounting position,” slj said proudly, adding that she several job interviews lined up in t* coming weeks. Generally, the Ruffs said, they, low' people to stay with them |j about four months, if necessary But residents are expectedtofcl low certain basic rules — no a no drugs, keep your living spu clean and he considerate of ofe residents. The Ruff s acknowledge thatdei ing with dozens of physically jj) emotionally troubled people isdH cult. “But it was given to usasanh sion,” Alice Ruff says. “And wl* God gives you something, you give it away.” Texas legislature discusses possible state income taxes ei “His mother brought him to me,” Alice Ruff says. “He was deaf, blind and retarded. He was 15 and he was a complete infant at that time. They (doctors) told us he would never function at all. They told us he was a ‘blob.’ Now, he functions fine.” Vincent still has speech problems but is an ebullient member of the Ruff House community wdio loves to strum guitars and play records. His hearing has improved without sur gery; the Ruffs chalk it up to faith. Robert Stewart is a recent Ruff House graduate. He came to the Ruffs in January 1987, after he lost his job. They paid his tuition at El Centro College, where he trained in health care. He married Lynn, an other resident, who had come to AUS I IN (AP) — Some Texas leg islators are so fearf ul of discussing even the possibility of a state income tax that they refer to it as the “I’’word. Other Texans say that when it comes to an income tax, the perti nent “I” word is “inevitable,” given the need to pay for critical state serv ices. One thing they agree on is that the idea of taxing corporate and per sonal income — a move that would raise billions of dollars for a state that has struggled in recent years to fund public services — stirs unusu ally strong emotions. “For the most part, the people who have come before our commit tee say the income tax is a godsend, or they say it’s a beast from hell,” Billy Hamilton, executive director of the Select Committee on Fax Equity, said. The panel w'as created last year by the Legislature to make recom mendations about the state tax sys tem. “It’s kind of like in the olden days,” Hamilton, former chief reve nue estimator at the state comptrol ler’s office and former research di rector for the Texas Association of Taxpayers, said. “People thought to matoes were poisonous until some body bit one and found out they weren’t. Right now, we haven’t got to the tomato stage on this.” Gary E. Wood, president of the Texas Research League, said, “There is just a visceral aversion to the word ‘income tax’ in Texas, and a lot of people feel that there’s some sort of mystical reason not to have one.” But economist Bernard Weinstein, director of the Center for Enterprising at Southern Methodist University, said Texans who don’t want an income tax may not have all the facts. “We’ve got to understand that all taxes are income taxes ... all taxes come out of income. I think it is im perative that we shift over to a sys tem of direct taxation and* away from the system of indirect taxation we’ve been using,” Weinstein said. Rep. Stan Schlueter, a Killeen Democrat who heads the House Ways and Means Committee, was matter-of-fact in predicting the im pact on the Legislature that would dare to approve an income tax. “One hundred and eighty one new mem bers (of the Legislature),” he said. “A new governor. A new lieutenant governor. The public feeling is that strong.” Schlueter has unsuccessfully tried to win legislative approval for a con stitutional ban on a state income tax. Rep. Dan Morales, a San Antonio Democrat who is vice-chairman of the House tax committee, said that someday, with spiraling property and sales taxes, “I can foresee a situ ation where the public will believe and the public will make the judgment that an income tax is the lesser of the available evils.” But the public must decide that before lawmakers will act, he said. The income tax is a potential monster of a money-maker for a state dealing with court rulings on schools, prisons and facilities farii mentally retarded. Forty-live states and the Eisitio of Columbia have corporate item taxes, according to inrormatioipit sented at a tax policy confereme year. T exas is one of 10 states# out a personal income tax. The select tax committee prepared estimates on possibles nue from an income tax. The mate said various versions of th:a could ra ise $5 billion to $7.8 bite the first year. T he report assumt the new tax would be fully inpi mented in 1991, but concedettli may be an unlikely schedule. Tony Proffitt, spokesman f state Comptroller Boh Bullock^ a 1991 effective date is unrealira I fe said itlcould take severalveaii WAS to exc 141 at ide n< aused nonth : as-Fort ort, ac (tunica The kviatiot pilots o [nunica lane’s or du aained 1mm iresum lie pilo lutmai to implement a personal inconra lentifi except in the unlikely event thtttb Legislature created a state incoffl /ere at tax figured as a straight percent:? of the federal income tax, withtt tere state exemptions. Bullock, asked by the comfoitti to estimate revenue from a to potato income tax, said aversion: sual a that levy would generate aboulil: million annually in net revel® starting in five years. It wouldti about 31 months to implementaij there would he “very significant"# ministrative costs he said. Sen. Grant Jones of Temple,v long headed the, Senate Finn: Committee hut is leaving the Let lature after losing the Democi primary election, predicted Tesj would have an income tax u five years. “I don’t think you enough money with selectivetaxett meet the responsibilities of ti* state,” Jones said. He said aninco® tax should be passed before resvem is critically needed, because of® k f i 10m time it takes to implement. An income tax is inevitaH 1 Weinstein said. “There .s no otk ^ way to broaden the tax base ton® t fair and efficient and generate® lescof revenues we desperately need schools, for highways, for socialJoston grams, everything,” he said The SMU economist predict the impetus for a Texas income will he the need for massive,set* finance ref orm. The state is apj® ing a judge’s ruling that the c# (f h 0 p e( i school finance system is uncdi# tional. buttle orm t But Weinstein said the dm? would not come before 1993,$ g, legislative redistricting gives Legislature more urban andi nority representation. He also noted that people V itemize their federal taxes cant duct the state income taxes they® State sales taxes no longer ated ductihle. That raises the ire of Ho) Speaker Gib Lewis. “1 think the Congress purp« targeted Texas and those oJ* states that do not have a personal come tax ... I think it was done# ciously to force those states toa sonal income tax,” Lewis said. CRIMINAL DEFENSE ATTORNEYS W.W. 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