Monday, November 28,1988 The Battalion Page? World/Nation Japan’s government, citizens protest U.S. military forces TOKYO (AP) — A monthlong spate of incidents involving U.S. mil itary forces has touched a raw nerve in Japan, provoking outraged news- E editorials and a sharp protest he government. On Okinawa, the southern island where 35,000 U.S. troops jostle for training space with 1.2 million Japa nese residents, civilians complain that houses were hit by bullets in Oc tober and two tear-gas canisters ex ploded at a night club Nov. 26. The canisters sent scores of people into the street, coughing and choking. The tear-gas incident, which U.S. Marine Corps authorities said was under investigation, followed the abrupt dismissal Nov. 25 of a U.S. Navy skipper whose ship embar rassed the Navy command by Firing practice shells that hit about 1,000 NY transit officials brace for winter, surge of homeless Dut to chantjf takes educfr ■e two years work. Hard Bricanswilljf} 10 just that build roads, >ps, teach nil businesses ilth workers, tball. Howevs l isn't half as : that they'll e of the wor! n, these 11 find that •d work will . It's exactly oyers are orps your net you're out you'll also be jr yourself, BA/BS □ for IT 124. WS iy sr 1 ling & mt jplication /iew NEW YORK (AP) — Though Clarence Charlton is homeless, he knows he has a warm and dry place to sleep — as long as he doesn’t mind waking up several miles away from where he laid his head down. Charlton, like hundreds of New York’s street people, calls the city’s subway system home, and officials say they expect the numbers to surge as winter sets in. “I can always get on the subway. I usually have the fare,” said Charl ton, 78, a former mental patient who was wearing a black-knit cap, grimy pants, no shirt, a sweater and tweed coat one day last week. “In the daytime I’m out on the bench, and at nighttime I get in the subway,” he said, lighting a cigarette butt, which he says helps his asthma. “In bad weather, I’ll go under ground.” Charlton had company that day at the 179th Street Station in Queens. Another homeless man was at the other end of the platform, and at least eight already were on the E train when it rolled up to start its run to Manhattan. As the wipds get. colder, New York’s subways are ''drawing ever more homeless people. The attrac tion: a warm, relatively safe environ ment, all for a dollar. For many riders, the disheveled and often unbathed passengers are not welcome on the nation’s largest transit system. “They stink,” passenger Bernard Nashofer said. “They’re dirty. They can smell up a whole train.” Transit police walk a thin line, rousting homeless people who cause trouble but letting the others sleep. Maintenance crews find themselves cleaning the kinds of messes that subways weren’t meant for. Subway passengers learn to select cars by scent. In response, the Metropolitan Transit Authority approved a plan last week to hire the Volunteers of America, a social service group, to patrol subway platforms and trains. Members plan to talk to the home less and offer them the group’s shel ter as an alternative to sleeping un derground. But many homeless people shun shelters, saying they don’t feel safe in them. Last summer, the transit authority estimated there were 1,400 people using its trains and stations as home. Advocates for the homeless say that’s far too low an estimate, and the au thority admits the number will be much greater this winter. The problem is not unique to New York; it is an issue only in cities where buses and subways run all night. In Los Angeles, transit offi cials say, many homeless people, drifters and alcoholics ride buses from one end of the line to the other all night long. There is no policy against riding the buses over and over as long as people pay the fares, said Leilia Bai ley, transit director of the Southern California Rapid Transit District. Constantine Sidamon-Eristoff, a lawyer who is on New York’s transit authority board of directors, said the transit police must exercise more au thority over the homeless. “If they’ve paid their dollar they have a right, providing they comport themselves with dignity,” he said. “But if they take up several seats, urinate, defecate, then they should be removed.” feet from a Japanese coast guard vessel. The Navy immediately expressed regret for the shelling, which oc curred in Japanese waters near the entrance to Tokyo Bay, but the Japa nese government reacted strongly. The Eoreign Ministry lodged a pro test with the U.S. Embassy, while several major newspapers published blistering editorials. About 64,000 U.S. troops are in Japan under a security treaty that obliges the United States to help de fend this country, with an added ma jor role in security for northeast Asia. The treaty also obliges Japan to provide the bases and training areas needed by the U.S. forces. The vast majority of the Japanese support the U.S.-Japan security treaty and the country’s anti-war constitution, which give the United States a prime role in defending Ja pan. However, Japan was never occu pied by foreign troops until its de feat in World War II, and Japanese are sensitive to the U.S. presence. Leftists demonstrate against visit ing U.S. ships that may be carrying nuclear arms, and the public reacts strongly when a dangerous accident involves U.S. forces or when the bases appear to be encroaching on Japanese life. The U.S. Navy base at Yokosuka wants to build more than 800 apart ments but faces resistance from the neighboring town of Zushi, which has repeatedly elected a mayor who opposes taking forest land for the military housing. On Okinawa, prefectural Gov. Junji Nishime has blamed a string of troubles on “something wanting in the U.S. military’s chain of com mand or a decline of discipline.” U.S. commanders on the southern island are reportedly reviewing safety measures after a forest fire in a training area in October and the discovery about the same time that a residential area near a Marine Corps firing range had been hit by bullets although the firing at the range was supposed to be in the opposite direc tion. Professor writes book on Texas bus history OXFORD, Ohio (AP) — Jack Rhodes turned his childhood enthu siasm for buses into a book on the development of the transportation industry in his native Texas. Rhodes, now a professor at Miami University here, didn’t find it hard to get rolling in his venture, even though research for the book took 15 years. He grew up in San Antonio and said he has been interested in buses since his youth, when he lob bied his mother to take him to the bus station so he could watch the ve hicles drive in and out. His book, “Intercity Bus Lines of the Southwest,” chronicles the his tory of intercity bus lines in Texas, New Mexico and Oklahoma until 1954. The Texas A&M University Press published the book this fall. The book covered periods when there were hundreds of small, pri vately owned bus lines in the South west, instead of the two that are op erating today. Texas was an early mecca for de velopment of the bus industry be cause cities in the state are so far apart. The first scheduled intercity bus ran from Colorado City to Snyder in 1907, Rhodes said. There was vigorous competition among bus owners to gain franchises when Texas decided to regulate the indus try in 1927. “In their scramble to become car riers of record, companies engaged in fare slashing and discounting,” said Rhodes, who is an associate pro fessor of communication and direc tor of forensics at Miami University. “Some lines operating between Austin and San Antonio cut the fare in half, then began carrying passen gers for free, and eventually began rebating up to a dollar or a free meal at the end of the line in an effort to collect passengers in support of their good-faith applications.” During World War II, when bus travel was popular, bus depots were hectic places and some bus lines suf fered frequent breakdowns, Rhodes said. Privately owned lines began to disappear after the war when people began to be able to afford cars and tires and gasoline no longer were ra tioned. The private bus industry also struggled in competition with the railroads, he said. In 1970, Rhodes rode buses across Texas, covering 1,800 miles in six days on small, privately owned lines. U.S. denies visa for Arafat visit Arab League urges session move to Geneva to accommodate PLO UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The U.N. Arab League ambassador said Sunday he has enough votes to move a General Assembly session to Ge neva so PLO chief Yasser Arafat can address the world body on the Palestinian issue. Jordan and Egypt agreed to spearhead the ef fort to reconvene the world body in the Swiss capital, Jordan’s official news agency reported. They urged the unprecedented protest after the United States denied Arafat a visa Saturday to address the body in New York. In Kuwait, a senior Palestine Liberation Orga nization official said the U.S decision was “an open call for extremism.” Egyptian Foreign Min ister Esmat Abdel-Meguid and his Jordanian counterpart, Taher Masri, said they had scrapped plans to visit New York in protest. Reaction to the U.S. decision came quickly. Is raeli leaders praised it, but Algeria, Egypt, France and Norway were among nations which protested the decision. Clovis Maksoud, the Arab League’s U.N. am bassador, said Arab nations felt “deep anger and outrage” over the U S. decision and will ask the General Assembly to condemn it. Arafat wanted to enter the United States to ad dress the U.N. body in New York on Thursday, when debate is scheduled on the Palestinian problem. A nearly 1-year-old Palestinian upris ing in Israeli-occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip has left at least 316 Palestinians and 11 Israelis dead. However, the State Department rejected his visa Saturday, and said the leader of the PLO “knows of, condones and lends support to” ter rorist attacks. “The issue of terrorism is a red herring used by the State Department, because the State De partment knows very well that resistence to Is raeli occupation does not under any stretch of he imagination fall under the rubric of terrorism,” Maksoud said. Arafat has not commented on the decision. Approval to move the U.N. body to Geneva would require a simple majority of the 159 mem bers. The members have regularly approved Pal estinian-backed resolutions by an overwhelming majority. “I really don’t see any problem (of passage) if the resolution is proposed in a reasonable man ner,” Maksoud said. “Tomorrow (Monday) the recommendation will be made at a meeting of the Arab group” of U.N. member states, Maksoud said. “Also we will ask the General Assembly to condemn this deci sion. This is the thrust of our thinking.” “I think that also the people in the non-aligned countries and the European countries realize Call Now For an Appointment! $2Qoo ROUTINE CLEANING, X-RAYS and EXAM CarePlus^tri Dental Centers (Ftofl. $54 l#M $25 cMh discount) Bryan Jim Arents, DOS Karen Arents, DOS 1103 E. Villa Marla 268-1407 College Station Dan Lawson, DDS Cassie Overley, DDS 1712 S.W. Parkway 696-9578 SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE Contact Lenses Only Quality Name Brands (Bausch & Lomb, Ciba, Barnes-Hinds-Hydrocurve) $ 5 Q00 V) o o pr. *-STD. DAILY WEAR SOFT LENSES $ 79 00 o o $ pr. *-STD. EXTENDED WEAR SOFT LENSES $ 79 00 o o $ pr. *-STD. TINTED SOFT LENSES DAILY WEAR OR EXTENDED WEAR LLI < CO ID < CO ID < CO ID < CO ID < CO ID -I < CO y CHARLES C. SCHROEPPEL, O.D., P.C. < DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY SAME DAY DELIVERY ON MOST LENSES SALE ENDS DEC. 22, 1988 Call 696-3754 For Appointment co ID Eye exam & care kit not included what a dangerous precedent” the U.S. action is, he said. The non-aligned group has 101 voting members in the General Assembly. A source close to the Arab League, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the Arab diplo mats will consider a legal challenge to the U.S. decision when they meet Monday. U.N. spokesman Francois Giuliani said the U.N. legal counsel was studying the State Depart ment’s decision and would advise Secretary-Gen eral Javier Perez de Cuellar on Monday. Until then, he said, the United Nations would have no comment on the developments. Moving the General Assembly out of New York as a protest would be unprecedented. Maksoud said the Arab group probably would call for postponement of debate on Palestine in the regular session, scheduled to end by mid-De cember, and reconvene in December or January in Geneva. The Palestine National Council, a PLO parlia- ment-in-exile, proclaimed an independent Pales tinian state Nov. 15. The move implicitly recog nized Israel by endorsing Security Council Resolution 242, which guarantees all Mideast states the right to exist in peace. The PLO has non-voting observer status at the United Nations, and is a member of the Arab League. Call Battalion Classified 845-2611 707 South Texas Ave., Suite 101D College Station, Texas 77840 m 1 block South of Texas & University SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE co > r- m co ? m co > r“ m co > r* m co > r- m co > r- m co > r- m co > ©1988 Uolkswogen ^I (Patches Florist 707 Texas Ave. Next to Taco Cabana 696-6713.*# We accept credit card orders by phone Complete Florist... Specializing in weddings and flowers for all occasions. We deliver around town or around the world. Compare these to the Fox GL and you’ll find they’re not more car. Just more money. Honda Civic DX is $ 1,350* more. Toyota Corolla Deluxe is *1,323* more. Nissan Sentra E is *1,024* more. The 1988 Volkswagen Fox GL is the lowest-priced German-engineered 4-door sedan in America, yet its styling, handling and engineering are anything but inexpensive. Come in for a test drive. You'll find that, compared to the sedans above, the 1988 Fox GL isn't less car. It's just less money. A lot less. German engineering. The Volkswagen way. Fox GL BudiWarcl Under the watertower in College Station 1912 Texas Avenue 693-3311 ‘Based on a comparison of competitive manufacturer's suggested retail price for 4-door models including air condi tioning, metallic paint and destination charges. Price excludes taxes, title and dealer prep. Equipment levels vary. MSC CAMERA COMMITTEE BONFIRE PHOTOGRAPH SALE III. ' U i \ X Wklli M-tliill-IV'A • I 'i * • u < . . ■ Ilf NOV 21-23 , NOV 28-DEC 1 AVAILABLE IN THE MSC 8X10...$5.00 11X14...$10.00 16X20...20.00 PAST YEARS ALSO $2.00