The Battalion WORLD & NATION Wednesday, March 1,1989 Government tries to restore order to Caracas CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Rioting over price in creases ravaged Caracas for a second day Tuesday as looting spread, and the government said that to restore order it was suspending constitutional guarantees. Police estimated up to 50 people were killed and 500 injured in the worst violence in 30 years of democratic rule. Thousands of people have been arrested, authori ties said. Civilians exchanged gunfire with police and shop owners took up arms to protect their property in the wake of the riots, which began Monday in Caracas, the capital, and spread to up to seven other cities. The month-old government of President Carlos Andres Perez announced it has decided to suspend constitional guarantees to re-establish order, and it au thorized the army to impose a curfew, although no hours were established. The Education Ministry or dered school and university classes suspended nation wide. Caracas appeared empty Tuesday afternoon, with police units stationed on the main corners to control the few pedestrians who dared to venture out. Paddy- wagons and trucks were filled with those arrested for rioting and looting. Policemen fired shotguns and tear gas to disperse crowds trying to gather in nearby grocery stores. More than 300 shops and stores have been sacked in Caracas, according to official figures. Looting also was reported Tuesday in the cities of Valencia, Barquisimeto, Carora, Puerto La Cruz, San Cristobal and Maralcaibo. The casualty toll in those cit ies was not known. Gun battles between police and residents continued into Tuesday morning in San Agustin, a shantytown in west (Caracas. Police failed to prevent mobs from sacking stores in the neighborhood, and one witness described how loot ers carried 50 cow carcasses from a butcher shop and hauled off the scales before police arrived. Residents sacked and'burned one of the city’s largest shopping centers in the wealthy neighborhood of San Bernardino in a scene one TV reporter described as “collective madness.” “Some people brought cars and station wagons to carry things away,” a reporter for Radio Caracas Tele vision said. Army and national guard units patrolled the streets but could not stop the lawlessness. “It is much worse than yesterday. Now we have seve ral policemen injured and one commissioner died shot by rioters,” Metropolitan Police inspector Omar Bolivar told The Associated Press. Officer Jesus Mesa Isturiz was killed in a poor neigh borhood where “rioters are better armed than we are. They have rifles, pistols, revolvers, even submachine guns out there,” Bolivar said. A National Guard officer said the death toll may be as high as 50 in Caracas and surrounding areas. “We have reports from different units that leads us to figure it out,” said the officer, who spoke on condition of ano nymity. Independent reports estimated damage nationwide to be in the millions of dollars. On some Caracas streets, virtually every store was looted. Six owners of a supermarket in the wealthy Los Palos Grandes neighborhood stayed on the roof of their building armed with rifles and pistols, “readv to defend our property,” one of them said. He said police had refused to protect his business and that he and his family decided to “fight the only way we can.” The riots began Monday with bus fare increases across the country —part of a sweeping economic re form package announced by Perez to breathe life into the stagnant economy and convince international bank ers to increase loans to the country. Officially, bus fares were to rise only about 30 per cent — on urban routes, for example, from the equiva lent of about a nickel to 7 cents. But Transportation Minister Gustavo Rada said some increases had been as high as 50 percent, apparently because of price-goug ing by bus drivers. Caracas residents said rising food prices also were to blame. 13017101“It was about time something like this hap pened. People finally got fed up and came down from the hills to protest,” said Josefina Vasquez, a neighbor hood leader. Others called the looters common criminals taking advantage of mass confusion. 7-Eleven owners plan protest against chain WASHINGTON (AP) — John Watson was home asleep, he says, when Southland Corp. officials, ac companied by two uniformed, off- duty police officers, tried to take his 7-Eleven franchise store “by force” before dawn one Saturday. Southland had given Watson three days’ notice that he was in breach of his franchise contract when company officials swept into the store and tried unsuccessfully to take control of the safe and rip the door to his office from its hinges, Watson says. A 7-Eleven franchise owner for about 10 years, Watson accuses Southland of “retail sharecropping.” He is leading a bitter fight against the giant Dallas-based chain by the Capital Area 7-Eleven Franchise Owners Association. At issue is Southland’s formula for splitting 7-Eleven profits. Wat son and other owners contend it doesn’t account for the costs of run ning stores in the inner city, where labor costs more, shoplifting is more frequent and managers have to con tend with neighborhood violence. Southland officials say they have considered the complaints and im proved franchisers’ terms. Corporate officials also said they entered Watson’s store before dawn to avoid interfering with business. Kathleen Callahan-Guion, manager of the chain’s Capital division, said the safe had to be seized because Watson was in a “serious deficit posi tion” and had become a “serious fi nancial risk.” “We were trying to protect our se curity interests,” Callahan-Guion said. The District of Columbia City Council and the National Associa tion for the Advancement of Col ored People have been drawn into the dispute, and the owners associa tion plans a Capitol Hill march Wednesday to protest the corpora tion. Franchise owners claim they aren’t making enough money under their Southland contracts, which give most franchise owners 48 per cent of the stores’ gross profits. Out of that owners must pay wages and cover inventory losses from shoplifting and employee theft. Southland is responsible for leases, taxes, utilities and other ex penses. “Sometimes they (franchise own ers) are getting 48 percent of noth ing,” said Fred Rasheed, national di rector of the NAACP’s economic development program. Callahan-Guion said the company has been making significant changes to help its D.C. stores, and about a third now get a 52 percent cut to Southland’s 48 percent. Separatists in Canada struggle over languages MONTREAL (AP) — It appeared the French and English languages could live together in Quebec after separatist fervor abated nearly a decade ago, but the struggle resumed in Decem ber and French appears to have won. “Resigned is probably the right catchword,” Donald Taylor, a psychology professor at McGill University, said. Language is “a symbol of identity and it also is a resource that has associated power, and status, and success and access,” he said. “So these appar ently minor events evoke very primary feelings.” Quebec was a battleground of culture and lan guage in the 1970s between the 81 percent with French heritage and a minority with a cultural kinship to Ontario and the other English-speak ing provinces. Power shifted to the French-speaking majority in those years but the separatist tide ebbed after 1980, and with it the dispute over language, when Quebec voters rejected a sovereignty refer endum. Then came a ruling by the Supreme Court of Canada in December that a 1977 Quebec law' re quiring all signs to be in French was unconstitu tional. The court said French could be required to predominate on all signs but other languages could not be prohibited. The provincial government, which has broader powers than state governments in the United States, overrode the decision with new legislation for the language on signs. Bill 178, as it is known, requires that all out door signs still be solely in French, but for the first time since 1977 allowed bilingual indoor signs. Premier Robert Bourassa described it as a compromise. Rallies by activists of both communities have accompanied the latest round. Fewer street protests are held now, but the conflict continues as regulations under Bill 178 are interpreted to restrict indoor bilingual signs Survey shows decrease in level of drug usage among high schoolers WASHINGTON (AP) — Drug use among high school seniors last year dropped to its lowest level since 1975, an annual survey released Tuesday said. Still, more than half of all students use an il legal drug at least once before graduating. Researchers and health offi cials said they were particularly encouraged by results showing the second straight significant drop in cocaine use and the be ginnings of a retreat in use of the smokeable and highly addictive form of cocaine called crack. Alcohol is by far the most widely used of the substances, with nearly 64 percent of the se niors reporting they had had a drink within the previous 30 days. Cigarettes were next with nearly 29 percent having smoked within the previous month and 18 percent reporting they were daily smokers. Some 16,300 high school se niors from 135 schools nation wide were polled in the survey. Lloyd Johnston, one of the re searchers in the' study, declined to identify the schools, but he said they included public and private schools across the continental United States. The survey, which has been conducted by the University of Michigan’s Institute for Social Re search every year since 1975, found that the proportion of high school seniors w'ho reported hav ing ever used an illegal drug dropped to 53.9 percent in 1988. That’s the lowest level recorded since the survey began, when the rate was 55.2 percent. “The news is very encourag ing,” said Charles R. Schuster, di rector of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, which sponsored the study. “The problem is there are still pockets, primarily among those who have dropped out of high school, where drug use remains at very high levels,” he said. The continued decline in drug use suggests that anti-drug cam paigns educating the young about drug use are being heard, Lloyd Johnston, a University of Michi gan social psychologist, said. WANNA FIGHT? Open division entries for those wanting to box in Sigma Phi Epsilon’s 13th An nual Fight Night are now being ac cepted. Fight Night will take place April 9 & 10 at the College Station Hilton. In dividual and Dorm teams are welcome. Those wanting to fight must form a team consisting of 4 to 5 members. ‘DEADLINE: APPLICATION WITH ENTRY FEE DUE MARCH 6,1989 For more information, call Kyle Hamrick Matt Warner or Darren Richter Ring Chairman Fight Night Co-Chairman 774-4887 696-7173 Exchange Ideas... Exchange Cultures... Be an EXCHANGE STUDENT May 22 through Tune 22, 1989 ***a cultural exchange hosted by Georg August Universitat students ***live with families in Gottingen, West Germany ^^^travel to other parts of Europe Informational Meeting: Thursday, March 9,1989 in Room 604 Rudder at 7:00 pm. Applications are now available in 223G Browsing Library, second floor MSC, and are due on Monday, March 20,1989 at noon. COST = group rate airfare + spending money MSC Jordan Institute for International Awareness 845-8770 13th Annual FIGHT NIGHT BORED BY THE MOONWALK? TIRED OF THE LIMBO? TRY THE NUCLEAR POLKA!!! COME TO THE INTERNATIONAL RANGE FEST Thursday, March 2,1989,Room 212 and 224 MSC TIME: 8:30pin - TAMU INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCERS will teach folk dances (Israeli, European, South African, and more). 9:00pm - the band, ©©ROB®, will start playing. FREE ADMISSION!!! j$|hMSC IORDAN INSTITUTE ^#T0R INTERNATIONAL AWARENESS Spring Break for Sale Great Rates for Great Times Make your spring break affordable! Great rates offer deluxe rooms at one low price for the whole family. $58 per night/gets you a room, 4 adults to a room, plus tax. $58 Emerald Beach - the best that Corpus Christ! has to offer: • Located on 600 feet of white sandy beachfront • Relax & play in the surf, join a fishing party or sightsee • Indoor pool, whirlpool & sauna • Indoor playport for the kids Call 1-800-Holiday for Reservations (Not available on ocean!rent rooms. Must be 19 or older for reservations. Subject to availability.) EMERALD ^ BEACH 1102 S. Shoreline, Corpus Christ!, Texas 78401, 512-883-5731