Monday, March 27,1989 The Battalion Page 5 Bluebonnet hunters can use phone line to find wildflowers By Andrea Warrenburg REPORTER Remember as a youngster, your mother dressed you in your Sunday bests, threw you in the car and drove for hours to find a bed of bluebon nets she could turn into a makeshift portrait studio with you as the sub ject? Well, now such wildflower enthu siasts will be able to find out exactly where the flowers are with a phone call. The Texas State Department of Highways and Public Transporta tion is providing a Wildflower Re porting Service which began on the first day of spring, March 20. This “Wildflower Hotline” pro vides information on the nearest wildflower patches in the area. “Blooming wildflowers have al ways been a prime event in Texas in the spring,” Rosemary Neff, public information officer at the transpor tation headquarters in Austin, said. "People are always calling, wanting to know where they can find the flowers.” Each of the 24 disticts in Texas obtains information on wildflower location and keys it into a computer. When one of the 12 Texas Tourist Bureaus or the nearest district office is called, the caller can talk to a per son — not a recording — about the exact location of the nearest wild flower patch. Bryan-College Station is in the 17th district. “The project has practical as well as poetic reasons,” Neff said. The highway department encour ages the growth of native vegetation with landscaping and vegetation management. The beauty of the wildflowers attracts tourists and pre vents highway driving monotony or “highway hypnosis,” she said. The project also helps to protect the envi ronment from erosion. Neff said no law exists which spe cifically forbids picking wildflowers. But if a person is recklessly and fla grantly destroying the flowers, it can be a misdemeanor punishable by a fine. “We discourage picking the flow ers because it’s in everyone’s best in terest to leave them to be enjoyed by all and to seed for the next year,” Neff said. f or local reports and information, call 778-2165. A spokesman in the Bryan office said the wildflowers in this area will not be blooming until mid-April. Location reports will be available at that time. Houston shelter violates housing, sanitary codes HOUSTON (AP) — The city’s largest shelter for the homeless houses hundreds of men each night without occupancy permits, which violates the city’s housing code, and its sanitary conditions are so poor its food dealer’s permit could be sus pended or revoked, officials said. After the inspections found the vi olations, officials from Star of Hope applied to the city for the occupancy permits, which include specifications for the number of people allowed in side. Star of Hope is a non-profit or ganization that operates the shelter. One official said the number of beds in the 38,GOO square-foot, three-story building at a Preston lo cation might have to be reduced. The building, which began to pro vide shelter for men about 15 months ago, has more than 400 beds. The La Branch shelter — which fire department records indi cate was last inspected in 1979 — has about 100 beds for men. The average number of men stay ing in the shelters per night in 1988 was 380. Earlier this year during a cold spell, there were more than 600 men in the shelters. In addition to looking at space al location in the buildings, city public works code enforcement officials are inspecting the buildings’ plumbing, heating and electrical systems and structural integrity, said Jack Gil lum, a department spokesman. Zoe Laurence, a spokesman for Star of Hope, conceded that a new men’s shelter is needed and said a general oversight was the reason the shelters did not have the permits. “We’re sitting here faced with an enormous need to do something about the men’s shelter,” Laurence told the Houston Chronicle. “It’s going to involve millions of dollars. We have to go back to these same corporations, same foundations and individuals, all the heavy hitters in Houston (who have donated money in previous fund-raising drives for the Star of Hope) and say, ‘You know what? You have helped us and helped us. But we need you to help us out again.’” Fire department inspections last week showed the Preston building has a sprinkler system, but, among other problems, it lacks a fire alarm and smoke detectors. Glenn Duhon, chief of the food inspection bureau for the Houston Department of Health and Human Services, said a recent inspection of the kitchen at the La Branch shelter showed 21 violations of the city’s 28 food sanitation regulations. Violations considered critical in cluded: mice infestation, the leaking and pooling of water in wash and walk-in cooler areas, no soap or pa per towels at the kitchen lavatory and toxic materials such as Comet and a can of enamel in food areas. The Preston shelter does not pro vide food services. Car plunges 42 feet; toddler, 2 women survive accident HOUSTON (AP) — Three peo ple, including a toddler, mirac ulously escaped death when their car ran through a construction site and plunged to the bottom of a 42- foot deep excavation, authorities said. Paramedics and firefighters used nylon rappelling rope to hoist the injured people out of the hole, which is about 20 feet wide and pro tected by a 3-foot high metal bar rier. The car’s driver, Norma Vasquez, 50, was flown Saturday night to Hermann Hospital by a LifeFlight helicopter from the construction site in southwest Houston. Vasquez’ 20-month-old grandson, Sergio, was pulled from the hole in the arms of firefighter Pat Kasper, who was suspended from a sling. “It made me think of Jessica Mc Clure,” Casper said, referring to the dramatic rescue in Midland last year of the young girl from a well. “All he did was cry, but he was the cal mest one down there.” Vasquez and her daughter-in-law, Bonnie Vasquez, 20, were lifted out on litters suspended from ropes hoisted by several firefighters as a crowd of spectators applauded. Vasquez and her grandson re mained at Hermann Hospital, au thorities said Sunday. Bonnie Vas quez was treated and released. Calling the mishap a “very freak accident,” Houston accident investi gator G.J. “Jerry” Moran said: “It was lucky nobody was killed with the amount of distance the car fell.” A witness to the accident, Brent Griffin, 18, said he was following the Vasquez’s car when he saw an other car pass them and run them off the road. Moran said there were no notice able skid marks in front of the hole that might have helped accident in vestigators determine how fast Vas quez’s car was going, or whether Vasquez made any attempt to stop. The traffic investigator said if her car was struck by another vehicle, she may not have had a chance to stop. Vasquez’s car drove across a muddy construction site, slammed into a 3-foot high steel barrier, and plummeted to the bottom of the hole. 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