n\ )n Woulii 'hanksgn. jnificantf 5 on, thetf who \«| 'ns to tk f is ( )ns >ich take hen diet manhooj ^ younj time h illpark, intan lo in tl m bel aud Per- jf caviar, ^ance.to for him, try tit to men- :rvi; fans had pt when tion and ie eaters iy wept defend- em said: you art lie wee- allpark ;sts. nost fa- orywas own bt ) or the ■ eating tbe did ; conn- this he- mentif ecesof ise will es, Inc, The Battalion ed STATE & LOCAL 3 Monday, April 3,1989 Wright denounces story in hometown newspaper House speaker denies breaking 100 violations FORT WORTH (AP) — House Speaker Jim Wright denounced a newspaper’s story that quoted a source close to the House ethics inquiry of Wright as ' saying the probe turned up an estimated 100 poten tial congressional rules violations. “It is absolutely absurd to suggest that 1 have bro ken House rules on 100 occasions,” Wright said Sat urday in a letter to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, which quoted the unnamed source in an article Fri day. “I feel very strongly, and my attorney agrees with my conclusion, that I have not violated any such rules at any time,” Wright, D-Fort Worth, said. “If I have ever even technically violated any such rule, it would have been unintentional.” Wright has served the Fort Worth district in Con gress since 1955 and became Speaker in 1987. The Star-Telegram’s source said a report written by special counsel Richard Phelan, a Chicago attor ney, refers to the potential violations and that the in vestigating committee has decided to release the re port this week. Phelan submitted the report to the committee in February and its contents have been kept secret. A spokesman for Wright, Mark Johnson, said Fri day the committee’s report matters more than Phe lan’s. “Phelan made a presentation and the Speaker’s lawyer made a presentation,” Johnson said. “Now we are on the eve of a decision. That’s what matters.” Wright said in his letter to the newspaper that he has not enriched himself Financially from congres sional service. “What I have gained for my efforts is a good repu tation, and 1 damn well resent any sniveling coward who tries to take that away from me and my family by planting anonymous stories based on innuendoes in my local newspaper,” Wright said. House Republican Whip Newt Gingrich said Sun day that pending ethics allegations against Speaker Jim Wright mean “we’re going to have a long and difficult spring,” and renewed his prediction that Wright will be out as speaker by June. But House Majority Leader Thomas S. Foley, D- Wash., appearing with Gingrich on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” said he is confident the Texas Democrat will be cleared of any wrongdoing. And he charged that Gingrich brought the allega tions against Wright in a politically motivated effort to “vilify” the Democratic party leadership. Gingrich said: “I think the evidence is already in public record, pretty clear, that we’re going to have a long and difficult spring. The evidence is going to be overwhelming. I frankly think Mr. Foley is going to be speaker by June.” 1 he Georgia Republican said the ethics committee already has spent $1.6 million investigating Wright, and he called on the panel — whose membership is evenly split between Democrats and Republicans — to make public a 460-page report prepared by its special counsel, Richard Phelan. “I think that it’s vital that we establish, as a Con gress, our commitment to publish that report and to release those documents so the country can judge whether or not the man second in line to be presi dent, the speaker of the House, should be in that po sition,” Gingrich said. Foley, who as majority leader ranks just behind Wright in the House’s Democratic leadership, de clared, “I am confident he‘s (Wright) going to be cleared of violating any House rules and he will re main the speaker of the House.” Gramm misrepresents Texans in Washington, opponent says By Sharon Maberry STAFF WRITER , State Sen. Hugh Parmer, D-Fort Worth, is running for the U.S. Sen ate against incumbent Sen. Phil Gramm because Gramm “doesn’t re flect Texas values,” Parmer told Bryan-College Station press mem bers Friday. “People need to understand the differences between the way Phil Gramm talks in Texas and the way he votes in Washington,” Parmer said. “In Washington, he voted against funding of the FBI, drug enforce ment appropriations, additional funds for the border patrol, Meals on Wheels for shut-in elderly and job retraining funds for displaced oil workers, although in Texas, he said he supported these issues.” Parmer said he is in favor of in creased funding for those programs. “I realize that Gramm has a large constituency in the Bryan-College Station area,” he said, “but I’d be willing to bet that if I stopped 10 Bryan-College Station people at ran dom and asked if we should spend more on these programs, 10 out of 10 would say ‘yes.’” As an example of Gramm’s voting record, Parmer cited an emergency supplemental appropriation for con tinued nutrition aid for 20,000 preg nant women and babies in Texas that was passed three years ago in Washington by a vote of 71 to eight. Gramm was among the eight sen ators voting against the appropria tions, Parmer said. “It’s difficult to understand that kind of political stinginess,” Parmer said. “Gramm has misunderstood Texas toughness. We’re tough on criminals. We’re not tough on babies or poor pregnant women or old folks. “During the next 19 to 20 months. I’m going to show the people of Texas that the real Phil Gramm is one who doesn’t reflect Texas values and that one who does reflect Texas values is Hugh Parmer.” Parmer said his political record is strong in the area of law. He said he supports the death penalty for serial murderers and video-tape testimony by victims of child abuse so they wouldn’t have to appear in court. Parmer has been the state senator for the 12th District, within Tarrant County, since 1983. He also has served as mayor of Fort Worth, state representative, Fort Worth City Council member and Tarrant County Hospital District Board manager. Lawmaker drafts ‘hate crimes’ bill AUSTIN (AP) — Recent vandal ism of synagogues and churches, as well as violent crimes against minori ties in Dallas, have prompted a Houston legislator to draft a bill that would increase penalties for so- called “hate crimes.” The legislation, which comes be fore the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, would make certain offenses such as murder, as- Former KKK leader forms anti-Semitic movement AUSTIN (AP) — Louis R. Beam Jr., the for mer Ku Klux Klan leader acquitted last year of conspiracy to overthrow the federal government, said he is forming a new movement aimed at es tablishing ties with groups in the Middle East. The New Right movement wants to create a national state “for the White man and an Aryan Republic within the borders of the present occu pied country,” Beam said, apparently referring to the United States. Beam discussed the new movement in a recent quarterly journal he has begun publishing called The Seditionist, and in an interview in Austin with the Houston Chronicle. “Factored into the new, thinking of the New Right will be a new relationship of respect and admiration for other races who have conducted successful campaigns of liberation in their re spective countries by throwing out the Zionist Jews,” he said. “Syrians, Libyans, Iranians and Palestinians will come to be looked upon in a fat- more favorable light than previously.” “When the time comes, I’ll have plenty to say. It’s in the hands of the father, the heavenly fa ther,” he said, referring to Yahweh, a favorite figure in the racist Identity Church. The Anti-Defamation League of B’nai B’rith, which monitors extremist groups, calls the Iden tity Church movement a pseudo-theological hate movement that emerged as a noticeable presence in the late 1970s and early 1980s. It holds that Jews are the children of Satan and that the white race is inherently superior to others. An impassioned speaker, Beam gained na tional fame in the 1960s and 1970s when he was a Grand Dragon of the KKK in the Houston area. He moved on to the Aryan Nations, and by 1987, was on the FBI’s 10 Most Wanted list. sault and vandalism more serious if they are committed because of the victim’s race, ethnicity, sex, age, sex ual orientation or religion. “There has been a dramatic in crease in this type of crime in Texas in the last five or six years,” Sen. Craig Washington, D-Houston, told the Dallas Morning News. “In some places it has become fashionable to voice group hatred out loud. This is something our so ciety ought to be beyond,” Washing ton said. “Sadly enough, we are not.” Among the organizations sup porting the measure are the Dallas Anti-Defamation League, American Jewish Congress, Texas Catholic Conference, Texas Baptist Christian Life Commission, Texas Civil Liber ties Union, Texas Women’s Political Caucus and Lesbian-Gay Rights Lobby of Texas. “This is a class of crime and a type of criminal that deserves special at tention,” Dallas lawyer Michael Stone recently told members of the criminal justice committee. Stone, vice chairman of the Dallas Anti-Defamation League, said the league — which monitors the activ ities of extremist groups — detected no anti-Semitic acts in Texas in the five-year period before 1987. But in 1987, the league had re ports of five such acts in the state, and the number of incidents bal looned to 23 last year. In the Dallas area in recent months, Temple Shalom, the Jewish Community Center and a Jewish- owned business in Richardson were painted with swastikas and anti-Se mitic graffiti and windows were shot out. Two synagogues in Waco also were vandalized. “This represents only the begin ning of the problem, and these only are acts against the Jewish commu nity,” Stone said. In addition, the Islamic Associa tion of North Texas mosque in Rich ardson was vandalized and two Dal las gay men were killed last year by a Mesquite teen-ager. Washington’s bill would elevate a criminal offense one degree if the crime was motivated out of group hatred or bigotry. HOPE IN HARD TIMES The peace movement of the 80"s and how individuals can make a difference in the world. A Talk by Paul Loeh Monday April 3, 1989 701 Rudder Free Admission An Invitation to Luxury... The Jewelry Express Card NATIONAL JEWELERS CREDIT ASSOCIATION. LTD. □ 00 000 000 s i smith BANKsONE. The Jewelry Express Card...Sheer Brilliance! 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