A Thursday, May 4,1989 The Battalion Pages our Texans under investigation for possession of assault weapons -Hal n soi® 1 romili WASHINGTON (AP) — Foreign diplomats and lucatia federal investigators have been drawn into a mys- eleasc terious web surrounding the arrests of four Tex- tionDi ans and an unemployed Virginia man in a motel ^om filled with “unconventional warfare, assas- nation-type” weapons. A fifth Texan, who claims to work for a Dallas- ea defense contractor, was arrested in a nearby om at the EconoLodge motel in a crumbling irt of Washington, where police said they und six children, ranging in age from 6 to 16. Social services workers say they are attempting t ranc to identify the parents of the children, described its o>;|Hs well-behaved and well-cared for, as the six Edults remain in the city jail, each facing 41 sepa- studcc |pte misdeameanor weapons charges. The adults are jailed on a $50,000 bond; their ext court date is May 15. A day before the hotel raid, another Texan be lieved connected to the group, Ruben Anzuldua of Mission, was apprehended by the Secret Serv- e outside the Soviet Consulate. Court documents say authorities had received ngS.« a mez or oikf Calif; lank 893:1! irk, ft: Teen dies in accident after senior prom lartmt: ;h seta auks: HOUSTON (AP) — Students from Spring High School heard sirens when they arrived at a ‘ m F ,; |j school-sponsored all-night party following the senior prom, but it 1 amon joputa wasn’t until later that they th Pennsi a rale: ilharii precit e coniii non, (if jltS 10 dat iety." art rchef uced ■rgy information from a “confidential source that a group of individuals might be planning to enter the Russian Consulate . . . with automatic weap ons.” Information received by police tied an orange car to the group, and authorities reported spot ting the vehicle in front of the consulate last Thursday. “Minutes later, two males exited the consulate and got into the car,” court files indicate. The car was stopped by the Secret Service, and agents spotted a .22 caliber gun protruding from under the front passenger seat, the files said. “Defendant Ruben Anzuldua had been in the car’s front passenger seat,” the file said. He is also in jail on $50,000 bond, facing three weapons charges. Police and other officials have said little since the 3:10 a.m. motel arrests Friday, and court doc uments provide a sliver of information in a case that appears to link the group to the Paraguayan Embassy. Those documents reveal that one of the ar- nployc Tense officer” at a Dallas-area defense contractor that manufactures bomb bodies and missile hard ware. An officer, speaking on background, said the weapons seized are the “weapons an assassin would use. They were unconventional warfare, assassination-type stuff.” One of the men told police he has a nervous condition and lives on disability payments; two of the women claim to be former employees of Texas Instruments, another Dallas-area defense contractor. One of those women, Billie Joy McEwen, 43, of Rowlett, is a licensed firearms dealer who told police she suffers from a recent abdominal injury. Another woman, also unemployed, has a heart murmur; and the only non-Texan, Kelvin Dee Owen Jr., 21, of Reston, Va., told police he is a former worker at a Washington guest-house and prior to that, was a waiter at the French Market Grill in Augusta, Ga. learned the emergency vehicles were for fellow students involved in an accident. Daniel Mulcahy Jr. and his edtti date, Erin McMahon, were en ewl fl route to a school-sponsored all- night party offered as a drug-and alcohol-free safe alternative when Mulcahy’s 1984 Corvette, a grad uation present, careened into a concrete-lined culvert near the entrance of a shopping center. Mulcahy, 17, suffered a frac tured skull and crushed abdomen and died later Sunday morning at Houston Northwest Medical Cen ter. McMahon, 18, was released from the medical center Tuesday. Friends and classmates of Mul cahy erected a white cross Tues day at the accident site a few blocks from the school. Among the scrawled messages covering the crucifix, one stood out: “We love you, Danny.” Three white roses and yellow ribbons decorated the cross, along with parts of the car wrecked in the accident. His funeral was held Wednes day morning at St. James Catholic Church. Burial was at Resthaven Me morial Gardens. During a rosary Tuesday, Mul cahy’s open casket was sur rounded with high school me mentos: a football signed by his teammates, his varsity letter jacket, a lion mascot. “He was telling everyone to be careful,” said William Welch, who played defensive tackle alongside Mulcahy, a defensive end on Spring High’s varsity football team. Ie imisi; ; endol w,” i» :iighi . [fitii irs ; right f Animal shelter receives grant, lowers cost of adopting pets By Holly Becka STAFF WRITER Pets at the Brazos Animal Shel ter can be adopted for a $20 dis count throughout May because of a $1,500 grant the shelter re ceived from the Purina Pet Par ent Program. Shelter Director Kathy Bice said dogs may be adopted for $25 and cats for $20 because of the grant. “This is the second year we’ve received the grant,” Bice said. “Purina donated $1,500 for the ‘Pets for People Program’ in the name of Safeway to reduce (the cost of) adoptions this month.” Purina’s nationwide program helps underwrite the cost of ani mal adoptions during May in con junction with “Be Kind to Ani mals Week.” “This grant will cover 75 adop tions,” Bice said. “Last year we re- Brazos Animal Shelter ceived $1,200, so this will go a little further.” Bice said this is the peak season to get a pet because so many are available and because of the grant. “Each adoption comes with $30 worth of coupons for trips to local vets,” she said. “This program will give people the incentive to adopt pets instead of getting free ones, which really don’t turn out to be free at all because of li censes, shots, worming and neu tering. “With this program, you’ll ac tually be getting more than you’re paying for.” Bice said the Brazos Animal Shelter is continuing its applica tion process and overnight wait ing period before an animal may be adopted. “This reduces the return rate and the impulse buying rate,” she said. “We want people to really think before they adopt a pet. We want them to sleep on it and make sure they’re prepared to deal with the health, care and training of that animal.” She said the adoption process includes describing the environ ment the animal will be in, whether potential owners keep other animals, whether the owner will neuter, worm and give heart medicine to the pet, if they have a fenced-in yard for big dogs or a written agreement with their landlord stating they are per mitted to have the pet. “We want to make sure the ani mal will have the best home possi ble,” Bice said. 7-Eleven sells San Antonio sites to operators of Stop N Go stores SAN ANTONIO (AP) — 7-Eleven has sold its 75 San Antonio stores to National Convenience Stores, a cor poration that operates Stop N Go stores and which now has about one-third of the convenience store market in San Antonio. The multimillion-dollar sale is the latest for Dallas- based 7-Eleven, a subsidiary of Southland Corp., which hopes to unload 1,000 of its stores to pay debt incurred from a leveraged buyout in December 1987. Stop N Go dominates the Houston market with 500 stores, including 279 purchased from 7-Eleven last year, and is second behind 7-Eleven in the Dallas-Fort Worth area with about 140 stores, compared to 400 7- Elevens. 7-Eleven, however, continues to dominate the indus try with about 7,100 stores, followed by Circle K with about 4,660 stores and Stop N Go, with 1,155, and growing. Stop N Go has shifted from 1,100 stores in 21 mar kets, to 1,J55 stores in ten markets. “Our focus over the last three years has really not been on numbers of stores, but we have been busy re structuring our market base, selling stores in markets which we did not have real penetration and buying stores in markets where we had a very important pres ence,” said Pete Van Horn, president and chief exec utive officer of National Convenience Stores. “We think that is strategically very important and it positions us as we move forward in our advertising and it will be more important in the overall formula for suc cess while being cost-effective in advertising expendi tures,” Van Horn said. •ound mp e time* > resciff ay, at If s thoii| * AM/PM Clinics clinics Minor Emergencies Weight Reduction Program 10% Discount With Student ID Minimal Waiting Time College Station 845-4756 693-0202 779-4756 ■ovides; oil, | \lasb ; iai SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE £ "^Contact Lensestirs w eP’ 0 Onlv Qualitv Name Brands 0ff er cleat use el Jet#: ,ve vities' i it's 0 ; who aurpo ? ilv be < v Rol w fOrw W eesti' < nd^ W ySte' : uj -J d oil j W | as vi have 1 UJ < UJ wll< Only Quality Name Brands (Bausch & Lomb, Ciba, Barnes-Hinds-Hydrocurve) $ 7000 pr. *-STD. DAILY WEAR SOFT LENSES $ 0000 pr. *-STD. EXTENDED WEAR SOFT LENSES $QQ00 pr. *-STD. TINTED SOFT LENSES DAILY WEAR OR EXTENDED WEAR SPARE PAIR ONLY $1 00 Applies to al I Baush & Lomb soft lenses only with purchase of 1st pr. at reg. price Call 696-3754 for Appointment CHARLES C. SCHROPPEL.O.D., P.C. DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY 707 South Texas Ave., Suite 101D College Station, Texas 77840 5$1 block South of Texas & University j * Eye exam & care kit not included m w givs gnvs 3~1VS 3~1VS 3~1VS 3~1VS 31VS g~ivs 31VS m co > r- m co > r- m co > m co > r- m co > r- m co > r~ m co > r- m co > i— m co > Beat the Heat! •Coke Classic •Vanilla Dr. Pepper •Cherry Vanilla Coke •Limeade •P'mk Lemonade •Cherry Limeade •Vanilla Rootbeer •Fresh-Brewed Iced Tea •Old-Fashioned Cherry Coke •Diet Coke College Station 104 University 696-6427 Bryan ^ 914 S.Texas Ave. 779-1085 IT’S BIGGER AND BETTER!! The Guitar Shop has moved to a new location. 117 Walton Drive (formerly East Gate Live) 693-8698 Come by and see us!! v°>« 10% more CASH For Your Books Limit 1 per customer, Not good with any other offer. MAKE US YOUR CHOICE FOR VIDEO ENTERTAINMENT The Paramount Theatre Movies on Tuesday & Thursday including NEW RELEASES VHS& BETA Free Memberships Players & Camcorders Also Available Located on the corner of Texas & SW Parkway in the Winn Dixie Center, College Station SUMMER STORAGE Offering “Aggie Share A-Space” For the 3rd Year *Total rent for the summer beginning at $45°° * No security deposit with A&M I.D. * Several size units available * Reserve now (Advanced payment required) Call 779-SAFE for details (779-7233) Security Plus Storage 2306 S. College Bryan 1 STUDY ABROAD OFFICE BRITISH MARSHALL SCHOLARSHIPS FOR GRADUATE STUDIES IN THE UNITED KING DOM LEADING TO THE AWARD OF A BRITISH UNIVERSITY DE GREE Competition Now Open! WED., 10 MAY FRI., 9 JUNE THU., 13 JULY 10-11AM 2-3 PM 10-11AM ]EE™©So 251 BIZZELLWEST 251 BIZZELLWEST 251 BIZZELLWEST STUDY ABROAD OFFICE, 161 Bizzell W., College Station, TX 77843 (409) 845-0544 Engine Performance Experts .Precision High-Tech Service without The High Price! cTyfunerr We Do More Than Fix Your Car. We GUARANTEE It. Does Your Car: □ Miss or run rough? □ Hesitate? □ Not start easily? □ Guzzle gas? □ Stall out, surge, or die at stops? □ Diesel; or try to keep running? □ Make strange noises under the hood? □ Need an oil change? Home of the 12 mo./12,000mi. TUNE-UP • 4 cyl-$49 90 • 6 cyl-$54 90 • 8 cyl-$59 90 Oil Change $17 90 PRECISION TUNE of Bryan • College Station 601 Harvey Rd. College Station 693-6189 (Z Blks East of Texas Ave.) Chevron **Reveille’s $1OO 00 CASH Bring this coupon to be eligible for $100 00 Cash Prize. Drawing to be held April 28, May 3 and May 5. No purchase necessary but be sure to re-enter each drawing. 300 Jersey (one block from Welborn Rd.)