iThursday, July 13,1989 The Battalion Page 5 mi : "'H b,j Jo ? nce." ^ck, ej^ '"erce ( •ce WedJ POLICE BEAT cniicisj rtmentij and not Wcesaid JrksW music t s. ptible to hfj ig “o indue* ind litfi ing cr | to paril on cou’J •5. 1 ice Iniiri < petted r confers The following incidents were reported to the University Police Department from June 29 through Tuesday: BURGLARY: • An Apple Macintosh com puter was taken from an office in Sbisa Dining Hall. • A Compuadd computer, a hard disk, monitor and printer were stolen from an office in the Psychology Building. A video cas sette recorder and a camcorder also were stolen. • An upright welding machine was stolen from the utility plant on Olsen Road. • A woman reported that a staff parking sticker was removed from her car. MISDEMEANOR THEFT: • Nine bicycles, two bicycle tires and one backpack were re ported stolen from various loca tions around campus. • A Hobby Hall resident re ported that someone entered his room and stole his compact disc player and one disc. • A student reported that the rear license plate was taken from her car. • A man reported that a radar detector was stolen from his mo torcycle. • A student reported that someone stole his wallet from his backpack, which he left unat tended in the Sterling C. Evans Library. CRIMINAL MISCHIEF: • Several new campus mark ers were damaged. • A man reported that some one tried to hotwire a utility vehi cle. • A window in the Reed Mc Donald Building was broken. CREDIT CARD ABUSE: • Someone rented a car at Eas- terwood Airport by using an ex pired American Express Card that he said was valid. WEAPONS PROHIBITED: • After stopping a vehicle for a traffic violation, an officer found that the driver and passen ger had a firearm and a small amount of marijuana. CRIMINAL TRESPASS: • A student reported that someone entered her apartment at Married Student Housing twice. • A student at Married Stu dent Housing reported that someone entered her apartment and removed a flower from a vase and put it on the table. Investiga tion continues. HARASSMENT: • The Texas A&M Employ ment Office received three obscene phone calls. • A Caldwell man reported that while he was in the third- floor restroom at the library, a male passed him a note with sex ual connotations. Florida governor OKs bill to help keep guns from children TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — Gun owners in Florida are required to take reasonable steps to keep loaded weapons out of the hands of children under a bill signed into law today by Gov. Bob Martinez. The legislation doesn’t take effect until October, but a national gun- control advocate says lives probably already are being saved. “People in Florida and elsewhere have become more aware of the dan gers of leaving loaded firearms where children can get access to them,” said Bernard Horn, state leg islative director for Handgun Con trol Inc. Publicity on gun accidents involv ing children not only has increased public awareness but prompted more safety measures, Horn said in a telephone interview from his Washington office Tuesday. Lawmakers from about two dozen states have contacted Horn’s organi zation about the Florida bill, includ ing California, New York, Illinois, Ohio, Wisconsin, Connecticut, Mas sachusetts, Maryland and Virginia. “I think we’re going to see some action in some of these states,” said Dennis Smith, director of public in formation for the Center to Prevent Handgun Violence, a nonprofit pri vate research organization in Wash ington. Florida lawmakers passed the leg islation in June after three children were killed and two wounded in sep arate gun accidents around the state during a single week. “I think the unfortunate tragic deaths speak for themselves,” Sen. John Grant, a Republican who spon sored the bill, said. The legislation requires gun own ers to take reasonable precautions to keep loaded weapons in their homes and businesses out of the hands of children under 16 years old, such as using a trigger lock or keeping the in a la weapon locked box. If a child shoots someone as the result of a careless gun owner, the adult could be charged with a felony, punishable by up to five years in prison and a $5,000 fine. A gun owner faces a misdemeanor and up to 60 days in jail and a $500 fine if a minor threatens someone with the gun or displays it in public. lean-air proposals face criticism ndustry, environment groups battle over specifics of Bush plan WASHINGTON (AP) — The 1 Bush administration tried Wednes- I day to calm growing criticism of its I draft clean-air legislation and urged I opposing environmental and indus- I try critics to stop “nitpicking this thing apart.” ■ Officials said they were worried hat intense criticism of the pro- Hposed legislation, before it even cached Congress, could lead to leg islative gridlock similar to that which as prevented passage of a bill the ast decade. “This is the best hope we’ve had in long time to break the 10-year log jam,” said EPA chief spokesman Da vid Cohen. “We are being absolutely faithful to the president’s commit ments. To start nitpicking this thing apart may pave the way to the grid lock that has prevented re-authori zation of the Clean Air Act.” After eight years of inaction on air pollution by the Reagan administra tion, Bush promised on June 12 to “curb three major threats to the na tion’s environment and to the health of millions of Americans: acid rain, urban air pollution, and toxic air emissions.” But he only had available then a 14-page outline for the first major presidential proposal for cleaning the nation’s air since 1977. As legis lative drafters worked to fill in de tails of the bill, copies of their work ing language have leaked out and the opposing sides have begun react- ing. This week, environmental groups and the chairman of the House envi ronment subcommittee contended the latest draft, dated June 30, weak ened the president’s promise for a strong pollution-fighting campaign. Industry groups said the Environ mental Protection Agency was trying to make the language tougher than Bush wants. The environmental side said Shooting in crowded restaurant leaves 3 Vietnamese men dead a P r m y PORT ARTHUR (AP) — Two gunmen apparently [seeking revenge entered a crowded Vietnamese restau rant Wednesday morning and shot three men to death as frightened diners fled, authorities and witnesses said. [ Within four hours police had arrested Phuc Dinh Tran and Dac Van Tran at their Port Arthur home and recovered a 12-gauge pump shotgun, authorities said. The suspects were arraigned on murder charges Wednesday afternoon by Jefferson County Justice of the Peace Barbara Dorman and jailed in lieu of $500,000 bond each. The shooting occurred around 10:45 a.m. when two men entered the Tau Bay Vietnamese Restaurant with a shotgun and fired at the three men, who were seated at a table, said Capt. J.E. Huebel of the criminal investi gations division. Two men were dead at the scene when police ar rived, and a third man died at St. Mary’s Hospital, au thorities said. The names of the victims were being withheld pen ding notification of relatives. “It appears, from what we understand this wa« a spill-over from a fight at a tavern last night,” Huebel said. “I guess these were the losers who came back and shot the others while they were in this little Vietnamese cafe,” he said. “The two of them just came in with a shotgun and blew them away.” The owner of a next-door grocery store said he no ticed a large crowd of diners in the restaurant when he walked to his Vietnam Market this morning, and later was startled by the sound of shotgun blasts. “I heard two shots, but the people told me there were three,” said Khoi Tran. “It was real loud. I didn’t think it was shooting at first, but I came to the front and I saw some people running out and they said it was shooting. “I closed the store and called the police,” he said, adding that witnesses told him most of the customers fled through a back door. Huebel said both the victims and the assailants are Vietnamese natives, and that the shooting occurred in an area populated with numerous Vietnamese busi nesses. Bush’s proposal was weakened in sections on auto pollution, emission of toxic chemicals and reduction of the substances causing acid rain. An industry coalition said the draft was tougher than Bush prom ised on auto emissions, took away the flexibility of states to deal with their particular pollution problems, and unnecessarily increased require ments on industry to reduce acid rain. William Rosenberg, assistant EPA administrator for air and radiatioin, said, “It’s unfair to say we’re deviat ing” from Bush’s wishes, adding that the proposal would “get the job done in a cost-effective way. You have a bill that’s 286 pages. The fact sheet was 14 pages. When you get to the specifics it’s much more compli cated.” “The legislative language is a far cry from what the president said he wanted to do: achieve clean air for every American,” said Rep. Henry A. Waxman, D-Calif., chairman of the House Energy and Commerce environment subcommittee. “In the area of smog, they seem to be willing to give in (to the auto industry) rather than assisting breathing Americans to give them a break.” William Fay, head of an industry coalition called the Clean Air Work ing Group, said, “We think exactly the opposite. My response is that someone got carried away in draft ing this thing. There are things in the staff draft that go far beyond what the president suggested.” One of the most crucial disputes is over motor vehicle pollution. The draft language would reduce the ex haust standard for unburned fuel from 0.41 grams per mile to 0.25 grams. But while the current law re quires that each car meet the stan dard, the draft legislation would permit automakers to achieve the re duction by averaging all their autos. Religious groups react to Supreme Court rulings n id 1 NEW YORK (AP) — A potpourri of reactions to recent Supreme Court decisions on abortion, executions, holiday displays and the flag has swirled through religious circles. Views were about as mixed in the religious household as in society at large. One odd situation found Jewish leaders upset because the court had approved displaying a Jewish symbol. Regarding the flag, President Bush ignited conflicting religious reactions for wanting new laws to shield it. Such a constitutional amendment or legis lation is needed, said the Knights of Columbus, to remove the court’s inference that burning or otherwise abusing the flag is an “acceptable form of protest.” The Roman Catholic fraternal order noted its stress on patriotism education in backing mea sures to “save the flag from desecration.” On the other hand, the general synod last week of the United Church of Christ said such legislation would “exalt” the flag beyond a “trea sured symbol” of America and restrict the very freedom the flag symbolizes. Similarly, the American Jewish Committee said such legislation would erode the First Amendment which “protects the freedom of all of us,” including “even crazy people who see fit to burn the American flag.” The court’s upholding of the death penalty for ■ 16- and 17-year-olds and the moderately re tarded was denounced by Protestant, Jewish and Roman Catholic leaders. It is “an outrage” that must be changed, said the Rev. Thom White Wolf Fassett, head of the United Methodist Board of Church and Society. It called the decision “reprehensible” to “people of faith.” Cardinal Joseph Bernardin of Chicago, term ing capital punishment a poor way to deter crime, said he is “disappointed and saddened” by the court decision allowing that penalty for mi nors and the retarded. The AJC said it “is appalled” by the decision, adding that capital punishment “degrades and brutalizes” society and becomes a “mockery of justice” in executing the young and retarded. A total of 30 youths, all younger than 18 when they committed murders, now are on death row, and the courts have estimated about a fifth of nearly 2,200 others awaiting execution are re tarded to some degree. The abortion decision evoked the most volu minous and diverse reactions, far more sweeping than the decision itself. Explicitly it held only that Missouri could pro hibit state-based hospitals and personnel from performing abortions. Other aspects remained ambiguous. Previously, Congress itself had bar red federal funds for abortion. Neverthless, the impact was thunderous, on both sides, one denouncing the decision as an as sault on women’s rights, and the other saying it signaled a turn toward protecting the unborn. It is “the beginning of the opportunity to end this dark night of our nation’s soul in which so terribly many of the most defenseless among us, our unborn, have been denied the right to life,” said the Rev. Richard D. Land, head of the Southern Baptist Christian Life Commission. The decision is “a victory for life” and the big gest winners “are the tiniest people of all — chil dren within the womb,” said Archbishop John L. May of St. Louis, president of the National Con ference of Catholic Bishops. However, some Jewish and Protestant leaders decried the decision as threatening women’s rights. “The ruling is a deplorable attack on the reli gious freedom of all Americans,” said officials of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations, vowing to oppose any state attempts to limit free choice in abortion. Fassett said the court had turned the clock back 20 years on women’s right to choose abor tion and the rulings “are highly discriminatory,” putting the heaviest burden on the poor. However, the Rev. James Heidinger, executive of the denomination’s evangelical caucus, hailed I he (Supreme Court’s abortion) ruling is a deplorable attack on the religious freedom of all Americans.” — Union of American Hebrew Congregations the decision as “a clearly positive one.” Thus, within denominations, as within the na tion, feelings were divided on an issue which re mained about as unsettled as ever. The court’s curiously two-way ruling on reli gious displays in Pittsburgh, banned a Christmas creche (cradle scene) in a courthouse lobby, but approved a Hanukah menorah (candelabrum) on the outside. Remarkably, Jewish leaders deplored the deci sion favoring their own symbol, which the court said was acceptable because it was religiously neutral and stood near a secular Christmas tree. The decision “will further hasten the transfor mation of Hannukah from a religious to a cultu ral event,” said Phil Baum, associate director of the American Jewish Congress. “This is the inevitable price paid for seeking to enlist official endorsement for religious prac tices.” !§■ 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 Lunch Buffet (11-2 Daily) Dinner Buffet (5-8pm Daily) Gourmet Chinese Food, More than 15 items All you can eat • Free Iced Tea Pacific Garden Chinese Restaurant Between Chimney Hill Bowl & The Hilton Dine in only, with coupon Salads & Desserts One coupon per person per visit New | tems Added: Varies Dai |y I Not good with any other coupon _. . ^ 71 Offer Expires 07-20-89 Chinese Fajitas on Sunday ■EATERIES CANTINA FREE NACHO BAR Every Night of the Week With $2.95 Purchase! 9:30-Midnight $1 50 Margaritas $4 50 Margarita Pitchers $1 25 Well Drinks 764-2975 On Harvey Road behind Safeway Contact Lenses Only Quality Name Brands (Bausch & Lomb, Ciba, Barnes-Hinds-Hydrocurve) $ 7000 pr.*-STD. 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