he Battalion WEATHER TOMORROW S FORECAST: Partly sunny, with chance of t- storm HIGH: 88 LOW: 64 ol. 89 No.26 USPS 045360 10 Pages College Station, Texas Friday, October 6,1989 akker found guilty of fleecing flock CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — PTL evan- ;elisljim Bakker was convicted Thursday if using his television show to defraud fol- owersof $3.7 million, money the jury fore- nan said corrupted a minister who started intto do good. “He was called by God. But eventually he money became too much for him,” said ^ oreman Ricky Hill, who said during jury ■ election that he was a Christian. “We kept P ooking for something from the defense ind we never saw it.” 1 Bakker faces a maximum sentence of 120 ears in prison and $5 million in fines. The J.S. District Court jury convicted him of all 24 counts in the indictment, which charged he oversold lodging guarantees, called “life time partnerships,” at his Heritage USA re ligious retreat. “The message is you can’t lie to the peo ple and use television and the mails to get them to send you money,” prosecutor Deb orah Smith said. “It doesn’t matter who you are or how well known you are, you simply can’t do it.” Defense lawyer George C. Davis said the verdict would be appealed. Prosecutors said Bakker diverted $3.7 million in ministry funds for personal use while knowing PTL was in financial trou ble. He used money from PTL for vacation homes in California and Florida, a lake- front parsonage, a houseboat, Rolls-Royce and Mercedes cars and more peculiar luxu ries such as an air-conditioneu doghouse. Bakker’s wife, Tammy Faye, said she and her husband would return to Orlando, Fla., where they moved the die-hard remnants of their ministry. “It’s not over until it’s over,” added Tammy Faye during a news conference af ter the verdict. Hundreds of Bakker faith ful and the lunchtime curious flocked around the courthouse, and Tammy Faye serenaded them with a hymn. “On Christ, the solid rock, I stand. All other ground is sinking sand,” she sang. Bakker was freed later Thursday on $250,000 bond imposed by U.S. District Court Judge Robert Potter. The judge set sentencing for Oct. 24. “I’m going to keep my faith in God and I’m going to go see Tammy now. I feel sad but encouraged in God,” Bakker said, smil ing in a brief midafternoon statement to re porters. He said he was “still innocent of the charges against me.” Potter said he granted bond reluctantly because Bakker faithfuls had a “Jim Jones mentality” and might help him flee the country. Davis declared the reference to the 1978 murder-suicide of 900 followers of Jim Jones’ cult in Jonestown, Guyana, “horrible, absolutely uncalled for.” The jury foreman said he was unswayed by Bakker’s testimony, in which he de fended his earnings as reasonable for some one who raised millions of dollars for the work of the Lord. “He was a man of God”. Hill said. “He got corrupt and I feel sorry for the man.” Hill said that in the day and a half of jury deliberations, “The most disagreement was when the fraud started.” Agents secure cocaine seized in South Texas Hooked on horns Dennis Brophy, a graduate student from Powell, Wyo., ad justs one of the 10 chrome-plated horns on his late-model Photo by Mike C. Mulvey Chevrolet pickup. Part of the truck’s unusual name comes from Brophy’s major — psychology. HARLINGEN (AP) — Two heavily guarded rental trucks Thursday hauled the nation’s second largest cocaine seizure out of south Texas to a more secure location in the state capital, while agents continued to search for the owner of a house where the nine-ton cache was found. Three Mexican citizens arrested at the house Wednesday were arraigned Thursday morning on charges of engaging in organized criminal activity and aggravated cocaine pos session, Justice of the Peace Leo Longoria of Harlingen said. Longoria said he ordered the three held without bond in the Cameron County Jail in Brownsville because of the magnitude of the case and because as foreigners they are con sidered high risks for fleeing the country. The three arrested were identified as Her- menegildo Rivas Sosa, 51, of Matamoros, Mexico; Alfonso Tristan Gonzalez, 36, of San Antonio; and Guadencio Garcia, 38, of McAl len. All three hold resident alien status in the United States, Longoria said. But officials said they believe them to be only low-level employees of the drug organi zation. “These are basically just the people that are hired to repackage and transport,” said Lt. Waylon Bvillard, with file NJarcotics Service of the Texas Department of Public Safety in Harlingen. Armando Ramirez, resident agent in charge of the Drug Enforcement Administra tion office in Brownsville, said Thursday that federal charges probably would be filed in the case. Charges could include conspiracy to im port, possess and distribute the drug, Ramirez said. The 17,950 pounds of cocaine taken Wednesday west of Harlingen with an esti mated street value of $1 billion brought to 35 tons the total cache of the drug in three raids in five days. Earlier Wednesday, the Coast Guard made what it called the largest cocaine seizure at sea and the third largest in U.S. history when it boarded a Panamanian supply vessel and un covered 11,500 pounds of cocaine worth an estimated $525 million. The two hauls came just five days after agents entered a suburban Los Angeles ware house and found 20 tons of cocaine — the world’s largest seizure — worth between $2 billion and $20 billion, depending on the In Harlingen, agents late Wednesday night said they were nervous at having $1 billion worth of cocaine parked in two large Ryder trucks behind their local office. “This, according to our headquarters in Austin, is the largest cocaine See Cocaine/Page 6 lorida court eases abortion regulations TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — A jaw requiring pregnant girls to get parental consent before having an Ibortion was struck down by the Itate Supreme Court on Thursday, (istfive days before lawmakers were )consider restricting access to abor- lions. The split decision said Florida’s Constitutional guarantee of privacy lutweighed the 1988 statute requir ing consent of a parent, guardian or Budge for a minor’s abortion. Attorney General Bob Butter- |vorth immediately said his office would petition the court tor a re hearing. “The challenged statute fails be cause it intrudes upon the privacy of the pregnant minor from concep tion to birth,” the court wrote. “Such a substantial invasion of a pregnant female’s privacy by the state for the full term of the pregnancy is not necessary for the preservation of maternal health or the potentiality of life.” The court heard the case of a 15- year-old Lake County girl, identified in court records only as “T.W.” She was denied permission for an abor tion by a local judge, but her appeal wound its way to the U.S. Supreme Court, which returned the case with out comment to the Florida Su preme Court. In the decision, the Florida court noted the U.S. Supreme Court “has made it clear that the states, not the federal government, are the final guarantors of personal privacy.” “We can conceive of few more personal or private decisions con cerning one’s body that one can make in the course of a lifetime,” the Culture center in L. A. provides cholarship for study in Japan 3y Melissa Naumann ! The Battalion Staff You don’t have to dig a hole ’to get to the Orient to [tudy. Instead, the U.S. - Japan Cross Culture Center in Los ngeles is offering scholarships to study Japanese at he Inter-Cultural Institute of Japan. Applicants for the scholarship must be U.S. or Ca- ladian citizens, but the Inter-Cultural Institute, located tear Tokyo, has students of all nationalities, Greg Gol- education director for the Center, said. In fact, most students are college students and busi- lessmen, who recognize the advantage of learning Jap- mese, Golley said. The institute’s program, taught by Japanese instruc- ors, is accelerated, teaching all three Japanese writing ystems: katakana, hiragana and kanji, he said. Kanji, ne system that consists of pictographs, originated in ^hina and is the most difficult of the three, but is nec essary for mastering Japanese, Golley said. “In order to read a newspaper, you need to know at least 3,000 characters,” he said. “It’s kind of fun to learn because there’s little pictures. Plus the calligraphy be hind them is an art.” Golley said three different scholarships are offered — one covering tuition for a full year, one covering two-thirds of the tuition and one covering one-third of the tuition. He estimated that a full year at the Institute, without a scholarship, would cost $10,800, including tuition, housing and other living expenses. The Institute, which has about 800 students, spon sors students for cultural visas, allowing them to work about 20 hours a week to alleviate the financial stress. Golley said many American students tutor Japanese students in English. Applications for the term starting in October 1990 are due April 31. For more information, contact the Center at (213)617-2039. court determined in upholding a 5th District Court of Appeals decision. The court’s ruling came just five days before a special session of the Legislature called by Gov. Bob Mar tinez to consider further abortion re strictions. “I’m going to work to make cer tain that somehow parental consent comes back,” Martinez said. He also is seeking fetal viability tests; a ban on use of public funds, personnel and facilities for abortions; tougher abortion clinic standards; and a no tice to women seeking abortions on the development of their fetuses. “If the Florida Supreme Court will not protect children, and par ents cannot, then the Legislature must, by passing new abortion clinic regulations.” Martinez said. Senate President Bob Crawford said he planned to ask Martinez to postpone the special session in wake of the court’s decision. “I hope the Florida Legislature will look to this ruling next week and understand the implications in re gard to the govenor’s ill-conceived plan to restrict access to abortion,” said Janis Compton-Carr of the Flor ida Abortion Rights Action League. Trump submits buyout bid for American’s parent firm DALLAS (AP) — Developer Don ald Trump stunned the airline world Thursday by offering a record $7 billion for the parent of American Airlines, capping weeks of takeover speculation about the nation’s big gest carrier and a wave of buyouts in the industry. Stock in AMR Corp. shot higher after the company disclosed a letter from the flashy tycoon to Chairman Robert L. Crandall, offering $120 cash for each of AMR’s 58.9 million outstanding common shares. If completed, it would be the big- ? est airline buyout in history. rump said his offer expires Oct. 20. AMR rose $17 to $100 in heavy trading on the the New York Stock Exchange. Other airline stocks also jumped in related speculation. AMR also said its board would consider the proposal “in due course,” but indicated probable re jection. “There has been no change in (AMR’s) policy and belief that AMR and its shareholders will be best served by AMR remaining an inde pendent company and continuing the strong partnership among American Airlines, its employees, the communities it serves and the public,” the company stated. AMR spokesmen declined to com ment furtner. In the letter, released by Trump’s office in New York, Trump said he had made a “substantial investment” in AMR and was prepared to com mit at least $ 1 billion of equity to the transaction. The letter did not disclose the size of Trump’s stake, although Trump officials noted he has filed no docu ments with the federal Securities and Exchange Commission, indicat ing his holdings are below 5 percent of AMR’s outstanding shares. Susan Heilbron, executive vice president of the Trump Organiza tion, said further financing details would be discussed with AMR offi cials when they meet with Trump, See Trump/Page 6 STS conference to come to Rudder tyMia B. Moody The Battalion Staff ■ A five-day national Science-Tech- I ology-Society (STS) Conference ^ wsted by Texas A&M will show aders from five states ways to dis- Uss topics such as world hunger, rar technology and water contami- ation to students in kindergarten 5 bough high school. Dr. Bob James, a science educa- 0n professor, said the conference Rudder Tower will feature spe- [ialists from across the country who teach STS concepts to represen tatives from state education agencies and school districts. “We need to prepare our children to become informed decision-mak ers,” James said, “because many of today’s problems can only be solved through informed decision-making at the ballot box, workplace and home.” James said after participants learn STS concepts on issues such as acid rain, hazardous waste disposal and consumer safety after genetic mod ification of food animals and plants, they will teach these methods to sci ence and social studies teachers in their school districts. Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, New Mexico and Louisiana will be rep resented at the conference, James said. Dr. Paul Thompson, an associate professor of philosophy and human ities, will speak on biotechnology and risk management. Dr. Anthony Stranges, an asso ciate professor of history, will discuss historical perspectives on science, technology ana human values from 1850 to 1900. Dr. Carol Stuessey, assistant pro fessor of science education, will speak on infusing concepts across the curriculum. Camping Out (Counterclockwise) Thomas Deeny, Pete Gamez, Mike Thomason, Larry Hubbard, Christina Kessie and Alan Riley camp out for Photo by Mike C. Mulvev R.E.M. concert tickets that go on sale Saturday morning. Riley is the first person in line.