f YOU. Could be one of the next leaders of the STUDENT Y Filing forms for Cabinet Officer elections now available in 211 Pavilion. NEED NOT BE A STUDENT Y MEMBER TO RUN Due Friday, March 30,1990 Election - Tuesday i? Wednesday April 3i?4 AGGIES ABROAD CLUB Presents: TRAVEL EUROPE On Your OWN! Tuesday, April 3 Rm. 302 Rudder Wednesday, April 4 Rm. 27 MSC SEMINAR TOPICS AND SCHEDULE: Tuesday, April 3 8:30 P.M. HOW TO TRAVEL INEXPENSI VELY Wednesday, April 4 Come Anytime! 9:00 A.M. SIGHTSEEING 11:00 A.M. HOW TO PACK & GET AROUND 1:00 P.M. TRAVEL TIPS (PASSPORTS, I.D.’S, ETC.) .M. YOl 2:00 P. )UTH HOSTELING RALLY FOR PALESTINIAN HUMAN RIGHTS IN THEIR OCCUPIED LAND DATE: WED., MARCH 28. TIME 11 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. PLACE: In Front of the Academic Building Prepared by: -Students Against Aparthied -The Medicine Tribe -The Islamic Association For Palestine DOORS OPEN 6:00 P.M. BEGINNERS WELCOME! V Speed (Ex Fri) 1st Session 2nd Session 6:45 7:15 9:00 TUES: BEGINNERS’ NIGHT •Learn to play 8 Games & Speed •Over by 9 p. m. •1/2 Price Daubers •Dollar Food & Drink Specials WED: $2 DOUBLE FUN, 12 & 18 Face Specials THURS: 1/2 Price Option FRI: 5x5 Night, 10 BIG Games SAT: SUPER SPECIAL, 18 Faces (or less) $ 10/Session, EXTRAS 500 per Front Face MAXIMUM NIGHTLY PAYOUTS TOWNSH1RE 2015 TEXAS A VE. S. BOYS CLUBS OF BRAZOS COUNTY B . V.C. A S A. LIC # 17460795846 L j C # 30008721273 BRYAN 822-9087 CHILD PLACEMENT CENTER LIC# 17422519375 mm TTMMJEA.TT] (^Nintendo") • Free Memberships • Players & Camcorder Also Available Movies on Tuesday & Thursday including NEW RELEASES MAKE US YOUR ONE STOP ENTERTAINMENT CHOICE ★ Compact Discs ★ Cassettes ★ Cassingles • Maxell Accessories By: Memorex • TDK • Discwasher • Case Logic M-Th 10-9 F&St 10-11 Sun. 1-9 693-5789 Located on the corner of Texas & SW ParKway in the Winn Dixie Center, College Station MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED The Battalion WORLD & NATION Tuesday, March 27,1990 ‘The devil got into me’ Man accused of arson faces 87 murder counts NEW YORK (AP) — The man accused of setting fire to the Happy Land social club was arraigned Monday on 87 counts of murder, and police said he told them “the devil got into me.” Authorities began shutting other illegal clubs in re sponse to New York City’s worst fire in 79 years. The families of the 87 victims, most of whom were Honduran or Dominican immigrants, sought solace in their grief, and a government task force was set up to counsel them and help make funeral arrangements. Julio Gonzalez, 36, was accused of setting the fire early Sunday with $1 worth of gasoline after arguing with a former girlfriend who worked at the illegal club. He is said to have threatened to “shut this place down.” “I got angry, the devil got into me, and I set the place on fire,” Gonzalez told authorities, according to a police source who spoke to the. Associated Press on condition of anonymity. During a hearing at Bronx County Criminal Court, Gonzalez was charged with 87 counts of murder com mitted during the course of arson; 87 counts of murder by depraved indifference to human life; one count of attempted murder; and two counts of arson. He was held under a suicide watch at the Rikers Is land jail, authorities said. The case was turned over to a grand jury, and Gonzalez will not be asked to enter a plea unless an indictment is issued. The deaths were believed to be the most ever charged to a single suspect in the continental United States. “He is a double animal,” said Rene J. Mena, 63, whose son, Rene Jr., 30, died. “Here, they’re going to have good food for him, a book, a movie. In Central America, we don’t do it that way.” District Attorney Robert T. Johnson said he hoped that if Gonzalez is convicted, he would get consecutive prison sentences amounting to 2,000 years. An equally angry Mayor David Dinkins ordered a sweep of other suspected unlicensed social clubs. Police and a special task force visited 241 clubs citywide from midnight to 7 a.m. Monday and posted vacate orders on 187. Only 23 of the clubs were open — most are closed on Sunday nights. There were 52 safety violations and 30 summonses issued, Sgt. Dick Vreeland, a police spokes man, said. In the East Tremont section of the Bronx, families drifted in and out of Public School 67, across from the fire-blackened club. A task force of state, city and pri vate agencies there helped them make funeral arrange ments and offered counseling and financial assistance. “It’s orderly, but it’s not emotionally orderly,” Ken Curtin, a local Red Cross disaster relief director, said. “It’s highly charged. There are a lot of outbursts of grief.” In Honduras, a foreign ministry spokesman said the government “is deeply moved by the deaths of many countrymen in New York.” The Honduran telephone company said it was swamped with calls from people seeking word about loved ones. Rapist gets Voli 130-year prison term j sh< glo By Jl TACOMA, Wash. (AP) man convicted of raping and» ually mutilating a 7-year-oldii! was sentenced today iomoreit 130 years in prison, three la the standard term for the aim In sentencing Earl Shrat Pierce County Superior Con ^ 1 Judge Thomas R. Sauriolsaidc p e case left him more troubled s |j yi outraged than any in his 3/-I8 ’ rta legal career highi 1 don t think that 1 haven ( ^j n j heard of a case that borders sorec ] extreme cruelty more than c nal j 0 one,” Sauriol said. “The realin lt . e ( Mr. Shriner, you present adr ( ()()1 , ger to the defenseless.” j nlei Shriner, 40, has a longhistoi of violence toward young people] tmUn 1 le was convicted Feb. 7oflin ;( [ ism degree attempted murder, i« ^ e n counts of first-degree rape ais ( ()ni first-degree assault. The dii was choked and his penis wain off in the attack May 20 in wooded area near his south I; coma home. The victim’s mother, Hdt Harlow, said she was satislii with the sentence because would in effect be a life sententt Under state law, the standac range for the offenses with some one of Shriner’s record is 34yen to 43 years, eight months. Radiation technicians encourged to walk out WASHINGTON (AP) — About 3,000 radia tion technicians at 37 nuclear power plants closed for refueling — including the South Texas Pro ject in Bay City — were encouraged to walk off the job Monday in a nationwide effort to win union representation. Labor leaders and utility contractors disagreed over the success of the walkout, organized by the International Brotherhood of Electrical Work ers. The IBEW wants to become the workers’ bargaining agent. “All I can tell you is it’s working,” said IBEW official A.V. Grimes, who said it was impossible to say how many of the 3,000 technicians in volved refused to go to work Monday. Frank Ingram, a spokesman for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, said the agency had been monitoring the situation and had not re ceived any reports that work at the closed reac tors had stopped. “Based on today’s experience at all our sites, it has been business as usual,” Karen Armour, a spokeswoman at Asca Brown Boveri Inc., of Stamford, Conn., the parent of Power Systems Energy Services Inc, said. The company has more than 600 technicians working at nine sites. Only “very few” workers failed to show, she said. Griffies said striking workers set up only one picket line — at the Turkey Point nuclear plant south of Miami where about 100 workers stayed off the job. Another 100 contract workers at Florida Power Corp.’s Crystal River nuclear plant re fused to work. Griffies declined to elaborate on why onlym picket line was established or to say howlongii walkout would last. The IBEW, which already represents thee jority of permanent nuclear power plant von ers, targeted eight utility contractors who vide traveling “health physics technicians reactors that close down for refueling or man: nance. Those technicians, who monitor the levelofn| diation at the plants, make between $11 andji an hour and have not received pay increases eight years, Griffies said. Some of the largest contractors involved only insignificant numbers of workers had to report for work. Court reviews case granting employers right to discriminate WASHINGTON (AP) — The Su preme Court said Monday it will study the power of employers to ex clude females of child-bearing age from hazardous jobs, a case that could affect millions of working women. The court agreed to review a Rul ing that let a Milwaukee-based man ufacturer of automobile batteries ban women who cannot prove they are infertile from jobs that expose them to lead. The fetal protection policy is be ing challenged as a form of illegal sex discrimination because it bans women from high-paying, if hazard ous, jobs. Exposure to lead, the principal material used in making batteries, can be a health risk to workers and to the fetuses of pregnant workers. But one judge, who dissented from an appeals court decision last year that upheld the fetal protection policy, said the ruling also could be applied to a broad range of employ ment, including “traditional office jobs.” The high court’s decision is ex pected sometime in 1991. In other action, the court: • Agreed to decide in an Okla homa City case whether some school districts may abandon forced busing after achieving racial balance. • Voted to study an appeal from Nebraska challenging the authority of states to house convicted mur derers on “death rows” and keep them apart from other inmates. • Said it will consider giving fed eral regulators more authority to lower electricity rates, setting the stage for a ruling that could affect more than 49 million homes. • Refused to extend a key civil rights law to protect non-citizens from private, as well as governmen tal, bias. The justices let stand a rul ing that a New Orleans bank did not discriminate illegally against a man when it denied him a credit card be cause he is not a citizen. • Let stand the conviction of an Indiana business for showing and selling movies “harmful to minors,” rejecting arguments that the convic tion and $5,000 fine infringe free- speech rights. In the fetal protection case, the court must interpret a federal law that bans sexual bias in employment. Since 1982 the battery division of Johnson Controls Inc. has barred women at its factories in several states from jobs involving exposure to lead. Prosecutors unable to charge Honeckei No legal grounds round for high treason EAST BERLIN (AP) — Pros ecutors said Monday there were fo no legal grounds for charging Erich Honecker with high trea son, but the deposed Communist leader still was under investiga tion for corruption and abuse of power. Efforts to form a new govern ing coalition continued to be dis rupted Monday by allegations that leading politicians had links to the former Communist secret police. The office of chief prosecutor Hans-Juergen Joseph said two members of Honecker’s Politburo — state security chief Erich Mielke and Guenther Mittag, the economics minister — also would escape treason charges but, like Honecker, were suspected of cor ruption and misusing their power. Treason proceedings were dropped against Joachim Her rmann, Honecker’s propaganda chief. The former Politburo member was ordered released. Honecker, 77, was arrested in January after undergoing sur gery for kidney cancer, but was Freed the next day, and Mielke also has been released for health reasons. Mittag remains in custo- day. Prosecutors had said earfc that Honecker, Mielke and Mil tag would he indicted and put on trial this month for high treason which carries a maximum sen tence of life in prison. Joseph saio in a statemeffi Monday, however, that treason indictments were not warrantee and the three men also had been cleared of conspiracy charges the case. _ His statement, carried by die state-run news agency ADN, ac cused Honecker and his lieuten ants of “persistent breaches oftlit constitution.” It added, however, that theac tions were part of a one-party Sta linist system and suggested trea son charges against individuals would not be appropriate. Honecker and Mittag, 64, ate accused of embezzling state f to build vacation homes and pret vide other personal comforts fot themselves. A range of accusations againsi Mielke, 84, stem from his control of the formerly all-powerful state security apparatus. Indictments are not expected before May or June, Joseph told the Associated Press. /f'Girls Just Wanna Have FunT\ HOW: Modeling the latest trends in fashion and hairstyles WHEN: Thursday, March 29,1990 at 10:00 PJV\. WHERE: The Mercuiy Bar WHY: For the FCIN of it!! SPONSORED BY: The Other Eclips The Mercury Bar MSC Hospitality j Collegiate FFA Business Meeting & Movie Madness- Kolache Social Tuesday March 27 7:00 p.m Inter Edtic creai datio activi bight spoil- ctent ucau econ- Texa stuc doe inst Ir hisu man pert effei tnlei real! otht H wha tion mar Uni unit tern Ple’i E stan tern Stive said Stat ten: of sire kno stuc on . con thai top eigt doe tior tnte obv atii star ; ctet I to s Sec L-. s By A Of Tf Vc Gove from Pc Roor Built of n will I Sterl Al catio El 11:3 van tion? C; STU • I •' •I • ] • ( SEN • | • l JUN