Friday, September 21,1990 The Battalion SERIES .uhiire OOM Year Restaurant Report The restaurants listed below were inspected by the Brazos County Health Department between Sept. 9 and Sept. 14. Information is from a food service establish ment inspection report. SCORED BETWEEN 100 AND 95: Golden Corral at 700 University Drive. Score - 98. Points were deducted for improper storage of clean equipment and walls/ceilings in need of repair. It was an opening investigation. SCORED BETWEEN 94 AND 90: Sundance Club at the College Station Hilton on Uni versity Drive. Score - 94. Points were deducted for im proper storage of food-dispensing utensils, unclean non-food contact surfaces, hand cleansers and drying devices in restrooms in poor condition. The investiga tion was due to a complaint. Gallery Bar at the College Station Hilton on Univer sity Drive. Score -91. Points were deducted for im proper storage of food-dispensing utensils, unclean non-food contact surfaces, unclean food contact sur faces and improper storage of toxic items (major viola tion). The investigation was due to a complaint. SCORED BETWEEN 74 AND 70: Sandpiper at the College Station Hilton on Univer sity Dr. Score -74. Points were deducted for improper temperature storage of potentially hazardous food (ma jor violation), improper protection of stored food, poor hygienic practices of personnel, unclean wiping cloths, improper storage of clean equipment, unclean non food contact surfaces, unrepaired floors and improper storage of food dispensing utensils. The investigation was due to a complaint. Garfield’s Resturant and Pub at 1503 S. Texas Ave. Score - 72. Points were deducted for improper protec tion of stored food, food prepared at improper temper atures, unclean wiping cloths, unclean non-food contact surfaces, improper storage of toxic items (major viola tion), inaccessible toilets and handwashing facilities (critical item requiring immediate attention), improper storage of food-dispensing utensils and personnel's fail ure to wear hair restraints. It was a regularly scheduled investigation. David Jefferson, a registered sanitarian at the de partment, said restaurants with scores of 95 or above generally have excellent operations and facilities. He said restaurants with scores in the 70s or low 80s usually have serious violations in the health report. Scores can be misleading. Jef ferson said, because res taurants can get the same score by having several minor violations or a few major violations. He said the minor violations can be corrected during the inspection. Point deductions or violations in the report range from one point (minor violations) to five points (major violations). Jefferson said the department might close a restau rant if the score is below 60, the personnel have infec tious diseases, the restaurant lacks adequate refrigera tion, there is a sewage backup in the building or the restaurant has a complete lack of sanitization for the food equipment. The department inspects each restaurant every six months. Jefferson said a follow-up inspection is some times required if a restaurant has a four- or five-point violation that cannot be corrected during the inspec tion, or if there are numerous small violations. Inspectors at the department are registered sanitari ans. Seniors upset when Williams withdraws from AARP forum AUSTIN (AP) — Senior citizens blasted GOP gubernatorial candi date Clayton Williams Thursday for pulling out of a forum with his Dem ocratic rival sponsored by the Amer ican Association of Retired Pei sons. AARP-VOTE, the group’s voter education program, canceled the Sept. 25 candidate forum aftei Wil liams withdrew, according to a lettei distributed at a news conference. The Republican and Democrat Ann Richards were to appear, seperately The news conference criticizing Williams was not sponsored by AARP, said those there. But they said they belonged to the group, and some belonged to the Gray Panthers. “Where is Clayton Williams?’' asked W’alter Richter, chairman erf the Travis County Democratic Party. “He needs to come off the television screen and meet Ann Richards and the voters of Texas.” Liz Carpenter, former press sec retary to Lady Bird Johnson, said, “Anyone who would welch out on talking about older issues is letting down the older people of this state She said that those at the news conference, if their ages were added together, “represent more than 1,000 years of wisdom. ' But Williams spokeswoman Mona Palmer dismissed them as “Ann Richards lieutenants.” She said Williams had to bow out of the event because of a scheduling conflict. She declined to say what the conflict was, but said Williams has offered to appear before the group on three optional dates. In other political developments Thursday: — Democratic state treasurer can didate Nikki Van Hightower crit icized Republican opponent Kay Bailey Hutchison, Saying she can't handle her family and business debt. Hutchison said Van Hightower was wrong and accused her of mak ing “wild claims, distorted charges and cheap shots.” Hutchison also announced her endorsement by Democrats and in dependents. L I S RD light Turn Diary investigator withholds decision until more evidence becomes available HOUSTON (AP) — A private investigator on Thurs day claimed to have seen a diary describing a CTA plot to kill President Kennedy, but a former agency em ployee who helped the investigator said the diary ap peared to be “a clumsy fabrication.” Private investigator Joe West told reporters in Hous ton he had obtained and copied the dairy, found by Ge neva White Galle, the widow of Roscoe White, a Dallas police officer at the time of Kennedy’s assassination. White’s son, Ricky Don White, claimed on Aug. 7 his father had shot Kennedy, acting on orders from the Central Intelligence Agency. Roscoe White died in an industrial accident his son said was a deliberate attempt to silence his father. A myriad of conspiracy theories, none of which have been proven, have emerged since The Warren Com mission concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone in killing Kennedy. Asked what makes the White family’s claims any more credible than other assassination theories, West said, “It would take me a month to answer that, and I’m just not going to.” White’s original claims brought immediate denial from both the CIA and FBI. However, state Attorney' General Jim Mattox has said he’ll investigate White’s story. West said Thursday he does not now have the origi nal diary, and refused to divulge who does. He said he believes it is being sent to a certified document analyst and it may turn out to be a hoax. Pages Police beef up area patrols after shooting AUSTIN (AP) — City officials urged calm Thursday as they beefed up police patrols in the area of a sus pected gang shooting that left three people wounded at a bus stop. Mayor Lee Cooke said he received numerous telephone calls from citi zens saying they plan to arm them selves in the wake of the Wednesday shooting. “That will only exacerbate the problem,” he said at a news confer ence Thursday at the Austin police station. “It will only make it more difficult for the police to do their job properly.” Those wounded included a 61- year-old man who attempted to pre vent the shooting, a 16-year-old girl and 16-year-old boy. All were in sta ble condition, police said. Three suspects were questioned by police but later released. No ar rests have been made in the shoot ing, which happened at about 4:30 p.m. at one of the busiest intersec tions in the city. Officials said they did not have enough evidence to call the shooting gang-related. But police said wit nesses claim they saw two groups of youths arguing at the intersection and yelling out the names of rival street gangs moments before the in cident. Cooke said extra police patrols, including officers on horseback, would be dispatched to the area. He “In the other shootings, I didn’t get calls to my office. The thing that alarmed me is the comments by citizens saying they were going to take the law into their own hands.” — Lee Cooke, Austin mayor dismissed questions about why secu rity has not been beefed up in other areas where gang violence has been reported. “In the other shootings, 1 didn’t get calls to my office,” he said. “The thing that alarmed me is the com ments by citizens saying they were going to take the law into their own hands.” Police said there are about 800 gang members in Austin, a relatively small number compared to other major cities in Texas. In an unrelated gang shooting Wednesday, an 18-year-old gang member was fatally wounded in the head. Police said they don’t know whether the shooting was deliberate or accidental. In earlier interviews with the Aus tin American-Statesman, the youth said he needed the companionship of his fellow gang members, but that he also wanted to get away from the violence of gang life. Buy any sandwich or salad, get a tiny yogurt for free (with this ad. offer exp 9-28 ) dine-in only) corner of E. 29th and Barak (across from Bryan High) 846-0174 Horresr new restaurant at northgate I'dxfvGOttx, Teuz. HockKS D/ne/n/ Take Out/ Deffvery/ DAILY LUNCH 12p.m. - 2 p.m. All you can eat EggRolls $4.00 (Pork, Chicken, & Mushroom) *** Coming soon - Cajun food.*** u 103 Boyett (Across from 7-11) 846-2898 ( Garfield^ \ J^egtauragt tycPub J 1503 Texas Ave. Inside Holiday Inn Buy one entree get one FREE! expires September 30, 1990 I I I I I I I I I Steve 'I I REPUBLICAN FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE ' ,4'' ■ U.S. Naval Academy graduate ■ Nuclear engineer, U.S. Submarine Force ||v ■ MBA, Texas A&M University jmtti " ’ ' ■ Successful local Businessman ™ & jM ■ Married 17 years, 3 children Pol. adv. paW for by Steve Ogden Campaign. Box 3126 Bryan Texas 77805 Hey Ags! Interested in Meeting Some of the Newest Aggies Around? Fifty Japanese Students From TAMU-KORIYAMA Will be on Campus for the Texas Tech Game Weekend, and Would Like to Spend Two Nights in the Residence Halls with Aggie Hosts. 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