D ■+ U ■+ D > i D 3] :u D [Monday, Novembers, 1990 The Battalion Page 9 £ Companies plan layoffs Texas due to economy FORT WORTH (AP) — Layoffs by some of the big- jest U.S. companies not only have sparked worries bout job security and a national economic slowdown, fhey’ve also hit close to home. The General Motors Corp. assembly plant in Arling- on will cut back to one rotating shift beginning Mon day because of slow sales. That move was announced before GM said Friday hat it would idle more than 27,000 workers nation wide. General Dynamics Corp. said Oct. 29 that it would ay off between 700 and 1,000 research and engi neering personnel in January. The defense contractor has said it expects to cut up to 7,000 jobs at its Fort Worth Division by the mid- 1990s because of declining government defense spend- ing. Texas Instruments in Dallas has lost 950 of its 22,000 workers in its Defense Systems 8c Electronics Group for the same reason. A study by an economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas shows that defense companies account for 18 percent of Fort Worth’s total economic output. Defense work is so important to the local economy that each job eliminated by a defense contractor will also bring about the loss of one more job somewhere else in the Fort Worth-Dallas area, the study showed. “We’ve been through a depression, so the only way to go is up,” said Frank Anderson, a Financial analyst who follows Southwest banks for Stephens Inc. investment bankers in Little Rock, Ark. “The Texas economy is more broadly based than it was 10 years ago. When you look at Tarrant County, once you go beyond defense... our largest employers —Tandy, GM, American Airlines, Pier 1 — depend on discretionary consumer spending.” — Robert “Bobby” McGee, president, Texas Commerce Bank Fort Worth But others aren’t so sure. “The Texas economy is more broadly based than it was 10 years ago. When you look at Tarrant County, once you go beyond defense... our largest employers — Tandy, GM, American Airlines, Pier 1 — depend on discretionary consumer spending,” said Robert “Bobby” McGee, president of Texas Commerce Bank Fort Worth. “There’s no escaping that whatever happens in the national economy happens in the Texas economy, good and bad,” McGee told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Businesses close up as soldiers pull out HOUSTON (AP) — Ever since troops from Fort Hood joined Oper ation Desert Shield in Saudi Arabia, the 65,000 residents of Killeen have felt the pinch of battle as stores and restaurants close from a lack of busi- ss. “Business is off 35 to 40 percent,” Mike Lazar, 53, owner of Scandals, a topless nightclub that gets about 75 percent of its business from Fort Hood soldiers, said. “There are fewer soldiers, and those that come in are spending less. Why? The magic of the crowd is missing.” Rob Morris, 29, who owns a jew elry store in Killeen Mall said he now trolls for shoppers. “Normally on a day like today (a military payday), I’d have 20 cus tomers,” Morris said. “Today, I’ve had five. We’re hoping for the best.” Fort Hood’s 38,000 troops — plus another 55,000 Army spouses and children — provide a livelihood, di rectly or indirectly, for an estimated 120,000 civilians around Killeen. The Central Texas post accounts for about 75 percent of the regional economy, officials said. “Since the deployment, we can’t find people to rent from us,” Rick Foerster, 47, a trailer park operator, said. “Where ordinarily I’d do $5,000 in business, I’m now doing $200,” John Consentino, 34, assistant man ager of an athletic footwear store in Killeen Mall, said. Still, Consentino is luckier than some merchants. Last month, the Western Sizzlin’ Steakhouse closed its doors and Manuel Pacheco plans to sell his Boot & Things Army Store. Police officer hit by car, driver flees DALLAS (AP) — A Dallas po lice officer was killed early Sun day morning when he was run over by someone driving a stolen car, authorities said. Sunny Ma Love, 39, was struck and killed at about 1:30 a.m. while he was placing flares at a traffic accident site on North Central Expressway, police spokeswoman Vicki Hawkins said. The Cambodian native had been on the police force two years, Hawkins said. Hawkins said the stolen car had been recovered, but the driver fled the scene and had not been found early Sunday. Another officer working a nearby accident found Love’s body, she said. Lewisfinds defense in supporters FORT WORTH (AP) —Many Re publicans, Democrats and political analysts agree: Questions about House Speaker Gib Lewis’ tax pay ments won’t matter much in Tues day’s election. Lewis said Thursday that a law firm didn’t pay any of his company’s delinquent property taxes. He re versed himself the next day, saying he would reimburse Heard Goggan Blair & Williams for all taxes, penal ties and interest that it paid for his firm. The law firm, which collects more than half of all delinquent taxes in Texas, paid more than half of a 1987 delinquent tax bill owed by the Shooters’ Palace gun range, of which Lewis owns 50 percent. State Rep. Doyle Willis, D-Fort Worth, a 36-year veteran of the Leg islature, said that while he often dis agrees with Lewis in the Flouse chambers^ he believes the speaker made a simple mistake. “It’s absolutely impossible to keep up with all those things. I don’t think he knew about it,” the 82-year-old lawmaker told the Fort Worth Star- Telegram. Willis and other legislators said they doubted that tax-paying dis crepancies and vacations that Lewis "It’s absolutely impossible to keep up with all those things. I don’t think he knew about it.” —Doyle Willis, State Rep.,D-Fort Worth took to Mexico with Heard Goggan attorneys — including one in 1987 to Manzanillo, Mexico, for which sources said the firm paid $28,000 — would have any effect on Lewis’ re-election. Lewis has acknowledged that he traveled to Mexico with the attor neys. “I don’t think it will affect him in the election,” Willis said. “But any time you are a public official and you have any criticism —just or unjust — you have a tendency to work a little harder.” H ie R ice University Publishing Program The Rice University Publishing Program, July 8-August 2, 1991, is designed to develop talent, skills and career opportuni ties for persons interested in book and magazine publishing. The program is designed for students who will be entering their senior year in 1991 and for college graduates. Although participants come from all disciplines, the program has been of particular value to students in English and other Humanities, Journalism, Art, Social Sciences and Business. The roster of guest lecturers includes more than 35 top professionals in editing, graphics, marketing and production from throughout the country. For more information, contact the Office of Continuing Studies, Rice University, P.O. Box 1892, Houston, Texas 77251-1892. Telephone (713) 520-6022 or 527-4803. William Marsh Rice University is an EO/AA Institution. SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE Contact Lenses o®V v Only Quality Name Brands (Bausch & Lomb, Ciba, Barnes-Hinds-Hydrocurve) '118 00 ‘138 00 TOTAL COST INCLUDES STD. CLEAR DAILY WEAR SOFT LENSES, EXAM AND FREE CARE KIT TOTAL COST INCLUDES STD. EXTENDED WEAR OR STD. TINTED SOFT LENSES, EXAM AND CARE KIT Sale Ends Nov. 30,1990 Call 696-3754 For Appointment CHARLES C. SCHROEPPEL, O.D., P.C. 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