Wedr , — cut here — — — — — ■ DEFENSIVE DRIVING CLASS April 8, 9, 1992 (6-10 p.m. & 6-10 p.m.) April 17, 18, 1992 (6-10 p.m. & 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. STATE APPROVED DRIVING SAFETY COURSE Register at University Plus (MSC Basement) Call 845-1631 for more information on these or other classes D&M EDUCATION ENTERPRISES L. __ .cut here _ — — — — — _ — J Scuba lessoNS 1/2 PRICE BUDDY SPECIAL fSten up and get your Buddy in at 1/2 priceJ Classes begin: April 2nd (call for schedules.) April 20th May 4th Dive Trips: Cozumel- June 24th - June 29th Belize- August Dates TBA ‘Heated Pool* ‘Textbook and Scuba Equip, included* 115 College Main. College Station fOn NorthfiateJ 409-846-9396 LSAT Free Preview The Princeton Review will be holding a free LSAT preview session on Wednesday, Apr. 8th at 7:30 pm St. Michael's Academy, 2500 S. College Come see how students nationwide raised their scores by an avg. of 10.4 points! Classes for the June test begin May 16th. Call to reserve a seat. We'll call for pizza. 1 -800-749-6336 Going Once, Going Twice...SOLD! «t the LOST & FOUND AUCTION Sponsored By MSC HOSPITALITY Wednesday, April 1...II:30-2:3G MSC Flagroom VALUABLE NOLAN RYAN Seventh No-Hitter Print ^PERSONALLY AUTOGRAPHED* As well as much more... Including Baseball cards and other Sports Memorbilia! Donated by the Nolan Ryan Historical Foundation Page 4 The Battalion Wednesday, April i S&L owner faces prison ter or f-ailc farincr nr» DALLAS (AP) — A federal jury late Tuesday found former Western Savings Association owner Jarrett Woods guilty of bank fraud in the use of thrift funds to pay gambling debts and assist a Houston developer. Woods, 48, faces up to 175 years in prison and $8.2 million in fines when he is sentenced by U.S. District Judge Robert Maloney on June 18. Jurors deliberated for three days before reaching the verdict. "We're gratified by the jury's verdict," said prosecutor Susan Greenberg. Woods' attorney, Shirley Baccus-Lobel, could not be reached for comment. Woods is one of the last major thrift figures in North Texas to be tried for wrongdoing in connection with the collapse of a savings and loan. Western s failure in 1986 is estimated to have cost taxpayers $1.7 billion. In December, prosecutors brought a second case against Woods, seven charges of misapplication of funds and making false statements to regulators, for a 1985 real estate transaction designed to inflate the thrift's net worth. His attorney tried unsuccessfully to have the cases consolidated. In the just-finished trial. Woods was accused of illegally taking $18 million from Western in four separate transactions in 1984,1985 and 1986. Two of the transactions involved complex loan schemes, including use of Western profits, to help Houston developer James Reagin pay delinquent loans at Western and other thrifts. The other transactions were to pay off debts Woods accrued playing a gambling game called "Stack 'Em," in which participants bet whether the next quarter in a stack will have heads or tails facing up. During the trial, ine '■ McSirney III, former chains | rl A failed Sunbelt Savings, te S J^ under a plea arrangement* Pvai government prosecutors that Ptud won $5 million in a "Stack’! a e game with Woods. Prosecut I Katii said Woods took $5lO,OOOfe J in f orr Western to put a down payn 1 on a home McBirney sought! MSC payoff for the debt. f rin McBirney, accused in K j, ^ 0 17 counts fraud in connection* Sunbelt's failure, agreed top! guilty to four counts in return a maximum possible punishit more of 15 years in prison. * Residents unite to rescue community AUSTIN (AP) - When H.V. and Mary Williams moved to the Truman Heights neigh borhood in East Austin 33 years ago, it was a quiet rural community. Their home was only the second to be built on Samuel Huston Avenue. But more people followed, and schools and churches sprang up. The community thrived with a vibrant mixture of middle- and working-class couples. Some who moved here in the 1950s and 1960s have died of old age while others are re tired now. And scared. Crack cocaine, which police say made its debut in Austin about three years ago, changed the face of this neighborhood. And residents have been forced to change with it. They mobilized a "Save Our Neighborhood" association, met monthly with police, even went to court to obtain injunctions against the owners of two alleged crack houses. But despite innovative methods of fighting drug activity, residents fear the war is being lost. mem a.m. Erik LAM ticket MSC Call E "We never knew of drugs. There were no drugs. This was a nice community, and we felt real good about it," said Mary Williams, a re tired Austin schoolteacher. But as the community aged, its face began to change. Homes once occupied by homeown ers are now rented out by absentee landlords. Police sirens pierce the roar of planes over head. Down the hill from Williams' home, crowds gather near the corner of Samuel Huston Av enue and Webberville Road and the corner of Samuel Huston and Bunche Road. Cars stop in the middle of the street and people approach them, while other traffic waits. Money changes hands and the drivers move on. Police and residents agree the transactions likely are drug deals. The Samuel Huston and Webberville inter section is one of 31 places noted on a list of ma jor street-level drug markets made public by AGG gene disci volur Mexk p.m. the Austin Police Department in a report; plaining a 72-person street-level drugts force being formed. Residents hope the task force will help. "Last night, it was terrible. We alwaysc 911 at night. I was coming home last nightj | f or m they just flag you down, trying to selldra > It's not a good feeling," Mary Williamssi i thi= one night last week as the crowds onceae; nr oc.o began to gather. ^ Gc She tells a story of the man who got am g anc j It's the story of how "Save Our Neighk hood" was bom about one year ago. j x a ^ "The officers were chasing a car right . there in front," Mrs. Williams said, pointc mee out her front room window. "The susp ~ c jumped out of the car and ran behintH '■ neighbor's house. ... It was exciting. It ws white car. A nice late-model car. It stopf* right in the middle of the street. The susps 0LYP got out and left the car. The officer gotouti been ran too. It was scary to look at." Senator's contributions live, thrive despite untimely death Agencies need veto Republicans reflect on achievements of Texan John Tower WASHINGTON (AP) - A quarter of a century ago, a young Republican senator from Texas named John Tower was swept up in a Senate ethics battle over a Yankee Democrat. Sen. Thomas Dodd of Con necticut stood accused of misus ing campaign funds and faced cer tain censure by his colleagues. Tower, however, supported him. On the eve of the showdown vote, one of the old Senate lions approached Tower. "Son," he said, "what you're doing is ad mirable. It's good that you realize we're a closely knit club." "But," he reminded him, "we shoot the wounded." Tower nonetheless cast a dis senting vote the next day when the Senate condemned Dodd by a vote of 92-5. Some 22 years later, the Senate shot down Tower himself. Wounded by rumors of strong drink and a weakness for women, he was rejected by three votes as President Bush's Secretary of De fense. "He got a taste of that early les son," says former U.S. House Speaker Jim Wright, a Texas Democrat who likewise was ban ished by his colleagues. "They do indeed shoot the wounded. "But I think he got a bum rap." Wright's recollections preceded the anniversary of Tower's death April 5, 1991. Tower, 65, and a daughter, Marian, 35, were among 23 killed when a commuter plane crashed in Georgia. Tower was en route to a party promoting his book, "Conse quences," a ferociously defensive account of the Senate confirmation brawl. Some sug gest the sud denness of his death, coming as it did on the heels of the Senate deba cle, obscured T Tower o w e r s unique contri butions to his party, state and his country As a member and later chair man of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Tower was the archi tect of the American military buildup that Ronald Reagan used to end the Cold War with the So viet Union. Sen. Minority Leader Robert Dole of Kansas insists the U.S. vic tory in the Persian Gulf could also be traced to Tower's stewardship of the nation's defense. The war showcased the weaponry of Tower's arsenal. In times of national crisis. Pres ident Reagan twice turned to Tower. First as a strategic arms negotiator and later as chairman of the Special Review Board on the Iran-contra scandal. Associates say Tower hired the best and brightest aides, including women and minorities, and most are sprinkled now through all lev els and branches of government. "Washington is John Tower's town," former Texas Congress man Tom Loeffler, himself a Tow er alumnus, said when his mentor left the Senate in 1985. At the time, another former aide. Republican Cyndi Krier of San Antonio, was the only woman in the Texas Senate. Tower was the first Republican to win a statewide Texas race since reconstruction, snatching Lyndon Johnson's old senate seat in a 1961 special election. Short and stiff with slicked- back hair, tailored suits, starched shirts and French cuffs. Tower seemed the least likely person to lead Texas Republicans out of the political wilderness. But he did. Tower helped mold the GOP into a competitive force from the courthouse to the statehouse, and even the White House . power, says director Wishes of wildl services^ go ignotd Speci in 301 CLAS the M find c leade 7 p.m 847-5 HISP ASSC electii CHARLOTTE, N.C (AP)- The federal agencies thatnw age coastal fish and wildlife^ sources need the power tovek potentially destructive develof ments, a National Marine Fist eries Service biologist said Mot day. Without that veto, NMFSat the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Sen* only can make recommendation to other agencies that make dec sions about development " James R. Chambers, acting tor of NMFS's Office of Hal* Protection. He conceded in al interview such a veto power never be given to a wildlife source agency. Those decisions have led mass destruction of coastal™ tat and coastal resources, Char hers told the North Amer* Wildlife and Natural Resource Conference. The pressure more development along men tion's coasts is increasing, hesa't "By the year 2010, an estimate- 54 percent of the U.S. P°P U fj, will live within 50 miles of coast," he said. This trend, and its threa s' As student leaders, we are committed to: diversity creating an environment which fosters an understanding and awareness of a variety of cultures and backgrounds; promoting the involvement of all students within our organization; and respecting the various means an individual has of expressing his or her Aggie Spirit. The following organizations endorse this statement AggieCulture Aggie Democrats Aggie Muster Committee Aggie Orientation Leader Program Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Inc. Class of '92 Council Class of '93 Council Corps of Cadets COSGA Environmental Issues Committee of Student Goverment ExCEL (Excellence uniting Culture, Education, and Leadership) Fish Camp Gay and Lesbian Student Services MSC Black Awareness Committee MSC Hospitality MSC Jordan Institute MSC Student Conference on National Affairs Parents' Weekend Committee Texas A&M College Republicans RHA Sponsored by University Awareness for Culture Togetherness living marine resources, is I * 0 | ing particularly fast on the sou east Atlantic and Gulf coastSi said. jM On those coasts, fish spe c , valued by both recreational 3 commercial fishermen ‘ ire most completely dependent up esturine and coastal habitats their survival," Chambers sai. Habitat destruction may u J, important as overfishing™ “ destruction of those fish stoc < said. In Chesapeake Bay, he sai number of striped bass fell / P cent from the mid-1960s ° j mid-1980s, while the number hickory shad fell 96 p er alewife and blueback herring 92 percent and 66 perc en American shad disappeaj' 601 ' , f( Meanwhile, the bay s °y ^ population has declined by than 96 percent, he said. j "Half the bay's wetlands 3 40 percent of its forested have been destroyed," Ch? . said. "Ninety percent of n grass meadows, the pri lTie ery habitat have been lost. "More oil washes dpw ^ watershed's storm drains year than was spilled by Exxon Valdez." The Southeast has 300 estuaries containing lion acres of coastal mars / ^ commercial fishery landing j the South Atlantic and .i Mexico coasts have decreas percent since 1982, he said CELI Spirit of the whicf Cores story c to 1:1i - movi in whi millior killing MSC. LIBEF social cost is at 692 WHEI PARI sugg< that i Don’t befoi Regis to 5 Deidr soc JOUI p.m. i ASS ENT meet spea Sprir River gra Gem 342 more EL I even Pesi infor M ab Contir eack dale." Blai not a ] good c "I v nnent said. Wh stood House "If he wil an in courte or De said.