r-!. 1 BONFIRE Off Campus Aggies invites all OFF CAMPUS STUDENTS to be a part of the tradition. Come out and CUT with the OFF CAMPUS HOGS 0 LAST CUT this SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 6th and SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 7th (HOG LOG) Meet in Zachry parking lot at 8:03 a.m. Wear leather boots, jeans, pot (hard hat), sunglasses, lunch. Cut classes at cut site. For more info call: Eric 764-2177, Eliot 846'6939, Paul 696-5408 Page 4 The Battalion Friday, November 5,1993 Lithographs recovered after 4 years The Associated Press ill JEWELRY AUCTION V™ 11:00 AM, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1993 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS ^ RAMADA INN, 1502 TEXAS AVE. LOCATION: Busi. Hwy 6 to Hotel, 2 blocks south of Texas A&M on Texas Ave. VIEWING: Saturday 10:00 AM. Come early. LIQUIDATING JEWELRY FROM RETAIL CLOSING, FACTORY AND WHOLESALE YEAR END SURPLUS LOOSE DIAMONDS 3/4 TO 2 CARAT I I 14K GOLD FASHION RINGS, BRACELETS & NECKLACES, WITH GEM STONES 14K GOLD & DIAMOND WEDDING SETS & BANDS WATCHES BY LONGINES, WHITTNAUER, BULOVA, SEIKO, & CITIZEN APPROXIMATELY $250,000 OF QUALITY JEWELRY MUST BE SOLD!! BUY YOUR CHRISTMAS OR SPECIAL OCCASION GIFTS AT PRICES YOU WANT & WITH COMPLETE CONFIDENCE IN QUALITY HOUSTON- Eight litho graphs stolen from the late Mexi can painter Rufino Tamayo four years ago and then seized in the breakup of an illegal South Texas money laundering operation were returned to the artist's foundation Thursday by federal authorities. "It is very important for us to get these pieces of art," Oscar Gonzalez, of the Mexican attorney general's office, said after accept ing the paintings. "We are very, very pleased to have these important works of art back." "We're excited and pleased to return these treasures," U.S. At torney Gaynelle Griffin Jones said. Tamayo, who died in 1991 at the age of 91, is one of the centu ry's most famous Mexican painters whose work has been compared to such modern artists as Braque, Picasso and Miro. His work, over seven decades, fea tures fiery color schemes, abstract figures and political themes. Tamayo also is known for his social work, building hospitals, orphanages and other facilities for the poor in Mexico. His museum in Mexico City is considered among the most respected in the country. The eight paintings being re turned to Mexico were stolen from the artist's home in Mexico City in 1989. U.S. Customs agents, working undercover in McAllen, were of fered the paintings after about a year of participating in money laundering operations along the Texas-Mexico border. Part of the operation included s( setting up their own "Choza Rica," or ^rich shack," authorities said. "The case actually was not about artwork," John Hensley, Customs assistant commissioner for enforcement, said. "It was about infiltrating orga nizations that were moving illicit moneys across the border and avoiding detection by the Cus toms Service. "When you're known as a crook in the business, people come out of the woodwork and that's how this artwork got out there. The individuals thought they would be nice easy targets to sell this artwork to with no trace back to them." Three people were arrested and a money-exchanging house in McAllen known as Principal Casa de Gambia Inc. was shut. Agents seized some $3.5 million in cash and property and say the investi gation across the country subse quently has grown to seizures topping $30 million. One of the defendants in the case has died and two others face sentencing later this month to up to 5 years in prison and $250,000 in fines. The lithographs they attempted to fence are artist's proofs, mean ing they were part of the original prints made for the artist's benefit. Vernon Weckbacher, curator of collections for the McAllen Inter national Museum, termed the paintings "quite significant" and estimated their value at $300,000 to $1 million. FREE 14K GOLD BRACELET TO FIRST 15 BUYERS TERMS: All items sold with seller's guaranty that jewelry is authentic as to description. Payment due at sale by cash, approved check, Mastercard, Visa, American Express & Discover. This is partial list & subject to change. Houstonians love, hate their neighborhoods The Associated Press Jim Swigert SALE RAIN OR SHINE Lie.9214 (Class of *70) 409-693-0694 SWICO Auctions MSC Barber Shop Serving All Aggies! Cuts and Styles Reg. haircuts starting at $6. Eight operators to serve you Theresa-Ramona-Jennifer-Mary-Yolanda Wendy-Troy-Hector 846-0629 _ Open Mon.-Fri. 8-5 Located in the basement of the Memorial Student Center HOUSTON — Anthony Nixon isn't fazed by the maze of mansions, businesses and apartments he calls home. "I like it here because it's eclectic. I think anyone who moves into this neighborhood has to know that," Nixon said of the urban Mon trose area. "I think they're kind of bigots to move in here and then complain about things," said Nixon, whose neat two-story home sits down the street from a sometimes raucous Irish pub. Whiners, he suggested, might consider a move to the more orderly suburbs. Nixon, like droves of other Houstonians, didn't vote in this week's election. But if he had, he would have cast his ballot against a proposal to bring zoning to the nation's fourth-largest city. Many of his more civic-minded residents felt the same way, and the proposal failed Tuesday, 52 percent to 48 percent. It was the third time in 45 years voters here have quashed zoning efforts. The defeat means Houston — the land of erratic and explosive development — remains the largest city in the nation without a zoning ordinance. "It's embarrassing to admit that Houston is once again going to stay in the Dark Ages," zoning proponent Bart Truxillo, who lives in the Heights neighborhood, another mixed-up area near downtown. Zoning proponents said the ordinance was needed to protect residential areas in Houston, where businesses can wander into some neigh borhoods with impunity. Opponents campaigned heavily against the measure, calling it a costly measure that would restrict growth. Although Truxillo and Nixon are at oppo site sides of the issue, both live in neighbor hoods that are distinguished for their hodge podge development. In Nixon's neighborhood, one can walk to a convenience store, one of the most exclusive restaurants in town or even an adult book store. The trendy Montrose area also is home to restaurants, bars, grocery stores, drug stores, tanning parlors, tattoo parlors, used clothing stores, washaterias, gay bars and at least one rather wild leather store. Runaway youths, some of them working as prostitutes, and other homeless people walk along Westheimer, a major thoroughfare that cuts through the area. But on the side streets, trees shade many quaint middle-class homes and small apart ment complexes. People from all socioeconomic levels can live in Montrose. On one street, a one-bed- room apartment that rents for $465 a month stands next to a two-story house that is selling for $259,000. And perched on the edge of Montrose is a majestic group of old mansions that are sur rounded by a stiff iron fence. Truxillo, meanwhile, lives in the historic Heights in a whimsical, 100-year-old house that many consider a local landmark. Victims of California fires return to ashes The Associated Press MALIBU, Calif. — Alice Kavaldgian cried as she trudged through Genuine Rugged BULLHIDE 1st Quality LIZARD Smooth Backcut Python OSTRICH SNAKE W $ 219 99 $31899 $ 29 179 99 JEANS ENTIRE STOCK! % t Apparel GIANT GROUP! 1/2 OFF! BUDYKSr FELT KARMAN' * Apparel Panhandle SlinA Where Quality A Fashion la A Tradition HATS Wranqler BRAND ENTIRE STOCK KIDS & MORE! MEN’S LADIES SHIRTS $ 24 99 ADULTS TOPS LARGE GROUP LONG SLEEVE 20% $4099 $■1099 OFF! Wranqler BRAND COWBOY CUT 13MWZ Si 936 Size Restrictions Apply to Sale Price. Quantities Limited. WHERE TEXANS GET THEIR BOOTS!™ STATION 1400 HARVEY ROAD NEAR POST OAK MALL 696-8800 • MON-SAT 9-9; SUN 12:30-5:30 Sale Ends November 7. LAYAWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS! VISA m r aidgic the ashes of her home. "This is it," she said, pointing to the clothes she was wearing. "I don't even have a sweater." .. Kavaldgian was among thousands of residents chased from this celebrity enclave by an arson wildfire that roared out of the Santa Mon ica Mountains on Tuesday and burned 200 houses. One person was killed. Some returned Thursday to see whether any of their past was still standing. Others waited at roadblocks hastily put up to allow fire or aircraft bombing runs over the remaining hot spots. By Thursday, firefighters had contained 70 percent of the 18,500-acre wildfire, one of a series of blazes that have destroyed 1,000 homes, blackened 200,000 acres and injured nearly 200 people in Southern Cal ifornia since Oct. 26. Several were blamed on arsonists. The Malibu fire claimed actor Sean Penn's $4 million Spanish-style mansion along with Ali McGraw's home, with its panoramic view of the Pacific Ocean. "I'm grateful to be alive. I'm grateful to my friends who helped save my animals. And I'm grateful to all the firefighters for their extraordi nary efforts in saving so many people's lives," the star of the 1970 hit movie "Love Story” said in a statement released through her publicist. Many celebrity homes, including the 100 mansions in the exclusive Malibu Colony, were spared. With cool sea breezes mixing with wind gusts in the hills, crews and firefighting aircraft focused Thursday on the hot spots around Fern- wood in Topanga Canyon. Forecasters weren't expecting a return of the hot, dry Santa Ana winds from the deserts northeast of Los Angeles that fanned the worst of the fires. Mike Pierson, 33, returned to his wood-sided house to find it intact. His relief was subdued. "My cousin's home is gone. My best friend's home is gone. Every person I grew up with, their home is gone," Pierson said. "I look here and I can't even tell where people live." Chris Mitchell sat in her fully loaded car in the middle of a highway, unable to get home. "Last night we rode our bikes up the highway so we know our house is all right," she said. "But we're tired of driving around and liv ing out of our car." Nelson Carpentier returned to his Las Flores Canyon lot to find his home destroyed and his restored 1970 Mercedes-Benz a burned out shell. Sitting next to the car were the remains of a 20-foot Wellcraft boat. As family members dug spoons, metal tools, ceramic cups and pots out of the ash, Carpentier expressed anger at the arsonist who authori ties said set the fire. Lingerie Show every friday M with KTSR Drink Specials with Complimentary Buffet followed by Trash Disco XCOLLEGE STATION HILTON and Conference Center 801 University Drive East, College Station, Texas 77840 409/693-7500 AUSTIl' tnly skin tomes to t jo deeper toiding to; Attracts j percent those wit! cording t 'Beauty an hyUnivers tconomist md Michi tconomist J 'No mr )d-looki fetter ever "A b penalized 1 a factory versity." 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