AGGIEIAND CREDIT UNION GREATER TEXAS FEDERAL CREDIT UNION Wc’vc mAcle i: 1 i 111e Gh an^e t'* v' *it ^ o* or 1 ^ ^ t-fVt 1 ur am Page 10 • The Battalion ^XAXE Tuesday • January 24, 1995 : We areieLxw,J t.&fifWi J ;S L. :. ^^ LAND GR A uxtirs • C oilc^slStntionMP } ><.»nis s - r e i nH«r^« w< >rm Mv*-< 1 ~^<3*W49~07T2 Bomer vows action on insurance fraud The Total Fitness Experience. • 3 Raquetball Courts > 2 Tennis Courts ' Basketball 1 Volleyball • Certified Instructors • Five Studios Over 6000 sq. ft. • Over 100 Classes Weekly • W'ater Aerobics • STEP Classes • 1/10 mile Indoor Track • Olympic Free Weights • Eagle/Cybex Circuit » Qualified Trainers • New Wfeigh t Room ‘ VfersaClimber ■ StairMasters ’ Treadmills AQUATICS • 8 Lane, 25 Yard Pool • Indoor, Heated New Year’s Resolution Special $19.95* BRYAN 1900 W. VILLA MARIA 823-0971 CALL FOR MORE INFO. COLLEGE STATION 2220 S. TEXAS AVE. 693-0073 (AEROBICS ONLY) AGGIE SPECIAL - OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK - - MONDAY-THURSDAY, 5:30AM - 12AM - *Some restrictions may apply. $10 OFF any semester membership! * *Good thru Feb. 15, 1995. Not valid with any other offer. DEPENDABLE AGGIES ’WANTED! HELP THE MEDALS ‘95 HIGH SCHOOL CONFERENCE SHOW THAT “AGGIE SPIRIT” and “HOSPITALITY” by volunteering TO HOUSE ONE OR MORE MINORITY HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS ON FRIDAY, JANUARY 27TH (BEGINNING AT MIDNIGHT UNTIL SATURDAY AT 8:00 AM). YOU WILL BE REWARDED! * PLEASE SIGN UP IN THE MEDALS OFFICE, DEPT. OF MULTICULTURAL SERVICES RM 137 MSC & * ATTEND A FUN-FILLED HOUSING MEETING ON TUESDAY, JANUARY 24TH AT 6:30 PM IN 292 MSC! For more information call: MEDALS 862-3361 Help jVlake a ’Difference For more information call: MEDALS 862-3361 be ci part of JVltzD^lCS '95! Commissioner also wants to make insurance more affordable AUSTIN (AP) — Gov. George W. Bush’s pick for Texas insur ance commissioner said Monday he wants to beef up fraud-fighting efforts and plans to meet with a grand jury that has accused the state of lax enforcement. “Fraud is very definitely a major problem,” Elton Bomer, a former state lawmaker from Montalba, told a Senate Fi nance subcommittee. Bomer said he’ll meet Feb. 8 with a Travis County grand jury that last month sent Bush a letter accusing the Texas Department of Insurance of failing to investigate fraud and citing “undue influence from the industry.” Bomer, who is awaiting Sen ate confirmation, said he re quested the grand jury meeting “to try to get at the root of the problem.” Texas Department of Insur ance funding to fight fraud has dropped 33 percent since 1993, from $3.5 million to $2.3 mil lion, Bomer said. He said he would like to move money from other, unspecified areas to strengthen anti-fraud efforts. “I think it needs to be in creased,” he said. Outgoing Insurance Commis sioner Rebecca Lightsey, who appeared before the subcom mittee with Bomer, noted that the state auditor already is re viewing the matter at her re quest to see “what changes need to be made, if any.” Bomer also said he planned to continue efforts at the agency that are aimed at ensur ing insurance is available and affordable for Texans. Sen. Gonzalo Barrientos, D- Austin, told him about an Austin man who was informed that his insurance was canceled because “his business was on the wrong side of town.” Bomer said he has asked Barrientos for details on that case. Bomer told reporters that, if asked, he would consider taking another look at anti-discrimina tion rules recently approved by Ms. Lightsey for Texas insurers. Bush had asked her to hold off on such major action because her term ends Feb. 1. British investigator criticizes Waco raid Families of victims take legal action against federal authorities MANCHESTER, England (AP) — A senior British police man on Monday criticized U.S. handling of the 1993 siege in Waco, Texas, where 79 mem bers of the Branch Davidian cult died. The raid by the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, T ah a c c o and Firearms was “doomed from the start” said Detective Chief Su perintendent Albert Yates at an inquest into the deaths of 23 Britons in Waco. Ten of the victims came from Manchester, and the inquest was held at the request of the Manchester coroner. Yates said an important as pect of the inquest “is allowing the families of those who died to stand up and ask questions.” Families of the British vic tims are joining in a multimil- lion-dollar legal action in the United States against federal authorities, whom they accuse of bungling the siege. A report by the U.S. Justice Department criticized FBI han dling of the incident but blamed the deaths of sect leader David Koresh. The raid, in which four U.S. agents and six sect members died, led to a 51-day stand-off at the Mount Carmel Center and was followed by an inferno in which the others died. Yates said the raid Feb. 28, 1993 had very little, if any, chance of success. “It put, quite clearly, police officers and those within the Mount Carmel center at unnec essary risk of tragic conse quences,” he said. “All was lost from the- moment the agents ar rived outside the center.” Former cop questioned about death of two sons HOUSTON (AP) — A for mer Houston police officer suf fering from a shotgun wound to his chest was questioned Monday about the deaths of his two young sons who were found murdered at his home. Frank Anthony Picone, 31, drove himself to the Spring Branch Memorial Hospital emergency room Sunday evening with a gaping wound to his chest, Houston police spokesman Robert Hurst said. Picone, who was in stable condition Monday, told offi cers he had been shot at his home. On arrival at the sec ond-story condominium, po lice found the bodies of 15- month-old Julian Picone and 5-year-old Franco Picone. The boys, who live with their mother, were visiting their fa ther for the weekend. The couple is divorced. The infant, apparently drowned, was found “laying on the floor in the bathroom outside the bathtub. The bathtub had about 6 inches of water in it,” Hurst said. Franco, apparently asleep when he died, was shot in the back with the same gun that wounded his father, authori ties said. The gun was found next to the boy’s body. Police called Picone, fired from the force last August af ter less than a year, a suspect but did not immediately charge him with the murders. He was questioned by officers in his hospital bed Monday. Hurst stopped short of say ing Picone’s shotgun wound was self-inflicted, but doctors said it was a close-range wound surrounded by gun powder burns. Dr. Dimitris Kyriazis, a surgeon who worked on Pi cone, said the man didn’t say how he had been shot when he walked into the emergency room Sunday with the 3-inch- by-3-inch wound. “He didn’t say anything. He was in severe pain, mostly asking for pain medication,” Kyriazis said. Hurst said Picone was fired by the police depart ment after violating depart ment rules, but refused to further characterize reasons for the dismissal. WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE SALE IMS Engineering & Office Supply STEEL SHELVING Starting at. 1* r IVW n , iiP~ SCRATCH & DENT FILE CABINETSJ|gg Starting at^ -06^ H WOODEN ^ DESKS pfillllt® Starting at. BOOKCASES COMPUTER DESKS Starting at^ ^ ^ METAL * ^ ^ DESKS Monday glG SELECTION OF Sale Ends Friday USED CHAIRS J ai ^y3hl^ ENGINEERING & OFFICE SUPPLl^^^^^^ On Longmire Drive past Hope Lumber across from Federal Express in College Station v