Page 2 • THE BATTALION State Monday •May29, C NEWS Bush vetoes liquor sales bill Memorial Day honors veterans of U.S. wars Today is Memorial Day, a federal legal holiday commemorating veterans of United States wars. The holiday previously celebrated on May 30 is now observed on the last Monday of May. Memorial Day was first established in 1868 by Gen. John A. Logan and was called Decoration Day on which the graves of Civil War veterans were decorated. □ The bill would have set up exclusive sales territories for whole sale liquor and wine distributor companies. re spective territories of liquor and wine brands whose con- Health course may be added to core curriculum The Faculty Senate approved a change in the core curriculum that will require students to take a one-hour health and fitness course for part of their four-hour kinesiology requirement. The course will focus on issues such as stress, substance abuse, HIV/AIDS and cardiovascular fitness and be offered by the Department of FHealth and Kinesiology. The Faculty Senate's proposal will take effect if approved by other units of the University administration. Recycling center for used motor oil opens AUSTIN (AP) — Legislation that would have established ex clusive sales territories for seven distributors of wine and liquor has been killed by Gov. George W. Bush’s first veto. Bush’s spokeswoman, Karen Hughes, said the governor ve toed the measure — which dealt with alcoholic beverage permits and regulation — because of an amendment added by Sen. Ken Armbrister, D-Victoria. That amendment would have set up exclusive sales territories for seven wholesale liquor and wine distribution companies. ‘He feels it’s bad for the con- sumer and it runs counter to his belief in marketplace competi tion,” Ms. Hughes said after Sat urday’s veto. Under the bill, six distribu tion companies owned by five Texas families and one jointly owned by a Chicago family and Texans would have become the exclusive distributors in their tracts they had held on May 1. The bill was sponsored by Rep. Kim Brimer, R-Fort Worth, and Rep. Chris Harris, R-Arling ton. Brimer chairs the House Business and Industry Commit tee and Harris heads the Senate Administration Committee. Armbrister said beer distribu tors operate with exclusive sales territories. He said he believed the territories were necessary because distillers haphazardly switch distributors, leaving re tailers and the distributors with out a supply. But opponents said the mea sure would have created virtual monopolies for the Texas fami lies and hurt retailers and smaller distributors. Passage of the bill had caught the major distillers off guard, leaving them with little legisla tive relief except to lobby the governor. Fred A. Meister, president of the Distilled Spirits Council of America, had said the bill “would remove competition, fos ter costly distribution ineffi ciencies and ultimately harm small Texas retailers and con sumers. ... This bill is anti-free enterprise.” TFie Public Used Motor Oil and Filter Recycling Center opened in College Sta tion earlier this month to educate people on protecting water resources and recy cling motor oil and filters. The new recycling center provides a safe and healthy way to dispose of motor oil and filters since dumping this waste on the ground or down drains is illegal. The center is located next to the fuel station at the Public Services Cen ter, 261 3 Texas Ave. S. House OKs property rights measu □ The bill allows landowners to sue for relief from gov ernment regulations. AUSTIN (AP) — The Senate was embroiled in a last-minute debate Sunday over a House- passed bill that would give Tex ans the power to sue state and local governments over action that devalues their property. The bill by Rep. Susan Combs, R-Austin, was passed on an unrecorded House vote Saturday night, despite objec tions from several lawmakers. Senate approval still was needed before Monday’s end of the 1995 Legislature if the measure were to reach Gov. George W. Bush’s desk. But when the bill came up in the Senate, Sen. Carlos Truan, D-Corpus Christi, talked for more than two hours against it and no vote was immediately taken. The bill would create legal grounds for lawsuits against state or local government for actions that restrict a person’s use of private property and re duce the market value of the property by at least 25 percent. It would require state agen cies and local governments to assess whether potential action would reduce property values. The bill has come under fire from environmentalists and some law- ★ 3a monetary awards. “Any possibility of a sui:-^ money was removed,” Ccc-'O said. ~ Negotiators also include. provision that would req^T property owners to pay tht-J-L gal costs of all the partial they sue and lose. “That’s a real good disir.: tive for frivolous suits,”Co;. said. “I don’t trJlCI you’ll find -p/"' body these thi: J makers, who said the increase in the number of new lawsuits would cost the state and cities millions of dollars. Combs, however, said that concern was ad dressed when House and Sen ate negotiators amended the bill to disallow lawsuits for on. ‘CRTS Under bill, landor." would onljl allowed toil for relief::j government’ T1 ulations. ;urn( A leadir.. m d 1 v i r o nme:;hat group vqeadi doubts atuvith ante i T1 the bill. “This bill passed in par. cause Susan Combs misleCity people of the House ofRnotic sentatives about whattinue does and does not do, sai amas Kramer, director of the'and chapter of the Sierra Club hanc and 1 Electronic debit card brings efficiency to food stain w theii fmon wont • wron House OKs governing board for Aquifer □ The Lone Star Card can only be used at grocery stores. It has cut down on fraud and reduced adminis trative costs. AUSTIN (AP) —- An elected govern ing board would be established to oversee the Edwards Aquifer, a huge underground river in Central Texas, un der a bill that got final FHouse approval Sunday. The Senate still needed to consider the measure. The legislation would establish an Edwards Aquifer Authority board. The panel would include 15 members elected from single-member districts in the eight-county area. Seven would come from Bexar County, four from the western side of the region and four from the eastern side. The panel would include two more non-voting members, one from the west and one from downstream. Man shot at high school graduation party LA MARQUE(AP) — A man was shot and killed while trying to break up an argument at a high school grad uation party, police said. Broderick Keith Crowder, 20, was found shot in the back of the head about 1 :45 a.m. Saturday in the dri ver's seat of his car, which had skidded into the front yard of a residence. Crowder was airlifted to John Sealy FHospital in Galveston, where he died at 10:40 a.m. Saturday, a hospital spokeswoman said. HOUSTON (AP) — A funny thing is happening in Texas as food stamps go the way of the horse and buggy. The cost of the food stamp program is down because the pa per coupons used for decades are being replaced by the Lone Star Card — the nation’s most ambi tious use of a reusable electronic debit card. Those savings were expected. But what was not anticipated was the amount of federal mon ey actually spent on food is ris ing, even though the number of people using food stamps has re mained fairly constant. “I didn’t expect the dramatic rise in grocery sales,” says John Sharp, the Texas comptroller who first proposed the card in 1991. “It’s paying dividends I didn’t know.” Unveiled late last year in a test program involving 16,000 families in Houston and in rur al Chambers County just east of Houston, the Lone Star Card expanded Feb. 1 to include all of Houston’s 220,000 food stamp families. February grocery sales using the card were $29 million. March sales jumped to more than $33 million. Some stores re ported grocery sales using the card increased as much as 12 percent compared with earlier food stamp sales. Flushed with success, the pro gram moves to Dallas and north Texas in June and then gradual ly to the rest of the state. “By the time this year’s over with, we will eliminate food stamps in Texas and a heck of lot of fraud and black market at tached to them, bunches of over head, and food stamps will begin to be used again for what they were sup posed to — and that’s buying food,” Sharp says. “I’m pretty proud of it.” With 1.3 million house holds getting food stamps in Texas, the state ac- Gov. Bush counts for about 10 percent of all food stamp coupon recipi ents nationally. The coupons alone cost $4.7 million annually to print, an other $460,000 to ship and $2.4 million for final processing. They’re used once and then shredded. Sharp figures that’s money Texas will save the fed eral government. The plastic card looks like a regular bank card and works in almost the same way. Each hold er’s account is replenished dur ing the first four days of each month with that family’s allot ment for food stamps. Purchases then are debited electronically at the grocery store checkout. If the card is lost or stolen, it’s useless without the holder’s PIN — a personal identification num ber. Even if the PIN is discov ered, the card holder can get the electronics of the card disabled by calling a toll-free number to report the loss. “You can’t use the food stamp portion of the card on street corners to buy crack co caine,” Sharp says. “You have to use it to buy food, whether you like it or not. “I knew we were going to take a good bite out of fraud. People were using food stamps on street corners and trading in a black market, and common sense would say that if you can only use this thing at a compatible machine and the only place com patible machines are is in gro cery stores, people are going to get caught.” Even with a compatible ma chine, nine people at a Houston meat market got caught in March when electronic tracking of benefits showed questionable transactions. The arrests broke a ring estimated to have bilked the food stamp program out of $1 million over the years. “You’ll never totally eliminate fraud, but it’s going to take a big bite out of it,” Sharp said. Grocers love the card for its simplicity. Cashiers merely run it through an electronic scanner like a credit card transaction. And there’s no pile of paper coupons at the end of the day. “It’s worked tremendously,” Gil Russell, director of informa tion systems for Houston-based Fiesta Mart, a supermarket chain that draws the largest number of food stamp users in the state. “It has reduced our adminis trative costs. We don’t have to count paper food stamps and rec oncile them at the end of each day. And we found our sales were up for food stamp purchas es, just because we think it has reduced fraud.” Users also report satisfaction with the simplicity, convenience and security. “Before if I lost the checks or if something happened to them, they were just gone,” said one Houston mother of two, who asked that she be identified only by her first name, Becky. “With the card, if I lose it, it is re- of comments in the past , food stamps,” she saic that the Lone Star Car:," rp. like a bank card. “Nobo r ,, the difference. They c ?j a ( that much attention." ^ Big losers in the dea • out-of-state firms that .1 federal food st^mp ( £ ret * Sharp said they wa g ec c[ r i Vi successful lobbying e thwart his plan to mov into the electronic age. The program, whic dent Children benefits electronic card. "You can't use the card on street corners to buy crack cocaine.' — John Sharp, Texas comptroller placed. It’s a lot less hassle. It’s a lot more security.” The woman, who has been on food stamps for about two years, says it’s also helped with her self-esteem, removing the stigma of standing in a long checkout line and handing over a pile of food stamp coupons. “I’ve had lots of looks and lots men It caught the attention of 30 other states, is evolvitp i the addition of Aid F° r - on i ( Con f That has drawn the m vate check-cashing firrt^o^ handle welfare checks' 0 g e welfare recipients meiv jyj have personal bankiccou )U jj- they sometimes endupp^j^ exorbitant fees to ______ cashing companies. vor , “People moaning' *1^ making a tonofq re{ cashing AFDC cfc rp not on groceries,’ ^ a ti sympathetic Sharp^j e “That’s fixing to t c iear the window. ieas “It’s really a P^y. r0 j ample of what’s with government,” he: jyj “What’s wrong with go ver yror is not necessarily the cor.- or lot of people will sayweo-j e |j feed poor kids. en ^ “But they’re sick and t] seeing where their mone' rp either to some guy in Ne> or( or some crack dealer i D > iar town Dallas.’ >lac S' CROWN CLEANERS — 613 East University Drive In Randall’s Center 846-4064 Present coupon w/incoming order MEN’S BUSINESS SHIRTS Choice of Starch Laundered on hangers 79 Exp. 6/17/95 No Limits PANTS/JEANS Laundered or Dry Cleaned ■u- $ 1 99 Silk Extra Exp. 6/17/95 No Limits PLAIN SWEATERS & PLAIN BLOUSES IBr $ 2 29 Each Silk Extra Exp. 6/17/95 No Limits 3 PANTS Dry Cleaned Only $ 4 99 Silk & Pleats Extra Exp. 6/17/95 No Limits 2 PIECE PLAIN SUITS OR DRESSES $ 4 59 Silk & Pleats Extra Exp. 6/17/95 No Limits Comforters (All Sizes-Laundered Only) $099 Exp. 6/17/95 No Limits DiTTOJ COPIESV Welcome Back Ags! 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