•f NEED A JOB? THE KIDS KLUB IS SEEKING STAFF FOR THE 2001 SPRING SEMESTER Are you a fun person? Do you enjoy working with kids? AVK >U/>$ College Station Looking for valuable work experience? Are you available Mon.-FrL, 2:45 p.m. to 6:15 p.m.? If you answered yes to any of these questions, we may have a job for you. Applications are now being accepted for the Kids Klub After School Program at the College Station Conference Center thru November 29 th at 5 p.m. Employment to begin January 2, 2001 College Station ISD is an Equal Opportunity Employer For more information call: Male & Female Staff needed! the kids KLUB 764-3831 Apartment Hunting? Page 6A STATE Wednesday, Nover,j^j^2—- THE BATTALION River alcohol ban consider Central Texas leaders study drinking at parks and r. 7- idea of banning alcohol along Ce tral Texas parks and rivers is spreading, with San Marcos city of ficials now considering a similar proposal. Officials say a drinking problem that began years ago has prompted them to study banning alcohol in their city parks, many of which are near the San Marcos River. “The area by the falls in the riv er, the people drink and they get belligerent,” Jane Roach, a member of the San Marcos Parks and Recre ation Advisory Board, told the San Antonio Express-News in Tuesday's edition. “I don't even go down there anymore. People use the parks like a bar.” In New Braunfels, the city coun cil has proposed banning alcohol on sections of the Guadalupe and Co mal rivers designated as a central business district. Some San Marcos residents wor ry that if New Braunfels bans drink ing while tubing, that could send more troublemakers to the San Marcos River. The Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission last month did not act on the New Braunfels plan, instead recommending that the city rework its proposal. San Marcos Parks board mem ber Marvin Nile said drinking in the parks has been a concern for years. “The parks are for children, not for alcoholics to do their stuff,” said Nile. Even though the San Marcos proposal does noti Parks Director RodneyC there are concerns the would become more pop rowdy, heavy-drinking crowd if open containersarij from bank to bank on Braunfels rivers. New Braunfels reside: plained last summer contributed to problems eluded profanity, nudityi ing on the rivers. City offs this week they still hope state approval for the ban The San Marcos advisi will likely hold public hi the coming months before ering a recommendation If council, Cobb said. een sor veterar jn injurei x'hers sa Dr. Robe •chers fi item Me ;ch is j idrome” laley a idrome lictures a tn comb nerve gas t Hect repe 1‘Thishi of symptor person to p HThe fine Jc Asser lorth Ame Theysa : to the i basal gi paired s Victim’s family sues Dillard I Damag use gen ARLINGTON (AP) — Relatives of a man fatally shot at a mall by an off-duty police officer filed a S50 million wrongful death claim Monday against the offi cer and Dillard’s Department Stores Inc. The lawsuit, filed in a state district court, alleges that Arlington police Sgt. Keith Humphrey used unjustified deadly force in June against 41-year-old Roy Don Bearden. Humphrey, who was working as a security guard in plain clothes, shot Bearden four times after chasing the unarmed man through Dillard’s and struggling with him. Papers filed in the lawsuit contend that Dillard’s was negligent in supervising the officer. Tom Carse, the family’s attorney, said the large claim is designed to get the jury’s attention about the seriousness of the case. “That's the starting point for placing value on human life,” Carse, who represents Ronnie, Misty and Dawn Bearden, Bearden's brother and two daughters, said in Tuesday’s edition of the Arlington Morning News. The officer has said he fired shots only after Bear den, who was suspected of stealing a $50 razor at a nearby Sears store, shouted that he wasannq peared to be reaching for a gun. A Tarrant County grand jury declined 66 [The large claim is] tin starting point for placi value on human life,' —TomC Bearden family ai Humphrey in the shooting last November, ternal investigation cleared the officer of wroiB An autopsy by the Tarrant County medicals er’s office showed Bearden had cocaine in when the shooting occurred. 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