• v...”* wrv. .• ■•.W.v. THE BATTALION Page 4 College Station, Texas Thursday. September Ifi. 1971 Specials BRYAN ... 1816 Texas Ave. Good at Any Monterey House With This Coupon. n Monterey Dinner i Guacamole Salad, Chalupa, Chili Con Queso, Beef Taco, Two Enchiladas, Tamale, Chili, Beans, Rice, Tortillas, Hot Sauce and Candy. Reg. $2.00 $1.64 I Void after October 15,1971 J Good at Any Monterey House With This Coupon. Monterey Dinner j $1-64 I J Guacamole Salad, Chalupa, Chili Con Queso, Beef Taco, Two Enchiladas, Tamale, Chili, Beans, Rice, Tortillas, Hot Sauce and Candy. Reg. $2.00 Void after October 15,1971 Good at Any Monterey House With This Coupon. Fiesta Dinner Guacamole Salad, Beef Taco, Two Enchiladas, Tamale, Chili, Beans, Rice, Tortillas, Hot Sauce and Candy. Reg. $1.70 $1.44 Void after October 15,1971 Good at Any Monterey House With This Coupon. J “I Fiesta Dinner Guacamole Salad, Beef Taco, Two Enchiladas, Tamale, Chili, Beans, Rice, Tortillas, Hot Sauce and Candy. Reg. $1.70 l_ Void after October 15,1971 $1-44 j erne MEXICAN RESTAURANTS ® Rockefeller stands behind decision on Attica assault ATTICA, N.Y. (A*)—Gov. Nel son A. Rockefeller say he still stands behind the decision which sent state troopers into riot- wracked Attica prison, an assault which cost more than two-score lives. “I do not see how I could have done any differently,” Rockefeller told a news conference in New York on Wednesday. Overnight, the Republican gov ernor received renewal support from President Nixon in the un leashing Monday of more than 1,000 state troopers and sheriff’s deputies behind a barrage of tear gas from New York National Guard helicopters. Wearing helmets and gas masks, the massed state forces quelled the four-day Attica riot— worst in an American prison in at least a generation. Rockefeller added that he ac cepted “full responsibility” for the bloody Monday death toll— now set by the state Corrections Department at nine hostages and 32 convicts. A 42nd fatality had occurred earlier. The victim was a guard, William Quinn, 28, who died of wounds received in the first hours of the riot last week, when 1,200 Attica inmates rampaged through the prison, setting fires and tak ing hostages. Quinn was buned during the day on a hillside overlooking the 40-year-old maximum security prison, which houses a total of 2,254 inmates. Sunny skies re placed gray, rain-laden clouds that had overhung tl?e 54-acre prison compound for days. Quinn’s wife, Nancy, fought back tears as her husband’s cas ket was lowered into the earth. Nearby, one of her women neigh bors said: “They got too lenient with the inmates.” The scheduled burial of another guard, Richard Lewis, was de layed after funeral director Amos Grefrath claimed the body bore no bullet wounds. He said a sec ond funeral director, James F. Smith, concurred with him and signed a statement that “there were no visible bullet wounds.” Originally, eight of the Attica hostages—guards and other pris on employes—were said to have been killed by convicts who slit their throats with makeshift knives. A ninth hostage’s death was attributed to gunfire. However, a medical examiner’s report 24 hours later ascribed the eight deaths to gunshot wounds, and said there was no indication of throat slashing on the bodies. There was no immediate offi cial explanation of the source of the gunfire which killed the hostages. But State Corrections Commissioner Russell Oswald ad mitted to newsmen that the throat slitting reports were false, and indicated the hostages could have been subjected to gunfire from state troopers. The hostage victims repoi’tedly had been stripped of their own clothing and forced to don inmate garb. Oswald said this could have confused trooper marksmen. And Rockefeller said that, in the hazy confusion of tear gas and gunfire at Cellblock D where the rioters made their last stand, “accidents can very well happen.” Remaining unanswered, how ever, were a number of questions —how the reports of throat slit- tings originated, the origin of false reports that some of the hostages were killed before the Monday assault, and that at least one had been castrated, and what were the precise instructions giv en the assault forces. However, Hollis Chase, presi dent of the guards union at At tica, stuck by the original ver sion of the slayings and declared: “We’ve got people, our fellow guards, who carried off the bodies of these hostages. Their hands and feet were bound, their throats were slit from ear to ear.” In an apparent effort to fur ther clarification, the state police called to Attica a well-known pathologist, Dr. Henry Siegel, ATTENTION ALL FRESHMEN! MAKE SURE YOUR PICTURE WILL BE IN THE 1972 AGGIELAND YEARBOOK PICTURE SCHEDULE A-D — September 7-10 E-M — September 13-17 N-S — September 20-24 T-Z — September 27-Oct. 1 MAKE-UP WEEK OCTOBER 4-8 Corps, Freshmen: Uniform: Class A Winter Bring Poplin Shirt and Black Tie and Citation Cords, if any, Studio Will Furnish Blouses. Band Must Bring Own Blouses and Brass. Civilians: Coat and Tie. Pictures Will Be Taken From 8:00 a. m. to 5:00 p. m. NOTE: Bring Fee Slips To UNIVERSITY STUDIO 115 North Main — North Gate Phone: 846-8019 THE OFFICIAL Dallas Cowboy “Insiders” NEWSLETTER Read it evefy Friday in The Daily Eagle S This is the official authorized Dallas Cowboy publication that sells by subscription for $6.00 a year, brought free to you each Friday only in the Daily Eagle. THE NEWSLETTER CONTAINS INFORMATION AND SCOUTING REPORTS ABOUT THE DALLAS COWBOYS AND THEIR UPCOMING OPPONENT FOR THE WEEK. IT FEATURES STORIES AND COMMENTS BY THE MOST RESPECTED SPORTS WRITERS AND PERSONALITIES, SUCH AS: FRANK GIFFORD sports announcer abc-tv FRANK LUKSA SPORTS EDITOR FT. WORTH STAR TELEGRAM ANDY ANDERSON sports editor ft. worth press KYLE ROTE FOOTBALL ANALYST NBC-TV BLACKIE SHERROD SPORTS EDITOR DALLAS TIMES HERALD m medical examiner of Westchester County, adjacent to New York City. Pathology involves the analysis of the cause of death, and the manner and sequence in which it occurred. Siegel has had 30 years expe rience in the field, and formerly was executive deputy chief medi cal examiner in the prestigious New York City office. The acting cht examiner from the latter office, Michael Baden, also was summoned here. In view of the revised infor mation, blaming the hostage deaths on gunfire, press secre tary Ronald L. Ziegler was asked in Washington if President Nixon still stood by his backing of Rock efeller in the Attica assault. “Of course he does,” Ziegler replied. “The governor had the responsibility to deal with a very difficult situation. He met that responsibility ... the President’s not going to second guess him.” Nixon had expressed his sup port in a telephone call to Rocke feller Monday afternoon. Ziegler said the two had another tele phone conference Tuesday eve ning, after the disclosure that gunshot wounds killed the host ages. Unrest generated by the Attica riot spread to other prisons in New York and elsewhere. State troopers stood emergen cy patrol on the walls of Great Meadows prison at Comstock, N.Y., and Clinton state prison at Dannemora. At Great Meadows, where about 75 Attica rioters were transfer red, there was a four-hour out break of bottle-throwing and fire setting in the so-called “radical” wing of the prison. The outburst was described as minor and no injuries were reported. In the county jail at Atlanta, Ga., inmates threw food, broke fixtures and lights, and plugged and tore up plumbing. Sheriff Leroy Stynchcombe quoted one inmate as saying the prisoners were going to take control of the jail and that “Attica ain’t seen nothing yet.” The sheriff said he had re jected a list of prisoner demands which he called “silly.” Among them were request for hair spray and cologne, which Stynchcombe said they could use to “get drunk.” SBISA HALL CASH CAFETERIA Please excuse the inconvenience. Dut to renovation of the Sbisa Basement, lunch only will be served to our cash customers from 11:00 a. m. to 1:30 p. m., Sunday through Friday in the Sbisa Hall Annex, just above tlie basement. DID JIMMY DOOLITTLE FLY WITH THE TEXAS A&M AERO CLUB? For Information Call 846-5672 TEXAS A&M AERO CLUB, INC. TltS FV8 “FOR AN ATMOSPHERE YOU WILL ENJOY” Featuring: FRIDAY NIGHT—“The Southerns A Drawing for free albums will be held by the Budget Tapes & Record Shop. SAT. NIGHT — The Resurrections SUN. NIGHT — The Statutory Grapes Thursi Game A&M- Ark-C UTA- Baylo USC-1 Texas New I SMU- Dallas Housl Last ^ B By I Assi: Va Cors that him Hi betw lineb play behii four: ter. sets uses “I causi play “Wh the c play I ha in p: Od dene becai play< squa “L Ponderosa MOTOR INN South Hwy. 6, C.S Phone 846-5794