1 # Ken Hen!-] House members ' i ■ deny Park links azi metintlifi United Press International CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Police iy y K refuse to divulge the contents of a Claude Hi ‘ science n led his Id the bead ’t Wi n contiae Monaraij withandi lid. "h without i Houste Battalion photo by Jim Crawley Why should I have to keep in step? Reveille IV eagerly awaits the upcoming A&M-Kansas game, ready to strut before onlooking crowds. attacks blacks ket of his khaki pants. “From the way he was dressed, he seemed to he disorganized, ” said Lt. C. L. Owens of the Mecklen burg County Police Department. “If he had been part of a Nazi or ganization, I think he would have had spit-shined boots and a uni form. ” Harold A. Covington, comman der of the National Socialist Party of North Carolina, said Wilson was an “official supporter” of the Nazi Party but the party did not order the shooting of the blacks. “An official supporter simply is some one who supports the party fi nancially and through activism, Covington said. “This is not actually a membership status, he added. handwritten note found on the body of a white youth wearing a Nazi armband who killed one man and wounded three other persons in a 12-shot attack on 200 blacks at a Labor Day church picnic. Police identified the youth as Kenneth Neal Wil son, 17, who killed himself with a 30-30 rifle after the Monday attack, and said officers .identllu were questioning Wilson’s relatives iet ” j a Officers hoped the parents could MdentJ P r()V ' c ^‘ some reason for the young man’s apparently unprovoked attack on the blacks. He wore a swastika on a red armband on his green work- shirt. The note was found in a poc- United Press International WASHINGTON — Most of the congressmen who got campaign do nations from businessman Tongsun Park knew little about him or his alleged connection with Korean government interests, they or their aides said yesterday. Rep. Frank Thompson, D-N.J., for instance, “wouldn’t know Tongsun Park if he rode in here on a rickshaw,” an aide told UPI. Thompson was listed as a 1970 re cipient of $100 from Park in an in dictment made public yesterday which charged the South Korean socialite with failing to register as a foreign agent and trying to influence congressmen with money, trips to Korea and parties. Neigher Thompson nor his staff suspected Park was “a representa tive of the government of Korea,” the New Jersey congressman’s aide said. The indictment did not charge the congressman with anything il legal, since it was legal prior to 1974 to accept contributions from foreign ers so long as they were not listed as agents of foreign governments. Rep. John Murphy, D-N.Y., listed as receiving $500 in 1970, said he knew of the donation but did not know Park at the time. Rep. Eligio de la Garza, D-Tex., listed as receiving $500 in 1970, said through an aide he did get such a donation, but knew little about Park. Park was once by the office to see if rice grew in de la Garza’s dis trict, and de la Garza went to one Park party, his aide said, “and that’s all.” Rep. John Rrademas, D-Ind., was listed as receiving $500 in 1970. The indictment also said Park gave him $2,950 in 1974 to cover costs of a fund raising reception at the Georgetown Club. Rrademas, in a statement, said he welcomed Park’s indictment and noted Assistant Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti had said none of the members of Congress mention- Ciyy> € 4103 S. TEXAS AVE. Bryan Place Bldg. Suite 208 846-5018 Saturdays by Appointment 10% DISCOUNT ON STYLES OR MERCHANDISE WITH THIS AD ; on W introvei START YOUR TIFFANY COLLECTION WITH A16 oz. COKE: ariftinnijiiiinnnnnnnfininrni • Now you can get Tiffany-styled glasses every time you go to a Whataburger® restaurant. Just come in and order the 16 oz. Coca-Cola special. You’ll not only get a big cup of Coke, you’ll get a glass to go along with it. Both for only 59 Whataburger, Inc. 1977 105 DOMINIK DR. COLLEGE STATION 1101 TEXAS BRYAN ed in the indictment was under investigation for illegal costs. “Park never intimated to me that he was an agent of the South Korean government, nor did he make any overtures to me on behalf of that government,” said Rrademas. “Moreover, my voting record has been consistently hostile to the in terests of the South Korean gov ernment and I have been a strong critic of that government’s repres sive policies.” Rep. William Broomfield, R-Mich., listed as receiving $1,000 in 1970, has found no record of such a donation, his office said. An aide to Rep. Morris Udall, D-Ariz., said Park made a $300 do nation to the congressman’s 1970 campaign. The check was a legiti mate donation, signed by “T. S. Park,” and Udall did not know Park at the time, his aide said. Udall has been outspoken in his opposition to “repression” by the South Korean Government and if the Park donation was intended to make Udall a friend of the regime, “it failed miserably,” he said. Rep. Thomas Foley, D-Wash., was listed as receiving a $500 dona tion in 1970. His aide said the dona tion has been confirmed, but “we did not know that he, Park, was ap parently an agent of a foreign coun try,” an aide said. The indictment mentioned that Park once asked Foley to send a letter — which Park himself had drafted — to the Ko rean government praising Park. Foley refused to send the letter, his aide said. Sen. Harry Byrd, I-Va., was listed as receiving $500 in 1970. An aide said Byrd “had not known per sonally of that donation” and the name of the check, “T. S. Park,” meant nothing to anybody on Byrd’s staff at the time. A spokesman for Rep. John McFall, D-Calif., also noted there was nothing in the indictment to in dicate McFall ever knew Park was “anything but a businessman.” Police officer critically shot United Press International FORT WORTH — A policeman responding to a call about a drunken man with a gun was shot and criti cally wounded yesterday. Police said the officer was a 21- year veteran of the force, but did not release his name, pending notification of relatives. Officers said the policeman was shot an unknown number of times in the stomach. An elderly man was taken into custody at the scene. Yarbrough loses license i United Press International AUSTIN — The Texas Supreme Court yesterday accepted the resig nation of Donald B. Yarbrough as an attorney licensed to practice in Texas. Justice Sam Johnson read a brief statement in which the nine- member high court said it accepted THE BATTALION Paae 13 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1977 the resignation of Yarbrough, who stepped down as an associate justice of the court in July rather than face impeachment proceedings by the legislature. "It is ordered by the court that the license of Donald D. Yarbrough to practice law in Texas be cancel led,” Johnson said. Hu Kii Mon. Fri. 10 8:30* Sat. 10-6 - V, flS WUlf ••• ipskitifis you can ajjfpiui Manor East Mall Texas Ave. at Villa Maria Men’s Levi’s DENIM JEANS Boot Style 15 60 Levi's® new Dura Plus® jeans fade just like our regular jeans but polyester has been added for extra strength and less wrinkles. Boot jeans are slightly flared to fit easily over jeans. Sizes 28 to 38 waist; assorted inseams. 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