stimony in eighth week i nt dm i i mliun Kage 3 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1977 Davis prints not found in mansion United Press International Bay none of the 44 prints found ^ 0r ganizai* e T. Cullen Davis mansion n senatorp|L e d those of the millionaire »ts wishinj norial Stud ake place ( US ■er defendant. Igerprint expert James Slaugh- L S aid he could not identify a red bloody palm print found on at the top of the basement Davis’ 12-year-old- oighter, Andrea Wilburn, was ("shot to death in the basement, partial palm print found near the zech hijackers ask for asylum "■-Texas person. Gi Tower p; el y after tlt_ >1 Former Stlli is does not ill be no ms to wall Unite{ t Press International a sack lun|r West Germany — Knan and a man dressed in a |h uniform hijacked a Czechos- IVlgy jk airliner at gunpoint Tuesday ■forced it to fly to Frankfurt k Thursdau tre they surrendered peacefully dder Theafe (sked West German authorities -student.liLlitical asylum. blood smear on the wall was iden tified by Slaughter as belonging to a maid employed at the Davis mansion at the time of the murder. Prose cutor Joe Shannon Jr. said it was necessary to establish the identity of the person who left the palm print no matter who it was because it was found near the blood stain. “If you don’t establish whose it is, they (defense lawyers) are going to come back and try to insinuate it was the killer’s,” Shannon said. “It’s no big deal except it’s important if we don’t identify it.” Although prosecutors were unable to place Davis at the scene through fingerprints, three persons have tes tified he was present the night the Wilborn child was shot. Davis, 44, is being tried for the murder of the Wilborn child but is also accused of wounding his es tranged wife, Priscilla, 36, and mur dering her lover, Stan Farr, 31. , Davis is also charged with wounding Gus G.avrel Jr., 22, a family acquain tance. Mrs. Davis, Gavrel and his girlfriend, Beverly Bass, 19, have all identified Davis as the black-clad in truder who entered Davis’ former home. Davis vacated the 19,000- square-foot mansion in 1974 when Mrs. Davis filed for divorce. Slaughter testified the prints found at the mansion were compared with a number of Davis family mem bers and friends, including one of Mrs. Davis’ former boyfriends and one of Farr’s ex-business associates. H e said none of the prints matched those of the boyfriend, W.T. Rufner, or the business as sociate, Horace Copeland. He iden- st son of Set Public ecouple, armed with a revolver a pistol, seized a Soviet built ommittees j|t-range Yak40. The plane, carry- aviation Jfce persons, including the crew, lopmenl son a domestic flight when it I made to cross the border to likfurt. The hijackers gave them- tored J es up ^ ter two h° iirs aiK * 15 -New Havei nain address iversity's Si am begins! ring the stii-| the ( |utes of negotiations with West ian authorities. hey have asked for political um,” Frankfurt Police Chief iut Mueller told reporters after thy (turned over to police for inter- Rtion. conyocaH g a | au thoriies said that even if nhers of tM, are a ll OW ed to stay in West d associate!jl manv th ey will face trial here for 0) and high.Bking. iterparts ni m e hjj ac kers seized the aircraft on light from Karlovy Vary, formerly Amendment iroposals nations secjl ound on tit ' _ partmenli !0r VOtePS N V l aCe “ j United Press International IlSTIN — Texans will vote Nov. t y, some 1, two proposed constitutional o tries part of tit another salt ■ cases, j eset the trial hear pretrial a heavy pared for the court July 15 ed of forging i grand jury ggoner Carr, ion betweei y grand jury twer ndments to give tax exemptions istorical or cultural resources and •ermit agricultural organizations j collect dues from farmers and eCl c ^ ers f° r promotion of their ducts. r third amendment due consid- o give prose r on by voters would change the ne of the Judicial Qualifications [nmission to the State (Sommis- j> on Judicial Conduct and give t agency additional power to dis- line jugdes. tone of these proposed amend- nts—among seven on the ballot has provoked any controversy, he proposed amendment No. 4 dd authorize the legislature to 'vide for property tax relief to 'ourage the preservation of “cul- al, historical or natural history re- irees." Jnder the proposal, the legisla- e could grant relief from state id party offi- 1 'perty taxes or permit cities, coun- lephone anil 'and other local taxing agencies to ling them to '"t such exemptions, ing moneyii ^pporters of the plan note it will efffC' jest said at a f the money ndidate wlio mey will not • fund to the in d Czechoi' g with inteo yce Hughes of disrespect ident of tic on the U.S : mentation erly winds |ht 46. No - Battalion. W ■ Station. T<*» ’ ,titled excluiS i.spatolK-s*^ matter lu-n-in"’! .gc Station. ^ R elation ).«’* Mary Alio'" Lee Roy p»»l Tvlir ■-■>3 n: g SmI Uiiirdi"" 11 * Carlsbad, to Prague, police said. By the time Czechoslovak air control lers realized the plane was off course it already was in West German air space, Prague aviation sources said. The plane flow toward Munich then veered toward Frankfurt where it landed without permission. In a radio conversation with the Frankfurt tower the hijackers de manded the plane be refueled so it could fly on to Munich, where they wanted to surrender. But they were told this was impossible because of technical problems and they were persuaded to leave the plane in Frankfurt, Mueller said. At Prague airport a crisis staff met and contacted Frankfurt airport au thorities. The Czechoslovaks were expected to demand and receive permission for the plane and the re maining 24 persons aboard to return to Prague. tified the partial palm print as be longing to Arlenia Cooper, a former mansion maid. Defense attorneys indicated they would produce more testimony on fingerprints from their own expert. The trial, the longest murder trial in Texas history, is in its eighth week of testimony. Prosecutors Monday dramatically delayed identifying the persons who made the fingerprints at the man sion. Davis, seemingly unconcerned about the introduction of the prints, remarked to reporters: “Well, there it is. I guess that about wraps it up.” The homicide detective who lifted the prints said he was never in formed of the results of crime lab tests and could not identify them. TEXAS INSTRUMENTS Has The Latest In Programmable Calculators Check Loupot’s Bookstore Tor Complete Selection THE BATT DOES IT DAILY Monday through Friday iviriivivivi BRYAN-COLLEGE STATION’S LEADING AUDIO DEALER permit such tax breaks, but not mandate them. Oppo- rts argue local agencies such as 1001 districts already face fund Wages, and exempting cultural historical resources could fur- - r erode their tax bases. ^ agricultural assessment 'endment. No. 5 on the ballot, is S1 gned to reinstate a 1967 law “e was declared unconstitutional J D ftS TeXas Su P reme Court. Cl. .,^amendment passes, agricul- and marine associations, such Poultry or livestock producers, 'y collect assessments from pro- ^ rs of those commodities and use "nds for research and promotion 'he product. reducers who objected to the as- ,* ment cou ^ apply for refunds of cooperation J noae V they were assessed, itriesfortlf u preme Court had ruled 4 UnionW ™ a t ndat °ry assessments inki pledg fi | n . to.an unconstitutional tax irdinary * 11 ’ 0 Jf j ture- Opponents of the ; of the Hel secl amendment contend pro- n„U °PP osed to the program sim n °I ^ ave to pay the as- fu nd process 80 thr ° Ugh a ,engthy )tiM en ^ men t ^° - ^ on the ballot jalif- eXpan ^ t ^ le s ’ ze °f the Judicial idp r Cadons Commission to in- (i, ° ur citizen members instead ace t an L d add one J us tice of the >uld ° rnern k>ership. It also rouehdf ^ cornm i ssion ’ acting suin j . u P rem e Court, power ithoi t nC a J ud g e from office with or ch Pay P endin g final disposition Illff/Salnst .he judge. "ami ■ arnendmei at passes, the ssiou also would have author- , Sunn Ub lC y re P rim and a judge. J intend 0 ?if rS of amendment nethoH tle , cornm ission needs a tion „ 0 ta ke quicker disciplinary ,n and^f nSt i a ,-! u . d £ e ’ sutdl as a re P' Dcedur^ additi()n to the lengthy i ce es t() remove a judge from CUSTOM SOUNDS “The Woofer” The perfect receiver for just about anyone. Pioneers new SX-650 has the right combination of operating features, performance specs and design nuances. Its front panel is a catalogue of conveniences. \\ ith dual tape monitor circuits and deck-to-deck dubbing, click-stop tone controls w ith defeat, high filter, dual tuning meters and microphone input. On the inside, there are technical advances that mean better sound, letter reliability, and better value, bike an FF/f front end. speaker and transistor protector and circuit-board-mounted jacks. Continuous power output is 35 watts per channel minimum KMS at o ohms from 20 to 20.000 Hz. with no more than 0.3% total harmonic distortion. Reg. $325.00 SALE *229 95 OrD PMOrVECET? SX-850 STEREO RECEIVER Continuous power output of 65 watts* per chan nel, min. RMS at 8 ohms or 85 watts* per chan nel at 4 ohms from 20 Hertz to 20,000 Hertz with no more than 0.1% total harmonic distortion. FM Sensitivity (INF): Mono; 10.3dBf (1.8 M V) FM S/N Ratio (at 65dBf): 72dB (mono), 67dB (stereo) ONLY $ $550.00 389 95 ONLY A FEW LEFT! It has everything you’ll find on a $ 120 turntable. Except the $ 120 price tag. There’s a good SI 20 turntable around with a vibration-free 1-pole synchronous motor. A static balanced S-shaped tone arm. And the anti-skating device you need to get top performance from the light stylus pressure cartridges now on the market. There’s another good $120 model with a floating turntable and tone arm, designed to damp out external vibration. But to get all those features plus a die-cast aluminum platter and a rumble level of -50 (IB (.IIS) for less than $120. a turntable has to lx* more than just good. It has to be a Pioneer PL-1121). GO RIOIXieEIT SALE *79 00 A Great Turntable at a Great Price! fl&RioixieeiT HPIV-40 3-WAY 3-DRIVER SPEAKERS 3-WAY 3-SPEAKER SYSTEM Enclosure: Bass reflex type Speakers: 10-inch carbon fiber blended cone woofer, 1 2 %z-inch carbon fiber blended cone tweeter. High-molecular polymer super-tweeter Impedance: 8 ohms Frequency Range: 35—25,000Hz Sensitivity: 91dB/W/ M Maximum Input Power: 40W Crossover Frequencies: 4,000 Hz, 10,000Hz Dimensions: 12 1 ?<6"(W)x22%5''(H)Xl2j4"(D) Reg. $150.00 ea. SALE $99 oo each fliDmOlMGEIT RT-707 TAPE DECK 3-MOTOR 4-HEAD AUTO-REVERSE PLAYBACK STEREO TAPE DECK Drive System: 3-motor direct drive system Motors: FG Servo AC direct drive motor x 1 (capstan drive), 6-pole inner-rotor special induction motor x 2 (reel drive) Tape Speeds: IVz ips, 3% ips ± 0.5% Wow & Flutter: 0.05% (WRMS, at IVz ips) S/N Ratio: 58dB Frequency Response: 20-28,000Hz (71/2 ips), 20—20,000Hz (3% ips) Reg. $575.00 NOW $ 489 95 Pioneer’s Newest Tape Deck CW) moivieerr- tx-65oo AM/FM STEREO TUNER What it tunes out Is as important as what it tunes in. FM Usable Sensitivity: Mono; 10.7dBf (1.9/jV) FM S/N Ratio (at 65dBf): 75dB (mono), 68dB (stereo) FM Capture Ratio: I.OdB FM Alternate Channel Selectivity: 60dB Stereo Sepa ration: 40dB (1kHz), 30dB (30—15,000Hz) Reg. $175.00 SALE $ 129 95 ONLY A FEW LEFT! C ' 0 ' stAff (V( ) |w! ents 1 say J ud 8 es are elected f left t and ^ le * r removal should l>n 9 j n , , 0 Vot ers rather than an ap- c. Ki*' 1 ' '*j. They also argue the 0 '„ Hild J; P OVVer fur the commission w'-i r«l«* on, seckTn^ 38 ?- <|l ! alif ’ ed persons utkmg judicial office. GUSTOM-- SOUNDSHia SPECIALS GOOD THROUGH SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15 3806-A OLD COLLEGE ROAD 846-5803 Next to Triangle Bowling Alley Open 10-6 Mon.-Sat. %