i HI) K THE BATTALION Page 7 TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1979 Jury hung, Davis on bond (Continued from page 1.) ■‘‘I m glad it is over and I just hate s ‘ aV( »r tin-that it is going to have to he done • shouldiover again,” Mrs. Carter said. ec ' Monda, I Chief Tarrant County criminal ''lost toinu,prosecutor Tolly Wilson said Davis vt “i's also iwill he tried again, but both he and Elense attorneys said a new trial piesent sp^likely could not begin until next Posed, Midyear, at the earliest. il Moore, who after declaring the believet mistrial said defense tactics in drivers of . stretching the trial to 11 weeks was B “abuse” of the legal system, was is|ed if he would preside over ' with the rt ,mother trial, regulation.! “Hell, no!” he said, he mosteffn; During the trial Moore showed his displeasure at its length but did ir most ofilnot speak publicly on the subject until the mistrial was declared. “It’s an abuse of the system,” he / said. “I’m not going out on a limb now (to blame anyone for the trial’s length). I don’t want to criticize any member of the bar. Eidson, who has sat on the front row during deliberations, left the courtroom with a four-man body guard. In an earlier interview with UPI, Eidson said he would be ap prehensive until Davis “was broke or dead.” In a courtroom news conference, Haynes said: T would have to say I’m highly emotional. This is a victory for the system more than it is a victory for anybody.” Testimony began Nov. 6 and jurors listened to almost 100 witnes ses — including Davis — and eight hours of closing arguments Tuesday before receiving the case. The jury was permitted to con sider either conspiracy or solicita tion counts in their deliberations but were instructed they could con vict on only one. Jurors were forced to choose be tween McCrory’s claim that his boss pressured him to arrange the slay ings of 15 enemies in a scheme of paranoia and revenge, or the defen dant’s explanation he was just “play ing along” with the FBI in the taped conversations. Davis was arrested Aug. 20, 1978, after leaving a restaurant parking lot where he handed McCrory $25,000. McCrory testified the money was for relay to a professional killer whom McCrory had fabricated — initially to pacify but later to lure the industrialist toward arrest and end the scheme. Iran’s armed forces to obey government, protect country United Press International TEHRAN, Iran — The chief of Iran s armed forces Monday pledged full support to embattled Premier Shahpour Bakhtiar and re peated his promise that the military will not attempt to overthrow the civilian government. Gen. Abas Qarabaghi said, “The question of a coup d’etat or any kind of indiscipline in various military units is not true. The army will obey the orders of the government. ” Qarabaghi also said steps had been taken to prevent pro-shah elements in the country from threatening anti-shah demonstrators and said those involved in recent at tacks would be arrested. “I assure all countrymen that all More fighting i Israeli shellfire leaves six dead in Lebanon n operatioi B %/ operatii _ United Press International id. 140sucl | BEIRUT, Lebanon — Heavy weekend fighting between Israeli ed, but tk (commandos and Palestinian guerrillas Monday left southern Lebanon s has seeroj at its most volatile point since a full-scale Israeli invasion 10 months working aj ago. peace hasB Israeli artillery and gunboats swapped shell, machine gun and ed techniijf;rocket fire with Palestinians in the rugged hill country Sunday — 48 that havej hours after Israeli ground forces briefly penetrated the frontier to the I aslll ; battle the guerrillas in the southeast. bor negotiafl The violence was the worst since Israel invaded in March 1978 and on disputefepccupied the south for about three months. The latest Israeli incur- ||ion, similiar to the attack 10 months earlier, was prompted by Pales- eace is nkeI tinian guerrilla attacks inside Israel. Linkingn At least six people were reported killed and 14 wounded in Sun- communihBay’s Israeli shellfire on the guerrilla-controlled market town of efine what L Abatiyeh, target of some of the fiercest fighting. deVelopuvB “At the height of the shelling, five shells were exploding every Ive conflicbHninute,” a panic stricken Nabatiyeh resident told a Lebanese re s’, at home I porter. bring Reporters on the scene spoke of “at least several casualties” in Huerrilla-controlled towns closer to the southeast frontier than ce acadeimMjabatiyeh, which is some eight miles from the border. However >ple as Dr Jr ott king.l rew YoimjB ent before ■ r to the la rcited aboutL .'alter AikR. nt to thecil reliable figures were not immediately available. The guerrillas unleashed fierce fire on Israeli-allied Lebanese rightist militiamen in the southeast, the reporters said. The militiamen had been pitching in with the Israeli gun barrages, The Palestinians also lofted several Soviet-made 122-mm rockets into northern Israel, the reports from the south said. During the duels, which began shortly after midnight and con tinued through Sunday afternoon, Israeli gunboats briefly opened fire on Palestinian controlled areas just above the southwest port of Tyre, reporters in the area said. The guerrillas returned fire. There were no immediate reports of casualties in the southwest clash, which sent a number of projectiles into coastal citrus groves. One early report said the Israelis had also mounted an abortive land ing attempt, but there was no independent confirmation. rogress made in Mideast talks 1 at Camp .ve’re tallii United Press International I ■iTRLSALEM — U.S. envoy *u bnd Atherton Monday returned rigbt i ;o th e bargaining table to negotiate it of tin v fh the Israelis, postponing his de li om t'l 1 ' jh'rture to Cairo in efforts to clear up liich ma) he remaining obstacles to an ler positioi Banded draft peace treaty with dent and Ipt- David to®he cabinet Sunday failed to an could g ree to proposals aimed at resolv- battldi' ^ a dispute on whether the treaty >ut withaphould take precedence over get a frar ;gypfs defense commitments to its irab allies — a major obstacle some oppHjocking conclusion of the draft lovement, aC ( e sa ’^’ ll 'j» ut tbe cabinet reportedly DefenseOifi| orse d recommendations by the work on ®H 0 tiating team to accept Article 4 idy being f the draft. It calls for a review of nnent. ecurity guarantees, in that in This show of progress, according e act as an| |he Jerusalem Post, encouraged tates intif jotb sides to try to work out a com- academy'rpmise on Article 6 — the mediator, riorities clause, goals and Israel wants the United States to Irify beyond any doubt that Egypt ientists «%uld be entitled to attack the ch.and 20®jsh state only if war was Lane sajiggered by unprovoked Israeli ag- shifted tression, the Post report said, resolution The wording of the draft article iarly gives the treaty preference Now you know United Press International ie most popular man-made attrac- on in the United States is San ancisco’s Golden Gate Bridge. over Egypt previous defense com mitments to its Arab allies. Cairo does not want to surrender those commitments and Washington has agreed with the Egyptian stand. The cabinet apparently was adamant in its refusal to accept Atherton’s compromise proposals regarding Article 6, wanting a U.S. interpretation of it that more clearly identifies with Israel s view. ed ig Foods ax. :00P. DAY PECIAL ;d Steak 3ravy toes and e other le j and Bull Tea ZACHAR1AST GREENHOUSE dub & same parlor Disco dancing Games Exotic drinks NEVER A COVER CHARGE POOL TOURNAMENT TONIGHT 8 P.M. QUALIFY FOR FREE VACATION VOUCHER FOR 2 TO LAS VEGAS ($350.00 VALUE) 1201 Hwy. 30 Briaryvood Apts. College Station 693-9781 Aggies! 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