{ Page 6 THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 1979 Described as ‘well-mannered’ Hillside strangler suspect named United Press International LOS ANGELES — A man de scribed as being well-mannered and having a fixation on becoming a policeman is a prime suspect — but perhaps only one suspect — in the “Hillside Strangler” slayings. Kenneth A. Bianchi already faces s ppinq friday at C oncert 8:00 ' jg&jj I * Heavy Music & Happy Music Don’t Miss It !! ! Music Extraordinaire April 27 Rudder Theatre charges of strangling two women in Washington state and is suspected in 10 of the 13 Los Angeles killings. The killings, mostly of attractive women in their late teens and early 20s who also were sexually molested, terrorized young women in late 1977 and early 1978. The nude bodies of the victims were left sprawled on the slopes of the Hol lywood Hills in the northeastern Los Angeles area. The announcement came Monday from an unusually high-powered team of law enforcement executives — Los Angeles Police Chief Daryl Gates, Los Angeles County Sheriff Peter J. Pitchess and suburban Glendale Police Chief Duane Baker — because the victims were found in all three jurisdictions. Gates said the announcement did not wrap up the case, “I still believe that in some cases there was more than one individual involved.” Baker said he had long “been operating under the assumption that more than one man was involved.” Gates named Bianchi’s cousin. Angelo Buono, 44, as a possible sec ond suspect. Buono has not been charged but police have sealed his Glendale home and upholstery shop while they continue a search begun under a warrant last Friday. Bianchi was arrested three months ago in Bellingham, Wash., where he pleaded innocent by rea son of insanity to the stranglings of two Western Washington Univer sity coeds. “We now believe we have a case put together,” Gates said. “The evi dence will support the fact that Kenneth Bianchi is involved in Seven murders in the city of Los Angeles, two under sheriffs juris diction and one in Glendale. ” Bianchi, a native of Rochester, N.Y., studied police science for three semesters at a junior college there. He applied to become a re serve police officer with both the police and sheriffs departments in Los Angeles and at the time of his arrest in Bellingham was enrolled in a sheriffs reserve training program. One killed by blaze in rest home United Press International WASHINGTON — A fire at a nursing home Tuesday morning i killed one resident and injured several others, the latest in a se- | ries of fires at Washington nurs ing homes and similar facilities J that have killed 10 people and in jured dozens. Police said the fire broke out on the eighth floor of the Roosevelt Senior Citizens’ Home about 7 a.m. The blaze, confined to that floor, was extinguished in , a half-hour. One unidentified resident was killed, and police said several residents were hospitalized with what were believed to be minor injuries. On April 11, nine residents of a halfway house for mental pa tients were killed in a fire. Two days later a blaze at a nursing home killed an elderly resident. Last Thursday more than 30 stu dents were injured, two of them critically, in a fire at a George Washington University dormi tory. Haig stresses need for leader United Press International NEW YORK— Retiring NATO commander Gen. Alexander Haig says the United States must develop a “new kind of post-Vietnam leader ship” in world affairs, but he won’t say if he wants to do the leading. In an address to the 93rd annual convention of the American News paper Publishers Association, Haig repeatedly stressed the need Monday for the United States to de velop a new kind of global leader ship. He said the nation should begin by putting the Vietnam War be hind. “Our experiences in Southeast Asia are over,’’ Haig said. “The mesmerizing preoccupation with these experiences is over. We must develop a new kind of post-Vietnam leadership.” “America must continue to lead, but lead in a far more sophisticated manner,” Haig said. “The days are gone when America could move in and out of a conflict and bring about a result that would be in the inter ests of the Western world.” ARE YOU GAY? ARE YOU METHODIST? The Wesleyan Fellowship has been founded to assist gay United Meth odists in the Texas Annual Confer ence. For further information, write us at P.O. Box 3942, Houston, 77001, or call 713-522-4761. IF CHRIST IS RAISED FROM THE DEAD . . . TRULY RAISED . . . THEN DEATH IS NOT WHAT IT SEEMS TO BE. LIFE CAN NEVER BE THE SAME AGAIN, FOR IT IS TRANSFORMED. THE WORLD’S ORDER IS SHATTERED BY THE NEW ORDER OF GOD. GOD’S RULE HAS ALREADY BROKEN OVER THE FACE OF THE EARTH ^WflJnnlngo^V- "y A WORSHIP SERVICES AT 9:15 A M. AND 10:45 A M. WORSHIP CELEBRATION AT 6 P.M. Wed. Candlelight Communion Service - 10 p.m. University Lutheran Chapel _3f5 N. College Mciln Hubert Beck, Pastor 846-6687 We now Have the Xerox9400 If you need copies of. Reports, Proposals, Legal Documents, Computer Printout, Catalogs, Brochures, Manuals, Just about anything! If you want to copy onto 16 lb. up to 110 lb. Paper Stocks, Color Papers, Your Company Letterhead, Other Prestige Papers, Safety Paper, Plastic-Coated Papers, Drafting Vellum, Tabbed Stock, And more! 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He will leave hist mand post in Europe in June. “I’m wary about men on I back entering politics,’ he s “However, I have not madeanyi cisions about the future and wiiu until I complete my tour of duty,] In his ANPA address, Ha there was a “continued inab Western political leaders to ( with the contradiction” of deten with the Soviet Union and their j itary needs. “Th ere has been a relentlej growth in sheer Soviet power in the last 15 years, hea and the Russians have basesstreli ing from Afganistan to Saudi/ “that could snuff out the lifelinel the Western world” — oil. He also said the United Sti should strengthen ties with Cej because Peking’s leaders were! terested in “strategic reality” i would endure “just so manyc pointments from the Westei world” about closer links. Haig’s troubled picture of mil affairs was echoed by three Unii Press International correspond! who addressed the conventij Tuesday. James Anderson, who covers! State Department in Washing! said the peace treaty between Isni and Egypt has created an unspda anti-Soviet alliance in the Mid East. Joseph W. GriggofUPI’sLoii bureau said there are fears in Vtl ern Europe that the United! would not risk nuclear warf should the Soviet Union decide! overrun the area. Alan Dawson of UPI’s bureau spoke of an aggressij Vietnam defying China in seeli control of Southeast Asia, while Pij ing remained fearful of Soil encroachment. Chili cook-off, play to benefit KAMU radio Chili cookers and eaters and edy and theater fans all will have chance this month to help KA FM, Texas A&M University’s pul radio station. The Third Annual Chili Fest the Brazos Valley Spring Bluej Concert, set for Saturday, special performance of “The Si shine Boys,’ today will hem KAMU-FM during the last wee! April. StageCenter, Bryan-College tion’s community theater gn will present “The Sunshine Boys, Neil Simon comedy concerning reunion of the famous vaudeii team of Lewis and Clark for ah sion special. Curtain for the S] performance will be at 8 p.m., tickets in the form of a $3 don to KAMU-FM. The chili fest and bluegrass cert will be on Dilly Shaw If Road, 2.6 miles north or the Is Road junction. The daylong will feature a Terlingua-sanctii chili cooking contest and thebli rass concert, in addiiton to an madillo beauty contest, arrow ing, frog jumping and otherconl and games. More than 75 teams have rf tered for the chili cooking conti FOR A SUGAR FREE LUNCH Come to the most complete salad bar in Texas in the Sbisa Dining Cen ter Basement. $/'' . & Open 10:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m ? Monday thru Friday /vpfnam aw " ’ Eddie Dominguez 1 Joe Arciniega 74 If you want the real thing, not frozen or canned . . . We call It “Mexican Food Supreme.” Dallas location: 3071 Northwest Hwy 352-8570