THE BATTALION Page 11 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1979 the state exico lures U.S. gamblers Judge erred, court rejects sentences United Press International CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico — gambling is spreading along Mexico side of the border. Officials predict that by next year, exican book and lottery offices will ; operating across from nearly 'ery major American border city to % cept bets on horse races, soccer, idlAmerican professional football idljaaseball. For decades, pari-mutuel horse tracks in Tijuana, across from Diego, Calif., and in Ciudad across the Rio Grande from [aso, were the only Mexican ef- s to attract American gambling liars. so, a horserace book has oper- for years at the Turf Club in —-—-qudad Juarez. Recently a lottery on lexican professional soccer, called BpGOL, was added and plans are Berway to take lottery bets on imenttoimerican major league baseball, ROHIT, American professional otball, PROTOUCH, and horse Is, PRODERBY, according to 'emetrio Sotomayor Cuellar. Sotomayor is the authorizing ^ent for one of seven Ciudad larez soccer lotteries and operates le business at the Turf Club. He |licts that unless the Mexican Bmment changes its plans, simi- I fcetting in the next year will be lig place all along the 1,933-mile .S. Mexico border, ig ma d f loof of the move to expanding ilksonl iejico gambling within easy driv- hat the ig distance of millions of Americans )mmittedas the opening in September of a * formii orserace book in Nuevo Laredo, the 0[J e l* co ’ across fr° m Laredo where ds of Texans are placing bets , • r tn on horse races run at a dozen U.S. tracks and the Mexico city track. Officials of the Nuevo Laredo turf club say they, too, will add lotteries on Mexican soccer and American baseball and football. They plan to open branches in Matamoros, Reynosa and Piedras Negras, across the Rio Grande respectively from the Texas border cities of Brownsville, McAllen and Eagle Pass. Sotomayor said the Mexican soc cer lottery, limited to Mexico City when it began a year ago, now takes bets in Ciudad Juarez, Mexicali and Tijuana. The Mexican government underestimated demand and many applicants are having to wait for their concessions because of a short age of special lottery cash registers, he said. The sports lottery “is going to go to all border cities,’ Sotomayor said. Most of the betting parlors are being strategically located within walking distance of border crossings for easy accessibility to betting Americans. Although a strike of referees in Mexico’s major soccer league al lowed betting only on second- division Mexican teams and soccer teams in Chile, Colombia, Argen tina and Brazil until September, Sotomayor said the sports lottery still was successful the three previ ous months. “Nobody’s even heard of those teams,” he said. “So they were just guessing.’’ Nevertheless, he estimated about 1,500 bets ranging from the minimum of 10 pesos (48 cents U.S.) to as much as $570 U.S., were ^FROM BUSTIN’ ILLEG-Al placed with his agency during that period. Sotomayor said persons playing the sports lottery do so on a com puter punch card, similar to those used in voting, in which the out comes of 13 games are predicted — home team winning, visitors win ning or a tie. The cost for the initial punch is 48 cents. A bettor can improve his odds by punching additional holes on any and all of the 13 games, but the cost for each additional punch increases in multiples of two. A grand prize is offered for per fect selection of all 13 soccer games and it increases each week there is no winner. In the event there is more than one winning card, the top prize will be split among the winners, he said. So far, no one in Ciudad Juarez has won the grand prize, but some have made 12 correct choices, Sotomayor said. In all of Mexico, three persons so far have posted perfect choices and won about $67,000 each, he said. United Press International AUSTIN — The Court of Crimi nal Appeals has overturned two life sentences given a Dallas woman for shooting her husband and a cocktail waitress, ruling the trial judge erred in failing to instruct the jury it could consider voluntary manslaughter charges. Trial testimony showed Nicolena Medlock had gone to the private club Feb. 6, 1975, to meet her son and daughter-in-law. She was sitting at a table with the club manager and her daughter-in-law when her hus band walked in and stood nearby, staring at her. Medlock approached his wife and told her he didn’t want some money she had left for him, and then re treated. Thirty minutes later, Med lock again approached his wife, grabbed her by the neck and said, “Let’s go. I’m going to get you.” Mrs. Medlock pulled away and grabbed a pistol from her purse and began shooting. Two shots hit Med lock and one bullet hit a waitress, Yvett Harris, killing both of them. The court ruled the issue of vol untary manslaughter had been raised and the trial judge should have considered it, since Mrs. Med lock had sufficient proof that she feared her husband. The court also Wednesday over turned the capital murder convic tion of a Waco man because the trial judge erred in not scheduling a hearing on the defendant’s motion for a change of venue. Charles Eugene O’Brient was convicted for the Jan. 3, 1978, strangulation death of Mamie Witt. At a pretrial hearing on April 20, 1978, O’Brient filed a motion for a change of venue, but the trial judge elected to carry the motion along pending jury selection. On May 30, after the jury had been selected, the judge overruled the change of venue motion. The state argued that O’Brient had abandoned his motion because it was not urged until after the jury was selected. But the criminal ap peals court said O’Brient had prop erly filed the motion and was follow ing the trial judge’s instructions by not pressing for the motion until jury selection was begun. The criminal appeals court also reversed a 15-year sentence given Richard Apodaca of El Paso for vol untary manslaughter in the Jan. 12, 1975, death of Edward Figueroa. Apodaca was riding in a car driven by John Lewis that was chasing Figueroa. Apodaca hit Figueroa’s vehicle with a tire tool as Lewis pul led up beside Figueroa. Lewis then rammed Figueroa’s truck, which hit an embankment, killing Figueroa. The court said Apodaca’s convic tion was defective because he was held criminally responsible for Lewis’ acts in causing the wreck. The court also said although Apodaca contributed to Figueroa’s death, Lewis was the “primary ac tor” in the case. Security eased 9 ts attorneys ook for jury m l and hon 17 pera: saiiLJ nergy in ere stilli and Iffii rcent inc Depart ■eport « 1 rate ofii 1 percenl. s entered the higl sincef 12 pem White ;r, has at stratioa ie rcent is low “clea percent r e. •term rej itly ich mfi mges tat meanij were B $223,| )epartra r of hope! 5 prices e wlies | firm | e throul United Press International BROWNSVILLE — Jury selection was recessed Thursday in the trial of two Houston area men accused of plotting to kill the husband of one defendant’s ex-wife. District Judge Darrell Hester Wednesday ordered jury selec tion recessed until Friday in the trial of Archie Herman Burkhal- ter, 51, and Scott David M in nick, 21. Burkhalter and Minnick are accused of plotting to kill John Hensley, 40, who was shot through the eyes and blinded by a .223-caliber bullet fired by a sniper outside his South Padre Island condominium on Feb. 15. Prosecution and defense at torneys were thought to be near ing completion of their qualifying of a 32-member panel, from which each side will strike 10 names. Hester earlier Wednesday slightly relaxed security at the courthouse by removing four armed marksmen from the roof, after one or more of his fellow district judges complained that their presence created a “circus like atmosphere.” The indictment alleges that Burkhalter — a wealthy Pasadena physician who formerly was married to Hensley’s wife, Laurita — offered $15,000 and a new Cadillac to have Hensley killed. S.J. Wilburn, 56, Min nick’s uncle, was sentenced to life imprisonment in July after a Brownsville jury convicted him as the hired gunman in the shoot ing. Hensley at the time was scheduled to testify against Burkhalter in a kidnapping trial in which he allegedly spirited his ex-wife from Hensley’s home to his Pasadena hospital on Oct. 13, 1978. During questioning of the 60-member jury panel Wednes day, Houston attorney Bob Heath indicated he may not call any witnesses or put on any evi dence in Minnick’s behalf when testimony begins. Professor’s killer gets life United Press International SAN ANTONIO — A judge Wednesday sentenced a second man to life imprisonment for the slaying of Trinity University jour nalism professor Bill Hays. Judge John Benavides assessed the life term in 187th District Court for Carl St. Anthony, 27, who pleaded guilty to a murder charge. Prosecutors agreed to drop a capi tal murder indictment against St. Anthony in the plea bargain. Earher, Benavides had sentenced a companion of St. Anthony, admit ted male prostitute Loyd Myers, 22, to a life prison term in a similar plea bargain arrangement. Hays was found beaten and stab bed to death at his bachelor apart ment Feb. 15. Myers testified that Hays had of fered to buy him an automobile if he would live with him and that St. An thony was upset with his relation ship with the professor. P HOMEFIELD ADVANTAGE SPECIAL Friday, Saturday, Sunday Good only at Monterey House located in the Woodstone Shopping Center 907 Hwy. 30, College Station 693-2484