National THE BATTALION FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1981 Page 11 :es rn itigating id Wednesi linckley’s iould inspiii :d people assassinalt lis have aim eople reads people idea' o is being li the Metrop: enter in Me a briefheaii DistrictCd: an order ; suspect to chiatrist, ; David Elk ything to sj and replij -ask the cos 1 try to unde nd what 1 k Freed after eight years, man forgives his accuser United Press International MILWAUKEE — Francis Hemauer is a free man today, and says he wants to forgive the mis take that sent him to prison eight years ago for a rape he did not commit. “I am overwhelmed at just being turned free. I can’t find the words to say much more,” he said. A circuit court judge said Wednesday he was convinced because of recently developed tests that Hemauer did not rape and assault an 18-year- old woman in 1969. The tests showed the attacker had type B blood. Hemauer’s is type A. Hemauer, 60, put his head down and sobbed for several moments after the judge announced his verdict. Relatives, friends and others wept and applauded. Mabel Cooper, Hemauer’s sister who never quit fighting for her brother’s freedom, invited him to live with her until he decides how to resume his life. He accepted, on one condition. “What have you got in the refrigerator?” said the twice-divorced father of four. “I’d like a steak.” Hemauer said he held no grudges for spending eight years in the Waupun State Prison. “This is not an attempt to put any blame on anyone,” he said. “It was a good-faith mistake by a young person (the victim). “I was a little worried at times, but my family was beautiful. They stood behind me all the way. ” Hemauer was sentenced to 60 years in prison on the basis of a photograph. He earlier had been a suspect in the rape-murder of a Milwaukee girl, but was not held. His photograph, however, was kept in police files and the rape victim identified Hemauer as her attacker. His pleas of innocence and a negative poly graph test proved futile. “This has been a personal hell for this man and his family, ” said a former pardon attorney for the governor’s office who was instrumental in the case. Hemauer’s plans weren’t definite, but he knew one thing he wanted to do. “I would like to take a long walk in the woods and touch the trees.” Latest Atlanta killing victim seen in car, driver described al Dial-it calls are no joke, cost taxpayers thousands United Press International ATLANTA — A friend who saw Atlanta’s latest missing black youth riding in an old green sta tion wagon on the day he vanished says he felt something was wrong because the man “was sitting so stiff and didn’t wave at me.” Larry Rogers, 21, and mentally retarded, looks much younger. This week he became the 25th vic tim in the city’s string of missing and murdered young people. Twenty-two of those young blacks have been found dead, the others are missing. The witness told police he was outside his northwest Atlanta home March 30 when he heard a car door slam and turned to see Rogers sitting in the station wagon with another black man. “He didn’t move or nothing,” the witness said. “He didn’t talk.” The witness, a neighbor and friend of Rogers, told police the vehicle drove up and down the street twice before leaving the vicinity. He said he was con cerned “because he (Rogers) was sitting so stiff and didn’t wave at me.” A composite drawing of the light-skinned black man, who was said to be about 50 to 55 years old, and a partial tag number with the first letter R and the first digit 5, were termed “important” de velopments by police. The drawing depicts a man with long, graying black hair, a thick mustache, heavy eyebrows and hom-rimmed glasses. “We do not give out a lot of composites,” Public Safety Com missioner Lee P. Brown said dur ing a news conference. “We have some confidence in the validity of what we’ve put out here.” Brown stopped short of saying the development was the best break in the overall investigation. But he said “in the one case (that of Rogers) it’s the best break we have had so far.” He said, however, the man in the composite is not a suspect but is only wanted for questioning. Brown denied reports some of the murdered children had been seen at an abandoned house fre quented by homosexual men. “There’s no evidence these crimes are related to homosexual activ ity,” he said, adding, “when you do not have the exact motive, you look at all possibilities.” Until recent weeks all the vic tims have been under 16, but then the body of Eddie Duncan, 21, who like Rogers was mentally re tarded, was pulled from the Chat tahoochee River. Police and reporters rushed again to the Chattahoochee River north of Atlanta late Wednesday after a trout fisherman wading in shallow water spotted a bone on the river bottom. Gwinnett County police Lt. L.F. McKelvey said later, howev er, a medical examiner had deter mined the bone to be “of animal orgm. In a related development Wednesday, the Rev. Earl Car- roll, 46, who has been involved in fund-raising in connection with the children’s cases, was arrested on multiple charges, including writing bad checks, theft by con version, unauthorized use of a name without written consent and soliciting without a permit. Detective S.D. Benton said Carroll was collecting money for the children’s fund by telling pas sers-by he was assistant pastor of the Wheat Street Baptist Church, and by soliciting money from va rious businesses. “I don’t have any idea what hap pened to the money he collected, ” said detective Sgt. J.F. Paschall. Carroll has complained in the past of police harassment and filed a $1 million suit against Mayor Maynard Jackson and police offi cials in connection with the ac cusation. United Press International NEW YORK — Government jfficials don’t think Dial-a-Joke and tkr such dial-it telephone ser- ices are a laughing matter. They say government workers re spending hundreds of busands of dollars in taxpayer jioney dialing for sports, weather okes from their offices. In New York City alone — rain March 31 sident Reajs outside at his menti o normal, 1» aid Thursday g he had sai: ainty in a can telephone company ffers 15 dial-it services ranging Dial-a-Joke to Dial-a- loroscope — officials say $300,000 rould be cut from city telephone ills if all calls to the services were topped. The federal government and |Jlew York City are moving to in- t he said its otor functa .. “I thinktlf some residd am to normal stall special screening devices to prevent workers from reaching dial-it numbers — now available in at least 11 major metropolitan areas. But their efforts in the city are being slowed by a price dispute over installation costs with the New York Telephone Co. “There is no nationwide esti mate how much is being spent on dial-it calls from federal offices,” said Jim Edwards, a telecommuni cations expert for the General Ser vices Administration, which hand les supplies of federal offices. “But it’s big money and Dial-a-Joke is no laughing matter to us. Businesses also have this problem.” The GSA says an estimated $36,000 a year is spent on unautho rized dial-it calls from federal offices in New York, where each call costs between 3 and 9 cents, depending on the time of day. Screening devices were placed on exchanges for Chicago-area fed eral phones and the GSA says an estimated $157,000 annually in dial-it calls were blocked. The GSA says under New York state rules the phone company is limited to charging initially about $5,000 to install screening devices on its main New York exchange for federal phones. But the phone company questions the figure and says an additional $100,000 should be charged. The dispute is pending before the state Public Service Commission. Propane safe after grain elevator blast iso Justice firm on AT&T suit neral thank I United Press International WASHINGTON — The gov- fohn Mai# ernment will not drop its antitrust suit against American Telephone It Telegraph Co. despite a De- of I# Tense Department request based on grounds of national security, the Justice Department said mrsday. 7 intend to litigate it to the iyeball,” said William Baxter, the isistant attorney general in ;e of the Justice Depart- lenfs antitrust division. He cal- d his ranki fed the government’s case “per- earlier intkj fectly sound.” death as “al tion but fori! 3ople amplified on standard d h said, “fl* story asagrti nilitary leads indicated totk he world.” ipated in Pre* uguration J® the new con- a cerenio® nd marsh But Baxter said the govern ment’s case seeking divestiture of the world’s largest company can he reconciled with Defense De partment interests. “I do not intend at this time to drop the suit,” Baxter said. “On the other hand, I fully recognize the importance of an effective and integrated communcations net work. “It is not at all clear to me that the concerns of the Defense De partment and legitimate antitrust objectives cannot be reconciled. Obviously that’s something that has to he explored with the De fense Department and that will most surely be done.” Baxter’s comments came a day after it was disclosed Defense Sec retary Caspar Weinberger asked Attorney General William French Smith to dismiss the case because of the need for a unified communi cations network. The government began its anti trust case against AT&T in January in U. S. District Court in Washing ton in an effort to break up the massive Bell system on grounds that it has engaged in a “classic case of monopolization. ’’ The case was recessed in Janu ary when it appeared the govern ment and company lawyers were near a settlement. But the trial resumed in March after the nego tiations bogged down. United Press International BELLWOOD, Neb. — Au thorities Thursday finished drain ing 29,000 gallons of propane from two storage tanks endangered by a crippled, tilting grain elevator. Bellwood’s 360 residents, who were evacuated Wednesday after noon, were told they could return to their homes. Officials completed drainage of the tanks, sitting in the path of the crumbling elevator riddled with holes after a Tuesday explosion. Pete Stumer, chief investigator for the state fire marshal’s office, said he had feared the elevator might topple onto the storage tanks. The elevator had shifted 3 to 4 feet since the explosion, which kil led one man and critically injured two others. Stumer said the shift ing seemed to have stopped late Wednesday after the wind died down. Killed in the explosion Tuesday was Gary Roh, 20, of Linwood, whose body was retrieved from beneath tons of corn and nibble about 5.5 hours after the blast. Joe Stastny, 58, a Bellwood far mer, and elevator employee Larry Navrkal, 28, of Bellwood were in critical condition at St. Elizabeth’s Community Health Center in Lincoln. John Navrkal of Bellwood, an elevator supervisor and the father of Larry, also was injured but not hospitalized. State Fire Marshal Wally Bar nett said Wednesday the cause might never be determined “be cause it went from one end to the other, blew out the top and even blew out some of the bins.” SINGLE ADULTS You are invited for dinner, swimming and fellowship. 5:00 p.m. Sunday April 12 I 3406 Spring Lane Bryan For more information: Call Quinn 779-1297 or Susan 775-6507 I •FLOUPOT'S'P BOOKSTORE At Northgate Across from the Post Office WE BUY BOOKS EVERYDAY! AND GIVE 20% MORE IN TRADE ON USED BOOKS! i&K-j rvt-i'iviA i.U Vi > If the government wins, the ustice Department would consid er Defense Department sugges- ions on what changes should be kade in a settlement, Baxter said. In a letter released Thursday, le and satotf Deputy Defense Secretary Frank at the swe® Carlucci told Baxter the case )1. sshould be dropped because the er—Bradle)' AT&T “nefwork is the most im- Point — "'-j portant communications we have mander, Brf to serve our strategic systems mmander 6*| within the United States, that stormed 1 the westeif ne 6, 1944. | laced in W®T| troops in across Frantfi . Bradley || :rvice in theU.S.conT IT .. . „ Tf f . . i J United Press International Normandy I when Richard Nixon’s abrasive White House aide Chuck Colson •y of D-Day j declared himself a born-again Christian in the midst of the Watergate mess, there was much skepticism. Colson served seven months in jail, then went on to found Prison Fellowship, a Christian ministry to inmates. • Colson has visited 120 prisons in the United States and abroad. More than 9,000 inmates have graduated from Prison Fellowship programs. Now Colson is off on a 21-day trip to 22 cities — including a visit to death row at Nebraska State Penitentiary on Easter Sunday. Colson claims he has an answer to the nation’s crime problem, noting that of 300 graduates from his two-week Washington, D.C., seminar for inmates, less than 5 percent went back to prison on new convictions. “I know it works,” said Colson, who wants foundation money for a study of his program. sees success in prison fellowship OS 11 Sound Vlfewes 1 LOWEST PRICE TIDDIES IN THE WORLD 2919 Tx. Ave. Bryan Across from Manor East Mall 779-0065 PHOTO & CAMERA, INC. Tolcin “In Germany, where optical excellence is a way of life, TOKINA is the best-selling lens.” $ TOKINA 500 mm f/8 Mirror Telephoto Lens (Sale price on lens mounts in stock only) 375 00 TOKINA 70-210 mm f/3.5 Close-Focusing Zoom Lens $ 328 TOKINA 28 mm f/2.8 Wide-Angle Lens $ 115 00 Sale prices through Sat., April 18 See our complete stock of darkroom and film supplies. FREE! 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MONDAY EVENING SPECIAL Salisbury Steak with Mushroom Gravy Whipped Potatoes Yout Choice of One Vegetable Roll or Corn Bread and Butter Coffee or Tea TUESDAY EVENING SPECIAL Mexican Fiesta Dinner Two Cheese and Onion Enchiladas w chili Mexican Rice Patio Style Pinto Beans Tostadas Coffee or Tea One Corn Bread and Butter WEDNESDAY EVENING SPECIAL Chicken Fried Steak w cream Gravy Whipped Potatoes and Choice of one other Vegetable Roll or Corn Bread and Butter Coffee or Tea THURSDAY EVENING SPECIAL Italian Candle Light Spaghetti Dinner SERVED WITH SPICED MEAT BALLS AND SAUCE Parmesan Cheese - Tossed Green Salad Choice of Salad Dressing - Hot Garlic Bread Tea or Coffee FOR YOUR PROTECTION OUR PERSONNEL HAVE HEALTH CARDS FRIDAY EVENING SPECIAL BREADED FISH FILET w/TARTAR SAUCE Cole Slaw Hush Puppies Choice of one vegetable Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Tea or Coffee SATURDAY NOON and EVENING SPECIAL Yankee Pot Roast (Texas Salad) Mashed Potato w gravy Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Tea or Coffee f‘Quality First”| SUNDAY SPECIAL NOON and EVENING ROASTTURKEY DINNER Served with Cranberry Sauce Cornbread Dressing Roll or Corn Bread - Butter - CoffeorTea Giblet Gravy And your choice of any One vegetable