The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 27, 1981, Image 10

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Page 10 THE BATTALION
MONDAY, APRIL 27, 1981
National
Announcing!
Our April and May
Evening and
SKiiloH
Weekend
Special!
STEAKHOUSE
Our Large Rib eye
with a trip to our famous Salad Bar,
Baked Potato and our delicious
homemade rolls.
Noon Specials Mon.-Fri.
From $2.50-$7.95 Soup &
$ 8.
49
V From
11 a . m. -2 p. m.
Salad Bar $2.95|
saiej jauiums sa;ej jauiums sa;ej jauiums saiej jauiums sajej
3
NAlflKrJMBMS
APARTMENTS
WHILE YOU’RE THINKING ABOUT THE COST OF COOUNG YOUR APARTMENT THIS
SUMMER,
THINK ABOUT USI
WE PAY YOUR UTILITIES) YOU CAN RENT AN APARTMENT FOR AS LOW AS $200 A
MONTH THIS SUMMER WITH ALL OF YOUR UTILITIES PAID.
ADD ALL OF THIS TO OUR LOCATION TO TEXAS A&M, AND SEE HOW YOU CAN
SAVE!
^ ,0 *
n
"ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED"
SPECIAL SUMMER RATES
<= FURNISHED & UNFURNISHED
3 EFFICIENCY, 1, 2 & 3
3 BEDROOM APTS.
$ NO ESCALATION CLAUSE OR
_ FUEL ADJUSTMENT CHARGE
3 PARTY/MEETING ROOM
» BASKETBALL/VOLLEYBALL COURT
24 HOUR EMERGENCY MAINTENANCE
TWO SWIMMING POOLS
TENNIS COURTS
HEALTH SPAS, INCLUDING
SAUNAS FOR MEN & WOMEN
THREE LAUNDRY ROOMS
3 693-1110
Rental office open Monday thru Friday 9-5
Saturday 10-5, Sunday 2-5
1501 Hwy. 30
693-1011
tes summer rates summer rates summer rates summer rates
D. R. CAIN PROPERTIES
“YOU HAVE A CHOICE’’
PRELEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL SEMESTERS
YELLOWHOUSE APARTMENTS AND 4-PLEXES
Corner of Southwest Parkway and Welsh
College Station
One and,Two Bedrooms —r Furnished and Unfurnished
Two Bedrooms Have Washer and Dryer Connections
4-plexes Have Fenced Back Yards
Laundry Room Facilities
L0NGMIRE HOUSE APARTMENTS
2300 Long mire Drive — Off FM 2818
in Southwood Valley
College Station
One and Two Bedrooms — Furnished and Unfurnished
Pool — Laundry Room Facilities
ON SHUTTLE BUS FOR SUMMER AND FALL
SPECIAL 12 MONTH RATE BEGINNING IN JUNE
1 Bedroom Unf., $207.50 Furn., $238.75
2 Bedroom Unf., $262.50 Furn., $302.50
2 Bedroom Unf., $287.50 Furn., $327.50
4-plex at Yellowhouse
FALL RATES FOR NINE MONTHS
1 Bedroom Unf., $235.00 Furn., $270.00
2 Bedroom Unf., $290.00 Furn., $335.00
2 Bedroom Unf., $315.00 Furn., $360.00
4-plex at Yellowhouse
D.R. Cain Company
3002 South Texas Avenue
College Station
Call 693-8850 weekdays 8:00 to 5:00
Call 693-8345 on Saturday
Missing black may be number 27
United Press International
ATLANTA — Fear mounted
Saturday that a slightly built
young black man missing since
Wednesday may have fallen vic
tim to Atlanta’s child killers who
have snuffed out 25 lives in the
past 21 months.
A spokesman for the Missing
Persons’ Bureau, Detective Bill
Bibles, said Jimmy Ray Payne, 21,
was last seen three days ago by his
sister, Evelyn. She said Payne left
their home in northwest Atlanta
on a trip to the Omni, a downtown
entertainment and business com
plex, to trade some old coins.
There were reports Payne had
been seen since then, but Bibles
said police were disregarding the
reports because they could not be
verified.
He said a decision may be made
late Saturday or Sunday on
whether to add Payne’s name to a
list kept by a special task force set
up to investigate the sensational
string of crimes.
In addition to the 25 young
blacks found slain, another 10-
year-old, Darron Glass, is official
ly listed as missing.
Public Safety Commissioner
Lee Brown expressed concern
over the disappearance of Payne.
He noted the 21-year-old man,
who weighs 130 pounds and
stands 5 feet 7 inches tall, was a
“small person’’ like three other of
the adult victims. He also lived in
the same general area as several
other of the young blacks who
have disappeared.
Meanwhile, Roy Innis, the staff
director of the Congress of Racial
Equality, who threw the investi
gation into a turmoil earlier this
week by announcing the civil
rights group had a witness who
could break the case wide open,
said Saturday CORE’s investiga
tion into the crimes would con
tinue although police and the FBI
have written off the CORE sus-
step in and make a citizens’ arrest
of the suspect unless city officials
took the suspect into custody by 1
p.m. Saturday.
sible suspect” in the case. ‘H
it’s worth spending somegii'f
she said.
pect.
The “witness,” Shirley McGill
of Miami, told UPI that her former
boyfriend, a cab driver, had
boasted to her of being involved in
the crimes. Local police and the
FBI said Friday it checked out the
man McGill had mentioned and
found no reason to arrest him.
In light of this, Innis backed
down on his threat to have CORE
In another development,
however, Attorney Sharman
Meade, said her client, Larry
Marshall, 34, jailed in Atlanta on
an attempted robbery charge, has
information that could be helpful
in the child murder investigation.
Marshall, recently extrc
from Connecticut to fkt_
attempted armed robberyd ..
in Atlanta, knew one of tied I
victims, Timothy Hill,
portedly frequented a boysi ,
attended by some of m
youngsters, sources said.
This tied in with the Innis infor
mation in so far as that McGill had
told UPI that Marshall, using the
name Ted Washington, was with
her boyfriend when he visited her
in Miami. She said Marshall had
no connection with the crimes, so
far as she knew.
Meade said the information
Marshall has “could lead to a pos-
Marshall has offered tci
bargain with authorities ii
change for information aki
murders, but no agreemet:
been reached.
“He’s got to tell men
thing,” said District Atte |
Lewis R. Slaton. “Idon’tk
dp 1981
in a poke.”
Officials revise Chaffee security plai
United Press International
FORT CHAFFEE, Ark. —
Officials have ordered two revi
sions in the security plan for the
resettlement center at Fort Chaf
fee in the wake of last weekend’s
rock-throwing incidents.
Meanwhile, officials said the
2,477 refugees remaining at the
fort were “very quiet” Sunday and
“enjoying the beautiful
weather. ”
The changes in security called
for revising the system to alert,
remove and account for civilian
employees during a disturbance
e were
such as the one last Saturday,
which injured 34 soldiers and 27
refugees and did $100,000 in
property damage.
Officials said the Army re
ceived two false reports during the
incident that hostages had been
taken.
In one instance, Lt. Col.
Charles Donovan, commander of
the troops, was about to order a
potentially dangerous rescue
attempt when he learned the em
ployees had not been held hos
tage.
Mike Sweeney, a spokesman
Take the $25.00
Challenge
at Dud Warcf s!
just can't lose!
So
Sez
Fiddlin'
Faron
PRE-LAW SOCIETY
BANQUET
APRIL 30 - 6:30 PM
PELICAN'S WHARF
PLEASE SIGN UP AND PAY BY
NOON — APR. 29 — RM 101
HARRINGTON TOWER
MEMBERS
$6.00
NONMEMBERS
$8.40
SPECIAL GUEST — TAMU LEGAL COUNSEL
GAINES WEST
ALL PRE-LAW STUDENTS ARE
ENCOURAGED TO ATTEND
*
*
*
*
*
*
AGGIELAND
1981-’82
Staff position open
Apply at Reed McDonald rm. 216
Applications
due by
April 17, 1981
for the Cuban-Haitian Task Force,
said the policy would not mean all
civilians would be removed from
the compound, but communica
tion would be improved so author
ities would know if they were
threatened.
The gate locks and keys would
also be changed, officials said. At
one time during the disturbance,
troops were delayed from helping
soldiers because they could not
find a key to unlock the gate.
However, authorities were
pleased the gates had not been
violated. In the June 1 riot, hun
dreds of refugees poured out of
the camp through the gates.
Col. Bill Cook of the Arkansas
National Guard, who is Gov.
Frank White’s liason to Chaffee on
security matters, said he was gen
erally pleased with the way troops
reacted in the incident.
“You can’t argue with success, ”
he said. “They contained every
body and that’s our primary objec
tive. ”
compound to confront the: [>
refugee bands.”
The eyewitness also wrote!!
eral Protective Service oS
“were forced to retreat Iron
compound living area and
lessly watch the refugees
havoc and destruction to go«
ment property at will.”
But some employees at the fort
said the disturbance was not hand
led adequately.
In an unsigned letter to a Fort
Smith newspaper, one witness
said “the riot squads went to
pieces when they entered the
Some employees comp!
that more troops were ne«
but Donovan said ‘‘ifweW
more forces in, (the disturb
would have escalated more,
most concerned with getting
Ags
prej
the civilians out and then cos! exas Aggie ba
ing the refugees.”
17 Connecticut protester
arrested in nuke rally
United Press International
Demonstrators opposed to the
nuclear arms race rallied at
weapons facilities around the na
tion Saturday, including a Con
necticut shipyard where 17 per
sons were arrested before the
launching of a fast-attack sub-
Turnouts were far below what
had been expected by the Nuclear
Weapons Facilities Task Force,
the organization that had planned
some 60 demonstrations across
the nation.
In Denver, 16 miles east of a
plant that manufactures pluto
nium triggers for bombs, between
30,000 and 40,000 persons were
expected but only about 2,000
appeared, including activist Tom
Hayden.
The arrests in Connecticut
occurred at the Electric Boat Co.
shipyard at Groton, where about
1,000 persons gathered at the
company’s main gate for a teach-in
and speeches. The rally was timed
with the launching of the U.S.S.
Corpus Christi, a nuclear po
wered attack submarine armed
with cruise missiles.
Just before the sub slid into the
Thames River, a group of demon
strators splashed cow blood on the
steps of EB’s administration build
ing. Police removed about 17 pro
testers and charged them with dis
orderly conduct. The crowd out
side began to dwindle after the
beginning of the protest.
At Clam Lake, Wis., where one
of the larger rallies was expected,
200 persons gathered to protest
the Navy’s proposed “Extremely
Low Frequency” transmission
facility — ELF — designed for
communication with Trident sub
marines.
In California, more than 100
members of the San Fernando
Valley Alliance for Survival con
ducted a 12-kilometer walk to the
Rockwell Rocketdyne facility in
Canoga Park, part of the city of
Los Angeles.
Demonstrators also rallied at
the Bailly Nuclear Power Plant at
Porter, Ind.
In Boise, Idaho, about 200
activists, chilled by a light wind
under a cloudy sky, listened to
speeches opposing development
of the MX missile and nuclear fuel
production at the Idaho National
Engineering Laboratory near Ida-
By FRANK I
Batti
In a must-'
vhat it had
Saylor Bears c
The Aggies
light, and swe
lie header by
4.
Aggie pitcl
truck out 14
Sriday’s game
gainst no loss
ts runs in the
Soyes hit a 0
\odney Hodd
:olo homer.
Davis pitche
IS ACCEPTING
Y APPLICATIONS FOR:
CLASS GIFT CHAIRMAN
CLASS BALL CHAIRMAN
CLASS PUBLIC RELATIONS
CHAIRMAN
APPLICATIONS CAN BE PICKED UP IN CLASS
COUNCIL CUBICLE IN ROOM 216 MSC AND
SHOULD BE TURNED IN BY 5:00 P.M. FRIDAY,
MAY 1, TO THE SECRETARIES’ ISLAND IN 216
MSC.
ho Falls.
A man in s
crossbones costume calling I
self the “spector of nuclear*! vas relieved b
told the crowd: “You’ll hint! he ninth after
deal with me sooner than; latter. Swansc
think. Thirty minutes is allitii ave in two
for a nuclear war to destroy! hree straight
all. By then it will be took In Saturda;
In the Denver protest,« 3avid Flores,
chers gathered at the iw lings before
Higher Education Complen liminthesevi
paraded for about a mile to! lecond save ir
state capitol. They carried plr s Boyes, Hod
“bombs” tied to small poles,® vere the leac
bolizing the new weapons; sach with tw<
quired for deployment of! vith three RB
proposed MX missile, the f he last four g
launched Trident, and air-f lew A&M re
ground-launched cruise missfl 17th double ol
“There’s a lot less peoplel he old record
we expected,” said Officer|(i Bonner in 197
Martinez of the Denver Felt In Saturday
“First we thought were was ii Robert Slaven
to be 40,000, then 7,000 anib if Rick Luc
it’s 2,000.” The crowd laterS Taylor. Lueck
to about 5,000. 'tart since pi
The demonstrators calleil! weeks ago, ca
conversion of the Rocky Flats?' in the fifth inr
tonium trigger plant, operate;! ipff the mounc
Rockwell International, to peH Luecken w
fill uses. ? a in from th<
The American Friends Senl bad coach 1
Committee, one of the sponsed Uiecken’s
groups of the protest, calledwl weekend’s T
United States and Soviet Uni® 1 huch-and-gc
“adopt an immediate, m.'P
freeze on all further testing, I
duction and deployment of®
lear weapons and of missiles*
new aircraft designed primal
deliver nuclear weapons.”
Hayden told the crowd atil
Colorado statehouse: “Thetin*! |
over when you can just be ag®|
violence or against the armsratt |
“It’s a violent world and we re*
always the villains. Presi®
Reagan should meet less 1
with Alexander Haig and i
with Pope John Paul.”
SI
pre
The
MSC CRAFT
presents
SHOP
Paintings by Harlan Shoulders
a local wildlife artist
these paintings will be displayed
in the MSC CRAFT SHOP GALLERY
until April 30th.
Friday m
Pn