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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 24, 1982)
local/state Battalion/Page 5 February 24, 1982 prime Stoppers to pay for fugitive information ICrime Stoppers this week is pffenng $1,000 for information Biding to the arrest of five fugi- Ks, all of whom either live in rt also n« the iiryan-College Station area isewasimpdor visit on a regular basis, ten appomljryou have information con joint pning the whereabouts of any, ip for fo^r all, of the following fugitives, nercial elrjcrinie Stoppers will pay $200 vide entetefor each one or $1,000 for all ilf of Affive. The number is'775-TIPS. ideogarriEp #j 0 h n L. Shannon, 31, alias ities fortiaBIbe L.” Shannon, a 5-foot-9- :alskillsi4()-pound black male, is ig inentil f or f a il ure to appear on Itharge of delivery of a control- H substance. ^ ; fEsteban Rogelio Garcia, 30, H “Steven Roger Garcia” is Hispanic, with black hair and jr<wn eyes, 5 feet 7 inches tall ind 170 pounds, and is wanted ior theft and embezzlement. ■•Charles Alfred Bishop, 48, :ss on ihtljias “Chuck” Bishop is white, 5 lingual edt ieet 4 inches tall, 170 pounds, ights.andijnd has brown hair and blue le he want Ip-, er the Dei* Brazos County 7S STOPPER 775-tips eyes. He is wanted for failure to appear on a charge of aggra vated robbery and theft. •Robert Franklin, 22. a black male, is wanted for failure to appear on a charge of a building burglary. •Willie James Foster, 25, is black, 5 feet 8 inches tall, and 160 pounds. Foster is wanted for violation of probation on an attempted murder charge. Callers do not have to reveal their identities and all informa tion will remain confidential. Crime Stoppers also pays cash rewards of up to $ 1,000 for information leading to the arrest and indictment of persons responsible for any unsolved felony. . '?••>?.; i'i John L. Shannon Esteban Rogelio Garcia Charles Alfred Bishop Robert Franklin Willie James Foster Agents break up alien-smuggling ring ■d, if we an [ark Whitt™ ocratswaittl ine withtt verftothd e will.” Search continues in what may be family drowning said Den iiJbC United Press International . "Bake Dallas — The disl i uvBry of a 6-year-old girl’s body : past, ' iggpronipted authorities to fear tsues n, he es Award 5 , h er family also will be ound in a watery grave. ra n fmenneth Merillat, his wife, dice, and their two daughters, iayleen, 6, and Kendra Lee, 5, isccvered Feb. 14. They have jeen described as a clean, all unerican family. [They were not wealthy by means, but they did pay ofAutom#tr bills,” Denton County Biff’s Department Lt. Ron al Teeter hlglas said Monday. ;d to yoiirpAuthorities believe foul play ulty memk# 8 involved in the girl’s death iiished the Merillats’ disappear- emic trar.;^, Douglas said, teachingMAlfwe know about that fami- ttracurrioitfe that they were straight as a erests. Ipig an d all of them cared ab- . Zoeller,;^ ea ch other,” Douglas said, i biocheniilKayleen’s body was found a recipiet: Ming near the east shore of ;d Studentip 6 Lewisville Sunday, oppo- ican Oil Q®i where searchers had con- Brated their efforts. A patho- I presentafsPP 81 sa 'd the girl drowned and 73rdan»^ ! b°dy showed no signs of in Toron[':k uma ' Khe autopsy indicated the Texas Ahp’s body had been in the lake mdthecccTOm two to seven days, the AOCi^Authorities said they feared lected oniilflake also held the bodies of oandreseife other family members, nong nomidjthough a continued search re- tembers ( toned at 8 a.m. Tuesday and no Eds of them have been disco- ^ered. L The family had gone to Lake Lewisville Feb. 14 to gather driftwood. Daily searches were conducted since their auto mobile with the driver’s window broken out was discovered Feb. 16. | Investigators from the Lake Dallas Police Department and Denton County Sheriffs De partment planned to continue peir search of Lake Lewisville, (9 miles northwest of Dallas, glthough they believed the bodies would surface soon. KfThere’s nothing more we on do short of draining the Ike,” Deputy Randy Kaisner H. “It stands to reason where you find one body you’ll find the other three, and with with the warm temperatures the bodies won’t stay down very long.” United Press International EL PASO — Two U.S. Border Patrol agents disguised as illegal aliens arrested 11 people sus pected of transporting Mexican immigrants to Chicago, a feder al agent says. Jack Richardson, acting chief agent of the Border Patrol in El Paso, said Monday the agents boarded a truck in Texas in a six-state trek that ended in Chi cago. “We identified what we called category one alien smugglers,” Richardson said. “That’s a group capable of handling large numbers. We took two agents. posed them as illegal aliens and put them on the truck.” He said federal and local au thorities in Texas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri and Illinois, kept a constant sur veillance on the truck as it pas- were hei ' e illegally.” case will be presented to the U.S. sed through each state. Complaints were filed against Attorney in El Paso, Richardson the 11 men in Chicago and the said. Richardson said the suspects arrested included U.S. citizens, resident aliens and several “who i S n ^ V* Rejection of black sets off protest J Thursday: LUNCH SPECIALS — PORK CHOPS — $2.95 HAPPY HOUR: 4:00-7:00 p.m. 10:00 p.m.-12:00 p.m. Graham Central Station WEDNESDAY. United Press International FORT WORTH — Tarrant County commissioners have re jected a recommendation that a black woman be appointed to a county judgeship, sparking an outpouring of protest from black civic and political leaders. The appointment would have been the first time a black or a woman has served as a coun ty judge. The commissioners Monday turned down County Judge Mike Moncriefs nomination of Mary-Ellen Hicks to fill the un expired term of J.C. Duvall, wTio died Feb. 13. The term will end Dec. 31. The commissioners appointed public defender Jake Cook to serve the remainder of Duvall’s term. The commission- ip p( e th Cook to serve as judge’through March 31. Black leaders claimed the commissioners reneged on a 1979 promise to appoint a black to a county-level bench and ac cused the commissioners of “turncoat politics.” The commissioners said they decided not to appoint Hicks be cause they thought it would give her an unfair political advantage in her primary race this spring for County Criminal Court No. 1. Black leaders also expressed anger because Commissioner Dick Anderson, whose Precinct 1 comprises a predominantly black area, did not attend the meeting. Come Join Us For Happy Hour!! qq* 2 p- m ' 6 p- m - Dai| y S7C7V' Pitchers of Lowenbrau and Miller Lite 990 Orders of Nachos at ALFREDO’S TACOS AL CARBON 509 University Dr. NORTHGATE 846-3824 LADIES WIGHT Unescorted Ladies my jr Tap Beer Jmt Kxfr ir DrinkS f 4„, US' 1600B South College Ave. 2.6 Miles Worth of Texas A&M § § (mufl) What's Happening On Wednesdays? Record Trade-In Specials Bring in any old 33 Vs LP in any condition and Music Express will give you $3.00 off the mfg. list price on a Brand New LP! Wednesday Only It's time to clean up your record collection! MUS/n Fxrmss ; s 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 Old South Restaurant NOW HIRING • wait people • bus people 12 noon-6 p.m. Monday-Friday Parkway Square S. Texas Rve. & Southwest Pkwy. dishwashers cooks OLD SOUTH SOUTHWEST PKWY