state Battalion/Page 5 October 8,1982 Lawyer says topic drugs, not murder is largely in ight by then tie. Arlene is e frightened litatedsideo;, els and conn Arlie-hen eful -nal s .ernal stni| other chai e, duetotki plot device yed by one/ fernandez, a y another, At QS e elected tost election is f the class oi dved a majc nators needt votes to re posted at: • Student Pis 216 MSG € j l United Press International SAN ANTONIO — Charles Harrelson, accused of killing fed- eraljudge John Wood, was sleep ing in his Dallas apartment some 300 miles away at the time Wood was shot in the back, Harrelson’s attorney said Thursday. Harrelson, however, had arranged earlier to “rip-off’ El Paso gambler Jimmy Chagra in a phony drug deal, his lawyer said in opening arguments. Wood, who was trying a case involving Chagra, was killed out side his San Antonio apartment on May 29, 1979. Harrelson, his wife Jo Ann, and Chagra’s wife Elizabeth are charged with con spiring to kill Wood. Harrelson is also charged with murder. Assistant U.S. Attorney Ray Jahn said in his statement the government could show Harrel son and Chagra met in Las Vegas to arrange the slaying of Wood. But attorney Tom Sharpe said all contacts between Chagra and Harrelson concerned the drug deal. “Jimmy was a sucker for a scam. He had been set up be fore,” Sharpe told the jury. “(Harrelson) intended to take the money and run. It had nothing to do with killing the judge.” Jahn said Harrelson offered his services as a contract killer to Jimmy Chagra to avenge the 1978 murder of Jimmy’s brother, Lee, who was killed in a robbery at his law office. Mrs. Chagra is accused of de livering Harrelson’s payoff for killing the judge to his step daughter in Las Vegas. But again, Sharpe said, the money was for a drug deal that Harrel son never intended to pull off. Jahn said Harrelson stalked Wood in San Antonio for days before the judge was shot in the back as he was leaving for work — the first federal judge killed in this century. “He (Harrelson) boasted that it was a clean shot. But just as he shot, the judge bent over,” Jahn said. The government plans to play wiretap tape recordings to show the defendants discussed the judge’s murder for months after wards. STOPPER 775-TIPS Drunk drivers face probation United Press International I AUSTIN — The state Depart- ■ ment of Highways and Public Transportation Thursday announced a pilot program to [develop specialized caseload j probation for chronic drunken driver offenders. Spokesman Terry Pence said ; the program will be conducted in four Texas cities that have not been selected. Case workers will have small caseloads in the program and will work exclusively with people convicted of driving while in toxicated, he said. Jerry Johns, an insurance in dustry official, said the Texas Legislature should raise the state’s legal drinking age from 19 to 21 to try and reduce drunken driving. Johns, president of South western Insurance Information Service, said alcohol abuse among Texas teenagers is a more serious problem than drug abuse. “In excess of 44 percent of all nighttime alcohol-related fatali ties are caused by the 16 to 24 old age group, yet they only rep resent 22 percent of the total licensed driver population in this country,” he said. Johns said many of the acci dents could be prevented if the sale of alcoholic beverages was restricted to people 21 and older. “State residents should take a strong position on this issue which every year results in the needless death and crippling in juries to thousands of our young people,” he said. jBethe to open lecture series -Tuesday ■■■■» 00 y 16" )re pizza per pizza Delivery, by Beverly Hamilton Battalion Staff Hans Bethe, Nobel laureate and professor of physics at Cor nell University, will deliver the inaugural address in the Texas A&M University E.L. Miller Lecture Series on public policy at 8 p.m. today in Rudder Thea ter entitled “Energy Independ ence is Possible". The lectureship, established [ in 1981 by Cooper Industries, a Houston-based manufacturing firm, is designed to bring inter national authorities in public •policy to speak at Texas A&M. Bethe was selected the first •Miller lecturer soon after the •series was created and was sche- .culed to speak last fall, but his appearance was postponed due to illness. The lectureship was established with a $150,000 grant in honor of Cooper Indus tries’ chairman of the board, E.L. Miller. Bethe’s post doctoral studies were conducted under physi cists in Europe including Enrico Fermi in Rome, Niels Bohr in Copenhagen and Ernest Rutherford in Cambridge. He earned the Nobel Prize in Phy sics in 1967 for his discovery of the carbon cycle. He also earned the 1961 Fermi Prize for his work on general theory of nuc lear reactions. Bethe delivered technical presentations Tuesday and Wednesday on supernova ex plosions and a talk Thursday on the global problem of energy at Texas A&M. 112” >re pizza. )er pizza elivery. i * ■■■■4 THINGS I NEED TO DO TODAY... 1. Go by Yearbook Associates and have my picture taken for the ’82- ’83 AGGIELAND. 2. Go by Yearbook Associates and have my picture taken for the ’82- ’83 AGGIELAND. 3. Don’t forget 1 & 2... Yearbook As sociates is on Puryear behind Cul pepper, across from Tanglewood. Questions? Call 693-6756 HUNG TOGETHER A IS LIKE DRIN START OFF WITH A COU F TAIL ONES. Red Auerbach EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED IN A BEER. AND LESS.