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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1982)
=state Battalion/Page 8 October 13,1988 V' WL FREE, FREE! IWO FREE QUARTS PEPSI OR DR. PEPPER WITH ANY 16" PIZZA ONE FREE QUART WITH ANY 12" OR 14" PIZZA!!! 846-7785 696-7785 CAMPUS S. BRYAN S. COLLEGE STATION 319 Patricia College Station ,4* Any 16" Pizza! (with coupon) Name Phone Any 12 or 14" Pizza! (with coupon) Name. Phone -"l % IT Delivery Limited To Service Area Offer Expires Oct. 31,1982 Delivery Limited To Service Area Offer Expires Oct. 31,1982 Wood trial continues United Press International SAN ANTONIO — For the second time in as many days a witness has testified to seeing a man who could have been Charles Harrelson near the scene of the assassination of fed eral Judge John H. Wood Jr. Wood was gunned down the morning of May 29, 1979, out side his townhouse as he pre pared to leave for work. Harrel son, 44, is accused of being the trigger man in the slaying. Mary Helen Wilkinson, man ager of the Chateau Dijon Tow- nhomes, testified Tuesday she saw a man fitting Harrelson’s general description at the end of the Dijon driveway about 8:20 a.m., minutes before Wood was shot in the back. Her testimony was similar to that of Chrys Lambros, a lawyer and Dijon resident, who testified Monday that she observed a man she later identified as Har relson outside the apartment complex the morning of the shooting. Both witnesses were later hypnotized to assist in their re call at the request of federal au thorities investigating the case. “It was so unusual to see any one at that time of morning,” Wilkinson said Tuesday. “He appeared to be waiting for someone.” She said the man, about 6 feet tall, was wearing blue pants and a white shirt and had longish blond hair. But even after hyp nosis, Wilkinson said she had been too tar away to see his face. Eighteen months later, she joined Lambros in identifying a police photo of Harrelson. Only Lambros, 28, identified Harrelson in a Houston police lineup, and testified Monday she bumped into him as she walked to her car minutes be fore Wood was killed. She was recalled to the stand Tuesday and asked by Harrel son’s attorney whether she ex pected to be rewarded for her testimony. “I realize it’s a pertinent ques tion and I should not take offense,” she said. "But I would never seek or accept a reward for testimony that is nothing more than my civic obligation that anyone would do.” 1 he jury also view hours of Lambros’ video! interviews with the .FBI 0 and during the hypnosis, i H .it ids'>n is cliarg^L murder in tlu^jiiilni' sdeaffl is on trial with his wife Jo J charged with obstruction off tice, and Elizabeth Cnl charged with conspirac I he prosecution conti Jimmy Chagra, an El gambler and Elizabeth's band, hired Harrelson to] Mood so he could avoid ad smuggling trial in Wood'scJ Chugru will be tried later. 1 1 )el( use attorneys claim! relson did not kill Wood 1 have said at one point in the™ the real killer's identity wiU| revealed. Grass’ return to help fish United Press International TEXAS CITY — I he widgeons couldn’t be happier, not to mention the shrimp and fish of Galveston Bay. Widgeon grass — so called because widgeons or wild ducks FREE APARTMENT LOCATOR SERVICE • Apartments • Duplexes • Houses • Fourplexes • Townhouses Now leasing for summer and fall. Special sum mer rates now available. Walking & biking dis tance to T.A.M.U. HOMEFINDER PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 696-1006 1055 S. Texas C.S. SUMMER ENGINEERING CAN BEGIN YOUR BRIGHT NEW FUTURE Amoco Production Company (USA), one of.the nation's leading producers of oil and natural gas, has summer positions for engineering students. Our summer engineering trainee program can begin your bright new future by exposing you to both field operations and engineering projects. We have two types of positions available: ROUSTABOUT (Engineer Trainee) You will work primarily in the field, becoming familiar with the operations, equip ment, and people involved in production. SR. PRODUCTION TECHNOLOGIST (Engineer Trainee) You will work in one of our district or division offices on an engineering staff and will be assigned one or more projects during the summer. Prior roustabout experience and three years of engineering studies are required. Check with yodr Placement Office for more information. [AMOCO) Amoco Production Company (USA) A Subsidiary of Standard Oil Company (Ind.) An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F - H/V Amoco Will be interviewing on campus: October 26, 27 and 28 like to eat it — is making its first appearance in the bay area since Hurricane Carla uprooted and, it was thought, eradicated it 21 years ago. Texas City Refining Co. offi cials found the grass growing in a wastewater pond on the refin ery grounds several years ago but did not know until recently what it was. “At first we were going to burn it because it was choking off the pond,” said Jim Taylor, a company spokesman. Then the company) noticed shrimp loaded with eggs among the grass. Now the Houston Marine In stitute, a non-profit educational agency that works with delin quent youth, is undertaking to replant the bay with the grass. If the grass stays and survives the winter, officials say it could in crease the seafood harvest in the bay. Lee Merriam, a Houston Marine Institute biologist over seeing the project, led a group of students in planting the along the Houston Ship! nel about a month ago. Ii makes a perlect nun Men iam said. “Shrimpatidj need the grass to (if thein and protect them. It isac that has been missing frra bay bet ause there arcn’I many substitute grasses" II we can re-establi$9 grasses in the bay wed uially increase prodii I hat would niean an inti both commercial and pri 1 fishinn.” Pasadena school officials say minis too revealing United Press International PASADENA — The miniskirt is causing administrators to send girls home from school again. Assistant Superintendent Elmer Bendy of the Pasadena In dependent School - District said Thompson Intermediate School had sent a few girls home for wearing skirts some of their mothers might have liked as schoolgirls. “It’s not a big problem, and we haven’t had any complaints,” said Thompson Principal E.J. Ritch ey. “We’ve had to send a couple of girls home, and we had one volunteer to go.” Bondy said the school dis trict’s dress code prohibits reveal ing clothing and the administra tion informally has decided that includes skirts above the knee. “We hate to get into the busi ness of getting rulers and measuring skirts,” Bondy said. Thompson eighth-grader Sara Gammage, 13, wore a skirt two inches above her knee the first day of school. She escaped disciplinary action and has not shown her knees since. “I think it is an OK dress code,” she said. “But they shouldn't be that strict, Iftl were in school now, they want to go with fashion, t( 'll we were up thereandi were down here, they woiillj want us doing this to them? Ritchey said when niini! were in vogue 15 years aJ cials let girls wear dresses assk as five inches above tliekncf'l trustee John Elam said theta is unlikely to change theprti mle unless there is a loudol “I don’t think it is tod! Elam said. “I haven’t studied ityles and styles dictate 4 things. I’m sure we’ll look J it it does cause a problem.'’