Tuesday, March 8, 1983/The Battalion/Page 5 t ■"Police brutality ase reopened 'United Press International DALLAS — The Justice De- artment traveled a long and implicated road to reach Mon- ^ 'ay’s opening of the trial of :ven white New Orleans police- ien accused of beating blacks hile investigating a fellow fficer’s slaying. ill 'The federal indictments con- ’ f four black men who said tey were illegally jailed as atential witnesses, threatened i’th guns, beaten and almost iffocated by bags placed over teir heads during interroga- 3iis that lasted up to 18 hours. b\ ihtj yi seven officers were I la ler Robert D. Bullock before the budget presentation for an update on anticipated state revenues, which were ex pected to drop by more than $1.5 billion from earlier esti mates because of decreases in world oil prices, the national re cession and declines in the Texas border economy. Bullock was scheduled to announce his new revenue esti mates today. Now Better Than Ever. 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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 Style (Tossed Salad) Mashed Potato w gravy Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Tea or Coffee SUNDAY SPECIAL NOON and EVENING ROAST TURKEY DINNER Served with Cranberry Sauce Cornbread Dressing Roll or Corn Bread - Butter - Coffee or Tea Giblet Gravy And your choice of any One vegetable |“Quality First”! Parb Four deaths still unsolved iesda e phi Police investigate killings oberlfi^ United Press International 3und beaten or stabbed in their omes in a west Houston neigh- alilii . prlood. lepartafcSrhe funeral for Elizabeth aubus, estranged wife of the ■per Arkansas Gov. Orval nit for^aubus, was scheduled at noon eed-Mfclday. She was to be buried in Memorial Oaks Cemetery plot te bought two months ago. .Mrs. Faubus, 44, found bludgeoned last Thursday in the tub of her home, was the latest of three women found dead in their bathtubs. Authorities said although Mrs. Faubus sustained multiple i cu Faubus, 73, flew to Houston Friday from his home in Little Rock, Ark. Police took him to Mrs. Faubus’ home to view the scene and to tell him what they knew about the case. head injuries, her death was due to suffocation, with indications that a fatal amount of pressure had been applied to the front of her neck. Although medical in vestigators said Sunday they felt “something other than hands” was used to kill Mrs. Faubus, no other weapon has been found. “It was a very brutal murder,” Faubus said. “How in the name of God can people do things like that to other people?” about a block away from the apartment of Ruth Kottler, 61, the first victim in the series of killings. Detective J.C. Moshier, chief investigator in the case, said police had received several tips and information on the cases, but had no “earth shaking” leads. Saturday a fourth woman was found dead in the neighbor hood. Bonnie Grace Wright, 40, was found stabbed to death in the kitchen of her townhouse, couii i alias flight delayed by rat iiscovered on food tray se wJj United Press International ..,l[ DALLAS — An American irlities flight was delayed 40 ■ 1 inutes last month to remove a - , it which had boarded the first back, saying: “There’s a mouse up there.” Later, Brydon said, she informed passengers it was a rat because it was at least 6 in ches long. , ass section on a food service 73 Old' a y ( * l j' | Passenger Don Brydon said an( j first he feared there was bomb aUI ( .' a hijacker on board when the n ' j C-10 taxied to a remote area of allas-Fort Worth Airport. I siu crew kept looking ept ' ils . ound and behind them. Other ''ew members paced back and irth. It was a deck uckneJ* “The stewardess said it was not unusual,” Brydon said of a Feb. 10 flight bound for New York. “She said they come out of the flight kitchen, and one once ran up her arm out of a food service tray. He said the two Sky Chef faci lities, where some 20,000 meals a day are prepared for nation wide flights, “have an outstand ing record out there” which was better than competitors in the airline food service industry. But an American flight atten dant based in San Francisco con firmed there were sanitary problems in the huge Sky Chefs facilities. iisi' irtL, it W as a decidedly abnor- operation before takeoff,” .(stu^ said. e said a flight attendant ran m K v Sward — and immediately ran ig a “I decided not to eat. I guess they trapped or killed it. I did have another drink, though.” American spokesman Paul Haney confirmed the incident but said rodents on planes are extremely rare. The flight attendant, who asked not to be identified, said she had seen three rats and, “I’ve seen flight logbooks with ‘mouse’ or ‘rat’ entries. You’re supposed to report these things.” Now you SUr.Sm.TBAPE OB BENT THROUGH THE - F-MI d Ld •S know A NEW CLASS IN STUDENT LIVING! • compact, efficient space • 3 minutes from campus • security/covered parking • washer/dryer in every unit • CHANCE FOR FREE TRIP TO EUROPE* (* subject to total occupancy) 846*8960 United Press International It’s the most common ailment the country, affecting 90 per- nt of Americans. It generates lions of dollars for aspirin tnufacturers. But despite its 1 versality, the simple head- is not yet understood. “It’s only in the past decade jfwe’ve begun to understand * pain mechanisms, and 1 5 ere’s still a lot to be learned,” l anil ys Seymour Solomon, director tsusptf the headache unit at Monte- i retire Medical Center in New s arc >rk City. and r f Researchers know that peo- iget headaches for all sorts of paystfisons — anything from mus- ng i°Iar tension to brain tumors, ent o^nsion headaches usually re- crimf. It from psychological stress. lis in turn may cause scalp j iscles to contract too hard or ^ ) long. Nerve endings in the r j^ilp, stimulated by the tight- ' ed muscles, relay an elec- "y : >chemical impulse to the lin, which interprets the sig ht) pl' l,I n S fexasJ“ ut what about the 10 per- ' j itof the population that does '' |()|] t get headaches? Says Solo- I >n, “We do not understand j s I10 ||y the brain sometimes regis- ^ (jJ pain and at other times does dietf” Fountai Forum pre nts CHRISTIANITY ON TRIAL - is Christianity credible in Tdday^ylfVorid? - you be the judge - THIS WEEK: Christianity's Cure to Society's Illness Biblical Perspectives on: — crime — economic crisis — social problems When: Every Wednesday 12:00-1:00 February 16-f*1arch 23 (Except March 16) Where: Rudder Fountain oasis The Bass WAREHOUSE SHOE FIT CO. in 5 Colors Sizes 5-10 But 2^00 ^ in Narrow & Med. Widths Sizes 5-11 But ’ 1 in 2 Colors Sizes 5-10 But $24.°° in 4 Colors Sizes 5-11 N&M Widths SHOE FIT CO Mon.-Sat. 9:30 a.m.-6 p.m. 693-8269 in « said.