The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 31, 1983, Image 7

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

    ataan Death March
try to sue Japan
«
Peter R«i
Institute.
barriei
United Press International
■ ALBUQUERQUE — A Ba
taan Death March survivor says
iEjapanese people placed in de
tention camps in World War II
hjtve the right to seek damages
flom the U.S. government, he
should be able to sue the
Jlpanese government.
I Leo Padilla, who observed his
|cih birthday in a Japanese pris-
er-of-war camp, said he has
ked to other survivors of the
42 march and subsequent
farced labor and said “I imagine
efery one of them” would be in-
teiested in seeking damages.
■ Rep. Manuel Lujan, R-N.M,
will introduce legislation
Wednesday designed to circum
vent the 1951 peace treaty with
jlpan, which specified that
+ nlither member of the newly-
f|rged alliance would sue the
o|her for wartime damages.
Padilla said he started talking
to other survivors about the pro
hibition about three years ago
bfit had never done anything ab-
oyt it until recently.
[He said his interest was re
vived after the U.S. Supreme
Court ruled that Japanese na
tionals interned in detention
camps in the United States dur
ing the war could sue the U.S.
government for damages.
“When we saw the Japanese
nationals could do it, we thought
maybe we had the same right,”
Padilla said Friday.
Now 60, Padilla was 17 years
old when he and other members
of the 200th Coast Artillery were
ordered to the Philippines in
1941. The Japanese invaded the
islands in December of that year.
When Manila fell Jan. 2,
1942, Gen. Douglas MacArthur
ordered his troops to fall back to
Bataan so they would not be di
vided by the Japanese.
They fought a delaying action
down the 30-mile-long, 15-mile
wide peninsula, which military
historians later said disrupted
the Japanese timetable for con
quest in the Pacific.
President Roosevelt ordered
MacArthur off Corregidor Is
land — at the southern tip of
Bataan — March 11, 1942, to go
to Australia and assume com
mand of all allied forces in the
western Pacific.
Lt. Gen. Jonathan Wain-
wright continued the fight on
Bataan until April 9, 1942, when
he retreated to Corregidor, and
surrendered April 18.
The Death March followed,
with the Japanese force mar
ching 70,000 captured U.S. and
Philippine troops 55 miles back
up the mountainous, jungle-
covered peninsula.
Only 54,000 reached Camp
O’Donnell. Of that group, the
ones that survived hunger, thirst
and disease in the camp were
sent to various plants producing
material for the Japanese war
effort.
Padilla said he and others of
his artillery unit had been serv
ing as infantrymen at the south
ern end of Bataan when “about
100 Japanese infantry came
over a hill and took us. We were
in foxholes.”
Padilla spent 42 months as a
prisoner, and was released in
October 1945.
ie
tter
utional
Ualih" 1
saniU 1
be fa« el1
k.
)hnso« tf
ause H':
d body'
etem
cites a 11 "
rgettW
yOU l*
•(lure#
he tast f
.inp re f
r y COOl®
1 of« atf:
■n lea f [
les at |f ;
• or vita 111 '
irceol
ritrus
cabh
■andjj
day *7
ah t
)ne
alfa<
-acke rs 1
■rving 5
fit
Penny beer is back! Purchase any great tastin' Hoffbrau
meal anytime, seven days a week, and enjoy up to three
beers for a penny each. That's a thirst quenchin' deal that's
hard to beat.
And Hoffbrau's regular draft beer is only 50C whether you
purchase a meal or not.
Our great menu offers a wide variety of steaks, chicken
fried steak and catfish. Lunch or dinner...Hoffbrau is sure
to suit your taste.
11 oz. T-Bone
$7.50
12 oz. Ribeye
$9.95
Chicken Fried Steak
$5.25
Catfish
$5.95
...And More
All served with our famous Salad, Fried Potatoes and Bread.
10% discount to Senior Citizens •
Carry-outs available.
Banquet facilities
available.
Monday - Saturday, 11 a.m.-lO p.m.; Sunday, 11:30 a.m.-lO p.m.
317 South College in the Skaggs Center, 260-9172
Tuesday, May 31, 1983/The Battalion/Page 7
Suspect sought in aggravated
robbery charge, lost in woods
United Press International
IREDELL — A man armed
with a pistol held half a dozen
bank employees at gunpoint
while he rummaged through
cash drav/ers and the vault at the
Iredell State Bank Saturday and
escaped with an undetermined
amount of cash, a witness re
ported.
Tommy Joe Williamson, 47,
of Bosque County, was being
sought on an aggravated rob
bery charge following Satur
day’s robbery.
The gunman, whom bank
officials said they knew, entered
the bank at about 12:45 p.m.
with a pistol pointed at a teller
who had just left for lunch, said
one employee.
“He said, ‘I’m crazy. I’m
going to rob the bank, and I’m
going to kill you,’” the witness
said.
“He had everybody lay on the
floor and he proceeded to rob
us,” the witness said. He went
through the bank’s cash drawers
and vault. No one was injured,
but the gun did go off in the
vault, the witness said.
The robber took one of the
employees hostage and fled in
her car. She was released un
harmed about two miles east of
town, the Department of Public ,
Safety reported.
Bosque County officials, the
DPS and the Texas Rangers
gave up their search for the sus
pect after dark. They sought
him in a wooded area north of
Iredell, but the search was com
plicated by heavy thunder- i
storms that stymied helicopters
and dogs.
Escaped
lioness
suffocates
United Press International
A weakened 8-month-old
African lioness named Cuervo,
who escaped from her owners
May 16, apparently choked to
death while onlookers tried to
untangle a chain around her
neck, authorities said.
Brazos County Deputy Sher
iff Lorenzo Alonzo said the body
of the 100-pound lioness was
taken to veterinarians at Texas
A&M University Friday for an
autopsy.
The normally docile pet
escaped from her owners, Butch
and Debbie Lovell, by breaking
her restraining chain while the
couple moved from a trailer
home near Bryan to the Lake
Somerville area.
Lovell said a link on the re
straining line snapped and
Cuervo, dragging an eight-foot
length of chain behind her, fled
into the woods.
Alonzo said Cuervo’s chain
was caught in some shrubs near
the Lovell’s former home. When
people approached her, she be
gan “growling and trying to
bite”.
The sheriff said some men
tried to use a restraining device
to hold Cuervo’s neck while
others tried to untangle her
chain.
“Then all of a sudden she quit
fighting and got quiet. I’m not
sure, but I think she choked to
death,” he said.
GET OFF ON OFF-CAMPUS?
NEST IN A TREEHOUSE.
Do you get off on the idea of living
off-campus? Yet wouldn’t want to
miss out on the fun, friends, and
closeness the dorms offer? You can
enjoy the best of both worlds ... by
nesting in a treehouse. Treehouse
Apartments. Just a little off campus,
and so much more than just a dorm.
Only a block from campus on Jersey
Street, Treehouse Apartments offers
all the security, friendship and conve
nience of dorm life. PLUS the extra
space, privacy and amenities you
want. Like swimming pools, large
closets, outdoor storage, central
laundry room, outdoor racks and
storage for bikes, and much more.
Sharp 1- and 2-bedrooms, many
with patios or balconies.
Reserve your apartment NOW AND
SAVE! Just sign your summer or
school-year lease.
Move up in the world.
205 Jersey St. West of College Station, TX 77840 • 713/696-5707
’COMPUCAMP
A COMPUTER CAMP FOR YOUR
SCHOOL AGE CHILD THIS SUMMER
We work with games and educational
programs to enhance your child’s summer.
This is just one of the many activities your
child will enjoy. We also swim, skate, bowl,
water slide and much, much more.
Full and half day programs available all summer.
^ _ 5 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS, OVER 20 YRS. EXPERIENCE
BRYAN COLLEGE STATION
Kiddo Campus Wee Aggieland Care-A-Lot
4351 Carter Creek Pkwy. 1711 Village Drive 900 University
846-1037 693-9900 Oaks Bivd.
Royal Tot u „ 693-1987
110 Royal ... HaPPY Da V_
846-4503
1024 Balcones Drive
696-9062
Food for Thought
at a Discount Rate
Texas A&M Students, Faculty & Staff
Get a healthy balance of News, Sports,
Business, Culture and Humor every day
from The HOUSTON CHRONICLE.
—SPECIAL SAVINGS—
May 31-August 12 $10.00
May 31-August 31 $12.00
CALL 693-7815
or
693-2323
Houston Chronicle