Thursday, June 30, 1983/The Battalion/Page 5 Culla Claims to have killed 100 '< 1 FEEL 5 WG ftLREfti Man charged in killing atic switch -lop simili mechanist United Press International GEORGETOWN — Henry cc Lucas, who claims to have led 100 women, has been ed for the death of a fifth male victim, an unidentified oman whose body was found Williamson County Justice of Peace Bill Hill set bond at D,000 Tuesday on the mur- charge against Lucas. The ody, found Oct. 31, 1975 near eorgestown along Interstate has yet to be identified. Sheriff Jim Boutwell had aveled to Montague last week question Lucas and said then would prepare charges jainst the man believed re- onsible for the deaths of up to women killed along the inter- >led patict ould not has ccidents V advances iedman sai ■ ill needed i therehaH *s to devel ary trail ■alth center and occui cal therapt vice. aliens, tk legally rely eral ID for ecurity cart hould also amnesty d. And the i ed that ett be impost who know, ZESf id 10% )-8776 uilmait EAtnes VaSS; state between Austin and south ern Kansas in the past four years. Lucas, 46, is jailed in lieu of $1 million bond for the stabbing death of an Ringgold woman, 80, whose ashes and remains were found in the woodburning stove of Lucas’ shack in nearby Stoneburg. He also has been charged with three other murders involving a girl, 15, he lived with, a woman whose headless body was found in Hale County in the Panhan dle in February 1982 and a west Texas woman, 46, strangled in her mobile home in February 1981. He remains a suspect in sever al other cases in the state. The number of law depart ments publicly trying to link I X c s cm ■4 Around town ASA£ student chapter honored U The student branch of the American Society of Agricul tural Engineers at Texas A&M has been named the 1983 sinner of the Annual FIEI Activities Competition. An engraved gold cup acknowledging the accomplish ment was presented June 28 to representatives during spe- eral ID lotj rial ceremonies at the annual ASAE meeting in Chicago by El Vice President James Ebbinghaus. These awards are presented to student branches which, in e opinion of the judges, have had the most outstanding ri record of acheivements and activities in the past year. Traditional 4th celebration offered said it wasco osed san® ]}, e College Station Lions Club is sponsoring a traditional Dyers wnol! |jly 4 independence Day Celebration and Fireworks Show lotbeentorf j|jjg er field _ Concession stands open at 5:30, with cold drinks, pop- s “may r®f orn ’ snow cones > an d hot dogs available. Games begin at 6 ,m, They include sack races, three-legged races, egg toss 1 citizens an :nt aliens discriminaM ind a tug-of-war. Winners will receive slices of watermelon At7:15,Bubbha Thomas and the Lightmen, ajazz ensem- efrom Houston will perform, followed by a routine from ingle Bells, of A&M Consolidated High School. Fireworks, provided by the City of College Station, start at 30 and the whole family is invited. To submit an item for this column, come by The Battalion office in 216 Reed McDonald or call 845-2611. HONEST TO GATTFS DELIVERED deliveiy after 5:00 p.m. 693-0035 (Shiloh Place) 846-3412 (Skaggs Shopping Center) The best pizza in town-T/ff**® 4 ^/ The Camera of Tomorrow, Today! • Easy Operation: Just Set, Focus and Shoot • Accurate GPD Meter Sets Shutter Speed • 'ElectroTouch" Full Manual Override PENTAX MUESlipet • Big, Bright Viewfinder • Quick "Magic Needle" Loading • Accepts the Pentax System of SMC Lenses and Accessories SALE $229^ w/50 mm f/2 VHI I S I 14 H < I Ml L. INC. 01 University Dr. • College Station, Texas 77840 • 713 846-5418 murders to Lucas increased Tuesday to include the sheriffs departments in Dallas and Be xar counties. Dallas County Sheriffs De partment Detective Bill Mayes said he will go to Montague next week to question Lucas about the slaying of Carol Blanchard, 22, of Dallas. Mayes said Blanchard’s body was discovered in the Trinity River, 4 miles south of Seagov- ille, Sept. 7, 1982. Her arms had been cut off and her body was severed at the waist. “Near where the body was found, we found a Styrofoam ice chest covered in human blood,” Mayes said. “We have finger prints on the chest, and we’re pretty sure they are the sus pect’s.” Mayes said he hoped to get Lucas’ fingerprints Wednesday from Montague officials. Mayes said Blanchard was known to have hitchhiked on In terstate 35. Philip Dryer said the slayings were similar to those for which Lucas has been indicted. Lucas’ police record includes burglary and auto theft convic tions dating to 1954. He was convicted in 1960 at Tecumseh, Mich., of strangling and stab bing his mother to death. While under sentence for his mother’s murder, he was treated for five years in a Michigan men tal hospital. Within six months of his release in 1971, Lucas was convicted of trying to kidnap a teenage girl and was sent back to prison until 1975. Corrections officials optimistic about plans United Press International MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. — Despite a myriad of problems that still exist, the so-called crisis in corrections is beginning to wane, the director of the Nation al Institute of Corrections said Wednesday. “You can’t ignore the indi cators,” Allen F. Breed told the closing session of the Southern States Correctional Association’s annual conference. “Things are getting better. We must stop being doomsayers because we can accentuate the positive.” More than 500 prison, parole and criminal justice officials from 14 states attended the four-day convention, which fo cused on problems of over crowding, sentencing guide lines, restitution and alterna tives to imprisonment. “The trends are moving in the right direction,” Breed said. “I predict that we will soon talk with pride that we are part of the helping professions.” There is a renaissance occur ring in the concept of helping people after it became fadish to debunk rehabilitation a few years ago, he said. “We have to hope offenders can change,” Breed said. “With out that hope, they become no thing but animals and we be come zookeepers.” A Minnesota criminal justice official told the SSCA delegates Tuesday that his state’s 3-year- old sentencing guidelines, which have been touted as a model for other states, look good on paper but have been abused in prac tice. “This is not to imply that guidelines and determinate sen tencing are not an appropriate step forward in sentencing re form,” said Leslie R. Green, ex ecutive officer of the Minnesota Office of Adult Release. “Much to the contrary, Minnesota has taken the first step.” Green, a former state parole board chairman, said Minnesota must now go further to remove the inequity, inconsistency and statistical illusions in the system. Many states are considering sentencing guidelines forjudges to eliminate wide disparities in punishment for the same crimes under similar circumstances. “It’s not a silver bullet, but it is a reasonable alternative to the structure that now exists,” said Frank Sanders, director of the governor’s Division of Public Safety in South Carolina. “Trying to control discretionary sentencing is like trying to nail Jello to a tree.” DA claims plotting to defendant kill him United Press International KERRVILLE — The district attorney prosecuting a nurse charged with murdering one child and injuring six others by injecting them with a muscle re laxant accused the woman on Tuesday of plotting to kill him. Kerr County District Attor ney Ron Sutton alleged during a preliminary bond reduction hearing that nurse Genene Jones had her husband search for someone to kill him, and that she conspired with one man to have him slain. “That’s unbelievable,” Jones said from the witness stand. Jones has been in the Kerr County jail since her May 25 in dictment and has been unable to raise money for her $225,000 bond. State District Court Judge Murray Jordan refused her re quest to have the bond lowered to $45,000. No charges have been filed in the alleged murder plot, and Sutton would only say it is under investigation. Jones is scheduled for trial on the charge of murdering 15- month-old Chelsea Ann McClel lan on Sept. 6. She also has been indicted on charges of injuring the McClellan child and six other patients of pediatrition Dr. Kathleen Holland, but no trial date has been set on those charges. Jones worked for Dr. Holland during the six weeks in which the deaths and injuries occured last fall. The indictments accused Jones, a licensed vocational nurse, of injecting the children with a powerful muscle relaxant — probably succinyl choline — that can cause the heart and lungs to stop functioning. Sutton told the court he learned of the alleged assassina tion plot prior to Jones indict- APPEARING at MURPHEY'S PR1ZNER Friday & Saturday Night, July 1 & 2 Moderate dress code, Relaxed Atmosphere Walton or at Texas Ave. East Gate 696-1043 f€E M OD: FOURTH of JULY SPECIALS! Tiy Something New! Shaefer & Schaefer Light *1 62 Six Pack i Pearl & Pearl Light $ 3 55 Six Pack 12 Pack Michelob —“ Case NATURAL LIGHT $2" $ (Bottles) 10 99 Miller — case $099 (Cans) Old Milwaukee $^89 12 Pack IMPORTED SAN MIGUEL $A75 A Six Prices Good Thru July 4th 3611 S. College 846-6635 ment. He identified the man she allegedly conspired with as Stuart King, but would not give further details. Jones acknowledged meeting King, but denied talking with him about having Sutton killed. She said King was in his 60s or 70s and came to her mobile home with a friend. She said King “stayed about an hour, I guess. We said ‘hello.’ That’s about it.” Jones’ attorney, Joe Grady Tuck, called Sutton’s charge “an inflamatory courtroom state ment” to increase trial publicity. COMPARE Compare the cost of an evening meal at the Memo rial Student Center Cafeteria with the cost of a meal prepared at home. ‘Many agree that it is less expensive to dine at the MSC. 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