Thursday, July 21, 1983/The Battalion/Page 11 it's big •ague's nations o(! throuj? ox. ce is itsplJ »d lureai [ames, In orker- > said afin) - I’mpn )ine grow ile thouffl rt of these rlington burial OK’d or Reynolds, usher “flth or fl® United Press International “ndingoo 1 WASHINGTON — Nancy jterial, ar^an intervened with the , playimifesirlent Wednesday to waive Iprules to have two notable ookieq 1 en buried in Arlington Gemet- foreaWB— ABC-TV anchorman urnedHiiank Reynolds and former pite House usher J. Bernard »r andfeest. P- ‘ It was Reynolds’last request at:he be buried in the military Etery in nearby Virginia, ui Hebertr r< ^‘ n ? to Tate, the deaguedpMy’ 5 press secretary. eberth. Lt. Col. Jamie Walton, public oe - formation officer for the ilitary District of Washington H Arlington Cemetery, said " “^ynolds would have been eligi- lon request” for buriall at the ifetery since he received a miss, ami je dream Purple Heart in World War II. He served as a sergeant in the Army. Tate said that Reagan learned of the request when she telephoned Reynolds’ wife, Henrietta, to express the first family’s condolences. Reynolds, 59, died early Wednesday morning of hepati tis complicated by bone cancer. He will be buried in Arlington with full military honors Satur day. Reagan, and possibly the president, will attend, Tate said. Tate also said Mrs. Reagan re ceived a similar request Tuesday from former first lady Jac queline Onassis that West, who died Monday of a respiratory ill ness, be buried in Arlington. West served under six presi dents from 1941 to 1957 and wrote a book about his experi ences, “Upstairs at the White House.” He was 70 and was de tailed to the White House while serving in the Navy during World War II. Tate said Reagan telephoned Onassis Wednesday to inform her the president was granting the waiver for West to be buried in Arlington. She said that Reagan and Onassis chatted and “spent some time catching up.” It was not known whether Onassis would attend West’s funeral. Her first husband. President John Kennedy, is buried at Arlington. as lOlarter criticizes Reagan d his foreign policy Midland'.' i Division 1 dl-Star indudinfl adezhaii United Press International er AwaiTOKYO — Samantha Smith’s sit to the Soviet Union at the yitation of Soviet leader Yuri ;ts in tlmndropov is an example of the two hitsfnple things” needed to over- jine political differences and his honitfevent war, former President gles foAmy Carter said Wednesday. Andropov invited Samantha, gs on K r |> a sixth-grader from Man- de it Wpter, Me., to visit his country double her parents after she wrote Basking whether the Kremlin Schusrtdership wanted war or peace. ioard.Ii’f'1 think Mr. Andropov is a scored i: ry wise man to make this hu- an, personal gesture to a nerunfo [ ihg American girl,” Carter d a gathering of business exas W ders on the third day of his ■day private visit to Japan, lit shows the importance of est, overcoming governmental ani mosity and differences by hu man contact,” he said. “I’m sure that President Reagan, who is a great actor and expert in public relations, wishes he had thought of it first. Simple things like this are powerful enough to prevent war,” he said. Carter told reporters Tues day that briefing papers the Reagan camp allegedly obtained during the 1980 presidential campaign described “issues that we had identified through secret polling as being the most crucial and important,” he said. “Whether he had all this material or not I do not know. If he did, it was obviously of great benefit to him,” he said. Carter also criticized his sue- omputer-glitched )ill sparks shooting doof electric spree United Press International INDIANAPOLIS — A man lo received an erroneous 19.96 electric bill went into a je, grabbed a gun, stepped tside his apartment and rted shooting. Witnesses at the Garden Arch tments, where other nts’ electric bills averaged | for the month, told police Dayton Parkey, 65, asked 'em, “Wouldn’t you be mad?” such a bill. They said he then ordered a visitor to the apartment complex to leave the area and fired a shot at him. The bullet hit Lester Rhodes’ belt buckle, but he was not hurt, authorities said. Police officers who tried to calm Parkey said he fired at them four times and they fired back. Parkey was not hit and fled to his apartment. Capt. Lawr ence Turner then persuaded him to drop the gun. A spokeswoman for Indiana polis Power and Light Co. said the bill was an error — caused by a computer problem — and that it should have been for $33.50. “We are very, very sorry ab out the incorrect bill,” Jan Low er said. “We’re very upset that Mr. Parkey reacted in this way.” Parkey faces charges of attempted murder and resisting arrest with a deadly weapon. Ocean weather blamed Hunt for Titanic delayed United Press International NEW YORK — Fierce ocean weather and mechanical prob lems are being blamed for de laying the search for the “un- sinkable” Titanic which sank on its maiden voyage 71 years ago. The search in the North Atlantic, using a sonar system and a magnetometer capable of detecting the 45,000-ton wreck, was originally scheduled for Monday but was delayed again Tuesday by mechanical prob lems, expedition spokesman Michael Jahn said. The expeditioners were not able to drop a line carrying the equipment into the water be cause of an electrical problem and corrosion on the towing line and the braking system of the towing crane, Jahn said. The “consistent strong winds and a northwest excursion of water” were also delaying the survey, he said. The venture by Columbia University scientists began Saturday and is being conducted from a U.S. Navy research ves sel, the Robert D. Conrad. Texas oilman and investor Jack Grimm, who financed ex peditions to locate the Loch Ness monster and Bigfoot, is financ ing the expedition to find the vessel. The RMS Titanic, called “un- sinkable” because it had water tight compartments and a dou ble-bottom hull, struck an iceberg about midnight April 14, 1912, 40 miles southeast of Newfoundland. The iceberg tore a 300-foot gash on the side of the ship, rup turing and flooding five water tight areas. The ship could float with four flooded compart ments. ' Within three hours, the 822- foot-long White Star liner, on its maiden voyage from South ampton, England, to New York City, sank killing 1,513 people, most of them immigrants who were traveling in steerage, deep inside the ship. 2 indicted in prison beatings United Press International DEL RIO — Zavala County sheriff Ramon G. Garza and an investigator have been indicted by a federal grand jury on charges of falsely arresting and harrassing prisoners to gain confessions, and the investigator and a former deputy have been indicted for beating prisoners. The 15-count indictment was returned in U.S. District Court against Garza and investigator Alfredo R. Menchaca. Menchaca and former depu ty Mario H. Avila were charged with participating in the beating of a prisoner and pleaded guilty. Garza and Menchaca were charged in one count with con spiring to violate the civil rights of seven civilians by forcing them to confess to crimes. The indictment said the violations occurred between April 8, 1981 and Dec. 19, 1982. Garza and Menchaca also were charged in 11 other counts with violating the civil rights of those arrested or detained. Both wefe charged in another count with holding a prisoner in in voluntary servitude by refusing to release him after he had been cleared of all charges by the Dis trict Attorney. Avila and Menchaca were charged in a separate criminal information with beating Pedro Nunez-Lesmes on Dec. 5, 1982, and with intimidating a fellow deputy sheriff to prevent him from telling FBI agents of the alleged beating. Alleged killer worried someone will kill him United Press International LOS ANGELES — Marvin Pancoast, who has pleaded inno cent by reason of insanity to beating model Vicki Morgan to death with a baseball bat, is “a frightened young man” whose lawyers fear someone will try to kill him. Pancoast, 33, entered two pleas Tuesday — innocent and innocent by reason of insanity — to one count of murder and one count of assault with a deadly weapon before Municipal Court Commissioner Robert Swasey, who scheduled a preliminary hearing July 28. By entering two pleas, Pan coast would be tried and, if found guilty, could face another hearing to determine if he was sane at the time of the crime. The arraignment was arranged hurriedly by Pan coast’s lawyers who tried to keep it a secret. The attorneys have expressed fear for their client’s life, asking his jailers to increase security because they are afraid someone may try to kill the for mer talent agency clerk to pre vent a trial in a case that involves alleged videotapes of govern ment officials at a sex party. One of the lawyers com plained in court that the District Attorney’s Office fueled the notoriety surrounding the case that could “expose (Pancoast) to additional risk” by informing the media about the arraign ment, which was originally sche duled July 25. But Deputy District Attorney Stanley Weisberg said the media had a right to attend the hear ing. Swasey agreed with the pro secutor and refused to admon ish the district attorney. Pancoast’s principal attorney, Arthur Barens, said he asked the arraignment be moved ahead from July 25 to avoid ex posing his client to danger and publicity and also to dissociate his case from Beverly Hills attor ney Robert K. Steinberg, who claimed last week he saw videotapes of Morgan and gov ernment officials in sex acts. July 25 is the day Steinberg is scheduled to appear to answer a court order to produce the tapes, which he said have now been stolen from his office. Beverly Hills police have re commended the lawyer be charged with filing a false theft report. Morgan, 30, long-time mis tress to presidential confidant Alfred Bloomingdale, was killed July 7 as she slept in the con dominium she shared with Pan coast. ALIEN EGG CONTEST ALIEN EGG HUNT COME EARLY!! s $1 P»LJTT SCHULMAN THEATRES OFF ADULT TICKET 1st SHOW EACH DAY SCHULMAN 6 775-2463 775-2468 2002 E. 29th 2:30 4:45 7:15 9:35 WAR GAMES Dolby 2:455:05 7:25 9:40 TWILIGHT ZONE (Dolby) 2:40 4:55 7.359:45 BLUE THUNDER 2:35 5:00 7:30 9:55 TRADING PLACES 2:20 4:50 7:20 9:50 OCTOPUSSY (Dolby) DISC 1ST 30 MINS 1ST SHOW t A " SR CITIZENS 65-ID DISC AN' 1 >Mf cessor’s foreign policy, charging Reagan with inconsistency in his China policy and a lack of con cern for human rights in Central America. “(Reagan) advocated even af ter he became president that in effect we should shift our eggs back to the Taiwan basket and abandon the U.S.-China re lationship,” he said. Carter said he believed the administration should cut off military aid to El Salvador until the Central American country respects the human rights of its citizens. “In Nicaragua I think that de spite semantical denials, the Un ited States is directly and overtly involved in the overthrow of the Sandinista government,” he said. 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