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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 13, 1983)
Tuesday, September 13, 1983/The Battalion/Page 11 illar & PLAYEKStOO : waifftYR* egg JiWWT nnent \s like!] •eivably be h Stadium as icduling conflicts i Sherrill called in lentioncd it to mt, talk about s lid. "As far as don’t have any series as long as lict with the Rice heduled. The(Al have to make tkcl oposed series will J, an interstate m d in 1899 and lastedi ould be renewed, ead in the series* ist 14 losses and ficials were unaval nt. ason ^ the summer. “Si * as fast as Lori Si y counting a lot oa maturity.” problem area Ai king on this fall is! ■am, the Aggies Sir [slate in 1982 (d regular season ui ge of .231). Bid ivs his squad has be the “best hi nation,” andhepo! ling starters as pm photo by Jane Beach A Sunday Ride... The Texas A&M Polo team coach A. McCleary gets ready to ride in a scrimmage held on the polo Held Sunday afternoon. The was played against former A&M polo players. game Texas Inheritance murder jury selection starts Vutt, Iva Jackson per should e this season. -e from Bartlesil M ’s leading retudi nished last yearwil . Coon ile-header will be! ' home contests United Press International SALT LAKE CITY — One- undred prospective jurors faced ‘errogation by prosecutors and dense attorney Monday in the ial of a New York socialite ac- used of arranging the murder of father to protect her inheri- *r SB! k lies 1 liar lid each group rents, burnsand|< id pains and thee* 1 m le said manytinil lies are as benefidl sive treatments f lectors. showed some ol re cures to be eal garlic for ng juice of the hypertf )ro | Frances Bernice Schreuder is barged with masterminding the order five years ago of her mil- bnaire father, Salt Lake City businessman Franklin James radshaw, 76. The triggerman ^ her teenage son. Prosecutors Bradshaw was killed to pre- [ent him from disinheriting bis lughter. Prosecutors said they want the penalty for Schreuder be- ise she allegedly tried to hire )hit men to kill Bradshaw be- breorderingherson to do the job. The jury selection in Third Dis- rict Court could last all week, wt officials said. “There’s been a lot of high— le murder cases here but this is an extremely unusual murder, said Deputy Salt Lake County Attorney Ernie Jones, the chief prosecutor in the case. It’s got some interesting twists as far as evidence and the relationship be tween all parties. “The thing that makes this case unusual is the amount of money involved, the fact that the grand son killed his own grandfather and our contention that the mother put him up to it. Schreuder, a former member of the board of directors of the New York Ballet who lived in a posh Manhattan apartment with the allowance sent by her father, has pleaded innocent to the first- degree homicide complaint and is free on $500,000 bond. The trial ends a five-year inves tigation into the shooting death of Bradshaw, an auto parts magnate and oil and gas lease enter- preneur. PROBLEM PREGNANCY Are you considering Abortion? Confidential Free Pregnancy Testing & Referrals Call (713) 524-0548 Houston, Texas \ < burns, and drinl^ stomach aches, ifessionals should ; positive effects : remedies, Ren irned that some lay be dangen* i Czech use ofaj ter may “loosen ' cause skin irrii ation, she said. 1 ly of chamomile iches can also be loses of chamoU i be poisonous, x remedies the covered: nd coughs the Am :1 lemon, onion pi and poho oil; arc! plaster, skunk tine plaster; nomile tea, nisi nine oil. the Amish use onion salve» e Czechs, flaxpe* , carbolic acid si ;; the Greeks, vis and onion poultk (a ailments, the A* uoal oil, comfrey juice; the Czec lamomile tea tin tea; the Greek ea, oregano si :ory problems, 1 te oak bark, calci® rh; the Czechs J i and linden flu"' <s, garlic and C2C IT’S HERE Godfather's Pizza, HAPPY HOUR PIZZA PARTY PITCHER OF BEER 5-7 P. TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY CULPEPPER PLAZA 1515 TEXAS AVENUE PHONE: 696-4166 Beer Concession By T.G.B. Services $ 1.50 Lavelle asking for no charges United Press International WASHINGTON — A lawyer for ousted EPA official Rita Lavel le asked a federal judge Monday to dismiss Lavelle’s perjury indict ment on grounds that agency lawyers gave her advice and then worked with the prosecution to bring a case against her. Mark Bierbower, lawyer for the fired Environmental Protection Agency official, said EPA lawyers violated the attorney-client pri vilege by their actions. He said the five-count indictment should be dismissed because of government misconduct. U.S. District Judge Norma Johnson did not immediately rule on the request, but asked Lavel le’s lawyers to submit additional material to support their argu ment. The judge also set a Nov. 16 trial date. Lavelle, who was in court for the hour-long proceeding, did not talk to reporters. Lavelle was indicted in August on five felony counts, including charges of perjury and obstructing a congressional proceeding. The indictment charged that Lavelle lied under oath in testimony to two congressional panels, ob structed a congressional proceed ing and made a false “statement of certification” to the EPA. Four of the counts focused on her testimony to two congression al panels and a sworn statement to a third as well as to the EPA that she was unaware before June 17, 1982, that her former employer, Aerojet-General Corp., was a potentially responsible party in a California toxic waste cleanup. EPA officials testified to an energy and commerce subcom mittee that Lavelle was informed by her staff on May 28, 1982, of Aerojet-General’s potential cleanup liability with respect to the Stringfellow Acid Pits near Glen Avon, Calif. She did not withdraw from the case until June 18. The indictment charged that Lavelle failed to live up to a pledge at her confirmation hearings to ex cuse herself from all matters per taining to Aerojet. In seeking the dismissal, Bier bower argued that Lavelle was acting on the advice of EPA gener al counsel Robert Perry and other EPA lawyers in dealing with Con gress. He said the EPA lawyers who advised her later assisted the FBI investigation of her and helped congressional committees in draft ing questions for her appearances. Third hurricane does no damage United Press International MIAMI — Hurricane Chantal, the third of the 1983 storm season, headed north toward the chilly waters of the north Atlantic Mon day far away from land, whipping up barely enough force to keep its hurricane status. Forecasters at the National Hurricane Center in Miami said the storm was a threat only to ship ping interests and was hundreds of miles away from major shipping lanes. Chantal brushed past the resort island of Bermuda late Sunday, hut vacationers barely noticed the rain and wind from the fringe of the storm. At 6 a.m. EDT, Chantal was centered near latitude 33.8 north, longitude 56.6 west, or about 495 miles east northeast of Bermuda. The storm was moving toward the east northeast at 13 mph and was expected to continue that direc tion all day Monday. ChantaTs top winds were 75 mph — 1 mph more than neces sary for a storm to be classified a hurricane. Gales extended only 75 miles from the center and the storm was called “minimal” by forecasters. Rhodes Scholarship 1983 Are you a senior with a 3.50 + average? If so, you may be eligible for a Rhodes Scholar ship. You could spend the next 2 years at Oxford University honing your career skills, widening your educational base. Contact Professor J. F. Reading Room 211; Physics 845-5073 or 696-9190 Deadline: September 30, 19S3 IIEEE Career Day Thursday, September 15 in the Lobby of Zachry Discuss job opportunities with over a dozen different companies. T THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH Welcomes You (A Member of the Anglican Communion) EPISCOPAL STUDENT CENTER CANTERBURY HOUSE 902 JERSEY 696-0774 Wednesday Evening Eucharist 6:00 and Supper Friday Morning Eucharist 6:30 and Breakfast Student Center Chapel, St. Jude’s, open 24 hours Study Space 8c T.V. Room open until 10:00 p.m. ST. THOMAS EPISCOPAL CHURCH 906 JERSEY 696-1726 i* i<0 Sunday Morning Eucharist 8:00, 9:15, 11:00 ‘ ‘ ‘Second City’ is brilliant. ’ ’ ‘ Subtly & Superbly funny! Veccuff jM m Touring if” September Rudder Auditorium 8 pm $4;5.6 /’zscez x— .1— jl. box of <. /CMsemeaxt -i-r