McCultaf VE5, M TUI JUST WHAT M CAW DO Will Goldwater, ed of civilian in. military mate uld do an’ )ut not d put mytaill* ments were of’ containin] ■rgency m requested for [I million hebii support CIA- i Nicaragua. faced the | I-door session to raragua aid anJ [related amend’ i treaty to ban apons. iublican leader pushed the Set ie overall two. al dined to com er Smith wasco authorities. Ik refused to coni’ fate of ie civilian poslit i75 after the rank of ser the governmert e FBI that,alic 1 INSCOM, k isively to ires, ien experienced I difficulties, jptcy duringik > nent said et KGB agenlii ■mber 1982 ssified info# “Royal Miter." davit said Sr te provided ed information iter. I Smith received 1 from the Kl ed as Victor ransaction to viet commerdi Tokyo, authon irtment source he Soviet agent e expelled fro® the Army 975, when lit hiian duty rfl the army wii eant. >t culminated ation by the FBI Department. Ht >on his arrivalJi ties said nder upon am' of could face nt. • • Roll with • • Tuesday, April 3, 1984/The Battalion/Page 7 Lawsuit filed in restaurant slayings United Press International HENDERSON — The wife of one victim in last year’s mas sacre of five people abducted from a Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant has filed a $5.5 mil lion negligence suit against the restaurant operators. Meanwhile, the 6-month-old investigation into the robbery- homicide, in which all the wit nesses were taken from the scene and killed on a rural East Texas oil lease, has turned up no new leads, police said. Henderson attorney John Sloan said Lana Maxwell of Kil gore filed suit March 29 against Tem-Kil Co. Inc. and Kdgore Kentucky Fried Chicken, the two firms that operated the res taurant from which the victims were abducted on Sept. 23, 1983. “We’ve sued on the basis of negligence,” Sloan said. “Fai lure to provide security is the most obvious cause.” Sloan said that after the de fendants are served with the suit, he will immediately begin seeking to subpoena company records and testimony. “Hopefully we’ll go to trial at the end of this year or early next year,” he said. Maxwell filed suit on her own behalf and on behalf of her newborn son, David Maxwell II, born six months after his fa ther’s slaying. She was pregnant at the time of her husband’s Psychiatric test ordered lor Marvin Gaye’s father United Press International LOS ANGELES — A Munici pal Court judge Wednesday or dered a psychiatric study for the preacher father of slain soul-singer Marvin Gaye be cause the lawyer for the elderly man said he is incompetent to stand trial for murder. Judge Michael Tynan, who entered a plea of innocent on behalf of Marvin Gaye Sr., or dered the retired minister held without bail pending comple tion of the psychiatric report, which is expected to lake about three weeks. “It is my understanding he is clearly incapable of under standing these proceedings and to undertake his own defense,” Tynan said of Marvin Gaye Sr., granting defense lawyer Philip Schreiber’s request for a psychi atric evaluation. Tynan delayed further court proceedings until April 25, when he said he would set bail at $100,000 if it is determined Gaye understands the nature of the charges against him. If the doctor reports Gaye is incapable of understanding the legal proceedings, and a judge agrees, the retired minister could be sent to a mental hospi tal until he is able to aid his law yer. Schreiber, Tynan and Dep uty District Attorney Dona Bracke had huddled in the judge's chambers to discuss the competency issue in private be fore holding the brief court ses- •sion before a roomful of the singer’s fans and reporters. Gaye, who is charged with al legedly shooting his Grammy- award winning son through the heart Sunday, did not utter a word during the five-minute le gal proceeding. He reportedly is being held in a high-security section of the county jail because of alleged death threats. “Il is my understand ing he is clearly inca pable of understand ing these proceedings and to undertake his own defense,” Tynan said of Marvin Gaye Sr., granting defense lawyer Philip Schreib er’s request for a psy chiatric evaluation. Schreiber earlier told report ers the singer’s father is “a very moral man, who in recent years has become rather frail.” “The thunder is out of the man,” he said. “A lot of things will be coming out which will be surprising to the public.” The younger Gaye was shot twice in the chest at his parent’s Los Angeles home Sunday af ternoon following an argument that began with his father Sat urday night, police said. Police said the fight was over an “im material letter from an insur ance company.” Bracke said Gaye appeared mentally competent to police detectives when he was ques tioned after the killing. Another member of the district attor ney’s staff said defense lawyers frequently file incompetency motions to delay a trial. But Tynan, in his ruling, said, “A doubt arose in my mind as to the present sanity of the defendant.” Bracke said the prosecution decided to file the murder count, instead of a lesser charge of manslaughter, because there was a time lapse between a physical altercation between the two men and the shooting. She said Gaye’s father got his gun from his bedroom and walked back to where his son was standing. The first shot, through the heart, killed the entertainer in stantly, she said. The singer’s father then waited a few moments, stepped forward and fired a second shot from his .38-caliber revolver through the entertainer’s left shoulder at such close range that it left gunshot powder on his son’s face, Bracke said. Coverage of O’Bryan’s death disturbs death row inmates United Press International HUNTSVILLE — The exe cution of Ronald “Gandyman” O’Bryan disturbed Texas death row inmates, but apparently not as much as media coverage of the event, some inmates said Wednesday. Thomas “Andy” Barefoot, 39, considered the next inmate likely for execution, criticized reporters for defying O’Bryan’s wishes to leave his family out of the coverage. Barefoot said the execution scene resembled a “dog and pony show.” However, Barefoot was 13 miles away from the exe cution chamber at Texas De partment of Gorrections head- (juarters. “I was very much upset —not that he was killed — but about the exploitation of what went down, ” Barefoot said. O’Bryan, 39, was executed Saturday for poisoning his 8- year-old son with Halloween candy in 1974 to collect insur ance money. Barefoot said the execution did not bother him; he said that as a Christian he is assured of eternal life. He said he would not grant extensive media inter views prior to his scheduled ex ecution to avoid news coverage similar to that surrounding O’Bryan’s death. “I’m feeling like I’m not going to be the next show pony,” said Barefoot, sentenced to die for the 1978 shooting death of a central Texas po liceman. Jay Kelly Pinkerton, 22, scheduled for execution May 31, also declined interviews be cause he said the news media had treated O’Bryan unfairly in his final days. Pinkerton was convicted in the 1979 slashing death of an Amarillo housewife during a robbery. Both Pinkerton and Barefoot said the news media did not give enough coverage to O’Bryan's insistence 1 hat he was innocent. O’Bryan, dubbed “Gandy man” by his fellow inmates, was not well liked on death row. When he died at 12:45 a.m. Saturday, many death row in mates nad already gone to sleep. Others reflected on his death in silence. Following the Dec. 7, 1982 exeuction of Gharlie Brooks Jr., of Fort Worth, death row in mates at Huntsville rattled their cell bars and shouted in protest against the killing. NOW SERVING LUNCH SPECIAL 11 am-2pm Mon. -F ri. Original Chinese Cuisine Hunan-Szechwan- Mandarin Quick service, Friendly atmosphere 340 THE INN AT CHIMNEY HILLS Restaurant & Bar 901 University Drive 260-9150 want ads tm OPEN HOUSE Courtyard Apartments Space *** Price ** Location ** Local Owner *** Outstanding Maintenance Come See Why We Are College Station’s “Standard of Quality” and Save with our Early Bird Leases Refreshments and Special Gifts Saturday April 7 Saturday & Sunday April 14,15 or come by anytime 8-6 Monday - Friday 600 University Oaks Highway 30 at Stalling Drive 693-2772 death, Sloan said. David Maxwell, 20, an em ployee of the restaurant, was abducted around closing time along with Mary Tyler, 37, Joey Johnson, 20, Opie Hughes, 37, and Monty Landers, 20. Rusk Gounty Sheriff Mike Stone said investigation contin ues into the killings, but there have been no new devel opments. “The Waco sheriffs office had a boy we wanted to talk to last weekend but he was just one of thousands,” Stone said. “We talked to him but that didn’t re sult in any new leads.” The five victims were taken to an oil lease in adjacent Rusk Gounty. Four were laid out face down and shot in the back of the head. Tyler apparently tried to flee and was shot down about 50 yards from the others, investigators said. ■ n ■■■■■■ hi ■■■■■■■■■ Gather up all of your broken baubles and bangles and bring them in to DOUGLAS JEWELRY Culpepper Plaza 693-0677 and save 50% on most of your jewelry repairs (watch repairs and stone setting excluded) Good thru April 30,1984 This coupon good at Culpepper Plaza location only. No charge cards accepted on this offer. Must bring this coupon in when leaving repairs. / Today's Your Last Chance! 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