neyei Friday, April 6, 1984/The Battalion/Page 11 in wo prisoners are executed in 1 day al g four tiinti >e very m > all iheiii One of first ini it ion ssions, United Press International Arthur Frederick Goode II, killer of two small boys, crying in Florida’s elec- ric chair Thursday less than ix hours after Louisiana exe- tited Elmo Patrick Sonnier. It was the First time two aen have been put to death n the same day since the Su- ireme Court lifted its ban on apital punishment in 1976. ihe electrocutions brought o 18 the number of con- lemned prisoners executed ince 1976. Eleven of those executions tave taken place in Southern irisons. Goode was the ourth to be electrocuted in loricla since 1976; no other tale has held more than hree executions. Goode, 30, who had said arlierhe would “kill as many get my hands was set free, re- ^“'lids as I can if he icnted in his final tearful sec- ge front I in( j s before the death hood ai fromli m dropped over his face, s, lexasl Sonnier, 35, convicted of ional Oi aping a teenage girl and 3, a vacali hen killing her and her boyf- about fc) lend, looked into the eyes of i $35 wi i|B i for jew lickens.. will be i techni e being» wn og t each pia mow who ;oes off li I ild stimuli! bidding, I call for f his victims’ fathers as he was strapped into the chair in An gola prison and begged their forgiveness. One nodded his accep tance, but the other stood grimly silent. The men were allowed by the state to watch the death of the man who killed their children. Sonnier, 35, died in “Grue some Gertie,” the oaken Louisiana electric chair, at 1:15 a.m. Goode was pro nounced dead in ‘‘Old Sparky” at Starke, Fla., at 7:09 a.m. The pudgy, pockmarked Goode spent an hour-long press conference Wednesday telling newsmen of the plea sure he found in child molest ing. His last wish, he said, was to have sex with a small boy. But he presented a differ ent picture in the death chamber. “I’m very upset,” he said in a quavering voice when a prison official extended a mi crophone for his last words. “I don’t know what to say, really.” “I want to apologize to my parents,” he said haltingly. tears welling from his eyes. “I have remorse for the boys I murdered. It’s difficult for me to show it.” Goode killed Jason Ver- dow, 9, after escaping from a mental hospital in Spring Grove, Md., and later killed 11-year-old Kenneth Dawson in Falls Church, Va. He was sentenced to life in prison in the Virginia slaying. Sonnier, in his final statement in the Louisiana death chamber, apologized to Lloyd LeBIanc and Godfrey Bourque, the fathers of teen age victims David LeBIanc and Loretta Bourque. Bourque, his arms folded, stared at Sonnier silently. Sonnier and his younger brother, Eddie, then 17, ab ducted the teenagers from a lovers’ lane, took them to a remote area, raped Bourque while her fiance was hand cuffed to a tree, then shot both to death. Eddie Sonnier was sentenced to life in prison. White pushes education reforms United Press International AUSTIN — Despite a continu ing state budget crunch and de lays in devising a specific plan for teacher pay raises. Gov. Mark White said Thursday he still is determined to push a package of expensive educatio nal reforms through the Legis lature in a special session this summer. “The time for action is now. We should not delay it,” White said. He said the special session, aimed at implementing the rec ommendations of H. Ross Per- r : BRAZOS ot’s education committee, might be held later in the summer than originally hoped because the committee will not complete work on a specific teacher pay raise plan until late this month. The governor said he would not set a date for the session nor give legislators a look at a tax hike plan until the Perot com mittee finalized its recommen dations. The committee released a preliminary report last month but still has not come up with a definite pay raise plan for tea chers. “We’re not going to be circu lating a tax plan until we see what the costs are,” White said at his weekly news conference. “We’re going to get the final re port in before we ask somebody (legislators) to sign off on some unknown. “I don’t think it’s fair to the Legislature to suggest to them that they should agree to some thing before they see it in writ- sus on some written package, then we won’t be calling the ses sion.” Once the report has been completed, White said, he would not expect lawmakers to simply pass the plan. Legislators also expressed concern about the estimated $2.6 billion price tag on the rec ommendations in light of pre dictions of a revenue shortfall as high as $4 billion in the next biennium. • VALLEY ; GOLF t DRIVING * RANGE ing. Until we have some consen- Alpha Kappa Psi Professional BusinessFraternity t A 4-' ; T Taternity announces its 1st Annual Sale of // A Mon.-Fri. 12-9pm _ Sat. 10am-9pm Sun. 1 pm-8pm 696-1220 East Bypass and Hwy. 30. Service Road Going South • V* miles. Easter "Age Baskets 0 ^ -candy filled baskets will be sold April 9-17 in the MSC, Commons, & Blocker Building for $5.00. -on campus delivery will be April 18-19. ^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiip Attorneys still hunt for nurse trial site one United Press International jSAN ANTONIO — A de mise attorney for Genene Jnes said Thursday that he Bexar County prosecutors |ve not found a suitable site the nurse's pending trial on forces of injury to a child. (Corpus Christi said no be- |use it lacked courtroom ice, he said. y ' korney Royal Griffin and ternatiouil :dal prosecutor Nick Rothe \ UI | ]ir re scneduled to appear be- I l, t |e District Judge Pat Priest at ()ti t ^ ,m. today for a change ol ve- es found ti hearin g- soutliwe«l 0nes > 33, is scheduled to go are drop] on trial May 14 on charges she injected 4-month-old Rolando Santos with heparin, a blood thinning drug. The child sur vived. Griffin said Priest will decide on a new site for the trial if at torneys cannot mutually agree. If the decision is left to Priest, the law provides the new site must be in a county close to Bexar County but beyond the reach of San Antonio newspa per and television coverage. Last month, Jones was con victed of murder in the injec tion death of a 15-month-old Kerrville girl. hallenging act Dr bees in space United Press International ime, Id, Vednesdij :iry chat| e bones devil woi ,h Lake, I he she* box of b» APE CANAVERAL, Fla. — d that 35 ausands of buzzing bees will 1 and toot nd six days in orbit aboard id no ^ shuttle Challenger in a stu- ny was [nt experiment to find out if leinsectscan build their sticky Jislrict At jfieycombs in the weightles- aid patlid Mss of space. hie to df [Dan Poskevich, 19, a student ;e, gendetfTennessee Tech University ic infant. ICookeville, Tenn., designed ; bones experiment as part of NA- rissom Ws student involvement pro- s) were«lam. git h,ad toll never have done anything llibees,” the engineering slu- he invesWt said Thursday at the Ken- id. Ily Space Center. “I’ve never lised bees. 'When I first started, I didn’t sournn Illy want to do it. I thought lerewas no way anybody from 1 (found here (Waverly) could About 3,300 honeybees and their queen will be used in the experiment. They will spend their time in space housed in a special bee box stowed in Chal lenger’s crew cabin. J. Robert Peterson of Honey well Inc., sponsor of the project, said the bee box is structurally reinforced, and the astronauts will not need any fly swatters for their mission. “Any bee that gets out of there is really going to be a ter ror,” he said. “The box is built like a tank.” Honeybees typically build regular, six-sided cylinders as the structural unit that makes up the honeycomb. The hexa gon shape holds more honey than triangular or square struc tures, and also provides strong stability. : r YLl$& Delicious Food } Beautiful View lOpen to the Public ( “Quality First” ’ C- T 4 i ** Pj \ 4 tv i peer Brewed by Miller Brewing