Tuesday, November 27, 1984/ r The Battalion/Page 3 75th Bonfire burns Thursday . wanted n ic of them in storefoi ■ tails whet >w the dif irime. For I and 11 [I and IV, ■ bestowed omewhere must bt dogs de bout ho* ic life ofi idler. (Re- jpy breatli 2[.) At leasi ound. Be au up, and eed a ped- By TRENT LEOPOLD Staff Writer Push continues as the 75th-anni- ersary Texas A&M bonfire nears completion. J Scott Strom, head redpot, said some wood remains on the ground, but if a lot of workers come out to work on the stack, it should be com pleted by Thursday evening. “Things were fairly slow during the Thanksgiving holidays, but we Jeally got a lot of work done Sunday night,” Strom said. “Most people went out of town for Thanksgiving, but quite a few civilians came out Sunday night and we got some work done.” Strom said four Corps outfits, dtaout 180 cadets, are scheduled to vork on the bonfire stack tonight ( and tomorrow night. “We have two shifts scheduled to york on the stack during night dours,” Strom said. “The first shift is from 6-12 p.m. and the second shift is from 1-6 a.m. “We expect to have a fairly large crowd working on the stack, but we need everyone we can get in order to get the stack done by Thursday night. Quite a few logs remain on the ground and need to be moved.” Head football coach and athletic director Jackie Sherrill also will be working on the stack tonight begin ning at about 7 p.m. “Sherrill usually comes out each year and works on the stack for a couple of hours,” Strom said. “He will be on the fourth level of the main stack, working with others to wire logs together.” Although a spokeswoman at the athletic office said Sherrill will be working on the stack, she was uncer tain late Monday if any football play ers are planning to be there. Strom said everyone is invited to the bonfire site on Duncan Field whether they plan on working or not. “Everyone can come out and have a good time,” Strom said. “Several Sport Murder victim will finally after 20-year search for :s. .tatemenu on which and noi s, is a nar- iut people ing to cause you In d iccusedui ing, mat ell as nar- s at A&M see, ever ;, they’ve we don’t fackie has g our tra ining the i Bonfire, I practice etc. Even ig able to ong. An) -serve the 3SS; with s opposi- t like our her good n walk on II games, -se it wil ething to ur group ou'retry- ditor e Powc Lauri Reese Tingle e Lane H alien iennett hmeier ia Flint •wspaper &M and se of the aril)'rep- s, faculif saperfor y classes n-ords in lit letters maintain md must writer. S Frida) r holidaf e f 16.75 per full cDonald ion, TX 630. Ad- (77S43. e Banal- , Texas United Press International HOUSTON — Several lawmen, a medical examiner, a reporter and a judge brought together by the death of a man they never knew now will serve as his pallbearers — 20 years after he was murdered. A farmer found the body June 11, 1964, about 5 miles north of Rich mond on the edge of Farm Market 369. The man had been dead only a few hours. His head was cut off at the shoulders, his hands severed at the wrists and his legs sheared off at the knees. The rest of the man’s body never was found. He never was identified and never claimed. Leads in the case have slowed to a trickle, and Harris County Medical Examiner Dr. Jo seph Jachimczyk recently suggested he be buried. Jachimcyzk, a Catholic deacon, will conduct the ceremony Wednes day in Richmond. Pallbearers will be Lt. R.L. “Tiny” Norton, who was Fort Bend County sheriff when the murder occurred; Cecil Wingo and David Gary, investigators in Ja- chimczyk’s office; Texas Ranger Mil- ton Wright; former newsman Will Sinclair; and Sam Robertson, an as sociate justice of the 14th Circuit Court of Civil Appeals, who was a prosecutor in 1964. The murder victim was dubbed Stubby by the men who tried to find his killer. There were few clues to his identity — he was Caucasian, around 50 years old, about 5-foot-6 and 160- 175 pounds. He had a fractured sixth right rib, some adhesions on his lungs and a cyst. “We did not find a cause of death in the part of the body that we’d got ten,” Jachimczyk said. “We obviously know this is a homicide, but we don’t know the cause of death.” Stubby was embalmed and kept in a refrigerated vault in the county morgue. Many people viewed the torso, but he never was identified. One woman who claimed she knew the man later recanted her identifi cation. “We had numerous people that tried to claim or identify him, but we never were able to determine just who he was,” Norton said. “We were able to determine a hell of a lot of people who he wasn’t.” That apparently was the reason the body was dismembered, and Norton and Jachimczyk believe the murder was a mob killing. campfires are burning on the field, and people can come out to sit around the fire and have a good time. “We welcome anyone who just wants to watch as well. Girls espe cially are invited to come out and give some moral support.” Strom said although torches prob ably will not touch the stack Thurs day night until after 8 p.m., seniors will begin gathering around the stack about 7:30 p.m. “Traditionally the bonfire is sup posed to start at dark-thirty,” Strom said. “It is hard to say when the torches will actually be thrown on the stack to begin the actual burning of the 75th-anniversary fire, so those people wishing to see the bonfire at Duncan Field Thursday should be there by 7:30 p.m.” In addition to the traditional festi vities planned for the burning of the bonfire, a 9 p.m. concert by country singer Willie Nelson has been sched uled in G. Rollie White Coliseum. be buried his killer “At that time they were having quite a bit of underworld problems up north, and my own personal opinion is that he was found down here by some of the mobsters and as sassinated,” Norton said. “This has all the earmarks of a gangland killing and a deliberate at tempt that the body be found imme diately, but not be identifiable,” Ja chimczyk said.” The man’s legs may have been re moved because they could have pro vided a clue to his identity beyond footprints — a scar or tattoo or de formity of the leg below the knee. Officials had planned all along to bury Stubby, Jachimczyk said, but investigators involved in the case were convinced a solid lead would be found. One assistant medical exam iner who since has died once vowed he would not die until he had identi fied Stubby. “We had intended to do that (burial) all along, but we had con stantly worked on it off and on and we still had hope,” he said. “We’ve exhausted all leads. We followed many, many leads over the years. We think we’ve gotten as far as we can, and we hopefully now can give him a Christian burial.” AGGIE CINEMA. cLady^ ^Sings c riie ^lues DIANA ROSS Wednesday November 28 7:30 p.m. 701 Rudder Tower $1.50 MOSCOW « Hudson Moscow on the Hudson Friday November 30 Saturday December 1 7:30 p.m. & 9:45 p.m. Rudder Theatre $1.50 rdbTn mlAMS Friday November 30 Saturday December 1 Midnight Rudder Theatre $1.50 ERASERHEAD A film by David Lynch, director of DUNE and The Elephant Man. Crossguard recounts city streets' rural origin By Brittany Millholland Reporter Most people expect a frustrat ing battle with the morning traf fic on the way to work. But for 70-year-old Charlie Banks bat tling the morning traffic is work. Armed with a stop sign, a orange vest, and red helmet, Banks is fast becoming a landmark of sorts as he provides safe passage to all school children crossing the busy intersection of Jersey Street and Texas Avenue. One of College Station’s most recognizable figures to area mo torists, Banks is known as an affa ble man who takes his job se riously. Banks, a native of College Sta tion and a City of College Station employee, has been working at this location for two years. Banks remembers when the two streets were dirt roads traveled on exclu sively by horse drawn wagons. Banks said that being a cross guard “is an enjoyable job for an old man, and it gets me out of the house. If I can make a person’s day better by talking to them it makes me feel better.” As Banks talked, a group of kids approached the intersection. He excused himself and then greeted the kids with a warm “Howdy!” While waiting for the light to change. Banks exchanged a greetings with the children who responded with smiles and laughs. One student passing by said, “Mr. Banks is the greatest, he’s kind of like a grandfather to all the kids. He’s always friendly and always smiling. He has a flawless safety record. He states that ‘any way I can protect the children I’ll do it’.” Banks thinks that traffic is ex ceptionally heavy in College Sta tion now. “The traffic is twice as bad as last year,” he said. Amazed by the growth of College Station and of Texas A&M, Banks clearly recalls when College Station was strictly a rural farming commu nity and the University consisted of only a few buildings. Banks, the father of seven chil dren, describes himself as a “10th grade scholar.” He said, “When I was growing up, education wasn’t ioto byFRANR IRWIN 70-year-old Charlie Banks stops traffic at the intersection of Jersey and Texas Avenue to allow students to cross Texas Avenue on their way to school. as important as it is today.” One of the few problems Banks encounters as a crossguard is that “some of the college stu dents, especially, think that they can cross the street without me. When a young child sees them going across they follow. I’m here for everyone’s protection. I promise if everyone will be pa tient I’ll get them across as soon as possible and much safer.” Banks said that another prob lem is that a lot of foreigners don’t understand English. “T hey can’t read my stop sign and they think I’m going to mug them or something when I come up to their car.” Banks advises mothers and tea chers to remind their children ev eryday of the danger of cars. “You can never tell them enough to look both ways before crossing every road,” he said. Banks said he plans to work, “as long as I can still get out of the road quick enough.” Battalion Classified 845-2611 Get Your O** Bvs * T - Shirts and sweatshirts Shirts will be on sale Monday thru Fri day from 9 to 2 at the following locations: • MSC COMMONS •BLOCKER Listen for the “ HORNBUSTERS” song on local radio stations! Sponsored by: The Society for Entrepreneurship and New Ventures 846-3628 v