^ M' J>l j y vfiii [') R*; f•.; V*';| %«? ;* V-. ■ 'Jhjti Uii i\- : ^hWM' : : : ■"- ' v: / v ^ r# 4 Tuesday, January 22, 1985/The Battalion/Page 11 WORLD AND NATION "" Plumber will not face charges / Associated Press >erjonif. *y of (ht donated >n forms Memorial AI table aturdav CHICAGO — A (i8-year-old plumber came forward Monday as the man who fatally shot a gun- wielding youth during a robbery at tempt, and police said they consid ered him “a victim” and did not plan to arrest him. Harold Brown, who said he had been robbed before, told reporters he regretted the incident, but added, “1 didn’t have any choice.” “He is not under arrest at this time,” Detective Michael Shull said. “He is considered to be the victim of a robbery.” Attorney Thomas Royce said that as Brown was leaving a West Side grocery store Thursday night “two people jumped him, one on either side... Brown, who was questioned by po lice for three hours after his surren der Monday, stood beside Royce at a brief police-station news conference. “He is not a vigilante,” Royce said. “If he had not snot, he wouldn’t be here right now.” Royce said Brown had delayed his surrender because of “a great deal of concern for safety as well as noto riety.” He said Brown had been through a “very nerve-racking,” experience and had suffered from lack of sleep since the shooting. arks and lias 4 is activin e Station snts. npatc in old Id Cup ms art ix place ories) in ; or indi- i a single of their “Mr. Brown said, ‘I’ll give you what I have.’ ... They (the youths) continued to say, ‘Shoot him, shoot him.’ (One of the youths) pointed a gun at his head.” Royce said Brown then reached into his pocket, pulled out a small gun “and began snooting.” Detrick Wallace, 18, was fatally wounded. The other youth, whom Brown said had wielded a knife, was taken into police custody on Friday. The youth, K.C. Cathey, 18, was charged late Monday with attempted rob bery. Royce said Brown had feared re prisal from friends of the shooting victim and from other members of the West Side community. Asked if he considered himself a vigilante, Brown shook his head and said, “No,” his voice trailing off. The basis for the decision not to charge Brown was that “the shooting was self-defense,” Terry Levin, a spokesman for Cook County State’s Attorney Richard Daley. The Thursday night shooting has attracted widespread attention, in part because it came a few weeks af ter four youths were shot and wounded on a Manhattan subway train after they asked a passenger for $5. Bernhard Goetz has surren dered in that case and is charged with attempted murder. Photo by FRANK IR WIN ill around These icicles on a leaking wa ter fountain were protected by the shade of the north end- zone stands at Kyle Field as Tuesday’s temperature crept above the freezing mark. ! 16 cities compete for Navy port ;tic Fart; Mississippi bids for base million tli U just 3$ efforts! he busim ixelsonsaii hr right , we have it ack of intei ostly indie a I basketbi eak even .ansas Gin. ure, a con appointed to determis n. The com mmendatio: ors, whoso tin 120 da« [2 owners uove. n declined! Id do if thffi rejected. Associated Press JACKSON, Miss. — T he cities of Pascagoula and Gulfport have deliv ered proposals to the Department of the Navy, trying to become the home port of the battleship USS Wisconsin and its accompanying flotilla. stretching from Key West, Fla., to Brownsville. Pascagoula wants the base, and Gulfport would like to be home to two of the reserve frigates. The Navy has said they might house the flotilla in separate ports. The competition for the port is in creasing in Washington, where the Navy must choose from 16 cities Pascagoula is depending on Mis sissippi’s congressional delegation to bring the port to the southetist cor ner of the state, said Mayor Roy O’Bryant. “Florida and Texas may have big ger delegations, but they don’t have the people in the power positions,” O’Bryant said. The Navy says the selection will not necessarily depend on political clout, but on which port can offer the Navy the best deal for the money. Attorney who won abortion case saddened by violence Associated Press WASHINGTON — Sarah Weddington, the attor ney who won the Supreme Court case legalizing abor tion 12 years ago, says she is “saddened” by the recent rash of bombings at abortion clinics. “I think the bombs are obviously to create fear for a whole lot of people — women who seek services, per sonnel who provide services — and that is deeply sad dening,” she said in an interview. “I do think they’re having an effect,” Weddington said. “I don’t think people are changing their conduct as a result, I just think they’re living with their fears, and that’s sad to me that they have to do that.” People who commit such acts of “terrorism” are “out of step with the majority of people in this country,” she said. Weddington was just 26 when she argued the case of the ' ' “jane Roe” before the high court. The court’s decision, rendered on Jan. 22, 1973, overturned a Texas law outlawing abortions except to save the life of the mother. The landmark decision will stand without “dra matic” changes in membership on the Supreme Court, Weddington said. A new court could simply overturn the decision, but would be unlikely to do that, she said. “It seems to me...that they would, in essence, begin to allow all kinds of regulations so that abortion would become legal but not available,” she said Weddington, who has served in the Texas Legis lature, as counsel to the U.S. Agriculture Department and as a presidential assistant, now represents Texas Gov. Mark White in Washington. Weddington said she was pleased when President Reagan and Moral Majority leader Jerry Falwell came out strongly against the violence. Disaster (continued from page 1) UOIB'' stereo graphed by Dallas Cowboys player Tony Dorsett. Yellow bags con taining the bodies of the victims were stacked nearby. The plane crashed in clear, 20-de gree weather in a field next to a fur niture store, about half a mile from a large apartment and condominium complex near a shopping mall. Survivor George Lamson, 42, was in critical condition with multiple in juries at St. Mary’s Hospital in Reno, said spokeswoman Stephanie Kruse. Lamson’s son was in stable condition at St. Mary’s with a minor head in jury and minor hand burns. A third survivor, Bob Miggins, had burns over 84 percent of his dy Medical Center to Southern Nevada Memorial Hospital in Las Vegas, said nursing shift coordinator Janell Schmoyer. In the previous crashes in the past year, one Electra went into a Screeching 20-second dive without warning and broke apart over Penn sylvania on May 30, 1984, killing three crew members and a passen ger, according to the National Transportation Safety Board. An other disintegrated and crashed Jan. 9 near Kansas City, Kan., killing three people. Lockheed spokesman Ragsdale said so far, the only similarity be tween the crashes in Reno, Kansas City and Pennsylvania “is that the three are the same type of aircraft.” “They were all originally built as passenger transports for airlines, but in recent years, some of them have been converted to cargo carriers,” Ragsdale said. He said the planes that crashed in Kansas City and Pennsylvania were cargo planes. Ragsdale said that when the Elec- tras first went into passenger service in 1959, one plane crashed when a wing came off the aircraft in flight near Buffalo, Texas, and a similar accident occurred early in 1960 near Tell City, Ind. Those crashes killed more than 160 people. Alone and egnant? 00 dbe irad We discuss all options Confidential counseling Free pregnancy test Maternity care and adoption services 1-800-392-3807 Homes of St. Mark Houston, Texas All faiths served cel BATTALION CLASSIFIED PULLS! Call 845-2611 IS BEST ON HARWOOD STUDENT TOURS TOP QUALITY ESCORTED CO-ED FUN GROUPS 16-41 Days 4-11 Countries From $1 295 plus air Nationally Acclaimed Since 1959 See Your Travel Agent or Write: harwood UNIVERSAL GROCERY & SNACK BAR CHINESE LUNCH SPECIAL $2 00 t -Eggrolls & Wontons- f Imported Oriental Groceries-Exotic Foods All within walking distance of Campus Across from Blocker Bldg. & St. Mary Center 110 Nagle-C.S 846-1210 2428 GUADALUPE AUSTIN, TX 78705 NAME tr ADDRESS. CITY ^ STATE ZIP j New Sunshine Laundry Open 24 hrs. 7 days a week Self Service - T.V. Carpeted - Air Cond. Professional Wash - Dry & Fold & Dry Cleaning Service 3815 East 29th 846-3968 Alpha Chi Omega National Sorority Proudly announces their SPRING RUSH Jan. 29-reb. 2 % Open House Sun. Jan. 27 2:00-4:30 Sausalito Apts #47 for more information AXU 696-5516 Karen Smith 260-0246 > irnmmmki HOUSE ****** RESTAURANT All You Can Eat - Daily Specials 4-10 p.m. Offer expires Feb. 28, 1985 Sunday Pancakes $1.99 All You Can Eat Mon. lues. Wed. Spaghetti $1.99 All You Can Eat aT“ Thurs. Fri. Shrimp $4.99 All You Can Eat Saturday Special Steak Dinner $4.99 Complete 103 N. College Skaggs Center ;| ' is?: S i YOU CAN SOLVE THE AVYSTERY. DISCOVER THE M6C!!! WHO: You WHAT An Open House For MSG (Committees WHERE: MSC Main Lounge WHEN : Wednesday, January 23,10 am to 2pm WIIV: To Inform Students Of The Wide Range Of Student Activies Available MSC Discovery, 845-1515 Indulge yourself at Padre Cafe’s Shrimpfest. You’re going to love Shrimpfest! Dive into all the fried or boiled shrimp you can eat. Tackle crispy salad with homemade dressing. Savor hot rolls made from scratch. Munch irresistible trench tries. And enjoy it ali in the bizarre atmosphere of the Padre Cafe. Shrimpfest: all you can eat. $7.95 every Tuesday 5:00 p.m. - close. Dominik Drive College StatkxvBY-THE-SEA