Thursday, January 23, 1986/The Battalion/Page 11 Slouch By Jim Earle "Where are those loud, over-hearing, rude, bad-mannered, obnox ious, fanatical football fans from t.u. that used to be so easy to find?” Police come back to staked-out grave to find body inside Associated Press SAN ANTONIO —Sheriffs dep uties, who had staked out a shallow grave for two days, then left for 11 hours, returned Wednesday af ternoon to find a body buried in the hole. The body was that of a man, be lieved to be in his early 20s, who had been shot once in the head at close range, Sheriff Harlon Copeland said. The grave was about two feet deep and covered with an old tire, styrofoam, rags, string, green roof ing plastics and broken shingles, in vestigators said. Authorities said children playing in the area near the banks of the San Antonio River in far south Bexar County found the grave. Officers began a stakeout of the grave Sunday, but had to leave the site about 1:30 a.m. Wednesday be cause of a shortage of manpower, Copeland said. When officers returned to the scene Wednesday afternoon and cleared the gravesite, a deputy no ticed two gym shoes sticking up from the grave. “Whoever killed him must have liked him. He took time to build a grave. At least this is better than finding some bones a year from now,” Copeland said. The sheriff estimated the man was killed Wednesday morning within two hours of when his body was found. Officers said they tentatively had identified the man, but his name was withheld pending notification of rel atives. Lucas fires second lawyer, delays trial Associated Press EL PASO — Accused killer Henry Lee Lucas fired his second attorney Wednesday and forced the fourth postponement of his capital murder trial. State District Judge Brunson Moore had earlier refused to let at torney Gary Richardson of Tulsa, Okla., withdraw from the Lucas case. Lucas confessed to hundreds of murders nationwide but he recanted last spring. He fired his first attor ney after accusing him of being too close to the prosecution. “I am tired of it; 1 am tired of you firing lawyers,” Moore told Lucas, who is charged in the 1983 ax slay ing of 72-year-old Librada Apodaca of El Paso. Richardson apparently engi neered his own firing because he couldn’t afford to defend Lucas. The defendant’s legal problems are so complex that it would take about $250,000 and six months of full-time work to untangle them, Richardson said after a pre-trial hearing was halted because of his dismissal. “He has woven himself into a real legal web and it’s going to take a lot of money and time to get out of it,” Richardson said. “If I thought Henry was guilty,” he said, “I’d just go in there and wing it. But I’m thoroughly con vinced that Henry did not commit this murder and I stand on that very firmly.” Moore had refused to allow a court-appointed lawyer help Rich ardson in his defense of Lucas. The judge also refused to designate Rich ardson a tax-paid attorney for Lu cas, who is indigent. Richardson said he had already sacrificed a $200,000 fee by de clining a case in order to defend Lu cas. He confirmed that he had con sidered cashing in on Lucas’ book rights to collect his legal fee, but he learned that is not allowed under Texas law. During a pre-trial hearing Tues day, El Paso investigator Jay Armes withdrew from the defense team be cause he was not allowed direct ac cess to prosecutors’ files and was dis satisfied with other arrangements. The judge extended to Richard son a gag order imposed on Armes. Teacher convicted for dismembering wife Associated Press ODESSA — A Lubbock teacher accused of killing and dismembering his wife and then burying parts of her body in their back yard was con victed of murder Wednesday. Arthur Lee MacLeod was con victed after a week of court proceed ings that included testimony on the mental health and psychological his tories of the defendant and the vic tim, Evelyne Feather MacLeod. The wife’s head and hands were found buried in the couple’s back yard last year. MacLeod, who faces up to life prison, asked jurors to give him pro bation because he said he wants to try and stop others from making the same mistake he did. Jurors were de liberating his sentence Wednesday night. The couple’s stormy relationship was a key to the trial’s central issue: MacLeod’s intent and state of mind on the night he killed his wife. Monday MacLeod admitted strangling his ex-Playboy bunny wife of five months during a May 15 ar gument. But he testified that he did not remember dismembering her body in an alcoholic stupor. Lubbock psychiatrist Dr. H.G. Whittington said Tuesday he doesn’t believe Arthur Lee MacLeod planned his wife’s death or intended to strangle her. Psychologist Richard Wall, who described MacLeod as psychotic and an alcoholic and his wife as a manip ulative psychopath, testified Mac Leod would be a good probation candidate if he stopped drinking. MacLeod is a repressive person who tends to deny problems until they become unmanageable. Wall explained. Evelyne MacLeod, whom he saw in 1983, was depressed, suicidal and an alcohol and drug abuser who used other people and then became angry with them, Wall said. Criminal District Attorney Jim Bob Darnell, however reminded the eight men four women jury that MacLeod told Whittington during sessions in October and December that he wanted to get rid of the evi dence. Whittington said that the de fendant buried the head and hands of his wife in their yard to remember her. YAMAHA ELECTRONICS EXCELLENCE Yamaha R-3 35 Watts Per Channel Digital Tuner Variable Loudness ONLY $229 00 Yamaha P220 Semi-Auto Silver Only Reg. 129 00 SALE $99 00 Yamaha CD 300 New Model ONLY $259 00 Yamaha NS 10T 2 Way 6” Woofer Reg. 200 00 $159 00 SALE Pair Major Credit Cards AUDIOWOE)!® Full Service Accepted 707 TEXAS Free Delivery 696-5719 NAKAMICHi SIGEP Spring Rush 1986 Jan 24 SUAD (Shut up and dance) Jan 26 Super Bowl Party Jan 29 Swiss Alps Schnaaps Party Sigma Phi Epsilon “An Invitation to Excellence” For more information call 764-6604 Bob Anthony or 846-9927 Sig Ep House. WINTER CLEARANCE 'Ijmii AtWetic Shoes / Kaepa new Balance tt 20% to 50%off V, Men’s, Ladies’ & Children’s Warm-Ups 25% to 50% Off Men’s, Ladies’, Children’s Nike, Bonnie, Winning Ways . Ski-Wear 25% ,o40% Off • After Ski Boots • Goggles • Men’s & Ladies’ Jackets & Bibs Jackets starting at $59.95, Bibs starting at $39.95 f Ny, rif^ e * s 30% off N. w Lodcrr Room ~lhP HOil t illj M.iru Hd. I Irr<»^ Inmi Manor t v | by Kevin G. Schachterle Chiropractor NERVOUS TENSION There is a tendency for people who suffer from nervous ten sion to allow their muscles to become tense. It is partic ularly in the spinal column that it may have a significant ef fect upon their overall state of health. Between each two consecutive spinal segments, is a pair of exiting nerves which branches out to various muscles and viscera and helps regulate their function. A disturbance in normal nerve function at this level may effect the normal function of the muscles and viscera supplied by these nerves. Using chiro practic spinal adjustments, muscle tension, immobilized spinal joints and localized congestion may all be corrected allowing more harmonious functioning of the exiting nerves. This helps the entire body to function better and makes you feel better. Please do not ignore the early warning signs: headache, stiffness in neck/back, painful joints, leg/arm pain, numb ness, back/neck pain, shoulder pain, numbness in hand s/feet. Early treatment of these signs will minimize your need for additional follow-up visits. Complimentary consultation and spinal evaluation will be given thru January 31. Previous patients of chiropractic who feel the necessity for “only” a spinal adjustment are welcome. Should you feel a need for an appointment please call 696- 2100. Hint: Excessive nervous tension may contribute to heart disease, high blood pressure, insomnia, etc. Yours for better health, Kevin G. Schachterle, D.C.