The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 13, 1987, Image 3

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    Friday, March 13, 1987AThe Battalion/Page 3
State and Local
.
rand jury indicts
tell then
' s roomy
urder suspect
in stabbing death
By Carolyn Garcia
Staff Writer
Murder suspect Terry Wash
ington was indicted Thursday on
apital murder charges by the
razos County grand jury for the
an. 15 murder of Beatrice Hul-
gng. If convicted, Washington
tould face the death penalty,
an nrl Washington has been held
without bond in the Brazos
bounty Jail since his Feb. 25 ar
rest in connection with the mur-
ler of the night manager of Ju-
e at
long I®
i drink.
hing act; ie's Place Restaurant.
it relat
'ofthini
3.
ilim ji,
:talion,
Bail was denied March 6 dur-
nga hearing sought by Washing-
on’s attorney, Tyler Moore, to
lave his client released.
During the March 6 hearing,
woof Washington’s cousins testi
fied that Washington bragged
about killing Hiding.
Mary Sandies told District At-
orney Bill Turner during that
tearing that Washington told her
and four others in her home that
he had killed Huling.
Sandies testified that Washing
ton said, “Yeah, I killed the
bitch.”
“He said that he hated white
folks,” she said. “For enough
money, he said he would kill any
of them.”
Sandies’ brother, Billy Sandies,
told Turner he saw Washington a
few days after the murder at a
convenience store with a $100 bill
in the front pocket of his shirt
and what he said appeared to be
several hundred dollars in his
wallet.
Moore said that Washington
has made no confession.
Washington, 23, was employed
as a dishwasher at the restaurant.
Huling, the mother of two, was
found stabbed to death in the res
taurant. She had been stabbed 85
times and disemboweled. There
was more than $600 missing from
the restaurant.
At the time of his arrest, Wash
ington was on parole from the
Texas Department of Corrections
after serving part of a seven-year
sentence for the unauthorized
use of a motor vehicle.
Faculty Senate nominations in;
32 seats to be filled in election
By Amy Couvillon
Staff Writer
Nominations are in for the Texas
A&M Faculty Senate regular elec
tions, and absentee voting will begin
March 23.
Nominations for 32 seats ran
from Feb. 23 to March 6. Twenty-
nine of the seats received nomi
nations and three remain open, two
in the College of Business Adminis
tration and one in the College of Sci
ence. Fourteen of the elections are
contested.
At its Monday meeting, the Senate
received two late nominations for
the business administration seats but
voted not to accept them. Instead, it
will advertise that all 32 Faculty Sen
ate vacancies may be filled with
write-in votes.
Absentee votes, which will be
taken until March 27, may be cast at
the Faculty Sente Office, 203 Good
win. Hours are from 9 a.m. to noon
and from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Ballots for mail-in absentee votes,
which will be accepted until March
30, are available in the Faculty Sen
ate Office or from Election Commit
tee members.
The regular spring election will be
March 31 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Run
off elections, if needed, will be held
April 1.
The following are candidates run
ning for Senate seats. All candidates
are running for three-year terms un
less otherwise indicated. (Polling
places are listed below each college):
College of Agriculture
Voting will be in 107 Scoates and
217 Soil and Crop Sciences.
• Place 2: Bill A. Stout.
• Place 3: C. Richard Shumway.
• Place 5: H. James Price and
Carl E. Coppock.
• Place 9: M. M. Kothman and
Ethel Ashworth Tsutsui.
College of Architecture and
Environmental Design
Voting will be in the second-floor
gallery in the Langford Architecture
Center.
• Place 1: Malcolm Quantrill.
College of Business
Administration
Voting will be in tne second-floor
lobby of the Blocker Building.
• Place 1: Open.
• Place 2: Open.
• Place 4 (two-year term): Clin
ton A. Phillips.
College of Education
Voting will be in the first-floor lobby
of Harrington Education Tower and
in 159 Read.
• Place 2 (one-year term): Leon
ard D. Ponder.
• Place 3: Frank Thomas, Pau
lette T. Beatty and Patricia A. Alex
ander.
• Place 6: Maurice E. Dennis and ,
Max M. Stratton.
College of Engineering
Voting will be in 241 Zachry.
• Place 1: A. D. Patton and De
metres A. Vlatas.
• Place 5: John T. Tielking and
Thomas Pollock.
• Place 8 (two-year term): Ron
ald M. Brimhall, Jon F. Botsford and
WilliamJ. Harris.
• Place 9: James Morgan, Rich
ard A. Startzman, Chris Burger and
S. Bart Childs.
• Place 12: Richard M. Alexan
der, Thomas W. Comstock and
James C. Holste.
• Place 14: G. Kemble Bennett
and James W. Jennings.
College of Geosciences
Voting will be in the second-floor
gallery of Langford Architecture
Center.
• Place 2: Anthony F. Gangi.
College of Liberal Arts
Voting will be in the first-floor lobby
of the Harrington Education Tower
and in the second-floor lobby of the
Blocker Building.
• Place 2: Thomas Green and
David R. Anderson.
• Place 3: Walter L. Buenger.
• Place 4: Herman J. Saatkamp.
• Place 6: Mark B. Busby and
Stephen H. Daniel.
• Place 11: Edward J. Smith.
Sterling C. Evans Library
Voting will be in 210 Sterling C.
Evans.
• Place 1: Christine E. Thomp
son and Gloriana St. Clair.
College of Medicine
Voting will be in the first-floor lobby
of the Medical Sciences Building, at
the Scott and White sixth-floor doc
tor’s lounge and in Dr. John Hig
gins’ office in the VA Center.
• Place 3: John M. Quarles and
John D. Fisher.
• Place 5: Barbara C. Thomas.
College of Science
Voting will be in the dean’s office,
313 Biological Sciences Building
West.
• Place 4: Open.
• Place 10: A. Lewis Ford.
• Place 11: Peter F. Stiller.
College of Veterinary Medicine
Voting will be outside the dean’s of
fice.
• Place 1 (one-year term): Frank
lin J. Stein.
• Place 5: Michael E. Tatum.
• Place 6: Larry D. Claborn.
iA/ar memorial honoring fallen Ags to be relocated for better visibilily
By Tami Tate
Reporter
The Texas A&M War Memorial is being
elocated, partly to increase its visibility and
)artly because of Duncan Dining Hall reno
vations.
The 10-by-5-foot stone memorial is cur-
ently in the Meditation Garden between
he east and west wings of Duncan Dining
lall. The memorial’s new location will be
)n the west side of the plaza in front of the
Quadrangle at the intersection of Nagle
ind Lubbock streets.
The memorial is dedicated to Texas
A&M students who died in military service
since World War II.
“The new location will create better visi
bility for the monument," said Col. Donald
R. Henderson, deputy assistant comman
dant of the Corps of Cadets. “In its pre
vious location, parents and students could
not easily view the monument.”
Architects and engineers from Emmett
Trant and Associates are designing and
constructing a new look for the memorial.
“The new memorial will have buff-col
ored concrete instead of gray, with steps
leading up to it,” Emmett Trant said. “It
will be sandblasted with a rough surface
that will make the memorial more decora
tive than the previous one.”
The architects also will clean, recondition
and modify the memorial’s bronze plaques
listing the names, ranks and classes of each
A&M student killed in military service since
World War II, Trant said.
Trant said the memorial should be com
pleted within two to three weeks.
Henderson and Corps Cmdr. Garland
Wilkinson head a committee in charge of
planning the rededication of the memorial.
The rededication is planned for April 21,
the same day as Muster, Wilkinson said.
“Muster is a reflection on our past," he
said. “We want to tie the two together.”
The committee plans to have Dr. Robert
Walker, A&M’s vice president for devel
opment, speak at the rededication cere
mony and at Muster, Wilkinson said.
The Drum and Bugle Corps and the
Ross Volunteers will participate in the cere
mony, with the Drum and Bugle Corps per
forming Echo Taps, he said.
Financed by the classes of 1969 through
1973, the original memorial was dedicated
Nov. 8, 1969, Henderson said.
An article in First Call, a Corps of Cadets’
newsletter, said the original idea for the
Meditation Garden and memorial was con
ceived by Landis S. Cervenka, a 1969 A&M
graduate.
“We have plans to invite representatives
and class agents from the classes of 1969
through 1973 to the rededication because
they sponsored the original memorial,”
Henderson said.
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