SALE S£ c SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE Page 4/The Battalion/Friday, June 12, 1987 Friday: Downtown Wellborn Bar-B-Que $3 95 $5 95 After 5p.m. Lunch Catfish All You Can Eat Frog Legs/Catfish Saturday: All Day BAR-B-QUE PLATE Your Choice: Brisket, Ham, Sausage includes 2 vegetables ami Texas Toast All You Can Eat $5 95 Thurs., Fit & Sat.: Introductory Offer 12" Homemade Pizza with one topping: Pepperoni, Ham burger, Sausage. Mushroom. Green Pepper, d* A95 Brisket. Ham, Onion. 75# each add. topping. ijlfl 25£ Meister Brau 4-7 Daily Pool Tournament Every Wednesday Cash Prizes! Downtown Wellborn Bar-B-Que 2154 Wellborn Rd. PA Mile* Sooth 8yt« Retd Mon-Thurs 11-9 gut Closed Sunday Fri, Sat 11-19 gat ,You CAlsHtienre It ALU i V ^ vv , i¥: ./«: ■ Condominiums at apartment prices •Covered parking •Furnished available ■Walking distance to A&M Washer/Dryer Connections or units NEwryr & NORMANDY SQUARE 402 Nagle 846-8960 Great SUMMER rates! REMA Real Ennu Marus^rmrrti of Amrruui Inc SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE Contact Lenses SALE I cn > Only Quality Name Brands (Bausch & Lomb, Ciba, Barnes-Hinds-Hydrocurve) V) <|;7Q 00 -STD. DAILY WEAR SOFT LENSES u Spar© pr. Only $1 0 with purchase of 1st pr. at reg. price $99. 00 -STD. EXTENDED WEAR SOFT LENSES m $99. 00 -STD. TINTED SOFT LENSES DAILY WEAR OR EXTENDED WEAR m SALE ENDS JUNE 30, 1987 AND APPLIES TO CLEAR STANDARD m DAILY WEAR STOCK LENSES ONLY Call 696-3754 For Appointment * Eye exam and care kit not included CHARLES C. SCHROEPPEL, O.D., P.C.l DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY 707 South Texas Ave., Suite 101D College Station, Texas 77840 1 block South of Texas & University SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE AYLAS vnAMsivussiaiu We pledge to do the best! TRANSMISSION TUNE-UP • Remove Pan and Inspect Transmission For Wear • Adjust Linkage and Bands • Refill With New Fluid • Clean Screen • Clean Pan, Install New Pan Gasket • Check Transmission & Converter Area for Leaks • Check Vacuum Modulator • Road Test for Performance RESEAL SPECIAL NATIONWIDE GUARANTEE 1507 Texas Ave. Bryan 779-0555 Includes front seal rear seal, pan gasket, and lever seal. Call for appt. or drop by! locally owned by Stanley Poteet Davis testifies he wasn’t killer in 76 shootings FORT WORTH (AP) - Million aire defendant Cullen Davis re turned to the stand Thursday in a fi nal attempt to convince a civil jury he was not the bewigged man in black who gunned down four people in a 1976 shooting spree at his Fort Worth mansion. “I was nowhere near 4200 Mock ingbird Lane on August 2, 1976,” the 53-year-old Davis testified in his multimillion-dollar wrongful death trial. Three survivors have insisted otherwise. Attorneys for the defendant’s ex- wife, Priscilla Davis, are trying to prove Davis was the gunman wear ing a woman’s black wig who wounded Mrs. Davis, killed her boyfriend, Stan Farr, 30, and her daughter, Andrea Wilborn, 12. Gus “Bubba” Gavrel, 33, who was permanently disabled by the assail ant’s gunfire, settled a separate per sonal injury suit with Davis last year. Mrs. Davis and Andrea’s father, Jack Wilborn, are suing Davis for millions of dollars in damages for the death of Andrea. Davis, who testified earlier, was recalled by his attorneys Thursday to provide jurors an uncluttered ver sion of his activities the night of the shootings. He said he left his office in a com pany pickup around 8 p.m. that night 1 1 years ago, ate dinner alone and then went by himself to a movie, “The Bad News Bears,” about 9:30. He maintains he drove the pickup hack downtown, picked up his Cadil lac and arrived at his girlfriend’s home shortly after midnight. He said he telephoned a friend at 12:15 and was in bed asleep when the killer invaded the remote hilltop mansion. There were no witnesses to the child’s slaying, but police say the sub sequent shootings occurred between 12:20 a.m. and 12:40 a.m. Key alibi witness Karen Master Davis, 38, the defendant’s girlfriend in 1976 and now his wife, preceded her husband to the stand and told the jury she awakened at 12:40 that night and Davis was in bed beside her. What’s up 'arp Saturday TAMU SAILING CLUB: will conduct an all-day outing Overlook Park. tio. hat Sunday BRAZOS VALLEY ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE FAN SUPPORT GROUP: Dr. Randall R. Light, a local neunij gist, will speak at 3 p.m. in the Parish Hall of St. Tlioi Episcopal Church at 901) Jersey St. TAMU SAILING CLUB: will conduct an all-day outing| Overlook Park. Items for What’s Up should be submitted to The 216 Reed McDonald, no less than three working dx fore desired publication date. The current Mrs. Davis admitted she had been “confused” several times when testifying previously about what Davis did or did not tell her about his activities the night of Aug. 2. But under brutal cross-examina tion, she stuck to the salient points of her story and even offered a vague explanation about why she failed to tell a Fort Worth grand jury 11 years ago about the critical 12:40 a.m. awakening. It was her alibi testimony that helped persuade an Amarillo jury in 1977 to acquit Davis of capital mur der. In Advance Board to discuss computer accessle Students will pay a computei access fee beginning Sept. 1 if ap proved Monday by the Texas A&M Board of Regents at iis reg ular meeting. A fee of at least $3 would be charged for each semester hour a student registers for during the regular semesters and $1.50 would be charged for each semes ter hour a student registers foi during the summer terms. Stu dents who register in absentia oi for a course to he taken off-cam pus will he exempt from paving the fee. The lee is needed to upgrade and maintain computer facilities which have seen increased use be cause of improved access, a re port to the Board states. I!>| port shows that sludentt these facilities doublet' the 1985-86 school year. In othci business, the I will: • Dist uss the propsedd lition ol the Sonthsiae \p I complex south ol kvleField 15 wood-frame buildings,i wete built in the late lft| limited to married studenii gi aduate students. 11 approved, demo! begin in summei 1 ( .)8H. Altj live housing would beofftn the tenants of the complex, • Award a hid for the a ning and construction ol a biochemistry and biop! building. 'H; Patrolman knew about investigation before shooting friend, detective soys SAN ANTONIO (AP) — A patrolman charged in the slaying of a fellow officer knew two days before the shooting that he and the slain officer were suspects in a smear letter-writing campaign, a police detective testified Thursday. Patrolman Farrell Tucker, 36, is charged with murder in the Aug. 18, 1986, slaying of his best friend and fellow officer, Stephen Smith, 31. Tucker claims he shot Smith five times in self- defense after Smith threatened him with a pistol. Prosecution witnesses, however, have testified that Smith could not have been holding a weapon on Tucker and actually tried to fend off Tucker’s attack. Smith, who was on suspension on brutality charges, allegedly planned to kill then-Assistant Police Chief Frank Hoyack, Deputy Police Chief Robert Heuck and then-Bexar County District Attorney Sam Millsap. Smith was suspected of fire-bombing Hoyack’s and Heuck’s homes and of starting a smear let ter-writing campaign against Hoyack, calling him xal child molester. Detective Alvin C. Brown, who was investigat ing the origin of the letters, was called to testily by Tucker’s attorneys, who want to show that Smith, who was suspected of vigilante acts, was the aggressor. Under cross-examination by special prosecu tor Sid Haile, however, Brown testified that he spoke with Tucker two days before the fatal shooting. “Was Tucker aware he was a suspect in the writing of the letters?” Harle asked. “Yes,” Brown said. “Tucker knew he was a sus pect. a homosexut “Tucker told me he had been asked to provide typewritten samples and he knew that it was part of the investigation into the writing of the let ters.” Brown said he sent Tucker’s handwriting and typewriting samples, along with copies of the en velopes in which the letters were sent, to the FBI Crime Lab in Washington D.C. for analysis. The samples did not get there until the day of the shooting. The next day, Aug. 19, Brown Judge calls man despicable liar, orders 10-year prison sentence asked FBI officials to do laser analyst typewritten samples, but to send tliehanfi samples hack to him. I ticker’s handwriting samples werea in San Antonio, hut did not match conclusi the handwriting on the envelopes, fled. Smith already had Iteen linked to thtij writing. Brown said. Capt. Jimmy Kopeck, commander of i peat Offenders Program, said Hoyackd on the afternoon ol Aug. 18. HoyacLi home already was unch i pi >Ih <• MiiveillaiKi’] concerned about his home. “He told me to tell the officer to \va Stephen Smith because he believed ih phen Smith who had fire-bombed his l Kopeck said. “I instructed anotherofficttl out there, hut within a matter of hours tlt| veillance was no longer necessary.” Police administrators I loyack and Heudl testified that Fucker went to the meetintl Smith to help reconcile Smith’s marital pm _ocal res Iryan ( friends o AUSTIN (AP) — A judge called a defendant a “despicable liar” and sentenced him to 10 years in prison after the man fell .$ 140,()()() behind in restitution payments to 21 Austin people bilked out of more than $400,000. State District Judge Bob Perkins also fined George D. Stewart $5,000 and told him that he would protest his parole from prison. If Stewart did win parole, the judge said he would see to it that the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles would again order Stewart to begin repaying his victims. Stewart, 47, pleaded guilty to ob taining a secured document by de ception in 1984 after being charged with stealing more than $400,000 in scams involving the sale of comput ers and sports cars. Many of his victims, whose losses ranged from $5,800 to $85,000, be gan doing business with Stewart in an attempt to get Datsun 280Z cars at prices well below retail. While some people did get inexpensive cars, many got nothing for their money. In July 1984, Perkins placed Stew art on probation for 10 years, but the judge deferred adjudication in die case. That meant that if Stewart met die terms of probation, no find ing of guilt would have been entered by the judge and no conviction would have appeared on Stewart’s record. kins’ court, officers and supervisors in the Travis County Adult Proba tion Office testified that Stewart had paid only $1,237 in restitution and probation fees. That meant most ol his victims had received about $29. A condition of his probation was that he repay $377,883 of the more than $400,()()() he was accused of stealing. Soon after the sentencing, Stewart moved from Austin to Georgia. Af ter he moved, he stopped paying the $1,500 monthly restitution pay ments. A motion to revoke his pro bation was filed and a warrant was is sued for his arrest. Stewart was arrested this year in Virginia and brought hack to Austin. At a hearing Wednesday in Per- Stewart said he had to leave Aus tin because a newspaper story about his guilty [ilea and (he scams made il impossible for him to find a job. The judge asked Stewart what he had done with all die money he had stolen, and Stewart said he had in vested some of it and had returned some of it to the victims. Stewart said he had gotten mar ried and was moving back to Austin where he hoped to find work and start paying the restitution. Perkins said, “You’ll understand why I find that hard to believe.” Stewart slat ted to continue his ex planation when the judge inter rupted. “You’re a despicable liar,” Perkins said. “You may step down. Go ahead. Step down right now.” Cisneros bot found to hail heart defect SAN ANTONIO (AP) hoy horn to Mayor Henry ros and his wife, MaryAlkt diagnosed Thursday as congenital heart disease not in immediate danger family’s pediatrician said. Fite baby’s heart hastwod hers and three valves, tnst» fom chambers and founJ'j Dr. Fernando Guerra said added that the problems oped early in the pregnancy The baby seemed fineai hut pediatricians later itj that he was turning blue ami j he had a heart murmur.Tlif cided to do tests, inclufc rays, and administeredoxyw He said physicians woiilj the child to go home in ate days and if there areanyf lems, a catheter into the'1 and veins will he conducted (ermine the problem. hankh savings ai of source Texas ec< The fa have coll; record tli Mans hav First St al N.A. bsit Inst [an Bill < In Tex rib Savit practices Home Lo file S£ state-duu lexas. It mutual as AT A&M NEARLY EVERYBODl money in I ; “1 will n the S&L’s Don G. Jot “After tl (36,000 active, affluent Aggies) Reads The Battalion ew rapic million in 1985,” Oik ■ TheS&I sitions, de\ reckless an I Meanwl punty St; 10% 38201 Bryan 846-4',