Wednesday, July 15, 1987/The Battalion/Page 3 >1 il State and Local ■Former Student Association ets $1.75 million ‘surprise’ »*' ratio:" agai )ostl 'as a, esnia Tim mi toil tottllf be.fi itrioti leisj '.xea: lib ■nalii tori By Carolyn Garcia Assistant City Editor The Texas A&M Association of Former Students received a Heasant surprise Saturday — H .75 million dollars. ■ Midland rancher and oilman (layton Williams, Cdass of ’54, presented the board of directors with the check, completing his SB.5 million pledge to the build- ■IK of the University’s new alumni center, which bears his nli me. ■ The final installment came as a surprise to the board, said Jlmes Jeter, associate executive director for the association. I “He was not due to pay off his Hedge until 1989,” Jeter said. ■ “He just surprised everyone at the board meeting. It was a sur prise— a pleasant surprise.” I Jeter said Williams pledged the money to the University be fore there was any mention the building would be named for him. I “We were looking for a prin ciple underwriter,” Jeter said. I “We knew it would take a large committment,” he said. ^■We (hoard members) went to Hlidland and asked him, and he Bgreed. I "It was not discussed that the Building would be named after him. I “Board members got together liter and discussed it.” I The 130,000-member associa tion plans to move its offices 'from the Memorial Student lenter to the new facility in Au- lust. [The center is 60,000 square ■eet and will provide office space, meeting and banquet Jog ms for use by alumni, stu- lents and faculty. Dedication ceremonies for the Tlliams Alumni Center will be ept. 5 before the Aggies kick ft their 1987 opening football ante. Photo courtesy of Association of Former Students Clayton Williams at a ground-breaking ceremony. Man with 18 DWI convictions gets 5-year sentence after 25-car crash AN AH U AC (AP) — A man with 18 drunk driving convictions pleaded no contest to a charge of fel ony driving while intoxicated in con nection with a 25-vehicle crash that killed five family members. Samuel LaRoy Hargrave, 60, of Anahuac, was given a five-year sen tence and fined $500 Monday by State District Judge Carroll E. Wil- born J r. “You have been convicted more times than I can count of felony of fenses,” Wilborn said in sentencing Hargrave. “But for the peculiar quirk that does not allow you to be indicted as a repeat felony Or habit ual felon, the maximum punishment this court can allow is five years in TDC (Texas Department of Correc tions).” Wilborn prosecuted Hargrave for drunken driving four times. “You have shown to this court . . . absolutely no desire to rehabilitate, to quit drinking or even not to drive a vehicle when you are unlicensed,” Wilborn said. Hargrave, who has not had a valid license since 1966, admitted he con tinues to drive although the state will not issue him a license. Texas Department of Public Safetv troopers said Hargrave was the driver of a station wagon that stalled on Interstate 10 in the middle of the fog-shrouded Old River and Lost River Bridge. Fog and his stalled car triggered the chain-reaction pile-up Jan. 28 that killed five members of a Rock- port family and injured six other people, of f icials said. Hargrave had 0.1 1 percent of al cohol in his blood at the time of the 9 a.m. accident, a blood sample showed. A person is considered in toxicated in Texas if his blood-alco hol content is 0.10 percent. District Attorney Mike Little said prosecutors allowed Hargrave to plead no contest to the Chambers County DWI charge as part of a plea bargain that called for him to plead guilty to a Feb. 10 drunken driving charge in 1 -hfM-tv Countv, and admit he has violated his probatioii lor a past DWI conviction. Defense attorney Walter I*. Konie- not said Hargrave accepted die plea bargain because “he wants to get it all behind him.” Little said the law should lie changed so habitual drunken drivers can be sentenced to life in prison like other repeat felony offenders. Last week. State District judge W.G. “Dub” Woods Jr. sentenced Hargrave to five years in prison and fined him $500 after he pleaded guilty to DWI in Dayton on reb. Id, 13 days after the fatal crash. Hargrave is expected to plead “true” this week to probation revo cation charges alleging he violated his probation by driving while intox icated July 30, 1985, in Chambers County, failed to report to his protiu- tion officer and failed to pay Ins pro bation f ees, Fontenot said. Hargrave now is serving a six- month sentence in the Lilierty County jail on a probation revo cation charge for driving witltout a license or liability insurance. McFadden sentenced to death by jury after being found guilty in murder trial BELTON (AP) — Jerry “Animal” McFadden was sentenced to die by lethal injection Tuesday after a jury found him guilty of capital murder in the strangulation slaying of a Hawkins teen-ager. The jury took about 35 minutes to return the verdict, which was announced shortly after 7 p.m. The tattoo-covered convict is already serving a life sentence for aggravated robbery. McFadden showed no reaction when his conviction was announced before the month-long trial’s punish ment phase began Tuesday af ternoon. Attorneys had wrapped up closing arguments at 12:10 a.m. Tuesday. Jurors got the case later and took about four hours to reach a decision. Prosecutor Arthur Eads told jurors they should look at the whole case and that “there is horror in this court room, there is death in this courtroom.” But defense lawyers had said prosecutors did not present any direct evidence linking McFadden to 18- year-old Suzanne Harrison, the woman he is accused of killing on May 4, 1986. “Mr. McFadden is on trial for capital murder amt the state can’t show you that Mr. McFadden did what they say he did, so (hey are trying to have to convict him other matters,” said defense lawyer Vernard Solomon. Harrison’s partially clothed body was found atop Barnwell Mountain in Upshur County the day alter rel atives reported she hadn’t returned from a G»ke Hawk ins outing. A grand jury ruled she had been lieaten and strangled with her underwear. The bodies of two companions who accniu|Miiied Harrison to the lake — Gena Turner 20, ami Bryan Boone, 19 — were found 5 days later. McFadden hasn't been indicted in their deaths. Jurors earlier heard a taped statement from a faifor who testified she was abducted at gunpoint by McFad den last summer. In the tape, Rosalie Williams quoted McFadden as saying, “Rosie, they’re trying to give me the needle for something I didn’t do. 1 didn’t even know those three kids.” DIAMONDS largest selection in Brazos County No Questions asked. 30 day money back guarantee on all loose diamonds sold. (Does not include lay away or mountings) FANCY COLOR DIAMOND .83 Marquise shape diamond wit*- 1 'T1A laboratory certificatate stating that the color is a natural orange brown and a clarity of WS; This diamond has a rosey/pink tint to it. 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