The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 02, 1996, Image 5

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    Pat-
December^
—
Monday
Page 5
December 2, 1996
Buspect regains consciousness
■ HOUSTON (AP) —The man been tracking the Polo Shirt Bandit, His only previous criminal his-
'W Clla L n uBl HOUSTON ‘ AP >
various’ sus P ecte< ^ as Houston’s Polo
j ori or res! Shirt Bandit has regained con-
. s - sciousness, but remained in crit
ical condition Sunday after
Booting himself last week dur-
i es dav 'T’ a P°Ii ce chase.
■ William Frank Guess, 46, had
m n just completed what police be-
® nee,s Bve was bank robbery No. 38 last
tmor * dnesda Y’ when a 911 cal1
gg sparked a high-speed chase after
■e Temple-area resident.
will disru« L As Harris County Sheriff’s
deputies closed in, Guess inten
tionally shot himself in the head.
n ‘ ln Hermann Hospital officials
said Sunday that Guess regained
■nsciousness on Saturday. Al-
• t, K ou gh he i s unable to talk, Guess
>ociation: I can move e y es to the left or
meting inllm^t when asked. He remains on
more life-support, but is alert,
ste at696-3M p am jiy members have been
the hospital to visit Guess
,te ChBnilnd consult with doctors about
^ntativefrom, condition.
= in [y[ eanw i 1 jj ei federal authori-
nzza will t ti (! s are preparing charges
naoon cai a g a j ns t Guess.
■ For seven years, police have
Battalions
irofit studs-f
sand actiij
submitted ii
in advance!
. Applicatic j|
es are not a
un in Whatsl
?stions, |
t 845-33131
p submissin
on web pi;
amu.edu.
tracking
who has kept authorities guessing
about his identity since 1989.
Wearing pullover-type golf
shirts and the same disguise — a
Tm not going to
bank on anything
except what's in my
checking account."
Stephen Sharum
Assisted in suspect’s capture
fake beard, dark glasses, a base
ball cap and wig — the Polo Shirt
Bandit has successfully robbed 37
banks without hurting anyone.
Guess was a 1969 graduate of
Temple High School and was the
school’s captain of the basketball
and golf teams that year. He be
came a Temple-area car dealer
who lived in the nearby commu
nity of Oenaville with his wife, his
former high school sweetheart,
and three sons.
only previous
tory were two convictions for
drunken driving.
Stephen Sharum, who used
his truck to stop Guess’ rental
car during the chase, said Satur
day he’s been told he may re
ceive half of the $25,000 reward
offered for the bandit’s capture.
He said he was contacted by the
Clearing House Association of
the Southwest, an association of
Texas banks.
“I’m not going to bank on any
thing except what’s in my checking
account,” Sharum said. “I didn’t do
it for the money. I’d like to have the
money, but I don’t want anything
that’s not coming to me.”
Sharum said he could use the
money, especially since his truck
is now banged up.
But he said he would do it
again even if there was no reward.
“I didn’t know who it was they
were chasing,” Sharum said. “I just
thought he was a guy that drove
like an idiot. All I did was stop my
truck in front of him. The officers
out there put their lives on the line
to surround him in the car.”
Breakfast
Continued from Page 1
“I have early-morning classes
and I never have time to eat
breakfast,” Manson said. “The
only time I have to eat is after
11:00.”
Breakfast foods served all day
include thirteen types of cereal,
two kinds of meats, potatoes, bis
cuits, waffles, pancakes,
omelettes and pastries.
Scott Bullock, a sophomore
political science major, said the
breakfast foods program allows
him to eat breakfast even after
breakfast hours.
“By the time I get out of my
morning classes, I still want to eat
breakfast,” Bullock said.
Beck said lunch is the most
popular meal of the day in all of
the campus dining halls.
Bullock said by the time he
makes it to a dining hall, it is usu
ally lunch time.
“I know I should eat something
before I go to my morning classes
— maybe I would be more
awake,” Bullock said. “I know that
a healthy breakfast is essential,
and gets the day started.”
GrOcL
■
m
JSTeaarly 2,000 yeaars ago G-oct ’became one ox us • Wily
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Citizen
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409-846-8905
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