Elderly man robs bank so he can die in penitentiary GALVESTON, Texas (AP) - A 74- year-old man walking with a cane. demanded that the bank teller put money in his paper bag, and then sat down with $10,000 to wait for police bcause he wanted to die in prison, of- ficials saidyesterday. "I'm old, I'm sick, I'm going blind; I'm an ex-convict and I want to go back: to prison to die," a bank officer quoted the man as saying. SANTOS CASAREZ RIOS, arrested at the U.S. National Bank, told deputies he had no family and no one cared about him, but he won't tell them much else about himself. Gilbert Bray, vice president of U.S. National Bank, said yesterday that an elderly -man entered the bank Monday dressed in nicely pressed brown clothes and walking with a cane. The man approached a teller and handed her a paper bag and a note demanding it be filled with money, Bray said. THE TELLER hesitated a moment, but started taking the man seriously when she thought he might be armed. "Be was just a little old man," said the teller, Theresa Kalsnes. "I looked 'at this man and he handed me this bag and told me to do it. So I started filling the bag." The teller said the man took the bag filled with more than $10,000 and star- ted walking toward the bank's security offices. "HE WAS SAYING something like, 'Call the police, I want to go to jail,' " she said. Bray said he was the first to confront the unarmed elderly man after the rob- bery and sat with him waiting for police to arrive. Sgt. Manuel Benavides, who works in the jail, said he spent much of Monday night talking with Rios. "HE IS AN alert, lively, well- mannered old gentleman," he said. "He told me he had been wandering all over Texas lately, trying to commit a crime so he could be arrested." Mike Wilson, Rios' court-appointed attorney, said his client would not be specific-about his background. "I don't believe he has any family," Wilson said. "He seems to have wan- dered around the state recently." Wilson said he recommended his client plead innocent to the charge. But :sheriff's department officials said Rios disagrees. "He doesn't want to fight it," Capt. Charles Wilson said. "Be just wanta to' go on to prison." Rios was charged Tuesday with theft by threat and, according to his attor- ney. Outfor a stroll AP Photo The column of smoke trailing from the airplane outlines a wing walker doing his job during a performance of the Experinental Aircraft Association Fly- In held in Oshkosh, Wisc. this week. Masses mourn 76 Bologna blast Vtictims DAILY CLASSIFIEDS (Continued from Page 10) PRIMAL/FEELING THERAPY-The Per, Growth Center, 403 Miller, 973-9764. HAPPY HOUR The University Club in the Michigan Union Happy Hour weekdays, 4-7 p.m. Light food snacks are also available. So, come by and sit Courtyard Patio and enjoy a cool refreshment.. of M affiliates welcome. THE UNIVERSITY CLUJ WRITING SERVICES: Creative, Tech, Editing, Research. Experienced. 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Bodies of only eight victims were present. Families of the other 68 dead preferred to hold private ceremonies. THE WHITE coffin of Angela Fresu, of Empoli in central Italy, was less than three feet long. "How old was she?" one woman asked. "Three years," said another, and both burst into tears. The impact of the bombing continued torippleacross Italy. The national union federation proposed a fund from workers' con- tributions to fight terrorism and help families of its victims. Italians can- celed scheduled events including an opera performance in Palermo and a bicycle race in Bologna. Shops closed nationwide to honor the dead. TONIGHT at SECOND CHANCE MAGZINE