NOTED FORENSIC EXPERT TO SPEAK AT COLLEGE OF LAW COLUMBUS -- Who killed Huey P. Long? James E. Starrs, forensic scientist and law professor, will discuss the 1935 assassination of the U.S. senator during a lecture and slide presentation Feb. 24 in the auditorium of John Deaver Drinko Hall (College of Law), 55 W. 12th Ave., on The Ohio State University campus. The lecture will begin at 4 p.m. and is free and open to the public. Starrs, a professor of law and forensic sciences at George Washington University, is appearing at the invitation of College of Law Dean Gregory H. Williams, a former student of Starrs'. History holds that Long, a flamboyant Depression-era politician, was shot by Dr. Carl Austin Weiss as he strolled down the Louisiana State Capitol corridor. Weiss was then killed by Long's bodyguards. But questions have arisen about whether Long was fatally wounded by overeager guards, who pumped dozens of bullets into Weiss outside the Senate chamber. In 1991, Starrs exhumed Weiss' body in a search for clues. A distinguished fellow of the Academy of Forensic Sciences, Starrs often is invited into the toughest cases nationwide. He established the authenticity of Jesse James' remains and hopes to solve the mystery surrounding the death of noted explorer Meriwether Lewis. He will be in central Ohio to examine the exhumed body of a Jackson County woman alleged to have committed suicide by shooting herself in the chest with a shotgun while hunting with her boyfriend, who had a history of violence. # Contact: Liz Cutler Gates, College of Law, 292-2937.