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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 20, 1980)
Page 10 THE BATTALION THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1980 National a PCKWG :so 3~~ Heg.3.95 3 5 ° Rea- 4.35 3 75 RCSTAUHivKT Ji WELCOME TO AGGIELAND! SPECIALS: Sweet & Sour Pork Moo Goo Gai Pan Pepper Steak noon BUFFET Monday thru Friday < SUNDAY EVENING BUFFET All You Can Eat! 3 9S — OPEN DAILY 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. 5:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. .v 1313 S. College Ave 822-7661 Reg. 4.50 129 FLUOR ENGINEERS & CONSTRUCTORS, INC. OF HOUSTON INVITES •MECHANICAL ENGINEERING STUDENTS •CIVIL ENGINEERING STUDENTS •ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING STUDENTS • CHEMICAL ENGINEERING STUDENTS (FALL 1980 GRADUATES) (SPRING 1981 GRADUATES) TO AN OPEN HOUSE! We have openings for engineering graduates in piping, vessel, electrical, control systems, and mechanical engineering, come talk to us about your future. we will be at the Aggleland inn at 6:00 pm on Thursday, November 20, 1980. we re interested in you...If you cant come to the open house, call us collect at our Houston Division at: (713) 662-3000 FLUOR ENGINEERS AND CONSTRUCTORS INC Battalion Classified 845-2611 PIZZA COUPONS EVERY WEDNESDAY 2 Free cokes WITH EVERY PIZZA NM schools ignore ruling United Press International LOS LUNAS, N.M. — The Los Lunas school board Tuesday voted to continue displaying the Ten Com mandments in district classrooms, despite Monday’s U.S. Supreme Court ruling that a state law requir ing such displays in Kentucky schools was unconstitutional. The Ten Commandment plaques in the Los Lunas schools are “the exact replica” of those displayed in Kentucky schools, school board chairman Jose Otero said. The decision not to remove the plaques was opposed by both the school hoard’s attorney and a minis ter’s group. School board attorney Edward Apodaca said the chances of winning a suit filed against it by a parent or a student at Los Lunas High School were “nil” and recommended the plaques “be taken down immedi ately.” Representatives of the Los Lunas Ministerial Alliance told the board not to violate the law and remove the plaques, “at least for the time being.” FALL FEST WHEN: Saturday, November 22, 8 p.m.-1 a.m. WHERE: Starlight Ballroom WHO: Featuring the band — MESQUITE WHAT: 200 Kegs of beer, sausage, nachos, and good times! WHY: for the College Station Service for Multiple Handicapped. PRICE: (includes all the beer you can drink) Girls — $3.50, Guys — $4.50. At the door: Girls — $4.50, Guys — $5.50 | Contact the Delta Zeta Sorority for your tickets and more information. —696-0765— New Fall Arrivals at the Locker Room! Warm-Ups by: JOG-JOY HANG TEN WINNING WAYS OPEN 9:30-6:00 % Locker Koont 800 VILLA MARIA RD. SPORTSHOES UNLIMITED ACROSS FROM MANOR EAST MALI 779 948-S Aggie Christmas Cards and Wrapping Paper On Sale in the MSC Nov. 17-22, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Also Available at Rudder Box Office 9 a.m.-6 p.m. jy * imzkM'- •s* v w A ,&^Ci war. HOURS ■n. -11 a.m.-Midnight P ®h.-Thurs. 4 p.m.-l a.m. Fr k 4 p.m.-2 a.m. Sat. 11 a.m.-2 a.m. ... PIZZA & SUBS FREE DELIVERY •846-3768 or 846-7751 Addict slays four people, then dies of drug overdose United Press International YORK, Maine — With a rifle and a knife, Andrew Weiss killed two men he blamed for making him a drug addict, the girlfriend who loved drugs more than him and another woman. Then he drove to a motel room and took a fatal overdose of cocaine. Police were called to a single-story house in the small coastal resort town of York by a neighbor who noticed bullet holes in a rear window. The bodies of two men and two women were lying on the floor. Near the bodies was a scrawled note, on a piece of cardboard: “I killed Greg York because he made me an addict. And I killed my girlfriend because she liked cocaine more than me,” the note said. The two men and one of the women had been shot with a rifle. The other woman had been stabbed with a knife and investigators said a “substantial” quantity of cocaine was strewn about the house. Weiss’ body was found Tuesday, 15 hours later and 45 miles away in a motel room in Peabody, Mass., where police said he apparently had committed suicide by taking a cocaine overdose. Authorities said there were no other suspects in the slayings. “It looked like ‘Helter Skelter,”’ said Assistant Attor ney General Pasquale Perrino, referring to the 1969 Tate-LaBianca murders in California committed on Charles Manson’s instructions. “Charlie Manson style, just like the big time. “Through our interviews with people it appears & was an argument dealing with drugs.” Police identified the two male victims as 1 Robert Lizotte, both believed to be in their lattl Perrino said authorities were checking to seeiftlsi| women victims were Lynette Ghiroud and Jen)| son, the owner of the house. Ghiroud, who lived in an apartment in tl told a neighbor she would soon marry Weiss ai^l pected an engagement ring for Christmas. Lizotte and Nelson, co-owners of a restaur neighboring Ogunquit, lived in the house’s otherijj ment. York, who lived two houses down the roadfronj murder scene, owned a local barbershop and wjj| son of a locally prominent family. Investigators said Weiss’ note blamed threed victims for his addiction. He apparently had no« ment with one of the women, but investigatoni rized she was killed because she witnessed the j murders. The high-powered rifle and knife were both fou the scene. “We have no other suspects. We re prettymucll ing the case pending identification,” Perrino sail Weiss, who had worked as a fisherman and 11 recently as a nightclub bouncer, lived in the ua I town of Wells with his mother, but often stayedil house where the bodies were found, neighbors uf Bill W group Mem< Woman will lead memorial group for children killed in Guyai United Press International OAKLAND, Calif. — Juana Nor wood, who lost her mother and 26 other family members two years ago in the jungles of Guyana, says the real tragedy of the People’s Temple mass suicide were the children whose lives were sacrificed. his followers, most of whom were from the San Francisco area. Since then, the Temple’s San Francisco headquarters has been sold, its assets auctioned off and its dead buried. followers in a mass suicide r which they had to drink fr containing cyanide-laced fruitjJ Some who refused were repoJ force fed the substance or skf death. Unitei KASHIN ^nt is up offers finical D! others t Norwood, attending the second anniversary graveside services Tues day for nearly half of the 913 Tem ple members who died with the Rev. Jim Jones in the murder- suicide ritual, said she formed a group to pay special tribute on Dec. 23 to the young people who died. Two dozen people attended a memorial service Tuesday where 421 bodies are buried in a mass grave at Oakland’s Evergreen Cemetery marked only with a single tombstone reading: easing sol _ . Jflie Food Toxic shocr* 1 ”"* “In memory of the victims of the Jonestown tragedy, Nov. 18, 1978, Jonestown, Guyana.” victim sues Rely maker cal has n active foi mts for \ ing toutei In the cui tug Bulle ctors and She said the children, 228 of whom are buried in a mass hillside grave and have not been identified, were “the real victims, the innocent victims. ” Relatives and friends held hands with six clergymen in a circle atop the grave, singing. Four small bou quets of flowers decorated the tomb stone. the age ing appro “Because the young people there Mere especially vulnerable because many of them did not know and had no control over what was happening, we want a special memorial for them,” said Norwood, who lost all her first and second cousins and 100 school friends in the South American jungle. Ryan, D-Calif., was leading a mis sion to investigate Jones’ cult when he was killed along with San Francis co Examiner photographer Greg Robinson, Don Harris and Rob Brown of NBC News and Patricia Parks, a defector from the temple. It was on Nov. 18, 1978, that U.S. Rep. Leo Ryan and four others were gunned down at an airstrip near Jonestown, Guyana, triggering the mass suicide of the Rev. Jones and Ryan and his party had just left the Temple’s Jonestown commune where they were investigating alle gations of torture, druggings and im prisonment of Temple members when the airstrip shootings occurred. Shortly afterwards, Jones led his United Press International BEAUMONT, Texas $200,000 damage suit has bee: itainers i against Proctor & Gamble: it.” woman who contends use oftk ‘The ager pany’s Rely tampon caused be: itectcons pitalization for toxic shod drome. • Jeanne Spaulding of Port said in the suit filed Tuesday slfj hospitalized from Oct, 22 to 14 with a fever of up to 104 dot Attorneys said it was them against Rely filed in the eastei trict of Texas since the coni began about the use ( Rely has been ordered offste because of its link to the Iff which, although rare, can bel Several million dollars in already are pending against Pm & Gamble by other women, oil survivors, who suffered from ill iute this 'roponen drug” fi ilar prob lergroun ngth ind Appearim LIVE Thursda Night $1© 4410 College Main * *** %T. ^ MSC Town presents: LACY J. DALTON m IIown hoII and the Dalton Gang with special guest DON KING December 2 — 8 p.m. Rudder Auditorium Tickets: Zone I $6.50 Zone II $5.75 Zone III $5.00