Page 8 THE BATTALION THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1981 Pick up your Aggieland ’81 TODAY at the COMMONS or any day alter that between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. and while you’re thinking Aggieland be sure to GET SHOT! for Aggieland ’82 special makeup all this week for FRESHMEN AND SOPHOMORES at the MSC!!! Room 350 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily Then — at Yearbook Associates Studio Suite 140, Culpepper Office Park off Puryear Phone 693-6756 JUNIORS, A-M - Nov. 2 thru 6 JUNIORS, N-Z — Nov. 9 thru 13 SENIORS, A-M — Nov. 16 thru 25 SENIORS, N-Z — Nov. 30 thru Dec. PURYEAR CO >- < £ X g x Don’t miss your chance to be part of Aggieland ’82 Don’t miss picking up your copy of Aggieland ’81 State Passenger safely lands plan after pilot dies of heart a ttn United Press International LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — The pilot of a small private aircraft died of a heart attack in midflight, leav ing the plane in the hands of a totally inexperienced passenger who was safely talked down by two flight instructors who flew along side him. John Ussery, 29, of Maumelle, landed the four-passenger Rock well Aero Commander aircraft at Little Rock’s Adams Field at 5:25 p.m. Tuesday, following instruc tions radioed to him by Larry Cain, 33, of Arkadelphia, Ark., and Joe Ropp of Okolona, Ark. Paramedics tried to revive Ellsworth Alexander Moore, 55, of Hot Springs Village, Ark., who originally piloted the plane, but he was pronounced dead on arriv al at a local hospital. “At first I thought it was a joke,’’ Ussery told police shortly after landing. “It was comparable to a stu dent’s first landing,” Cain said. “He bumped it once, but it wasn’t a bad bump. He drove it down the center line and even reached over and tripped off the engine by him self. “He did a super job and re mained calm, and that’s the key to the whole operation.” Police said Moore, Ussery and John David Boyd, 60, of Hot Springs, Ark., were flying south near Malvern when Moore turned to Ussery and asked him if he thought he could take over the controls of the plane for a while. “Then he started coughing and blacked out,” Ussery told police. Ussery said he thought it was a joke because Moore had shown him the plane’s instruments and explained some of the fundamen tals of flying before they began the flight. However, Ussery said when he couldn’t revive Moore, he took control of the plane and started flying at an altitude of about 2,500 feet while radioing for help. A radio operator at a control tower in nearby Arkadelphia heard the distress calls and told Cain and Ropp of the situation. The two instructors told Ussery to continue flying along Interstate 30 until they could catch up with him. They then jumped in their Cessna and caught the distressed plane just south of Malvern. Maintaining constant contact with Ussery, the pair succeeded in turning him around and headed to the Little Rock airport, about 20 minutes away. The crash-rescue unit of the Lit tle Rock Fire DepartmemJ waiting at the airport, plane landed without incidt Cain said the most woi moments came when Usserl to switch his radio to thcairj landing frequency — wl could have lost contact uitS — and when he had to I landing gear, which seij affects the flight characteri the plane. "We kept him going a faster air speed than non cause we didn’t want! out,” Cain said. He said neither he not S had talked down a plane l and the ordeal had its seani ments. Asked if he again if necessary, he : “You bet your sweet ass I It’s all 1 could do.” Man, daughter slain in homi United Press International CONROE — One man has been charged with murder and deputies are searching for two other suspects in the execution- style slayings of a Conroe man and his 9-year-old daughter. Harry Carter, 48, was charged with murder Tuesday in the shoot ing deaths of bar owner Craig J. Wiecht and his daughter, Karen. Carter was being held in Mont gomery County jail in lieu of $100,000 bond. Weicht’s wife, Caroline, 30, was admitted to an undisclosed hospital, where she was being guarded by deputies and police. Authorities refused to comment on Mrs. Weicht’s condition. Montgomery County Chief Deputy Steve Graeter said inves tigators discarded robbery as a motive and said the killings were apparently business related. Gaeter said, “We feel this is a personal vendetta between a group of people or individuals over business transactions. “This was an execution-style murder with the intent of leaving no witnesses. The little girl did like any kid; she was covering up trying to hide on the bed. ” Deputies identified Carter as a former business associate of Weicht, but gave no other details. A trace was put out on Weicht’s 1979 peach-colored Lincoln Con tinental, which deputies believe was stolen from the driveway. Weicht had been shot twice in the head. His body was found in the entry to his home. after being shot, inve said. She apparently tried a phone, but the outside p lines had been cut, Graetej Graeter said two men may have been in the house during the shooting late Monday, and they and someone outside had walkie- talkies. Deputies were searching for the two men late Tuesday night. ' His daughter’s body was found shot twice in the head under the covers of a bed in the master bed room. Graeter said the shots kill ing the girl were fired through a pillow, possibly to muffle the sound. The sheriffs department ceived a call before 8 p,m l day reporting a burglar shooting at the house, bni valuable articles were touched. Weicht, 30, owned threeta | the I louston area — the Bad Cowboy, the Nugget anJ Cheers. Bicycles mpus, Mrs. Weicht was found in a guest bedroom where she had crawled from the master bedroom Deputies said a gun was cated at the home ol apprehended suspect and other guns were found atWd house. 7f o i Odessa schools segregated MIDLAND — A visiting feder al judge ruled an inequity of opportunity existed between schools in the Ector County Inde pendent School District — mak ing the district liable for maintain ing racially segregated schools. U.S. Judge Fred Shannon of San Antonio said his greatest con cern was that minority students in GET YOUR BIG SCHOOL CUPl^H FULL OF YOUR FAVORITE DRINK! Oh boy, school colors and the ol' school mascot and everything, righUhere on your very own dishwasher-safe, giant plastic cup. At this price you can collect a whole i set. Odessa’s south side had to transfer to other schools to receive a full range of educational opportuni ties. “That concerns me very great ly,” he said. “Young people at Ector (High School) have less than equal opportunities.” The Ector school, which does not provide college preparatory classes such as Latin and physics, does allow students to attend clas ses at Odessa and Permian high schools. However, Shannon noted that such transfers upset student sche dules and that those students who do transfer classes miss out on ex tracurricular activities at their home schools. “This policy must have a chill ing effect on the students,” the judge said. “A greater sacrifice is being asked of the Ector students to get a background for college than is asked of students from Per mian and Odessa. Shannon also said the district most q had assigned the enced and better edi teachers to the city s schools and that “children#! United lALVES' (kofeeri ring st; night sk have ar 1 flying ; [ohn Sc , . , J «, agenc south side are not expos* ) one ][ ^ teachers as good as those* north side.” ide Jnte I he judge concluded; 1 , ie ’p eanl two factors demonstrate ai quity in opportunity. I belf it’s sight remedy is necessary in ori Police of eliminate the inequities as! ] en t s f rc ceive them to be.” Shannon scheduled hearings Wednesday Justice Department attdl Joseph Rich and school A y Smith attorney Jack Tidwell to seel' to remedy the situation. Tidwell said the district tried to improve the sitaft )r wo ” ^ hiring more minority and6i jb sa idin ual education teachers and! p| e a j attorneys representing theS | r eminent and Crucial, a soul vi n g anc j parents group, “don’t see® want to give us credit ford* right.” MEXICAN-STYLE FAMILY RESTAURANTS 614 VILLA MARIA EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES AVAILABLE — CALL JOE AT 822-2183 eim efficient nome? to the o weird glc ^ lentified )ne witn was shap its on it :h larger reporte< P entire chuesslei ire’s some People ; Ms base we’re n ' v er. 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