Battalion/Page 9 September 6, 1982 national Warped by Scott McCuIlar TODAY IS THE BE6/VNIWG OF STUDENT PARKING APPRECI ATION WEEK,"THE WEEK WHEN ADMINISTRATORS, FACULTY AND STAFF MUST PARK IN THE LOTS ACROSS WELLBORN ROAD. A4M UPDATE WITH MERRITT JENNINGS ALL THIS WEEK ALL NON-STUDENTS MUST GIVE UP THEIR CONVENIENT PARKING SPACES WHERE THEY WORK, TEACH AND RESEARCH FOR THE REMOTE PARKING SPACES ACROSS THE RAILROAD TRACKS. SIMILAR TO V 'HAND/CAPPED APPRE CIATION DAY," WHEN OFFICIALS SPEND A DAY IN WHEELCHAIRS,THIS WEEK IS MEANT TO INCREASE PEOPLE'S AWARENESS Op THE PROBLEMS STUDENTS FACE WHEN TRYING TO PARK ON CAMPUS. HEY, X THINK I'M GONNA LIKE THIS WEEK. Apartment fire kills 18; officials blame panic P Leaders pledge to unify l h a lollingnqi mg up> >re th< indict ors it Klan holds mass meeting United Press International R STONE MOUNTAIN, Ga. — Ku Klux Klansmen from both sides of the Mason-Dixon line met Saturday to try to forge a united front and to rally around a burning cross on Stone Moun tain, as they have done on Labor Day weekend for the past 57 years. , The Klansmen, representing at least three factions — some from as far away as Canada — gathered on property owned by fGeorgia Ku Klux Klan leader James Veneble. The hooded order’s own guards, none with weapons showing, kept watch on the front gate, marked with a “No Trespassing” sign. Veneble’s land is located at the foot of Stone Mountain, where Klan leaders say the orga nization, founded following the Civil War, was reborn in 1915 after being on the brink of ex tinction. The Klansmen chose a spot near Stone Mountain’s business district for their Saturday night rally, capped by the cross burning. Don Black, Grand Wizard of the Knights of the KKK, said groups from Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Michigan and Canada were attending the weekend meetings to see if they could “form a un ited front.” Black, 29, dressed in a dark pin-striped suit, strolled in front of Veneble’s red-brick Klan lodge while other Klansmen en tered the grounds in late model cars and pick-up trucks. Black said the various Klan factions were meeting separate ly Saturday before sitting down for the merger talks. During the meetings, applause could be heard inside the lodge but the public was not allowed to enter. “I think there will be some de gree of working cooperation that will lead to a unified move ment,” Black said. United Press International ! LOS ANGELES — A pre dawn fire raced through a Sun set Boulevard apartment build ing Saturday, killing at least 18 people — including nine chil dren — who panicked and fled the safety of their rooms into smoky, dark hallway deathtraps. The bodies of mothers with babies still in their arms were sprawled in the charred hall ways while, just a few feet away, their tiny rooms were virtually untouched by searing flames. “A great many of those peo ple would still be alive if they had stayed in their rooms and waited for firefighters,” Fire Depart ment spokesman Ed Reedhe said. “What happened is that they panicked, opened the doors, left the rooms and went to the hallways where they were trapped. “The heat and smoke is what got them.” Fire officials said at least 26 residents were injured, six of them critically. Some people jumped from windows of the four-story, Dorothy Mae apart ment hotel near downtown to escape the flames and dense smoke. Firemen tried to keep the burned survivors — many of them children — cool by spraying water on them gently and wrapping them in water- soaked sheets before ambu lances arrived and rushed them to hospitals. Scores of survivors were sheltered at a Red Cross facility. One resident said neighbors caught babies who were thrown out the windows by terrified pa rents. “I saw about five peoplejump from the windows,” said Ed Danal, 42, a construction worker who lives across the street from the building. “The fiames were so intense you couldn’t go inside without getting scorched.” Officials said four infants and five juveniles were among the dead, but said it would take at least several hours to identify the charred bodies. Mayor Tom Bradley and in- 2 children killed, 1 hurt as preacher drives car into group United Press International age 3. SAN FRANCISCO —A street is the; preacher, ta.unted by a band of ited a. - letnutgers, got in his car and .ml will drove it into a group of pedes- s kinds! trians, smashing two children to • exec11 death, and critically injuring imixtiti another. ral Am The driver was beaten merci- nenwl! 1 ess ty by witnesses of the bloody jlQig incident late Friday night. He lebut was rescue( J by a nearby • , storekeeper who used a gun to ( ^ ( hold off an angry crowd, and ” then jailed on murder charges, orchesj Police said the mother of one . of the dead youngsters, a hoy ities l)V bout 3 or had taken the other '• victim, a girl about the same age, to the circus with her son. ) “I was just trying to do a good iolinist deed,” said the sobbing woman id $5.0' at the scene. stantwi The coroner’s office said it 13,000.' was unable to identify the bodies ybecause they had been crushed so severely when the automobile smashed the children against the wall of a building. The boy was believed to be Lament Metoyer, and the girl Tiffany Sommers. The injured child was identified as 18- month-old Griffin Tamaris. Police said the Tamaris child’s mother, Brenda, jumped to safety, but the infant suffered stokinf severe injuries and remained in e IjqJi critical condition Saturday, elite sup Blood was spattered for sev- vCoriif era l yards, and the stucco and s( s (,o, wood wall was splintered and ( | oses0 ' smeared with flesh. ea | s (-oil [ The driver was identified as ‘tie William Daguman, 23, of San fid wlif Francisco. >rStu( w “He ran them down deliber- choleP ately. It was just crazy,” said an -nificaiH elderly man who saw the inci- “ gjiji dent, which occurred near the Cow Palace after a performance predominantly black neighbor- 1975 Mustang, of Ringling Bros, circus. hood about sin and drugs. Sev- Police said he drove around Witnesses said Daguman, a eral teenagers taunted Dagu- the block, headed the car over a Filipino, was preaching and ca- man, who scuffled with them curb and straight into the group joling people on the street in the and then jumped into a white of people waiting for a bus. BRAZOS TIRE SERVICE AN AGGIE OWNED BUSINESS SINCE 1952 J. N. HOLMGREEN CLASS OF ’44 R. J. HOLMGREEN CLASS OF ’47 MIKE A. HOLMGREEN-MANAGER-CLASS OF ’77 2707 TEXAS AVE. BRYAN 823-0551 822-1425 0U ional ducedc is beSe ptf 'he sul ■>Etp PIZZA & SUBS Delivers Free... Fresh! Fast! Hot Pizza! Plus Free Cokes! Call Now 846-3768 846-7751 We Guarantee 30- Minute Delivery Service! “AFTER 5 SPECIALS” 1/ DONl -NUT SHOP * GRILL ... another Tradition in Aggieland. AGGIE-OWNED AND AGGIE OPERATED! WE’VE GOT SOMETHING SPECIAL FOR YOU ALL MONTH! COUPON GOOD SEPT. 6 THROUGH SEPT. 12 ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER FREE HALF DOZEN GLAZED DO-NUTS WITH PURCHASE OF “CHICKEN STRIPS” A REAL TASTE TREAT Specially -seasoned strips of chicken, battered and then fried. Served with lettuce, tomato and French Fries. I COUPON GOOD SEPT. 13 | THROUGH SEPT. 19 ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER FREE HALF DOZEN GLAZED DO-NUTS WITH PURCHASE OF “STEAK STRIPS” SOMETHING REALLY SPECIAL Strips of steak, bat tered and deep-fried. Served with Texas Toast, gravy and French Fries. COUPON GOOD SEPT. 20 THROUGH SEPT. 26 ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER FREE HALF DOZEN GLAZED DO-NUTS WITH PURCHASE OF “TRAILMASTER” MORE THAN A MEAL Charbroiled steak sandwich served on a grilled bun with lettuce, tomato, onion, pickle and French Fries. IcOUPON GOOD SEPT. 27 | THROUGH OCT. 3 ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER FREE HALF DOZEN GLAZED DO-NUTS WITH PURCHASE OF “SHIPLEY DELUXE” HOUSE SPECIALITY Two large patties and double cheese served open-face on a grilled bun with lettuce, tomato, onion, pickle and French Fries. i I Now In A Bigger, Better Location 210 VILLA MARIA ROAD IN BRYAN Be, ” eenTe * as ^ and South College I s i i i i terim chief fire engineer Allen Evansen visited the scene in the afternoon and discounted ear lier statements that the fire was probably arson and that the building violated fire and safety codes. They blamed the large loss of life on panic. Evansen said the cause of the .. fire was still under investigation but, “At this point, we’re not call- ‘ ing it a suspicious fire.” The fire, described by offi cials as “extremely hot with a tremendous amount of smoke,” * ( was reported at 4:27 a.m. PDT, but may have burned for half an hour before being called in. Nineteen engine companies! and more than 80 firefighters worked about an hour to exting uish the flames, which apparent ly broke out in a first-floor boiler room. Several of the initial firefigh ters on the scene reported smelly ing gasoline when they entered^' the burning building, but that>! was later discounted. V I I I K ( I S I I C I I