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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 14, 1985)
Monday, January 14, 1985AThe Battalion/Page 7 Search continues for missing pilot 1981 I 13 ■» V A V 1 s niajfirriil la ngeiot(J ' n g.from| iiition rtj Stop S|J essureiU (1 salt com 1 necesarl itnd saiuj urol diabej rtical andJ ood choW reponj ke of y l.iiry pnicj r<Kxisli 'lesterolisa ? more d iid vepti id low-fatj lireeconu y, lack ofi are Unite a use hean has not a risk facte HA said th overt; lead totj rlv a con •; • \ i-fr: ‘‘So compelling and convincing you can't tear your eyes from the screen. It is not to be missed." .N«wiw«*k. Oov<J Ani*n “The best film I've seen this year. At its best, movies just don't get any better.' -Good Morning Am*<CQ Jo* S**g«l “Unlorgetlable. A movie to haunt your memory. One of the ten best ol the year." -CIS Mom*.g News Po* CoHm* “One of the year's best movies. A stirring true story of friendship and valor that captures human drama with true compassion. It has one ot the most compelling conclusions you’ll ever see." -US Mogonn* $l**yv«n $cho** “Powerful and Exhilarating I An indelible portrait of all the conflicting emotions with which journalists experience war. An extraordinary movie." -Vogue. Mo*y MoUH “If you see no more than one film a year, make it this one. Oscar nominations are clearly on the way." -Peoo*e Moganne. P** lrov*t “The Killing Fields’ is not a film you can afford to miss.” -JuOrfti Out. Syndkoied Coiumnai United Press International HAGERMAN, N.M. — Ground teams searched the snow-covered, rolling hills of southeastern New Mexico Saturday for an Air Force jet trainer reported missing in a storm with one officer aboard. The plane disappeared on a flight from Holloman Air Force Base near Alamogordo, N.M., to Garswell Air Force Base in Texas, said Ft. Col. Orlia d ate, Jr. The snowy weather that ham pered search efforts Friday night and early Saturday had improved, officials said, but the Air Force and the Civil Air Patrol were waiting for low clouds to lift before starting an airborne search, although a few civil ian planes search the area. The missing plane was a T-33 jet trainer based at Tyndall Air Force Basg in Panama City, Fla., said Tate. It was piloted by 1st Ft. Michael S. Wiegand, 26, of Warminster, Penn., he said. State Police Ft. James Sedillo said the search was focused about 15 miles east of the small town of Greenfield because a crew in a plane from Kirtland Air Force Base in Al buquerque flying over the area Fri day night “spotted what they thought was a small fire on the ground, but couldn’t get to it.” Police search for killers in Ft. Worth md wasotl about soi f incarci mbol that ;able ani :hem." j pted ton fie light («1 icgan asa® msted theol ns in TDCj ■It the onlTl i additiotull e Legisil United Press International FORT WORTH — A massive in vestigation into the deaths and dis appearances of five young women from southwest Fort Worth since October may turn up more than one assailant in the cases, police said. Acting Deputy Police Chief Charles Hogue, who is leading the 40 officers involved in the investiga tion, said officers have not ruled out the possibility of one attacker com mitting the series of crimes. But he said the different ways in which the women were slain made the possibil ity unlikely. Police were “investigating it from both standpoints, individually or from the standpoint that two or three are by one person,” said Capt. Ben Dumas, chief of the Criminal Investigation Division. “I assure you all of them are not (one person),” he said. “That is my personal opinion.” The police task force is investigat ing the death or disappearance of nine women, most of tnem from the southwest or west sections of Fort Worth. Three of the nine women were members of Broadway Baptist Church in Fort Worth, and detec tives Friday obtained a 160-page list of the church’s 2,800 members. Church spokesmen, however, said they did not believe the women’s deaths and their church affiliation were related. Kathryn Jackson, 32, Regina Suz anne Grover, 21, and Lisa Griffin, 20, were members of the church. Jackson was found strangled in the bathtub of her apartment Nov. 26, and Grover was found Dec. 23 under a Marine Creek bridge, min utes before her boyfriend’s body was found in a nearby apartment. Griffin, the latest victim, was found shot to death Wednesday night along railroad tracks in south west Tarrant County. Jackson was the only one of the three who was an active member, church officials said. The remains of Cindy Heller, 23, were identified Wednesday after be ing found in a creek on the campus of Texas Christian University. She was last seen Oct. 22 and an autopsy determined she had been strangled. Sarah Kashka, 15 of Denton, dis appeared from an apartment com plex in Fort Worth and was found stabbed to death Dec. 31 in Dallas. Catherine Davis, 23, vanished Sept. 30, the same day her garage apartment was destroyed by fire, and Angela Ewert, 21, disappeared Dec. 11. She was last seen buying gasoline in the Wedgewood area of Fort Worth. The Fort Worth task force also is investigating the deaths of Marilyn Hartman, 29, who was found stran gled Oct. 30, apparently after sur prising a burglar at her home, and Judy Herron, 34 of Colleyville, strangled Nov. 13 by a suspected burglar who also attacked her son. Police are unsure if a reported ab duction Friday morning near a Fort Worth freeway is related to the deaths. A man who helped a stranded woman motorist fix a flat tire said she got into a car minutes later with two men, one of whom may have been carrying a shotgun, police spokesman Doug Clarke said. A reward fund for information into the women’s death has been es tablished at Southwest Bank in Fort Worth. At least $6,500 has been donated to the fund, and Cindy Heller’s par ents have offered a $50,000 reward for information concerning the death of their daughter. Fort Worth gunshop owners re ported increased gun sales in the last few weeks to women seeking protec tion, and shipments of Mace sold out rapidly at one area store. Don’t wait in slow lines for fast food. Domino’s Pizza welcomes you back to campus. For over 20 years we’ve been delivering hot, tasty pizzas to hungry students across America. The best part (besides the pizza!) is that you don’t have to wait in line. Domino’s Pizza Delivers" So why wait? Call us with your order and relax. Fast, Free Delivery™ 1504 Holleman 693-2335 4407 Texas Avenue 260-9020 Townshire Center 822-7373 Hours: 11:00-1:00 Sun.-Thurs. 11:00 2:00 Fri. & Sat. Our drivers carry less than $10.00. Limited delivery area. ©1983 Domino's Pizza, Inc 30 minute guarantee If your pizza does not arrive within 30 minutes, present this coupon to the driver for $3.00 off your pizza. No coupon necessary Fast, Free Delivery" 1504 Holleman 693-2335 4407 Texas Ave. 260-9020 Townshire Center 822-7373 • O z s I® I I J Battalion Classified 845-2611 !Ck Over 30,000 people could be Reading your ad in this space! t'Ser Him mwr CASH ON CAMPGS Try our Battalion Classified!!! $300 a day-open an account at Commerce National. ffasaasswaasi “A little more bank for your money.” ^ Commerce National Bank wS> 2405 Texas Avenue S. at Southwest Partway, College Siation, Texas (409) 693-6930 Member FDlC