UNIVERSAL GROCERY & SNACK BAR CHINESE LUNCH SPECIAL $2 00 -Eggrolls & Wontons- Imported Oriental Groceries-Exotic Foods All within walking distance of Campus Across from Blocker Bldg. & St. Mary Center 110 Nagle-C.S 846-1210 irVTERURBAJV Join us Tuesday nights for MEXICAN BEER NIGHT! DOS EQUIS, TECATE A CORONA Only ONE DOLLAR from 5:00 pm until close The INTERURBAN 505 University Dr. "an aggie tradition" 50% off all Loose Diamonds 'Get highest Quality Diamond with a one year guarantee on our special setting.' 'Financing Available' 415 University Dr. Good thru 9/30/85 TAMU Summer Study Abroad College of Liberal Arts Come and find out about all opportunities offered Summer 1986 October 1, 7:30 p.m. MSC RM. 228 Study Abroad Office 101 Academic Bldg. 845-0544 College of Liberal Arts Ms. Ann Todd Baum Rm. 802 Harrington 845-5143 FISH RICHARDS HALF CENTURY HOUSE Invites you to experience the casual elegance that is Fish Richards, and enjoy ROAST PRIME RIB OF BEEF for (hQ off regular menu price 4)v3 on Mondays and Tuesdays. Lunch Poor Richards Revenge Dinner Mon-Fri Mon-Fri Mon-Sat 11:30-2:30 4:30-6:30 5:00-10:30 PIANO BAR NIGHTLY Featuring Jim Williams and Dave Ellis 5:00-6:30 and 8:00-10:00 BGT Wefborn Rd;, College Station 696-4118 Page 8/The Battalion/Tuesday, October 1,1985 World and Nation Cessna crash blamed on overloading, tainted fuel Associated Press JENKINSBURG, Ga. — A single engine plane whose crash killed the pilot and 16 skydivers carried con taminated fuel and may have been overloaded, federal aviation investi gators said Monday. A black discoloration was found in the right fuel tank of the Cessna 208 Caravan, said Jim Burnett, chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board. Investigators did not know what had contaminated the fuel, or its source, he said. The Federal Aviation Administra tion said it grounded the plane Fri day because of contaminated fuel, but Burnett said the plane’s owner took off without correcting the prob lem, which would have been a viola tion of FAA rules. Burnett, speaking to reporters at the crash scene 50 miles south of At lanta, said maintenance workers at an Atlanta air freight company re ported that the plane’s fuel last Thursday was ‘‘the color of black coffee,” instead of its normal amber color. The plane’s weight limit for its flight Sunday was 3,115 pounds, Burnett said. The West Wind Sport Parachute Center estimated that each parachutist carrying equipment would weigh 200 pounds. “I’ll let you do the mathematics,” he said. The weight of the pilot and fuel would be added to the estimated 3,200 pounds weight of the par achutists in calculating the load, but Burnett said the NTSB had not de termined the actual weights. Mechanics working for Midnight Express at Fulton County Airport, an air freight company which was considering using the plane, discov ered that the fuel was bypassing the fuel filter through a mechanism that is activated when the filter is clogged, he said. An FAA inspector at the airport Friday was told of the fuel contami nation and therefore did not certify the pilot for flight, Burnett said. “As far as I can determine, no fur ther action was taken by the FAA,” Burnett said. “The FAA inspector did not have a form” that he could have placed on the plane, grounding it until the fuel problem was cor rected. After the FAA inspector left, the plane’s owner, David Lee Williams, ignoring the warnings from the FAA and the mechanics, flew the plane from Fulton County Airport, an nouncing his destination as DeKalb- Peachtree Airport, Burnett said. The plane’s next known location was the parachute center in Jenkinsburg. Hicks said the plane made a nor mal takeoff from West Wind Sport Parachute Center and apparently was in the air only a few seconds be fore it crashed less than a mile away. Waldo by Kevin Thomas GAD/ THAT TASTPO like warm spit? W/ATEABOT/ G/MN/G THAT GATORAD£ ^ bucket/ HE OUT-WEIGHS ME Bl 200 POUNDS. YOU TELL H j N/ ** Transcripts: Flight 191 crew was anxious about storm Associated Press WASHINGTON — In the min utes before Delta Flight 191 crashed while trying to land at the Dallas- Fort Worth International Airport, a thunderstorm was clearly apparent and a pilot who had just landed no ticed what he thought was a tornado along the approach. But National Transportation Safety Board documents indicated Monday the pilot of Flight 191 never was warned of the storm’s severity. Less than 10 minutes before the crash he was told by air traffic con trollers that there was “only a little rain” north of the airport. Investigators have speculated that the Aug. 2 crash, which killed 136 people, was caused by wind shear, a severe change of wind direction that literally forced the Lockheed L-1011 jumbo jet into the ground as it was about to land. A transcript of exchanges in the cockpit just before the crash sup ported the wind-shear theory be cause the crew could be heard strug- ling to increase power amid the ackdrop of engines revving to max imum power. “Push it up, push it way up, way up,” pilot Edward Connors exnorted his co-pilot, Rudolph Price Jr. “Way up,” Price responded, with the sounds of the engines increasing power and the “whoop, whoop, pun up pull up’ warning of the ground proximity alarm in the background. This was followed by a sound sim ilar to a landing and someone say ing, “Oh . . .” and what the NTSB called a non-printable word. Almost immediately there was the sound of a second impact and silence. The flight, from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., was bound for Los Angeles with an interim stop at Dallas when it en countered heavy rain, lightning and trecherous winds short of the run way. The plane first touched down _in a field, bounded across a highway where it struck a car and crashed into water tanks before bursting ini: | flames. According to the transcript free the cockpit voice recorder, tnt cm was concerned during theapproac about severe weather in theim : Several times they criticized aittni I fic controllers lor di reeling them too |; close to a severe weather cell. “We’re going to get our airpk washed,’’ Price, a 15-year veten: with Delta, remarked. A short ditt: later, about 90 seconds before &: crash, he observed lightning “rigls ahead of us” as the plane continuct its descent. As they spoke, another Delti crew, its plane taxiing away fromtl* runway after having landed, already had noticed the severe weatk along the approach path. About 2V* minutes later, the tw Delta crew members, neither ri whom was identified, saw the fnelai beyond the runway where Flight 181 had crashed. Islamic fundamentalists vow to resii attacks by Syrian-supported milith Associated Press TRIPOLI, Lebanon — Syrian- supported leftist militias launched a series of attacks Monday on besieged Moslem fundamentalists who vowed to resist “to the last drop of blood.” The Palestinian-backed Tawheed Island, or Islamic Unification, movement beat back repeated at tempts by four other militias to push into the heart of Tripoli in the sav age struggle for power. The city’s streets were strewn with bodies. Police said they had been un able to gather a casualty report since Saturday, when they said at least 273 people were killed and 714 wounded since Sept. 15. Several hundred Syrian par atroopers with tanks ringed the port city and appeared ready to join the battle if their allies failed to break through the dogged Tawheed de fenses. Associated Press photographer Rex Henderson reported a battalion of Syrian paratroopers was spotted on Tripoli’s southern outskirts along with nine Syrian T-54 tanks in a con voy with 106mm guns and field artil lery. On bluffs east of the city, Syrian and militia artillery bombarded the western sector of Lebanon’s second- largest city where the black-scarved Tawheed fighters are trapped on a peninsula around the port. A telephone caller describing himself as Tawheed’s Beirut spokes man told the AP that the movement held all its positions. “We shall fight to the last drop of blood,” said the caller, who would not give his name. “Our dead go to heaven and theirs to hell.” The heart of Tripoli has been laid • I waste by shellfire and rockets sina the fighting broke out. Tripoli’sgot ernor, Iskandar Ghibril, fledthtdti ’ Monday to a makeshift headquarten on the outskirts. ■ He told the state radio that,“Dot; ens of casualties lie uncared for it; the streets. The fighting is veryut age.” So far, the estimated 7,500Syra: regulars around Tripoli haveonk provided covering fire and dashtc periodically with Tawheed outposts They have not yet been thro*: into the fighting, which beganwic clashes between Tawheed and tin Syrian-backed Arab Democrat Party. The two factions have foujlt intermittently for two years for® trol of the city. Botha refuses to offer blacks full voting rights Associated Press JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — President P.W. Botha offered some concessions to South Africa’s black majority Monday, including the possibility of seats on the advi sory President’s Council, but ruled out full voting rights. He said the les son of black Africa is that one man, one vote “means the dictatorship of the strongest black group.” Botha declared his commitment to a united nation that allows for black rights, but said any future sys tem must protect the rignts of whites and other minorities m South Af rica, which has been swept by more than a year of violence against white- minority rule. The 60-member President’s Council advises the government on legislation. It was restructured last year to include mixed-race and Asian members, after legislative bodies with limited power were es tablished for those minorities. But whites remain in control. Rioting continued in black town ships. Police said mobs killed three blacks and set fire to their bodies in the latest outbreak of black-against- black violence. More than 700 blacks have been killed since rioting began against apartheid, the race laws that guar antee privilege for South Africa’s 5 million whites and deny rights to the 24 million blacks. Most died at the hands of police, but some are victims of other blacks who accuse them of being informers or of cooperating with the white government. Botha offered no specifics in his speech to a congress of his ruling National Party in the Cape Province city of Port Elizabeth. He said details must be negotiated. It contained none of the bellicos ity that characterized his remarks to the Durban party congress Aug. 15, in which he said full voting rights for blacks would take the white minority “on a road to abdication and sui cide.” Disappointment over the tone and contents of the Durban speech caused international reaction that thrust the country deeper into finan cial crisis and sent its currency to new lows on world markets. The president said in Port Eliza beth that structures must be built to GALLERY 1SSAN 10% Student Discount Discount is on all parts & labor on Nissan Products only. We will also offer 10% dis count on labor only on all non-Nissan products. Student I.D. must be presented at time workorder is written up. We now have rental units available for service customers 1214 Tx. Ave. 775-1500 give blacks effective power over their own communities, in cities as well as tribal homelands, and a say in matters of concern to all people of South Africa. Copies of the speech were distributed to reporters in Jo hannesburg. Botha presented a view of South Africa as a nation of minorities, in cluding several within theblackcoir munity, and said any reforms mis protect all of them from dominatiot The central question, as Bothaa pressed it, is how to include not white minorities in a constitution system built by whites over tilts centuries — “tnat is, how they® share in a liberated South Africa Hard liquor sales peak during rush to beat tax hike Associated Press Vodka, whiskey and scotch dis appeared from store shelves across the country Monday as customers put in a final rush to buy their booze ahead of an in crease in federal liquor taxes. “We’re having a mad rush,” said Mike Bordenave, a St. Paul, Minn., liquor store clerk as peo ple carteu out cases of liquor and cordials. Stores around the coun try reported sales up from 30 to 50 percent. The sales rush peaked hours before new federal rules went into effect, increasing taxes byan average 19 percent. Starting at 12:01 a.m. Tuesday, drinkers were taxed $12.50 for each gallon of 100 proof booze, up $2 from the old rate of $10.50 a gallon. “Customers have been aware of the increase,” said Harold Kraun, manager of a Hamilton, N.J., liquor store. “The customers that can afford it are doing the heavy buying.” I MEXICAN BUFFET All You Can Eat Mon-Fri 11-2 11 to 13 choices of the real mexican food. All You Can Eat Special JjJ3 95 823-0872 318 N. Main Downtown Bryan