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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 23, 1987)
Serving The Finest Mexican Food to Texas A&M Students and Faculty for over 15 years House Specialities include: ,I Zar ape’s : Main Dovmtnwn Bryan : 779-S702 9t30-S;45 Closed Mondays Cl h tmichangas Fajitas T-Bone Steaks Red Snapper Chalopas Compoestas Tostadas de Polio Brocheta de Catnarones Polio a la Parritla Enchiladas Nortenas : ? ; vary between restaurants. Please call for information & Daily specials Jose’s features a fall service bar and banquet facilities for up to 120 people. Please come and join us in our coun try setting, only IV? miles east of Post Dak Mall on Harvey Road. Happy South Se Sigma Nu House Sundance Apts. rday 5-10pm or more information call: ike Bowring 764-7342 b Jamieson 764-6805 Texas A&M EMERGENCY CARE TEAM Now Accepting Applications No Experience Needed We will train you. Come to our introductory Meeting Monday, Jan 26 7:00 PM 701 Rudder Or Call 845-4321 for more information Domino’s Pizza Presents SUPER SUNDAY 12” 1 item Pizza $4. 9S DOMINO’S PIZZA DELIVERS® FREE. Hours: Sun-Thurs 11am-1am Fri-Sat 11 am-2am 16” 2 item Pizza and 2 16 oz bottles of Coke® $10. 30 No Coupon Necessary Tax included Good every Sunday 693-2335 1504 Hoileman 260-9020 4407 Texas Ave 822-7373 Townshire Shopping Center Page 14/The Battalion/Friday, January 23, 1987 Shultz: Poindexter assured hostages would be freed WASHINGTON (AP) — Secre tary of State George P. Shultz told a congressional committee that Vice Adm. John M. Poindexter informed him last February that the Ameri cans held hostage in Lebanon would be freed soon and assured him three months later the United States was not swapping arms for hostages, an informed source said Thursday. Poindexter, who was then Presi dent Reagan’s assistant for national security affairs, made no mention in the Feb. 28 conversation with Shultz of the fact that U.S. weapons were being shipped to Iran, said the source, who demanded anonymity. The first of seven American arms deliveries to Tehran was dispatched that month. In his testimony Wednesday at a closed committee hearing, Shultz said he was assured several times by Poindexter — and also by Reagan — that the United States was not trad ing weapons for the hostages be lieved held by a pro-Iranian group. The disclosure Thursday alxuit what Shultz had been told — coming a day after it was learned he had told the House panel that the administra tion continued making secret con tacts with Iranian representatives as recently as December — sparked new criticism from members of Con gress and a pledge by the chairman of a select Senate committee to ex pand that panel’s investigation. Sen. Daniel K. Inouye, D-Hawaii, chairman of the select committee, said he will expand the probe to in clude the disclosure of U.S.-Iranian contacts which came even after pub lic disclosure of the earlier contacts, the sales of arms to Tehran and the diversion of proceeds to the Nicara guan rebels. In early May, while attending the economic summit meeting of seven industrialized countries in Tokyo, Shultz received a cable from Charles H. Price II, the U.S. ambassador to Britain, informing him of a possible U.S. arms deal with Iran for the re- ?< Crash (Continued from page 1) sounded like a sonic boon and then saw black objects falling. “All a sudden, these pieces started hitting the ground, just like hail,” he said. “They started hitting the ground pretty hard and hitting at my feet,” Thompson said. “So I ran and got under a big mesquite tree,” he said. “I could see a large wing coming down, floating slowly through the air about a quar ter-mile away.” Brownwood Fire Capt. Donald Reiger said “someone zigged when he should have zagged.” The collision left a five-mile-long streak of smoldering debris on the ground. The Brownwood collision came a day after six people were killed when a twin-engine Army U-21 col lided with a Piper Navajo over the Lake City Ammunition Plant near Independence, Mo. All four people aboard the civil ian plane were employees of Sachs Electric Co. of St. Louis. Whitney said the cause of the Texas crash will be investigated by a military board. Steve Whittenberg, a Texas De partment of Public Safety dis patcher, said eyewitnesses said they saw three parachutes, one empty, falling to the ground after the 1 p.m. crash. lease of the hostages. Shultz immediately took bj (fins to Donald F. Regan,thf|| dent’s chief of staff, and tof| dexter. According to the source, y; testified that Regan told himhjG alarmed and concerned aboi gl reported shipments while (H dexter inf ormed Shultz his ini J*. se lion was incorrect. El s ' Afterward, Poindexter antf e U |1 liam J. Casey, the directorial ' < cut i .il 1111<■ 111m■ ik e Ageii v e 1 sured Shultz the deliveries h 111 H stopped and that those involvefjPPy a been “ordered to stand Shultz told the committee, t. m rom < i F|>r ; ized lot brain surgery, that he JF s ’ 'l' not recall giv ing Shull/such l uril ‘ l . suranee and that state was to committee. Casey said through a spoke in December, lx* fore he was ho the secret s mistaken.Shultz’ acI|F apparently has raised quftl||l within the committee aboutthtr. * r i . no'- 1 '' | three tot s version of events. ‘ aitn in ingcr The officers who parachuted to safety were taken to Brownwood Regional Hospital. Hospital spokeswoman Cheryl Wilson said First Lt. Richard Di etrich, 28, of Gaithersburg, Md., was listed in good condition with second-degree burns and contu sions on his right knee. First Lt. James R. Johnston II, 24, of West Monroe, La., the other crew member, was taken to the hos pital after aiding in the search but was not treated, Wilson said. Kozak’s body was found by search crews at about 6 p.m. Wednesday, according to Autrey. Nancy Garms, who lives about one mile from the crash site, said she heard two planes fly overhead and then heard an explosion. “I thought one plane exploded,” Garms said. “I didn’t see a second plane.” -ny UT groups settles in court cos loubte —oop; The Jway, on of /Ion is iimms Se AUSTIN - \P) — ThehJPf^ Conservatives of Texas recTt an out-of-court settlementTfcw^j day of a year-old suit conteoC® student services fees at theil m versitv i>t 1 e\.ts were Dall.i used to endorse state candid/: Septi fhe Students' As..,.. tel I UT’s student government! chat: spent $883.35 in student sen fees to buy an advertisement dorsing five Democratic at dates for the 1984 elections Money collected through dent services fees are considt state money and cannot beti for lobbying or endorsing de ral candidates, Duseksaid. lit* said the Young Const lives plan to look at other“(]i alile ac t iv itles” of the dents’ Association and of ’ student groups, includingthesH dent newspaper, to see iffeesiHH j being used illegallv IVlS sank ities : II Dent lege^ 28. I said. 11 sente men said. St The partners and professional staff of Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co. are pleased to announce the following graduates of Texas A&M University will be joining our Firm: feroc i sure-1 Zeke have he sa Mo backn start ii ter su Mohli rooki who 1 favor years 6-foo April Bentley Ernest Duncan Mary Hart Andrea Hobbs Andrea Jumes Maria Jung Meg Kash Lamar Kerr Janna McClintock starte alterr Linda McKeage ^ Wade Medlin p Nancy Morton Kim Otte Jan Reppond Mary Jane Robinso; Greg Schneider Laurie Stalter Charlie Thompson Welcome to Peat Marwick! PEAT MARWICK