Texas A&M^^ ^ m V • The Battalion Vol. 82 No. 166 USPS 045360 6 pages College Station, Texas Tuesday, June 23, 1987 onvicted murderer )ack in Bryan court :!»d By Robert Morris Staff Writer the man sentenced to death by le- H injection for the slaying of a fexas A&M student was back in a Bra’os County courtroom Friday af ternoon for a hearing regarding the “completeness” of a reconstructed Bisc ript needed for his appeal, ■eff Emery was sentenced to die by local jurors last year for the 1979 \ He and slaying of Texas A&M stu dent LaShan Muhlinghaus in the bedroom of her College Station Hrtment. I Harts of the original court report- / H notes were stolen last October / Hn an Austin storage room. State , Hrict Judge Tom McDonald Jr. aathorized a reconstructed tran- /■pt to be sent to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. Jnder state law, death sentences are automatically sent to the criminal appeals court for a decision. How ever, defense attorneys on Friday re peatedly asked McDonald to grant a new trial because of the lost notes. Emery’s attorneys, Keith Swim of Bryan and Dennis McGill of Lub bock, maintain that the original tran script is an important and necessary part of their appeal. Swim referred to the document as incomplete and questioned the clar ity of the substitute transcript as “not being a complete representation” of previous hearings. After the hearing, McGill said he felt the transcripts were a necessary part of Emery’s appeal. “Every pretrial hearing in a capi tal case is important,” he said. The major portion of the hearing centered on the testimony given by Swim and McGill concerning the clarity of the reconstructed docu ment and their objections to its use as a valid substitute for the original. A March 24 hearing, in which the defense says Brazos County Sheriff Ronnie Miller testified, was specif ically in question. Assistant District Attorney E. Hubbard Kennady III insisted that the document was a good represen tation of the events of the previous hearing. McDonald also said Miller had been present only to discuss court room security for Emery’s trial and was never put on the witness stand. And McDonald repeatedly said the hearing was called to allow the defense to present their objections and that he was not able to call a new trial. All statements and objections would be recorded and sent to the criminal appeals court, McDonald said, which will decide if there will be a new trial. neumonia claims life dancer Fred Astaire erfly ilso. itb ladV' OS ANGELES (AP) — Fred As- t, who defined Hollywood el- ice for 30 years dancing in top and tails with Ginger Rogers and :r stars, died of pneumonia Mon in his wife’s arms. He was 88. staire died at Century City Hos- al at 4:25 a.m., his wife, Robyn, Ifully told a jammed news confer- I just got in bed with him and put prms around him and he died in Jarms, and that’s the way he |ted it,” said Mrs. Astaire, the for- racehorse jockey Robyn Smith, Dm he married in 1980. le died holding onto me,” she fe had been admitted June 12 a cold that worsened to pneu- Bnia. Iresident Reagan hailed Astaire ■an American legend.” Hred was, in every sense of the ivjrd, a ‘superstar,’” Reagan said in ■bourne, Fla. “. . . the ultimate Beer — the dancer who made it all obk so easy.” |l: ring Berlin, many of whose olgs Astaire introduced, recalled ■ dancer as “one of my oldest rjends.” ^He was an international star . . . [purest talent I have ever worked p,” Berlin said. kstaire’s debonair style domi- pd the Hollywood musical genre tinning in the 1930s, when he red in many song-and-dance i with Ginger Rogers. [“I don’t think there’s another one te him,” said Rogers, who teamed Iwith Astaire in “Flying Down to 'o in 1933 and followed with 10 ier musical hits. “He’ll always have llove and admiration.” lestimony , ens trial in Bryan ■The prosecution began present ing its case Monday to open the trial of David Michael Clark, a Bryan feident who is one of four people Hrged in the Feb. 19 double hom icide of a Bryan couple. ■Tracy Penuel of Waco, a co-de fendant in the case, testified on the iial’s opening day. ■She will be cross-examined to- da Fellow song-and-dance man Gene Kelly said: “Although we have lost one of the greatest dancers who ever lived, Fred Astaire will always be im mortal and an inspiration to all dancers who come after us.” Astaire and Rogers captivated de pression-era audiences, and the magic continued with succeeding partners, including Cyd Charisse, Rita Hayworth, Judy Garland, Au drey Hepburn. Ballet choreographer George Bal anchine once called him “the great est dancer in the world,” and ballet star Mikhail Baryshnikov praised his “perfection.” But Astaire played down his own talent. “I never thought a funny-looking guy like me would be suitable for “Although we have lost one of the greatest danc ers who ever lived, Fred Astaire will always be im mortal and an inspiration to all dancers who come after us. ” — Gene Kelly pictures,” Astaire once said, and a studio executive once dismissed him with the curt words: “Can’t act . . . can’t sing . . . balding . . . can dance a little.” Born Frederick Austerlitz on May 10, 1899, to an Omaha, Neb., beer salesman, he was enrolled by his mother in dancing school. She took him, with his older sister, Adele, to New York for professional training in 1906, and the youngsters soon were touring vaudeville under their new name, Astaire. A Paramount executive who viewed Astaire’s 1930 screen test dis missed him, but RKO signed him and loaned him to MGM for his de but with Joan Crawford in the 1933 “Dancing Lady.” After RKO’s “Flying Down to Rio” with Rogers, the duo appeared in such hits as “The Gay Divorcee,” “Roberta,” “Top Hat,” “Follow the Fleet,” “Swing Time,” “Shall We Dance,” “Carefree” and “The Story of Vernon and Irene Castle.” The team parted in 1939 except for a 1949 reunion in “The Barkleys of Broadway.” Astaire continued in a string of successful musicals with various dance partners, including “Holiday Inn,” “Easter Parade,” “Royal Wed ding,” “Daddy Long Legs,” “Funny Face” and “Silk Stockings.” His only Oscar, in 1949, was hon orary but he won nine Emmys for TV specials in the ’50s and ’60s. Astaire’s first wife, New York so cialite Phyllis Baker Potter, died of cancer in 1954 after 21 years of mar riage and two children — Fred Jr., born in 1936, and Ava, born in 1942. The family also included Peter Hof- fer, Phyllis Astaire’s son from a pre vious marriage. He remained vital and physically active long into his 80s. He broke his arm at 80 showing off on a skate board for his grandchildren. On June 28, 1980, he married the 35- year-old Smith. It’s A Breeze Charles Jackson, 28, works on the drive shaft of one of the massive fan units inside a cooling tower Photo by Robert W. Rizzo of the Physical Plant. Jackson is a contract millw right from Alvin, Texas. Helicopter crash kills 10 during military exercises FORT HOOD (AP) — A military helicopter flying at low altitude crashed in rugged terrain Monday during training exercises, killing 10 people, authorities said. One of the victims died at Darnall Army Community Hospital about an hour after the crash at about 9:45 a.m., base spokesman Maj. George Creach said. Reports on the number of victims have been revised, base spokesman Jeanie Kitchens said, because of earlier discrepancies when officials were not at the scene. Most of the victims were apparently Army reservists, Creach said. He said names of the dead were not re leased pending notification of next-of-kin. The UH-1 “Huey” helicopter belonged to the Army Reserve’s 353rd Engineer Group, Creach said. But most of those aboard were part of the 489th Engineer Battalion based in Little Rock, Ark., part of the Okla homa City-based 353rd Engineer Group, Creach said. Investigators could not immediately determine the cause of the crash, and there was no inclement weather at the time, he said. The aircraft was part of a military training exercise called Starburst ’87, the Texas National Guard 49th Ar mored Division’s annual two-week training exercise. Kitchens said. About 18,000 people take part in the exercise, Creach said. The helicopter crashed in rugged terrain about two miles from the western boundary of Fort Hood, which is in Central Texas, authorities said. “It’s a utility-type helicopter,” Creach said. “It’s usually used to carry cargo. It usually has a crew of three, and it can carry up to eight passengers.” Investigators have been called in from Fort Rucker to investigate the crash. Kitchens said. “We don’t know the cause but the Army will investi gate,” Army Capt. Mike Monnett said. He said the helicopter was on an orientation flight with a crew of at least three and was flying at low alti tude. “It is obvious there was a fire” involved in the crash, said Monnett, adding he did not know when the blaze erupted. Creach said he did not know how many people a Huey normally carries. “It all depends on a number of things,” he said, “on the air, the weather and stuff like that. But normally, it has a crew of three, and eight passengers.” I either Brazos County District ■torney Bill Turner nor defense ftorneys John Quinn and Robert ■rozco could comment on the case ■cause the trial has been placed fider a gag order by Judge John Haney of the 272nd District lOurt. ■Beverly Benninghoff, 25, and Hades Gears, 21, were found dead ■n the living room of their house at |08 Foch in Bryan. Benninghoff lad been shot five times and Gears Had been shot twice. f’rolice say the killings appear to be drug-related. I Clark, 27, was arrested Feb. 20, with Mary Gober Copeland and Gary Allen Penuel, also residents of Brvan. Penuel was arrested in Man h. ■No trial dates have been set for the co-defendants. Bryan Council votes to keep option on landfill site near B-CS water wells By Yvonne DeGraw Staff Writer Before allowing any of those who packed its chambers to op pose a proposed site for a new city landfill, the Bryan City Coun cil agreed to spend $59,472 to keep a purchase option on the site. The 236-acre site, at the south east corner of Old Spanish and Sandy Point roads, would cost $580,560 if the city decides to purchase it. LaDona Hudson, whose ranch is on Old Spanish Road, orga nized a citizen’s group to protest the site. The group says a landfill on this site would pollute the wa ter supplies of Bryan, College Station and Texas A&M. Only after the council voted on the agenda items with little or no discussion, two representatives of the group — Hudson and Dr. Kirk Brown, A&M professor of soil and crops sciences — were al lowed to speak for a limited time. The group attended the coun cil’s workshop session at 4 p.m., but Hudson said they were not al lowed to speak there. Hudson made a formal objec tion to not being allowed to speak before the motion was passed. “I assume we have already spent $60,000 of the taxpayers’ money,” she said, “but I would hope the council could reconsid er.” The group met first on Sunday and listed four objections: Brown, who has been called to testify as a landfill siting expert in New York, Illinois and Califor nia, says the proposed landfill would jeopardize the water sup plies of both cities and A&M. “Normally, I wouldn’t speak up on a local issue,” he said. “You Bryan’s wells are located about 3V2 miles to the east of the land. Jack Cornish, manager of the city’s solid waste division, has said that the land has a layer of clay at least 40 feet thick. Clay is considered good protec tion against seepage, but Brown said clays are not impermeable. Suction from the well pumps in the area and holes in the clay layer from abandoned wells “Do people really want to drink water that has been leached through garbage, especially their garbage?” — Dr. Kirk Brown, A&M soil and crop sciences profes sor have to be more than 100 miles from home to be an expert, but this is the water my children will drink.” Brown displayed a map show ing the plot of land the city is con sidering and the major water wells in the area. College Station has three wells about one mile east of the site. One well is within one-quarter of a mile. There are plans for a fourth well nearby. Texas A&M gets its water from three wells about one mile west of the site. would allow hazardous wastes into the water supply, he said. Brown said there is no limit saying how far wells should be from landfills. Georgia law says landfills cannot be placed within two miles of a city water well. Although hazardous wastes are supposed to be dumped in special landfills regulated by the Envi ronmental Protection Agency, Brown said ordinary substances like battery acid and antifreeze can pollute the water supply. “It’s estimated that each person generates one gallon of hazard ous waste per year,” he said, quot ing a study by the New Jersey In stitute of Technolgy. The landfill would be hazard ous even if it met state standards, he said. “Do people really want to drink water that has been leached through garbage, especially their garbage?” he asked after the meeting. The group says the price, al most $2,500 per acre, is too high. Hudson claimed the cost will rise to over $1 million “before the first Coke can could be buried.” Old Spanish Road is the old est road in Texas and dates back to the conquistadors, Hudson said. She said she lives there be cause of its historical significance. The road leads to Bryan Utility Lake, the only recreational water facility in the area. Hudson said this would put dump trucks on the same narrow road traveled by family campers. Despite her frustration at the vote, Hudson is determined to fight city hall. “In one day we got 400 signa tures,” she said. “We will have 4,000 if necessary. We will have 40,000 if the citizens of Brazos County realize their water is in jeopardy.” Lawmaker: Clements should be impeached AUSTIN (AP) — A member of the Texas House of Representatives said Monday he is studying the pos- siblity of impeachment proceedings against Gov. Bill Clements in the wake of the Methodist bishops’ re port on the Southern Methodist University football scandal. “I think that report that came out from the bishops can’t be defended by the governor,” Rep. Paul Moreno, D-El Paso, said. A report issued by four United Methodist bishops said Clements, as chairman of the SMU Board of Gov ernors, knew improper payments were being made to football players and allowed them to continue even though the school already was on NCAA probation. The bishops said Clements and several other members of the board of governors participated in an elab orate scheme to keep Clements’ in volvement a secret. “It seems to me that a person of that background does not belong in the office of governor of the state of Texas,” said Moreno, who first be gan studying impeachment last March when Clements admitted knowing about the scandal. Clements refused Monday a re quest for an interview about the SMU report.