Tuesday, January 19, 1988/The Battalion/Page 3 State and Local Heavy fog delays planned arrival of Navy ship headed for Houston HOUSTON (AP) — The Navy’s :west and most technologically ad- iced guided-missile cruiser fell ctim Monday to Mother Nature as ;avy fog blanketed the Houston S[np Channel and delayed for at last a day the planned arrival of the [SS San Jacinto. The ship, bearing the name of the little which gained the Republic of •xas its independence, waited at ahchor at the mouth of the ship channel near Galveston while Navy o! icials scrambled to reorganize a bi sy week-long series of events that |ill culminate with the Saturday mmissioning of the vessel by Vice esident George Bush. “It’s the rules and regulations of le ship channel,” Ed Klecka, a Navy spokesman, said. “They don’t want violate them. The harbor pilots a| e advising the captain that this is [hat he should do.” Klecka said that if the ship were in ie open sea, it would be able to pro- ed regardless of the fog. I “The ship would continue, defi- ■tely,” he said. ■ Although the other nine ships of tie Aegis class of cruisers are all ■timed after historic American bat tles, the $1 billion USS San Jacinto is Hnique in that the commissioning will take place within sight of its ■amesake battlefield. I The San Jacinto is named after tlie 18-minute battle in which the Hjtnumbered Texas army, com- ■tanded by Sam Houston, defeated One killed in Houston private plane crash HOUSl ON (AP) — At least one person was killed and six others in jured Monday when a private jet crashed in heavy fog in a marshy field near a runway at Houston’s Hobby Airport, officials said. One of the surviving passengers told authorities she was among seven people on the flight, which origi nated in Monterrey, Mexico, and stopped in Laredo. “It came in, hit the trees and broke in half,” Houston Police Lt. Kenneth Ginn said. “It looked like he fell out and the plane kept going,” said J.D. Sellers, an ambulance supervisor who was the first rescue person at the scene of the accident. “The plane skidded about 200 to 300 feet before it >ed.” Those injured were suffering stoppt head injuries, dislocations, fractures and possible internal injuries, Sellers said. One woman passenger, however, managed to escape the wreckage without serious injuries. “It felt like we hit and started fish tailing and then it just flipped over and over,” Jennifer Jeffers of Hous ton said. She said she was asleep in the rear of the plane and woke up to hear the pilot saying they might have to land elsewhere because of the fog. After the crash, she ran to a business about three-quarters of a mile away to call for help. The airport had been closed inter mittently Monday morning because of heavy fog. Helicopter ambulances initially were blocked from reaching the scene because of the poor flving conditions but later brought two people to Hermann Hospital for treatment, a spokesman said. Four others were brought to the hospital by ground ambulances, she said. Their conditions were not imme diately available. Scattered power outages were re ported in the area, but Houston Lighting & Power Co. spokesman Geri Konigsberg said it was uncer tain if the plane caused the outages. The wreckage of the aircraft was in a field at the west side of the air port. Besides the fog, the marshy ground and tall grass hampered the efforts of rescuers to get to the acci dent scene. Authorities used four- wheel-drive vehicles. Investigators from the Federal Aviation Administration were called to the scene to studv the crash. the Mexican army on April 21, 1836, under Gen. Santa Anna. The battle field site, at the junction of the San Jacinto River and Buffalo Bayou, about 15 miles east of downtown Houston, is now a Texas state park and home to the Battleship Texas. Plans called for a 21-gun salute to be exchanged between the San Ja cinto and a cannon on shore. The San Jacinto is the fourth ves sel to bear that name and the third in the U.S. Navy. The first San Jacinto belonged to the Texas navy in the early days of the Republic and was wrecked in a hurricane near Galveston. The second San Jacinto — and the first to fly the U.S. flag — was a frig ate built in 1851 and was used to ex periment with a screw-type propel ler. After fighting in the Civil War, it ran aground on a reef in the Baha mas on New Year’s Day, 1865, and the hull eventually was sold. The most recent San Jacinto was a World War II aircraft carrier which included George Bush among its Fighter pilots. It served until 1970. Resolution made by faculty senate puts off changes By Karen Kroesche Sta ff Writer A resolution that will postpone for two years a “technology, rene wable resources and society” re quirement in the core curriculum was passed unanimously Monday at the Faculty Senate’s first meet ing of 1988. The resolution was proposed by the Academic Affairs Commit tee after it was discovered that the College of Engineering did not have suitable courses to meet the requirement, said Peter J. Hugill, chairman of that committee. In April, President Vandiver approved the core curriculum with the exception of the technol ogy, renewable resources and so ciety component, which was de signed to include either an agriculture or engineering course in the requirements that all stu dents will have to fill under the core curriculum proposal. The Senate also approved the dates for Faculty Senate elections, which are set as follows: • Feb. 29 - March 11: nomi nation period. • March 28 - April 1: absentee voting. • April 4 - election. • April 6 - runoff election, if nec essary. In his opening remarks. Fac ulty Senate Speaker C. Richard Shumway praised President Frank E. Vandiver’s accomplish ments and expressed sadness at his announcement that he will re linquish his post effective Sept 1. “I am saddened by his resigna tion, and deeply appreciative of the period that he’s served as our president,” Shumway said. “He has been a strong advocate for a core curriculum. He has sup ported faculty participation in the selection and evaluation of ad ministrators, he’s honored and shown respect for faculty in both substantive and symbolic ways. He has been an effective spokes man for higher education and Texas A&M in particular.” Shumway credited Vandiver with the existence of the Faculty Senate. “I think it’s fair to say as we near the end of our fifth year as a Faculty Senate that without his unwavering commitment to par ticipative government we would not exist.” Monday’s meeting set a new Faculty Senate record. Lasting only 30 minutes, it was the short est that anyone could remember. “I’m not aware of any shorter (meeting),” Shumway said. former Gov. Connally and wife prepare to auction off personal items ■ HOUSTON (AP) — Former Texas first lady Nellie Connally, surveying hundreds ol personal items Monday that awaited auc- ti< n later this week, said it looked “sort of ll:e the end of something.” ■ Mrs. Connally and her husband, former three-time Gov. John B. Connally, are sell ing off prized possessions to help pay $48 million in debts. Connally, 70, filed for both personal and business bankruptcy in July. ■ “I don’t like it at all, but it’s something we have to do,” Mrs. Connally said of the up coming auction, which begins Friday eve ning. “Most of the things we hate to give up are the gifts from friends and staff,” Mrs. Con nally, 68, said at a preview at Hart Galleries where the auction will be held. “It’s sort of like the end of something. We got into this so we have to do this.” As she gave a tour describing the posses sions, Mrs. Connally said, “It seems strange that they’re mine and that they’re here. I’m looking at these things with detachment.” Connally, who served as governor from 1963-69, was in New York on business Monday but was expected to return to Houston by Friday to attend the auction with his wife. The former governor, who also served as secretary of the Navy under President Ken nedy and treasury secretary under Presi dent Nixon, launched several real estate ventures at the peak of the oil boom with former Texas Lt. Gov. Ben Barnes as his partner. When the boom went bust, it took Con nally, Barnes and others in tow. Under bankruptcy rules, Connally is sell ing all properties except his house and 200 of the 3,400 acres at Picosa Ranch, his homestead in Floresville south of San Anto nio. The law allows Connally to keep $30,000 in personal possessions. Mrs. Connally said many have told her she’s in good company considering the number of bankruptcies filed in Texas. She agrees, but adds, “It’s a nice club, but not one 1 lobbied to become a member. “Don’t you ever fear we’ll do something like this again,” Mrs. Connally told report ers. “We’re never going to be out until we’re really out.” She said the auction will probably be tough, but that they have been through tough times before. r the: tlo* he dor iceii 0 YOU’VE SOT THE . * I 'GOOD SENSE I TO GO A&M... SAVE HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS!! FURNITURE BARGAINS SAVE 40%, 50% UP TO 80%= DOLLARS AT ! FB&T. First Bank & Trust is now offering % % * dr student loan program. To get into college, it takes intelligence, talent and ambition. We can help with the rest...financing. 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