-''•Styling for Men & Women Haircuts $9 with this coupon (regular $10) Perms $5 OFF Open M-F 9-6 Sat. 9-2 268-2051 Located in the Lower level Memorial Student Center exp. 02-27-88 id iri: i 1986,i three-\J;. ! >g touchilJ ive " last J an 80-vaitis.v \ i( ton 111 SundatiB te. lefensivti a $250.u$! highest-pl id lOthS - RANDY SIMS Bar-B-Que House FAMILY PAK SPECIAL-TO GO $9.99 Indues 1 lb. of beef, 1 pint of beans, 1 pint of potato salad, 4 pieces of garlic bread, sauce, pickles and onions. (Feeds 3-4 people). Monday thru Thursday 3824 Texas Ave., Bryan 4:00 p.m.-8:00 p.m. 846-8016 Thursday, January 21, 1988/The Battalion/Page 13 8 survive crash of plane; snow slows rescuers ALPHA KAPPA PSI Spring Rush'88 Jan.25 7 p.m. Informational Rush Pressbox Kyle Field Jan. 27 7 p.m. Casual Rush Rudder Tower Rm. 224 Jan.31 2 p.m. Chimney Hill Bowl Feb. 1 7 p.m. Formal Rush Clayton Williams Alumni Center p - Petal Patcti Florist 707 Texas Ave. 696-6713 FV K* . v. ill major cards accepted by telephone .i I an keep:: Gibbs s ball, wee best qti He got ime we it ill got gel a in the i i ugh bea« ave, vet te ;>ecause! 1/23 Sat FIJI Spring Rush Parties All Parties are Invitation Only. Party: South of the Border Attire: Sombreros/Ponchos 11/27 Wed Party: Ski Hawaii Attire: Hawaiian/Ski Wear I Fiji House: 1414 S. College * Bobby McGoldrick: 696-9132 * Keith Smith: 822-3008 * DURANGO, Colo. (AP) — Survi vors of a commuter airplane crash that killed nine people managed a “superhuman feat” by walking 1 ‘/a miles through darkness, tangled brush and waist-deep snow, authori ties said Wednesday. The only survivor with boots on, 39-year-old Peter Schauer of Boone- ville, Mo., made his way to a farm house and summoned help after Tuesday night’s Continental Express crash. Six others also made their way out, while an eighth survivor was rescued from the crash site. “Under normal conditions, no body could walk through this,” La Plata sheriff’s Sgt. Dan Bender said. “But the survivors were not under normal conditions. Adrenalin, shock, whatever — they did a super human feat.” The crash, which occurred in thick brushland 10 miles east of this southwestern Colorado city, demo lished the plane’s nose, hut spared passengers seated in the rear. Officials said the plane, en route from Denver, went down minutes after flight controllers cleared it to land at 7:05 p.m. at La Plata County Airport, about five miles from the crash site. Furniture Accessories T.V.'s Students Invited! Public Auction Liquidating Contents of the Sabre Inn Motel Saturday, January 23,1988 Location: Times: 701 Texas Ave. So. Sale Time: 10 a.m. College Station, Tx. Viewing: 9 a.m.-lO a.m. Contents of 35 Rooms With Contents of each room to include: Desk, Chair, Lamps, Dresser, Pic ture, Philco Color T.V., Double Bed with Frame. ALL ITEMS to be sold to highest bidders, as is and where is. TERMS: Cash, Cashiers Check, Local Checks with proper I.D. and Appro val, Company Checks and Out of Town Checks accepted only w/ Bank Letter of Guarantee. An Absolute Auction A.L. BUCK BUCHANAN Auctioneer 409-846-3069 TXS-088-007731 SELL BY AUCTION. The Sound that moves millions of dollars each year. r that star. IS is then eeves said and year® job, it w h) JoeGiH :ent of bis li division •eat job "ii —„nsb SHOES SALE $ 19 97 RACK SALE, Friday, Saturday and Sunday only. HD(3m < go' ( gio ) The shoe store with morel Sizes...service...selection. POST OAK MALL USE WYATTS ENTRANCE 696-7671 J© ES5 » overp°"‘ in the« f 1984. estaur" a OUt e CaterM 7 days SO** iVv includes round trip airfare transfers Hotel accomodations at the Sol y Mar $249 per person 8 days 7 nights Deluxe accomodations at Sun Tide 111 For all your spring break information 696-5020 UMEvLOBE 524 University Drive College Station Wednesday from his hospital room at Mercy Medical Center in Durango, Schauer said, “I said, ‘I’m going to get help,’ and 1 was gone. Nobody could keep up with me.” He said he climbed to the top of a hill and used lights in the distance to guide him. “I would count 50 steps and then rest,” he said. “I was hurt and it was exhausting. The snow was up to my waist, and I’m over six feet. At times I hit some gullies and the snow went up to my shoulders.” Behind Schauer were six other passengers, one a 23-month-old girl, who made their way to a highway. Thelma Tate, 79, answered a knock at her door about a half-hour after the plane went down to find Schauer limping and shivering out side. “I thought maybe he had been in a bad car wreck,” Tate said. Sheriff Bill Gardner said it took them more than an hour to reach the crash site, guided by Schauer’s footprints. Some traveled on skis carrying flashlights and battery-powered headlamps. Snow tractors and a bull dozer were used to cut a trail through the scrub oak and brush along the rolling hills and hum mocks. Applications are now available for the following RHA Executive Board Positions in 215 Pavilion: Chaplain (Dir.) Fish Programs (Assoc. Dir.) Freshman Leadership Program Secretary Authorities say teens killed 86-year-old man to obtain jar of pennies Now Open Saturday till 3 p.m. 10 Minute Drive-Thru Lube, Oil, & Filter Change All Aggies Oil Lube 10 o o 0 & All The Time no coupon necessary Filter Change (your choice of oil) 205 Holleman 764-7992 ■ AUSTIN, Minn. (AP) — Neigh bors of an 86-year-old man who po lice say was killed by two teen-agers for ajar of pennies shake their heads in disbelief when they talk about the victim and the two 16-year-olds. “You feel it’s going to happen in Chicago or New York; now it’s next door,” said Jane Felten, a secretary at St. Augustine Roman Catholic Church, where both the victim, Mi chael L. Fijik, and the suspects at tended services. “They murdered this man for a jarful of pennies,” Carol Kuettner, executive director of the Mower County Senior Center, where Fink was a frequent visitor, said. Police arrested the teen-agers, whose names have not been released because they are juveniles, on Mon day, three days after a neighbor found Fink’s home on fire. Authori ties believe the young men set fire to the house after the robbery to dis guise the crime, Police Chief Donald Hoffman said. The Rev. Charles Collins, of Fe- Roy, has known both youths since his days as an assistant pastor at St. Augustine from 1981-86. He now teaches next door at Pacelli High School, the parochial school that the teen-agers attended. “One was in constant trouble,” Collins said. “Some even pinned his early problems on the fact he was su per-bright. The other one, every body was just stunned. He was never a discipline problem.” The Rev. Charles Quinn, who has been pastor at St Augustine for eight years, said, “There’s a sense of community shame in that we are one family and that this could have hap pened.^ Quinn said he saw Fink, a wid ower with three children, at Mass a few times every week. “He was this tall, gangly man who shuffled along,” he said. “I think people would think he was crotchety because he was tone deaf and wouldn’t answer.” T hat image belied Fink’s true na ture, Quinn said. “He was a gentle man,” he said. As for the teen-agers’ families, the priest described them as “very fine E eople and, I am sure, traumatized y the whole thing.” Each youth has been charged in juvenile court with two counts of first-degree murder, one count of aggravated robbery and one count of arson, Mower County Attorney Nancy Evans said. They are to be transferred from the Mower County jail to a juvenile detention center in Red Wing pending further court proceedings. The two were arrested Monday afternoon when their parents took them in to be interviewed by author ities. The pennies and a hunting knife, which authorities say was used to stab Fink, were found during a search of the boys’ homes. An autopsy showed that Fink, who had multiple stab wounds and his throat cut, died of a stab wound to the heart. I I | Large 1 16** One Topping Thin Crust Pizza i i i | 12’* One Topping Thin Crust Pizza Free Delivery 846-0379 Best Pizza in Town Northgate 99 $5 + tax Small Free Delivery 846-0379 Best Pizza in Town Northgate n $4 99 + tax Federal safety agency blames drugs, alcohol for Amtrack collision DAVE’S LIQUOR Super Specials Lone Star Long Necks $6" 24 12 oz btls. 8 pk Seagram’s Wine Coolers $6 99 | Call 696-4343 for Kegs 524 University Dr. E Spring Break Get-A-Ways From $664 per person 9 days 8 nights J t/'H/OC' VZ-'M 1 V-V /H Adventure Travel WASHINGTON (AP) — A fed eral safety agency on Wednesday blamed impairment from drugs and the failure to require automatic braking devices on freight trains for the collision of an Amtrak passenger train and a string of freight locomo tives a year ago. The crash near Chase, Md., out side Baltimore, was the worst in Am- trak’s history, killing 16 people and injuring 175. The accident also refo cused attention on drug use in the railroad industry. The National Transportation Safety Board concluded after a year long investigation that the probable cause of the crash was the impair ment of Conrail engineer Ricky Gates from marijuana and possibly alcohol. Gates and his brakeman, Edward Cromwell, were the only people aboard the three Conrail locomo tives when they passed two slow down signals and a stop signal and screeched into the path of the Am trak train, which was traveling at 125 mph. The NTSB said the effects of the drug use by Cates and Cromwell caused them not to notice warning signals both inside the locomotive cab and over the tracks until it was too late to make a safe stop. Investigators said the Contrail lo comotives never went slower than 60 mph'before Gates frantically applied the emergency brakes in the last sec onds. Had the available warnings been heeded, Cates could have halted with more than 2,000 feet to spare, the report said. While the focus of the N TSB in vestigation has been drug use by the two Conrail employees, the safety board also took Amtrak and the Fed eral Railroad Administration to task for not requiring that all freight trains operating in the busy North east corridor be equipped with backup automatic braking devices. That brought a sharp response from FRA Administrator John Ri ley. He acknowledged that federal agencies “mishandled” the auto matic train braking issue over the past decade but maintained that the NTSB is as much at fault as any body. The safety board “ought to be candid enough to add itself to the agencies that mishandled this issue . . . There’s enough blame to go around,” Riley said. While the NTSB called for auto matic braking equipment on freight trains after an accident in 1978 it withdrew the recommendation four years later and influenced the ac tions of other federal officials, he ar gued. Since the Amtrak accident, Riley’s agency has directed all trains in the Northeast corridor to have the auto matic braking equipment. THE BROTHERHOOD OR SIGMA PHI EPSILON Wish TO CORDIALLY INVITE , ONE AND ALL TO ITS k>'XoV “WOODSTOCK RELIVED” RUSH PARTY FREATURING “WATERFRONT HOUSE THURS. JAN. 21 8:00 p.m. 2818 ★ Sig Ep House Wellborn \Univ.