2 |ihe Battalion STATE & LOCAL londay, Octobers, 1989 bfjVictims of fishing boat explosion 'fljhonored; investigation continues ; Captain tells NTSB officials he didn’t know about gas pipeline CAMERON, La. (AP) — Victims untinial rom the fishing boat that exploded e of tra( n the Gulf of Mexico were honored a memorial service over the week- :nd as an investigation into the mis- lap continued. More than 100 friends and rela- ives of the victims of the North Um- lyoneels jerland explosion attended the me- djapai ideroftl er hopt rtheSti heir he educ me educate > area® norial service Saturday after icarchers found the last missing rnnt «» rew member in a bunk aboard the '' hip where 11 people died. “At a time like this, we would all ike to have answers,” said the Rev. Marvin Miles, a pastor at Cameron's Oak Grove Baptist Church, who helped conduct the service. “We’ll see something worthwhile out of the worst of this situation. We’ve seen it happen before.” Meanwhile, the fishing boat’s cap tain told investigators he didn’t know his vessel was near a sub merged natural gas pipeline. Three men aboard the vessel were hurt. The explosion Tuesday night aboard the 160-foot North Umber- land happened about a half-mile off Sabine Pass. Zapata Haynie Corp., which owns the North Umberland, conducted the memorial service. Funeral services for two of the vic tims, Bennie Crawford and Timmy Lee Thomas, both of Lake Charles, La., are scheduled for Monday. Other services are pending, officials at Combre Funeral Home of Lake Charles said. The 31-year-old captain, Darreyl Wayne Gough, told National Trans portation Safety Board investigators that the crew was preparing to head toward a school of fish to the east of e area: 4gNet helps radio stations broadcast 1 consumer-based agricultural news thanji mit at ByTodd Swearingen glessrfe )f The Battalion Staff u re- tv are pr kids’ed It’s not a bird, it’s not a plane, and it’s not a farm how! It’s the Consumer AgNet Radio Program, rought to you by the Department of Agricultural Communications at Texas A&M. 'g w payclieti he edira Communications Specialist Randy Lemmon said the ictwork radio program is not a farm show, but instead ocuses on consumer-based agricultural news. Lemmon aid that radio stations do not cover agricultural news to re extent that they did in the past and that gearing ag- icultural news to the consumer allows him to reach a 531101 uufpi larger audience than traditional farm shows. There are still some farm shows out there, but by l^nd large they’re dying,” Lemmon said. lion, Lemmon produces the reports in long and short for- nats to give stations flexibility in broadcasting them. Several volunteer student reporters are used, Lemmon aid, to provide a variety of voices and add a profes- ional touch to the program. The news is presented so hat the general auclience can understand how it will af- ectthem at the grocery store or the shopping mall, he aid. “We also focus a lot on what we call high interest sub jects — gardening and family related sciences (diet, health and nutrition),” Lemmon said. Most of the news stories concern research by the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, the Texas Ag ricultural Extention Service, and the College of Agri culture and Life Sciences, because these agencies have a tremendous impact on people’s lives, he said. Lemmon spent three-and-a-half years producing ra dio and television programs for the Texas Farm Bu reau before helping create AgNet just over a year ago, and has watched it grow initially from about 70 stations to 123 stations in Texas and Louisiana. “We sent out the very first week of programming Sept. 27, 1988,” Lemmon said. “We really didn’t know what to expect — we thought we had something that was good. “Before we sent out the first week of programming, we asked probably over 200 stations whether or not they wanted to be a part of it.” Lemmon said that the program has gained a good reputation, and now stations are starting to contact him requesting the program. the accident site when the explosion occurred. Gough said he was backing up the vessel in shallow water, with the front of the ship facing shore, when he felt a jolt. “In the process of backing up, he was pulling the boat ... to the right and that’s when he struck the pipe line,” NTSB member Lee Dickinson said. “There was a sudden stop and an immediate boom. Immediately he saw flames,” Dickinson said of the captain, who was interviewed by NTSB members Friday at his Sul phur, La., home. Gough jumped overboard, and the captain recalled how a crew member drowned in his arms as they waited to be rescued, Dickinson said. After spending about 30 minutes in the water, he was rescued by a heli copter. He was treated for shock at a Beaumont hospital, then was re leased. The captain’s navigation charts were destroyed in the accident and it was not known whether the pipeline was marked on his charts, Dickinson said. He said Gough told investiga tors he didn’t know about the 16- inch pipeline. A spokesman for Natural Gas Pipeline Co. of America, which in stalled the pipeline in 1973, said the line was reported to appropriate au thorities at the time. Two victims were discovered Fri day by search aircraft near Sea Rim State Park — about 10 miles from the scene of the blast. Two bodies were found Tuesday night, a third was found on WednesHay and five others were recovered Thursday when investigators boarded the ship for the first time. All but one of those aboard the ship were from Louisiana. The other was from Port Arthur. 3 City Editor Fiona Soltes 845-3316 Texas man claims government impeded philanthropic efforts WHITE SETTLEMENT (AP) — A Texas man says he is ending his 5-year, one-man battle against hunger and death in Central America because of what he claims is persistent harassment from the U.S. Government. “They win, I quit. But the ba bies die,” said Gary Bennett, founder of Miskito Coast Child Find, an organization that has carried sick and homeless chil dren out of war-torn Honduras and Nicaragua and delivered more than 30 tons of medicine and clothing into Central Amer ica since 1984. Throughout his effort, Ben nett said, officials of the U.S. Em bassy in Honduras have accused him of “baby stealing” and inves tigated him on grounds he is not from a licensed adoption agency. An embassy spokesman told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram it did not harass Bennett’s organi zation. However, in processing visa re quests that involved the adoption of a non-American citizen, the U.S. government must make sure that adoption laws of the United States and foreign countries are complied with, to protect the in terests of everyone concerned, the spokesman said. Honduras officials insist upon children having birth certificates before they may be taken from the country, but Bertnett said Honduras refuses to give birth certificates to Nicaraguans. Child Find was licensed with the state of Texas until Sept. 15, when Bennett allowed the license to expire as part of dismantling the organization. “I’m just tired of fighting their process,” Bennett said. “I have no choice but to let the babies die.” Bennett initially became in volved in Central America as a 1 U I ' I . n > mercenary of sorts. He taught Fighting techniques to soldiers in Nicaragua. After several missions, he said, he became interested in helping people of Central America dis placed by the war. His interest in guns and grenades became sec ondary to an interest in sick chil dren and hungry families, he said. Bennett said his problems with Honduras began when a baby he was trying to help turned out to be Nicaraguan instead of Hondu ran. Bennett said the child’s mother told him the child was Honduran, lying to him because she thought it would increase her chances of getting help for her baby. Honduras officials accused Bennett of falsifying papers. Four children ranging in age from seven months to two years now are housed in Bennett’s House of Love, as he unofficially calls the building in Honduras that is used for orphans until par ents are found and paperwork completed. “Next week I have to go back and close down the house and try to find (the four children’s) mom mas or try to find them another home down there,” Bennett said. One of Bennett’s five children is one he adopted after finding her near death in the Miskito Coast, a 40-mile-wide, 225-mile strip of shoreline in eastern Nica ragua and Honduras. “They can put me in jail for 20 years, but they still can’t find one thing I’ve done,” Bennett told the Star-Telegram. “We’ve got a lot of babies and older people healthy and happy that wouldn’t have been before. And I’ve got a dollar and a quarter in my pocket.” ;e on- a now few 5 >rice ;has« real nete 1 lerS' nu c favf* : pai bras nuni 1 ' out I* oft* tea* jst thef metf nutf mess .An* boot til so* for* --Hf* an* for ; Texas A&M Department of Food Services Ag CaFe ...located on the west side of campus, first floor of the new Biochemistry/Biophysics Bldg.#61 OPEN 7:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Monday - Friday $1.99 Breakfast Special served...7:00 a.m.-10:15 a.m. A full line of other breakfast selections include: WaffCes, (Panca/tes, homemade ‘Biscuits, (Pastries, ‘Eggs, Breaf^fast (Meats and fresh fruit Bar (soCd By the ounce). $3.49 Lunch Special served...10:30 a.m.- 2:00 p.m. A full line of other lunch selections include: (DeCi-Sandunches, (Pizzas, fast food Items, (HomestyCe Entrees and ‘Vegetables, Soup and Salad Bar (sold By the ounce). A variety of beverages and snack food items also available throughout the day. TV How’re you going to do it? Reeling from revisions! 'or As! PS/2 it! 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