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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 30, 1974)
You’ll find sound savings at FedMart )- “Photographs & Memories — His Greatest Hits” • John Denver “If You Love Me, Let Me Know” • Olivia Newton-John “Body Heat” • Quincy Jones S' “His Greatest Hits” • Jim Croce “Back Home Again” • John Denver Recorded Live On Stage in Memphis” • Elvis Presley “Pussy Cats” • Harry Nilsson “Alice Cooper’s Greatest Hits” • Alice Cooper “Endless Summer” • The Beach Boys “Wrap Around Joy” • Carole King Stereo LP’s $4.69 ea. 8-Track Tapes . . $6.39 ea. Congratulations, Aggies, on your football season! The Consumer’s Friend Since 1954 FedMart Family Savings Centers 701 University Drive East (at Tarrow St.), College Station Store Hours: M-F 10:30-8:00 Sat. 9:30-6:00 Sun Closed THE BATTALION Page 11 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1974 S. Africa’s policy of apartheid falters JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) — Pressures at home and ab road are chipping away at South Africa’s policies of race separation called apartheid. New government initiatives, best described as “creeping changes,” appear to be gradually dismantling some of the nation s most criticized laws and customs. But long-time political observers say that while change is apparent there has been no fundamental shift in policy by the ruling Nationalist party. The changes, they say, are “too little, too late” and amount to win dow dressing by a regime intent on maintaining white supremacy. South Africa’s population com prises about 18 million blacks, 4 million whites, 2 million persons of mixed race and 650,000 Asians. The changes will not give the black majority the vote or create a multiracial society but appear to be aimed at eliminating or silently dropping the harsher aspects of ra cial separation. Two events—the collapse of the Portuguese empire in Africa and a mounting shortage of skilled white labor inside the country—seem to have sparked much of the new thinking about old problems. The possibility of racial conflict in southern Africa has grown since the sudden collapse of the Portuguese “buffer zone”between independent black Africa and white-ruled South Africa. At home. South Africa’s industrial economy finds itself increasingly dependent on black labor to main tain growth. Last Wednesday, Prime Minister John Vorster told the Senate in Cape Town that black and white- ruled Africa had reached a cros sroads and must choose between peace and growing conflict. He espoused a “good-neighbor” policy and called for cooperation be tween South Africa and the continent’s independent black na tions. Inside South Africa, blacks and whites now work side by side in once strictly segregated stores and supermarkets. Thousands of blacks are moving into jobs once reserved for whites. Almost 80 percent of the work force in South Africa’s new televi sion manufacturing industry, for ex ample, will be black because of a shortage of whites. The government recently prop osed in Parliament that the nation’s controversial “masters and ser vants” laws dating to 1850 be abolished. Critics have maintained the laws reduced black South Africans to “slave labor” and were a violation of human rights. Among the laws to be repealed are ones that make it an offense for blacks under contract to stay away from work without lawful cause, to refuse to obey a lawful command by his boss and to use “insulting or abu sive” language to an employer. Recovering energy from wastes studied A 600-page evaluation of energy faculty members in all participated recovery from solid waste, which involved two Texas A&M Univer sity people, is due off the presses around Dec. 1, NASA officials said. Dr. Gary Halter, political scien tist, and Dr. F. W. “Bill” Holm of the Mechanical Engineering De partment, received notice by letter Monday that the publication date was tentatively set. Halter and Holm spent II weeks this past summer on the project at Johnson Space Center. The prog ram was a faculty summer institute sponsored by NASA and ASEE, the American Society for Engineering Education. The pair was part of a three pronged study on recovering or re cycling resources from solid waste by municipalities. Eighteen college in the work under a NASA grant. A trio of groups studied technical problems, economic problems and overall impact in political, en vironmental, legal and social areas. A fourth group, a conglomerate of the initial three, worked to create a decision-making model from ap plicable information already gathered in the study. Holm and Halter are now expand ing the information into a decision-making manual for Texas cities, particularly in economics, to try to give almost any city an idea of what it will run up against in plan ning for solid waste projects. A tilling plan now being used in Odessa, in West Texas, where the city plows its garbage under, is being looked at in preparation of the manual.