Come To Diamond Country Sankey Park Diamond Salon Tax cuts into ’76 THE BATTALION Page 3 THURSDAY, NOV. 6, 1975 21 3 S MAIN DOWNTOWN BRYAN iifficienty M)() - Thelj ed. dd be easiS were alloj 'ingtheweel ■ ' )()w lingoy 1 4 P'Hi.eal »>• Franio.lijPfXXXft gh ThursdtC^ ramural boafc Bowling stu] •ctice for tin ittle time to anyone se it takes i Jlle Same er of play, problem, h the weelenlo our wait is "is lanes ii|o -base and ace for ati o deni. Ihai, O ictors in tin ^ that Te« o clariesintli ^ hem now, j o it would It © ig the weel ® equally bet o ■rs and oil* ® up allowed! \ '.I//, ^ Engagement Rings ^ Wedding Rings >h>H {/.S (U .\U<‘(!i W l N N E R! 3 ACADEMY AWARDS including BEST ACTRESS Katharine hepburn Joseph e LeviNe pm.™ an avco embassy film PETER OTOOL6 KATHARINE HEPBUI a MAKTINPOLLPmiuci»o r IPGlPAttMIkl GUDANCE SUGGESTED -2i ] V «. I. .1 MM nor II suiutir io« p«i'(iHnciidj Starts FRIDAY! ^Is FRI. AT 7:00 & 9:30 An AVCO EMBASSY Relffl PANAV1SI0N* In COLOR H MIDNITE SHOW FRI. & SAT. WOODY ALLEN’S “WHAT’S UP TIGER LILY?’’ (PG) ALL SEATS $1.25 KTAM CHILDREN’S MATINEE SAT. AT 11:00 A.Mj & 1:00 P.M. "COCKEYED COWBOYS OF CALICO COUNTY" (G) ALL SEATS 50c AGGIELAND 76 FALL SEMESTER DEADLINES NOVEMBER 14 is the LAST DAY TO RESERVE PAGES in the AGGIELAND 76. NOTE, THAT ONLY RECOGNIZED UN IVERSITY CLUBS AND ORGANIZA TIONS WILL BE PERMITTED TO PURCHASE PAGES IN THE AG GIELAND. DECEMBER 1 is the LAST DAY TO £AI FOR PAGES THAT HAVE BEEN RESERVED IN THE AGGIELAND. DECEMBER 19 is the LAST DAY FOR SENIOR & GR ADUATES MAKE-UPS AT UNIVERSITY STUDIOS. IF THERE ARE ANY QUESTIONS CALL 845-2611 between 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Cuts lack spending lid Associated Press WASHINGTON — This year’s tax cuts would be extended into next year and, in some cases, even further into the future under legisla- No intention to resign, Peron says Associated Press BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — President Isabel Peron has defied her foes, declaring in a telecast from her hospital room, T have not res igned and I do not intend to resign. ” Mrs. Peron’s tone was firm but moderate Wednesday night as she said she had not asked for another leave, of absence and did not plan one. The 44-year-old widow of Juan D. Peron went into a hospital early Monday, and the government said she had gall bladder trouble. Other sources said she was in a highly nervous condition because of the mounting demands for her resigna tion. A medical bulletin late Wednes day said her condition was “very satisfactory.” Although it was as yet unclear how leaders of the armed forces would react to her speech, Mrs. Pe ron’s political fortunes were bolstered by renewed support from the labor movement. One leading Peronist labor leader, Lorenzo Miguel, had urged her to quit Sunday night. But the General Labor Confederation CGT, the backbone of the Peronist movement, issued a communique Wednesday night expressing “abso lute scorn at the public sentiments which vainly pretend to damage the mandate of the president. ” CAMPUS tion facing the final test in Congress’ tax-writing committee. The tax-cut plan lacks a federal spending lid that President Ford in sists is necessary for his approval. In advance of today’s showdown in the House Ways and Means Committee, Chairman Al Ullman, D-Ore., said the legislation should survive the final votes, climaxing months of hearings and some fun damental questioning of the nation’s tax structure. The bill’s major item is a $12.7 billion plan to continue some 1975 personal tax cuts into 1976. This amounts to an added $2.6-billion tax cut next year compared with the cuts in effect this year. The current tax cuts expire at the end of this year. The individual tax cuts in the bill would make permanent the 1975 law’s temporary hikes in minimum and maximum standard deductions and would create, just for 1976, a new tax credit of 2 per cent of the first $12,000 of annual income. For example, the bill means that a single taxpayer with adjusted gross income of $15,000 who paid $2,549 in 1974 taxes and $2,519 in 1975 taxes would pay $2,315 in 1976 taxes, assuming deductible personal expenses of 17 per cent of income. Using the same assumptions, the bill means a married couple with two dependents and adjusted gross income of $20,000 paid $2,660 in 1974 taxes and $2,540 in 1975 taxes and would pay $2,420 in 1976 taxes. The bill also would extend busi ness tax cuts of the 1975 law through 1980 for the 10 per cent increased investment tax credit and through 1977 for the temporary corporate tax rate adjustments. The legislation would make tax benefits for child care available to more working parents, expand a tax credit system for the aged, boost taxes on higher-income individuals STARTS FRIDAY C0LUMI1A PICTURES PRESENTS A LAWRENCE GORDON Production 1 HARD frogs Production Services by Claridge Associates Persky Bright-Panavision® (jRfJfaBS' Marilyn Horne, Soprano Rudder Center Auditorium 8:00 P.M. Thurs. Nov. 20 Tickets - Regular 6.75, Tickets & information avail- 5.70, 4.60 able at MSC Box Office A&M Student 5.00, 4.50, 845-2916. 3.70 /tep Into the m/c circle Presented by OPAS through changes in the so-called minimum tax on the rich and curb various tax shelters. Nevertheless, there were signs the package might not remain in tact. Either the committee, the full House or the Senate might separate the tax cuts from the proposed revi sions to allow fast consideration for the cuts, thus leaving the proposed revisions for more study later. That would concentrate the im mediate battle directly on the tax cuts and Ford’s demand that they be accompanied by a lid on federal spending. Repeated Republican ef forts to get the Ways and Means Committee to go along with a tax cut and spending lid were crushed by Democrats. Inter union disputes Grad student survey slated for December A survey will be issued to graduate students by the Graduate Student Council to assess interest in an inexpensive insurance policy. The survey will be issued during pre-registration. The council is examining several alternatives for establishing a policy should there be sufficient interest to warrant it. One alternative being considered is rewriting a policy that Student Government had offered but it will be written for graduate students only. The CSC is also considering establishing a state-wide organization of grad students which would be the basis for an insurance policy and possibly a credit bureau. In other business, Jinny McNeill was elected treasurer. A bulletin board will be built and placed in the library for inpiit from graduate students. There are two positions open on the council; one for Geosciences and one for the College of Science. The next meeting will he Nov. 19 at 6 p.m. Teamsters cancel agreements Associated Press WASHINGTON — Angered over comments by George Meany, the Teamsters union has canceled agreements with AFL-CIO unions to honor each other’s strikes and jurisdictional lines, raising the pos sibility of interunion battles. In a continuation of a lengthy, bit ter dispute over representation of Califrnia farm workers, Meany, the AFL-CIO’s president, denounced the Teamsters last month as un worthy of being called trade un ionists. The Teamsters retaliated by re voking long-standing mutual aid and no-raiding agreements which it held with 22 AFL-CIO unions. “This is done reluctantly,” Teamsters President Frank E. Fitzsimmons notified AFL-CIO union leaders in letters dated Oct. 24. He added that he was particu larly annoyed by their silence fol lowing Meany’s remark, indicating they agreed with what Meany said. The Teamsters, the nation’s biggest union with more than two I million members, has the resources ' to take on almost any other union in ' the country. But since it was expel led from the AFL-CIO in 1957 over corruption charges, it generally has avoided raiding other unions. Although cancellation of the pacts opens the risk of jurisdictional raids NEIIiNG! - > IIHIDILIlU> POLITICAL FORUM BAN QUET will be held at 6:30 in room 231 MSC. SAN ANGELO-WEST TEXAS HOMETOWN CLUB will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. in room 301 in the Rudder Tower. CIVILIAN BONFIRE COM MITTEE will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. in room 308 in Rudder Tower. DATA PROCESSING MGMT. ASSOCIATION will meet Thurs day at 7 p.m. in room 419 in Rudder Tower. SOCCER CLUB will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. in room 501 in Rudder Tower. ALL-NIGHT CENTENNIAL FAIR will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. in room 504 in Rudder Tower. WOMEN’S AWARENESS will meet at 7:30 Thursday in room 510 in Rudder Tower. SAILING CLUB will meet at 7:30 Thursday in room 601 in Rud der Tower. ASSOCIATION OF STU DENTS FROM MEXICO will meet Thursday at 7:30 in room 607 in Rudder Tower. A&M JAYCEES will meet Thursday at 7:30 in room 141 MSC. LMT-HTC will meet Thursday at 7:30 in room 206 MSC. MIDLAND HOMETOWN CLUB will meet Thursday at 8 in room 507AB in Rudder Tower. LA MARQUE-TEXAS CITY HOMETOWN CLUB will meet Thursday at 7 in Room 206 MSC. TAMU HORSEMAN’S AS SOCIATION will meet Thursday at 7 in the Pavillion. DATA PROCESSING MAN AGEMENT ASSOCIATION will meet Thursday at 7 in Room 410 in Rudder Tower. AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR METALS will meet Tuesday at 7:30 in room 203 in Zachry. SIGMA IOTA EPSILON will meet Thursday at 7:30 in the Party Room at Tree House Apts. STUDENT AMERICAN VET ERINARY MEDICAL ASSOCIA TION will meet Thursday at 7:30 in room 601 VMS. - ELECTRICAL ENGINEER ING STUDENT WIVES CLUB will hold a Potluck Picnic Sunday at 1:30 in Hensel Park. ELECTRICAL ENGINEER ING STUDENT WIVES CLUB will meet Thursday at 7:30 at 205 Quail Hollow. MIDLAND-PERMIAN BASIN HOMETOWN CLUB will have a keg party Thursday at 8 at 907 Glade. and picket line warfare. Teamsters and AFL-CIO officials question whether the latest flare-up will be come that serious. They noted these agreements were carried out primarily at the local level and pre dicted they were likely to still he honored informally in most cases. “There’s obviously a good deal of Teamsters all over the country who are good union people and don’t cross anybody’s picket line, said one AFL-CIO official. A Teamsters official noted there was no “direc tive in Fitzsimmons’ letter for the locals to go out and start raiding.” An official of the Retail Clerks un ion, representing many supermar ket employes, also expressed doubt the local arrangements would he broken. However, he warned that “if they are violated and the Teamsters believe they can raid with impunity, they are wrong. Nevertheless, the Meany- Fitzsimmons feud has caught many AFL-CIO union chiefs in the mid dle of an explosive situation. These leaders owe allegiance to Meany hut depend on Teamster support to strengthen their economic position during a strike. Fitzsimmons threatened to re voke the agreements earlier when Meany called on AFL-CIO affiliates to support a boycott of lettuce and table grapes not picked by Cesar Chavez’ United Farm Workers. At the time, Chavez was battling for survival against the Teamsters. Last month, with Chavez and the Teamsters competing for contracts under California’s new farm labor law, Meany charged at the AFL- CIO’s national convention that Teamsters still were working in col lusion with growers. Sell Your Creations In Arts & Crafts Fair. More Information Call 845-1631. Sue AuKema at Dena’s Hair Fashion specializes in layer cutting frosting & Men’s & Women’s Hair Styling. 106 Carson 822-6034 779-0676 TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY TOWN HALL ^ , PRESENTS Linda Ronstadt Bonfire Special Attraction Wednesday Nov. 26, 1975 G. Rollie White Coliseum Everyone must buy a ticket. Tickets Reserved seats $4.50 General Admission A&M Student/date $2.50 General Public $3.50 Tickets and information available at MSC Box Office, first floor of the Rudder Tower. Open 9-4 Monday-Friday. 845-2916. No cameras or recording equipment will be allowed.