p aae 6 THE BATTALION ^ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1976 ^ FRIDAY, SEPTbMBtn o, ■ Neighborly carpenter builds free home for widow , „a for the new the work, laboring nearly five hours Viking 1 —dormant Second touchdown in better sp| Associated Press McKINNEY, Tex. — As chilling winter rains swept East McKinney last January, retired carpenter W. M. Jeter decided he d seen enough. Outside, his 73-year-old widowed neighbor Julia McDade was totter ing on an old ladder in an attempt to plug gaping holes in the tattered roof of her tarpaper shanty. “I said to myself, Lord, I m gonna do somethin,’ ” said Jeter. What he did was completely build a sturdy, new two bedroom frame house for his neighbor without charging her a penny. Jeter, a carpenter for 35 years, is nearly 71. Mrs. McDade will soon move next door into the new house, leav ing behind her sagging shack, with its dirt floor, battered walls and wood-burning stove. For the first time in her life, she 11 have indoor plumbing. “This woman needed a home and I decided to do it myself,” said the lean, friendly carpenter, who lives across the street. Jeter agreed to dismantle an old church parsonage nearby in order to obtain lumber, sheetrock, nails. JOB TRAINING FOR QUALITY MEN & WOMEN WHO WANT RESPONSIBILITY ARMY ROTC 845-2814 doors and windows for the new house. , Mrs. McDade spent hours pul ling nails from the lumber, while Je ter, a sixth-grade dropout, lobbied with city officials to obtain permits for his project. , , . He once appeared before the McKinney City Council -— carrying rough blueprints penciled on the back of an old board. Some of the materials and money were donated by area citizens and groups and one of Jeter’s longtime friends, an electrician, did the wir ing. But Jeter did the remainder of the work, laboring nearly five hours a day since last April. He laid a foundation, built the frame, in stalled the plumbing, hung sheet- rock and constructed the roof. “Mr. Jeter is some neighbor, said the diminutive Mrs. McDade as flies buzzed through the screen less windows of her shack. He took it upon hisself to build me a house. Money from the North Texas area has begun to trickle in as people have heard of Jeter’s project. He is planning an open house celebiation in late September when he finishes the new house. West Texas artist featured in A&M book (Continued from Page 1) more variety than anticipated, according to Soffen. . “New features of enormous dimension, and always different, were found daily — wide gorges, scarps, faults, flat valleys, mottled erosion, ancient shorelines, deep basins, blockly terrain, knobby terrain tablelands, sunburst craters, pedestaled craters ...” he said. “They were etched and carved by geologic processes more active than had been thought. The finding of so many signs that water had once flowed on Mars was particularly intriguing, he said. The current reckoning is that internal heat melted underground ice that erupted onto the land and drained back into the crust. Soffen enumerated Viking 1 s observations at a forum for visiting scientists this week. Evidence of volcanic, fluvial water- caused, aeolian wind-caused and depo- sitional processes on Mars. There are crat ers resembling those on the Moon, but they seem to have occurred at one-tenth the frequency and wind has eroded them relatively slowly. Scientists would like to learn more about the interior of Mars and find out whether any volcanic activity is still going 0,1 “The great Vallis Marineris, a series n f canyons that far outstrips our Grand Can yon in size, was formed by much more recent process than the craters were. These processes may still be continuing. The vast plains of the northern region are laced with almost geometric patterns of cracks, resembling some areas of the Arctic region on Earth. There is a great variety of rocks near the Viking 1 lander, all with a fine red coating. The sky contains suspended dust parti cles that make it look pink. Nitrogen and argon have been discov ered in the atmosphere. Using the n 163 ' surements of these gases, scientists have concluded that Mars’ atmosphere was once significantly different and proball, somewhat thicker than it is now. There is more water vapor in the; the farther north one looks, and there is: lot of water frozen in the north and so polar caps. The climate is rather stagnant andrt petitive in the summertime. No organic matter compounds based® carbon, essential for life as it is found® Earth has been found in two samplesd Mars dirt. The life-seeking biology experiments are inconclusive at this point, buthan yielded clues to the chemistry ofthesnt face. The last point will keep scientists® their laboratories for years perhaps, tryinj to understand the peculiar chemistn, Whether that chemistry is connectedwil life — Viking 1 has not been able to tel Viking 2, landing in a region believedlt be more hospitable to life, may yet fitl out the answer on its own. Eightv paintings by West Texas artist Mondel Rogers are featured in a new book published by the Texas A&M University Press. Old Ranches of the Texas Plains, which includes 57 Rogers paintings reproduced in full color, is the first publication in the Joe and Betty Moore Texas Art Series. Mr. and Mrs. Moore, of Austin and Midland, made possible a list ot art books interpreting the various regions ofTexas with a $75,000 gift to Texas A&M’s new scholarly press MANOR EAST 3 THEATRES manor east mall Happy Hour Till^iOOjTrL Daily: 6:10-7:50-9:30 AT LAST- THE FIRST DISASTER MOVIE WHERE EVERYBODY DIES (laughing) Sat. & Sun. Till 3:00 SaT-Sun. r^TstMTatTAlso last year. Moore is a 1938 graduate of Texas A&M and was president of its alumni association in 1974. Rogers, using dry-brush watercolor and egg tempera tech niques, has painted such old West Texas ranch buildings as the P 3 * 0 Duro Camp, the LX dugout, the Matador Ranch headquarters, the barn at the 6666 Ranch and the man sions of Milhollon, Gray, Rayner and Mooar. Most of the structures are painted as they appear today, or as they appeared until just recently. “Mondel Rogers’ visual document of the golden age of ranching (1870- 1917)...is a study in historic documentation, said Mitchell A. Wilder, director of the Amon Carter Museum of Western Art in Fort Worth, who wrote the foreword in the new book. Rogers, a native of Sweetwater, is a 1971 graduate ofTexas Tech Uni versity. ■ Smile It’s not completely hopeless Zurich talks focus on Namibia Associated Press WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger’s renewed involve ment in Africa’s racial conflicts is clouded by bickering with South African Prime Minister John Vorster and statements by U.S. officials downplaying Kissingers chance for success. The secretary leaves today for weekend talks with Vorster in Zurich, with an in- termediate stop in London for talks with British leaders. The focus of the talks reportedly will be the pace of the move toward indepen dence for Namibia, the former territory of South-West Africa still occupied by the South African regime. In addition to expressing dissatisfaction with the Namibia situation, Kissinger also will push Vorster to ease South Africa’s own restrictions on blacks. A third subject will be Rhodesia where the black majority is pressing the white supremacist govern ment. The Zurich meetings will be the second round of discussions between Kissinger and Vorster in the last four months after years of virtually no high-level contact be tween the two countries. If the secretary is able to claim any de gree of progress after the Vorster talks, he will travel to Africa for meetings with black leaders and possibly another session with Vorster in South Africa itself. The odds for Kissinger’s success are hard to gauge. He has said in the past he would not meet with Vorster unless he thought progress was distinctly possible. Nevertheless, he and Vorster engaged Thursday in some long-range gamesman ship, apparently designed to prove that nothing is settled at this point. Originally, the State Department said Kissinger and Vorster would hold a major formal meeting Sunday. But Vorster tfi® 11 said he didn’t work on Sundays and he called off the Sunday session, saying he would see Kissinger Saturday and Offer plain fense Monday. In addition, Vorster issued a statemedB saying his government s domesticpolicyi I “determined by South Africa itself and! lOLLEC not prescribed to her by any person i bs A&M country from outside.” Ilhursd Vorster’s anger and the schedule chans liple-opl was attributed by State Departmentol pes this cials to his determination to provethl let. Kissinger is not writing the script. t Shortly after announcing he would med lf erence with Vorster, Kissinger gave a speechtoi L ^ largely black audience in Philadelphia i| , 0 ^ midweek, sharply criticizing Vorsten internal white supremacist policies. In his turn, Kissinger leaked a mm Thursday that he would Zurich Sra day to visit relatives in Germany. Thisra designed to show that Vorster wasnotdic tating Kissinger’s schedule. _ After this pushing and shoving, tlt| ellarcl schedule was amended to call for Saturday and Monday with informal dir cussions on Sunday. [be the h been he Greenland is biggest! Greenland is the largest island in the world. It is 840,000 square miles in area. New rules allow low-rate flight Dally: 6:20-8:00-9:40 Sat.-Sun.: 3:00-4:40 Also Daily: 6:30-9:30 Sat.-Sun.: 2:15-5:15-8:15 212 N. MAIN 822-3119 DOWNTOWN BRYAN KEEPSAKE DIAMONDS PIERCED EARRINGS STAR OF AFRICA DIAMONDS SEIKO & BULOVA-ACCUTRON WATCHES 14 KT. GOLD BRACELET WATCHES CROSS PEN & PENCIL SETS SPEIDEL WATCH BANDS DESK SETS West Screen At Dusk SRy way Twin 822-3300 East Screen At Dusk CUNT EASTWOOD THE OUTLAW JOSEY WALES [PGl<33s> Panavision® Color ty Deluxe® IS HE THE BEGINNING OF THE END? THE OMEN r iuo | ‘Last American Hero’ _ MRace_Wlth The Devil^ Charge over to Heroes Clothes Co. big, old fashion road '■ *^ r v.* ", - show of ' ' truly ' outstanding : : 5 merchandise. < , , It s the greatest t ^ • •y-.-fi ^ ' Vs show on earth (with^/j/^\^ the world s greatest _ bargains) Associated Press WASHINGTON — New gov ernment rules will allow Americans to take low cost charter flights to any part of the world without having to join a group or buy ground accom modations such as hotels. Tickets on charter flights tra ditionally have cost about half the price of a coach seat on a scheduled flight. The new charters, similar to those already popular in Europe, require a traveler to buy a round trip ticket in advance. But the affinity group requirement is being eliminated and travelers won t have to stay for minimum periods, except in nine European countries where visitors will be required to stay at least seven days. The new rules issued Thursday by the Civil Aeronautics Board cover both domestic and overseas flights and will go into effect on Oct. 7. The new rules face possible legal challenges from scheduled airlines that generally have opposed more liberal charter rules. On the other hand, a charter organization has al- What great clothes . . . and what great once-in-a-lifetime bargains. ^ This sale must be seen to be believed. Don t ready said it will seek a court order to strike down remaining charter re strictions. Because the new charters, known as Advance Booking Charters, do not require passengers to belong to any organized group, the CAB rul- ing might lessen the lure that some travelers found in “affinity groups. The CAB had required everyone on the plane to share an interest other than traveling.. This encour aged the growth of social and occu pational organizations that also traveled. In fact, some of these groups had no purpose other than to qualify as “affinity groups’ under CAB rules. Under the new rules, there is no minimum fare and charter operators will be allowed to set the tare on their own. To qualify for the charters, passengers will be required to buy their tickets at least 30 days in ad vance for domestic flights and at least 45 days in advance for Euro pean flights. Tickets will be pur chased from independent charter brokers who will organize the lhatadifi flights. list look The flights must be roriltral Div with predetermined fixed (Mihail Coi departure and return, sqfc 1966, passengers must travel I both legs of the charter. All charters must contain 40 people. The charter operaK the right to impose a penal purchasers who cancel ala when the operator no Ion permitted to sell unsold or fl led seats. And the operator can cana flight if it does not meet coni specified in the contract. The CAB said it adopted! ferent rules for European nations because those count ms wen [th in tl titl ack Jim |k with n [ing guar in line a d> |ect it,” pell now ^er a 3-1 [heir hist U pre Coacl ready have similar charters» jade ago and the board did notwanttl>< , Ron th too much disparity between' "Super 1 charters and those operal" the Hons Europe. year wit Countries where the Em# 1 . Georg rules will apply are Belgium:wj 15 a s oyi Germany, Finland, FranceP°uston s land, Italy, Netherlands, S'' 1 ! 8 10-4sea: land and the United Kingd® 1 ij^der c Ton and ; fl'keaston Labor Day to bring gas price hike odoz :en j Associated Press HOUSTON — Motorists are ex pected to find gasoline plentiful over the Labor Day holiday but they will have to pay about one cent more per gallon than they did during the July 4th weekend. The American Automobile As sociation reported Wednesday that a survey of 254 service stations indi cated average prices of regular gasoline will be 57.4 cents a gallon. 59.4 for unleaded and 61 mium. The report showed 78 pm the service station operate! cated they would be open f ness on Sunday and SSpercm 1 they will be open on Monday Pyramid is tomb About 2600 B.C. the Eglf built the great Pyramid as a W King Khufu. I the Be over to Featuring GEORGINA SPELVIN, CINDY WEST, ARLANA BLUE & “GOOD GUY” JOE O’BRIEN Introducing: LANA JOYCE, SONNY LANDHAM, & MEUSSA EVERS Rock n Roll by ROLLAND DESOTO &THE STUDEBAKERS OUR 3rd FINAL SUMMER CLEARANCE! $5 - $10 - $12 JEANS * $3 MENS SHIRTS $5 MENS SHOES SATURDAY, SEPT 4th 10:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M. 1403 University Drive* Above McLaughlin’s Top of the Tower Texas A&M Universit)' Pleasant Dining — Great Vietc SERVING LUNCHEON BUFFET 11:00 A.M. - 1:30 P.M. Each day except Saturday early i flien tl ' e >” pled Phill Nut he 1 P>e Cine «t in 1966 Nation wh of Paul 1 [^ach of in retir leng, as a prii m Grown, | ic h from t 'aching r Non, wl a tough Ihe last, division Tha )W 1 eham Ners. {heir 19i ! out of ar Min. Pii Fran unc lne y, fini M'eadin That 4 . sarm r coach, v fine wir Nzation, F Baltimore nam $2.50 DAILY $3.00 SUNDAY Serving soup & sandwich 11:00 A.M. - 1:30 P.M. Monday - Friday $1.50 plus drink Available Evenings For Special University Banquets Department of Food Service Texas A&M University “Quality First” iTEXi T execi travel, excel army A.11^ Dim