ige s nation^ of 2H * u niaroi ■nesota, I'otli stale, er ' Itwas # won thatj 'Wer was 'er overly •lionaire beanie govemoi Demon ihrey _ ishingd 0v Senate wo states Minm _ 1 Repub'l ‘"gforsa hire, Dej clntyrei rvativeC ien vot -‘il spect o Gov ial lea e Senate: H-Mi dc Mclntj bert Grf Anders II, D-Col D-Maiir vere Hv Kan. ob Stra Schreib sate wi retary msband nd N'as )f m, wasi I candia n, the enate gains ini f womei i IStoli th Broil iber nr best ; to ek it elmingh ainst ts Amei is for® down Virgiaii It Monday launch for space observatory Invisible X-ray universe will be seen THE BATTALION FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1978 Pag United Press International WASHINGTON — The space agency plans to launch an orbiting observatory Monday to give as tronomers their best view yet of puzzling celestial objects — such as white dwarfs, neutron stars and maybe even black holes — which emit X-rays. The invisible universe, as viewed by X-ray detectors, is a bizarre and violent place and program scientist Albert G. Opp said the spacecraft will use an automated X-ray tele scope to enable astronomers to “see exactly where the action is taking place.” “You’ll be able to see in X-rays the motions of gases and the pres ence of the matter that’s creating the X-rays,” Opp said in an inter view Wednesday. “Since you can’t see these in visible light, you can only speculate as to what’s creating the X-rays.” The $87 million satellite, called HEAO 2 because it is the second of three High Energy Astronomical Observatories, will radio back data scientists will reconstruct into pic tures showing the size, structure and detail of objects in the far reaches of the universe. HEAO 2 is to be launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla., into an orbit ranging from 280 to 335 miles high. That vantage point will place the satellite well above the Earth’s at mosphere which keeps X-rays from reaching ground observatories. The first HEAO was launched 15 months ago on a sky-mapping mis- Germans have learned their lesson, official says United Press International COLOGNE, West Germany — Chancellor Helmut Schmidt, speak ing on the 40th anniversary of the first Nazi pogrom, said Thursday he believes the Germans have learned the lesson of their history and asked the Jews for forgiveness. “It is not for us to call on the Jews of the world for forgiveness,” Schmidt told an assembly in Col ogne’s Great Synagogue. “But we may ask for forgiveness. ” Schmidt spoke at a memorial service on the 40th anniversary of the Crystal Night pogrom — the first pogrom against Germany’s Jews by Adolf Hitler’s Nazi regime in 1938. It became known as Crystal Night because of the piles of broken glass littering Germany’s main busi ness streets after Nazi thugs smashed the windows of about 7,500 Jewish-owned shops. During Crystal Night, the Nazis killed 91 Jews, arrested another 30,000 Jews, most of whom were sent to concentration camps, and destroyed 267 synagogues. That pogrom was the first step toward execution of the Nazi plan to eliminate European Jewry. Before Living with the law I’ve moved here from out of state, and I pay the higher non-resident tuition. I’m not in the military now, don’t want to join the Texas Guard, don’t hold a competitive scholarship, and I don’t want to get married to a Texas resident or stay out of school for a year to gain residency. If I work in my department for 20 hours a week they tell me I can pay resident tuition. Can I do that a year, quit, and then be a resident? The provision in the law that you can pay resident tuition if you work half-time in a position relating to your degree program is an exception to the residency requirements; it doesn’t make you a Texas resident. Once you quit your departmental job, the exception ends and there fore your lower tuition ends. Editor’s note: This column is provided by the students’ legal advisers as a service to Battalion readers. Answers are general and should not replace the personal advice of an attorney. Questions for this column can be addressed to the students’ legal advisers in Room 306, YMCA Building. the allies defeated Germany in 1945, the Nazis killed about 6 mil lion Jews. “The truth is that many Germans knew of the crimes and disapproved them, but that many others knew nothing or almost nothing about them,” Schmidt said. “The truth is that nevertheless ail of this took place before the eyes of a large number of German fellow citizens and that another large number had direct knowledge of these events. “The truth is that a majority of the people remained timidly silent, and that the churches also remained timidly silent although synagogue and church serve the same God and are rooted in the spirit of the same testament.” Schmidt said the Nazis were able to seize power and carry out their criminal scheme with the acquies cence of most Germans because preceding generations had failed to prepare the ground for a democratic system guaranteeing the freedom and dignity of the individual. The Nazi crime began with vio lence against books, the shouting down of anyone with another opin ion, contempt for fellow men and the rejection of the democratic sys tem, Schmidt said. “Murder was the logical conse quence,” the chancellor declared. Spanish booty returned to discoverer United Press International TALLAHASSEE, Fla.- State ar chives officials Thursday were ready to comply with a court order to re turn $2.3 million in Spanish trea sure to the company that found it. Archives officials finished sealing hundreds of silver coins and artifacts Wednesday to meet the order is sued 10 days ago by the Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Or leans, said Robert J. Vossler, an at torney representing the secretary of state s office. The treasure was hauled from the wreck of the Spanish galleon Nuestra de Senora Atocha by Trea sure Salvors, Inc., a Key West- based firm that discovered the shipwreck 45 miles off the Mar quesas Keys after years of searching. The Nuestra de Senora Atocha went down 356 years ago, in 1622. The state laid claim to 25 percent of the treasure because of a contract signed by the treasure company’s president, Mel Fisher. But Fisher has testified in court that he signed the contract because the state threatened to arrest him if he didn’t. LOUISIANA GUMBO PARTY SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 11 : £/ntuKnsD CAJUN-STYLE SHRIMP GUMBO FOR A DOLLAR & SIXBITS LIVE GUMBO-LATim MUSIC Bf TIKI BMWFgg) ILj&Tg Awirohr.d make ^ fCen<£• Keotn •uriiS. Watch Sunday Af ternoon and Mon day Night Football While Sipping Your Favorite Drink With ALL Your Friends at The Aggieland Inn. BIG Draft beer SCREEN!!! Highballs sion. It has spotted an estimated 1,500 celestial sources of X-rays — five times the number previously known. HEAO 2’s job is to zero in on par ticularly interesting X-ray sources. Among its targets will be compact celestial objects ranging from stars known as white dwarfs to theoretical black holes. A white dwarf is what is left over when a star the size of our sun runs out of nuclear fuel and collapses cat astrophically into an object no big ger than Earth. They are so dense that a spoonful of matter would weigh a ton. Medium-sized stars crash down to neutron-star density — a billion tons per cubic inch. Heavyweight stars are believed to shrink even more, to material so densely packed that the resulting immense gravity prevents even light waves from escaping. These are what scientists call black holes. The Athletic Attic is Coming! r‘ i i i i i i i i i i i Lutheran Church WANTED EVERY DAY AT THE Meeting Sunday At: A&M Consolidate H.S. Cafeteria (enter Welch St. Lot) 9:30 A.M. Study 10:45 A.M. Worship The best fried catfish and chicken in Texas, served with Texas fries, pinto beans, coleslaw and homemade rolls. Try our famous mile high pie. Just 2.5 miles west on Hwy. 60. An informal fellowship: Variety in music and worship: Sunday School for all ages: Nursery at both Study hour and Worship: Opportunities for personal involvement in the work of the group: Join us this Sunday: (A.L.C.) SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING MAJORS: TAKE OUT INSURANCE NOW How about an “insurance” policy that your science or engineering degree will really be used? It would be nice. Especially considering the work you put into such a degree. The Air Force will use your talents. We have openings for young men and women majoring in selected science and engineering aca demic fields. . . like Aeronautical. Aerospace, General and Electrical Engineering, Mathematics, Physics and Computer Technology, and many more. One way to get into these jobs is through Air Force ROTC. Our AFROTC scholarship can help you financially so you can concentrate ur degree. AFROTC is on getting 1 is a great opportunity to help your- j your _ _ . . self through college, and the Air Force is a great opportunity to really use what you leam. Look into the Air Force ROTC program at your campus. It’s good insurance. Gateway to a great way of life. ANNIVERSARY SALE-A-BRATION! At The Sound Center Celebrating 6 Years of Serving Bryan-College Station SAVINGS UP TO 40%! Sate Runs Throughout November — Hurry By. 3820 TEXAS AVE. 846-3517 (Next to Handy Sims' Bar Be Que) HHNBB w Layaways & Financing Available Free Delivery And Installation