The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 23, 1979, Image 5

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    [nes
ly to be an attach,; I United Press International
NEW ORLEANS — A six-day
tter, an Albany,N] policemen’s strike that has limited
who has studied4 he annual Mardi Gras frivolity
>ted that “thereism ipread Thursday to the city’s gar-
ild prevent thisbage collection centers, with hun-
tended to otherpiti Ms of unionized workers refusing
to cross the officers’ picket lines.
vers said the dec®
earlier rulings wk;n
overturned adverts
wyers or pharma®
is a form of comma,
otected by the Fiit
:day’s decision, tli
trade names aiti
different”
eech, largely beca®
d to mislead the pal
on is a partial rev#
id of paternalism lli
1 in the lawyer
ertising cases," saj
rizona State Univi
sor.
; court said ‘Let 1
ide.’ But it seems
ly from that now,’ 1
iw was challenged I
an optometrist nil
aw inhibited his fo
ce under the nan
ptical.”
g the majority
Powell said i
decision overest
rntial for decepfe
mtes the harmful
ans
ng oil
ess International
banon — Libya k
of its oil 5 perns
il markets caused!
Iran, oil indusli!
ursday.
li Arabia, the
Qatar and Iraqi
d plans to incress
said the 5 percts
s light, high-qual
active Wednesds;
ils were not fo
ible,
led their customs:
;, so in that
ninced it, but tk
nounce it public!);
irces said,
ms not unexpecld
untries have tab
The Organization;
rrting Countriesk
iecial “consultatiss
•va March 26 tod
supply on them:
it will raise its
;cond quarter ofi
authoritative, Nt'
roleum Intelligent:
L5-to-20 percent pH
can be expected,
customers to be
i two weeks to if
tct prices,
nd Qatar have slap
premiums on tbs'
udi Arabia is charf
ices for oil product
sillion barrel-
ng-
abi and Qatar hfc
aut $1 a barrel aid
st economic suns'
datively modest in'
ering that the sp
urn has soared! 1
Garbage men join policemen
THE BATTALION
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1979
Page 5
New Orleans trashmen strike
Some residents showed support
for the dissident officers by dump
ing their garbage on the sidewalks
rather than aid the city in collection.
National Guardsmen stood inside
the collection center fences protect
ing vehicles and buildings. They
watched the dumping of the gar-
Texas oilers strike
largest’ Kansas well
United Press International
SITKA, Kan. — A Texas company has struck what Kansas officials
say could be one of the best oil wells in 20 years in southwest Kansas,
producing 816 barrels during a recent 12-hour test.
The No. 2-20 Moore well, in eastern Clark County, was completed
by Mesa Petroleum Co. of Amarillo about two weeks ago, but has
been shut down pending a hearing before the Kansas Corporation
Commission. That hearing, required by Kansas regulations, will de
termine how much oil the well can pump daily.
KCC oil specialist Roger Post said he had not seen a well to match
the No. 2-20 Moore in the 16 years he has worked for the KCC. “It’s
probably the largest one in 20 years or so,” he said.
But until the KCC designates the well’s output, no more than 68
barrels of oil can be pumped daily. After the March hearing, the new
well could be allowed to pump up to 192 barrels daily. Post explained
that state regulations controlling pumping are designed to protect
leases on adjacent property, which also could pump oil from the same
bed.
Oil from the new well will be sold to Koch Oil Co. of Wichita, and
then will be resold to a refinery.
bage, but did not react.
“The pickets are telling people
not to cross the picket lines,” said
station supervisor Aaron Landry.
“I have a place that you can come
in and dump (garbage). I just saw
them (pickets) stop some people and
tell them to just throw it on the
sidewalk. The people did. It’s aw
ful.”
It was the first time that the strik
ers, demanding that the city let the
union bargain for ranking officers
and submit to binding arbitration on
noneconomic issues, placed picket
lines at locations other than police
headquarters and district stations.
Policeman Keith Arnold said the
action was “just the first step.”
Garbagemen arrived for work to
find the pickets already in place.
Both groups belong to different loc-
als of the Teamsters Union, but
union officials had said the police
strike would not interfere with gar
bage collection.
“It’s up to each individual what he
does, and I think you can see this
morning how he feels, individu
ally,” said Local 270 business agent
Bill Cole, who was summoned to
meet with garbagemen before
dawn. “We just have to wait and see
what develops.
“This is the right of any Teamster
to observe a picket line, and it is an
individual right. They’ve told me
they’re going to honor the picket
line individually.”
Although state troopers and Na
tional Guardsmen performed regu
lar police duties, the absence of
1,100 of the city’s 1,480 policemen
forced cancellation of parades and
other organized Mardi Gras ac
tivities scheduled for outdoors.
Some parades moved to the sub
urbs, and the balls, dances and simi
lar indoor celebrations were not af
fected.
Incidents of petty crime and vag
rancy were more prevalent, espe
cially in the tourist-packed French
Quarter.
PLITT Southern
UNIVERSITY SQUARE SHOPPING CENTER 846-6714 8. 846-1151
CINEMA
Sun Theatres
,ewis rowell safoi .
n veys no informal 1C names
2 and nature of sen )
woman
to judgeship
United Press International
WASHINGTON— President
Carter has nominated an Amarillo
an optometrist. Hi r T/ ivo c
quality informal]:!
lated, leading to tli
ssibility trade ms
mislead the publit,
name, “frees an if
dependence on
ut at ion to attal
en allows him tos
rade name ifnef. TOman to fill one of 10 new federal
■ [( j ; , judgeships in Texas.
Mary Lou Robinson, 52, cur-
rry Blackmun aii re nt ly ft 16 chief justice of Texas’ 7th
shall dissented sr ^ ourt C* v *l Appeals in Amarillo,
was recommended for nomination
by Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D-Texas.
She is the sixth of 10 Texans
oad sweep” of Ik ll0m ‘ natec l M tl 16 president after
recommendation by Bentsen. Car
ter, Wednesday, named Robinson
lobe U.S. District judge for North
ern Texas, and she now must be
confirmed by the U.S. Senate.
Of 152 new judgeships that Con
gress created, including the one
Robinson will fill, only five women
from four states have been recom
mended by the senators so far.
Bentsen had two of them, including
Judge Robinson.
Robinson’s judicial career began
in 1955 when she was appointed
judge of a newly formed Potter
County court-at-law. In 1960,
chaotic supply site HoijjjjjQH was e i ec t et J to the 108th
District Court in Amarillo.
She became the first Texas
woman ever to serve as an appellate
judge in 1973 with her appointment
to the 7th Court of Civil Appeals
and was named chief justice of the
court on Sept. 1, 1977.
Robinson is a graduate of the
University of Texas School of Law.
The president earlier nominated
five other Texans to serve as federal
judges in Texas. They are David O.
Belew, a Fort Worth attorney;
Barefoot Sanders, a Dallas attorney;
Robert M. Parker, a Longview at
torney; James DeAnda, a McAllen
attorney and Associate Justice
George Edward Cire of the 14th
Court of Civil Appeals in Houston.
Of the 524 persons now sitting on
the federal bench, only 11 are wo
men.
h—
1A’S
;za
s Ave.
To Go
Look Into
Your Future
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HOME or DORM
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News you can use.
$1.25
333 University 846-9808
The only movie in town
Double-Feature Every Week
I Open 10 a.m.-2 a.m. Mon.-Sat.
12 Noon - 12 Midnight Sun
No one under 18
Escorted Ladies Free
BOOK STORE & 25c PEEP SHOWS
PLITT Southern
846-6714 & 846-1151
- COLLEGE STATION
the Aggie Players
present:
THE THREEPENNY OPERA
Bertold Brecht's sardonic
script and Kurt Weill's
haunting music seize upon
John Gay's 1728 "Beggar's
Opera". . . and turn all of
its lavish hypocracies and
shark-like sentimentalities squarely
upon the modern world.
8 pm Feb. 20 thru 24
RUDDER THEATER
general admission:
A&M STUDENTS $2
ALL OTHERS $3
Tickets at the
MSC BOX OFFICE (845-2916)
or at the door
THEATER ARTS SECTION
DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH
TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY
Daily
7:15
9:40
GUEST
ADMISSION
TICKETS
ACCEPTED
CINEMA
Daily
7:00
9:30
GUEST
ADMISSION
TICKETS
ACCEPTED
Hnas
Based on the novels
“The Fellowship of the Ring”
and“The Two Towers”
Util Hi lllli jLi.JLA.Jtii.lU
UNIVERSITY SQUARE SHOPPING CENTER
CORNER OF UNIVERSITY & COLLEGE
CINEMA
£
was never
like this.
“Voluptuous sophistication
with gorgeous sexual
couplings.” -Ullage Voice
“The entire French colony,
including our heroine, her
husband, and every other
French man or woman on
the scene, devotes full
time to fornication.”
— New York Magazine. Judith Crist
“Glossy, erotic.”
—New York Daily News
“Emmanuelle is a thinking
man’s X; a very specialized
how-to film; a stylish sex
trip across the skies from
Paris to Thailand, down
Bangkok’s canals, and
through the senses of per
haps the most physically
beautiful cast of top-caste
women ever assembled in
one film.”
— After Dark. Norma McLain Stoop
NO ONf UNDCR 1 7 ADMITTED
Lets you feet good
without feeling bad.
FRIQ'\Y& SATURDAY
MDNK3HTS
Tickets go on sale at 10:30
CINEMA
Outrageous
With Craig Russell and Hollis McLaren.
“Russell has astonishing gifts as a mimic.
His self'transformations into Streisand,
Deitrich, Channing, Bankhead and Davis are
hilarious and uncanny— impersonations
elevated to the level of criticism. And he’s just as
good as Robin, deftly avoiding the self'pity
built into his sexual stereotype. ” j ^ “j 2
David Amen, Newsweek
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