IThe Battalion iy Vol. 72 No. 110 8 Pages Tuesday, March 6, 1979 College Station, Texas News Dept. 845-2611 Business Dept. 845-2611 oto by Lee Roy Leschper Jr. flameworking as a hobby about 20 years ago and it is now his full-time occupation. He travels around molding glass tubes in an oxygen-propane flame to make ships, dragons, crucifixes, sombreroed campesinos taking their siestas and a menagerie of glass animals. .S. proposals unacceptable to Knesset arter to meet with Sadat in Egypt to pill J com United Press International il offjH ASHINGTON — President Carter T fy to Egypt Wednesday and on to Is- lel Saturday in hopes of salvaging a Mid- BEast peace, the White House an- pvlouliced Monday. Byithout a major effort such as this, the irospects for failure are almost over- iiarieslhel ing,’ White House press secretary 8, atIdy Powell told reporters. houscB^ter w jjj mee { w ith Egyptian Presi- ■ tl " 1 lent Anwar Sadat and with Israeli officials, s ‘ Powell said. But he said there are cur- ip B:i«] y no plans for three-way meetings in- rolving Carter, Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin. B'he President believes that we must lot allow the prospects for peace which ^ ieemed so bright last September to con- inue to dim and perhaps to vanish,” a White House statement said. “If we do, the judgment of history and of our chil dren will rightly condemn us.” The announcement came after Carter made further peace proposals to Israel, which were not accepted by the Israeli Cabinet. Carter also held a 10-minute meeting with Begin in the Oval Office. The Israeli Cabinet Monday accepted two proposals made by Prime Minister Menachem Begin designed to break the deadlock in the Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty talks but failed to approve the two American suggestions. Deputy Prime Minister Yigael Yadin announced the decision of the Cabinet fol lowing a five and one-half hour special ses sion. There was no indication of the nature of Begin s suggestions or how closely they re sembled the two American proposals presented to Begin by President Carter Sunday. The communique quoted Yadin as say ing he “stressed that the Cabinet had ap proved the prime ministers suggestions and not the American recommendations. Powell said Carter s meeting with Sadat, scheduled for Thursday afternoon, has been set up to provide Sadat “oppor tunity to discuss these ideas and difficult issues unresolved.” Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin met with Carter for about 10 min utes, and Powell spoke with reporters af terwards. Begin discussed where the negotiations go from here during his brief meeting with Carter in the Oval Office, Powell said. “Israel has responded favorably to American suggestions to help resolve some remaining differences, said Powell. Israeli officials in Washington said the American suggestions that were not ac cepted by the Israeli Cabinet are: —One dealing with Article 6 of the pro posed Israel-Egypt treaty text, which deals with the other treaty obligations that both nations have. Egypt has insisted on langauage which would give its defense obligations to the Arab League prece dence over the Israeli treaty. —A change in the protocol accompany ing the treaty that would clarify the issues left unsettled in the text, including propo sal of a “target date for setting up Palesti nian self-rule in Israeli occupied ter ritories. Begin earlier called Egypt’s demand to give precedence to its Arab defense com mitments “a breach of the treaty and said that would make the treaty a “sham docu ment. elay,! jump I ■ 4401 I relal >fferei s of 1 j big! nestel officf ublishing company opened is necessity, professor says ; By KEVIN D. HIGGINBOTHAM Battalion Reporter > B'or Dr. Paul Christensen, establishing nis own publishing company wasn’t the culmination of a life’s dream. It was more a matter of necessity. ■I never thought it would be neces- iM',’’ said Christensen, an English profes- Bat Texas A&M University. “Now I see ■s not only necessary but as a sort of missionary work. Si grew up naively about writing. I al ways thought that if you had the talent you’d get published. ■If anything the avenues of print today are dosed except to a few. The names ne\er change on the big presses; Mario ■o’s always on it, Michener’s always on it and the diet and sex manuals are always on it,” he said. ■As long as the situation persists where aRrge nation is not publishing its writers, ■re will be these home remedies.” ■’he Cedar House Press is Christensen’s pome remedy for the Southwest. • ■long with his wife, his brother-in-law, another poet in Austin and several others, ■istensen recently bought an old home in Bryan. He plans to move in and reno vate it to house the press. ■he home to be used for the press will ■moved to an area cleared behind Chris- ■en’s house on South Sims Street in ^Everything is ready for the move except !■ weather, Christensen said. All that is n e< led now is about a week of sunshine to ^wup the ground at the house’s new site. ■The Cedar House Press is an idea that «as had to wait before, though. It is, in 'act, an idea that was born two years ago °n a mimeograph machine. ''■n 1977, Christensen, a poet himself. published a book of his own poetry, “Old and Lost Rivers,” to see how a venture of this sort would be received in the area. According to Christensen, many small presses remain at the mimeograph stage their entire life. His first book was well- received, though, and gave him the im petus to expand his operation. For the first year of operation the press will concentrate on publishing books of poetry, Christensen said. Books of prose will come later after the press is more es tablished. Christensen said that initially he will contact poets whose work he knows, and offer them a chance for publication. Later, however, Christensen said the press will begin accepting unsolicited works and rate each on its own merits. “We’re not interested in traditional poetry,” he said. “Our emphasis will be spirit-of-place books — books which raise a specific awareness of an area. ” Christensen has hopes of publishing at least four books of poetry during the first year of operation. Ideally the four books will reflect the Indian, the Hispanic, the native and the newcomer points of view in the Southwest, he said. “We don’t want the poet to just hint at something. We want him to be faithful in his work. In some way the poet and the place will be bound together; how he re flects his place will be the emphasis of the books.” Christensen said that after the first year the press will begin applying for grant money to subsidize the operation. Grants up to $6,000 a year are available through the National Endowment of the Arts for small presses. In order to qualify for the grant money, though, the small press must first be in operation for at least one year. “Presses like this rarely, if ever, get into the black,” Christensen said. “You only make money by doing something that rein forces the status quo, rarely by challanging it — that’s the nature of the American cul ture.” Christensen is not discouraged because of the bleak financial opportunities with his new press. He sees the venture more as something that has to be done than a way to make money. He does, however, expect the press to generate some revenue through sales of subscriptions. “The public should realize that in 10 to 15 years the small press will be their ac cess to literature,” he said. Christensen described his printing equipment as sm£lT but commercial with four-color and good photographic capabilities. The press will initially be run on an AM 1250 offset press, but there are plans to buy a small letterpress to be used for head lines and covers, he said. The format, or overall appearance, of books will reflect the “simplicity, yet se riousness of our attitudes,” Christensen said. Several ideas currently under consid eration are the use of natural inks and a type face that may be free-hand in style. Future plans for the Cedar House Press include splitting the operation into two parts — one in Texas and one in Cam peche, Mexico. “Our sensibility is bi-national,” Christ ensen said. “We don’t want to recognize national boundaries. We are, after all, talking about one earth.” KAMU opens Festival ’79 successfully A first night total of $410 was pledged to KAMU, Texas A&M University’s public broadcasting af filiate, during the opening hours of Festival ’79, two weeks of special programming aimed at creating greater interest in and support for local public television. “The response from viewers thus far has been overwhelming,” said Jean Herbert-Wiesenburg, promo tion and development coordinator for the station. “The phones started ringing and just didn’t stop until well after the conclusion of Saturday night’s programs.” The best in PBS and local pro grams will continue to be presented" through March 18 as part of the pub lic broadcasting festival. The con clusion of Festival 79 will be a non stop 28-hour marathon, featuring exceptional programs and live and prerecorded appeals from Bryan- College Station and various loca tions around the country. The theme for the two-week event, according to Wiesenburg, is that public broadcasting offers “TV worth staying home for.” Persons interested in pledging support for public television should phone the station at 845-5611. Border-line winners Tim Scott, who appears very able to put the shot and throw the discus, is part of the Aggie track team that won the Border Olympics this weekend in Laredo. See page 7. Iran resumes exporting of oil United Press International TEHRAN — Iran resumed pumping oil to the world Monday for the first time in 69 days, loading a supertanker bound for Japan with 230,000 tons of crude in the government’s most tangible demonstra tion of its authority. But the symbolic return to ryjrmal con trasted with the execution ofrseven more top officials of the ousted royal regime, in cluding four generals, two officials of the SAVAK secret police and a member of the defunct parliament. The resumption of oil exports was timed to coincide with the 12th anniversary of the death of Mohammed Mossadegh, the anti-shah premier who nationalized Iran’s petroleum industry in 1951. The resumption marked a major break through for Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and his hand-picked Prime Minister, Mehdi Bazargan, who overcame opposi tion from the radical left wing said to be in control of some key oil installations. Officials said the total oil production for Monday topped 1.7 million barrels, just about all of it bound for the holds of the supertanker World Ambassador at the offshore Abadan terminal off Kharg Island in the Persian Gulf. Hassan Nassir, chief of the Iranian Oil Co., personally started the oil flowing for the first time in 69 days, since Iran’s 60,000 oil workers went on strike to press for the oust of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi. In Toyko the buyers of the the oil being loaded Monday, Mitsui and Co., declined comment on the price, but industry sources said it agreed to pay $20 a barrel for Iranian light and $18.50 for Iranian heavy. The price was well above the $13.33 a barrel set by Organization of Pe troleum Exporting Countries. Chief government spokesman Abbas Amir Entezam said the maximum produc tion target — about 6 million barrels a day — was set “to demonstrate our capabilities” but he emphasized that the export level would be “readjusted in ac cordance with the country’s real needs for oil revenue.” In Washington, an aide to Energy Sec retary James Schlesinger said, “I would be enormously skeptical about any number like that (nearly 6 million barrels a day). Our expectations have been, given the fact that foreign technicians have been re quired, 2 million to 3 million barrels. Iran has an internal need of 700,000 barrels. That number has to be looked on with some very major scrutiny.” Four other tankers awaited their turn for oil, the second of which was to be loaded Monday afternoon and bound for Rotterdam. Officials said it will receive 160,000 tons light and 160,000 tons of heavy crude. The Kayhan newspaper, in an oil analysis last week, said Iran would draw on 6 million barrels of crude oil in storage tanks on Kharg Island and other offshore export .terminals to bridge the period of time required for the resumption of full production. In Ahmabasbad, 60 miles west of Tehran, there was a massive tribute for Mossadegh, who was buried there during the shah’s reign without honors. But Monday, Iranians representing a wide spectrum of political opinion, led by Pre mier Bazargan and his entire Cabinet, joined in the tribute. In 1953, forces backing Mossadegh briefly seized power from the shah, forcing him to flee. But within days royalist forces counterattacked in a move widely attrib uted to CIA intervention. The years after Mossadegh’s oust marked an increase of the shah’s power. Even as oil poured into World Ambas sador, a revplutionary Islamic court exe cuted seven more supporters of the ousted regime, bringing to at least 24 the number of known summary death sentences car ried out by Khomeini’s revolutionary courts. China claims pullout; Viets deny report United Press International China formally announced Monday that it has succeeded in punishing Vietnam and is withdrawing its invasion forces back into China. Vietnam insisted that there was no pullout and promised to continue the fighting. The official New China News Agency said in a dispatch from Peking that begin ning Monday, all Chinese frontier troops are withdrawing to Chinese territory. “Chinese frontier troops,” the agency said, “have attained the goals set for them since they were compelled to launch a counterattack in selfdefense on Feb. 17 against ceaseless armed provocations and incursions of the Vietnamese aggressors against China.” The withdrawal statement coincided with every available report from Hanoi in dicating Vietnam would attack the with drawing Chinese. Military analysts in Bangkok said the withdrawal could be the toughest part of the Chinese offensive. Vietnamese forces, they said, almost certainly will attack the troops and try to turn withdrawal into a rout. To protect against this, the Chinese statement warned that the Vietnamese “must make no more armed provocations and incursions along the Chinese border after the withdrawal of the Chinese fron tier troops. “The Chinese government solemnly states that the Chinese side reserves the right to strike back again in self-defense in case of a recurrence of such Vietnamese activities.” But in sharp contrast with the slashing criticism of Vietnam, the Chinese state ment asked Hanoi to “speedily hold negotiations to discuss ways of ensuring peace and tranquility along the border.” Angelo Russo, a senior industrial distribution major, loads 8-track tapes of recorded music into the automated tape player that performs most of the “disc jockey” chores at KAMU-FM, Texas A&M’s educational radio sta tion. Battalion photo by Hurlie Collier