1 1 Pag* 10 THE BATTALION FRIDAY. MAY 4, 1979 Blind girl tries to be ‘sighted’ ARLINGTON — Donna Mack, 16, knows sighted people have no need to compete in her sightless world so she makes light of her blindness and works at being as sighted as possible.” ‘T’m blind,” she said after win ning the regional University In terscholastic League poetry in terpretation contest last month at Denton. “Big deal.” Tbe Arlington high school senior travels to Austin today for the state semi-finals of the contest. As in the regional contest, she will read her entry in braille. She entered her first poetry in terpretation contest this academic year and her efforts to overcome her handicap cost her. She had seated herself front row center so she had only to stand up and turn around to speak — without needing her cane. Some of the judges failed to realize she was read ing braille and thought she had memorized her poem, illegal under contest rules. “Now I have someone lead me in so the judges can see I am blind and there won’t be any questions. I don’t want to be penalized,” she said. Born two months premature with poor vision, she developed glaucoma in her right eye at age 7 and lost sight in that eye. Five years ago, the retina in her left eye began to detach and she lost her remaining sight. "I’m still not totally adjusted (to being blind),” she said in an inter view Wednesday. She credits her parents with help ing her adjust. "My parents more or less said This is the world you’re going to live in, so live in it, ” she said. The first year after she lost all her sight was the most difficult. “When the majority of my sight left, my eye contact got worse. That summer was the pits. I cried a lot. I kept asking 'God, why me?”’ Now, however, she can joke about her blindness and often does to put others at ease. “People are afraid they’re going to hurt me. A lot of stereotyped blind people haven’t been exposed as much (to sighted people). Some blind people won’t try to compete in a sighted world, but I try to be as sighted as possible. “They can't conform to me, so I want to be as near to what most people are as I can." SELL YOUR BOOKS FOR MORE! rr-i University Book Stores i-i-i ^ I MI NORTHGATE CULPEPPER PLAZA . rJ& 409 UNIVERSTTY DR. NEXT TO 3C-BBQ ’ lib The Tailor Shop (formerly Zubik’s) 105 College Mein — Northgete JUNIORS Avoid The Fall Rush — Come In Now And Order Your Boat Pants Before You Leave For The Summer. Men’s & Women’s Alterations PRESENTS NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER 4 FALL ONLY PRIVATE BUS thr doux ILr /t-I ir. 693-1907 693-1906 Aportm^nts WE’RE TRAVELIN YOUR WAY! 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You'll like our 1 & 2 bedrooms, complete with electric range, refrigerator, disposal and dishwasher. Each apartment is fully carpeted and has fenced patio. We are located Vz block from campus and on the shuttle bus route Call us today 693-2614. All Bills are paid. :i . Now leMing tor wmmar Btell. < -Posado Tied Qey (unoer new management and ownership) Quiet living with Spanish hair describes Posada Del Ray's atmosphere You will find an apartment that is close to campus and on the shuttle bus route -For an a Her noon swim or a retaxing evening on the balcony, you'll like Posada Dei Rey We have *1. 7. end 3 bedrooms wtth gas ranges, refrigerators and dlshwashars Call u*. *93-93*4. All bijls are paid Pool and Laundry. . 'D • 99 • A Xom*/ Britain to switch to liquified coal I’nited Presi International LONDON — "What are you going to do when the well runs dry?” asked Britain’s Undersecretary for Energy Alex Eadie. "We’ve made up our minds. It’s coal.” „ When the Middle East and North Sea oil wells pump no more — and sooner or later that is going to happen — Britain plans to run its cars, power its factories and produce its petrochemicals with the fuel that first made it an industrial giant: coal. Not ordinary coal, but coal turned into crude oil. "Coal is not just a lump of black stuff you throw on the fire," said Keith Beeston, spokesman for the British National Coal Board (NCB). “Once you liquify coal, what you’ve actually got is oil. After coal is in liquid form, said Beeston, “you can make virtually everything from rt that you can make from oil with the existing oil refining techniques. " The British government recently granted the NCB, which runs the coal industry, nearly $2 million to design two plants for extracting oil from coal. Although Britain hopes to be energy self-sufficient by 1980 —- using North Sea oil and gas, coal. And atomic energy — it expects to remain so for only a decade. By the 1990s, experts expect oil to be very expensive and scarce. Britain's North Sea reserves will be declining and it will have to limit petroleum to uses like motor transport. At that point, the British government wants to be ready to switch gradually from an oil-based petrochemical industry to one based on liquified coal. ■ > "The oil companies are investing in coal as fast as they can," said Beeston. They realize that their existing crude oil is limited in quan tity and subject to all sorts of political uncertainties. ” Britain is looking at two methods for turning coal to oil, both of which have successfully produced gasoline and other petrochemicals in laboratory tests at the NCB research center in Cheltenham. Using the "liquid solvent extraction technique, a hot chemical solvent is poured over coal, dissolving it into a tarry liquid. Hydrogen is added and it is then refined. In the “gas solvent extraction" method, coal is dissolved by expos ing it to a very hot compressed gas. Various stages of processing produce a tar-like solution which is hydrogenated and refined. The major drawback with both methods is price. A major coal refinery would cost about $3 billion to build. Coal Board officials estimate a barrel of oil from such a refinery would cost about $26, compared with the OPEC price of about $13 a barrel. Come to the Sbtsa Dining Center Basement The fresh crisp salad items are almost unlimit ed and the superb sandwiches are made with' big loaves of bread baked daily for this special purpose. If you are dieting you may also wish •r ■ to try a bowl of natural freestone peaches. No ^ sugar has been added to these beautiful peaches Quality First Open 10:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Mon.-FrI. ML LOUT THEATER A Product ions 15 Student—directed Plays May 2,3,4, & 5 Curtain at 7:00 p.m. RUDDER CENTER FORUM Tonighti shows: "FARMER JOHN" "PICTURES IN TIME" "BUS RILEY'S BACK IN TOWN" "VANITIES (ACT I)" NO CHARGE for admission! ■ " wm • ! * m i- ) / Clements gives home loan interest hike OK United Preu International interest rates in Texas could im- without delays or complicai United Preu International AUSTIN — Gov. Bill Clements announced Thursday he will reverse an earlier position and approve legislation permitting interest rates on home mortgage loans in Texas to soar above the current 10 percent limit, but said he will insist on provisions tying the rate to a federal economic indicator. Clements insisted, however, that any bill increasing the interest ceil ing have a cap that would prevent rates from going higher than 12 per cent, and recommended that the Legislature approve a floating rate of 2 percent higher than the interest rate on 10-year U.S. Treasury Bonds. He said the bond rate today is 9.31 percent, meaning under his proposed legislation home mortgage interest rates in Texas could im mediately jump to 11.31 percent. Clements also said he wanted a provision allowing people to refi nance without penalty if interest rates go down. Tne governor earlier had indicated he would veto any bill raising the interest ceiling above 10 percent, but announced last week he would reconsider that stand in view of an announcement by the Federal National Mortgage Associa tion that it would restrict its pur chase of VA and FHA loans in Texas. He said his decision to allow an increase in the home mortgage interest rates was based on. three factors — the FNMA decision to curtail purchase of VH and FHA mortgages in Texas^ concern that Texans he able to purchase homes without delays or complications im posed by the FNMA rulings and the danger of unemployment and dam age to the state’s economy that could result from a drastic slowdown in the housing indt^try. , Clements said he had discussed the idea of a floating interest ceiung with Attorney General Mark White, and White had found no constitu tional problems with such a law. Clements announcement U «*• pected to prompt quick movement in the House and Senate on the interest rate legislation, which has been stalled for more than two months. But strong opposition still exists to any increase in the interest ceil ing, and a number of senators are expected to filibuster Sen. Bill Meier’s, D-Euless, proposal. Trade talks ‘productive’ United Preu International WASHINGTON — Japanese Prime Minister Masayoshi Ohira headed Thursday for Capitol Hill to brief members of Congress on the trade talks President Carter pre dicted will lead to an accord within a few months. The Japanese leader scheduled morning meetings in the House and afternoon discussions in the Senate on the last full day of his visit to Washington. “We have made tremendous - progress,” Carter told guests at a state dinner for Ohira Wednesday, at the end of a day of intensive talks between the two leaders. Carter described Wednesday’s discussions as “one of the most pro ductive days of my life” and said the trade problems dividing the two na tions “are well on the way to being solved.” "I can’t think of any predictable problem that could separate us for more than a few months," he said. In reply, Ohira expressed eager ness “to work to make the U.S.- Japan partnership productive for more stable peace and greater pros perity.” ’ The two nations have been at odds for years over Japanese protec tionist policies that h^ve contrib uted to a massive American trade deficit. Earlier, Carter and Ohira issued a joint communique calling for a more productive American-Japanese partnership in the 1980’s with a new approach to solving the trade prob lems between the two nations. The two leaders said America’s billion-dollar trade deficits with Japan "were not appropriate in existing international circum stances. Ohira pledged “to open Japan's markets to foreign goods, particu larly manufactured goods” — the major issue in dispute. He indicated Japan would try to stimulate future economic growth through stepped-up domestic de mand — an apparent switch from Tokyo’s overwhelming past reliance ’ on increasing exports. Carter promised to reduce the U.S. rate of inflation, restrain oil imports, promote American exports and reduce the trade deficit. Carter and Ohira completed their official talks in only one day, cap ping the discussions with an unusual barbecue dinner on the roof of the West Wing of the White House. Meanwhile, Henry Owens, a presidential economic aide, re ported a resumption of U.S.- Japanese technical talks abruptly broken off last week by Robert Strauss, Carter’s special trade rep resentative. Strauss ended the talks when Japan adamantly refused to let. foreign firms bid on about $600 mil lion in government contracts, most with the Nippon Telephone & Tele graph Co. Veto of strip-mining bill sought United Presi International AUSTIN — A spokesman for an environmental group Thursday *aid a proposed House strip-mining bill will result in the loss of a million acres of Texas prime farmland. Edward Fritz, speaking for the Texas Committee on Natural Re sources, said 62 counties will he de spoiled if Gov. Bill Clements does not veto the Texas Surface Coal Mining and Reclamation Act already passed by the House and Senate. “These counties comprise the lig nite belt, mainly from Texarkana southwest to the Rio Grande and from Marshall south to Milam, where 1 million of the acres likely to be strip-rained are prime farmland or potential prime farmland — a massive hunk of Texas’ produc tivity,” Fritz said. Fritz explained that the act will allow strip-mining companies to pile up soil beside the trenches as they dig for coal, then shove it back into the trenches in hulk, thus mixing WANTED i Horses looking for lush pasture or comfortable stalls. Also horse owners needing round pen, walker,^ wash rack, arena. For Information Contact: Boonville Horse Center “the Stable place to Stall around" Off East By-Pass on Boonville Road 779-8772 the topsoil into deeper layers. , Topsoil contains the micro organisms essential to fertile pro duction of crops,” Fritz said. “These organisms cannot survive when buried deep. It takes up to 100 years or more to develop topsoil. ” He added that weakened federal regulations on strip-mining have jeopardized the topsoil in the entire United States, and that Texas’ laws are even weaker. Fritz also attacked other legisla tion which he described as anti environment, claiming that special interest groups are frustrating environmental issues this session. Fritz said the beverage container deposit bill has been “bottled up” by the soft-drink and liquor indus try. He said the r bill would help eliminate litter, save energy and natural resources. The bill would require that con sumers pay 5 cents deposit on all beverage containers, which would be repaid when the bottle or cjm is returned. A panel for the Texas Resources and Environmental Council, com posed of labor and industry leaders, testified before the House Liquor Regulation Committee Wednesday that the bill would not solve litter problems and would virtually elimi nate aluminum recycling programs in Texas. MSC Cafeteria Now Better Than Ever. You Will Be Pleased With These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Foods. Each Daily Special Only $1.79 Plus Tax. ' “Open Dally” Dining: 11 A.M. to 1:30 P.M.—4:00 P.M. to 7:00 P.M MONDAY EVENING TUESDAY EVENING WEDNESDAY SPECIAL SPECIAL ' EVENING SPECIAL Salisbury Steak Mexican Fiesta Chicken Fried Steak with Dinner w/cream Gravy Mushroom Gravy Two Cheese and Whipped Potatoes Onion Enchiladas Whipped Potatoes and Your Choice of w/chili Choice of one other One Vegetable Mexican Rice Vegetable 1 Roll or Corn Bread and Butter Patio Style Pinto Beans Roll or Corn Bread and Butter K Coffee or Tea Tostadas Coffee or Tea Coffee or Tea 1 H . J - One Corn Bread and Butter I THURSDAY EVENING SPECIAL Italian Candle Light Spaghetti Dinner SERVED WITH SPICED MEAT BALLS AND SAUCE Parmesan Cheese - Tossed Green Salad Choice of Salad Dressing - Hot Garlic Bread Tea or Coffee * FRIDAY EVENING SPECIAL BREADED FISH FILET w/TARTAR SAUCE Cole Slaw Hush Puppies Choice of one vegetable RoN or Com Bread & Butter Tea or Coffee T.A.M.U. THEATER ARTS SATURDAY NOON and EVENING SPECIAL Chicken & Dumplings Tossed Salad Choice of one vegetable Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Tea or Coffee I’ Quality First’ SUNDAY SPECIAL NOON and EVENING ROAST TURKEY DINNER Served with Cranberry Sauce Cornbread Dressing Ron or Com Bread - Butter - Coffee or Tea Giblet Gravy And your choice of any One vegetable