Page 10 THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY. JUNE 6. 1S7S the Clements says energy plan ‘stinks’ [eut United Press International HOUSTON — President Carter’s energy plan “stinks” and is so inef fective that it threatens the nation’s lifestyle and guarantees Carter’s de feat if he seeks reelection. Gov. William P. Clements said Tuesday. “I think it stinks,” Clements said of Cartel’s energy program. “There’s no part of it with which I agree. It’s no energy policy at all. “There’s no solution to the energy problem except to produce energy. Conservation alone is not going to solve anything. There’s no other so lution than to produce energy.” Clements said adequate energy production would require “unfet- 1 ALTERATIONS' IN THE GRAND TRADITION OF OLD TEXAS WHERE MOTHER TAUGHT DAUGHTER THE FINE ART OF SEWING — SO HELEN MARIE TAUGHT EDITH MARIE THE SECRETS OF SEWING AND ALTERATIONS. "DON’T GIVE UP — WE’LL MAKE IT FIT!" AT WELCH S CLEANERS. WE MOT ONLY SERVE AS AN EXCEL- _ENT DRY CLEANERS BUT WE SPECIALIZE IN ALTERING HARD FO FIT EVENING DRESSES TAPERED. SHIRTS. JEAN HEMS WATCH POCKETS. ETC (WE RE JUST A FEW BLOCKS NORTH OF FED MART.) WELCH’S CLEANERS 3819 E. 29th (TOWN & COUNTRY SHOPPING CENTER) Photo Hours 9-8 usn SHUGART COUPON bs June 8-9 Fri. & Sat. Gibson Discount Center 1420 Texas Ave. 9 WALLET SIZE COLOR PORTRAITS 994 tered” free enterprise and environmental compromises. “You can’t have utopia and at the same time move out fullblown on coal, nuclear (power) and petro leum,” he said. “Our lifestyles are at stake.” The first-term GOP governor said Carter’s energy policy shortcomings were being recognized by voters and said the President had no chance for reelection. “He’s certainly not going to carry | Texas,” Clements told reporters after a speech at the World Trade Association. Clements called for a “100 per cent plowback” into exploration of any windfall profits realized by de regulation of the oil industry. “Our future economic picture is bleak and our long term national se curity is in jeopardy — all of this because we have no real energy pol icy,” Clements said in his speech, citing an estimated 1979 trade defi cit of $53 billion directly attributa ble to oil. “Our dependence on foreign oil is a national achilles heel and we must not put our safety in the hands of politically unstable countries in the Middle East or anywhere else in the world,” he said. “We in the United States must break this habit before it breaks us. This dependence on foreign oil is draining nomically and morally.” us eco-| Bandido sought in Lubbock area IFUMS*; X 10/ Extra charge for GROUPS FOR A NEW DINING EXPERIENCE Come to the big new salad bar in the Sbisa Dining Cen ter Basement. Quality First Open 10:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m Monday thru Friday United Press International LUBBOCK — FBI agents are seeking a member of the Bandidos motorcycle club in the Lubbock area “for questioning in San An tonio,” a special agent in charge says. But, he added, efforts to locate the man were underway almost a week before the assassination of a federal judge. Agent Bernie Brown, who directs the FBI’s Lubbock field office, said the man wanted for questioning “has been in Lubbock. There’s no question about it.” In a copyright story Tuesday, the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal re ported that Brown said the FBI be lieves the man is still in the Lub bock area. Brown also revealed that deputies Sunday to stakeout a Ban didos clubhouse near Lubbock. The FBI has steered reporters away from inferences that the man might be a suspect in the assassina tion of U.S. District Judge John H. Wood Jr. of San Antonio, who was gunned down near his Alamo Heights townhouse May 29. In fact, agent Lloyd Harrell, who is coordinating the Dallas FBI of fice’s share of the Wood investiga tion, said continued publicity sur rounding the Lubbock search might endanger the life of the man being sought for questioning. “We have to use extreme caution in what we say,” Harrell said. “I cer- federal agents teamed with sheriff s _ tainly wouldn’t want to be the fed eral prosecutor who endangered the 846-6714 & 846-1151 UNIVERSITY SQUARE SHOPPING CENTEf POWDER MEGHANl SAILING- MSC FREE U REGISTRATION U) o o SUMMER life of an individual we need to talk to.” Agents said the man sought for questioning is not affiliated with the Lubbock chapter of the Bandidos. Hypnotist helps ^ policemen and cancer patients By Batti hen pe s Texas ftey talk abo Conference premature rr nes have United Press International FAIRFIELD, Conn. — Dr. Gerald Winter is having a time convincing other doctors that hypnosis can help cancer j s j n th than he had convincing police that they can use the techmqupThere will catch criminals. K f rom a t< Winter, 47, director of the Hypnosis and Counseling Center, w jth S a form of visualization therapy developed by a radiologist in [K rhird rot Worth to help patients battle the nausea and other discomfoitfjj at j ona i T< duced by various cancer-fighting drugs. the Winter said Monday the technique is not readily accepted life, s\yc wi medical community but he has used it on about 50 patients inanc& jO school of the hospital with “an excellent rate of success. ” BT n d if yoi Despite the lack of enthusiasm for Winter’s hypnosis in the reS f 0 f t field, his work with local and state police has been going on feB| t y ear ’ s p Q y ears - ' sas . will be i During that time, he has succeeded in obtaining valuable lea Hogs w police, resulting in the apprehension of criminals who othenM s anc j t h e might have remained at large. , , JL j Enters fron In one case. Winter hypnotized a rape victim who had been drab n| from the back seat of a car into a field where she was assaultedWg ut w ^y t “As she was dragged from the car I assumed she had seeii*j 0 ear iy? license plate. After the second visit she was able to rememlw»y e ]| numbers," he said. L Ight he ta When it comes to medical patients, he said pain and other s ^-kpthall te toms either disappear altogether or their need for medicatkuK,. wou id J sharply reduced. Kn ges and “I don’t know if I’m curing their cancer, but at least they’releafc m s ome < moe dignified lives and not vegetating on morphine,” he said. m ee a&m j In the technique, a patient is first hypnotized and then askdKmk just visualize his cancer and his immunological system "chippingawavlL 0 f ^g a , the disease. Winter said. He said the cure rate seems to be higher when the hypnosis is in combination with chemotherapy and radiation. ee receive Houston pilots Colombian exit permit United Press International BOGOTA, Colombia — Two Houston pilots caught in Colombia’s marijuana war got exit permits Tuesday and planned to take a flight to Miami, ending a wrong-way ad venture that lasted 37 days. William A. Spradley, a 45-year- old Houston fireman and part-time pilot, and his flying companion, Roy McLemore, 49, were issued board ing letters Tuesday morning at the U.S. Consulate in Barranquilla and planned to take the first available flight to the United States. U.S. Consul Thomas Gustafson in the port city 440 miles north of Bogota said by telephone that the consulate had issued the letters, a routine procedure in the case of Americans who have lost their documents.. The two men arrived in Colombia April 29 when Spradley crash- landed a small plane on a makeshift airstrip in the marijuana smuggling area of La Guajira. They were fined more than $35,000 for violating airspace re strictions over the area but no evi dence of smuggling was found in their case. The fines were paid Friday but red tape including a release order from La Guajira state governor and an exit permit from national security police kept them in the town of Riohacha until Monday night. Spradley and McLemore have said they landed in Colombia when the twin-engine craft developed engine trouble on a flight from Florida to Venezuela to pick up oil drilling bits. The plane, owned by a Houston firm, was confiscated by Railroad Commission approves gas rate increass for 3 cities United Press International AUSTIN — The Railroad Com mission Tuesday approved applica tions by Southern Union Gas Co. and Lone Star Gas Co. to increase 'slightly natural gas service rates to unincorporated areas around Gal veston, Snyder and Marlin. The commission said Southern Union will be allowed to raise rates for 582 residential and commercial customers. The new rates for an av erage residential monthly bill of five Mcf will be $20.07, compared to a previous bill of $17-98. Commercial service will increase an average of Sun Theatres 333 University 84t The only movie in town Double-Feature Every Week Open 10 a.m.-2 a.m, Mon.-Sat. 12 Noon - 12 Midnight Sun No one under 18 Ladies Discount With This Coupon' BOOK STORE & 25c PEEP SHOWS 846-9808 United NEW YOI jets, a high Wfielder ffoi lelbcted Tut ■ariners to K agent ba: ; Chambers, er and thro forii Harrisbi the government as part of tkpiot-4 and \ alty for the unauthorized lafflii fial Keller, The men were attacke; Bipment fo known assailants after ImCpambers 1 Spradley was shot in the jgfen for a hij McLemore was abducted b)B[Burrough Indians who held him for SlJflfpiber one ] ransom until he was rescwy short, ( army troops May 15. Hndous po\s Both men were held underiSChambers guard at the hospital in RidBx),” battec capital of La Guajira state <&fior, with s they were investigated bv 'dies, four hor thorities. ■’he New Houston fire Chief V. E tend, chose and Dale Everitt, public iiw Leary, f tion officer of the Houston i!0-year-old partment, traveled to Colon tlonica, Calif month to look into the case tethe Bmins of $60, (XX) was raised in B or most victo pay fines, hospital costs fires, he thr lawyer’s fee for Spradloichool recon McLemore. James and ar 111 strike LA recorc 124 hits, bronto khroder, a fom Pacific fit-handed Weighs 195 p< Atlanta, ch $5.89 a month. Brad Komm More than 200 residents Wi school fi Snyder area will have $2 rfin Lima, C gas rate increases by Lone' graduate commercial users will havetoikhool this n more a month. Wnds. The commission also alii; Oakland hj Lone Star to raise rates ans''°r Juan Bus of 89 cents a month for 311 school ir ers in the Marlin area. P- The swi Bghs 145 p ( The commission also exteP] an additional 30 days a susw order imposed on natural gat; ice rates sought by the Arfl Lousiana Gas Co. for residtj unincorporated areas nearl kana. he St. Lo rew Van Arkla is seeking to increal rates for 1,420 residents aj commercial customers nearl kana. Wyatt’s Daily Specials Good from 11:00 a.m. ’til closing Wednesday . .Two cheese 63 onion enchiladas with chili, Mexican pinto beans, fried rice, toasted tortillas, and hot sauce $1.89 Thursday . Friday . . . Saturday . . . Boneless breast of chicken served with wild rice blend dressing, mushroom gravy, cranberry sauce, and broccoli $2.95 . Fried tenderloin of fish served with tartar sauce, French fried potatoes, and creamy cole slaw . . $2.25 . Barbecued beef brisket with sauce served with baked beans, cole slaw, and slice onion . . . $2.09 W Wyatt’s Cafeterias 804 Texas Ave. Bryan