THE BATTALION THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1979 Page 5 e nation dd-even fever sweeping nation; ationing in East — Texas to follow United Press International ■your car’s license plate ends in ™6, 8 or 0, you got a spot in the nes Wednesday in parts of New y, the New York City area and mnecticut. If your license plate ends in 1, 3, or 9, you will have to wait until / when you will be joined by jest of the drivers in New Jersey motorists in the Washington, , area who go on the odd-even m of rationing then, irting Monday, Texas drivers will line up by the numbers and imposing a minimum purchase plan to keep drivers from topping off their tanks. Energy Office Director Joseph S. Fitzpatrick said Tuesday the plan probably will be im plemented before the weekend. The odd-even system, which showed some success in California where the gas shortage first ap peared, is gaining converts around Rhode Island motorists may soon find themselves under the same sys tem. Massachusetts was considering the country as a way of reducing pump lines and spreading dwindling supplies. New York Gov. Hugh Carey, Gov. Ella Grasso of Connecticut and Texas Gov. Bill Cl ements an nounced their odd-even systems Tuesday. And in both Connecticut and New York, the rationing plan is de signed to discourage cheating: the states could fine violators —- both the motorist and the dealer — with ruckers strike; protest el prices, weight system United Press International truck driver was found shot to :h Wednesday morning where iis Muck had jackknifed off the road I Hr Tuscumbia, Ala., in a mount- I ■ tide of violence affecting the I Hay strike of independent truck 1’ers. le strikers threatened a na- |wide shutdown at midnight, a pkers spokesman said. William Hill, chairman of the In- bendent Truckers Group, said on | NBC “Today television show in shington it was too late to call off the shutdown set for 11:59 p.m., local time Wednesday because there were too many truckers groups involved. The walkout was expected to halt the movement of large quantities of produce where the harvest is in full swing and of gasoline supplies. Forty-three persons were ar rested in Alabama at a trucker pro test in Winston County. State troopers said the dead man was found shortly after 4 a.m. near the intersection of U.S. 72 and U.S. 43 in Colbert County where the >to bv did kylab balancing aneuver sucessful United Press International WASHINGTON — The Skylab space station turned around in [orbit Wednesday in a key maneuver aimed at opening the way for an unprecedented attempt if necessary to keep it from falling over populous Europe and Asia next month. Acting on instructions radioed up from Earth during the night, the I 78.5-ton orbiting laboratory changed into a position intended to bal ance the increasing forces of gravity and atmospheric drag and keep it from tumbling out of control. j The maneuver started at 8:50 a.m. EDT while the abandoned [ spacecraft was about 165 miles over the South Pacific Ocean. Thirty minutes later, as Skylab passed over the Ascension Island tracking station in the South Atlantic, engineers confirmed that Skylab ma neuvered as planned. The station ended up in a sideways position as it circled the globe. “Everything looks pretty good,” reported control center spokes man Robert Gordon in Houston. “All systems aboard Skylab look good.” He said it would take several hours of tracking to confirm that the 118-foot assembly remained in its new orbital orientation. know i corded l nd are,i tv of le|ii Sun Theatres 333 University 84e The only movie in town Double-Feature Every Week 10 a.m.-2 a.m. Sun.-Thurs. lO a.m.-S a.m. Fri.-Sat. No one under 18 Ladles Discount With This Coupon* BOOK STORE & 25c PEEP SHOWS 846-9808 PLITT Southern Marsel ;e whoi ank ■ 1 businf* urposftj an and nted, ) part. presen f j el Lee 5 :o six ) :fl f a Ball UNIVERSITY SQUARE SHOPPING CENTER 846-6714 8, 846-1151 J All seats $1.25 IMEEMK1 CORVETTE SUMMER All seats $1.25 STARRING MARK HAMIL PG CINEMA EMANUELLE RATED X i.a ( 3:30' FRIDAY & SATURDAY MIDNIGHTS Tickets go on sale at 6 p.m. rated x Him illllllllllimiiJUii truck was parked. His name was not immediately released nor were de tails on the shooting. The indepen dent drivers are striking and pro testing the high cost of diesel fuel and the 55 mph speed limit. Hill said of the planned shut down, “We re not trying to hurt anybody. But we re being hurt by the oil industry (which) is holding back supply in order to raise prices.” The shutdown. Hill said, is a “protest against the oil industry. And it’s high time the government do something about the oil industry that is really causing a tremendous amount of inflation in this nation.” He predicted an overwhelming majority of independent truckers would join the shutdown by the end of the week. Hill said the top priorities of truc kers include: —One hundred percent alloca tions of diesel fuel. —A reasonable surcharge to cover the increased cost of fuel. —A uniform weight system. —Opposition to the adminis tration’s call for deregulation of the trucking industry. “I was involved in 1973-74 when they said they had a shortage of fuel,’ Hill said. “After we went on a shutdown, all of a sudden we got all the fuel we wanted — and the prices stopped rising.” Truckers, meanwhile, escalated their two-week protest by blockad ing gasoline distribution centers in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michi gan. Hill, however, disapproved of the blockades. fines of up to $1,000. Additionally, cheaters in Connecticut could get up to a year in jail. Although most of New Jersey won’t come under the plan until to day, the system was in effect Tues day on the Garden State Parkway and officials found the initial results encouraging. “We are very pleased,’’ said Parkway operations manager John Simons. “The lines were substan tially reduced, and I think the pub lic understands, although it is some times hard to convince them.” The odd-even plans were coupled with some sort of antitank-topping measure — either a minimum pur chase limt or a requirement the tank be at least half empty to purchase fuel. That was encouraging for gas dealers like Don Turner at the Mus tang Service Center in Dallas, who said Clement’s decision to order an odd-even system for Dallas, Fort Worth and Houston wouldn’t solve the problem. “They’ll just buy every other day whether they need it or not, said Turner, who added, about half his customers have been buying only a few gallons of gasoline to top off their tanks. There was one encouraging note Tuesday for desperate drivers. In London, Saudi Arabian Oil Minister Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamani said Tuesday Saudi Arabia is considering a million barrel a day increase in oil production to stop world panic, but only if indus trialized nations drastically cut con sumption. The current world short age of crude is estimated at 2 million barrels a day. And there was a discouraging note, too. Connecticut state Rep. John Groppo had planned to be on hand when Grasso declared the mandatory gas rationing. But he couldn’t make it. He couldn’t find any gas. 846-6714 8.846-1151 UNIVERSITY SQUARE SHOPPING CENTER- "MAIN EVENT" rMiiitesraai DAI LM I : 45 3:45 5:45 7:45 9:45 WOODY ALLEN. 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