THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY. JULY 18. 1979 Page 3 ite pq irritation and indifference arter’s thermostat setting rule receives mixed reactions United Press International merica’s office workers rolled up posts in San ^ e ’ r shirtsleeves and turned up gnition Day their thermostats in line with Presi- 'icemenand dent Carter’s energy conservation in the San nandate this week. Their reactions t Randolph, varied from irritation in the hot hy Veterans Southlands to indifference in the un dent Carter Isonably cool North, r estimated , “We’re just in this little area ars and the where there’s no air. It’s terrible. It’s rid was long isweatshop, ” groused Hollie Mann, Ijecretary for the Small Business Sdministration who said the tem- ™ature in her building reached 87 irees. hat was in Lubbock, Texas, ere the afternoon high neared 100 ;rees. n Chicago, where it never got above a pleasant 78, most office j workers scarcely noticed whether g D(lf] thermostats had been turned up to the required 78 degrees (Carter’s six-month 'wer plants, within their the Nuclear ally routine omic safety a March. mandate calls for 65 degrees in the winter). A telephone survey of several re staurants found the managers were not even aware of the president’s order to conserve energy. Steve Greer, manager of P.S. Chicago, a nightclub-restaurant, said his place is hot enough as it is. “It’s usually 98 degrees in here, even if we would turn it down to 65,” Greer said. “It would be getting out rageous to keep it hotter. People pay for an atmosphere of comfort when they go out.” In Fort Worth, Texas, where the temperature also approached 100, at least one restaurant was uncon cerned about Carter’s order. “All we have here are fans,” said an employee at Angelo’s, a restaur ant noted for its Texas barbecue. “It’s about 85 in here now and no one has ever complained about the heat. Folks just come in and drink beer. They stay cool that way.” Stewart Mauer, manager of the downtown Hilton Hotel in In dianapolis, said it’s all in the attitude, anyway. “If everyone thinks they’re going to be hot and uncomfortable, then they’ll probably be hot and uncom fortable,” he said. “The idea is to think cool.” Secretaries in the White House, already steamy for weeks because it was the first place Carter ordered mandatory thermostat settings, took to wearing sun dresses and cooling themselves with brightly colored fans. Reporters in the press room likened it to a sauna. Workmen in stalled screens in many of the West Wing offices so windows could be propped open. State workers in Miami shed three-piece suits for cooler cotton guayaberas — a shortsleeved cotton shirt of Latin origin — and armed Foreign investments could U.S. urban areas with Ford ne of the t General legotiator it down to week and s for the expire at aser indi- ssion and ; opening ik will be exchange i organiz- ome ie, Wyo. s awaited ister area led more dicopters rs. Eight :ed treat- ?d by the Mon two years in a suit ie settle- to Todd s mother S 12,500a jal acuity arm. He and was when his xmsinGO the front ts kind in Growing foreign investment in the United pes could become a major tool for ling distressed cities and urban 5as, Housing and Urban De- jlopment Secretary Patricia Harris Id Tuesday. [This source of capital holds the jtential for major impacts on the dthofboth the national economy and that of individual communities, ” Mi;. Harris said. “It is particularly |portant to those localities that i)w such symptoms of distress as I of jobs and declining tax bases.” iMrs. Harris made her remarks as HI D released a study on the impact iuttle key to space future, lirector says United Press International (■CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Kennedy Space Center Director Lee Scherer says the space shuttle will finish what the Apollo 11 moon mis sion started 10 years ago. ("‘Apollo 11 was a prologue of a forious future, during which the ^ace shuttle is going to open up the Jssibilities of doing things we have ly dreamed of before,” Scherer id Monday at a ceremony com- imorating the 10th anniversary of s moon mission. President Carter referred to the toon mission Sunday night in his ergy speech as proof of American complishment. When Neil mstrong set foot on the stark lunar idscape 10 years ago, he and his untry were heralded for the stag ring human endeavor. No longer is the nation so sure of space explorations. of foreign direct investment on U . S. cities. The issue of foreign investment, particularly in real estate, has be come an increasingly controversial one. According to the HUD study, in vestors from the Netherlands, Great Britain and Canada have the largest investments in the United States and it noted the OPEC nations, the source of much of the controversy over foreign investments, “are not responsible for much direct invest ment, preferring to place their funds in more liquid assets.” The HUD study showed, how ever, that overall direct foreign in vestment in the United States is rela tively small — $34.1 billion in 1977 — but said it has grown more rapidly than U.S. investments abroad in the 1970s. Among the study’s major findings is that while much foreign invest ment in manufacturing in the United States is in cities with lagging economies, a significant amount of EfLQhxcxy 3109 Texas Avenue Bryan, Texas 77801 RESTAURANT ; presents Happy Hour 4-6 (7 days a week) 2 for 1 per person 10% discount for all A&M students with current I.D. Mon.-Thurs. only. n spec- cted in id the ore the ; presi- ein was cil an- oion of Bakr’s emier- (ir )n, Texas 77843 (itled exclusively 10 ' spatches credited natter herein re» r ' ! ge Station, TX 71 t nation Congress . . .Karen ft? Debbie Pan Sean W RoyBt’ Keith W to bin Thorny Blosser, D* 1 .. .Clay C" M . .. .Lynn .Greg Sprt* 1 non- profit, Jf j ted by stutW nity newspupt d by the edit* 9.255% Interest and some nice people. Homestead offers both. 9.255% Interest... Money market certificates. These short term, high yield certificates mature in only 182 days. The rate shown above is the annual yield for this week. Minimum deposit is $10,000. 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We just told the ten ants they could set their own dress code.” the investment is for acquisitions of healthy companies thus creating less new employment for distressed areas than elsewhere. Foreign affiliates employed over one million full-time employees, or about 2 percent of the U.S. work force in 1974, the study said. The study recommended a number of ways in which foreign in vestments might be used to aid dis tressed urban areas, including the creation of a “national broker serv ice” to bring together places seeking new investors with foreign corpora tions, “since the present private broker system is not adequately at tuned to the needs of distressed cities.” It also recommended the possibil ity of putting together a package of investment incentives to make in vestment in distressed cities more attractive to foreign investors, but HUD officials stressed they had put together any legislative or policy packages as yet in response to the study. Barcelona APARTMENTS NEWLY REMODELED ! 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