'The Battalion 72 No. 3 !0 Pages Wednesday, September 5, 1979 College Station, Texas USPS 045 360 Phone 845-2611 Weather Warm and humid with a 20% chance of rain. High today in the low 90’s with the low tonight in the mid 70’s. Winds will be 10 m.p.h. teell Lewis, a senior in horticulture, fills up with gasoline at a station on University Drive. Some gasoline station operators in Bryan-College Station ire unsure about how long the gas will hold out. Battalion photo by Clay Cockrill 1 gas expected lere by year’s end on VC; By RICHARD OLIVER Battalion Staff Bryan-College Station gas station own- rs are generally pessimistic about the rice and availability of gasoline here for Krest of the year. Most predicted the price of regular isoline would soon reach $1 a gallon he re the end of the year. In a survey of 20 gasoline stations in Iryan-College Station on Texas Avenue, ieaverage price for regular gasoline was icents, up 25 percent from last May and 8 percent from May, 1978. The average hce for unleaded is 93 cents. station owners admit gasoline is on an upswing, they feel the rorst is yet to come. Gene Zulkowski, owner of Zulkowski exacoonl405 S. Texas Ave., said, “The !is situation has crippled my business. ! orexample, last year at this time I had six mployees, now I have only three. And to lale matters worse, the government is onstantly warning us the situation is ring to get worse. ’’ Joe Messina, assistant manager of Gulf Self-Serve on 300 S. Jersey, eeswith Zulkowski. i “The way everything is going right now, (looks doubtful that anything will get bet- rin the future, ” he said. “If they don’t jve us 2,500 gallons .a day, we’ll be in big rouble, and I certainly don’t anticipate Wing that much any time soon. The out- r j ongress votes to consider campaigning, federal deficit 30 Chinese want Carter visit, returned Mondale says United Press International WASHINGTON — Chinese leaders want President Carter to visit their coun try, Vice President Walter Mondale told Carter Tuesday on returning from a 10-day trip to China and the Far East. The president said he will try to schedule such a trip next year. Mondale spoke to Carter at a luncheon. ‘They are very anxious that you visit,’’ said Mondale, who just returned from China. “They made that point — both Hua and Deng.” Mondale referred to Communist Party Chairman Hua Guofeng and Vice Premier Deng Xiaoping. “I will try to work out a time next year,” Carter said. “We had what I thought was an excel lent trip,” Mondale told Carter. “Premier Hua was delighted by your invitation, and he said to use the words ‘with delight.’” Carter has asked that Hua visit the United States in 1980, as Deng did at the start of 1979 when the two nations resumed dip lomatic relations. During a few moments at the start of Carter’s luncheon with Mondale — while reporters and photographers were permit ted to be present — the president asked Mondale if he was allowed access to the Chinese people. “The mood was good. It was clear they place high priority on good U.S.-Chinese relations,” Mondale said. Mondale’s week-long visit to China re sulted in new agreements for trade and development projects and a new consulate in Canton. In Hong Kong Sunday, he toured crowded refugee camps and de fended the U.S. policy of picking up and assisting the Indochinese “boat people.” And in Tokyo en route home Monday, he had lunch with Prime Minister Masayoshi Ohira at the elegant Japanese summer palace and briefed him on U.S.- Chinese relations. Mike Mansfield, U.S. ambassador to Ja pan, said Mondale told Ohira he was “pleased as punch” with his trip to China, and had reaffirmed to Ohira the need for U.S. consultation with Japan on trade with China “so they won’t be interfering and competing with one another to too great an extent. ” The Indochina refugee situation and the Vietnamese occupation of Cambodia also were discussed. Mondale spent less than three hours in the Japanese capital. On the two-day visit to Hong Kong, the vice president toured two crowded ref ugee camps and defended U.S. efforts to find and rescue Vietnamese boat people afloat on the South China Sea. That initiative, he said, is “the right thing to do ... one of the best things our government has done in a long time.” As he headed home. Mondale told re porters his mission had been a success in expanding relations with China. The United States and the People’s Republic established formal relations in January but a number of difficulties had held up full implementation of the new status, particu larly economically. Mondale held 12 hours of talks with top Chinese leaders, toured the countryside to confer with local and regional officials and got in a hefty chunk of sightseeing. His major speech on U.S.-China rela tions was broadcast on Chinese radio and television — affording millions of Chinese their first opportunity to hear a message from a foreign leader, and making him an instant celebrity throughout much of China. The most important official part of the trip was the signing in Peking of bilateral cooperation agreements with the Chinese to start a new cultural exchange program between the countries and to give the Chinese much-needed technical assistance for work on hydroelectric systems. It was the first trip to China by a top U.S. official since Gerald Ford traveled there in 1975. Friends help boy fight cancer look is grim.” One gasoline dealer, however, is op timistic about the future. Jesse McCullough, general manager of the East Texas distribution for Sigmor Shamrock, said gasoline supplies for his firm were normal. “Our stations are staying open seven days a week with no problem. We have supplies coming in from our Three Rivers Refinery along with what the Sigmor Shamrock Corporation sends us. I don’t anticipate any real problems in the near future. We’re not going to close any pumps down at all.” Andy Sustaita, a Phillips 66 dealer and owner of Sustaita Phillips 66 at 208 N. Texas Ave., said supplies for his station were getting better, but he was unsure how they would be in the future. “We really haven’t had that much trou ble,” he said. “But, then again, I don’t think it can get much worse than it is. Over the summer it was much worse than it is now. On Sundays, we had 15 or 20 cars lined up for gasoline when we opened the station in the morning. The lines were generally limited to Sunday mornings. “I think the return of the students will cause some supply problems for the sta tions near the campus,” he said. “I’m about 6 miles north of the campus, though, so until the kids start coming out here for gas, I’ll be OK. ” United Press International STREAMWOOD, Ill. — Two years ago, Timmy Estes had a tumor the size of a lemon on his tongue. Despite radiation and chemotherapy, 30 to 40 small tumors soon appeared in his lungs. He is 7 now, fighting a daily battle against an extremely rare form of cancer. The medical bills are high and often he and his mother must stay in places infested with mice and bugs to save money for trips to the Mayo Clinic for experimental chemotherapy. “He’s so small — only 38 pounds,” says Donna Estes. “He’s bald because of the drugs and he has a lot of scars on his throat and neck. “He’s a very brave child. He tells me every night not to cry, just to say our prayers and God will help us. Now, his neighbors, local store owners. Boy Scouts, and even the village board in his hometown of Streamwood, about 25 miles outside of Chicago, are helping too. “It costs us $700 for one day of treat ment, and that’s not counting travel ex penses,” his mother said. “We’ve stayed in places with mice and bugs to save money while we re there (at the Mayo Clinic).” Last week, however, the village board Total eclipse of moon visible Thursday a.m. United Press International WASHINGTON — The moon will move within Earth’s shadow Thursday morning and the farther west you live, the better the show will be. It will be the last total lunar eclipse visible from North America until 1982. The moon will begin moving into Earth’s shadow at 4:18 a.m. CDT and leave the shadow at 7:30 a.m. CDT. The moon will be totally eclipsed for 46 min utes, between 5:31 a.m. and 6:17 a.m. CDT. When Earth’s shadow covers the moon, it appears as a rusty ball. It is never com pletely dark because rays of sunlight are bent by Earth’s atmosphere and enter the shadow. The last total lunar eclipse visible in the United States was in 1975. gave the go-ahead for his supporters to make door-to-door solicitations this Satur day for donations to help pay his medical costs. The village has been divided into sec tions by Timmy’s friends, neighbors and members of two Boy Scout troops for the door-to-door drive. Local store owners pitched in by allow ing donation cans and solicitations to be made on their premises. “The help everyone’s giving is really just super,” says Timmy’s mother. Last September local civic groups helped raise $13,000 with a fund drive for the boy. But those funds have dwindled down to $10 because of all the medical bills, Mrs. Estes said. Timmy’s cancer, she said, was discov ered in October 1977 when he had trouble swallowing. His parents thought he might have a problem with his tonsils. A tumor the size of a lemon was discov ered on his tongue, however, and he was diagnosed as having an extremely rare form of cancer with only 100 known cases and only two cases involving the tongue. He was treated with radiation and chemotherapy, but last July doctors said 30 to 40 small tumors had spread to his lungs. Doctors in Chicago said there was no thing they could do, so now he travels to the Mayo Clinic every three weeks for an experimental chemotherapy treatment. He also has undergone surgery on hi tongue. Donations can be sent to the Timm Estes Cancer Fund, First State Bank c Hanover Park, 1400 Irving Park Road Hanover Park, Ill. 60103. 1st student to die this yeai will be honored Sept. 11 Nineteen-year-old Woodrow K. Ratliff, first student fatality of the 1979-80 academic year, has been added to the list of Texas A&M University students to be honored Sept. 11 at Silver Taps. Ratliff, an electrical engineering sophomore from San Antonio, died Sept. 2 in a one-car accident near Bastrop. Serv ices will be held Wednesday in San An tonio, with burial in Fredericksburg. Silver Taps, the traditional ceremony in memory of students who have died, will be conducted for six others besides Ratliff. All died after Aggie Muster on April 21 anniversary of the Battle of San Jacinto which clinched Texas independence. The 10:30 p.m. outdoors memorial is usually held shortly after ea,ch studenl death during a year, but no ceremonies are held after April 21 and before the first Silver Taps of the fall semester. The Sept. 11 memorial will also honoi Charla Gwin, Stuart B. Walker, Alan D. Peacock, Tamara L. Bates, Henry B. Bishop and Luke D. Bell. United Press International WASHINGTON — Two items coming ) soon on Capitol Hill may have pro- und importance on the way Congress operates. First is the Senate Budget Committee allenge of seven other older and, at least itilnow, more powerful committees over Wing down the size of the federal defi cit. Then House members may have to deal "ith a proposed limitation on the role of il action committees in their own ®mpaigns. Members return from their August va cation today, with the House taking up the •oreign aid appropriation and the Senate addressing the Treasury and Postal Serv- appropriations. Otherwise, energy legislation and the Premier foreign policy debate of this ses- j°n — the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty — figure to dominate Congress’s Mention through October and possibly ' nger. Some of the other tough issues on the fall agenda include possible disciplinary action against Sen. Herman Talmadge, D-Ga., accused of financial misconduct, a bail-out for the Chrysler Corp., and abor tion language in federal appropriations bills. The budget showdown may come next week, providing the first major test of the congressional process adopted five years ago under which lawmakers are supposed to keep spending within limits they set earlier in the year. In May, Congress approved a budget with a $23 billion deficit, since raised to $28 billion because of inflation. But some major committees did not impose the re quired spending cuts and the Senate Ap propriations Committee has approved about $2 billion in extra spending. As a result, when it comes time to adopt the revised budget this fall, it will be about $32 billion in the red. Senate Budget Committee chairman Edmund Muskie, D-Maine, plans to chal lenge the standing committees by asking the Senate to require them to meet the first targets. Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., calls the challenge “the single most important economy test the Senate has faced since the passage of the Congressional Budget Act in 1974.” The attempt to limit the amount of money special interest groups can con tribute to House candidates through their political action committees “is going to be a struggle because there are a lot of mem bers who get a lot of PAC money,” says Dick Conlon of the liberal Democratic Study Group, which is pushing the at tempt. Although public financing of campaigns has been defeated repeatedly, Conlon says this bill has a better chance, at least in public image. Opponents argue that limiting contribu tions is an infringement of free expression and that more should be spent by in terested citizens on elections. Rep. Bill Frenzel, R-Minn., contends, for example, that spending on House races in 1976 was 10 percent of what Americans spent on dandruff shampoos that year. Just you & me, kid Battalion photo by Lee Roy Leschper Jr. Barbara Forrest and daughter Jenny, eight months, share a quiet moment outside Texas A&M’s Memo rial Student Center. Barbara’s husband, Wayne, is a student at Texas A&M.