fp 1 Page 10 THE BATTALION TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30. 1979 Study finds watching TV increases sexist attitudes United Press International WASHINGTON — People who watch a lot of television have more sexist attitudes than those who rarely watch it, a University of Pennsylvania study said Monday. Researchers sampled 3,600 people and found that those who watch television more than four hours a day scored higher on a test to detect sexist attitudes. “Television tends to perpetuate a sexist view of the world where men have all the adventures and women are relegated to staying at home,’ said Dr. Nancy Signorielli, one of the authors of the study. She said in the more than 1,300 network television programs monitored over the past 10 years, men outnumbered women three to one, and women characters were less likely to have a job and more likely to be married than were male characters. The number of minorities, on the other hand, has been relatively ac curately represented on television recently, she said. The study showed that total minority representation has risen from 6 percent in 1969 to 13 percent in 1979. ATTENTION diS MSC Town Hall Option Pass holders! Kewn holll Priority period to purchase tickets for The Oak Ridge Boys Wed. Oct. 24 — Tues. Oct. 30 Court wont hear landowners’ case United Press International WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court Monday denied a hearing to a group of landowners challenging a federal program to protect flood-prone land on grounds it diminishes the value of their land. The justices let stand a lower-court decision that the Flood Disas ter Protection Act of 1973 does not violate the rights of the Texas Landowners Rights Association, the state of Missouri, 40 local gov ernments and several hundred landowners. In 1968, Congress passed the National Flood Insurance Act, a federally subsidized program to protect property owners against flood damage by providing government-supported insurance. As a condition of the program, the act required flood-prone com munities to adopt local flood plain management measures to reduce or avoid damage. Congress, realizing the program was not sufficient to induce com munity participation, passed the Flood Disaster Protection Act of 1973, which included sanctions against communities that did not take part. The act prohibited federal assistance for construction and loans from federally supervised lending institutions to landowners in flood-prone communities that did not participate in the program. The landowners charged the 1973 law transformed a voluntary federal insurance program into one that coerced landowners and local governments into taking part in the program. A federal district court judge dismissed the landowners’ suit against the government, ruling the act was in the interest of the public’s safety, health and general welfare. The decision was upheld by the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia. Appealing to the Supreme Court, the landowners argued that property is designated flood-prone without a hearing and the deter mination often reduces land values. The landowners said some land was declared flood-prone with no evidence that it was under greater risk than other areas. "Only since 1973, however, has the scheme of enforcing local gov ernment and landowner participation in the program had the effect of forcing petitioners to accept irrational adjudications,” the landowners argued in their appeal. The government, opposing review, said Congress has determined there is a “need for a comprehensive scheme of flood disaster man agement.” “Part of the scheme involves discouraging new investment in flood-prone areas because the public must bear the expense of the subsidized insurance,” the government said. Government lawyers said designating land as flood-prone does not reduce property values. Tickets not purchased at this time will be released for sale to the general public Wed., Oct. 31. FRESH PLAIN POPPY RYE HOT YOU CAN BE ANY THING YOU WANT AT ZACHARIAS 4TH ANNUAL * * * * * * * * * * * * ORDERS TAKEN THROUGH OCT. 31 * * HALLOWEEN BALL THEY’LL BE PRIZES FOR: TO ORDER CALL HILLEL AT 696-7313 OR CALL 846-1492 EVENINGS — BEST COSTUME — MOST ORIGINAL CARVED PUMPKIN — APPLES BOBBED OUT OF A VAT OF BEER WEDNESDAY OCT. 31 ST. ■it Opal Vindiola Letha Lewis Jacque McDonald Olga Salcido ‘Our place Is That Place II. ! We invite you to our place for the newest hair styles. Permanent Waves, “The Cal ifornia Curl” and many other fine beauty services. 693-0607 a\3 ^ S Crr _ * Crash kills prisoners on way to freedom Texas A& United Press International SAN DIEGO — A Mexican gov ernment plane carrying American inmates destined for a prisoner ex change with Mexicans jailed in this country slammed into a utility pole in fog and burned near the border Sunday, killing all 10 people aboard. A Federal Aviation Administra tion official said there was no indica tion of any emergency or problem with the twin-engine Otter turbop rop plane, which was attempting to land at Tijuana International Airport in heavy fog. The blazing wreckage containing the four American prisoners, two Mexican pilots and four prison guards burned intensely for two hours as molten aluminum flowed several yards from the impact area, a half-mile north of the international border. The FA A said the pilot had re quested clearance into U.S. airspace through the Tijuana airport tower several minutes before the crash. “One wing caught the telephone pole and the baby just started turn ing,” said Border Patrol Sgt. Jack Doherty. “As near as we can tell the cause was bad visibility and the pilot didn’t know where he was at.” The prisoner exchange program, which began in December 1977, al lows American prisoners in Mexico to complete their sentences in this country and Mexicans jailed in America to return home. The four Americans were iden tified as Steven Michael Olsen, 30, of Imperial Beach, Calif.; Lotus Marie Sanchez, 29, of Garden Grove, Calif.; Julie Ann Sheldon, 25, of Cambria, Calif.; and Gerald Lapinski, 35, hometown unknown. Olsen and Miss Sheldon, daugh ter of jazz trumpeter Jack Sheldon of the Merv Griffin television pro gram, had been married in Mexico and were returning to the United States to start a new life with the couple’s 9-nH)ntlH)ld(W::.l? een t: ! ( Relatives said the coupltjk^ vacation in Mexico about \\ hen they were arrestei. marijuana charge. The two Mexican identified as Rene Hernai riguez and Marco AntoDi] Villa. The four federalgi Rafael Gama Avistas, Ea Estrada, Fernando Igiai and Raul Santos Benavife U.S. Patrol agents louiij burning aircraft at shortlyal iches bef In additic eared tc ipped in A&M los ppointii “Yeah,” s some r< he story in the 1 Tech offi |>artment niulit at about tin I secretary American traffic controllu ported a plane haddroppe radar screen. The rugged Otay Mesa is crisscrossed only by i used by Border Patrol Am ing the area for i Debris from the ‘ scattered over a i' - t i ..ml touched off a small Ini we] which was quickly extingri c i a $19.3 million deficit County lays off 5,000 tvorken United Press International DETROIT — Pink slips are being mailed in Wayne County, the na tion’s third largest county, inform ing nearly 5,000 county workers they will be out of work in two weeks. The county, facing a $19.3 million deficit, Monday planned to mail the layoff notices and to notify state offi cials it cannot maintain essential services. The layoff's are scheduled to take effect Nov. 12. County officials also were slated to ask the Michigan Court of Ap peals to rule on the county’s obliga- Wilson saic >y a “friem “You sail Baylor e t ion to fund its four couitsi ^ fisc ;d year ends Nov. 30. Earlier this month. CM Circ uit Judge RichardDe $ dered $1.5 million in wT set aside for operation oftkj tormation fctice. he first ockery ca ctually game a: We wei ted wit! nything at Wilson d >n to Tec “We had ESTABLISHED UN 1974 ONION SESAME SALT TRICK OR TREAT AT T.J.’S Drawing for prizes & drinks Drawing at 11 p.m. $100.00 — 1st Prize for best costume $ 25.00 — T.J/s Gift Certificate Costume judging by Diamond Darlings 707 Texas Ave. College Sta., Texas nonymou! girs. “But I us People ah ;nt right I Ik deht-ridden co«rflP^ n Y tea hoped to pay its uorta S «P leth,n g missory notes over the ntiil weeks, or until the r ear. But Friday, H'aynd A&M wi vitli SMU tees fell Circuit Court Judge !nm^P a Y' < die k stmek down thatidfiMv 35 i he brougr \ rose In any iitlici in -Monday. .1 lose, promissory notei^B] may permitted 1>\ law. Burdiu®ting the T he county proposal, bourr l.isi week In the* Boardof(*" e P as: is w.n to idle ■t,8ES^jL./“' un workers and then immedi^J 5 ■ .ill about half of them.'llr.^fr? j winkers were to havelwBYl 16 ° (‘it llC r nr mforfldjfiibPt U0 r ( (*r in scrip or inteuT " 1 P11 >missoi \ notes. loucnaowi I think Lt. GTiv. Jiicnes BridiltyRth coacl the county ovet the wetbmough ti ing its financial crisis ccif been avoided with a cent spending reductionilj ginning of the year. THE OUTLAWS “In The Eye of the Storm” LP Only PEACHES & HERB A& y Sati ai televi off at 1J origin ; \:30 p.m A&M and Ma 100% pc Vogu Me Now 1 flowei classe NOW OPEN 1905 TEXAS AVI COLLEGE STATIC* i