The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 30, 1979, Image 8

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    Page 8
THE BATTALION
the state
the
^Haifoweencostume pavtyNovel aims at U.S. energy attituchc..
. , li® n
United Press International
AUSTIN — A teen-ager at a
pre-Halloween masquerade party
fell 12 stories to his death ofi the
ledge of a downtown building Sun
day.
Witnesses told police Kyle Wil
liam Creekmore, 19, climbed over a
balcony railing onto the ledge of the
Commodore Perry Building and was
clowning around when he fell about
3 a.m. Sunday.
Creekmore was clad in women s
clothes.
Homicide Sgt. Mike Farrar said
the death apparently was accidental.
“It doesn’t look like there was any
foul play.” Farrar said. “The people
were drinking fairly heavily.”
Farrar said at least 23 persons at
tended the party at an apartment in
the building and three or four were
on the balcony when the fell occur
red.
2ACHAB1A&
GREENHOUSE
club & game parlor
never a cover charge
BACKGAMMON
TOURNAMENT
TONIGHT 8 P.M.
1201 Hwy. 30 in the Briarwood Apts., College Station 693-9781
DXXXS
CXXXCXXEN
SALOON
-.M)
307 University Drive
College Station
• Beer on Crushed Ice
• Progressive Country Music
• Hangdown Sausage
• Cheddar Cheese on the Wheel
• Authentic Turn of the Century
Texana
United Press International
AUSTIN — As a “blue-eyed
domestic Arab,” Alan R. Erwin
hopes his intrigue-filled novel about
CIA and OPEC plots and the seces
sion of Texas to form an indepen
dent republic will change America’s
attitudes about energy production.
Erwin, former chief lobbyist for
the state of Texas and until recently
“There's a mentality in Con
gress that one of the things that
has to he done as part of any
energy program is to hit at
Texas.” - Alan R. Erwin,
former chief lobbyist for the
state of Texas and former
member of the Texas Public
Utilities Commission.
a member of the Texas Public
Utilities Commission, is promoting
a 1983-era tale of national disaster
brought on by American’s punitive
measures toward oil producers and
Texas.
“There’s a mentality in Congress
that one of the things that has to be
done as part of any energy program
is to hit at Texas,” Erwin told an
interviewer. “They shoot at the oil
companies but they hit us. Some
how the punishment always seems
to fall on Texas’ natural resources.”
Erwin, 34, got the idea for his
book while heading the Texas Office
of Federal State Relations in
Washington during the 1973 energy
crisis. Erwin said Congress and
most Americans do not understand
that Texas no longer has the oil and
gas reserves to take up the slack
when imports are cut, and foil to
realize that punitive measures
against energy producers reduces
the amount of domestic supplies av
ailable.
In his novel, "The Power Ex
change,” Erwin portrays the ulti
mate outcome of such attitudes as a
disastrous effort to seize control of
Texas’ power plants to ship electric
ity to a blizzard-ravaged East Coast.
To avert congressional action to
nationalize energy production,
Texas exercises its option to split
into five separate states — an option
written into the treaty of annexation
by which the Republic of Texas be
came part of the United States in
1845.
The split option — which actually
exists — in Erwin’s novel is blocked
by a Supreme Court ruling declar
ing the article of annexation invalid
Unite*
CHICAG
itild keep l
ice the risl
and the succession ofii
lieutenant governor as if;
the new republic. TheWliii;
is taken over by a shell a
operatives who pushier^
ess I l on -. ,. , tack, Har
During his four.year S t 1 J rcherssa
of the three comnussioif, j ee f 0 ^ a j e
“—their side,
endorsemei
“They shoot at dieoijResearchers
ponies but they liitus.' Jess likely to
the punishment okiii)';jn on d r i n ^ er
fall on Texas’ naiv;| r ^ e re P°
sources." — Ewin. P™ 3 * ° t '
sociation,
"weekend a
cautioning l
regulate electricity andyrohnlics in t
rates in Texas, Erwin advisable fc
A Harva
eh team
Henne
beer,
n in n
otection ;
Erwin said Congress and most
Americans do not understand
that Texas no longer has the oil
and gas reserves to take up the
slack when imports are cut.
and Texas declares itself an inde-
pendent republic.
Erwin thickens the plot with an
assassination of the Texas governor
reputaton as a consumer
Unlike many consume:
men, however, Erwininiif:
prices are the only way In
sufficient energy supplies
“The free market isrealb*-rw •
, P Data inc
way to get energy proouv
Erwin “ w « Sale c
prices up drastically. Anij , , , * .
need to establish social pn; , t
help the [X)or and eklerl.^ l-’ V
not afford to pay those
Erwin, a former repofe ige,” the
igned his $44,500-a-yearj:.; j’Thus, i
Utility Commission in ]i protective
before his term was up: |sactually c
complete his novel and t (than any o
public relations post £ach type
Chemical Co. in Freeport BBut, the
NOW OPEN IN
WOODSTONE CENTER
ALBERTS HAIR DESIGN
Operated by Albert Martinez (formerly of
Newby's in San Antonio) and has been joined
by Annette Branecky (also of Newby's in San
Antonio.)
9-6 Mon.-Friday Woodstone Center
9-1 Saturdays 696-3003
We use and
recommend
REDKEN
1 ALTERATIONS 1
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 NOT
ONLY SERVE AS AN EXCELLENT
DRY CLEANERS BUT WE SPE-
CIAUZE IN ALTERING HARD TO
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^
Hispanics
object to
Renfrew
United Press International
CORPUS CHRISTI — The
nation’s oldest and largest His
panic organization announced
Monday it would carry on a cam
paign to defeat the nomination of
San Francisco federal judge
Charles Renfrew as deputy at
torney general of the United
States.
Attorney Ruben Bonilla, na
tional president of the League of
United Latin American Citizens,
said his organization objects to
Renfrew’s opinion that Hispanics
should not be considered as a
minority group under the law.
Bonilla said Renfrew wrote in
a 1977 article for the Southwest
University Law Review that “a
national rectification principle —
the legal principle designed to
correct historicial wrongs —
must perhaps fairly andk
be limited to Americanli
and blacks.’’
Renfrew stated in the a
that discrimination
panics “has not been pens
nationwide” and that the j
status of Spanish sp
dents “was not
approved.”
LULAC fears that Reil
attitude would be detrimeJ
Hispanics — the mi
fastest-growing minority-I
gaining equality inthekl
immigration, education
employment, Bonilla said
He called on Hispanics lf|
telegrams and letters t
White House and to Sei|
ward Kennedy, D-Mass.,
man of the Senate Judd
Commitee, asking that Hal
nomination be defeated.
out
Skyrocketing Gold Prices
Won’t keep you from giving
that extra special gift this
Christmas.
Layaway that gift at Cowart's now and just a 20% deposit
will hold it for you until Christmas.
Next Day
Picture
Pledge:
You get your
pictures back
the next day
or you get
FREE Kodak
film (no, 126 &
135 041 film
excluding holidays).
Photo-Tech! Say,
that’s the place in town
where I can leave my
Halloween pictures
and get them back the
next day — and they’ve
got a night deposit too
— I can hardly wait!
Hee... Hee... Hee...
PHOTO-TECH
813 S. Texas
College Station
696-0034
5X7
(Next to Pasta’s Pizza)
Convenience at
everyday low prices
from your favorite color nega
tive - must be selected at time
newly-processed roll of film
picked up (C-41). |
Offer expires Nov. 10, 1979
Barcelona
APARTMENTS
NEWLY REMODELED !
ALL UTILITIES PAID and...
Individual Heating and Air, Cable T.V.,
3 Laundry Rooms, Swimming Pool,
Security Guard, Party Room, and
Close to Campus. 693-0261
700 Dominik, College Station
T *’ x.
•V.N (*ol f Com si•
i'.AKCFLONA
•••W!,.il .* Im; t [m. r -