The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 08, 1979, Image 10

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    Page 10 THE BATTALION
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1979
Cl
ALTERATIONS
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
CIALIZE 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}
Supreme Court delays
sale of off-shore leases
mt
%
*
Sun Theatres
333 University 84E
The only movie in town
m m mm m _ -lA# f _
846-980*
Double-Feature Every Week
United Press International
PROVIDENCE, R.I.— Environmentalists won
an eleventh-hour reprieve from the U.S. Supreme
Court Tuesday night in their fight to block the gov
ernment sale of oil and gas exploration leases on the
rich Georges Bank fishing grounds off the New Eng
land Coast.
But federal officials are confident of ultimate vic
tory.
Time ran out on the scheduled sale of drilling
rights on 660,000 acres of ocean floor when Chief
Justice Warren Burger refused to hasten Supreme
Court consideration of the case, scheduled for
Friday.
By law, the lease sale had to be completed by
midnight. One official said it would be at least 40
days before the sale could be rescheduled.
The 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals refused to
block the sale Tuesday morning, just hours before
bids for the 116 tracts were scheduled to be opened
at the Biltmore Plaza Hotel in Providence.
At the request of the appeals court, the Interior
Department waited to proceed while attorneys for
the Boston-based Conservation Law Foundation
appealed the decision to the Supreme Court. The
group claimed Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus
underestimated the potential harm an oil spill could
cause in the area 85 miles off Massachusetts that
produces 15 percent of the world’s fish catch each
year.
Justice William Brennan temporarily blocked the
sale until the full court could review the case Friday.
Burger later refused to overrule Brennan’s decision.
Donald Truesdell of the Interior Department’s
Bureau of Land Management said he was confident
the Supreme Court will uphold the leasing process
but said he expected a delay of at least 40 days.
“The Supreme Court will apparently make some
type of ruling, this week, (or) next week. If it is in the
government’s favor, it will require, as we understand
it, a republishing of the sale notice, so it will mean a
delay of at least 40 days,” Truesdell said.
I
10 a.m.-2 a.m. Sun.-Thurs.
10 a.m -3 **.«-•. Fri.„Sat
No one under 18
Ladies Discount With (his Coupon
BOOK STORE & 25c PEEP SHOWS
Battalion Classifieds
Call 845-2611
VMSC AGGIE CINEMAiWmmm?;
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MANOR EAST 3
MANOR EAST MIDNIGHT MOVIE
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8:00 p.m.
Auditorium
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A MALPASO COMPANY FILM Co starrin3 SONDRA LOCKE GEOFFREY LEWIS
BEVERIY D ANGELO and RUTH GORDON as Ma ■ Written by JEREMY JOE KRONSBERG
Produced by ROBERT DALEY - Directed by JAMES FARGO • Color by DELUXE®
Distributed by WARNER BROS ©A WARNER COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY
*1.25
with
TAMU ID
Soundtrack album and tapes available from Elektra Records
Featuring Eddie Rabbitt. Charlie Rich. Mel Tillis
PARfNTAl GUIOAMCf SUOGfSTtD
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SILVER STRERI4
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k FRANK YABLAN5 PrM«nution
A MARTIN RANSOHOFF—FRANK YABLANS PRODUCTION
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GENE WILDER JILL CLAYBURGH RICHARD PRYOR
AN ARTHUR HILLER FILM “SILVER STREAK” A MILLER-MILKIS-COLIN HIGGINS PICTURE
ring
PATRICK McGOOHAN,
. Roger Oevereau
NED BEATTY • CLIFTON JAMES and I
Executive Producers MARTIN RANSOHOFF and FRANK YABLANS
Produced by THOMAS L MILLER and EDVY<VRD MILKIS Directed by ARTHUR HILLER Written by COLIN HIGGINS
Music by HENRY MANCINI COLOR BY DE LUXE*
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TO KEEP THEIR SANITY
IN AN INSANE WAR
THEY HAD TO BE CRAZY.
You may want to forget the war.
But you’ll never forget...
pgmslNCiiiiifC
) 1978 COLUMBIA PICTURES INDUSTRIES. INC
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Fri. & Sat.
Nov. 9 & 10
Midnight
Theater
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$1.25 with
TAMU ID
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Sunday
November 11
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8:00 p.m.
Theater
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*1.25
with
TAMU ID
C .37& COLUMBIA PICTURES INDUSTRIES INC
[original soundtrack album available on arista records and tapes I
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Advance Tickets Available At
MSC Box Office Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-4 p.m.
Tickets Available 45 min. Before Showtime
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RICE UNIVERSITY
JONES GRADUATE SCHOOL
OF ADMINISTRATION
MASTER OF BUSINESS AND
PUBLIC MANAGEMENT
MASTER OF ACCOUNTING
A REPRESENTATIVE WILL BE ON CAMPUS TO
MEET WITH STUDENTS INTERESTED IN GRADU
ATE PROGRAMS IN ACCOUNTING, ENTREP
RENEURSHIP, FINANCE, INFORMATION SYS
TEMS, INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT, OR PUB
LIC MANAGEMENT. PROGRAMS ARE FOR TWO
YEARS, FULL TIME. THE GRADUATE MANAGE
MENT ADMISSION TEST (GMAT) IS REQUIRED.
For further details or to sign up for an appoint
ment contact:
CAREER PLANNING AND
PLACEMENT CENTER
Rice University is committed to the principle of equal educa
tional opportunity and evaluates candidates without regard to
age, race, sex, creed, or national origin.
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9
9:30 A.M. 4:00 P.M.
Chrysler can recovi
Treasury chief says
United Press International
WASHINGTON — Treasury Secretary G. William Miller Wei
day told Congress that if financially ailing Chrysler Corp. goesb
rupt it would cost taxpayers $2.75 billion over the next two yea
up to 100,000 Americans would lose their jobs.
Miller, in testimony before a House hanking subcommittee,i
bankruptcy would be the only alternative to the administration’s!)
billion federal loan guarantee program which was unveiled last«
“Our conclusion is that Chrysler can recover as a result of thisp
osed financing plan,” Miller said. “It makes more sense thanaret
nization in bankruptcy.”
Miller painted a gloomy picture on the effects of a possible Ch
bankruptcy.
He said the administration has estimated that the federal ccp
bankruptcy would be at least $2.75 billion in 1980 and 1981 too
loss of revenues, unemployment claims, welfare costs and other)
cidental costs.
Furthermore, Miller said, the economies of some midwesternlo
lities — particularly the state of Michigan and Detroit — wo
seriously damaged by a failure.
Miller also said that a Chrysler failure would have “imp
negative effects” on the United States’ trade balance — possibly)
much as $2 billion by the end of 1981.
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Democrats defei
lown ui
Irking 1
■crease
GOP across U.
’,sec
United Press International
Democrats resoundingly won gov
ernorships in Mississippi and Ken
tucky Tuesday and kept a strangle
hold on the nation’s largest cities —
badly damaging GOP dreams of
picking up grass-roots momentum
for the 1980 national elections.
Kentucky and Mississippi, tradi
tional Democratic states whose con
servative voting in national elections
had boosted GOP upset hopes,
elected Democrats John Y. Brown
and William Winter.
Eight of the nation’s 20 largest
cities elected mayors — and Repub
licans won only three. The GOP un
seated a Democrat only in Cleveland
— and that had been expected —
where Ohio Lt. Gov. George Voini-
vich trounced feisty incumbent De
nnis Kucinich.
Former Democratic Rep. William
Green was elected mayor of Phi
ladelphia, the nation’s fourth largest
city, to succeed retiring Frank Riz
zo. Democrats already control the
three largest city halls — in New
York, Los Angeles and Chicago.
In Houston, incumbentDeA J
Jim McConn was forced intoaKf/TJ
by City Councilman Louis M* ■
but even the challenger is a
crat, guaranteeing party coni
the nation’s five largest cities
But in generally liberal Saal
cisco, conservative GOP Git)
cilman Quentin Kopprana
ingly strong race and forcedi
bent Democrat Dianne Fi
itl
|e same p
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and tc
thelp st
Ixas A&\
■— o4o-o/ m & omo- i i j i m
UNIVERSITY SQUARE SHOPPING CENTER H
gebzqnd
f A zinger!
Atour-de-
force!
into a Dec. 11 runoff. g u ), a )j re
In addition, Democrats c j e!
control of the state IegislateE ars j n( j,
New Jersey, Kentucky, Miss®T trave
and Virginia — important h
state lawmakers will redrawi Ifcutsui
sional districts based on tlitl R ona ld
census. fcounds 1
The GOP has a chance tosim, s t s f or
governorship next monlkft they o
Louisiana, where Rep. DaviJlej convent
is in a runoff If he loses, the
licans will have only 18 oftlj
tion’s 50 governorships.
Brown was an easy winner!)
Kentucky governorship over
lican Louie B. Nunn in a
bitter campaign.
The sharp personal attack)
marked the campaign disa]
lated the winner and Brown
supporters: “We have takenoi
pie and our state out of politic)l|
dage.”
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