The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 15, 1979, Image 6

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    Page6 THE BATTALION
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1979
copies:^"
M •NoMlniiinuns
J g •Lars*Orders
/ ** * •I*saI«s*4^C
L*sal8b*4*4C
OVERNIGHT RATES — 44 DURING THE DAY
Reductions & Dissertations
Collation & Binding & Pad&ng
Iranian students start checking in
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United Press International
Iranian students, ordered to prove
full-time status or face deportation,
straggled into offices of university
and immigration officials from Ber
keley, Calif., to Buffalo, N.Y.,
Wednesday on the first day of a
month-long reporting period.
The order by President Carter, in
response to the takeover of the
NOW YOU CAN
EARN OVER $6,500
WITH ARMY ROIC.
American Embassy in Tehran, will
be enforced by the Immigration and
Naturalization Service “as rigorously
as possible,” an INS official said.
The INS last January compiled
lists of50,600 Iranian students enrol
led in U.S. colleges and universities.
To qualify as full-time students, they
must be taking 12 credit hours.
Some 100 immigration officers
were assigned Tuesday in the New
York metropolitan area alone to find
the estimated 4,700 Iranians with
student visas.
Of the 5,500 Iranian students in
Texas, many of those contacted said
the order would not weaken their
support of Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini. But others feared depor
tation and growing anti-Iranian sen
timent. Texas A&M University offi
cials said about 75 students are on its
campus.
One Iranian student in Dallas, an
opponent of the Khomeini regime,
said his life would be endangered if
he was deported to Iran.
“I am scared to report to INS be
cause I might be deported,” said the
student, who would not identify
himself.
“Even if they deport everybody
that doesn’t solve anything,” said Ali
Jafarzadeh, a graduate engineering
student at the University of Texas in
Austin.
“The problem is not the students
here,” he said. “I guess the true end
of this situation is meeting the de
mands of the students back in Iran,
which is the return of the shah and
the relationship cut between the
U.S. and Iran. I’m ready to be de
ported. ”
INS officials in Oklahoma said 25-
50 percent of the 4,317 Iranian stu
dents in the state are there illegally.
Marvin J. Baron, assistant foreign
student adviser at the University of
California at Berkeley, said some of
the 160 Iranians there already have
asked about how to comply with the
order.
“The students are puzzled and
worried,” he said. “Wouldn’t you be
with something like that hanging
over your head?”
In Buffalo, Benedict Fem
trict director of the INS
I CLEVEI
nay have fc
office, said about 50 Iranianstj rty ste ™ us
were processed Tuesday. Fes Y nltet *
he expected about 500 student
processed by week’s end.
The clini
hose who
‘abnormalii
Little initial response IroJfcther autor
6,500 Iranian students inll»;
reported by William Slot jected deal
assistant deputy directorofd;
tion.
At least a dozen Iranians in
necticut were seeking polifc'
lum, said a lawyer specializing
migration cases. The
oppose Khomeini and fearpe; Sector of j
Ford had 161
patents in lifetime
tion if they return to Iran
now, you can com
bine service in tbe Army Reserve or National Guard with Army
ROTC. It’s called the Simultaneous Membership Program (SMP).
And, depending on your academic year when you enter, SMP
can help you earn over $6,500.
Here’s how it works. If you qualify and a vacancy is available,
you become a member of an Army Reserve or National Guard unit
as an officer trainee and, at the same time, enroll in the Army
ROTC advanced course at your college. Your Reserve or Guard
membership will pay you at the minimum level of Sergeant E-5, and
you’ll receive $100 a month during the regular school year as an
Army ROTC advanced course cadet.
At the end of your second year of advanced ROTC, you’ll be
commissioned a second lieutenant and, assuming there’s a vacancy,
serve with a Guard or Reserve unit while you complete the require
ments for your college degree. Upon graduation, you may con
tinue service with a Guard or Reserve unit while pursuing your
civilian career, or you can, if you prefer, compete for active duty as
an Army officer.
So if you’d like to earn over $6,500 while you’re still in college,
get into SMP. Because SMP can help you do it. You can bank on it!
For further information, contact the Professor of Military
Science at your school.
United Press International
WASHINGTON — Henry Ford
was granted 161 patents during his
lifetime, including the important pa
tent No. 610,040 for a “gasoline car
buretor, ” which he obtained on Aug.
30, 1898, that helped to spur the
automotive industry.
fi -stetsi
NATIONAL
GUARD
a
' V.- >«V\.\-vt > ?WVvXr • -
ARMY ROTC. ARMY NATIONAL GUARD. ARMY RESERVE.
SIDS, or
The rese;
jdiagnose pc
ontinue fc
ibnormal r
“The tesl
iEG is to t
low the el
mulus.”
Results c
Oi
Dam building delay ended
—v icreen. Oi
i really getti
Last holdouts surrenda
>ish
on
United Press International
GREENBACK, Tenn.-Tears streamed down Nel
lie McCall’s wrinkled cheeks, but Tom Moser’s face
was set in anger. “To hell with TVA,” he said as
bulldozers pushed over the last opposition to the
long delayed Tellico Dam.
Moser, 46, and Nellie McCall, 75, were the last
holdouts against the dam. Tuesday, the Tennessee
Valley Authority sent federal marshals to evict them
and bulldozers to level their homes.
“I watched them push my house in — 46 years of
your life and in four hours, it was gone,” Moser said.
Moser and McCall had told TVA they would not
move until marshals threw them off their land along
the Little Tennessee River.
Moser, a city judge, was politely told to vacate his
home. His lips pursed in anger, he yelled, “To hell
with TVA,” and left, walking hand-in-hand with his
sisters.
McCall had told them she would move — but only
United 1
if they could find her another farm of tlie Jr ASHING
quality. Roman Catho
“I don’t feel defeated. I feel proud. 1 let they® not h
people know you can fight the government, p * n
fiesty woman said as TVA workers disconnected! |U au cour *t
electricity and shut off water lines. ^ Bocumente
Cherokee Indians made a last-ditch attempl f' s ” 0 P ^
stop the project Tuesday. Attorneys for the Cl accse ofSa
okee asked Justice William Brennan to issue lr jhops Tuesc
junction to halt the flooding because them! )n wouldcc
would cover the “sacred burial grounds” of tl w ™ their
ancestors and infringe on their religious freedot .'U
Brennan, like Justice Potter Stewart last “® aere " av
refused to grant the motion.
The dam had been stopped for two years by
snail darter, a 3-inch perch believed endangej
But Congress and President Carter earlier thii
exempted the project from the Endangered Spa
Act and any other federal law.
Bush claim!
Sfeen the g
e White I
itholic Con
ie National <
hops, on t
ccording
CC has be
ment offi
ing the ct
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United Press International
OMAHA, Neb. — Repul
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d
846-3755
Professional Services
•
Typing Editing
•
Translating
■
Binding
Open 7-10 Mon.-Fri.
9-5 Sat.
prpside.ntial hopeful Geopg
says he is putting togethefa's
campaign organization that is
ing support away from front-n
Ronald Reagan.
“Today Ronald Reagan isck alth official
front, there’s no point denyit nmon food
there’s no point arguing ate S for an out
Bush said Tuesday. a Hugo, O
But citing support from lowiBtate £
retary of State Roy Lounsbeny; berts said
formerly backed Reagan, Bush i local he;
“We are cutting into his (Res: erviewing
organizational support.” F food ban
Bush spoke at a $125-a-plale! Feral fove;
raising breakfast during abritl ! w this hap
in Nebraska while on a two-dayi Officials bl
paign trip through Iowa. Phylococci
Bush also said he beat Reagac mmon typ<
mer Texas Gov. John Conni The studei
Senate GOP leader Howards miting Mo
Jr. of Tennessee “better thaul* rved a for
one” in four consecutive lowas! ach cobble
polls of several thousand p« Officials sa
each, and defeated the samei anyone bei
an informal party conventfe (use of the
Maine. ' I Or. Harok
“We are building the bestos ar y service
zation this party has seen,” Wment, sa:
Bush, a former CIA director, stained rr
ic terial org
Malone s
10re than ,
Us’ of
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