9 init :or The Battalion Longhorn i Curtis as the pl» e in favor ay, Dickey to rback MikeJ the right, li ‘"'t nk to Mosley' He chose middle for 21 e touchdow Vol. 73 No. 66 16 Pages in 2 Sections Committee urges wssing Taps bill said of the ■ to the lei 1 went to D e secondaryBxas A&M University’s student ser- ith half th Us committee will recommend tonight j otherhalii ^jthe student senate pass a bill which lie was open ||lil change the frequency of .Silver Taps, m his part, 55 minutes of discussion and con ation of the results of a survey taken ekin the Memorial Student Center, mmittee voted Tuesday night in of the bill which woidd provide for Taps to be held if necessary on the Tuesday of every month from Septem- April after a student dies. took it." chdown at No. issible r Washingtaj railing thi :he Horns || /e describer phi senate will hear the committee’s re- ngs best af jliiendations tonight at the same time it the final reading of the bill and votes e question. :1 to take,’'j(!| • a long timtf pilverTaps is currently held on a Tues- y is soon as possible after a student’s with no ceremony being held be- n Aggie Muster on April 21 and the ning of classes in the fall. 3 survey taken last Tuesday and resday showed the 1,163 students re- Iding opposed the change by a margin of 52-48 percent. The poll was taken by Student Government members who set up a table in the MSC and took opinions from students who volunteered them. During Tuesday’s discussion, Paul Bet tencourt, vice president of rules and reg ulations, pointed out that the results could be inconclusive depending on the way the questions on the survey were worded and on how well the lists of pros and cons pro vided for the students were drawn up. Other bills the senate will consider in its final meeting of the semester include ones which would: —recommend the installation of lights for safety and security reasons around the aerobics track; —recommend the installation of a traffic light at the intersection of Joe Boutt Boule vard and Wellborn Highway; —request the installation of Nautilus weight training facilities in the G. Rollie White Coliseum expansion. The facilities would cost an estimated $40,000. \C-I0 team, ir the season,! Hal and Fin hopes quart 10 has not pi last two injury, willrt iin Bowl o play, hell team has alst ie loss cks, A. ;aving the le threat, have are , and our We have 1 the ng,” Akers iv he is nself.” ounty to start class or handlers of food rent Rk free thro* lay of thefc itermission, scored sM to build Arb irers for the! id five rebff rd Scott H# nd snared freshman off' the bee th fivep Genii ?arly vhich percent sh« he first half ter it by or the gamr L forward th ends • throw with ing to m 81-80 n| By SYLVIA FELLOWS Battalion Reporter All people who handle food for pub- of h ic consumption will soon be required Jo# :o attend an educational class by the Brazos County Health Department. Beginning Jan. 1, a new food hand er’s education course will replace the lounty’s old tuberculosis and syphilis letection program for food handlers, quart Completion of the new educational aurse is the new method of issuing health cards for personnel of food re lated businesses. All food handlers within Brazos County will be required to attend the course before new or revalidated health certificates are issued. The certificate — which will he valid for four years — is especially convenient for Texas A&M University students, said Andi Wilson, food handler’s program assistant. “They can get one (health certifi cate) as a freshman and then they won’t have to worry about it any more,’’ Wilson said. The course will be offered three times a month at the Brazos Commun ity Center and will cost $5 per person for the three-hour course. The first class will begin Jan. 8 from 2-5 p.m. Those persons now holding valid health cards will not be required to take the course until their current health cards expire. The new educational course will teach methods of food-handling tech niques, preventing food-borne dis ease and poisoning, proper sanitation methods, personal hygiene and insect and rodent control. This type of educational course has been used by many other Texas coun ties for several years, Wilson said. Brazos County switched to this new method of issuing health certificates because the incidence of tuberculosis and syphilis cases in the county through the old program has been so insignificant in the past few years. Consequently, the state has refused further funding of the testing system. “This educational course is a much better way of certification, anyway. We hope that after taking the course, the people will understand the im portance of health inspections and proper food handling, said Wilson. “It’s something that everybody can benefit from and use in their personal homes also.’’ After the first year, when commer cial food handlers will be given top priority, we encourage private home makers to take the course,’’ Wilson said. Presently, health inspectors check health certificates and inspect opera tions of commercial food businesses twice a year. Bakeries and bars with food are inspected as well as re staurants. People can register one month in advance for the course at the Health Department. The $5 registration fee will be required at that time. The Health Department encour ages people to register now if their health card expires during the month of December so they will be assured a spot in the January classes. aptors contradict minister Militants reject U.N. am, •, Dominguez 1 Arcmiega f United Press International ITEHRAN, Iran — Militant students to- lay flatly rejected the U.N. Security Coun- icil s call for the immediate release of the 50 ericans and warned revolutionary arts would try the hostages as spies if the iposed shah left the United States for any untry but Iran. student spokesman appeared to con- idict a statement by Foreign Minister idegh Qotbzadeh that the students them- ilves would judge the hostages, now in eir 32nd day of captivity. j'The U.N. Security Council is under the fders of the American government and i CIA and therefore, this decision is not bportant for us,” a militant spokesman pd of the 15-0 vote at the council meeting uesday, which Iran boycotted. All the world has seen that the U.N. is pned by the U.S.A. and we reject this cision.” The spokesman added, “Our demands to (le U.N. that the shah be returned have en ignored. If and when the shah is re- firned, the hostages will be freed. But if the shah is not returned and goes any other country from the United Itates, the hostages will immediately be |ut on trial and face Islamic revolutionary' astice,” he added. The charge of spying [arries a maximum penalty of death. In Washington, a top White House aide Jisputed claims the hostages were well tre- ted, saying, “The American hostages have been threatened with execution if they fail to cooperate, ” and added, “They have been threatened at gunpoint and told they would be shot.” Diplomatic sources said the militants’ continued intransigent stand would greatly complicate any fresh attempts from moder ate Iranians and the United Nations to se cure freedom for the hostages. Finance Minister Abol Hassan Bani- Sadr, who was acting foreign minister for 19 days, visited the students at the embassy earlier this week and lectured them, saying they had “no legal right to put the hostages on trial.” Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini this week received an overwhelming mandate to be come Iran’s absolute ruler for life, and di plomatic sources said this development offered the best prospect for the eventual safe release of the Americans. Qotbzadeh insisted Iran had done all it could to defuse the crisis and the next move was up to President Carter. The foreign minister also said Iran had urged the Soviet Union not to interfere in the confrontation even if the United States launched military strikes against Iran. Reacting to such a possibility, the gov ernment announced the formation of a “combat cadre” of former soliders to pro tect the country from “American aggres- In Moscow, in its first high-level com mentary on the crisis in Iran, the Commun- : '' Wednesday, December 5, 1979 College Station, Texas USPS 045 360 Phone 845-2611 Football season’s last yell practice was held on the steps of the YMCA Building after Saturday’s 13-7 victory over the University of Texas. After being dumped ceremoniously into the Fish Pond, yell leaders Mark Outlaw, Brian Hill, Pete Greaves, Jeff Smiley and Ed Franza begin the post-game celebration with Aggie Band seniors in the background. Battalion photo by Jeff R. Sanders Title IX Government rules confuse women s athletics By ANGELIQUE COPELAND Battalion Reporter and United Press International Before the Justice Department inter vened in the sex discrimination suit on be half of Melanie Zentgraf, most of the con troversy surrounding Title IX dealt with its application in regulation of intercollegiate athletics. Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 bars all forms of discrimination on sexual grounds in schools and universities. Implementing the regulation in athletics has been th subject of debate since it be came effective July 21, 1975. Tuesday, the government confounded the issue more when it ordered all colleges and universities receiving federal aid to immediately make athletic scholarship funds available to women and men in prop ortion to their participation in sports prog rams. But aside from scholarships, the new policy says schools will not have to spend proportional amounts of money on women athletes as on men. The rules pertain to both public and pri vate institutions and those which do not comply with the scholafship rule could lose federal financial assistance. Policing could be delayed for several months because the new U.S. Education Department is just getting organized. In spelling out the long awaited policy regarding Title IX, HEW Secretary Patri cia Harris announced the government will conduct a nationwide evaluation of prog rams at schools receiving federal assistance to determine compliance with the law. She said the guidelines mean, for exam ple, that if 70 percent of a school’s athletes are male, they are entitled to 70 percent of the scholarship dollars their school makes available. But 30 percent would go to females. Before the regulation was released, the government required recipients of federal funds who operate or sponsor intercollegi ate, club or intramural athletics to provide equal athletic opportunities for members of both sexes. Factors determining whether an institu tion had been providing equal opportunity included selection of sports, accommoda tion of interests, number and compensa tion of coaches and publicity. A three-year transition period that expired July 21, 1978, was granted to universities by which to comply. By November 1978, HEW had received 93 complaints alleging more than 62 institutions of higher education were not providing equal opportunities for women. In response, a proposed policy interpre tation setting specific guidelines was de veloped by HEW. The purpose was to clar ify what universities must do with their programs to be within the law. The interpretation then proposed by HEW established a two-part approach to compliance and enforcement. Failure to comply resulted in a threat to withhold federal funds to the university. The first part was aimed at immediately eliminating discrimination in existing athletic programs with two standards of compliance. The program was to have equal per capi ta expenditures in what HEW termed “readily measurable benefits” and compa rability in those areas HEW said were “not easily financially measurable. ” Measurable benefits included scholar ships, recruitment and supplies. Examples of nonmeasurable benefits were opportun ity to compete and practice, recieve coaching and facilities. The ruling Tuesday kept the measurable benefit ruling the same, but changed the government’s position on the second group. Comparability of the unmeasurable benefits is no longer required, according to HEW’s announcement. The second part encouraged continued growth of women’s athletics and overcom ing what HEW terms the “discriminatory effects of the historic emphasia on men’s sports” within a reasonable length of time. HEW requires universities to take speci fic steps to provide more athletic opportu nities for women to “fully accommodate their rising interest in athletic competi tion.” Tuesday’s new policy added to this by stating items such as equipment and sup plies, games, travel expenses, locker rooms and medical training need not be identical, but must be “equal or equal in effect.” “HEW does not require identical be nefits, opportunities, or treatment,” the policy statement said, “but the effect of any differences must be negligible.” Before the announcement, equal per capita spending was to be met by an institu tion unless it could demonstrate the differ ences in expenditures were based on non- discriminatory factors. Under the new decision, exact equality will not be required, but HEW is expected to allow only small differences unless these non-discriminatory factors are present. These factors include cost of a sport or the scope of competition; for example, na tional rather than regional or local competi tion. However, these factors do not exempt revenue producing sports from the per capita calculation. See Title IX, page 3 resolution ist Party newspaper Pravda said today the United States was headed down a “very alarming and dangerous” path, adding the seizure of American hostages in Iran was no justification for military action. Diplomatic sources said there was still optimism, despite the latest apparent set back, that Khomeini could launch a fresh initiative to help secure the hostages’ re lease. They said such a move would come only after results are officially announced at the end of the week on the two-day referen dum to turn Iran into an Islamic state with the Moslem elder himself as absolute ruler. In a move escalating its economic war fare with the United States, Iran officially forbade foreign companies from paying for oil with dollars and announced Tuesday it will raise oil prices in 10 days. In other developmments, British Air ways has suspended its flights to Tehran and rerouted flights over Iranian airspace because of the hostage situation at the embassy in Iran, an airline spokesman said. The spokesman said the airline sus pended flights to the Iranian capital Tues day because of pilots’ concern about their safety. The airline also rerouted its eight daily flights that normally travel through Iranian airspace en route to Australia and the Far East, he said. Protestors denied permits for shah demonstration United Press International SAN ANTONIO — City officials, citing the “well-being of the hostages in Iran,” have responded to a test of their authority by refusing to allow an Iranian student group to protest publicly against Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi. But the students’ lawyer — back ed by the American Civil Liberties Union — indicates they will appeal the action, and the Socialist Workers Party has gone ahead with plans to stage a peaceful picket line at city hall Thursday in protest of the shah’s presence in San Antonio. “Our greatest concern has been for the well-being of the hostages in Iran,” City Manager Tom Huebner said Tuesday in denying requests by the loosely organized Iranian Mus- lem Organization for two protest permits. The shah, whose return to Iran is being demanded by Moslem stu dents in exchange for the hostages being held in Tehran, is convalesc ing from cancer therapy and gall bladder surgery at the visiting offic ers’ quarters at Lackland Air Force Base amid extraordinarily tight security. Huebner said city officials were concerned about the possibility of violence should the Iranians be allowed to protest, and said they consulted with a number of agen cies, including the National Security Council and the Texas Department of Public Safety before denying the permits. But he said, “At no time did any person or agency tell us what to do. We view this as a local issue.” The Iranian Muslim Association, described by its lawyer Louis Lin den as a loosely organized group with about 200 members, had re quested one permit to demonstrate Friday at Lackland’s north entrance and another for a 400-person march from Travis Park to city hall and the Alamo an hour later. Although Linden indicated he would appeal the city’s action, which he called a “judgment call,” he said he would advise his clients not to demonstrate in the meantime. The Socialist Workers Party, meanwhile, announced it would set up a peaceful picket line in front of city hall Thursday. Anthony Gon zalez, a SWP congressional candi date, said the organization had been assured by the city the demonstra tion would be legal because it would be held on a public sidewalk. “The majority of the people in San Antonio do not want the shah here, ” Gonzalez said. “We would not have protected Adolf Hitler had he lived through World War II.” San Antonio has been the site of numerous anti-shah demonstrations since 1978, but many Iranian stu dents, fearing deportation, have ex pressed reluctance to demonstrate. The Texas leader of the Ku Klux Klan, Gene West, had said his orga nization also would request a permit if the city gave the Iranian associa tion authority to conduct the demon stration and the parade. “I think for these people to de monstrate at this time is a slap in the face of the American people, ” West said. “After all, this is our country. I don’t see how they can refuse an American organization’s right to march, while giving a bunch of fore igners a permit. “If you can’t protect unpopular speech, then we really don’t have free speech.” Goldstein said such an advance decision by the city “smacks of prior restraint.