Pa irts : y THE BATTALION FRIDAY, MARCH 7, 1980 Page 5 A Fly your talents in CSkite contest es of $72.2 mill; n double the llion. Holzwaserj: 1 to continue, conditions nowiti. int for the ear osj r and get a refe oe a substantial s; , for one. uring short ( anu ntccrtiaiiuii ih mg ownanlj j^j-g con test on March 22. If you remember how to build the kites your dad may have helped you with as a child, you may be ready for some competi tion. It’s kite weather again this year and kite builders and flyers will . have a chance to show their ta il lents in the College Station Parks and Recreation Department’s The contest will begin at 2 p.m. on the grounds of A&M Consoli dated High School at 701 West Loop in College Station. First, second and third place awards will be given for the high- st flying, best decorated, largest, smallest, most active and strongest kites and youngest and oldest kite flyers, said Marci Rod gers, recreation superintendent. ictal components. 1 -d sense to reopisj and replace white; he said, estimated t pumps remanti bis try last years) heat 1,600 ( ar. •e savings avengn , Holzwassersail ;e cost comparison alternator $113, $49; new el $74; new si; tured $45; new lanufactured $38. e particularly ii car owners, whoi irehase price but] s for parts, he m for his optimal laying on the e will be a grei cment parts, ed by Holzw; an rewindingsti-S”HOUSTON - A woman who sur- cal car repair st; vived a car crash in which seven Kith anniversan: members of her family died 18 years ago has accused a mortician of reneg- > deeply invol ing on his promise of free burial and ster the trainre of threatening to dig up the bodies hanics ami unless she pays the bill, ly in the autoii»i.lHDeborah Jackson Green, 28, a onsunicrui Texas Department of Human Re ar part designs sources employee, filed suit in state aufacturing district court Wednesday making the s a crime tothicharges against E.J. Butler Jr., own- rtor when the raflf he said. There will be two age divisions: children 15 and under and indi viduals 16 and over, Rodgers said. Susan Edens, a Texas A&M student will be one of the judges of the contest, Rodgers said. Edens has attended several kite contests in Austin, where the idea of a kite contest for College Sta tion originated. Participation from A&M stu dents is expected Rodgers said. “One student told us he is getting his dorm floor involved in the contest,” she said. This year’s competition Rod gers said, is the second kite con test sponsored by the Parks and Recreation Department in Col lege Station. state Beaches safe from oil washups if well flow down, scientist says 3ff( JS St b etie: don ... United Press International CORPUS CHRISTI — U S. beaches are safe from new washups of Mexican oil this year if reports are true that the flow from a runaway well has been reduced to 400 barrels per day, the chief U.S. scientist monitoring the spill said Thursday. “If the 400 barrel per day number is correct, we’re out of the woods, ” said John Robinson, a Commerce Department scientist who has observed the oilspill since last sum mer. “We re not going to have any more problems.” Robinson said his prediction was safe despite reports Coast Guard pilots Thursday spotted a 40-mile- long oilslick floating in the Gulf of Mexico only 78 miles from the mouth of the Rio Grande. The Coast Guard’s chief oilspill coordinator, Capt. Gerald C. Hin son, said he was surprised by the appearance of the 200-yard-wide slick but was not alarmed because southflowing currents would not give way to a northward flow until late April. But Coast Guard Capt. Gerald C. Hinson and Robinson said it was im possible for U.S. authorities to know the precise amount of oil flowing from Ixtoc I in the Bay of Campeche because the Mexican government continued to prefer to handle the 9- month-old blowout themselves. Last summer the Mexican govern- oman, mortician battle over free burial promise er of Paradise Cemeteries. She asks unspecified damages for “harassment” and a court order blocking Butler’s alleged threat to dig up the bodies of her mother, father, three sisters and two brothers, and re-bury them in a com mon grave. Green also asks that Butler be ordered to let her place grave mar kers and flowers on the graves. She said Butler has allowed her only to Clayton warns of tax hike, no extra money for relief m I noted as sayky his country will y when Pahtl 1 stop wl ) topple his ,\lnt w with the w m newspaper 4| rnibay, Kamula >els fightraghisstj ring offensive i then United Press International r AUSTIN — Texans may be fac- |ing a tax increase rather than tax relief next year. Speaker Bill gClayton warned Thursday. Clayton said he is dubious of prospects for the $600 million to |$1 billion tax relief program Gov. Bill Clements has said he will propose. The state’s third highest official said he fears the 1981 Legislature may be forced to raise taxes rather than lower them. “I don’t see where we could /find any monies at this point in time for any tax relief,” Clayton said. “I would hope it would be so. I just don’t see it. I don’t think we re going to gravevard off®I-have enough projected surplus ... to take care of inflationary needs unless the comptroller comes up with some different projections,” Clayton said. He said the state’s financial situation will be clearer in August when the Legislative Budget Board begins hearings on state agency spending and Comptrol ler Bob Bullock updates his re venue projections. The comptroller in January re vised revenue estimates down ward, predicting $324 million in the state treasury at the end of the 1979-80 biennium. However, Bullock said about $200 million will be unexpended balances, leaving only $124 million of actual surplus. lat the CIA M ■r Afghanistan, t d southern paitj th to China andS I other nation!. A’s) whole sckl mistan intoai r they lostt id. government is! ere nee of llietw the crisis to(M iree to pi ■onticr, Kamii>| es to any i angement sbi| □nformity wM it there sUda aeddling in ore irmal added. E Sun Theatres 333 University 846-! The only movie in town Double-Feature Every Week 10 a.m.-2 a.m. Sun.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Fri.-Sat. No one under 18 Ladies Discount With This Coupon BOOK STORE & 250 PEEP SHOWS 846-9808 PLITT Southern SKAGGS CNTR-ACROSS F” OM A&F.l 846-6714 .s 846-1151 7: 30 900 SAT & SUN 1 : 30 300 500 700 900 [R] How much shock can you stand? NIGHTof BLOODY HORROR its lose tocau js route. I ition CINEMA DF 'Starts FRIDAY... OBLAST . MARRIED rse JU.I III 1111111111 ri n m n rfl visit the graves. She said he gained favorable pub licity by promising free burials and hould be held to the bargain. Butler admits the re-burial threat — “I might have mentioned that I have the right to do that, but I was just trying to get my money — but it could not be done without unlikely permission from the Harris County medical examiner. Butler denies promising free bu rial. He said an insurance company promised to pay the $3,015 bill but reneged, so “the only thing I could do was try to get my money from the only remaining family member. ” Butler said he trid to collect from Green’s only surviving brother, Cary Jackson Jr., 7, but was unsuccessful. Jackson, a former aide to Houston Mayor Jim McConn, was shot to death in a freeway incident last year. District judge frees 3 men, rules they were held illegally ment reported the oil flow was at 30,000 barrels per day, but said half that amount was burning off at the wellhead. Capping and wellblocking efforts were unsuccessful until Pemex, the Mexican national oil company, com pleted drilling two relief wells now being used to funnel brine and mud into the main well. Pemex had been plagued by bad weather but Hinson said a 72-hour period of stable conditions could re sult in the capping of the well. “This is the first time I’ve been encouraged,” Robinson said. “I’ve been a pessimist since day one. But we re now to an extent corroborating (by overnlight observations) the in formation that the oil flow has been reduced.” Robinson said Pemex had slowed the flow previously only to see it spurt back out of control. Hinson said Texas beaches had been hit by tarballs of weathered oil throughout the winter but said milit ary and civilian clean-up crews had kept pace with the impact, leaving beaches “in as good a shape now as they ever are.” Last summer repeated washups of oil on Texas beaches spoiled the LET THE . RUSSIANS PLAY WITH THEMSELVES LET THE RUSSIANS PLAY WITH THEMSELVES tourist trade and created serious financial problems for Padre Island hotels and shops. Gov. Bill Clements, after touring a portion of the oily Texas beach, said the publicity about the pollution was “a big todo about nothing.” The state and federal governments as well as beachfront businesses and property owners subsequently filed damage suits amounting to hundreds of millions of dollars. SEDCO, the drilling firm founded by Clements and which made him a millionaire, owned the Ixtoc I rig. After the blowout the rig was towed into the Gulf of Mexico and sunk. \L U United Press International ODESSA — District Attorney John Green pledged Thursday “jus tice will be done” despite a judge’s ruling to release three men charged in the recovery of more than three tons of marijuana and the seizure of a DC-3 airplane. Released were Jesse David New, 33, of McAllen; Humberto Pablo Nunez, 46, of North Bergen, N.J., originally from Havana, Cuba, and Richard Morley Stewart, 42, of Nor man, Ark. A fourth man, Robert Lee Ross, 39, of Harlingen, was arrested separately on Feb. 25 but was not released. 70th District Judge Gene Ater ruled they were held illegally be cause of discrepancies between the criminal complaint filed and the search and arrest warrants. Green disputed Ater’s ruling saying it is not necessary to allege the same offense in the search and arrest warrants and the complaint that eve tually is filed. Green indicated the three men had left the state. QpOo TM 1980 T Getts PROTEST THE MOSCOW OLYMPICS WHITE POLY/COTTON T-SHIRT WITH RED AND BLUE IMPRINT. 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