Page 6 THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1980 National/State Texas firms get EPA warning United Press International DALLAS — The Environmental Protection Agency has warned seven Texas companies that new rules effective Jan. 1 might subject them to large penalties for failure to comply with pollution control limits. One official said the penalties could total mil lions of dollars. The penalties, under the new rules, would equal the amount of money com panies save by not installing equipment needed to meet federal air standards. The new rules are part of 1977 amendments to the Clean Air Act. Supporters of the new strategy said it would remove financial incentive from fai lure to comply with air pollution restrictions. The EPA adopted the new rules of applying the law July 28 and the rules take effect Jan. 1. The “informational” letters went out several weeks ago and officials said several companies already have responded. Carl Edlund, regional EPA air enforcement chief, said records show 22 Texas firms could face non-compliance penalties, but he said the first letters went to “the largest sources with the longest record of violation.” He said 15 other firms in other states in the five-state EPA Dallas region also received letters. The Texas firms receiving the letters included Armco Steel Corp. in Houston, Gulf Chemical & Metallurgical Corp. in Texas City, the Temple Eastex wood processing plant in Diboll, the American Smelting & Refining Co. plant in El Paso, Lone Star Steel Co. at Lone Star and two west Texas mineral processors, Southern Clay Products at Allamore and Milwhite Inc. at Van Horn. Hoax victim strips down, strolls through mall hoping to win prizi United Press International OKLAHOMA CITY — A man posing as a disc jockey on a local radio station telephoned a woman, who figuring the promised prizes were worth the embarrassment, stripped down to her underwear and walked through a shopping mall. The unidentified woman, wearing only bra and panties and pushing a stroller with a baby in it, was stopped by a security guard Monday as she walked through the mall. Police said the woman was the vic tim of a hoax. The woman had been told by a male caller posing as a disc jockey that if she would wear only her underwear while walking through the shopping mall, she would win a $16,000-a year job at $10,000 in cash, a car, am; and $1,000 for each ofhertlj officers said. A police spokesman saidii; suspects a radio proir he or she should call the rail for verification and notify | is a sham. FLAG who los loisonin mown ;mall ch Authc iearchin if whicl ialf-mil< ing suet Suit trying religion in schools United Press International LUBBOCK— Defense and plain tiff s attorneys in a school prayer law suit filed by a civil liberties group spent the first day of testimony arguing whether school board policy invited religious activity. Thomas Griffith, attorney for the Lubbock Civil Liberties Union which brought the federal lawsuit against the school system, tried to prove officials encouraged certain re ligious activities in the schools. Attorney Tom Johnson, mean while, argued that religious ac tivities were not promoted by the schools and that any volations of students’ rights occurred without the board’s approval. Among the witnesses at the pro ceedings Monday was Max O’Ban- ion, Coronado High School princip al, who testified about several inci dents that prompted protests from some students. O’Banion said some students ob jected to an October 1979 perform ance by a musical group called Sweet Comfort Band. He said a statement by the group and one song contained religious references. Griffith told presiding U.S. Dis trict Judge Halbert Woodward that his questions to O’Banion were de signed to elicit responses that would prove the school board “invited reli gious programs” into the schools. The school system's policy states the board “adheres to the principle of freedom of religion as expressed in the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of Texas. ” But, asked by Griffith if principals “were encouraged to think the board would back them up” if religious acti vities were presented, O’Banion said O’Banion said a morning devo tional discontinued for several years was resumed at his high school, largely at the students’ request. Johnson introduced issues of the school newspaper hoping to show the devotional was begun anew at the students’ initiative. A Unitarian minister, meanwhile, testified a study of religious activities conducted in Lubbock schools showed an emphasis on Christianity, especially evangelical Christianity, even though students of other faiths attend the schools. The school system has asked the court to deny the plaintiffs declara tory or injunctive relief, because the religious policy now has been altered. Third-World economies hurt women United Press International LUBBOCK — Despite their in creased responsibility in developing nations, women take a back seat to men in programs designed to in crease productivity and employ ment, says a third world specialist. Dr. Nadia Youssef of the Interna tional Center for Research on Women, located in Washington, D.C., said women make up a large percentage of the agricultural work force in developing nations but their roles are not reflected in surveys. She spoke during the opening ses sion of a two-day conference at Texas Tech University on “Challenges In volving Women in Developing Na tions.” She said the directors of assistance programs in developing nations need to be aware of women’s roles in those countries and the way assistance programs affect the women’s lives. Perhaps ironically, development programs can have disastrous effects on women, she said. When agricul tural technology is increased, for ex ample, many women lose their jobs to automation and mechanization. Often those results are not reflected in unemployment figures, she said. Like their Western counterparts, Youssef said, women in developing nations find themselves increasingly in the mainstream of the urban work force, but usually in the lowest-paid occupations. More women head their households and an increasing number live alone, she said. 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