— 'f Battalion/Page 16 February 5,1982 ^ 1. Women (continued from page 1) there, “I like the small town atmosphere,” she said. “I’ve lived here for 11 years and I know a lot of people.” Childs, who recently was di vorced, calls the superwoman image of women today ridicu lous. She said a married and working woman still has the ma jor responsibilities of caring for the children and home. “You are really talking about a lot of stress,” she said. “I think a woman must be incredibly organized to get all that done.” Ravey, 36, radiates energy and enthusiasm about her work. She is one of the few women in the commercial printing busi ness in Texas. Ravey has operated the print ing center for four years. Pre viously, it was a federally funded urban planning center owned by two Texas A&M professors. Ravey worked as the bookkeep er and the professors did much of their own printing to cut down on expenses. But, she ex plained, they sold the printing side of their business to her when urban planning funds were cut. She said most women are in volved in the copy business rather than commercial print ing. “It’s traditionally been a man’s role,” she said. “I’m not sure why. But, I guess partly be cause it’s just a dirty business.” Her husband, Rick, is a local architect. And, she said, he travels with her on business trips. “One of the funniest things,” she said, “is when I go to shows to buy equipment and the salesmen always turn to Rick. And he says, ‘I think it’s terrific, but this lady over here has the yourself. You can arranp | life around time withthei time for partiesorwhate She said one obstai faced when she wanted chase the printing centi obtaining financing. “I whether it was because 1 woman, or because it was; business or whether it wasi Nikki Ravey said one obstacle she faced when she wanted to purchase the printing center was obtaining financing. Kennedy secretly taped talks in White House checkbook. So, I think you’d bet ter convince her.’” Ravey and her husband have three children. She admits the hardest thing for her is juggling family and work. “But,” Ravey said, “that’s one of the advantages to working for was a woman in a traditional business,” sh “It’s hard to say. Butin sistent. “I look back on it ‘Ciee, 1 had a hard timeta ing $25,000. And then,laj I went out and bought a) press almost by the stroh pen.” She said in herbusines are few people who can Ik the pressure of deadline' “A lot of people o . let cd," she said. “ButyouJ you just have totakeitontl a time, one step at a titnei the very best you can Pacman fever Gary Barmore, left, a senior industrial their skills on the video games in the distribution major from Houston, and lower level of the Memorial Student David Welch, a sophomore chemical en- Center, gineering major from Dallas, sharpen Former IRS head rejects need for tax-exempt law United Press International President John F. Kennedy secretly taped more than 600 White House conversations with advisers, world figures and members of his family, the Ken nedy Library’s director said Thursday. Daniel H. Fenn said library staffers in Boston have spent six years listening to and transcrib ing 100 to 150 hours of record ings — tapes that reportedly in clude Kennedy’s talks with such figures as Gen. Douglas MacAr- thur and Adlai Stevenson, as well as his wife, Jacqueline, and brothers Edward and Robert. A recording system was first used in July 1962 and was de signed so no one else in the room knew of the taping, Fenn said. Evelyn Lincoln, Kennedy’s personal secretary, said Ken nedy had a switch in his office that activated a red light at her desk — the signal that told her to turn on the recording system. If the light went on when the president was on the phone, she was to turn on a system hooked up to the telephone. If the light went on when Kennedy was in the Cabinet room or Oval Office, she was to turn on a sys tem that would pick up remarks there, she told the Post. “He (Kennedy) was very con scious of history,” Mrs. Lincoln told the Post. “These were for history and he wanted to have them for that and he never once went back to one.” Fenn said the recording sys tem taped 325 meetings and 275 telephone conversations. The Post said it obtained a log from the library of the record ings, which indicated they in cluded “vast amounts of unre leased information, including many highly classified meetings The years have been spent “trying to determine who’s talk ing. It’s a long, long process,” Fenn said. United Press International WASHINGTON —The head of the Internal Revenue Service in the Nixon administration dis puted Thursday President Reagan’s contention that legisla tion is needed to deny tax- exempt status to schools that dis criminate. leader Howard Baker hinted a joint resolution — rather than express congressional intent joint resolution — ratner man that tax exemptions be denied to legislation — might be used to schools that discri Former IRS Commissioner Randolph Thrower told the House Ways and Means Com mittee that President Nixon himself reviewed the 1970 IRS ruling that denied tax exemp tions to schools that discriminate on the basis of race. L B. L. Shane's AKEVIEW Continuing a Tradition of the Very BestJ Country-Western Music and Dancing! — Thursday Feb. 4 NICKLE BEER NIGH1 Lone Star Draft Beer 5