state Battalion/Page 6 April 8,1982 Annexing of offshore oil well off Port Arthur upheld again United Press International AUSTIN — The Texas Sup reme Court upheld without comment Wednesday Port Arthur’s annexation of a drilling platform, 10 miles out in the Gulf of Mexico, that is among the most productive along the Texas coast. Superior Oil Co., owner of the lease on state lands in the gulf and of the drilling plat form, had challenged the city’s annexation of a one-mile-wide strip of land into the gulf on grounds it violated the com pany’s rights of due process and equal protection under the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Consti tution. deLcnthe Canvas TuTu Slippers perfect for spring! yellow, red, beige, navy, natural, white, lavender & green. $25.00 shellenberger’s 520 University College Station 693-0995 The state earlier had filed suit challenging Port Arthur’s annexation of the submerged land that includes the well, but a Port Arthur court ruled out right in favor of the annexation. The Superior suit had been consolidated with the state case for that ruling. But since the state attorney general failed to appeal within the required time after the ruling, the prospect of an appellate court overturning the decision was voided. Superior had appealed on its own, alleging violation of its con stitutional rights, but the courts rejected that argument. The Beaumont Court of Civil Appeals said Port Arthur’s three-step annexation of the gulf lands complied with state annexation laws, and Superior could not challenge that annexa tion on constitutional grounds. Port Arthur, which is not on the coast, first annexed land along the Sabine River to the gulf, then in three separate ordi nances annexed the strip into the gulf that included the Super ior oil and gas lease. City taxes on the lease for 1980 amounted to $774,430, which Superior paid under pro test. The Legal Foundation of America issued a friend-of-the- court brief, supporting Super ior’s arguments, that said: “There has never been a case such as the case at bar, in which an inland city has taxed by anne xation down to the coast, south westerly along the coast, and then, in three steps, outward 10 miles into the ocean. “This case is that rare, out landish situation in which even the general taxing power has reached its limits.” You are cordially invited to the KAPPA SIGMA Expansion Party on April 15, 1982 For more information call 696-3172 696-7679 693-5696 (Greg) (Bryan) (Jeff) Shuttle test ruined by freezer thaw United Press International HOUSTON — A relatively simple freezer failed at John son Space Center and des- icl nea troyed nearly all the data from one of the experiments flown aboard space shuttle Col umbia last month. JSC spokesman Brian Welch said Tuesday that a freezer cannister lost its cool ing power over the weekend and thawed human cell sam ples electrically purified in orbit. The cells were purified between March 22 and 30 in a process called elec trophoresis. One experimenter, who sent up visible red blood cells, hoped to obtain useful infor mation by studying film of the electrophoresis unit in opera tion. Another experimenter, who sent up invisible kidney cells, lost everything. The freezing was impor tant not only because it immo bilized the samples for later study, but also because it kept the cells alive in a frozen sus pended animation. When they thawed, they died. It was the third major fai lure among 14 pure science experiments on Columbia’s third mission. In orbit, a sun sensor failed and a balky tele vision camera on the shuttle cargo bay arm prevented de ployment of a contamination monitor. Welch said the latest failure occurred on the ground. The samples were transferred into a freezer cannister after Col umbia landed at White Sands Missile Range, N.M., March 30. The freezer used in orbit had no problems. The ground freezer apparently worked for four or five days after landing, while experimenters prepared to remove the sam ples for study, Welch said. This type of freezer, which looks a bit like an ice cream churn, has been used fre quently. Such freezers have kept samples f rozen fort: two weeks. The cannister has non ing parts and relies sold; liquid nitrogen for cold.Ii nitrogen apparently 1*,. off through a leak over; weekend while no onei; watching, Welch said. Dr. Stuart Nachtwey off said: “Of all the things^ could have gone wrong,: freezer is the last piece equipment we would have: pected to have troubles] The electrophoresis ;■ cess used on Columbia's^ flight involved passing electric charge throughe; 7-in( h-long clear tubes(idi cells. The process divide^ with dif ferent electricalpn Officials said the fieete:; ilure will not affect plantn continuous-flow a trophoresis experiments duled aboard the fourth tie mission in June. Latino pastors end ‘mission in reverse’ £ * £ SPIRIT AWARD Up to 20 Seniors 15 Juniors 10 Sophomores 5 Freshmen and 2 Graduate Students will be selected by a committee of faculty, staff and students based on outstanding contributions to the student life pro gram at Texas A&M University. A framed certificate and a distinctive watch will be presented to each recipient by the Former Students Association on May 5. Grade requirement: Must be a student in good standing. Applications are available from April 2-12 in all deans’ offices, Student Services Office (YMCA Bldg.), and the Student Programs Office (216 MSC) and are due in the Forsyth Alumni Center, 131 MSC, by 5 p.m. United Press International EULESS — Thirteen Latin American church officials re turned to their homelands this week from what one of them cal led a “mission in reverse” to the United States. During their visit, three of the officials urged their north Texas counterparts to consider how U.S. multinational corpora tions with investments in El Sal vador and Latin America prey on the poor. Sponsored by both U.S. and Latin American Methodists, the 19-member mission challenged North Americans to resist what they called unethical corporate behavior and join an ecumenical movement based on struggle against oppression. A Panamanian bishop, a Cos ta Rican seminary professor and a Chilean pastor, now at a Mas sachusetts church, came on a mission the Chilean compared to that of the Old Testament prophet Amos. Amos is remembered as the Jewish herdsman who also traveled north to denounce Israel because it had sold the righteous for silver and the poor for a pair of shoes. Bishop Secundino Morales of Panama, the Rev. Ulises Torres of Chile and Yolanda de Flores of Latin American Biblical Semi nary in Costa Rica denounced an economic system they said impoverished 150 million Latin Americans. “When (the U.S. economic) system works best, it works worst for us,” Torres said Saturday at the First United Methodist Church of Euless. While they criticized U.S. military involvement in El Salva dor, the three repeatedly emphasized the role of U.S. cor porations in that country’s prob lems. “They did essentially assert that the system of capitalism has produced some policies that have caused people to be ex ploited and that’s a fairly com mon theme among people of socialistic inclinations,” said the Rev. DeForrest Wiksten of Dal las’ 550-member Northaven Un ited Methodist Church. Approximately 40 partici pants heard the four-hour pre sentation, which included an Ed Asner-narrated film on the his tory of U.S. military and corpo rate moves in Latin America. Bishop Morales saved his har shest words for a final question period. “There is a kind of (in the U.S.) to regainth<(l nance of the 50’s,’' heiM “The U.S. would likeiol it is the Boy Scout of theJ Morales was also blutlfl support of Nicaragua's* junta. “We are looking to N with great expectation,It “But not only that, wesij Nicaragua.” Despite the occasional talk, the three mostly rek Biblical imagery and rti symbolism to influence! people who heard them. “We have been in Lent! to remember the suffeiiit Christ,” Torres said. % remember that the r _. T Salvador have been inapd social, and cultural Lentil' years.” Morales declared the must identify with the pot) that the its task is toaccos the people in their seard life that is more human GM interest plan OK’d for Fexas United Press International AUSTIN — The Texas Motor Vehicle Commission has revised its rule prohibiting rebate prog rams requiring dealer participa tion, apparently clearing the way for General Motorsr its 12.8 percent financing' in Texas. Olivia Belle, BeH (Sever when United Press Ii OAKLAND -i arrying 8,800 g; ine jackknifed ar lames inside a hi lighway tunnel c fay, killing seven The accident o y after midnight nnnecting Oakk irban Contra C< WE BUY BOOKS EVERYDAY! AND GIVE 20% MORE IN TRADE ON USED BOOKS I GM earlier announj would not offer the prog Texas because of the y Vehicle Commission’s rulfj hibiting any rebate or inj rate programs requiringo butions by the auto dealest because of a suit by AlH| General Mark White tosif earlier CM rebate prognj The California H aid the identities vere not immedk Witnesses saic :ars were caught it ound lanes of i unnel on the ea Francisco B; ruck apparently avoid a transit b loded. Fire teams and rs, kept out of the |*FLOUPOT / S*Pl The commission’s nf'l BOOKSTORE Northgate — Across from the Post Office permits General Motors ance Corporation to ol 12.8 percent interest raid ram in Texas if dealer p tion is “clearly and cons Tired of having competitive pric ly disclosed” in any adv^ MR The Origin of the Universe THE BIG BANG I ACCELs HURST •MOR 'AYS«KONI«CRAGEF GASKET 2-Day Service On S 1800 Welsh a College DR. DAVID N. SCHRAMM Thursday, April 8 8 p.m. Room #301 Rudder Tower University Lecture Series Recent discoveries concerning the composition of some primitive meteor ites suggest that a nearby supernova exploded just before the solar system formed. This violent event may have stimulated the collapse of 3 cloud fragment that eventually condensed into the sun, planets and other members of the solar system. Dr. Schramm, a theoretical astrophysicist from the University of Chicago, will discuss the interplay between current ideas about the origin of chemical elements in the stars and ideas about the origin of the solar system. Dr. Schramm is an authority on the origins of chemical elements, stellar and galactic evolution, the consequences of gravitational collapse that may form neutron stars and black holes, and the link between cosmology and the physics of atomic nuclei and high- energy particles. FREE TO THE PUBLIC ■■ 1 &