I/ 1 :®;: Texas A8cM (M. »5ol. 76 No. 26 USPS 045360 20 Pages lements says order state’s I big problem >f the t u United Press International ; WASHINGTON — Texas Gov. William Clements said Texas- Mexican border problems and agri- leRanee H ure fig urfe d prominently in his 20- lioiiofih'Pf ut e meeting with President eball . r a ’ HeaHlinp 9 Following I uesday s meeting, ( | i iu which fell less than a month before 1 tided toi(R ers P ass j u dg men t on Clements’ . In jT^Kleetion bid, the governor told re- ^ ' ' porters he discussed the forthcoming |! e '. U i s 'between Reagan and Mexican y, Miguel de la Madrid, ' Hi discussed ways to stabilize the int ™'#i would like has asM tilted in tli| nice to stall for Americans to saidhet un( ' erst;an d that it is not just a Mex- t forttpIB 1 problem,” he said. “It is an Amer- lid he ' cai1 problom- Our border is in a chao- i^lj^Mlemems also said he received Agriculture Secretary John Block “a strong indication they will be working with the Farmers Home n’t likej«® n Administration to get some re- lein said. IlH' for Texas farmers “on a case-by- nply. Cara c 35 ' f* 35 * 8 -” i unhajpM Ho P eful| y there wil1 be an necessan', ft announcement within 10 days,” he said, adding that he had received a “positive” reaction from Block. Clements said Reagan will be accompanied to the meeting with de la Madrid in San Diego and Tijuana by Treasury Department officials, who expect to “discuss all aspects of this particular (monetary) problem.” Clements indicated a national clearing house is one device being considered. “There should be a decision on this shortly, in the next 5 or 6 weeks,” he said. The Texas governor also hinted the administration plans to move in the direction of a multi-year grain sales agreement with the Soviet Union. “I think you can well anticipate there will be a Firming up of this posi tion. It will no longer be ambiguous,” he said. Clements predicted he will defeat Democratic challenger Mark White Nov. 2 because “the polls tell me so.” Battalion Serving the University community College Station, Texas Wednesday, October 6, 1982 The lawn in front of the Academic Building wasn’t littered Tuesday — it played host to an unusual work of art. Paper plates of various colors were arranged in a grid and entitled “Great Musical Hit Series #1.” A placard in the background explains the work, which was meant to represent the relative scale of C minor. ft nowisa : the s, but we if ('money to II come froi as producers United Press International WASHINGTON — A massive fed- II investigation into possibly illegal ementw hjj t j n g 0 f natural gas supplies Bong pipelines will force four major tais producers to pay customers $58.5 million in penalties. ft In its largest enforcement action ;\ter, the Federal Energy Regulatory pmmission announced Tuesday At settlements with the four com panies will pass on $58.5 million in reduced rates to interstate customers of Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co., a natural gas transmission Firm. “The money will be flowed through to interstate consumers and relief may be realized this winter,” the commission said. Settlements with three of the firms — Tenneco Inc., of Houston; Sun Ex ploration and Production Co., of Phi ladelphia, and Atlantic Richfield Co., of Los Angeles — were disclosed Tuesday. The fourth company, New York- IU =3:30 AM staff photo by John Ryan Name that tune Master of ceremonies Jeff Vice, left, a civil engineering major from Port Arthur, listens as Elizabeth Pickvance, a biology major from England, tries her luck in naming a musical selection. Her luck wasn’t good enough; she lost the MSC OPAS contest. Vice and Pickvance are juniors. penalized $58.5 million based Mobil Oil Corp., ended its in volvement in the dispute with in a 1980 settlement. That agreement, however, was held up by a Tenneco appeal. Under the agreements, none of the firms admits any wrongdoing. The settlements follow a three-year investigation into the alleged diver sion of more than 450 billion cubic feet of natural gas from interstate markets to intrastate markets by Sun, Atlantic Richfield, two pipeline com panies and several other natural gas producers, the commission noted. The agency charged Tenneco violated federal law by making an un authorized transfer of more than 160 billion cubic feet of natural gas to Channel Industries Gas Co., an in trastate pipeline affiliate of Tenneco. The diversion of gas from inter state to intrastate markets supposedly allowed the companies to realize higher prices and profits. All of the transactions occurred by 1965 and 1975. “I think it’s about time,” a leading consumer-energy group official said of the development. Ed Rothschild of the Citizen-Labor Energy Coalition, said the commis sion “has been dragging and drag ging on this for years. The govern ment could have gotten more if it really wanted to press this.” The individual settlements announced by the commission in clude: •Tenneco will reduce by $23 mil lion the cost of natural gas sold to Tennessee’s interstate customers over the next five years. •Tenneco also will dismiss an ear lier appeal, clearing the way for an $18.5 million payment by Mobil to Tennessee under a 1980 agreement. •Sun will pay $10.5 million to Ten nessee’s interstate customers, along with $250,000 in civil penalties. Latinos spend $60 billion a year Business taps Hispanic market United Press International The consumer potential of 20 mil lion Latinos in the United States is large — conservatively estimated as a $60 billion-a-year market. Rapidly growing is a major busi ness community both generated by the fastest growing minority in the U.S. and principally serving the His panic consumer. Although their awareness of it is relatively recent, both the media and Madison Avenue today are pitching hard for that market. About 250,000 businesses in the United States are Hispanic-owned and grossing an estimated $ 16 billion annually, according to the Kansas City-based United States Hispanic Chamber of Commerce. That figure compares with census bureau esti mates of 219,000 Latino-owned businesses in 1977 which represented a 53 percent increase over 1972. Competition for the advertising action is just beginning. Antonio Guernica and Irene Kas- peruk, in their new McGraw-Hill book “Reaching the Hispanic Market Effectively,” estimate it at $70 billion annually, and say it is largely untap ped. They conclude that Hispanics are alike in lifestyle, regardless of na tional origin; and they urge advertis ers to keep in mind three facets of the community: the Spanish language, strong family ties and Roman Catho licism, the religion professed by 85 percent of U. S. Latinos. A study by Strategy Research of New York has found that 2.3 million Spanish-speaking persons are reached by New York City television signals. Another study, by Yankelo- vich, Skelly and White, found that seven of 10 U.S. Hispanics sample some form of Spanish language media every week, with radio pre dominant. The Washington-based National Association of Spanish Broadcasters counts 107 radio stations which trans mit exclusively in Spanish (and the association laments that only 28 of them are owned by Latinos) and 90 others which broadcast in Spanish at least 10 hours a day. The stations are located where the Latinos are: New York; Miami and environs; Washing ton D. C.; Chicago; and across the Southwest. The association lists 13 U. S. televi sion stations which transmit exclu sively in Spanish — but Spanish lan guage penetration of television is much greater. SIN, the national Spanish television network, had at last count 170 U. S. outlets, including part-time programming, cable sys tems and low-power stations. Daily Spanish-language newspap ers are published in Los Angeles; New York; Miami (two); Chicago; Brownsville, Laredo and El Paso in Texas; Tampa, Fla.; and Oakland, Calif. South Africa downs Soviet-built MiG United Press International PRETORIA, South Africa — South African jets have shot down a Soviet- built MiG fighter Tuesday over southern Angola, South African De fense Force Chief Gen. Constand Vil- joen said. Two South African reconnaisance planes and two escort aircraft were “reconnoitering” a build-up of missile installations, concentrations of South West Africa Peoples Organization guerrillas and logistics bases when $100,000 four MiGs attacked them, Viljoen said. It was not immediately known what nationality the MiG pilot was. An estimated 20,000 Cuban military personnel are stationed in Angola. “In the ensuing dogfight, one MiG was shot down,” Viljoen said, “and the other three turned tail and fled the area.” He said all the South African planes returned safely to their baSe. There was no immediate comment from Angola on the dogfight. All the MiGs supplied to the Ango lan air force are piloted by either Cuban or Soviet airmen, South Afri can military sources said. The South African reconnaissance mission was the result of “large scale rearming and reequiping of SWAPO by Russia and its surrogates,” Viljoen said. “It is known that 600 tons of weaponry was supplied to SWAPO through the (Angolan port of) Mocamedes 10 days ago. “In addition to this, it is also known that missile installations have been erected in southern Angola while SWAPO, with its latest resupply, and its logistics build-up, intends to re sume its terrorist actions internally af ter losing prestige in its latest efforts.” The dogfight was the second in the past 18 months in which South Afri can planes downed a MiG over Ango la, SWAPO’S base for its 16-year-old guerrilla war with South Africa over South West Africa, which geog raphically separates the two nations. inside Around town . . 4 Classified National . . 9 Opinions . . 2 Sports . 17 State . . 5 Whafs up . 13 forecast High in the mid- to upper-80s, low in the lower 60s tonight. Clear skies. in scholarships awaiting student pick-up More than 400 scholarships awarded to students for the fall semester — totaling more than $100,000 — have not been picked up, says the student financial aid admi nistrator for scholarships. The Financial Aid Office faces the same situation every year, Lynn Brown said. “1 don’t like to see it happen,” she said. “I know many times the students are not aw r are when the checks get there (the Fiscal Office), and they get tired qf checking and eventually forget about them. Some students get so many scholarships that they simply forget which ones they’ve picked up and which ones they haven’t.” The scholarships range in value from $50 to $1,000, Brown said. Although $100,000 is a large amount, it is a small part of the $3 million to $4 million awarded annually, she said. In the past, nothing was done to remind students of scholarships that had not been picked up, Brown said. But this year the Financial Aid Office is notifying scholar ship recipients by mail that they have until Oct. 29 to pick up their scholarships from Fiscal Office cashiers. If the scholarships aren’t picked up by then, they will be cancel led and redeposited for use at a later date. “I feel that if a student is not going to use his scholar ship money, he should let the donor know so the money can be used for someone who really does need it,’ Brown said.