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Operah illion coiti|tLij iss forthesa;| ookesman Qji August U to predict y ise SeptetM s year a seasti th. es i and Caltloi ers in non American s abroad. 11 students injured at bonfire cutting site See page 3 Section of roof falls in mall in Houston See page 5 Cubs' Rick Sutcliffe awarded Cy Young See page 9 The Battalion Serving the University community , 81 No. 39 USPS 045360 14 pages College Station, Texas Wednesday, October 24,1984 littnt Wilson, specialist, in Texas,» •red, to ntif uerrilla manual ailed repugnant Saudis lead six OPEC countries Production of oil to be cut ABLE M s _jjj Ml M R l:S United Press International WASHINGT ON — A top Nicara- lan rebel leader said Tuesday a controversial guerrilla war manual was prepared and paid for by a CIA veteran. ■Alfonso Callejas Deshon, a direc tor of the U.S.-backed Nicaraguan Democratic Force, said in an inter- ivieu the booklet “was not widely dis tributed.” ■“It was an instructor’s manual,” he said, noting he never finished read ing it and “did not assign it much im portance.” ■“It seems like a hook translated Item Mao with the word commu nism substituted for imperialism,” Callejas said, referring to the late Chinese leader’s classic texts on rev olution. The manual has become a point of political conflict, with critics of President Reagan arguing its advo cacy of political assassination is mor ally repugnant. Administration officials have said the controversial version of the doc ument was a preliminary draft not cleared by CIA officials. The CIA has provided both funds and advice to the rebels, although Congress now has cut off money to support the groups Reagan de scribes as “freedom fighters” against Nicaragua’s leftists Sandinista gov ernment. Reagan, who ordered an investi gation of the manual’s origins, said See MANUAL, page 11 United Press International GENEVA — Six OPEC countries led by Saudi Arabia agreed Tuesday on a general plan to cut oil produc tion to keep the cartel’s $29-a-barrel base price from collapsing. Saudi Oil Minister Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamani said the price rescue proposal will be presented to a full emergency session of the 13 mem bers of the Organization of Petro leum Exporting Countries on Oct. 29. “We decided to defend the price of oil by cutting production,” Ya mani said after a day and a half of advance talks with other OPEC min isters from Algeria, Kuwait, Libya, the United Arab Emirates and Vene zuela. “There is ho price cut,” he said af ter the meeting, which also was at tended by non-members Mexico and Egypt. A seventh OPEC nation not at the meeting, Iran, said it would support the production cutback. Iranian Oil Minister Mohammed Gharazi told the Iranian Parliament the move was necessary to “counter plots of those who want control of OPEC,” the organization’s news agency OPECNA said in a dispatch from Tehran. The news agency said Gharazi dis closed Iran’s production in October, and it was lower than the 2.4 million barrels per day quota allocated by OPEC. The cutback has been attrib uted to Iraqi attacks on oil tankers in the Persian Gulf. News of the OPEC proposal prompted the spot oil market to rally briefly, but it dropped back after Mobil Corp. lowered its posted prices for some U.S. crudes by 75 cents a barrel. “Mobil could be the next-to-last domino in the recent chain of inter national oil price cuts,” said William Randol, analyst at First Boston Corp. in New York. “OPEC’s $29-a-barrel benchmark price is the final dom ino.” In San Francisco, U.S. Energy Secretary Donald Hodel said the risk of an oil price war will increase the longer OPEC tries to hold the line on prices that are unrealistically high in the weak world market. Yamani planned to fly to Nigeria today to try to persuade the OPEC state to rescind its $>2-a-barrel price drop last week that undercut reduc tions by non-OPEC Britain and Nor way; and set the stage for a price war. Mexican Oil Minister Francisco Labastida Ochoa said he would ac company Yamani on the Nigerian trip to show a “spirit of cooperation” between OPEC and non-OPEC pro ducers. In Oslo, however, Norwegian En ergy Minister Rare Kristiansen said Norway could not comply with OPEC requests to lower its North Sea output. The six OPEC ministers refused to disclose details of the proposed cutback in the cartel’s production or whether individual cuts for its mem bers had been worked out. blue law ruled unconstitutional again lefwtiai ] 10 S3f irClassi- help you r plates can be sold, but not china. Hammers can be sold, but not / nails. Disposable diapers can be sold, but not doth diapers. A bottle of beer can be sold, but not a baby bot tle. A can of beans can be sold, but not a can opener. ■The Texas Blue Law has been surrounded by confusion and con troversy for many years. ■Recently, the confusion was inten- ; sifted when a Houston district judge ruled the law unconstitutional. ■ District judge Tom Phillips’ deci sion in the blue law trial involving Harris County Handy Dan hard ware stores will probably set a prece dent in upcoming blue law trials. Ln Dallas, Revco, Eckerd Drugs and the Skaggs Co. also are challeng ing the constitutionality of the law. Even though lower courts in Texas have repeatedly ruled the blue law as unconstitutional, their decisions have been reversed by the State Supreme Court. Will Rogers, an information clerk with the attorney general’s office, said the current status of the blue law is up in the air. The blue law 7 — named for the color of paper on which the law v\ 7 as originally printed — restricts sales of 42 types of merchandise on consec utive weekend days. Items that cannot be sold on Sun day are kitchen ware, kitchen uten sils, clothing, footwear, headwear, wearing apparel, bed coverings, toys, infant wear, rugs, tools, hard ware, cutlery and lawn furniture. The first blue law was passed in Houston in 1839 for religious rea sons. It prohibited the sale of malt li quor on Sundays. Since that time, the blue law has undergone several renovations and even was repealed once in 1868. The current blue law, passed in 1961, resulted from changing retail patterns. The advent of discount chains and suburban shopping malls caused downtown department stores to lose weekend sales. In 1960, some 1,400 companies owning 8,000 stores started a push for a blue law to restrict sales in an attempt to prevent the loss of sales to the newer and more convenient sub urban stores. When Texas passed the present blue law in 1961, only nine states did not have blue laws. Since then 21 states have repealed their blue laws and courts in another four have de clared them unconstitutional. Only 10 states, mostly in the South, still enforce the blue law. According to the September newsletter from the state comptrol ler’s office, the comptroller estimates that sales tax revenue in fiscal year 1985 could increase by $13.5 million if the blue law was repealed. Massachusetts repealed its blue law in March 1983. Analysts estimate that the action brought in an extra $27.9 million or 3.2 percent of the total 1983 Massachusetts sales tax. Blue law supporters argue that to tal sales would not increase, because consumers would still have the same amount of money to spend. Propo nents say the amount would just be spread over seven days instead of six. Another reason given in support of the blue law is the argument that retail workers would not have a uni form day off to spend time with their families and would be unable to attend church. Black South African townships raided Of you! iur lion leaii United Press International ■SEBOKF’NG, South Africa — Biousands of soldiers and police swept through the sprawling black township of Sebokeng Tuesday, ar resting hundreds of people in a pre- dawn house-to-house raid aimed at Hushing the worst black unrest since 1976 riots. ■The 7,000-member army-police %ce marched into the nearby black townships of Sharpeville and Boipa- tong hours later after police fired rubber bullets to disperse angry crowds gathered in Sharpeville. ■At least 358 people were arrested, alj but nine in Sebokeng. Residents of the townships who had been ques tioned and released were given orange day-glow stickers to w'ear. ■News of the raid spread quickly to the black townships ringing Johan nesburg and reporters described the atmosphere as “very tense.” Law 7 and Order Minister Louis le Grange said the massive operation, code named “Bulrush,” was a move to “rid the affected areas of criminal and revolutionary elements.” “The government has decided that this lawlessness must be curbed with all the available means and that law and order be restored effecti vely,” Le Grange said. Anti-apartheid activists con demned the sweep as a “declaration of civil war.” Bishop Desmond Tutu, secretary general of the South African Coun cil of Churches who won the 1984 Nobel Peace Prize, said he might cut short his United States tour because of the government action. “It’s possible that the situation could develop to such an extent that I would feel that it was better for me to be back home than here,” Tutu said. In Washington, State Department spokesman John Hughes said the United States “deeply regrets” the action and called on the South Afri can government to open discussions with non-whites toAxpen the way for political participation by all races. “These repressive measures are bound to obscure and put in ques tion the South African government’s professed intentions of dealing with the problems of the country by re form and consensus,” he said. The massive raid marked the sec ond time this month army troops were deployed with police to curb black unrest, the worst since rioting in 1976, which has claimed the lives of 80 blacks and one white. The two months of unrest was 2 ered by rent hikes and the poor ty of black schools, but has been fueled by blacks’ resentment of apartheid, the government’s system of racial segregation that reserves the best homes and jobs for whites and excludes blacks from political power. Thousands of troops and police swept into Sebokeng at 3 a.m., ring ing the township 25 miles south of Johannesburg and lining streets at 15-yard intervals. Police banged on doors to rouse residents in a house- to-house search of 20,000 homes. In Today’s Battalion Local • United Way is a third of the way home to its $425,000 goal. See story page 4. • Congressman Bill Archer will speak at a two-day tax con ference. See story page5. State • The whooping cranes are expected to arrive on the South Texas coast this week. See story page 6.