Page \ 2/The Battalion/Tuesday, April 23, 1985 PT FTP HA Mmm* II ^iii< ■unit ML mil Complaints bared by sunbathers Associated Press AUSTIN — Construction work at Hippie Hollow, a long-time nude beach area on Lake Travis, is spoil ing the natural beauty of the area, sunbathers complain. “We come out here to get away from the asphalt,” said a sunbather who asked to be identified only as Marvin. “But now you come here and see the same thing,” he said while standing in the middle of a new, paved parking lot at Hippie Hollow. A grant from the Texas Parks and Wildlife Commission and nearly $400,000 in Travis County bond funds are being used to pave a park ing lot, put in two restroom build ings with decks, build a ticket booth and grade a 4,700-foot lakeside trail. The county leases Hippie Hollow from the Lower Colorado River Au thority. It was the trail that sunbathers grumbled about most over the week end. “It’s a highway,” a man identified as Gary told the Austin American- Statesman. “It just looks like overkill. The trail is within 10 feet of the wa terline at some parts. You used to could look up and see j^reen trees. Now you see more rocks. The work isn’t finished, said Tra vis County Commissioner Bob Honts, who is coordinating the pro- ject. “It’s going to be put back in a very natural form,” Honts said. The changes are designed to make Hippie Hollow cleaner and safer, he said. In recent years, more beer cans and bottles than sunbath ers have lined the rocky banks of the hollow, officials said. Trash has been thrown down the hill and, when it rains, the trash washes into the lake, said Sueann Brady, Honts’ assistant. Before the new trail was cut through Hippie Hollow, the trash had to be packed out of the park, she said. One weekend last summer, workers hauled two tons of trash out of the beach area, she added. “You literally couldn’t keep it from being a trash receptacle,” Honts said. “We're still digging bot tles out of there that have probably been there 10 years.” The trail will also make Hippie Hollow more accessible to emer gency vehicles when a swimmer is in jured, Brady said. Slouch By Jim Earle “Could you explain what ‘dead week' is to me? Is it a week when we don’t have to come to class?” Man chooses land instead of money Associated Press Willie sings new tune Associated Press AUSTIN — There were no hoots, hats or longneck beers. Not even a chorus of “Whiskey River.” The au dience didn’t mind when Willie Nel son appeared live, on stage, in church. Mann said. “All that’s ever adver tised is the outlaw image and the sea mier side of his life. I love Willie. He’s a kind and gende man and a deeply spiritual man. Most people don\ know that.” Nelson, the country singer with an outlaw reputation, doesn’t play churches very often, but Rev. Gerald Mann, pastor of Austin’s Riverbend Baptist Church, got him into one. Mann turned down an offer of $1,000 for two tickets to the Sunday night service, and he didn’t even pass the collection plate. Nelson devilishly threatened to sing “Whiskey River.” Mann threatened to preach his topic of humility but the two men reached a compromise. “The main purpose is for the world to see the other side of Willie,” Mann said before the service, ex plaining how he lured Nelson into a free appearance to help mark the dedication of the new church build ing. After Nelson sang “In God’s Eyes,” Mann recited an earlier duet between the two performers. Mann: “Have you been to church since?” Nelson: “No.” Mann: “Do you send money?” Nelson: “I ve been sendi somewhere.” OLD OCEAN — John Holland Bannister turned down an offer to buy his old slave cemetery, planta tion house and some woods and ranch land that others would have found hard to refuse. But to the man who spent 30 years in the oil business and gave up a big house in Houston to move to the country, choosing land over money came easily. “Now what would I do with all that money,” Bannister says. “I don’t want a big house. I had all that, and I gave it up. I want the land. You’re never poor if you have land.” Bannister, 62, had another good reason to look past the seven-figure offer from Phillips Petroleum — a reason deeply rooted in history. He is the great-great-granason of one of the first Anglo settlers in Texas, John Sweeny, who was given the land in 1833 by Stephen F. Aus tin. Austin gave Sweeny 50,000 acres, which Sweeny split among his nine sons. John Sweeny Jr. received the bulk of the land, 15,000 acres, which he turned into a plantation. Sweeny’s descendants over the years have sold all but the acreage now owned by Bannister, his brother and a cousin. Bannister moved back to the old homestead in 1981, and this is where he says he’s doing to die —just like John Sweeny Jr. Part of the once-fertile land that for so many years produced cotton and sugar cane now accommodates a Phillips petrochemical complex. In the mid-1970s Phillips ap proached Bannister about selling the remaining 1,000 acres for future plant expansion. “The idea of selling the land just turns me off,” Bannister says. rf My ancestors settled here when all this was forest. They had to clear the trees out before they could farm the land. They didn’t come to speculate but to start a new life.” Another man shares Bannister’s attachment to this land. This is where the parents of Thomas Jeffer son Ellis Jr. were laid to rest, and this is where Ellis, better known to friends as T.J., says he wants to be buried in the old slave cemetery. The cemetery lies across the road from a massive maze of pipes, water coolers and storage tanks — a meet ing of history and progress in this western Brazoria County c marked graves on this green patch of land that has changed little since the first years ago. The descendants of the plantation slaves still bury their dead here. “There is a lot of history here,” says Ellis, 78, who has been caretaker here for seven years. “I’m going to keep it going as long as I can.” Ellis is a retired Farmer and Phil lips employee. He grew up on a nearby farm‘and recalls play ing ball as a child on the plantation. He remembers the row of long, narrow slave houses that once stood where cattle now roam, the school- house and the church, and the pecan trees that once lined the dirt road to the plantation house. Ellis, who has spent most of his life and reared five children here, says the physical reminders of an era when people were bought and sold do not botner him. “That’s history, and this is the pre sent,” he says. “We’re all friends About 50 descendants of the plan tation slaves still live in the area. The only requirement for burial in the cemetery, Ellis says, is to be one of those descendants. No one knows exactly where the slave graves are located because none are marked, Ellis says. They were either never marked or the markers have been lost or deterio rated over the years. The plantation that surrounds the cemetery was converted to a ranch in the 1940s, and most of it is now leased as pasture. Bannister reserves a small section for his own 30 head of cattle. This way, he says, he can have a piece of steak anytime he wants without going to the super market. iginal pi mains in good shape. Bannister leases the building to a family who maintains and repairs it in lieu of rent. The house has been expanded over the years, but has retained its original grandeur and most of the nails, wood and bricks slaves used to build it in 1837. sending it mty >ounty commu- About 100 slaves are buried in un- The two-story house is far too big for Bannister and his wife, Nancy. The couple live in a smaller house on Texas 35. Geologist to mine lost ore lode Associated Press HOUSTON — A Houston ge ologist hopes to pick ud where prospectors in the late 1800s off when he goes hunting for sil ver in the Colorado mountains. A.H. Wadsworth .Jr. oil W’adsworth Oil Co. says he willbt digging into an untouched nor- lion of an ore lode believed to have been separated by a geok cal fault millions of years ago. The operation will be an exten sion of the old Moose Mine, miles south of Breckenridge and | two miles from Hoosier Pass ( the Continental Divide. |ol. 80 No. 135 The mine was one of Colon-1 do’s largest producers of silver! until it was mined up to the fault and closed in 1893. Early-day miners believed ati| extension of the Moose Mineott deposit existed somewhere be yond the fault. But, Wadswortk: said, they could not find it wittij their simple equipment and 19 century knowledge of geology. ong iplits rebel Associan “We got in only a month of core drilling last year before win ter set in and closed the roads, Wadsworth said. WASHING IX)h latic-controlled H |ght rejected 2- :agan’s proposal red miliiarv aid :nts seeking to ov ivernment of Nic olution was ap -the Republican-led wrs earlier. ■Combined, the i gominuing debate The mine is in an area where tallow Reagan to p access roads are under 50 feet or Is-i tance to the re more of snow in winter. During last year’s exploration, tests showed that the ore deposit extended for about 1,700 feet f rom the fault, he said. [In both houses. Jditional suppor pledge to reop is between the She Sandinista gov Wadsworth said the strike’s 1,700 feet length should produce silver which, in there- fined state, is now selling on the market for about $6.45 an ounce, Aside from Moose Mine, Wadsworth's lease acquisition in cludes 4,000 acres of mineral in Democratic nev Bu s policy lowai Reagan also pr e money for mi )d of the cui re tpt. 30. (The House vot (ree on aid to th - §vo remaining alt pleteljKcied to be mud- equipped mine with gold, silver | etaken Wednes , and lead ore that can operate■Q rie c hoice sp< year around and a 250-ton per L. mou ats wou | d day ore mill at the town of Alma jjij m jHj on b e Jniied Nations oi Wadsworth said he bought the k-d Cross for Ni leases for $3 million and has Ld to enforce an spent about $500,000 so far. the countries ir SAWmCLS J The second ah< in House Republ lithel of Illinois Je president. w< |pn to the Conti jhbri-lethal aid to nited States Ag iijbiial Developme Tin the Senate, z ID Democrats voi aid proposal; 37 L lepublicans vot i|hn East, R-N.C cause he is in the 1 J Specifically, th an appropriatioi ■ratmlitary ope But Reagan p delivered to Sem Robert Dole only the vote that he v for non-leth 1st of the fiscal 10. Low It's easy to lose your way when hunting for a new apartment. Now, Treehouse Village is helping to make your choice a little clearer by offering you new efficien cy and one- and two-bedroom fur nished and unfurnished apartments with a wild assortment of extras. Just a few blocks from campus, Treehouse Village features the popular two- TREEHOUSE VILLAGE- bedroom roommate floor plan, two swimming pools and hot tubs, jogging trail and tennis, basketball and volleyball courts. Some handicap units available, too. So come in from the jungle and set tle into a comfortable new apartment at Treehouse Village. Your haven in the apartment jungle. Editor’s Note: le in a two-part duscry and he file’s economic < By KEVIN TRENT Staff Pete Wilson’s dget have on< APARTMENTS LEASE NOW FOR FALL 1985. Texc by'£ By CARN h Treehouse Village Apartments. From $295. For information, visit the Treehouse Village Apartments Leasing Office at 800 Marion Pugh Blvd. College Station, Texas 77840 409/764-8892 Professionally managed by Callaway Properties. Tornado se Monday ni were sighted Monday, the Service issued 77 counties in In Olney, a “exploded” S j hit by a tornac -year-old a jvvife and the Iwere found n- The month June are activ does and huri Hurricanes reach the Br area, but off-;