Monday, September 23, 1985/The Battalion/Page 11 f] ■■■■■ IAKIU &M 3 Malonf chdow d Pitu- died J as dif rs 2M Footbal pair ( i streal again* 1 al Di«' miss^ h qua r ' r.*sw. r ONtf JO««* World and Nation U.S. Senate discussing renewal of ‘Superfund’ for toxic cleanup Associated Press WASHINGTON — With eight days remaining before America’s toxic waste cleanup program ex pires, the Senate resumes debate to day on its “Superfund” renewal bill as House members scurry to get their bill ready for the floor. The Senate, in sporadic floor work last week, has settled only one major question: the size of a new five-year program to replace the first five-year effort that expires at midnight Sept. 30. Still to be confronted by the Sen ate in a work week shortened by the .Yom Kippur holiday are how to pay for a greatly expanded Superfund and how to apportion cleanup cost liability among people responsible for creating toxic dumps. Other issues before Congress this week are a farm bill that will set long-term agricultural policy and an anti-abortion amendment which is part of a District of Columbia spend ing bill. In addition, the Senate fight over Superfund could be interrupted by controversy over trade legislation designed to protect the domestic tex tile and shoe industries. Neither side of Congress is wor ried about the clock running out on Superfund. Leaders concede they wilt miss the deadline, which will re sult in a drying up of revenues flow ing into Superfund, principally from a tax on petroleum and basic petro chemicals. Anticipating the law’s expiration, the Environmental Protection Agency last month ordered a halt to work at 57 dump sites. Lawmakers say that while they can recover the lost money, they can’t regain the time lost by the temporary halt in cleanup activity. The Senate on Friday easily beat back an effort to set Superfund spending through 1990 at $5.7 bil lion. This all but guaranteed that the $7.5 billion in the Senate bill will be the least that Congress will approve. On the House side, staunch envi ronmentalists have renewed their ef forts to strengthen the $10 billion Superfund reauthorization measure hammered out by the Energy and Commerce Committee in July. Their attention now is focused on the Public Works and Transporta tion Committee and its water re sources subcommittee, which are tentatively scheduled to consider the House bill late this week. The toughest question is how to pay for a huge increase in a cleanup program created in 1980 with a five- year budget of $ 1.6 billion. The Senate bill would create a new value-added tax on large man ufacturers to pay for more than two- thirds of its $7.5 billion program. The tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee has yet to tackle the financing question. The value-added levy, a form of national sales tax in use in Europe, is being opposed by manufacturer’s groups and, more importantly, the White House. But despite criticism of this approach, no one has for mally proposed another way of fi nancing the program. Shultz preparing for summit U.N. celebrating 40th anniversary Associated Press UNITED NATIONS — U.S. Sec retary of State George P. Shultz and his Soviet counterpart will meet here this week to prepare for the Novem ber superpower summit. They also join a parade of world leaders ad dressing the U.N. General Assembly in commemoration of its 40th anni versary. The New York Police Department and United Nations have stepped up security in response to the expected record attendance of more than 100 presidents, foreign ministers and other government leaders, drawn by the month-long anniversary com memoration. The assembly's so-called general debate, an annual event, opens to day with Brazilian President Jose Sarney as the first speaker. He is ex pected to emphasize the economic crisis faced by developing countries like Brazil, which has a foreign debt of more than $100 billion. Shultz will follow Sarney to the rostrum and plans to attend Tues day morning when Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze ad dresses the 159-member assembly. Upon arrival in New York last week, Shevardnadze said the Krem lin’s prime concern was finding ways of “curbing and stopping the arms race, particularly the nuclear arms race, and preventing the militariza tion of outer space.” Shevardnadze already has sent the assembly a draft resolution that urges “preventing an arms race in outer space,” an apparent reference to President Reagan’s Star Wars re search project for developing a space-based missile defense system. Unconfirmed news reports have said Shevardnadze carries with him new proposals to break the deadlock in U.S.-Soviet arms reduction talks, which resumed Thursday in Ge neva. According to one report, the Sovi ets will offer to reduce certain mis siles by 40 percent, allow some on site inspection to verify the cuts and allow U.S. scientists to conduct labo ratory work but not field tests on anti-missile systems. Shultz and Shevardnadze, who met for the first time last July in Hel sinki, Finland, will hold bilateral talks Wednesday in New York and resume their discussions Friday in Washington. Shevardnadze also is to confer with Reagan at the White House Fri day in preparation for the presi dent’s Nov. 19-20 summit meeting with Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorba chev. In between their talks in New York and Washington, Shultz and Shevardnadze will participate in a special ministerial meeting of the 15- £ nation U.N. Security Council to dis cuss ways of strengthening the >eacekeeping body. British Foreign ecretary Sir Geoffrey Howe is to preside over the Sept. 26 council meeting. The assembly’s 40th session opened last Tuesday with the elec tion of veteran Spanish diplomat Jaime de Pinies as its president. Rea gan and some other world leaders are holding off their appearances here until next month, when the 40th anniversary is formally ob served. Reagan is expected to speak Oct. 24, the date on which the U.N. Charter took effect in 1945. Speakers during the first week of general debate are expected to in clude the presidents of Peru, Uru guay, Mozambique, Panama and Tanzania. King Hussein of Jordan and Polish leader Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski are scheduled to speak Friday. New Orleans ‘Mr. Coffee’ closes doors Associated Press NEW ORLEANS — A fair share of the coffee enjoyed by America got its start at Kent Sat- terlee’s “cupping table,” but his business is about to be relegated to the history of this city where the aroma of coffee and booze spice the air. Along with French Quarter ca rousing, coffee is a necessary sta ple here. This port city which once boasted up to 20 coffee im porters. Now, there are four, and Bright & Co. Inc. is locking its doors, with Satterlee deciding to close rather than to sell. “Mr. Bright gave me my start when I was 14 years old, an office boy making $16 a month,” said the 82-year-old Satterlee, who took over the business decades ago with a partner. Satterlee is Mr. Coffee here, f >ast president of the Green Cof ee Association and past presi dent of the New Orleans Board of Trade. In 1916 when he started by running errands, Satterlee knew he would get ahead because he drew a five-year plan to reach a goal. NBC dominates 37th Emmys with 8 of the first 15 awards Associated Press PASADENA, Calif. — “Cagney 8c Lacey,” CBS’s once-canceled po licewoman show, and “The Cosby Show,” the warm and loving series about a black family that has sparked NBC’s drive for top ratings, domi nated the early awards at the 37th annual Emmys Sunday. “Cagney & Lacey,” which stayed on the air only because of a massive letter-writing campaign, won as best dramatic series — upsetting NBC’s much-nominated “Miami Vice” — and took awards for best direction and best writing.^. Tyne Daly, as Mary Beth Lacey, the detective who must juggle her career with a family, won best dra matic actress for the third straight year. “Every year I come expecting to hear someone else’s name called,” she said. “I think it must be the part I get to play.” But NBC, which has topped the ratings for 16 of the past 17 weeks, dominated the awards with eight of the first 15. It led the nominations with 125, more than double the to tals for both CBS and ABC. “The Cosby Show,” new last sea son, won best comedy writing for Ed Weinberg and Michael Leeson and best direction for Jay Sandrich. Bill Cosby,the star and driving force be hind the show, rejected a nomi nation, saying he didn’t believe in competing against other perform ers, and boycotted the ceremony at the Pasadena Civic Auditorium. “So much of my work is shaped by Bill Cosby’s wit and philosophy of what a family could be,” Sandrich said in accepting his honor at a fas ter-paced, restructed awards show televised live on ABC. William Daniels, the finicky, cranky heart surgeon Dr. Mark Craig on NBC’s St. Elsewhere,” won the award as best actor in a dramatic series. Betty Thomas, Sgt. Lucille Bates on NBC’s “Hill Street Blues,” won best supporting actress in a drama, but was upstaged when a prankster accepted the award for her, saying she couldn’t be present — even though the camera had plainly showed her in the audience. “Well, it is definitely hard to fol low an act like that,” she joked, when she finally took the podium after a commercial. “Miami Vice,” a pastel and neon blend of cop show and music video, won best supporting actor award for Edward James Olmos as the stone faced Lt. Martin Castillo. “Yes, Lieutenant Castillo does smile,” Olmos said. The show, which had the most nominations with 15, won three technical Emmys announced earlier, but lost the first two awards for which it was eligible. John Addison’s music for CBS’s “Murder, She Wrote” beat Jan Ham mer’s “Miami Vice” score and Karen Arthur won the dramatic directing Emmy for a “Cagney & Lacey” epi sode, defeating two “Miami Vice” nominees. Robert Guillaume, the star of ABC’s “Benson,” whose character has progressed from manservant to lieutenant governor, won the award as best comedy actor. “I know you can’t tell, but I just lost my color,” the black performer joked. “This certainly beats going home empty-handed for a sixth time, and I’d like to thank Bill Cosby for not being here.” The women comedy performers were both repeats from last year: Jane Curtin, as the more insecure of two roommate divorcees on CBS’s “Kate & Allie,” was best actress, while Rhea Perlman won supporting actress for her portrayal of the tough barmaid Carla on NBC’s “Cheers.” NBC’s “Hill Street Blues,” which won the most Emmys the past four years, this year drew 11 nomi nations. The Boot Bam JUSTIN ROPERS $79 00 Largest Selection Lowest Price in The Brazos Valley 2.5 Miles East of Brazos tenter on FM 1179 (Briarcest Dr.) Mon.-Sat 9:30-6:00 822-0247 LITE NITE AT INTERURBAN Every Monday all Lite Beer isonly .750 5:00 p.m. to close 505 University An Aggie Tradition Dominik Drive A little momentum could make you a genius. PO Box 910, Fort Worth, IX 76101 TEXAS GUARANTEEL STUDENT LOANS are a bright idea for beating the high cost of higher educa tion. MBank Fort Worth has funds available; up to $2,500 for undergrad uates and $5,000 for graduate studies per year. For more informa tion, call our Student Loan Hotline r 1-800-633-8677. Or write to us for a TGSL application. A little momentum in your degree program could be the brightest idea you’ve ever had. K MBank Fort Worth A Momentum Bank 817/334-9517 Member MCorp, MPACT and FDIC LEARN HOW TO * SKYDIVE* It only takes one day! For more info; Rm.601 Rudder Wed., Sept. 25 7 ; 00p.m. : : : : : See thejumpers on thedrillfield Sept.24- 1 : 50 • Sept.25-12*50 6:50 TAMU Sport Parachute Club ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS Rohm and Haas Texas Inc. interviews on campus October 3. Rohm and Haas Company is a major manufacturer of specialty chemicals used in industry and agriculture. Our operations are international in scope and our business activities are highly technical in nature with over 2,500 products sold to customers in a wide array of industries. Rohm and Haas will be on campus October 3 fo inter view Electrical Engineers graduating in December or May for openings at our Houston manufacturing facility. Electrical Engineers are employed in two primary areas in our Houston facility: Electrical Power Engineers are responsible for electri cal projects from initial concept through final installa tion and start-up. They are involved with the design, acquisition, and construction of plant electrical facili ties including substations, power and lighting sys tems, equipment control systems, programmable controllers, and motor control centers. Instrument Engineers are involved with the design, acquisition and construction of plant process variable measurement and control systems, including computer-based controls and programmable con trollers. Their work includes design and specification of facilities, cost estimating, justification and appropri ation of capital funds, field construction supervision, and start-up of the facilities. If you’re the kind of person who can take the initiative, works independently, and is capable of assuming increasing responsibility, we would like to talk with you. Sign up now at the Placement Office for an interview on October 3 with Ray Stivers of Rohm and Haas Texas Inc. An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F. ROHM! iHnnsl