Tuesday, October 4, 1988/The Battalion/Page 5 ei What’s Up inU::J usic ir:;-l ved in.a| ids; excep: & Tuesday NATIONAL ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING HONOR SOCIETY: Mark Stein, pro ject engineer at A&M, will discuss opportunites for electrical engineers in the oil industry at 7 p.m. in 104 B Zachry. Yearbook pictures will be taken at 8:30 p.m. in the MSC Flagroom. PRE-MBA ASSOCIATION: Director of A&M Graduate Business Programs will speak at 6:30 p.m. in 156 Blocker. NATIONAL IEEE/ACM: Contemporary Computing Issues: there will be a satel lite conference with several sessions offered between 10:15 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. in 601 Rudder. Topics include VLSI, SW Engineering, Office Automation and Machine Intelligence. PRE-MED/PRE-DENT SOCIETY: Dr. Gonzalez-Lima will speak about research in the biomedical sciences at 8 p.m. in 200 Harrington, and the club will elect a freshman reporter. DATA PROCESSING MANAGEMENT SOCIETY: Penzoil will offer information on data processing at 7 p.m. at the University Inn penthouse suite. THE PLACEMENT CENTER: will have a workshop on what to do with a degree in Liberal Arts from 3 p.m. - 5 p.m. in 302 Rudder. SPEECH COMMUNICATION ASSOCIATION: Jo Hudson will speak at the , meeting at 7 p.m. in 158 Blocker. TAMU SAILING CLUB: will meet at 7 p.m. in 206 Military Sciences. Have orders for gear ready. MSC ALL NIGHT FAIR GENERAL COMMITTEE: will meet at 8:30 p.m. in 402 Rudder. DEER PARK HOMETOWN CLUB: will meet at 8:52 p.m. in 404 Rudder. TAMU SCUBA CLUB: will meet at 7 p.m. in 402 Rudder. AUSTIN HOMETOWN CLUB: will meet at 10 p.m. at Rudder Fountain for Silver Taps. OFF CAMPUS AGGIES/HAUNTED HOUSE COMMITTEE: will meet at 9 p.m. in 607 Rudder. Any off-campus students interested in helping with the haunted house should attend. SADDLE AND SIRLOIN CLUB: will meet at 7 p.m. in 115 Kleberg. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS ASSOCIATION: will meet at Carnaby’s at 7 p.m. on 3610 S. College, by the Chicken Oil Company. OFF CAMPUS AGGIES: will meet for Silver Taps at 10 p.m. at Rudder Fountain. PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR INDUSTRIAL DISTRIBUTION: will meet at 6 p.m. in 305 Fermier to discuss high school recruiting. STUDENT “Y” ASSOCIATION: will meet at 7 p.m. in 230 MSC. SPANISH CLUB: will have a taco party at 7 p.m. Call Susie at 696-1773 for di rections. MEXICAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION: The Maquiladora Conference committee will meet to form committees at 8:30 p.m. in 158 Blocker. Wednesday WILDLIFE BIOLOGY SOCIETY: Dr. Jane Packard of the wildlife and fisheries department will speak about the denning behavior of Artie wolves at 7 p.m. in 110 Harrington. MSC POLITICAL FORUM: Dr. Lenora Fulani, an independent presidential can didate, will speak at 8:30 p.m. in 701 Rudder. RASC 602: Dr. James B. Teer will discuss: “Conservation strategies in Third World nations at noon in 204-C Sterling C. Evans. ECONOMICS SOCIETY: Dr. Bob Gillette will speak at 8:30 p.m. in 501 Rudder. LAMBDA SIGMA FOUNTAIN FORUM: Mike Hachtman will discuss voter regis tration and current political issues at 12:30 p.m. at Rudder Fountain. TAMU VICTORY ‘88: will have a Bush-Quayle campaign meeting open to all in terested students at 7 p.m. in 701 Rudder. TRAP AND SKEET CLUB: will meet and elect officers at 7 p.m. in 507 Rudder. GREEN EARTH SOCIETY: will discuss upcoming events and elect officers at 7 p.m. in 410 Rudder. AGGIES FOR BARTON: will have an important meeting at 7 p.m. in 701 Rud der. UNITED CAMPUS MINISTRIES: will have an Aggie supper at 6 p.m. at A&M i Presbyterian Church. CHI ALPHA CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: will meet for fellowship and worship at 12:10 p.m. in the Oceanography and Meteorology observation room. MSC VISUAL ARTS COMMITTEE: will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 145 MSC. STUDENTS AGAINST APARTHEID: will meet at 7 p.m. in 402 Rudder. RACQUETBALL CLUB: will meet at 7 p.m. by court seven in the Read Building. MEXICAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION: will have a general meeting and will dis cuss the Maquila Conference at 8:30 p.m. in 302 Rudder. PHI ETA SIGMA: will take Aggieland pictures at 6:30 p.m. in the MSC flagroom. THE 0BJECTIVIST CLUB: will have a videotape debate between socialism and capitalism at 8:30 p.m;iH5l0 Rudder. WOMEN'S BONFIRE COMMITTEE: will meet with women bonfire chairmen at 7 p.m. in 510 Rudder. STUDENTS AGAINT APARTHEID: will meet at 7 p.m. in 402 Rudder. AGGIE DEMOCRATS: will watch the vice presidential debate at 7 p.m. at Mr. 'Gatti’s in the Skaggs center. Guests Jim Knboviac, Jim Locke and Micheal O'Connor will speak. DEBATE SOCIETY: will present a parliamentary debate “Should The Last Temptation of Christ’ be shown on the A&M campus?” at 7 p.m. in 206 MSC. 1989 COTTON BOWL REPRESENTATIVE: Applications are available through October 14 in 208 Pavilion. Items for What's Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald, no later than three business days before the desired run date. We only publish the name and phone number of the contact if you ask us to do so. What’s Up is ! a Battalion service that lists non-profit events and activities. Submissions are run on a first-come, first-served basis. There is no guarantee an entry will run. If you have questions, call the newsroom at 845-3315. Court denies HL&P’s appeal to hold refund WASHINGTON (AP) — The Su preme Court on Monday refused to free Houston Lighting & Power Co. from having to pass along to its cus tomers a $111 million tax benefit re sulting from abandonment of a pro posed nuclear plant. The court, citing the lack of a “substantial federal question,” re jected arguments that the ordered electricity rate cut is an unconstitu tional confiscation of the utility’s property. Houston Lighting & Power Co. said billions of dollars could be at stake if a Texas court ruling against it is adopted nationwide. The company, which serves 1.3 million electricity customers, de cided in 1972 to build the two-unit Allen’s Creek Nuclear Generating Station. Faced with rising costs and de clining power demands, the utility dropped plans for one unit in 1976. Plans for the second unit were aban doned in 1982, and the total loss for Houston Lighting was $361 million. The Texas Public Utility Commis sion ruled that the company should have abandoned the project by Jan. 1, 1980 at a loss of $195 million. The commission said the $166 million that Houston Lighting lost after that date was due to “imprudent” man agement. The commission allowed the com pany to recover the $195 million from its ratepayers over a 10-year period but barred recovery for the $ 166 million. Houston Electric then wrote off the $166 million as a loss to reduce its taxes. Subsequently, the commission said $ 111 million in reduced federal taxes resulting from the deduction must be passed along to the custom ers — rather than kept by the utili ty’s investors. The Texas Supreme Court upheld the commission’s ruling last December. “The issue before this court is whether HL&P can recover from ra tepayers a federal income tax ex pense which it did not incur,” the state court said. The answer, it added, is that “ra tepayers can be held accountable only for those tax expenses that are actually incurred by a utility. The utility’s rates rqust reflect the tax lia bility actually incurred^” Lawyers for Houston Lighting said the question is “whether a state constitutionally can require the shareholders of a public utility to forfeit tax benefits from their unre covered investment in a cancelled power plant.” They said the commission, and the state court, permitted the utility’s property to be seized to subsidize utility r^tes in violation of the Con stitution’s ban on confiscation of pri vate property without due process or just compensation. Billions of dollars could be at stake if other state regulators take similar action, Houston Lighting’s appeal said. peeding car, truck collide; die, 6 injured near Austin |AUSTIN (AP) — Four people ere killed and six others injured hen a car traveling at least 96 mph entoutof control and collided with pickup truck, officials said. Tests by the Department of Public hfety show that the 1978 Chevrolet ■iven by Michael Luetkemeyer lidded nearly 400 feet before it lammed into an oYicoming pickup luck near Marble Falls, which is pout 50 miles northwest of Austin. “My tests indicate that the driver s traveling a minimum of 96 mph when he realized he was not going to ake it through a curve,” DPS trooper Joseph Glenn said Sunday. The car, carrying six teen-agers, crossed the center of Farm-to-Mar- ket Road 2147 and struck a pickup driven by Delores Sosa, 20, of Aus tin. The pickup carried four people. “The two vehicles were kind of welded together,” Glenn said. “When you get hit at that speed, the metal fuses together. We had to use two wreckers to pull the car and the truck apart.” Killed in the Saturday crash were Luetkemeyer, 18, of Marble Falls; Thomas Hunt, 17, of Austin; Jackie Drunette, 13, of Marble Falls; and Maria Reyes, 51, of Horseshoe Bay, who was in the pickup. Three other passengers in the car were taken to Brackenridge Hospital in Austin were they were listed in fair condition Monday. Sosa and her two children were hospitalized. Rayne Sosa, 3 months, was in serious condition at Bracken ridge, while Leticia Sosa, 3, was treated and released. The mother was in good condition at Shepperd Memorial Hospital in Burnet. DPS officials said Monday that no one in either vehicle was wearing a seatbelt. PRE LAW SOCIETY - 4- FIELD TRIP TO UT LAW FAIR Every Late School in the Country Represented Wednesday, Oct. 5 9:00 a.m. meet in driveway of Rudder Tower FOR More Informatioi Call Matt 776-0428 *UNIVERSITY EXCUSED ABSENCE FED UP WITH TRAFFIC JAMS & POLLUTION? SCARCE. EXPENSIVE HOUSING? DETERIORATION OF THE ENVIRONMENT? OVERCROWDED RECREATION AREAS? Convert Your Frustrations Into Action And Help Solve The Underlying CAUSE Of These SIDE EFFECTS — OVERPOFULATION. THERE IS A REAL SOLUTION! Join the campaign to stabilize the population of the U.S. The U.S. has the fastest growing population of any country in the industrialized Western World. ■/ ' //' In the next 32 years, today's U.S. population of 244 million will increase by 53 million Jo nearly 300 million and con tinue to grow, if current trends continue — we will add two and a half times more people than the rest of the industrialized western countries combined. ■ ■“"“—“"l Last year alone, California's 3 population grew by 600,000 people, that's equal toadding _another San Francisco every 1 2 months. Texas added the equivalent of a new Corpus Christi and then some. Florida burgeoned by another fampa. BOX SCORE BY 2020 The U.S. will add enough addi tional population to create another: New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston, Philadel phia, Detroit, San Diego, Dallas, San Antonio, Phoe nix, Baltimore, San Fran cisco, Indianapolis, San Jose, Memphis, Washington, Jacksonville, Milwaukee, Boston, Columbus, New Or leans, Cleveland, Denver, El Paso and Seattle — PLUS the next 75 largest cities in the U.S.! ... if we don't act now to sta bilize U.S. population! Our unchecked population growth means higher education costs, over-burdened social services, more pollution, more traffic jams, more water shortages and other adverse effects on the environment. Overpopulation is threatenirg to destroy the carrying capacity of the physical environment and the social cciiditions necessary for maintaining our free society in the American tradition. Yet, all levels of government — federal, state and local —typically avoid dealing with rapid population growth. They just try to accommodate the increased numbers of people by attempting to mitigate the side effects. Costly, false solutions such as more freeways or massive water projects nearly always make matters worse or merely postpone the day of reckoiing. WE MUST ACT NOW TO STABILIZE OUR POPULATION BY DEALING DIRECTLY WITH POPULATION INCREASE. WE CANNOT DO EVERYTHING AT ONCE! BUT WE CAN BEGIN BY: • Reducing immigratbn into the United States • Supporting prograns to reduce unwanted pregnancies • Controlling growtl; at the local level Even though we aie all aware of the problems of crowded urban areas and unplanned, unwanted pregnancies, the fact is immigration from foreign countries is the most important jingld cause of this excessive growth. • Over 40% of the United States' and over 50% of California's population growth is causid by legal and illegal immigration from foreign countries. • In addition to stressing the environment, the population increase resulting from immigraion cost millions in added social services and other govern mental outla y s. • Illegal immigration creates unfair job and wage competition and unemploy ment for U.i. residents, because illegal immigrants are easily exploited. • Excessive inmigration contributes to housing shortages, high taxes, home lessness, irban crowding, and other social problems. • Failure toadequately control U.S. borders encourages illicit drug trafficking and stimilates even more illegal immigration. "iff RIGHTNOW, IT IS ESSENTIAL THAT WE ACT TO REDUCE LEGAL IMMIGRATION CEILINGS BECAUSE: In the waling days of its current legislative session. Congress is considering bills which wou^ raise legal immigration levels — some by apparently as much as 60%. But, we afeady admit more than 600,000 legal immigrants each year. This is multipliecby the many relatives who come later. And, adding this to estimated illegal immigratbn of half a million a year makes a total of over one million new immigrants a year, 'hat's already too many! We need less immigration, not more! Puttirg U.S. population on the stabilization track requires passage of new federal legislatbn setting an all-inclusive immigration ceiling of 200,000 immigrants per yen'* This ceiling would balance the estimated annual number of emigrants who leave he U.S. to live elsewhere. ( ACT NOW! YOU CAN MARE A DIFFERENCE! • Spid the coupon below to vour Senator. Representative or favorite candidate: L