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Page 29 text:
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i t 0l ' tw0ct .11 .:-:..- . . ;.:s: : -, wife twig to iiix boy ' ....::; ,:- ,..! . . tef Rednecks and armadillos alike kick up dust at San Marcos ' 12th Annual Chilympiad held in September. PHOOEY iKLliU i Esltp applauds sptaktr in inti- moral majority ' s Sept. 29 Phoocy on Falwcll rally on the West Mall. September 1 New state laws raising the legal drinking age from 18 to 19 and restricting head shops from selling drug paraphernalia go into effect. Two hundred anti-nuclear activists attempting to blockade the Diablo Canyon nuclear reactor in California and prevent its activa- tion are arrested. 17 Women ' s Intercollegiate Athletic Office in Bellmont burns. October 1O Cotton Bowl Scoreboard reads TEXAS-34 OKLAHOMA-14, ' 1 earning the Horns the No. 1 spot for a week. 2O Botched holdup of a Brink ' s truck in Nanuet, New York brings back a name from the 60s. Marilyn Jean Buck, a UT student in 1966-1967, is suspected of working with the Weather Underground, a group dedicated to the overthrow of the American government. The at- tempted robbery leaves two police officers and a security guard dead. September October 23
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Page 28 text:
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Bricks Bum, Stones Discoing in jubilation on a portion of the Drag sectioned off by police, Austin-based revelers prove that Dallas isn ' t the only place to let loose after the OU victory Oct. 10. T: Effectiv | he first day of September saw many freshmen complaining about a perceived return to the Dark Ages. Effective Sept. 1, a new law had raised the drinking age in Texas to 19. To some it seemed that college students were being denied a collegiate lifestyle. In any event, some prepared to wait out the dry spell while others set out in search of fake I.D. cards. On Sept. 8, the Panhellenic Council ' s representatives decided to sign a non- discrimination statement required by the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees for inclusion in the Cac- tus yearbook. The decision reversed an April non-binding vote not to sign. Those who thought UT ' s brick-and- cement buildings could not possibly burn were proven wrong when a Bellmont Hall office caught fire on the night of Sept. 17. Students cheered firefighters ' efforts from below as the fire was extinguished. In- vestigators suspected arson. With October came a new fiscal year and the beginning of President Reagan ' s economic recovery program. Congress had passed the truncated budget and Reaganomics became the economic law of the land. In Poland, the independent labor union Solidarity re-elected Lech Walesa union chief at a union congress in Gdansk. Who is buried in Oswald ' s grave? That question was answered for good on the first Sunday of October when an exhumation and autopsy were performed on the body of President Kennedy ' s alleged assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald, buried in Ft. Worth. Cor- oners concluded the body was Oswald ' s, disproving a theory that the casket held the body of a Soviet spy. In a tragic irony two days later, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat was assassinated at a parade in Cairo. The University Co-Op had problems stemming from disagreements between members of its board of directors. On Oct. 21, William Lesso, chairman of the Co-Op Board of Directors, resigned, citing prob- lems between himself and student members of the board. Tom Philpott, a UT professor of history, was assaulted in his home allegedly by at- tackers trying to make his death appear a suicide. Philpott guessed that his attackers, from whom he escaped with a gunshot wound to the shoulder, were trying to silence his campaign against boy prostitution. On Halloween weekend, the Rolling Stones were back. Late in the month on a national tour, Mick Jagger and company played two concerts each in Dallas and Houston for stadium-sized crowds. Halloween day found the Aggies acting like, well, Aggies. SMU ' s football team was playing at A M and following a Pony touchdown, the Mustang cheerleaders began to spell out S-M-U on the field, in violation of an A M rule barring anyone but players and officials from the field during a game. One overzealous Aggie cadet, an officer of the day, charged toward the cheerleaders, kicking one and drawing his sword. The cadet was then knocked down by another cheerleader and had to be dragged away. No one was injured in the incident. 22 September October
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Page 30 text:
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Space shuttle Columbia arrives piggyback on a 747 to spend the night at Bergstrom Air Force Base Nov. 24. ovember opened with a city-wide referendum in which voters decid- ed 3-2 to sell their 16 percent share in the Southwest Texas Nuclear Pro- ject. A few days later, Brown Root, Inc., in charge of construction of the Bay City plant, pulled out of the project, claiming that they could not negotiate a contract with Houston Lighting and Power Co., which had a 30.8 percent interest in the project. In a Nov. 4 meeting of the Texas Student Publications Executive Committee, 11 staf- fers took Daily Texan editor Don Puffer by surprise when they presented him with a petition and allegations that he and manag- ing editor Paula Angerstein had violated several TSP handbook rules. When he refus- ed to resign as demanded, approximately 20 staffers walked out. That Friday saw his and Angerstein ' s resignations. John Schwartz, former editor of UTmost magazine and editor of The Daily Texan during the interim period, took the helm per- manently when six out of 11 TSP Board members voted for his selection. Angerstein was reinstated and striking staff members returned, but Puffer denounced the affair as a power play, saying he resigned for the good of the newspaper, not because he felt unqualified for his vacated position. Space Shuttle Columbia, piloted by- rookie astronauts Joe Engle and Richard Truly, finally blasted off after two delays which set the launch time back more than a week. Technical problems cut the mission ' s projected five-day flight to only two days. The shuttle returned to earth with a mini- mum amount of damage, less than it ex- perienced during its April orbit. Federal budget director David Stockman ' s interview in the December issue of Atlantic Monthly almost cost him his job. His poor judgment and loose talk on the economy and Reaganomics led to his resignation offer on Nov. 12, which Presi- dent Reagan subsequently refused. National Security adviser Richard Allen didn ' t fare so well with another publication, a Japanese magazine called Shofu No Tomo. Allen ' s inability to explain an envelope con- taining a $1,000 thank you for setting up an interview with the first lady led to his dismissal. The discovery was made when Allen ' s office was being moved to a new location; Allen claimed he had intended to tell the president, but forgot in the confusion. Peacelight Fellowship, a new group on campus, organized a Dec. 8 peace rally on the West Mall in memory of John Lennon. The former Beatle and advocate of world peace was shot to death in front of his New York apartment in December 1980. In an out-of-court settlement, former UT employee Freeda Nash reported receiving $60,000 from the UT for denying her due process. Given an hour and a half s notice, she was relieved of her position as executive assistant to the chairman of the Department of Music when that department underwent reorganization, eliminating her job. UT did not grant her a grievance procedure, so she sued. Students geared up for finals, which lasted from Dec. 11-18. The month-long break that followed offered long hours for catching up on sleep and fortifying oneself for the spring semester. o heats up Municipal Auditorium Nov. 21 24 November December
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