The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 23, 1976, Image 6

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    Page 6
THE BATTALION
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 23, 1976
' '
i i: I
.i
SAVE
LIMIT 1 PER COUPON. ONE COUPON PER FAMILY. GOOD ONLY 4Q«
AT LEWIS & COKER. EXPIRES 6-30-76. ^*WITHTHIsS]
bathroom"”
AURORA tissue ^imit^please 2
coca coi^:=:::: 4 ^1°°
ROLL OQC
PKG 05»
LONGHORN CHEESE..™ I'l 89«
STRAWBERRY PRESERVES ‘ 18 ° z ' roc ’
BEEF CHUCK STEAK
PORK CHOPS
PORK LOIN
RIB END CUTS
USDA CHOICE
HEAVY BEEF
BLADE CUT .
■
LB.
SEVEN STEAK lb 79 c
FRESH CALF LIVER lb 59*
SWEET RED PLUMS . C . A . L “ LB 69*
JUICY NECTA RIN ES. . C " A . 69 c
Geared to industries, builders
Service provides energy info.
A statewide energy advisory ser
vice to help Texas industrial, resi
dential and public energy users has
been initiated by the Center for
Energy and Mineral Resources
(CEMR) at Texas A&M University,
announced Dr. Richard E.
Wainerdi, CEMR director.
Called the Energy Advisory Ser
vice for Texas (EAST), the new pro
gram will be directed by Dr.
Stephen Riter, an associate director
of the CEMR. The program is par
tially supported by a grant from the
United States Energy Research and
Development Administration.
The Energy Advisory Service for
Texas is an experimental service
supported by the Energy Research
and Development Administration to
fuptnamba
0® ~ "
test methods for transferring energy
conservation methods to users.
Initially, EAST will develop pro
grams to serve medium-sized man
ufacturers, residential builders and
the operators of large existing build
ings. These target groups have been
selected because of their existing
high potential for energy savings.
Medium-sized manufacturers
were selected as an initial audience
because many are heavy energy us
ers, but they do not have trained
personnel to formulate and carry out
a comprehensive energy conserva
tion program. For example, many
such industries manufacture process
steam and use process heating, two
operations which use a great deal of
energy, but in which the potential
for improved efficiency of energy use
is also high.
EAST personnel will work with
builders to help them determine
energy-efficient equipment which
can be incorporated into houses,
apartments and larger buildings.
This could include recom
mendations on the proper type and
amount of insulation, using heat
pumps for cooling and heating, using
double-pane windows and other
measures.
A special team of conservation
specialists will be available under
the EAST program to evaluate the
equipment and operating practices
in large existing buildings. After
studying the equipment and opera
tion, the team will recommend con
servation measures which might be
taken.
Other phases of the Energy Advi
sory Service for Texas will include
information programs to support the
efforts to reach industrial and resi
dential energy groups, and a pro
gram to evaluate the effectiveness of
EAST and to plan additional ac
tivities.
Ji
riN-
lature '
iropria
.gricul
geat
was
lifluer.
the
to
entire
iatec
Mo
rom di
it a
The
Eddie Dominguez ’66
Joe Arciniega ’74
Greg Price
City Council to discuss fiscal budget
A public hearing concerning the 1976-77
College Station municipal budget leads off
the business agenda for the College Station
City Council meeting tomorrow.
The $7,481,420 budget is expected to be
approved after the public hearing. The
budget represents a 20 per cent increase
over the current year’s budget and a 63 per
Providing energy information
Texans is not a new concept forTf
A&M. The Center for Energy
Mineral Resources has been worloq
in this area since it ’
1975. Other parts of the Tea
A&M University System, suchaslli IN —
Texas Transportation Instituti jdle i
Texas Agricultural Extension Sei ^rdir
vice, and the Texas EngineeringEi arr ' ve
periinent Station have beenworlj iers
for years to help Texans with eneii ty
problems.
“The grant from the Energy ^
search and Development Admi®
tration will allow us to expandiviloffi
past efforts and concentrate on spilt)’ Ml
cial groups with a high potential^ |sleej
real energy savings,” Riter said.. ir’sba:
Methods for reaching dies 115 ' n
groups will include conferences^ ®tor
workshops, on-site visits, privj nflc
consultations, presentations lorn Jung,
terested audiences, publications® g reen
media information programs,
ils per
PUS (
of Jan
Jbags
cent increase over last year’s budget.
The Council is also scheduled to discuss
the projected housing inventory which will
be available in College Station in Sep
tember.
The meeting begins at 7 p.m. in the
Council Chambers of city hall, 1101 Texas
Avenue.
If you want the real
thing, not frozen or
canned .. . We call It
“Mexican Food
Supreme.”
Dallas location:
3071 Northwest Hwy
352-8570
Consol receives $121,834
Governor Dolph Briscoe an
nounced approval Friday of a
$121,834 Office of Human De
velopment grant to A&M Consoli
dated Schools in College Station.
The grant includes $58,169 in new
federal funds and authorization to
use $537 in carryover funds for a
ffril-day Head Start program and
$63,665 in new federal funds and au
thorization to use $281 in carryover
funds for a summer Head Start pro
gram. The grant was effective re
troactively from April 1, 1976,
through March 31, 1977. It is funded
under Title V of the Head Start,
Economic Opportunity, and Com
munity Partnership Act of 1974.
The full-day. Head Start program
is serving 60 children through three
classes in one center. Classes meet
five days per week for nine hours per
day for 36 weeks a year.
The summer Head Start program
has been delegated to the Bryan In
dependent School District (ISD) and
is serving 300 children through fif
teen classes in one center for five
days per week, four hours per day.
Classes are meeting during
weeks of June and July.
Objective of the program istopn id deg
sent a sound early childhood edio
tion program for low-income dd JScroj
dren. In addition to presenting# dedtc
education program, the childrenn d grei
given physical examinations in m
needed follow-up.
Grant processing and progra
liaison are through the Econon
Opportunity Division of the Ten
Department of Community Affain
KAMU features hear
AGGIE RING DIAMOND
SPECIAL
1/5 carat diamond mounted in your ring $110.
Vs carat diamond mounted in your ring $60.
Two-Day Setting Service
Special good through July
Carl Bussells
iamond Room
3731 E. 29th
Town & Country Center
846-4708
“Cardio-Pulmonary Resuscita
tion,” a method to give heart failure
victims another chance at life, will
be the subject of KAMU-TV’s
“Femine Touch” next week.
The Texas A&M University
production, hosted by women’s
editor Dale Torgerson, will be aired
Saturday, June 26, at 5:30 p.m.
Channel 12 on the cable.
Becky White, a Registered Nurse
from St. Joseph’s Hospital, and
Laura Kitzmiller, for the univer
sity’s Health and Physical Educa
tion Department, will demonstrate
the technique and explain what it is,
said Torgerson.
Chr
ds. Wi
mount
led tot
recei
ids. It
than
as bee
LC0I
SPreji
that
can
ition.
VEST
of the
e —
ges mi
e, and
cents [
ANTC
satwe
ii cartha
can hi
t. We
purpo
The Bacardi Driver.
Zippier than a screwdriver.
Easy as 1,2,3.
Pour 1 Vz oz. Bacardi light rum
over ice in a tall glass.
2 Pour on ice cold
• orange juice.
Squeeze and drop in a lime
or lemon wedge.
Now you’re ready to sip
some zip. Because Bacardi
and that hint of lime or
lemon really turn on theOJ!
I BACARDI @ rum.
The mixable one.
® 1975 BACARDI IMPORTS, INC., MIAMI, FL. RUM 80 PROOF.
“bacardi" and the bat device are registered TRADEMARKS OF BACARDI a company limited.
May held 12-day dry spell
“The method can be usedii
case of heart failure caused by ki
attack, electric shock, poisonin
drowning, auto accident or anyc
where the heart has stopped batjdlitate
ing,’ she explained.
“Clinically, a person is (
the heart stops treating, butbiolt coin '
cally he has four more minutesb min
fore death,” Torgerson said, “ft#
ably the technique could be pich
up hy watching the program Wi]
be effectively used it has tobegi
ticed. The course will be
adults and children by the I
Valley Development Coundl
Information for class schedii! fW 'b f
can be obtained by calling822-i
en s an
lin al
Ifctl
iff.
May provided near-normal rain
fall in the area, although the month
included the longest dry spell so far
this year.
Parts of Bryan and College Sta
tion went 12 days without rain. But
25 observers in a network for Texas
A&M’s Meteorology Department
averaged 4.04 inches of rain. Rec-
ALLEN
Oldsmobile
Cadillac
SALES - SERVICE
‘Where satisfaction is
sta ndard equ ip men t ”
2401 Texas Ave.
823-8002
ords for the month average 4.3b
ches.
Rain fell four to 10 days of
month, depending on observerh
tion. It left the total for If
about 18 inches, slightly behind
pace that produces an avenj
yearly rainfall of 39 inches here.
Amounts for last month vani
from 6.12 inches at Kurten, to2
inches in the 1000 block of Holt
the cities. College Station also
the high, 5.71 in the 1300 bloc
Laurel Lane. In Bryan,
maximum was 5.28 inches in lb
200 block of W. North Avenue,
The 30-day outlook issued bytb
National Weather Service
above normal precipitation ait
below normal temperatures tbrocl
mid-July. Those corres
three to four inches rainfall id
temperatures producing an
degree mean.