THE BATTALION THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1977 Page 3 THE DIAMOND ROOM’S STANDARD OF EXCELLENCE And now one-day setting service. Plus a special price on Aggie diamond rings. 3731 E. 29th Town & Country Center 846-4708 Oil trade less in 40’s By DEBBIE PARSONS Most people did not expect Saudi Arabia to have as much oil as it was discovered to have, Thomas C. Barger said last night in his lecture on “Middle East Views on the Energy Situation.” Barger said the lecture was de signed to give people a background on the Middle East and tell some thing about the oil industry there. Barger retired in 1969 after spending 32 years in Saudi Arabia with the oil company, Aramco. The Middle East is composed of those states adjoined to the Persian Gulf, he said, including Saudi Arabia, Oman, United Arab Emi rates (U.A.E.), Iran, Iraq, Kuwait and Qatar. In 1908, oil was first discovered in Iran. It was then discovered in Iraq in 1927, Bahrain in 1932, and in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia in 1938. “The amount of oil in the gulf is rather hard to appreciate,” Barger said. The oil reserves in the Persian Gulf are approximately two-thirds of those in the Free World, he said. Production is 24 million barrels a day, which is one-half to two-thirds of the production in the Free World. “With all this oil it would seem that finding it would be like shoot ing fish in a barrel; this is not so, ” he said. During World War II, oil opera tions stopped everywhere in the Middle East except in Iraq and Iran. Saudi Arabia did not have the refineries needed to export crude oil, so they had no trade in it. “After World War II, the expan sion in the oil industry was tremen dous,” Barger said. He used Aramco as an example, which went from producing 13,000 barrels of oil a day in 1943, to producing 150,000 barrels of oil a day by 1953. “It was obviously a madhouse,” he said, “trying to expand at this rate.” During this time, the oil com panies’ profits increased drastically, Barger said. In Saudi Arabia, a “50-50 Agree ment” was made that split the oil profits between the oil companies and the government. In August 1960, some companies posted a price that was 14 cents a barrel less than the price the gov ernment wanted. The government protested the price, which led to the formation of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), Barger said. OPEC is represented by people from Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Iran, Kuwait and Venezuela. “OPEC has nothing to do with politics or embargoes,” Barger said. “It was founded solely for sustaining the price of oil and raising it when it could. I think it is a very good thing for the Middle East.” From 1960 to 1970 the price of Arabian light crude oil was fixed at $1.80 a barrel, but the market price of oil had dropped, so there was not a 50-50 agreement between the government and the oil companies. In February 1971, the Tehran Agreement was made, which fixed the prices and terms between com panies and the government for five years. “1073 was the really big year,” Barger said. “The world oil demand rose to 2-% million barrels of oil a day in nine months. Eighty per cent of the 2-% million barrels came from the countries around the Persian Gulf.” On Dec. 23, 1973, after the Arabs placed an embargo on the U.S. and the Caribbean Islands because the U.S. said it would send help to the Israelis in the war between Egypt and Israel, OPEC met to decide on a posted oil price. “The real disaster of the embargo was the effect it had on the price of oil,” Barger said. SENIORS & GRADUATE 1 STUDENTS Your Yearbook Photos For The 1977 Aggieland Will Be Taken Through Feb. 11 Only— Feb. 11 Is The Final Day. JuniorYearbook Photos Will BeTaken x Beginning Feb. 14 i. . . university studio "“sxr" Top of the News Campus DEGREE application dead line is Friday, Feb. 11 for stu dents expecting to graduate May 6 and 7. To apply, students first pay an $8 diploma fee at the Fis cal Office, in the Coke Building. Undergraduates present the re ceipt in Room 7. Graduate stu dents complete application at the Graduate College, 209 Coke Building. A PROFESSOR of chemistry at A&M, Dr. F. Albert Cotton, has received the Pauling Award of the ACS Oregon and Puget Sound Sections. Cotton is the first chemist to earn the award. The author or co-author of about 480 research publications. Cot ton is a Robert A. Welch Distin guished Professor of Chemistry. DISTINGUISHED professor and head of the chemistry de partment at A&M, Dr. Arthur E. Martell, has received the 1976 ACS Southwest Regional Award. The award was presented at the Southwest Regional Meeting in Ft. Worth last month. Martell came to A&M in 1966. Since then, the chemistry faculty has increased from 23 members to 60, graduate student enrollment has doubled and the amount of research funds has increased six times. Texas A BURGLARY suspect, Stephen Elroy Bownds, in jail in Houston, was talked out of jump ing from the ledge of the Harris County Courts building yester day when the sheriff offered him a nickle. Bownds had escaped from a rooftop recreational area and made his way to the ledge. Sheriff Jack Heard said Bownds would probably be sent to the Rusk State Hospital for mental exam ination. THE CHAIRMAN of the Texas Medical Association Coun cil on Medical Education and Hospitals yesterday said the shortage of family doctors will be come worse unless the legislature funds family practice residencies in the state. Dr. William F. Ross said there are insufficient graduate training residency pro grams to replace physicians leav ing family practice. National MARC SALINGER, 28-year- old son of Pierre Salinger, who was press secretary to Presidents Kennedy and Johnson, was killed yesterday when he jumped from San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge. Salinger, a student at San Francisco State University, was the third person to jump from the bridge in the last two days. Since the bridge was built 40 years ago, 591 persons are known to have committed suicide by jumping from it. PRESIDENT Carter yester day met with members of Con gress from states bordering Mexico to discuss various border problems. Among the problems are gun and drug traffic control, economic development areas, il legal alien control, and water dis putes. Carter also discussed the value of the peso and efforts to stop “anti-government terrorist groups” from dealing in arms traf fic. Several members of Congress favored a return to the Bracero Program, under which Mexican nationals came to the U.S. legally to work. AMERICANS watched more television in January 1977 than in any other month. The A.C. Nielsen Co. said the average American family watched televi sion for seven hours and 16 min utes per day during January. An average of 30 per cent of the tele vision sets in use were tuned in on a 24-hour basis. PSYCHIATRIST Dr. John Cody testified yesterday that Francis Donald Nemechek was insane at the time he killed four women and left a 3-year-old boy to die of exposure. Dr. Cody, di rector of the High Plains Mental Health Center at Hays, Kan., said Nemechek had an emotional loss of contact with reality at the time of the killings. Nemechek has pleaded innocent by reason of insanity to five counts of first- degree murder. BUZZARD BOOTS Sure, good shoes cost a bit more. When you give good shoes you’re giving quality long-wearing comfort and refined good-looks. Natural suede or tan waxy leather. 8V2 to 12N, 7 to 12, 13. 32.99 mis Shoe. StosieA DOWNTOWN BRYAN Before Sound Guard; the only way to prevent your records from wearing out was not to play them. Magnified, you can see record vinyl wearing away. With Sound Guard With same magnification, record vinyl shows no wear. If you’ve played any record often enough, you’ve heard the inevitable occur. It wore out. While “pops’’ “hisses^’ and other surface noises began making their appear ance on your favorite records, high frequency sounds—like violins and flutes—began disappearing. The villain behind this destruction is friction. (If a diamond cuts through steel, you can imagine what a diamond stylus does to vinyl records.) Fortunately, from outer space has come a solu tion to record degradation. It’s called Sound Guard? A by-product of re search into dry lubricants for aerospace applications, Sound Guard record preservative puts a micro- scopically-thin (less than 0.000003") dry film on records to protect the grooves from damage. Yet, remarkably, it does not degrade fidelity. Independent tests show that Sound Guard pre servative maintains full amplitude at all ’ ( audible frequencies, while at the same time significantly retarding increases in surface noise and harmonic distortion?* In other words, when applied according to in structions, a new record treated with Sound Guard preservative and played 100 times sounds the same as one in “mint” condition played the first time! Sound Guard preserva tive comes in a kit (complete with non-aerosol pump sprayer and velvet buffing pad). It is completely safe and effective for all discs, from precious old 78’s to the newest LP’s including CD-4’s. Recently introduced to audiophiles, Sound Guard preservative is now avail able in audio and record outlets. **For complete test results write: Sound Guard, Box 5001, Muncie, Indiana 43702. Sound Guard 9 keeps your good sounds sounding good. *Sound Guard is the registered trademark of Ball Corporation for its record preservative. © 1976 by Ball Corporation.