Page 4 THE BATTALION FRIDAY, MARCH 4, 1977 BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES One day 10c per word Minimum charge — $1.00 Classified Display $1.65 per column inch each insertion ALL classified ads must be pre-paid. DEADLINE 3 p.m. day before publication OFFICIAL NOTICE OFFICIAL NOTICE COLLEGE OF SCIENCE ENGLISH PROFICIENCY EXAMINATION ALL JUNIORS and SENIORS in curricula of the College of Science must take the English Proficiency Examination on WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23, 1977, at 7:30 p.m. BIOLOGY Department Curricula — Room 113 BSBE CHEMISTRY Department Curricula — Room 100 CHEM MATH Department Curricula — Room 204 ACAD PHYSIC Department Curricula — Room 301 For information and guidelines on the nature of the examination, check with the depart mental secretary. In order to qualify as a candidate for a degree in the College of Science, each student must demonstrate an ability to express himself (or herseli) in acceptable English. This require ment may be satisfied by (1) passing an exam ination in English composition (EPE) taken not later than the spring semester of the junior year, or (2) completing English 301 with a minimum grade of C. Any student who fails the written examination (EPE) must satisfy the English proficiency requirement by taking English 301 and earning a minimum grade of C. SENIOR RING ORDERING PROCEDURE OFFICE OF THE DEAN OF ADMISSIONS AND RECORDS To be eligible to order the Texas A&M ring, an under graduate student must have at least one year in resi dence, credit for at least ninety-two (92) semester hours and be in good standing with the University A year in residence may consist of the Fall and Spring semesters or one of the above and a full summer ses sion (both the first and second terms). The hours passed at the preliminary grade report period on March 23rd may be used in satisfying this ninety-two hour requirement. Students qualifying under this regulation should leave their names with the ring clerk, Hoorn Seven. Richard Coke Huilding. This should he done prior to March 23rd in order for all records to be checked to determine ring eligibility. (Any student having completed ninety-two (92) hours at the end of the f all '76 semester may order at any time. There is never a dead-line once the hours have been completed, with the exception of a monthly mail ing date.) Graduate students are eligible to order with proof (receipt) that they have filed for graduation. Orders tor mid-semester will be taken by the ring clerk starting March 23, 1977, and will continue until April 26, 1977. Students who do not place their order during this period may order after final grades are. posted. All rings must be paid for in full when the order is placed. Please bring mid-semester grade re ports along when ready to order. Anyone having failed to leave their names in advance and fail to bring grade report will be asked to return later to allow time for records to be checked. The rings should arrive at the Registar’s Office on June 28, 1977. AH rings ordered, regardless of whether on March 23rd or April 26th will arrive at the same time, The ring clerk is on duty froth 8 a'.ni to 12‘noon and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m of each week, Monday through Friday. However, in order for records to be checked, orders must be placed prior to 11:30 a.m. and 4 p.m. We hope this information will be helpful and extend our congratulations. Edwin H. Cooper, Dean Admissions and Records Carolyn Wells, Ring Clerk SPECIAL NOTICE Weight Watchers has an exciting new program. College Station class meets Thursdays, 6:30 p.m., Hillel Foundation, 800 Jersey Street. For further information call 822-7303. 83H6 Service For All Chrysler Corp. Cars Body Work — Painting HALSELL MOTOR COMPANY INC. Dodge Sales and Service Since 1922 1411 Texas Ave. — 823-8111 FOR SALE ’71 Camaro. 350, V8, automatic, power steering, air, vinyl top, new tires, radio, cassette player, nice interior. Engine in excellent condi tion. $2500. Call: 693-6815. 85t2 Dokorder Model 7500 Tape rec order; Kenwood KR2400 Stereo receiver; Pair of Studio Speak ers. For more information, call 693-7533 after 5:00 p.m. 8413 For Battalion Classified Call 845-2611 ALLEN Oldsmobile Cadillac SALES-SERVICE “Where satisfaction is standard equipment” 2401 Texas Ave. 823-8002 w Q3 Mts ILLIAMS REAL ESTATE List with us— Sell thru us — Finance with us WILLIAMS MORTGAGE CO WILLIAMS INSURANCE — Beautiful 3 BR, 2 bath, den with f/p, LR & DR, detached 2 car garage. Memorial Forest. — 2 new 3 BR, 2 bath, den & garden kitchens with paved alley to DBL garage. Windove East. — Older frame houses and dup lexes belonging to large estate. Good rental incomes, homes to live in and commercial potential. From 14,500 up. — Land tracts. 5 acres each in Royal Oaks Estates and Harvey Estates for your beautiful coun try home. — 11 acres with 4 BR, 3 hath home. Double F/P in large open den area. DBL. garage, Must see to appreciate. Short drive to town. Mid $80’s. — 2 BR, 1 bath frame for bargain $16,000 in town near bypass. Owner anxious. OFFICE 822-3793 GLYNN WILLIAMS, BROKER 822-3793 CAL TROSSEN 846-7260 86(1 1975 Yamaha 400 Enduro. 660 miles. $950.00 or hest offer. 693-7458. 83(5 English saddle pad with matching girth cover. White fleece. $17.50. Call 846-4101. 83t4 ’74 Honda 250 Elsinore. Clean. 575 miles. $750. 845-4887. 82(5 Speakers, cassette deck, turntable, bicycle. 846-3295. 84(3 Twelve string guitar. Excellent condition. 846-6420. 84(8 1975 Toyota Celica ST. Low mileage, A/C, AM-FM & Tape. Excellent Condifion. Must Sell. 693-7458. 84(3 FOR RENT THE GRADUATE COLLEGE Final Examinafion for the Doctoral Degree - Name: Khaleel, Raziuddin Degree: Ph.D. in Agricultural Engineering Dissertation. NUMERICAL SIMULATION OF TWO-PHASE FLOW AND DIS PERSION IN SATURATED — UN SATURATED POROUS MEDIA. Time: 1:30 p.m. on March 9, 1977 Place: 209 in Agricultural Eng. G. W. Kunze Dean of the Graduate College THE LA SALLE a resident hotel Faculty, Staff, Post-Grads, Stu dents. A quiet, dignified place to live & study. Rooms and Rooms With Board Monthly Basis La Salle Hotel 120 SOUTH MAIN BRYAN 713/822-1501 One bedroom furnished and unfomished apt. $135/rho. plus partial utilities. 808 and 806 East 32nd. 2 bedroom unfurnished apt. $120/mo. plus utilities. 1316 Antone. 3 bedroom furnished house, central air/heat. $250/mo. plus utilities. Bryan. 1 bedroom partially furnished apt. $100/mo. plus utilities. JACOB BEAL REALTY 822-4518 Ask for Linda 85t7 DIAMOND ENGAGEMENT & WED DING RINGS: Up to 50% discount to stu dents, faculty & staff (full or part-time). Example, 14 ct. $75, ¥i ct. $250, 1 ct. $695 by buying direct from leading diamond im porter. For color catalog send $1 to SMA Diamond Importers, Inc. Box 42, Fan- wood, N.J. 07023 (indicate name of school) or call (212) 682-3390 for location of show room nearest you. 1974 Capri. A/C, AM/FM, Tape. New Ra- dials, Reclining seats. 2095.00. 846-4416. 84t3 One bedroom apartment available at Doux Chene. Pool, tennis courts, shuttle bus. From 1st April as sub lease for one month or from 1st May as an ordinary lease. Call 693-7516. 86tl No use driving and hunting — just see Cowan’s White Auto Store, North Gate. We have it: auto parts, home appliances, bikes and repair, home needs and lawn mowers. One bedroom in upstairs apt. All new kitchen. Private phone. Cable t.v. Share bath with three students. Five mins, from campus. Large home on acreage. $80/month. Bills paid. Call 846-5694 after 5:00. or 846-3824 83(5 Attention Married Couples. One and two bedroom, furnished or unfurnished apartments. Ready for occupancy. 1-1V& miles south of campus. Lake for fishing. Washateria on grounds. Country atmos phere. Call D. R. Cain Co. 693-8850, or after 5, 846-8145 or 693-1818. 64tffi APARTMENT PLACEMENT SERVICE 204 Texas Ave. (Western Motel Lobby) 823-7506 A Free Service Rooms and bath close to campus. Apart ments: one, two, or three bedrooms. Dup lexes, Mobile Homes. Let us show you a selection in the B-CS area. 75(17 AVAILABLE NOW. Very large two bedroom apartment. $200 per month. All Bills paid. Small complex. No children. No pets. 846-3914 or 1-828-4778. 83(8 WORK WANTED Typing. Experienced, fast, accurate. All kinds. 822-0544 . 83(16 TYPING DONE. REASONABLE RATES. Call 693-8071. 80(19 Typing — Experienced, accurate, 846-3491 after 5:30. 79t8 Typing. 823-4579. Typing. Symbols. 846-0360. Full time typing. Symbols. Call 823- 7723 - 392tfh Typing done after 5:30. 693-0267 64(40 HELP WANTED STUDENT MANAGER v_ GROVE MOVIE SERIES Must be enrolled as a student during the summer terms. DATE: May 29 through August 10, 1977 DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS: Fri day, 5:00 P.M., March 25, 1977 Applications and job description available at the secretaries’ desks in the Student Programs Office in Room 216 of the M SC. 86(5 HELP NEEDED Day or Night Ken Martin’s Steak House 1803 S. Texas Ave. Bryan 85(4 Full time help needed at Farmer’s Market Deli in Bryan. Hours — 9 a.m. — 5 p.m. Restaurant experience desired. 822-6417 80tfn Restaurant help needed. Morn ing, evening, night. Cooks, waitresses, dishwashers. Apply Denny’s Restaurant. Mr. Dugan or Mr. Hayes. An EOE em ployer . 83(8 JOB OPPORTUNITIES OVERSEAS JOBS — summer/year- round. Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. All fields, $500-$1200 monthly. Expenses paid, sightseeing. Free inform. — Write: International Job Center Dept. TC, Box 4490 Berkeley, CA 94704 84(8 Commercial Lawnmower Sales — Service. Owner retiring, 8,000 sq. ft. shop, tools, and equipment. Fantas tic location near I-10 @ 1-45, 1702 Ovid St., Houston, TX. Kenneth H. Baird Properties, 713-492-1150. .64(4 GARAGE SALE NOT A GARAGE, BUT A BAL- CONEY SALE. SCANDIA I APT. 6M (401 ANDERSON) All day Saturday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m Free cof- fee and doughnuts before 10 a.m. 86(1 LOST 1 round 14k gold St. Christopher. Lost on baseball field #13. If found, call 845-3473. There is a reward! Has sentimental value. Registered Springer Spaniel puppies for sale. Well marked and good tempered. Call 693- 0589. 8415 INSTRUCTION Summer apartments for 2 boys. $100 . 846- 5132 ■ 85t3 Tutoring: All levels of German or mathematics by experienced university teacher. Call 693- 0794 after 5 p.m. 83t4 AUTO INSURANCE The Television FOR AGGIES: Shop Call: George Webb TV & RADIO SERVICE Farmers Insurance Group Zenith Sales and Services 3400 S. College 823-8051 TV Rental 713 S. Main Bryan 822-2133 Vfe can give you something to smile about. efficiency 6 2 bedroom floorplons bus service ro and from campus monagemenr-sponsored pomes • clubhouse and pool • coble TV service • ample parking 693-1325 502 Southwest Parkway lUillotuich apartments Colby to speak on CIA operation! pa Couple-Up (for Mother’s Day) Portraits of Couples — $29 95 3 - 8 x 10s in color for through March 18 (a regular $42.95 value) Call for an appointment . university studio 115 college main 846-8019 William E. Colby, former direc tor of the Central Intelligence Agency, (CIA) will speak Monday, March 7, at Texas A&M University on “The New Intelligence.’ The presentation concerning where the United States now stands in intelligence operations will be at 8 p.m. in the Rudder Theatre. Colby’s appearance here is jointly sponsored by Great Issues and Political Forum. Admission will be 50 cents per student, $1 each for others. Tracey O’Shay, Great Issues chairman, said the talk will present an inside view of one of today’s most controversial issues. Colby, as CIA director from 1973-76, supervised the United States’ entire intelli gence community. He became a pivotal influence on American Foreign policy. The Great Issues speaker’s con nection with the CIA dates from 1943. The Princeton graduate, re sponding to a call for French- speaking volunteers, joined the OSS and parachuted behind enemy lines to join a resistance unit fight ing the Nazis. He studied law at Columbia) the war. Finding the practiceof|| had no appeal for him, Colby jo the CIA on the outbreak rean War. He remained in agency, except for briefintervalij deputy then chief adviser pacification program in Vietnam, until retirement. Colby served CIA stints Stockholm, Rome and Vietnam was named executive direct controller in 1972 and pi 1973 to deputy director of i tions. His job as director was to tain CIA effectiveness during) of growing public concern ovi cret operations. To counteracti trust of the CIA, Colby stop its preoccupation with secrer| His concern is that the U.S.i tion is weakened by loss in ligence service’s effectiveness! to publicity given its covert tions. He calls the CIA “the beslinlel gence service in the world.. envy of foreign nations. I thin need good intelligence. I thin have it . . . and I think it si continue.” Students can je (ting Sp sta, Spu jorthem whid it. r r I e h I Will do typing, call after 5:00 p.m. 693- 7533. 84(3 APPLICATIONS FOR EDITOR + + + The Battalion, Summer 1977 The Battalion, Fall 1977 The Aggieland, Academic year 1977-78 The Student Publications Board is accepting applications for Summer and Fall editorships of The Battalion and for 1977-78 editor ships of the Aggieland. Application forms may be obtained at the Student Publications office, 216 Reed McDonald Building, between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. Completed application forms should be returned to Bob G. Rogers, chairman, Student Publications Board, 301 Reed McDonald. Deadline for submission of applications is 5 p.m. Tuesday, March 22. The Battalion summer editor will serve from May 16 through Au gust 24, 1977. The Battalion Fall Semester editor will serve from April 18, 1977, through Dec. 4, 1977 (with the exception of the summer term.) The Aggieland editor will serve for the academic year 1977-78. Qualifications for editor of The Battalion are: 2.0 overall and major GPR at the time of taking office and during the term of office. At least one year of experience in a responsible editorial position on the Bat talion or comparable student newspaper OR at least one year of edito rial experience on a commercial newspaper OR ^ least 12 hours of journalism including Journalism 203 and 204 (Reporting and Editing I and II) or equivalent. The 12 hours must include completion of or enrollment in Journalism 402 (Law) or equivalent. Qualifications for editor of the Aggieland are: 2.0 overall and major GPR at the time of taking office and during the term of office. At least one year in a responsible staff position on the Aggieland or equivalent yearbook experience elsewhere. Doctor develops huge microscope United Press International LOS ANGELES — Microscopes help scientists see inside small dabs of blood or bits of tissue after the matter has been taken from the body and put on a slide. Now there’s a microscope that can hold a whole body. Dr. Wallace Frasher of the Uni versity of Southern California Med ical School wanted to look at the blood and tissue while it was still in the body. So USC and the Califor nia Institute of Technology in Pasadena developed a microscope to do the job. The problem was that very little is known about how blood gets through tiny capillaries half the size of the blood cells they carry. Capil laries are ho more than a thousandth of an inch thick and they compose the micro-circulatory system. The basic design of the mi croscope was developed by USC in association with Dr. Harold Way- land of Caltech. A prototype model was built at the Pasadena school and the working model was built at USC’s lab. Daniel Netto, an optical engineer who had worked on the 200-inch Palomar telescope, devised the lens system for Frasher’s microscope. It uses a telescoping mechanism and lenses focused at infinity, and allows the researcher to move the tube containing the lenses up or down. The next step was to build a plat form that would hold an animal and keep it from wiggling, provide necessary life support systems, house the optical system, and allow the researcher access to I Machinist Marty Nagel builll 10-foot high, three-leggedstr cli| with a 400-pound steel platfor a table moved by a system ofgea The platform was so well se it would take a “killer ear move it, a researcher said."It rest of the building collapsed,!’ microscope would tower aboveil ruins,” he added. Working with other doclt: Frasher found a way to recordij quantity of matter being transfen from the blood to the tissues! using a very small crystal of radio tive matter. Frasher said he hopes no\sj learn how the transfer betel blood and tissue cells takes pltj how long it takes for the p occur and how long tissue ret« matter before the blood carri