THE BATTALION TUESDAY, MARCH 8, 1977 Page 5 pplicants for radio announcer o apply tomorrow at KAMU-FM ?An organizational meeting of Texas A&M University students in- [foested in working as radio an- uncers at KAMU-FM will be held morrow at 8:30 p .m. at the Educa- malTelevision Building. Program mcepts and an outline of the basic rogramming philosophy of the sta- will be discussed. At that time, formal applications the position of announcer will be SOe.jp.tten. Following the meeting, the iplicants will be screened and au- s, Hi »by, 1 litorim S! ' '■ HealtliQ of M,t, ontaiyi 'O boril H , 'anisl ui 'tudeni 1 m . Ira Ed 0 Life A® 7:30 p* « Ckitij Who F(! et Club, i violet lay andl given I rowing e,9:00i: 3 5.30 p. ) p.m ner Triu U.KyleFi chool Cm Music FesS i prepareli League t® uind coni# stand ilifU >e Major'" rf the Ui Houston Si Kyle Fie v cofftt ational 3V the yffee was: e until II e in years itions will be set up. KAMU-FM is a Public Broadcast ing Station affiliated with the Na tional Public Radio Network. It will broadcast a combination of classical, jazz, show tunes, big bands and easy listening music in addition to public affairs and educational programs from National Public Radio. Approximately 6-8 students will be hired to work an average of 20 hours per week. Work schedules will be coordinated with class schedules and KAMU-FM’s broad cast schedule of 6 a.m. to midnight, seven days per week. Salary is $2.30 per hour. ZJL fabric Sh 822-2433 oppe Complete Stock of Fashion Fabrics for Easter Sewing ‘In Our 30th Year of Selling Fabrics” Downtown Bryan 201 Main St. ARE YOUR SUMMER UNIFORMS READY? Have them cleaned now and be ready for the switch to summers! University Cleaners 112 College Main — Northgate Student Services Building (next to the Band Hall) GOOD FARMERS NEEDED AND OTHER SKILLS, TOO. PEACE CORPS ★ VISTA ON CAMPUS: Mar. 28-30 Applicants should have an inter est in good music, public affairs, and cultural programming, in addition to possessing a desire to learn broadcasting. Previous background is helpful, but not necessary for the position. In general, students with good voices, a sincere interest in broadcasting and a desire to bring good music, public affairs and cul tural programming to the commu nity are sought. All applicants must have a Third Class Radio Telephone Operator’s License with a broadcast endorsement. Anthropologist to speak today Anthropologist Richard E. Leakey will arrive on campus today for meet ings with Texas A&M University students, highlighted by an evening public lecture, entitled “The Human Heritage.” Leakey, director of Kenyan Na tional Museums, will present his public address at 8 p.m. in Rudder Auditorium. Tickets, $3 for general admission and $1 for students will be available at the door or from the An thropology Club booth in the Memorial Student Center. Leakey’s East African studies through the Foundation for Re search into the Origins of Man (FROM) have given rise to the claim that man’s ancestors existed millions of years earlier than was believed possible and that several species of man’s ancestors acutally lived side- by-side. A&M is the first of four campuses in the state that Leakey plans to visit this week. He arrived in Texas Monday following last weekend’s 2nd Annual FROM Distinguished Lecture Series in California. The series, which brings together the leading names in the search for man’s roots, is planned for Texas next year, with A&M as headquar ters for the scientific body. Top of the News Campus Texas AIR FORCE Col. Kenneth W. Durham, base commander at Dover AFB, Del., and a 1954 Texas A&M graduate, has been named the next professor of aerospace studies at Texas A&M University. Col. Durham will assume the post July 31, succeeding Col. Robert Elkins as the ranking Air Force officer at Texas A&M. A BOOK SALE will be held April 18 i'q recognition of National Li brary Week, April 17-23. Donations for the sale, which can include books, maps, records and posters may be left at Fed-Mart, Skaggs, Piggly Wiggly, Safeway at Hwy 30 and McDonald’s. On campus they may be left at the library, the mili tary science building and the mar ried student’s housing office. DEPOSITS for Free University courses will be returned Wednes day and Thursday from 8 a.m. until 6 p.m. on the second floor of Rud der Tower. Students must have completed at least three-fourths of the classes to receive the refund. ROGER McBRIDE, 1976 Liber tarian Party candidate for U. S. Pres ident, will speak in Rudder 701 at 8 p.m. March 22. A reception will be held afterward in MSC 205. UTILITY companies have been forced by take-or-pay contracts to pay for millions of cubic feet of natural gas they did not receive, and consumers have been the ultimate losers. Rep. Tom Schieffer, D-Fort Worth, contends. His bill, scheduled for House consideration today, would limit the future use of take-or-pay contracts, but would not abolish them. Take-or-pay con tracts, which require utilities to either take all the natural gas they contract to purchase or pay for it anyway, would be limited, accord ing to Schieffers’s bill, so that uti- lites would never have to pay more than 80 per cent of the sale price for natural gas they did not receive, and would give the utilities up to two years to take contracted gas without losing the option to purchase it. National BY DENYING a request to hear an appeal by convicted murderer Ernest Benjamin Smith, the Su preme Court yesterday moved the Dallas man a step closer to the elec tric chair. Benjamin Smith is con victed of participation in the 1973 robbery of a small Dallas grocery during which William Moon, a clerk, was slain. In July, 1976, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals af firmed Smith’s conviction and an execution date was set for last Nov. 18. However, the death sentence was stayed pending the ruling on whether the full court would hear the appeal. Yesterday’s order was the denial of that appeal. THE SEARCH goes on today in Tower City, Pa., for five men who were trapped in a coal mine last Tuesday by tons of water that rushed through the mine. Federal and state mine safety officials hold little hope any of them have sur vived. Four were killed and another was rescued during the weekend. A television camera, microphone and loud speaker were dropped through a hole straight down from atop a 435-foot hill into the flooded-out coal mine tunnel to find out if the five missing miners might still be alive. A RUSSIAN trawler has become the first foreign vessel cited southwest of the Alaska Coast under the new U.S. 200-mile fishing law. An officer of the National Marine Fisheries Service yesterday boarded the stern of the trawler Mys Vorona and found halibut on the Russian ship, violating the law which took effect March 1. The treaty permits the Soviet fleet to fish in certain areas for some species within the 200-mile zone, but the taking of halibut is prohibited. The fisheries service will initiate pro ceedings, which provides a civil penalty of up to $25,000 for the type violation the Mys Vorona is accused of committing. The trawler was not detained. World THE NATION, a newspaper in Nairobi, has urged Ugandans to es tablish their own government-in exile and blasted Arab and African nations for their silence over recent events in the East African country. It also demanded the United Na tions to “disarm” Uganda and ac cused the Soviet Union of being deeply involved in the mass killing of Ugandans by President Amin’s security forces. TO ALLEVIATE some of Romania’s needs following a major earthquake last Friday that killed at least 1,034 people, the United States yesterday flew $80,000 worth of bandages, antiseptic sprays, an tibiotics and other supplies from American bases in Italy and West Germany. „„■«/ INTERVIEWING SENIORS/GRADS: PLACEMENT OFFICE 10th Floor Rudder Tower SIGN UP NOW! Peace Corp Office § Agronomy Bldg., Rm. 105 Vfe can give you something to smile about. 7 PM IAY EClM jBeef earn 36S 3^ . other 'and^ fea VElft yplF # 5auc e res$^ id-^ 6 Tea efficiency b 2 bedroom floorplons bus service ro ond from campus management-sponsored parries • clubhouse and pool • coble TV service • ample parking 693-1325 502 Southwest Parkway llJilloiuick apartments NV. G.& Company STEAKS * SEAFOODS WE CATER All You Can Eat *2 50 • Bar-B-Que Beef • Bar-B-Que Sausage • Cole Slaw • Pinto Beans per person Bread Pickles & Onions Ice Tea Ideal for that special event this spring 317 College Avenue 846-8741 BRYAN-COLLEGE STATION’S LEADING AUDIO CENTER CUSTOM SOUNDS if you’ve been thinking about getting a programmable, Texas Instruments has a special offer for you NOW. SR-52 $249.95* (New low price) If you want the computer-like power of a card pro grammable then choose this one. Techniques like optimization, iteration, data reduc tion, what-if matrices, mathematical modeling, need not tie up your mind — or your time. But learning to use it is a hassle, you say. Not true. Prerecorded programs are gathered into software libraries: Electrical Engineering. Math. Statistics. Finance. All you need do is load a mag card, press a few keys and you’ll get answers that previously required a com puter. You can make your own programs just as easily. In just a couple of hours you’ll begin to prove what a powerful asset you have — right at your fingertips. And there’s not a better time to get an SR-52 than right now. TEXAS A&M BOOKSTORE In the Memorial Student Center SR-52 FREE Software offer. Indicate choice of 2 software libraries below and (1) return this completed coupon along with (2) your completed SR-52 serialized customer information card (packed in box) and (3) a dated copy of proof of your purchase, verifying purchase between Jan. 20 and March 31,1977, to: Texas Instruments Incorporated P. 0. Box 1210 Richardson, Texas 75080 Name : : Address City “I SR-52 Serial No □ Math □ Statistics State. (from back of calculator) □ Finance □ EE -Zip. 1 Texas Instruments reserves the right to substitute software libraries of equal value, j based upon availability. Please allow 30 days for delivery.