The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 01, 1977, Image 4

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    THE BATTALION
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1, 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
AGGIELAND REFUND POLICY
“Yearbook fees are refundable in full during
the semester in which payment is made.
Thereafter no refunds will be made on cancel
led orders. Yearbooks must be picked up dur
ing the academic year in which they are pub
lished.
“Students who will not be on campus when
the yearbooks are published, usually by Sep
tember 1, must pay a mailing and handling
fee. Yearbooks will not be held, nor will they
be mailed without the necessary fees having
been paid. ”
This policy took effect on October 22, 1976.
SPECIAL NOTICE
ATTENTION SUMMER AND
VET GRADUATES You may
begin ordering your Graduation
Announcements June 6th thru
June 17th at the Student Finance
Center, Room 217, Memorial
Student Center from 8:00 to 4:00,
Monday thru Friday.
Service For All
Chrysler Corp. Cars
Body Work — Painting
HALSELL MOTOR
COMPANY INC.
Dodge Sales and Service Since 1922
1411 Texas Ave. — 823-8111
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.
83tfn
For employment information at Texas
A&M University dial 845-4444 24
hours a day. Equal Employment Op
portunity through Affirmative Action.
Texas A&M University
HELP WANTED
The C&S Transit Co. Restaurant is accept
ing applications for part-time and full time
help in the following positions:
1. Waitresses (exp. preferred)
2. Bartender
3. General help
Call 693-7623 and ask for the manager or
apply in person at 815 Hwy. 30.
119t4
TEACHERS WANTED: West
and other states, Placements
since 1946. Bonded, Southwest
Teachers Agency, Box 4337, Al
buquerque, NM 87106. Free
Registration. imio
Summer Jobs. High School and
College students. Work part-
time now and full-time this sum
mer. Apply in person only.
Whataburger. Bryan or College
Station. io3tfn
SALES
3358.
Gas and Oil Wells. 614-866-
96t33
Typing. 846-3491.
Typing. Experienced, fast, accurate. All
kinds. 822-0544 . 83tfn
Full time typing. Symbols. Call 823-1
7723.
392tfo
FOR SALE
4 used window air conditioners. Good condi
tion. Priced right. Call 846-6793 after 1
p.m. 122t3
1967 Olds 4-door. Superior condition due to
good care. 822-5279. 122t2
Sell your used air conditioner to White’s
Auto Store or trade on new Catalina home; (
appliances. -
ALLEN
Oldsmobile
Cadillac
SALES - SERVICE
“Where satisfaction is
standard equipment’'
2401 Texas Ave.
823-8002
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
THE MEAN MACHINE!
1975 Suzuki 750
In order to support my expensive
parachuting habit, I am forced to part
with my fantastic motorcycle, which
is in excellent condition. It is 18
months old, and has only 6,200 miles
on it. It is completely decked out with
windjammer fairing, crash bars, de
luxe luggage rack, tall sissy bar, P.A.
Speaker, C.B. mount, 6’ fiberglass
whip antenna, dual front disc brakes,
new heavy-duty chain, sprockets and
tires, and is water cooled! You’ll be
surprised at how inexpensive I’ll sell
it!
Call Les @ 693-3374 before Sunday.
12211
BOOK SALE. Texas
A&M University
Bookstore. Large
selection of scientific
and technical books.
$1.99 or $2.99.
ROOMMATE WANTED
1973 Ford
Custom 500
This is the car for you! It is in very
good condition, and the price is
right! The car and engine are very
clean and it runs great! It has
brand new radial tires (steel belt
ed), air conditioning, power
steering, power front disc brakes,
4 stereo speakers, 351 Windsor
V-8 2 bbl., automatic transmis
sion, rear window defogger,
heavy duty trailer hitch, very
large trunk, 4 door hardtop, and
has been well taken care of.
Come look at it!
Call Les @ 693-3374
before Sunday
FOR RENT
Antiques, Primitives, 1,000 & 1 Iron
Things, Stained Glass Window, Oak Dres
sers, Old Iron Beds, Walnut Oak, Maple,
4-Poster & Bunk Beds, Primitive Pine
Hutch, Pie Safe, Oak Wash Stand, Oak
Dropleaf Table, Dining Chairs, Patio, Yard
and Aquarium Rock, Crystals, Petrified
Wood Logs, Old Wood Stoves, Black
smiths Anvils & Forge, Old Tools, Saws,
Model-T-Ford Parts, Et Cetera, Ad In
finitum. An Emporium ofThings You May
Need. Six-O-Eight South Bryan in Bryan at
Thirty Second Street. igar?
THE
LA SALLE
Attention Co-op Stu
dents. A quiet, dignified
place to live & study.
Monthly Rates
La Salle Hotel
120 SOUTH MAIN
BRYAN
713/822-1501
2 bdrm-1 bath duplex-1422 Hillside,
Southwood Valley. Fenced yard,
complete kitchen, W/D connections,
economical to heat and cool-$215.00
month. 845-7420. 693-2304.
12 x 48 ’72 Sheraton. 2 Br.
Exc. Cond. Owner has made
improvements. Central heat/
window air. Days — 693-
0023. Nights & Weekends —
693-7799. 12112
One bedroom apartment. Central air
and heat. Ice box and Stove. Carpet
and drapes. Private parking and yard.
$165 a month. 822-2479. 113 S. Texas
Ave. Bryan.
Horse pasture and stalls. 846-7015.
‘Briacwootf
tjAparintanis
Exercise Rooms
(Men & Women)
2 Swimming Pools
Sauna Baths
Tennis & Volleyball Courts
Recreation Center
1, 2, 3 Bedrooms
Furnished and Unfurnished
•ALL BILLS PAID
• No Fuel Adjustment Charge
• No Esculation Clause
Now Preleasing
For Summer & Fall Semesters
1. Enjoy Discounted Summer Rates
2. Outdoor Recreational Facilities
3. Night Club-Zacharias Green House
693-2933 1201 HWY. 30
693-3014
100tfn
The Television
Shop
TV & RADIO SERVICE '
Zenith Sales and Services
TV Rental
713 S. Main Bryan 822-2133
AUTO INSURANCE
FOR AGGIES:
Call: George Webb
Farmers Insurance Group
3400 S. College 823-8051
cOt /JCappened Sexas
by MU. LEFTWICH
1776:“Hunting the Wild Bull” was a sport of Spanish
Cavalrymen stationed in the Texas Gulf Coast area where
raising Longhorn cattle was the only occupation of the
colonists. In this natural cattle-breeding country. Long
horns thrived, increased and ran wild.
— Western Beef Cattle by tom lea
Heroine
could be
of Spanish civil war
iament head
new
New Cartons For Moving or Storage. 35c each.
608 South Bryan, 779-4361 Anytime. 122t3
United Press International
MADRID, Spain — Parliament
speaker Torcuato Fernandez-
Miranda announced his resignation
today, making it possible for Spain’s
new parliament to be headed briefly
by Communist party chief Dolores
Ibarruri when it convenes for the
first time next month.
The 81-year-old Mrs. Ibarruri,
“La Pasionaria” of the civil war who
returned from 40 years of exile in
Moscow earlier this month, is the
oldest of the candidates running in
the June 15 elections for parlia
ment.
Constitutional experts say that if
she is elected, she would be the
senior member of the new parlia
ment and, as such, becomes its act
ing president. King Juan Carlos
could prevent this by designating a
new speaker before the election.
Political sources believe Juan
Carlos will pick a new speaker be
fore the first session of parliament to
avoid the controversy and embar
rassment brought about by “La
Pasionaria’’ occupying the speaker’s
chair.
Fernandez-Miranda told a news
conference that he handed his res
ignation to King Juan Carlos eight
days ago and that he definitely did
not want to be the speaker of the
new Cortes.
He said the King accepted the
resignation Monday, but asked him
to stay on until the elections.
Under the Franco-era constitu
tion, the speaker of parliament is
appointed to a five-year term by the
King. Fernandez-Miranda’s term
was to run until 1980.
His resignation apparently was in
fluenced by widespread demands
by political parties that the new
Spanish parliament, like most
Western legislatures, picks its own
Uniti
'JEW Y<
r is a it
I goveri
; of iriai
president or has a president
senting a parliamentary major)
Fernandex-Miranda, a 61-i pt tecfo
old law professor, is a forma
of the King and was vice pr»
under the assassinated Premier
Carrero Blanco.
Although a man of the Praia
gime, he was instrumental im
ter B. I
ting firn
The surv
samf
pointees
ashingtoi
ting the parliament to app
Premier Adolfo Suarez's pm
toward democracy.
Female roommate wanted for summer/fall.
Share large 3 BR apt. with two others. 693-
0641, 846-5037. 122U
Poor maintenance
cited for explosion
Scientist predicts era
of more coal burnin
fact the
e politics
at of th<
never is
They sai<
bulent a
governr
?ny prog
op basis
anged.
The defi
United Press International
HOUSTON — Federal occupa
tional health officials Tuesday cited
Texaco for alleged safety violations
at a Port Arthur, Tex., refinery
where a March 17 explosion and fire
fatally injured eight employes.
Texaco had no immediate com
ment, but sources said the company
would contest the citation within
the 15-day time limit.
The main Occupational Safety
and Health Administration com
plaint was failure to conduct tests to
detect combustible vapors before al
lowing maintenance work on
Stabilizer Unit No. 1, where the ex
plosion and fire occurred.
Other complaints included al
leged improper construction of
combustible liquid tanks and piping
and unsafe ladders, stairs and rail
ings.
“We don’t have any statement
this afternoon,” company spokes
man Ben Fortson said. “It will have
to be gone over.”
Twenty-six workers were injured
when three explosions and fire
shook the 150-foot stabilizer unit
where more than 100 maintenance
employes were doing refurbishing
work.
Twenty-two were hospitalized
with burns and other injuries.
United Press International
WASHINGTON — Columbia
University scientists warned yes
terday the nation is about to enter
an unprecedented era of coal burn
ing to meet energy needs without
knowing what the effect will be.
The concern, Dr. Wallace
Broecker said, is that carbon dioxide
added to the air from coal combus
tion will act like a greenhouse,
keeping some of Earth’s heat from
escaping into space. This will cause
atmospheric temperatures to rise.
Broecker’s statements were made
in a report to the American
Geophysical Union.
This has long been a recognized
phenomenon of burning fossilfi
but Broecker said the
effect is one hazard which l*
pointees
intees tl
career
1 . • 1 . , . Jlitical ap
ceived little attention during jg enoll ^
current debate over sources'
ture energy.
“We cannot afford to disreg ijjj ca ]
he di
Careerist
cause ol
mpounde
Institute to
educate
teachers
this long term con sequence ofu
economy,” he said.
Broecker, a geochemist all , ^snect
lumbia’s Lamont-Doherty Geo! r
cal Observatory, said if 1
energy usage rises at the ei
rate of several per cent per
then during the latter halfofthei
century, the carbon dioxide
of the atmosphere will be dd
what it was in 1900.
Broecker said recent
suggest the resulting greenhoos
feet would raise the atmosph
MANOR EAST 3 THEATRES
MANOR EAST MALL 823-8300
Burt Reynolds
“Smokey-voTHE Bandit Vf
Sally Field Jerry Reed »xi
Jackie Gleason [ as SheruhfarlatO-T Jus-lice 1
A RASJAR Production ■
A UNIVERSAL Picture
nn MCA R« & Upesj PC.’UWM MHAKI SWiSTUMm-,
Technicolor'* «•<.
7:10-9:20
Texas A&M University’s fourth
annual American Economy Institute
begins June 6. The institute is a
four-week program for public school
teachers who teach principles of free
enterprise.
The institute was established to
provide aid for teachers in fulfilling a
state requirement that public
school teach basic free enterprise
economics courses, said its director,
economic prof Dr. John W. Allen.
The Economics and Educational
Curriculum and Instruction de
partments direct the program, with
additional speakers from industry
and government.
Support for the institute comes
from the Texas Bureau for Economic
Understanding and Invest-in-
America National Council Inc., al
lowing participants to attend free of
charge. A housing allowance for
out-of-town teachers is also
provided.
Teachers can earn five hours of
graduate credit and the institute is
open to all public school teachers
who hold a baccalaureate degree.
temperature by 4 degrees Fab
heit. But he said scientists
reliable way to predict the rest!
changes in rain and sr
various regions of Earth.
“Thus, we are about to lauixii
into the era of coal burning nil
knowing where it will
said.
Writing course
to teach style
clarity, gramm
7:20 - 9:30
ROdSCY
Two can ride cheaper
than one.
(5mal
Guidance in spelling, gram:
clarity and style in writing m
highlighted in Texas A&M Uni
sity’s 15th annual writing clink
ginning June 6.
Anyone 17 or older is elig
the program, which meets
p.m. June 6, 8, 10, 13, 15a
said Dr. Henry Pope, Collejt
Liberal Arts continuing e<k
coordinator.
Classes meet in rc
Academic Building.
The clinic is offered by
English Department in cooperi
with the Continuing Educatk
flee. A $30 fee is charged h
clinic, which includes indivk
appraisal, participation in the
sions and subsequent indiv
guidance.
Pope said tfie program is
sented as part of the College of
eral Arts’ continuing educatioof
gram. Persons need not be form
enrolled in Texas A&M to
No degree credit is given, 1
tinning education units are await
A Public Service o( This Magazine 4 The Advertising Council ^ or th e program.
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