Page 5 Classifieds Cent. HELP wanted iolng to summer school'?* Need a part time job? We need night clerk Call us Saber inn 696-7755_i*0(5 For breaking off relations Sadat blasts Saudis THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, MAY 2. 1979 MIRANDA’ part time bartender, $3.00/hr. xperienced, personable. Em- loy now and summer. Apply 309 University Next To Dixie Chicken 137tfn Wanted Fast Food Personnel FREE FOOD PAID VACATIONS ROOM FOR advancement, excellent working CONDITIONS. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY 54 00' Pl,rt * ful1 ' tl, ? 0 .. po * ,t,on ? employee;.:; Will emp: UliablV for the following shifts 11 a.m.-2 p.m. 7 p.m.-2 s.m. 5 p.m.-2 s.m. Starting pay $2.90/hr. Apply in person at Der Wienerschnitzel 501 S. Texas Ave. Between 2-5 p.m. daily. 125t,n B United Press Internationa] President Anwar Sadat Tuesday charged that Saudi Arabia had used influence and money to engineer a collective Arab break of diplomatic relations with Egypt. In a stunning, no-holds-barred at tack on Saudi rulers, Sadat said they were motivated by a desire to as sume the leadership of the Arab world and had also succumbed to 7 Univers Puxa >11111. IIandpart-iPart Time Positions Open 30. Ve are in the "People” busi- less and if you enjoy working jrfth and serving people, we lossibly have a position for ou as a cook, waiter, or wait- ess gyroiiont wages for those '^^VVVVVVW - IE >mployees who are product- ve and have a positive at- ur schedt'^^ 6- Dther Benefits Include: meed per. 1 Furnished Meals. > Furbished Uniforms, i Paid vacation for full and part time employees, i Pay raises for achievement. • Advancement opportunities within the corporation. :oiiege stdf you are dependable, well and have a friendly ooootfXlt going personality, come to the Pizza Hut of Bryan and nake arrangements for an nterview. ^^^^^Equa^Opporlunit^Employe^l^MC CINEMA Daily 5:20 7:30 9:45 THE CHINA SYNDROME JACK LEMMON JANE FONDA MICHAEL DOUGLASR pressure from anti-treaty radicals like Syria, Iraq and the Palestine Liberation Organization. “This is something for which they will have to pay dearly,” Sadat told a May Day rally at the Red Sea mining center of Safaga, about 300 miles southeast of Cairo. In the same breath, Sadat assured Israel that the hostile Arab reaction to the treaty will not deflect Egypt from honoring all its commitments under the treaty, including the nor malization of relations with Israel after a first-stage nine-month Israeli troop withdrawal from Sinai. Referring to the 16 Arab countries with which Egypt has no diplomatic ties at present, Sadat said: “Some of them broke off in a gesture of cour tesy to Saudi Arabia. The others were paid the price by Saudi Arabia. Countries from both catgories sent word to me about this and asked for understanding. ” “Are they (Saudi rulers) out to frighten Egypt so it will retreat (from the treaty)?” Sadat asked. “No, we are not going to be frightened and we shall normalize re lations with Israel,” he said in a de fiant tone. “And every time Israel takes one step forward, we shall encourage her and take two steps forward.” “I tell Saudi Arabia: Egypt will not go back. The peace process will not stop under any circumstances. The business of severing relations will not impede us. It will not affect Egypt’s prestige, leadership, strength and economy,” Sadat said. “It is true we have to make new calculations,” Sadat said in an appar ent reference to the cutoff in Arab economic aid decided last month as part of sanctions slapped on Egypt by anti-treaty Arabs gathered in Baghdad. Sadat said the collective Arab aid Egypt lost was $500 million, decided at the 1974 Rabat summit conference and about $140 million decreed at a 1967 summit in Khartoum. “One project of our own can make up for this,” he said. He admitted he was uncertain what is going to happen to the mas sive aid Saudi Arabia has been giving Egypt on a bilateral basis. But he said in effect he did not care if it, too, were cut off. As Sadat spoke, Kuwait’s foreign minister announced that Sudan had dissociated itself from the Egyptian- Israeli peace treaty and told the Kuwaiti government it has not sup ported President Anwar Sadat’s sign ing of the accord. In Damascus a government- owned Syrian newspaper, Al Baath, said Tuesday that Sadat’s regime should be toppled and it advocated sanctions against governments that support the Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty. Egypt suffered a new rebuke Monday with Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini’s decision to sever Iranian relations with Cairo. The move was viewed as a response to energetic lobbying by PLO representatives in Tehran and radicals calling for non- alignment in the Islamic Republic. Growth boom accelerates Houston’s "breakdown’ United Press International HOUSTON— The city of Houston and the county sur rounding it are experiencing a collective “nervous breakdown” that local facilities can’t cope with, a research report contends. And that “breakdown,” the re port said, has been accelerated by the boom that rapidly advanced Houston to world city status. “The city and the whole county are having a nervous break down,” said the report. “The rapid growth and population boom our area has experienced, combined with other factors, has produced a serious and measura ble trend of social disintegration. “Unless the community and our public officials act on some of these urgent recommendations, the problems we are facing now in . mental health will soon become completely unmanageable.” The report, entitled “Mental Health in Harris County: A State of Crisis,” estimated that by 1980 a total of350,000 people — about 15 percent of the population — will require some kind of mental health care. The primary finding of the re port by the the Mental Health Association of Houston and Har ris County was children that are among those most affected by the stress of rapid urban growth. “Our figures show that the fam ily unit in Harris County is under unprecedented stress. Our fig ures in various categories show the symptoms of this stress among the adult population,” the report said. “But the most dis turbing aspect of this increasing social disintegration is the effect on our children. for whom only minimal facilities, or in some cases no facilities, exist.” The association cited 1978 statistics showing: 25,876 mar riages vs. 25,086 lawsuits for di vorce; 2,100 new child support cases monthly; an estimated 100,000 alcoholics; 16,090 arrests for drunken driving; 60,099 calls to Crisis Hotline. “Our figures show that our children are the chief victims of our own inability to cope with the stress that is inherent in our fast- paced lifestyles and are the ones Some 130,000 persons in a county population of 2.2 million sought mental health aid from public agencies and the report said the number “is only the tip of the iceberg.” Others visited Houston’s 188 practicing psychiatrists. The report said Harris County facilities are inadequate. 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