The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 04, 1979, Image 5

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    Classified
Ads Cont’d
FOR SALE
low hiring delivery per-
onnel. Must have own
nted^ ar and ' nsurance - Flexi-
le hours and dsys- Pa rt
e or full time $2.90 per
lour and + commission
md tips.
Apply Domino’s
1504 Holleman
after 4:30 p.m. lartn
Jeoooooa-a-c
it needed
semester.
Student
AY
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0
is/ cooks/
be willing k
necessary lw i
son
Bryan
required,
mton
!2
Business opportunity
Build A Business In
Your Spare Time
jest two years, Jim Place con-
CHNICIAIiLted a $12.50 investment into a
3 osltlon (0,000-per-year business of his
No obligation. When: Sept. 11,8
M Where: Bravos Center Lecture
i, 3232 Briarcrest, Bryan. 693-
097. ns
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iry PuMit.
100 S. College
iccurate All
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FOR AGGIES:
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air, powei.
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Battalion Classifieds
Call 845-2611
Dionne
Warwick
says:
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blood into
circulation 7 .
Call
fed Cross
now for a
blood donor
appointment.
+
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TM **•»*•*? CounCa
m
Deserted
Holidays bring no beach crowds
THE BATTALION Page 5
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1979
French women: few taboos
OFFICIAL NOTICE
iptradve Education in the College of Lib-
Arts has a half-time position open at the
Igehouse in Bryan. The salary is $3 per
i. For more information about this posi-
{ please contact Henry D. Pope or Susan-
Claryat 845-7814... lt5
United Press International
CORPUS CHRISTI — A second
day of rain Monday kept the few
beachgoers available away, ending
the summer’s last major holiday as
dismally as it had begun.
Thundershowers fell along the
Texas coast early Monday. The rains
had ended by early afternoon but
overcast skies threatened the few
remaining tourists still around on the
third and last day of the Labor Day
weekend.
Only a handful of people walked
around the moderately clean beach
at North Padre Island. Bob Hall
Pier, at the far end of the Nueces
County Park, was experiencing a
moderate day as 75 fishermen took
advantage of the better than average
surf.
Coast Guard officials said the
weather had prevented work crews
from working at Mustang and South
Padre Island. But the winds and high
tides caused by the weekend’s thun
derstorms had prevented any new oil
from washing ashore.
flexible t» (di Come hear Jim tell how he did I
w/. 1'° |
_ - i^rrvr
Defense $
to decide
SALT II
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The Senate
Foreign Relations Committee be
gins its final round of hearings on
SALT II this week, with plans to re
port the arms limitation treaty to the
Senate by Sept. 25.
But it is still awaiting word on how
much President Carter is willing to
increase defense spending to win the
votes of undecided senators or those
who believe the limitation treaty is
justified only if the United States
strengthens its own, military post
ure.
President Carter, on one side,
faces senators who say the United
States must increase defense spend
ing substantially to catch up with
Moscow and keep pace with weapon
development the Kremlin will make
under SALT II.
But on the other side is a sizable
bloc of senators who see the arms
limitation treaty being used as an ex
cuse for a U. S. military buildup — in
effect, negating it purpose.
Carter’s decision on the defense
budget is expected to be announced
to the foreign relations comm ttee by
Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, who
testifies before the panel privately
Sept. 12 and publicly the next day.
Administration officials already
have revealed plans to ask Congress
to provide an additional $2.5 billion
for defense spending in fiscal 1980, a
sum that would fill the gap caused by
inflation, but one that falls well short
of the 5 percent hike sought by Sen.
Sam Nunn, D-Ga., and others.
The administration does not ap
pear ready to seek a 5 percent hike in
spending above inflation, as Nunn
wants, and there is no indication a
majority in Congress would approve
that much.
Carter also is expected to decide
shortly on a basing system for the $30
billion MX nuclear missile program
the Pentagon is planning.
Senior Pentagon officials favor
putting 200 MX missiles on circular
roadways in the deserts of Nevada
and Utah. These roadways, or
“racetracks,” will have 23 spur roads
leading to hardened shelters.
The idea is to shuttle missiles
around so the Soviet Union never
knows their precise location.
Search begun
for slayers
of U.S. nurse
United Press International
MANILA — Police Monday
launched a wide manhunt for sus
pects in the killing of an American
nurse outside the U.S. Clark Air
Base.
Authorities said Filipino military
and police teams and Clark person
nel were cooperating in investigating
the death of Capt. Mary Byrd, 26, of
Enid, Okla., whose body was found
500 yards from the Clark main gate
early Saturday.
Col. Ahmed Nakpil, police station
commander of the town of Angles
where Clark is located in Pampanga
Province, 50 miles from Manila, said
Byrd was shot twice in the head.
No arrests have been made but the
colonel said in a telephone interview
that initial investigation indicated
she might have been killed by a
jeep-riding group, possibly com
posed of “three or four teen-agers.”
Nakpil said Byrd, who worked at
the Clark Hospital, went out with
several American friends to visit
nightclubs in Angles Friday evening.
Later she left the group saying she
was going somewhere else, the col
onel said. Her body was found
shortly after 1 a.m. Saturday in an
open field outside the base near the
MacArthur National Highway.
Press reports said a woman bar
owner heard the screams of a woman
and sounds of gunshot before the
body was found.
Nakpil said police had not estab
lished the identity of any suspects.
Coast Guard spokesman Jim
McCranchan said a reconnaisance
plane had flown out 120 miles from
Corpus Christi and had found only a
few small patches of light sheen.
He also said several heavy to
moderate concentrations of oil had
appeared from the south jetty at
Mustang Island to Bob Hall Pier,
about 20 miles long.
He said water near the beach was
clean except for an occasional film
which washed ashore.
Coast Guard officials also said
some of the oil, seeping from the
blown out Ixtoc I oil well in Cam
peche Bay, was being washed up
higher on the shore and was mixing
with seaweed and lessening the
mess. The Coast Guard said some
other oil is being broken down by the
heavy wave action caused by
weekend storms.
Businesses along the beach con
tinued to suffer from the dismal at
tendance by tourists and local resi
dents. Deep sea fishing charter serv
ices in Port Aransas were experienc
ing a 75 percent drop in business.
Local merchants conceded that
the bad weather had put a serious
dent in their business, but had com
plained that bad press coverage
about beach conditions had deterred
many tourists from visiting.
Don and Diane Rhudy, who oper
ate the Gulf Beach Courts Motel in
Port Aransas, said longtime clients
from as far north as Oklahoma City
had told them about scare stories
they had read.
An irate manager at Deep Sea
Headquarters Monday was display
ing a prominent sign outside his
business.
“Is this the Mexican oil you prom
ised us Mr. Carter?” the sign read.
United Press International
PARIS — Forget those fables of
everyday extramarital sex in the land
of ooh-la-la. Seventy-eight percent
of French women prefer to confine
their sex life to a single partner, and
only 4 percent of those who live in
couple arrangements admit to fre
quent outside affairs.
But a survey — described as the
first of its kind in France — shows
French women may be less inhibited
than some other nationalities when it
comes to traditional taboos such as
masturbation and oral sex.
The survey was conducted by the
French women’s magazine “F.” It
asked readers to respond to 150
questions, some of them intimate,
and received more than 13,000 re
plies.
Seventy-one percent of those who
lived in a couple arrangement said
they had sex “regularly” with one
partner, 4 percent said they had fre-
quent relations with different
partners and 10 percent said they
had occasional relations with differ
ent partners.
Of women living alone, 46 percent
said they had regular relations with
one person and 7 percent said they
had frequent relations with more
than one partner. Four percent of
the all respondents said they were
homosexual and 8 percent described
themselves as “bisexual.”
Seventy-one percent said they
practice oral sex “often” or “some
times,” while 81 percent said their
male partners practice oral sex.
Forty-seven percent said they
have sex several times a week, but
many said they would do so more
often were it not for the interference
of professional lives, children and
fatigue.
Eighty-four percent said they
achieve orgasms, but 41 percent said
they believed sexual relations could
be successful without them. Sixty-
two per cent said that in order to
have sexual relations, they need to
be in love with their partner.
PHOTO TECH’S
ONE DAY GUARANTEED PICTURE PLEDGE
Your Pictures On Time Or You Get
FREE KODAK FILM
*on roll developing of 110, 126 and 35mm color
C41 print film (C-41 processing only) excluding holidays.
0«IVE IN CONVENIENCE AT EVERYDAY LOW LOW PRICES 1
813 S. TEXAS
COLLEGE STATION
(Next To Pasta’s Pizza)
PASTAS
PIZZA
I
□
cb
> TEXASAVENUE
*] TAMU
•J Has It All!
Whether you’re an engineer or an artist, an architect or an environmental designer,
the supplies you need. Our College Station Store will open 8 a.m.-8 p.m. Sept. 3-7 and
9 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturdays.
has
SPECIAL PRICES
ON
COMPLETE
EDG KITS
$ 28 50
$23 9 s
ll Retail $ 25 95
/
Drafting Lamp
Adjustable
SOI 95
SALE
fTfeQd School Supplies
SPIRAL NOTEBOOKS
(70 ct.) 65c
(120 cl.) I 15
FILLER
PAPER
(200 ct.)
19
ZIPPER
POUCH
59c
(8x10'/») 1
TYPING
PAPER
40-SHEET
PAD (SVzxll)
Retail
Picket Wood
Drafting Tables
“ Space-Save i£
Drafting Tabl
24X36
Retail $72.00 (305 TAG) SALE
31X42
Retail $84.00
(305 TAG) SALE
24X36
Retail $98.00
31X42
Retail $110.00
36X48
Retail $129.00
Desk Model
Study Lamp
NOW $ 23
Many Other Styles In Stock
SPECIAL SALE
TEXAS A&M NOTEBOOK
100 Sheets
Includes Map
of Campus!
ONLY
$1
Reg. $1.79
17
We have every kind of Notebook in
Stock . . . For all Student Courses
Pen tel
Pentel of America. Ltd
Automatic
Drafting
Pencils
5>swedtler
tnaPSMD
4 PEN
TECHNICAL
PEN SET
Retail
$30.00
SALE
SALE PRICES GOOD THRU
SATURDAY, SEPT. 15
$ 25
50
UNIVERSITY DRIVE
>
NEW MAIN DRIVE
JERSEY STREET
Engineering & Office Supply
1418 Texas Ave.
Redmond Terrace Mall
College Station
693-9553
OPEN:
Mon.-Fri.
8:30-6:00
Sat. 9-5
■l-