features THE BATTALION FRIDAY, JANUARY 18, 1980 Page 9 rain dealer complains about embargo it United Press International WASHINGTON — Brice Harris, grain dealer based in Watonga, Dkla., may be typical of grain levator operators across the nation 'ho are intensely worried about the jpnsequences of President Carter’s grain and soybean embargo. Harris says he does not usually rite letters to federal officials, but last week he wrote a letter to Ag riculture Secretary Bob Bergland to lomplain that "this time the action /ou have taken is having far too big a aegative effect on us as a country grain dealer and on our grain pro ducers. ' He told Bergland that administra- ion officials “do not realize the bur den you have placed on the agricul- :ure industry of this nation and the ar-reaching effect it will have on the conomy unless you come up with a method to spread this tremendous costout over the nation as a whole. Harris, who is president of Wheeler Brothers Grain Co. Inc., told Bergland that the firm faces a potential loss of $200,000 to $300,000. The firm has six country elevatbrs in northwest Oklahoma located within a 30-mile radius of Watonga, and seven elevators in the Texas Panhandle near the towns of White Deer, Pampa and Groom. Harris said the 13 elevators handle 6.5 million bushels of wheat and 2.5 million bushels of grain sor ghum each year directly from area farmers. At close of business on Jan. 4 — a few hours before Carter announced an embargo of 17 million tons of grain and 1 million tons of soybeans — Wheeler Brothers’ elevators owned 405, (MX) bushels of wheat and 114,(MX) bushels of grain sorghum. Harris said the firm owned that much grain because it was unable to get rail cars or trucks to move it. Describing a Catch-22 dilemma,! he said, “We could not contract ahead for sale because we had to give delivery dates, and we could not because we couldn’t get the cars. ” Harris told Bergland, “We know that nearly every country elevator in the nation owned some grain as of Jan. 4, 1980, and stand to lose quite a bit of money because of this ac tion.” A week after the embargo, Harris was unable to sell any of the firm’s thousands of bushels of grain which he estimated to be worth $1.5 mil lion. The firm is paying about 15.5 per cent interest to hold the grain, or $19,375 every 30 days. He estimated that the grain even tually would be sold at a 75-cent per bushel loss. Grain producers are “complaining about this embargo and they are getting very, very angry,” Harris said. “Some of these producers will end up by going broke. There’s no doubt about it.” Farmers were having a hard time before the embargo, but now they face a cash flow problem and may not be able to get credit, he said. “In about five months, we will have another wheat harvest, ” Harris said. “The question now is: Where are we going to put it?” Officials insist there is sufficient GRAi N EMBARGO storage capacity. In his letter to Bergland, Harris suggested that government officials have ignored the impact of the em bargo on many people who will Ixj “badly damaged or ruined. ” The administration has offered to assume contracts which grain ex porters had with the Soviet Union at an estimated cost of $2.5 billion. In turn, the exporters are to honor their contracts with, country elevators who are tq pay their con tracts with farmers. One purpose of the takeover of contracts was to remove grain from the market so that supply and de mand would be the same as before the embargo. But, of course, there will be no payments to elevators that had no contracts for grain bound for Russia. Harris said to Bergland: “We feel that the in-between grain dealers and the grain producers that we serve are entitled to a full explana tion of how your plan will work to really protect them from the disas ter you have suddenly created.” in-C|j[, six ode •by on, lecades "After | i Caul it to Greatest space energy is found -hou ithePu lacaoaa United Press International WASHINGTON — An as- jnomer announced Wednesday helpof he discovery of an immense “su- bubble” of hot gas that stores more energy than anything else k ; mown in the Milky Way galaxy. Dr. Webster Cash of the Univer- aty of Colorado said the glowing liere is 1,2(X) light years in diame er and an estimated 6,(MX) light ears from Earth. A light year is ambtii jwut5..9 trillion miles, the distance tlebnsi igbt travels in a year. Cash and Dr. Philip Charles of nanai*! 16 University of California at 15 and| lerkeley discovered the bubble ndyln virile examining X-ray readings es ,4 nade by a space agency satellite ob- xnn.Hi ervatory launched in 1977. The ediatd drenomenon is centered in the said ll )r 'gbt summer constellation Cyg- “isix “It is clear that we hav e discoy- red a magnificent example of the lediatel dolent interstellar medium at 3mb,tll Cash told a meeting of the dgrtu, American Astronomical Society in in Arm ^ an Francisco. He said the finding will help as- ronomers better understand star- bmring processes. “It’s going to change our picture • Oxfor of how the interstellar medium claiiw dynamics happen," he said. Cash said the hugh cosmic bub- :he nan most it rsive Turliis :>ing WtlgmSm Mom ble, orhalo, had never been spotted rinericii before because it packs so much ban K |ergy that it cools by emitting X-rays, instead of radiation visible through optical telescopes. The NASA satellite, the High Energy Astronomy Observatory 1, scanned the universe for X-ray sources in more detail than ever be fore. Cash said parts of the bubble had been seen before in brief X-ray glimpses, but no one knew what it was. One part was thought to be a remnant from a massive exploding star. He said the cooler outer edge of the bubble emits visible light. Such "filiments have been seen with op tical telescopes for years, but not understood. Other bubbles are known to exist in the galaxy, but Cash said this is by far the largest ever seen. And the bubble is still growing at a rate of about 18 miles a second. At 3.5 million degrees Fahrenheit, the sphere contains enough gas — primarily hydrogen to create 10,p<)0 Jieyy stays Jikt; the sun. Its energy output is an es timated 10 times that emitted by the sun since its formation 5 billion years ago. Cash said there are no other known astrophysical processes in the galaxy capable of supplying this much energy. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration said, “What puzzles scientists is finding an an swer to how this huge amount of energy got locked up in this gigantic halo in the first place. Cash suggested the superbubble may have been created by a series of star explosions during the past 3 mil lion years. OH, FLIDOS(U CARTER DKOPS HI5 LATEST bombshell.... ^SrraUa X chromosome makes women stronger sex United Press International CHICAGO — Forget all that nonsense about women being the weaker sex. Two physicians say females are equipped with chromo somes that make them naturally immune to certain male diseases. “Females, who have one more X chromosome than males, are less likely to get some infectious diseases and certain forms of cancer, Drs. David T. Purtilo and John L. Sulli van wrote in the current issue of the journal (Vf Diseases of Children. The two researchers said males show a decreased survival rate vmcn JUCEK throughout the life cycle. Although there are 5 percent more male babies born, women outlive men by eight years on the average. “In addition to accidents, severe infectious diseases are responsible for many deaths in males, ” the doc tors wrote. “Severe respiratory in fections with para-influenze show male preponderance.’ They said studies show males also experience more staph infections than females. During recent epidemics of so-called Legionnaire’s disease, three times more men than women fell victim to it. Pink Floyd has been building up to this. “The Wall.” On Columbia Records and Tapes. Off-Campus Aggies 1st General Meeting Guest Speaker: Dr. Jarvis Miller (President of Texas A&M) (■l Jon. 27 thru Feb.7 Monday, January 21 Rm. 108 Harrington 6:30 p.m. 3 9i in oi is 9 a PC2 36183 f f L °rp 'ikmlL Run Lili* M«M/Com»or1*bly Numb Another Bock In The Well (Pert II) Young Luet/Nobody Home 'Columbia" is a trademark of CBS Inc. PHOTOGRAPHERS WANTED! The Battalion is hiring a limited number of staff photographers for the spring 1980 semester! Experience with B/W processing, printing essential. Portfolio requested. Contact Lynn Blanco, 845-2611 Rm. 216, Reed McDonald Bldg. GIVE A HOOT! DON'T POLLUTE J Woodsy Owl. aMIMSC AGGIE CINEMAMMmtt* I:::* •*«.. Jh«.. ;L.: N. fc il**: »'«* s: »:* S: ::: i:: p * i: * *»%*,■ WANT FREE MOVIE TICKETS? JOIN AGGIE CINEMA GENERAL MEETING MONDAY JAN. 21 7:15 701 Rudder Tower An Aggie Cinema member may ... — take tickets at the door — sell tickets at the box office — treat a friend or a date to a movie with 2 complimentary tickets — help layout Battalion Ads and Fall Calendars — help plan contests and promote movies Day students get their news from the Batt, WALL STREET JOURNAL and NEW YORK TIMES For Sale at the TAMU BOOKSTORE in the Sweet Shop located in the MEMORIAL STUDENT CENTER ST. MARY'S kcATHOLIC j/ CHURCH I Announcing Inquiry Classes Begins....Mon. Jan.21, Time. ...7:30pm Place... .St. Mary’s For interested Non-Catholics & Catholic!