The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 31, 1980, Image 4

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Page 4 THE BATTALION
MONDAY, MARCH 31, 1980
business
Pride is success in
HELP WANTED
WANTED
- Wisconsin sausage
PART-TIME
HELP WANTED.
GRAPEVINE
PERSONALITY.
696-3411.
NEEDED
HARD WORKING PEOPLE
who need extra money
to do house cleaning.
Good money.
Work own hours.
779-8900. i27tio
l-Twm ion
Part-time employees needed. Posi
tion open for wait persons and
cooks.
PIZZA INN
413 Texas Ave.
College Station
Apply in person only.
12811
FRANK’S BAR & GRILL
Part-time
cook needed.
Apply in person.
913 Harvey Rd. ,
Typing. Experienced, fast, accurate. All kinds
822-0544... lift)
Typing. Full time.
823-7723... 76tfn
Symbols. Notary Public.
SPECIAL NOTICE
Expert typing.
3266.
Call Gloria.
693-8286. 779-
119110
WANTED
Would like to rent small
2-bedroom home
close to campus,
by middle of May.
Call 846-7441 after 5 p.m.
A&M
Consolidated
ISD
is seeking
applications for:
i
Ground Maintenance
Custodians
Apply in person
from 8-5
Monday-Friday,
100 Anderson
College Station, Texas.
Salary dependent
on experience.
Benefits available.
r
MIRANDA’S
needs waitresses |
5-8 shift or 8-12 shift.
Flexible hours. '
No experience necessary. |
Apply MIRANDA’S
im
846-9150 i25tfn <
Equal Opportunity Employer
Now Taking Applications
For Cashiers and Hostesses
APPLY IN PERSON ONLY
At Ken Martin’s
1803 S. Texas next to Sears
' PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Free abortion
counseling and referrals. Call (713) 779-
2258.. .62tfn
CASH FOR OLD GOLD
THE MATHEMATICS DEPT,
will be taking applications for under
graduate employment and graduate
assistantships from
April 1-14.
Applications may be picked up in 102
Milner.
128111
Class rings, wedding rings, worn out
gold jewelry, coins, etc.
The Diamond Room
Town A Country Shopping Center
3731 E. 29th St., Bryan
846-4708
j
United Press International
NEW YORK — A quality product
is a sure-fire ingredient for a success
ful company, and so is attentiveness
to detail.
They are for Hillshire Farm, a
sausage producer in London, Wis.
The company, now a subsidiary of
Consolidated Foods Co., is the out
growth of a small meat market which
started up right before the Great De
pression and almost went under just
after the hard times arrived.
Proprietors were Austrian-born
Fritz Bemegger and Billy Schmidt.
They split amicably during the 1950s
— by that time it had grown to a
couple of retail stores and a packing
house — and Bernegger incorpo
rated shortly thereafter.
Despite the company’s growth —
sales now run around $200 million a
year and production a million
pounds a week — Bernegger still
preaches adherence to high quality
and attention to the small things.
Hams and bacon, for instance, are
in the smokehouse for days. “The
longer a piece of meat smokes, the
sweeter it is, Bernegger observes.
Only fresh meat is used, not
frozen, although it would be cheaper
and more convenient to use frozen
meat.
As his son Gary, Hillshire’s presi
dent, explains, “Frozen meat
‘weeps’ — you notice it when you
take something from the home freez
er — an( l this detracts from the
taste.”
The company also tales paj
■filler” is used in sausage^
“Sometimes small chunkdj
make their way into as
enough identity to locate tltjj
on the carcass where tfceyj
from,” the younger Bernef
plains, half seriously.
"Pressures of product!®;!;
are so great,” he says,
sausage firms chop anc
mash their meat tothep
taste suffers.”
At Hillshire, whenprodtd
needs increasing (he comp
chooses expansion ratheribii
sion of the sausage maltingpu
Consequently the compant
more than a dozen buildings!
ing some 200 acres.
NOTICE
BIOMEDICAL
SCIENCE MAJORS
THE ORIGINAL TEAM
CLEANING AGENCY
Wants reliable, energetic employees with phone
and car for residential or commercial cleaning.
$3.30/hour and up, plus travel
HOME CARE SERVICES
846-1905
112tfn
HELP WANTED
Part-time position
available at
FARMER S MARKET
SANDWICH SHOP
I
in Bryan.
Hours Flexible.
FOR SALE
l §22;641 _ J23tfn [
New Acoustical Guitar with hard shell case.
Talk price. 693-6332. 125t5
Honda CB 200. New exhaust,
*500.00 firm. 846-6761.
windshield.
126t5
Senior boots size 9k4D.
Good price. 845-6200.
Excellent condition.
126(7
Kawasaki 900, mint condition. Dual overhead
Cam engine. $1595 or best offer. 846-9468.
127t2
BABYSITTERS NEEDED
Musi have own transportation. Apply in person
between 4-8 p.m.
106 Williamson
Bryan
779-8900.
127110
>v Preregistration for the Fall Semes-
v. : ter 1980 will be conducted during
j:; the week of April 14 - 18, 1980. Fall
Semester Schedule of Classes will
be available on or about April 10.
£ All Biomedical Science majors are
g required to schedule a conference
S with their Academic Advisors and
i:-:; obtain an approved Course Re-
S quest Form for use at preregistra-
g-jtion. You can avoid long waiting
periods by making an appointment
j-t'With your advisor and having your |
: ;j: Course Request Form approved :
prior to the week of preregistration. :
When you have obtained the ap- •
Improved Course Request Form, de- :
S liver it to the Biomedical Science :
office, Room 332, Veterinary Medic- :
S': al Administration Building. During |
;S; preregistration week, you should re- j
S turn to the Biomedical Science of- :
fice to pick up your registrtion pack- •
Si et and complete your preregistra- ;
S tion. : :
l - SEE YOUR FACULTY ADVISOR SOON 1
.V™™"" U. S.-Chinese treat]
Lost: Male Boxer - Brown anH whin* with "
jolted Soviet Union
Lost: Male Boxer - Brown and white with
black mask. One and a half years old. RE
WARD! Please call 696-1261. 125t5
REWARD: Small male Sheltie, sable and
white, black on back of neck. Donna
McDonald 845-2509. 124t5
LOST
Gold bracelet with two saphires and
one diamond.
“Very Sentimental".REWARD
Call 693-7226.
12215
SERVICES
Typing. 823-4579.
Typing!! Reports, Dissertations, etc. ON THE
DOUBLE. 331 University. 846-3755. llOtfn
TYPING. Prompt, professional. 823-5726.
113(18
12818
’73 Mercury Marquis. Clean, dependable.
$800.00. 693-3889. I27t7
New Kay Banjo with case. $185.00 or best
offer. Call Julie after 6 p.m. 696-4286. 127t3
1977 Trans Am, T/A 6-6 Auto Velour interior.
AM/FM Cassette w/equalizer. Excellent con
dition. $5000. 822-4516. 127t3
’76 Capri Hatchback.
$2600.00. 846-2506.
Excellent condition.
124(10
Senior Boots, size 6'/2D. Excellent condition.
Great price. 779-9670 after 6 pm. 120U3
DOMESTIC
SERVICES
Full or part-time,
now/this Summer,
Team cleaning homes.
Starting salary $3.30/hour
plus travel compensation.
693-1954
Battalion Classifieds
Call 845-2611
^erviceTof^!IP 1
Chrysler Corp. Cars
Body Work — Painting
. HALSELL MOTOR
| COMPANY INC.
■ Dodge Sales and Service Since 19221
1411 Texas Ave. . 823-8111 |
FOR RENT
PERSONALS
Judy Smeins
Libby Vastano
12815
FOR SALE BY OWNER
3-bedroom, living room, 2-bath, din
ing room, fireplace, glassed in
porch. AC/CH, newly decorated.
Beautiful lawn and shrubbery. Adja
cent to campus.
696-1602. I24t4
HOLD THOSE PRICES!
ChartPack Transfer
lettering has taken a jump in price
but we are rolling it back.
New price for single sheet -
$3.50-.
Our price — $2.95 — !
Engineering Office Supply
in Redmond Terrace.
125110
Brazos Valley
Development Council
Area Agency on
Aging
Contract fiscal manager part
time. Requires experience in
government fiscal procedures,
double entry bookkeeping and
chart of accounts. Application
deadline, April 10, 1980.
(713) 822-7421
3006 East 29th Street,
Bryan
Affirmative Action, Equal Opportunity
Employer
Persons over 60 encouraged to apply
126(3
NEW EFFICIENCIES
$159 month. One bedroom from
$180 month. All bills paid except
electricity. No pets. Villa West
Apartments, south of Villa Maria.
Lorraine Peterson, manager. 822-
7772. 177t,n
TRUTH AND LIGHT
Both illumine.
Investigate the
BAHA’I faith.
696-1626.
United Press International
WASHINGTON — Carter’s Jan.
4 trade sanctions against the Soviet
Union for its Afghanistan invasion
must have jolted Moscow. But over
whelming Congressional approval of
a Most-Favored-Nation (MFN) trade
status for China 20 days later was
probably more jarring.
Peking now enjoys a reduction in
U. S. tariffs on Chinese goods from 20
to 10 percent and other benefits de
nied the Soviets.
Moscow has tried for Congression
al approval of an MFN treaty since
the 1972 settlement of the World
War II Soviet 722 million Lend-
Lease debt.
Human Bights issues then gained
prominence, and discovery of Soviet
restriction and heavy exit fees
charges for would-be emigrants —
mostly Jewish — prompted Con
gressional members led by Sen.
Henry Jackson, D-Wash., to delay
MFN approvat.
The Soviets claimed U.S. “inter
ference” in Soviet internal affairs,
but intermittently increased the
number of emigrants. Congressional
critics were not satisfied.
The Trade Act of 1974 added more
restrictions, including a $300 million
ceiling on export credit to the Soviet
Union by U.S. government agencies
without congressional approval.
This inhibited credits for thf> harrl.
currency Soviet purchase of U.S.
goods.
Trade as a political weapon is not
new to the Soviets. Soviet trade ex
pert A.P. Chevynkov was quoted in
1973 as saying:
“Due to the basic antagonism be
tween communism and capitalism,
trade between the East and West
will always be influenced, if not
dominated, by political considera
tions and motivations. The
U.S.S.B.’s foreign trade policy is an
integral part of its foreign policy.”
Robert Loring Allen, an American
scholar on Soviet affairs, concluded
in a 1960 study, “The Soviet Union
uses all of its foreign economic poti-
cies and relations consistently and
exclusively to promote the interests
of the Soviet state anti the philoso
phy on which it is founded.
The United States has also grant
ed MFN facilities to communist-
ruled Romania, Yugoslavia and
Hungary — some with more relaxed
views of the linkage between ideolo
gy and commerce.
A comprehensive study on MFN
last year by the Heritage Founda
tion, an independent research
group, showed the first U.i
trade agreement was signed
Louis XVI of France in 1775
1778. j.Wl
“The Most Christian Kings
United States engage mutoi
grant any particular favor li
nations, in respect ofcommeK
an
navigation, which shall notinn thusiasm S
ately become common to tlie
party, the agreement read.
“It is important to note, aid
Heritage study, ‘‘that MFN
ment does not implyastalussa
mous with its name. In other
Cadets’ fou
Brazos, be
Cowboy ch
referees.
The chee
Siastic abot
most favored nation treiti for the Mai
“I think \
leader Jean
is having a
ting a chari
When ca
Its
for
By DE
PRE-LEASING
MHSPACES
FOR STUDENTS
Battalion Classifieds
Call 845-2611
UAW protests
Japanese cars
-Over 400 spaces (many shaded)
-Swimming pool -Club House
-Laundry -Security Patrol
FOR RENT
Can accommodate 12 ft. to 14 ft. homes.
$75/month; $50 Deposit
Call or come by
WESTERN VILLAGE
MOBILE HOME PARK
2001 Beck St.
Bryan 822-6912 113,;
JOBS!
CRUISESHI PS (/SAILING EXPEDITIONS!/
SAILING CAMPS. No experience. Good Pay.
Summer. Career. NATIONWIDE, WORL
DWIDE! Send $4.95 for APPLICATION/INFO/
REFERRALS to
CRUISEWORLD127
Box 60129
Sacramento, CA 95860
AMC SPIRIT
Spirt DL Liftback
Prices start at P.O.E. $4,741. *
You can see Spirit has a lot of great
things going for you. It also has some things
you can't see — to keep it going longer.
It’s obvious that the 1980 AMC Spirit DL liftback Is
built to look good. But it takes more than a quick
glance to discover It’s built to last long, too.
Because under that sporty skin the Spirit is protected
by the exclusive Zlebarf Factory Rust Protection. In
fact, the Spirit is built so well, we’ve got it covered by
the exclusive AMC Buyer Protection Plan, the most
comprehensive protection in the industry, plus full 5
year No-Rust-Thru Warranty™ coverage.
There’s even a cavernous 21 gallon fuel tank.
The new 1980 AMC Spirit DL Limited. Don’t just see
it...drive it! Now at your AMC Dealer’s.
‘base price-not including freight, optional equipment or TTL
n AMC
Bud Ward FIAMC-Jeep-Renault
^ United Press International
WASHINGTON — Small, fuel-
I efficient, Japanese cars are sweeping
the counry, accounting for most of
the 27 percent import share of the
U.S. auto market and almost all of
the country’s $9 billion trade deficit
with Japan. In fact, Japan now sells
more cars in the United States than
in Japan.
Also sweeping the country,
however, is talk of protectionism —
keeping the Japanese cars out unless
the ones sold to Americans are made
in America.
The recent mission to Japan by
United Auto Workers president
Douglas Fraser to persuade Nissan
(Datsun) and Toyota to put assembly
plants in America was not outwardly
successful. Now the UAW, with
200,000 jobless auto workers, is pur
suing a legislative solution in the
House — clamping quotas on
Japanese cars unless a substantial
portion is made in America with
American components.
This is contrary to the union’s and
the nation’s free trade posture. Cri
tics warn legislation restricting im
ports could touch off an international
trade war.
“There is clearly a calculated
Japanese invasion of our shores dur
ing a time of vulnerability and transi
tion” from Detroit’s big car produc
tion mode to the smaller models with
higher gasoline mileage, says Rep.
Bob Traxler, D-Mich.
To “repel this invasion of our eco
nomy,” Traxler introduced a bill to
cut Japanese imports 35 percent im
mediately.
Sen. Donald Biegle, D-Mch.,
points out the auto industry provides
one of every 12 manufacturing jobs
and generates 24 percent of domestic
steel demand, 15 percent of alumi
num demand and 56 percent of rub
ber demand. „
“One can quickly see, he says,
“that the invasion of Japanese im
ports is a principal cause of the
recession now affecting auto-
producing states — and about to
overtake the entire nation.
Hearings held at the UAW s re
quest and the various threats of ac
tion are believed by congressional
experts to be enough to encourage
the Japanese to keep imports to 1977
levels voluntarily while Detroit re
covers from its past mistakes and
then to put some assembly plants in
America.
Honda, which already produces
motorcycles in America has
announced plans to build an auto
plant in the United States.
affords a third party the sat
leges that the benefactoril
with all other trading parte
ceiving MFN status.”
In 1923, prompted by thepp
competitor! American exports!
on the world market, theli
States adopted a policy of*
tional MFN treatment to coDlixi
partners — except in timeofn
With the emergence of the)'
Union and its East Europe)!
and China after World War 111
policies had to he created ttt
with communist countries.
The Trade Agreements Exte
Act of 1951 directed the Preside
“suspend, withdraw, or prevent
application ” of any tariff, custoi
other concessions for imports!
the Soviet Union and “anyDafe one campu
area dominated or controlledk almost ever
foreign government or fore
nization controlling thewr
munist movement.”
The president could p ipart of thei
MFN treatment, if he felt it« 1 “We have
promote independenceofanatifl fpeople worl
further U.S. interest. wait for the
those in AP
and can’t we
«-» ■'UUgggiainfl said Barry 1
Making 1
nd cleanir
timay not ap
SKYWAY TWIN
2000 E. 29th
EAST
EAGER BEAVER!
AND
SEX EDUCATION
WEST
THE
VISITOR
AND
LASERBLAST
ramug
********** ♦♦t*****************''
: MANOR EAST 3
{ MANOR EAST MALL
823-8300
By M
The relai
Although
flax on week
Phi Omega
APO,
fraternity, s
822-3$gdi e Brazos
doing odd
cleaning of
Margaret
trator of th
partial to Ay
number c
the center
patients enj
“It make:
young peop
it makes tl
GAY LINE
693-1630
Information & Referral
Mon-Thurs 8-10 p.m.
AUTO INSURANCE
FOR AGGIES:
Call: George Webb
Farmers Insurance Group
3400 S. College 823-8051
ALLEN
Oldsmobile
Cadillac
Honda
SALES - SERVICE
“Where satisfaction is
standard equipment”
2401 Texas Ave.
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SR * ■ "Mig' <■ W"™
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