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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 9, 1980)
THE BATTALION TUESDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1980 Page 5 HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED Local/ State 'ONVMOUS, refund^ lre ref ®lljtlllkl oks niiBlli,p ’“rtawkiii not be published, ^ ’ l mrilingimii be held, nceessaiyfeai :NTI0 'UATII JIORS ve on leland, J Student f fice, rooi! onald art; tiling fee r forwan 3 your k 3 mailed t, ien theyal TESI OUR GRAI : ORE LEA* 5 HOLM! I Process Engineers Entry Level Good Hope Industries is a privately held, multi-billion dollar oil company with 1500 employees. Our operations are fully integrated into all major facets of the energy industry. Our refining division is currently undergoing a major expansion that will substantially raise capacity to 300,000 barrel/day to facilitate processing heavy, high sulphur crudes. As part of our expansion plans, we are adding several Chemical Engineering graduates to our process engineer ing group. These positions provide an opportunity to gain hands-on refinery process engineering and unit opera tions exposure working with the latest in refinery technology. Our past growth is indeed impressive and our future is even brighter. As a consequence your potential for professional growth, and advancement is limited only by your abilities. For immediate consideration, please submit a resume to Employment Manager or call collect at (504) 722-7771, extension 122. GOOD HOPE INDUSTRIES A great place to build a career RO. Box 1 Good Hope, Louisiana 70079 An equal opportunity employer M/F Work brings satisfaction to her SERVICES LOST xperienced professional typist. 693-1283. IDER' «S| 10 PM 6, i years experience. 7 day/24 hour service! 893-9539. 67tl0 YP1NG. 775-5343. 65(12 [fryping, symbols. Notary Public. 823-7723. ISOtfn Typing!! Reports, dissertations, etc. UN THE DOUBLE. 331 University. i-3755. 178tfh lyping. Experienced, fast, accurate. All kinds. |22-0544 . 54tfn TYPING. All kinds. Let us type your propos als, dissertations or theses on bur WORD PROCESSOR. Fast service. Reasonable rates. B/CS 209 University East 846-5794 lesttn Chrysler Corp. Cars Body Work — Paintirtg HALSELL MOTOR COMPANY INC.] bodge Sales and Service Since 1922 1411 Texas Ave. 823-0111 unexpe! PREGNANCY? Services through the 20th week. Awake or Asleep. Women’s Health Services of Houston and Dallas, Texas. Off Metroplex Gyn. Group Toll Free 1-800-442-4076mioi Pair of Metal Framed Eye Classes. Lost on or North of Campus. If Found Call 846-8082.6915 Brown wallet near Cherry St. and Old College Main. REWARD. Phone 846-7659. 7<K2 Lost Nov. 4 watching election returns in Li brary. White tennis jacket with red/blue trim. If found Call 696-7267. 69(5 Lost: Opal ring with pear-shaped stone. Senti mental value. Call 696-1906. REWARD! 70t5 f LOST 0Black male Labrador Retriever. 2 REWARD! ^Please call 846-2667 or 845-3854 p or 779-2960. 7ot^ ROOMMATE WANTED Female roommate wanted. House off South west Pkwy. Have own room. $150 or $125/mo. utilities paid. 696-2798 or 846-5824. 68t9 Female roommate needed to share spacious two bedroom two bath apt. $97.50 plus Vi utilities. Call Celina 696-0611. 7014 Female roommate wanted. New house less than a mile from Campus. $125/month plus utilities. 693-0330. 70t7 Female Roommate Needed to share spacious two bedroom two bath apt. Near Campus. $175.50. 696-7787. 68t5 Female Roommate to share 2-bdrm. apt. $160 + (A utilities. Call Angie or Angsana. 693- 4452. 68t9 PERSONALS Happy Birthday KATIE Love, Mike Battalion Classifieds Call 845-2611 JOB OPPORTUNITIES JOB OPPORTUNITIES: GRIMES MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Navasota, Texas has immediate openings for full time Registered Staff X-Ray Technicians, Staff RN’s and LVN’s for floor and ICU positions with shift and ICU differentials. Excellent pay and good fringe benefits. For information contact Buma Erwin, Personnel 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. 713-825-6585. RHA president leads a hectic life By CATHY CAPPS Battalion Reporter As a freshman from a small town, Sherrie Balcar thought the way to meet people was to get involved in campus activities. And she did get involved. Starting as a wing representative in Mosher Hall during her freshman year, Balcar has since served as Resi dence Hall Association delegate, Mosher president, and now, as a senior, is the RHA president for 1980-81. During her four years at Texas A&M University, Balcar has been active in class council, Omega Phi Alpha, Town Hall, the Hospitality Committee and various advisory boards as well as acting as Fish Camp counselor and peer advisor for freshmen. “You get back 100-fold what you put in,” Balcar said of working in organizations. She describes RHA as “a buffer between students and the adminis tration” whose objectives are to hear complaints and review policies. Re cently, RHA has heard a proposal to restrict fifth year seniors from living on campus and a presentation by GTE on the new dorm phone policy to be effective on campus this spring. Balcar said RHA does program ming for the dorms in an advisory capacity, with its main objective being to unify the 25 civilian halls. “If you live in the dorm, you’re a part of RHA,” she said. RHA is made up of a general assembly, which includes a presi dent and delegate from each hall, general members and the executive committee. Balcar said RHA at Texas A&M is strong compared to that organization at other universities — so strong that Texas A&M has been chosen as the site for the 1981 National Association Sherrie Balcar of College-University Residence Halls convention May 21-24. The strength of the individual halls on campus is what makes RHA strong, she said. How to deal with different types of people on different levels is one of the main things Balcar has learned through her work on committees and RHA, she said. Another benefit has been the con tact with other student leaders and the administrators. Balcar often has lunch with the Texas A&M Board of Regents and with Dr. Charles Samp son, University president. In order to squeeze her many acti vities into often toD-short days, Bal car charts her time on photocopied sheets in hour blocks. She makes sure to schedule one hour a day for her boyfriend, enough study time, and some free time “to just sit and do nothing.” The president of RHA is required to maintain a 2.5 GPR, which has been no problem for Balcar, an accounting major. Despite her acti vities, she has taken about 15 hours each semester and has a 2.9 GPR. After graduating in December of 1981, she hopes to become a certi fied public accountant. Nixon s ex-aide said ‘ok’for Reagan team United Press International HOUSTON — Watergate prosecutor Leon Jaworski said Monday that he knew of no wrong doing by Alexander Haig as chief of staff in the final days of the Richard Nixon administration and said he had a “very wholesome respect” for the man rumored to be President-elect Ronald Reagan’s first choice for secretary of state. Jaworski said that if Reagan nominates Haig, he would expect him to be confirmed “unless there are reasons that I’m not aware of. “I mean, as far as the implications of Watergate are concerned, I’m confident that it’s going to show that they were nil and that the man serving as chief of staff (Haig) did no more than any of us would have done if we had been serving Nixon. “I left Haig with a very wholesome respect. I found his character to not be wanting in any re spect. He definitely has the qualities of a diplo mat. He’s a very bright individual. I found no thing wrong. ” Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd, D- W.Va., has said if Reagan nominates Haig, Democrats will demand a close look at Haig’s role in Nixon’s final days including the wiretaps, Nix on’s pardon and the crucial ISVz-minute gap in secretly-made White House tape recordings. Jaworski said he talked with Haig “sometimes two or three times a day ” during the height of the Watergate investigation and that he considered Haig merely a “messenger boy” with no real influ ence on Nixon’s course of action. “If Alexander Haig had done anything that we had considered wrong during the Watergate pro ceedings, we would have taken action against him,” Jaworski said. “There just wasn’t anything that he did that I considered to be out of line or that I considered to be an impropriety. “I think that people probably forget that Haig was serving Nixon as chief of staff, and I think they overlook that Nixon was really running the show on his own and all Haig could do was to say to me what Nixon wanted him to say to me. He was, more or less, a messenger boy.” As for any possible Haig role in any wiretaps, Jaworski said, “I found nothing along that line in our own investigation of Haig in the wiretaps. ” As to the Nixon pardon, Jaworski said,,‘,Tf they’re talking about sojhe pre-arrangement prfdr to the time Nixon resigned; T know'nothing about that. Haig and I had no discussions about the pardon. He never talked with irie about it.” As to the 18‘/2-minute tape gap, Jaworski said, “Personally, I was convinced Haig had nothing to do with that. My own conviction was that Nixon handled that matter himself.” Jaworski added that he believed no one, includ ing Haig, could have convinced Nixon to act more in the nation’s interests. “There was no way anybody could have done that,” Jaworski said. “I listened to enough of Nix on’s comments, his ideas, his thoughts, his deter minations, his convictions on tape recordings to know that there was no one who could have done anything with Mr. Nixon, especially from the time that Haig came. “You must remember he (Haig) came after Haldeman and Ehrlichman were dismissed. Haig comes in and this matter is already one that is weighing heavily on Mr. Nixon and the nation. And Mr. Nixon had decided that he was really going to stonewall it. From there on, all Haig could do was be Nixon’s man serving as chief of staff because, of course, hq had to be loyal to Nixon.” Still Jaworski, recalling that it was Haig who first asked him fo serye .a$i Watergate prosecutor, said he would not consider a full review of Haig’s Watergate role inappropriate or unfair. “The only thing I would say is that perhaps it’s better for the matter to be aired than for people to have misgivings about it,” Jaworski said. “There has been enough written and said, questioning his motives and conduct that it’s probably a good idea to have the thing aired and let the linen be washed and get it over with.” MSC Council sets January business AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group [3400 S. College 823-8051 wiwr Oldsmobile Cadillac Honda SALES - SERVICE "Where satisfaction is standard C(iuipnient 2401 Texas Ave. 779-3516 January business for MSC Council members will include reviewing a reorganized executive structure as well as 19 Directorate Committee budgets for the 1981-82 school year. A committee consisting of council officers and faculty members will fin alize a proposal which would create two new vice president positions. President Emen Haby said at the MSC Council meeting Monday night. Haby said the new structure would include vice presidents for student/leader development and financial development in addition to those for operations, programs and finance. The proposal would also change the position of public rela tions director to a vice president’s position. Keith Shurtleff, vice president for finance, said the council’s budget re view committee will examine budget proposals for the 19 Directorate committees before they come up for council approval during the spring semester. ... . . .Of/ FOR RENT 2-bdrm. apt. for rent. 3V4 miles from A&M. Quiet area in Bryan. $225/month + elec tricity. 779-6335. 6615 Battalion Classifieds ipartment for rent. Boys only. $100/month. lalf utilities paid. Call 846-2154 between 8:30 and 4:30. 70tfn Large mobile home in Oak Forest Trailer Park Available immediately. Call 693-3167. 66(5 FOR RENT Sublet through May. 2-bdrm. apt., Durango, furnished, shuttlebus. $325. 693-1642. 69(5 Sublease apartment for Spring semester. Rent: $280. 2-bdrm., shuttlebus, New apart ments. 696-3235. 69t5 2-bdrm. unfurnished apartment to sublet. 1270/month plus electricity. 775-4378 even ings. 68tC TOWNHOUSE APT. Brand new. 2-bdrm. 1 Vz bath. $350/month + deposit. Four miles from TAMU. 779-8650 - 779-5288 after 6 pm. 66t22 ©ahwood apartments Now leasing for PRE-CHRISTMAS MOVE-IN •1-2&3 bdrm units • Special units for the handicapped 503 Southwest Pky. - C.S. • Storage Room w/washer-dryer conn. •Cable TV matt Ht/ff) urn ADS Advertise an item in the Battalion. Call 845-2611 Number One in Aggieland ■ i i i i ■ i i i DOMINO’S PIZZA Lunch Special —- good only between 11:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. $2.00 off any large 2 or more item pizza or $1.00 off any small 2 or more item pizza. Cpupon expires 12-19-80. One coupon per pizza. Free Delivery within limited area. 1504 ^ Holleman. 693-2335. nrfi'ServV Q \ CHRISTmfiS service I Thursday DtcemBER. ttpiso | | TOO pm AH Foi+hsChapel ‘