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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 1, 1981)
Page 12 T HE BATTALION TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1981 CCLASSIFIED ADS sure to get results) “If an Aggie needs it, we’ve probably got it: • Used Books * ^ttar- S 0n * / > • School Supplies . COS ;tO ,T1 # C»' c xots ☆ Full 2-Week Refund ☆ 90-Day War ,, ranty on All Calculators ☆ Quantity Discounts on Shirts ☆ Plenty of Free Parking lies SUpP' ^■Shirts ~ cap s ’ S'" - A 99'e G^s • Vet OPEN DAILY 7:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. We Accept Master Charge & VISA on All Books and Supplies 696-2111 TT IT Across from the University Police Station ^OTHER’S Sgfe 340 Jersey St. If you’re taking tough courses, you need all the help you can get. €8*2SS If you’ve really done it to yourself this term, you need an advanced calculator you can count on through thick and thicker. You need the most advanced func tions and programming features. You need lots of pre-written programs to save you time. You need Continuous Memory and the utmost in depend ability. You need an HP calculator. ocsciltbN ISoow! AT 3 30 ~ s v, *00* .shhI The HP-34C. All the help you can get. Hewlett-Packard offers you eight mi iiSiS 'wm different calculators priced from $55 to provide professional solutions in science, engineering and business. So visit your nearest HP dealer for a hands-on demonstration. Then buy an HP calculator. It may be the last easy thing you do for a long time. For details and the address of the dealer in your area, call toll free: (800) 547-3400, Dept. 658N, except Hawaii and Alaska. In Oregon, call 758-1010. Or write Hewlett-Packard, Corvallis, OR 97330, Dept. 658N. ♦Prices are suggested retail excluding applicable state and local taxes —Continental U.S. A., Alaska and Hawaii. 611/14 HEWLETT PACKARD National Medfly believed under control Fruit prices may drop United Press International Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. has declared California’s Mediterra nean fruit fly infestation under control but says the state’s pro duce industry still faces an image problem that may cause a drop in fruit prices. A produce packer said fear of the Medfly was responsible for the decline in prices for California produce, but supermarket repre sentatives blamed oversupply. In Los Gatos, a spokesman for the Federal-state medfly eradica tion program said Sunday that the aerial spraying campaigns in the Santa Clara Valley and Stanislaus County in northern California and in Los Angeles County in South ern California have shown positive results. Since last week, there have been no new discoveries of Medfly larvae, he said. “There’s no need for fear or panic,” Brown told reporters Sun day at the offices of Paul Engler Los Angeles County Agricultural Commissioner Paul Engler. “The Medfly has been brought under control.” “The major problem is one of the perception of other states and other countries imposing a quarantine on California fruit. tine and the daily counts, and it has to psychological effect.” “I even think about it,”Ife said. “When I take abiteil!] plum, I think, ‘Hey, whalij here? Maggots?”’ Lu Haas, director of programs and policy for the governor, ex plained Brown’s statement: “Wherever we sprayed, we have not had a new outbreak of flies. This is the real test of whether we’re controlling the situation, not that we’re having larvae finds.” Several national supernal chains discounted the fearfc however. They said con*? reaction has been minimal a blamed tumbling prices supply. Charles Sanderson, an official of California tree fruit agreement, a marketing group, said fears of quarantines meant retailers could not purchase and advertise with confidence. Prices for peaches, pears e nectarines are down sharplyfe last season, and Japan’s n buy $100 million of citrus ti could affect the domestic' market. Art Benney, marketing mana ger of United Packers, a distribu tor in Fresno County, said: “Peo ple keep hearing terms like fumi gation and maggots and quaran- Consumers often donotroi stand that while the threattott fornia’s $14 billion farmindustii enormous, so far, only a relafet small number of producingk are affected. Most of the a® being sprayed is near L< and San Francisco and is urk 01 Space shuttle Columbia roll- honors Kennedy Center crew United Press International CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Space technicians readied the shuttle Columbia Monday for a 3V2-mi|e roll-out to the firing pad, where it will undergo final prepa rations for its test flight in October. The winged freighter —- first reusable spacecraft in history — is already in position on the same mobile platform it scorched dur ing the April 12 blast-off. The whole assembly was to be hauled Monday from Cape Canav eral’s rocket assembly building to the oceanside launch site on a massive crawling machine origin ally built to carry Apollo moon rockets in the 1960’s. Flight No. 2 of the Columbia, carrying its first working payload and an untested crane to unload satellites, is scheduled to begin Oct.9. Officials blamed the delay on minor technical problems the ex pectation of frequent thunder storms and the desire to give the launch crew a rest before launch. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration used Mon day’s roll-out as an opportunity to honor more than 200 Kennedy Space Center workers for their roles in preparing the Columbia for its initial flight. “The flight of Columbia repre sents a technological achievement of the highest order,” NASAadmi- nistrator James Beggs said in an awards ceremony. “To those of you who took part in the space shuttle program there can be a special feeling—tl ognition that hard work, c tion and cooperation can come almost any obstacle-s the pride of knowing that:: were part of the team that mr possible.”- Astronauts Joe Engle Richard Truly will be attheCl umbia’s controls for the seowi four planned test flights, ciie the earth for five days and at Edwards Air Force Baseintt fornia’s Mojave Desert. The space shuttle rehra from its first flight in surprises good shape. Itwillberetumiii space with the original system except for replacement of i than a thousand heat shieldl! and a few mechanical parts. Si SY * Un new Mich inishedl of the Ur Board of ratings, team tot pionship The) starters s team tha Rose Bo 1 22 first p from th board to homa foi preseaso Oklat place vot out Alab Alabama mentions third in I Notn starting i coach Ge to Michij place vot finished overall b Southe place me poin ), Pe: national i Pittsburg Georgia votes, Pi sburgh o OhioS in thi heads th After the move make your next move to 5 El EL City National. A new home, a new community, a new job. It is all a part of moving to a new town and there are a lot of things to consider. You will have to choose a new family doctor, dentist, a church and a bank that will meet all of your financial needs. No matter how long you have been in Bryan- College Station, fifteen minutes or fifteen years, City National Bank will give you the personal service you need to grow with your new respon sibilities. Check out a checking account at City National Bank, you will like the extra service you get and the personal attention you deserve. ENJOY 24 HOUR BANKING WITH TELLER 2. CALL US AT 779-5402. • « • • • •• CITY NATIONAL BANK OF BRYAN | A First City I BancorportW \ Member 1st l Thui 301 South Texas Avenue. Brvan. Texas 77805 Member FDI