THE BATTALION MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1981 Page 5 What’s up at Texas A&M Monday r typing c 50, - lisseiU »es, etc, - », all ft wwle, k, il typist bis espeij ipus.Cliala Inr idviKf E DOUBli wte.illi atas, etc Inivenitj, 79-2736. yourptoft ports, ess, lOCESSt orM ■p Cars Paint! DEBATE & FORENSICS SOCIETYrWelcome meeting for new members, debaters, Room 502, Rudder Tower. Upcoming tournaments and this year’s debate topic will be previewed. CATHOLIC STUDENT ASSOCIATION:Night Prayer will be held in St. Mary’s Church at 10 p.m. TELECOMMUNICATION SOCIETY:Organizational meet ing will be held at 7 p.m. in Room 305, Fermier. Anyone interested in Telecommunications is invited. Dues will be col lected. AGGIE ALLEMANDERS:Free Fun Night of beginner Square Dancing Lessons at 7 p.m. in Room 255, G. Rollie White Col iseum. There will be calls for more experienced dancers after the lesson. BETA ALPHA PHLOrganizational meeting with pizza after wards at 6 p.m. in the Sausalito Party Room. COLLEGIATE FFA:Meeting to discuss money-making projects and make introductions will be held at 7:30 p.m. in Room 110, Harrington. WILDLIFE BIOLOGY SOCIETY:Murray Walton of the Wildlife Management Institute will speak in Room 108, Har rington. TAMU RODEO CLUB:Meetingto introduce new members and discuss the All-Aggie Rodeo at 7:30 p.m. in Room 113, Kleberg. PHI THETA KAPPA ALUMNI ASSOCIATION:General meeting at 7 p.m. in Room 104B, Zachry Engineering Center. AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL EN- GINEERS:Dr. Don Beeth of HL&P will discuss South Texas Nuclear Project at 7 p.m. in Room 102, Zachry Engineering Center. UNDERGRADUATE ENTOMOLOGY CLUB:Meeting to welcome new memebers and plan the year’s activities at 6 p.m. in Room 103, Soil and Crop Sciences Entomology Center. Tuesday AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERINGrDon Dunlap, representative from Chevron will speak on offshore structures at 7:30p.m. in Room 121, Civil Engineering Building. Upcoming events that ASCE will sponsor will also be discussed. AMERICAN SOCIETY OF ENGINEERING TECH NOLOGISTS: Will hold a meeting at 7:30 p.m. in Room 102, Academic and Agencies Building. MARKETING SOCIETY:Back-to-School Party at 8 p.m. in the Willowick Party Room. Beer, wine and snacks will be provided. Membership is open to all students. RANGE CLUB:Will hold a faculty vs. students softball game followed by a wiener roast and the first meeting of the year at 5 p.m. at Hensel Park, Area 2. ALPHA PHI OMEGA:Will hold its Fall ’81 Rush at 7 p.m. in Room 401, Rudder Tower. FOOD SCIENCE CLUB Organization and planning meeting at 7 p.m. in Room 127, Kleberg. ETA SIGMA GAMMA:Officer elections will be held at 7:30 p.m. in Room 140, MSC. Wednesday ALPHA PHI OMEGA:Will hold Fall ’81 Rush at 7 p.m. in Room 302, Rudder Tower. AiIDD:Will meet at 7 p.m. in Room 304, Engineering Building. CANTURBURY ASSOCIATION:Communion Service at 5:30 p.m. in the Episcopal Student Center. ECONOMICS SOCIETY:New department head will speak at 7 p.m. in Room 350, MSC. . SAN ANGELO WEST TEXAS HOMETOWN CLUB.Orga nizational meeting for Fall ’81 will be held at 8 p.m. in the MSC Main Lounge. TAMU SPORTS CAR CLUB:Meeting to discuss Aggie Cross in Room 607, Rudder Tower. TAMU MATH CLUB:Organizational meeting in the 3rd Floor Lounge in Milner Hall. AGGIE SPELEOLOGICAL SOCIETY:Meeting for both new and old members at 7 p.m. in Room 401, MSC. State 100j000 are suffering from Love Field noise United Press International DALLAS — Some 100,000 resi dents living near the controversial Love Field airport suffer from noise pollution which exceeds levels people can tolerate without interference with normal activi ties, a city-financed study re vealed. The residents live in nine neighborhoods around the airport which is used mostly by South west Airlines and the newly founded Muse Air. The study, made in May and released Friday, said noise at the airport was sufficient to provoke “widespread complaints’’ and “in dividual threats of legal action.” The residents are subjected to around-the-clock sound levels of 70 decibels — or 15 decibels more than the ideal maximum noise level set by the Environmental Protection Agency for residential neighborhoods, the study said. Lori Palmer, co-chairman of the Love Field Citizens Action Com mittee, said the study confirmed that the “extent and seriousness of the noise exposure is of a magni tude that the city must now estab lish an effective noise control program.” The group wants the city council to impose a curfew on night flights. The EPA admits few urban neighborhoods enjoy the max imum 55 decibel noise level and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development has set 65 decibels as the level above which it will not subsidize new housing without the use of special noise muffling techniques. According to the EPA, noise of 60 decibels will provoke only spor adic complaints but when levels reach 70 decibels, community reaction would intensify with strong appeals to public officials. The study was ordered by city officials last spring. Nearby resi dents have been complaining to authorities to reduce the noise level. City officials warned the study was only a preliminary step and that the consultants would submit their recommendations in November. Southwest Airlines has released its own consultant report saying the area affected by noise levels of 65 decibels or more had been re duced since 1973 and would de crease after the airline introduces quieter jets. Haitians remain in jail, request for asylum denied United Press International NEW ORLEANS — Federal attorneys say 25 Haitians impris oned for six weeks will have to remain in jail a while longer be cause their request for political AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 100 S. College 823-8051 AC M iceSte 1 a&Blli | ays j in f berstp COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE STUDENTS ALLEN Oldsmobile Cadillac Honda SALES - SERVICE “Where satisfaction is standard equipment” 2401 Texas Ave. 779-3516 j IT’S YOUR FUTURE... GET READY FOR IT! JOIN US AT PCPA III PROFESSIONAL CAREER PLANNING IN AGRICULTURE PRESENTED BY • COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE let in''*' ental wl* .6, ITICL Classified ■' Cont. NATIONAL AGRICULTURE MARKETING ASSOCIATION CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT CENTER liber*' ;NT: ^ aclaini al Sec-' i for Fall iry PoW j45-78 ,( on INSTRUCTION rivacj & i erf! 1 wtbil* ce oft* Hebrew classes starting. Day & evening. Week of Sept. 14. Pro fessional instructor. Call 696- 7313, Monday, Wednesday & Fri day—9:30 - 3:00 p.m. for more information. 218 WANTED HELP!! Need to rent backyard for small, well-behaved dog, who is not allowed in my apart ment. Emergency — Please call Charles, 693-4442 or 693- 4447. sis WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 16, 1981 2nd Floor MSC Sign up for the BARBECUE (6:30 p.m.-Sept. 16) on Sept. 7-11 in the MSC MAIN HALLWAY. Each participating organization will have a booth on the Second Floor of the MSC. The morning hours (9:00- 11:30) are reserved for Juniors, Seniors, and Graduate Students and for those underclassmen with schedule conflicts. The afternoon (1:30-5:00) is open to all students. EMPLOYERS ATTENDING PCPA III: infi# jrr# ti# 5ion : . jnta^ CASH FOR OLD GOLD Class rings, wedding rings, worn out gold jewelry, coins, etc. The Diamond room Town & Country Shopping Center 3731 E. 29th St., Bryan 846-4708 ufn ROOMMATEWANTED i Animate wanted, own room in house. 2 odts from campus, 693-8381. 4t2 ■male. 3 bedroom house, Bryan, $160 + VSt “s 779-9201 evenings. 4AtlO pie roommate, own room, Plantation fe Apt, $200.00/mo. includes utilities, 13)538-1587. 183U4 tinie 1 )' ran' 361 FOR RENT ®rtment partially furnished, $125.00 per )nth. Boys Only!! Call 846-2154 between 10a.m. to 4:30 p.m. 141tfn HORSE STALLS FOR RENT 20x60) large riding and roping arena and round pen. We feed nomings. Call Mike 696-1450 or Joan 693-4847. Coggins Test re quired $30 and $40. ^9,-ig Allied Mills, Inc. American Brahman Breeders Association American International Charolais Association American Cyanamid Company Associated Milk Producers, Inc. Brookhaven Country Club Cargill-Nutrena Feed Division Castle & Cooke, Inc. ChemLawn Corporation Ciba-Geigy Corporation Country Pride Foods Ltd. DeKalb AgResearch, Inc. Dow Chemical Company Elanco Products Company Farm Credit Banks of Texas Farmers Home Administration Funk Seeds International Granada Land & Cattle Co. Halliburton Services Holly Farms Poultry Industries, Inc. Merck & Co. — MSD-AGVET Moorman Mfg. Co. Monsanto Company — Agricultural Division National Farm Life — Ag. Workers Auto Northrup King Co. Nortrust Farm Management, Inc. Plant Care Co. Producers Grain Corp. Ralston Purina Co. Seventy-Four Ranch Beef, Inc. Texas Agricultural Extension Service Texas Electric Cooperatives Texas Farm Bureau Texas Parks & Wildlife Dept. U.S. Army Engineer District, Fort Worth Valmont Industries, Inc. Vocational Agriculture Teachers Association of Texas RepublicBank Dallas John Deere & Co. MBPXL/Corporate Personnel The purpose of our PCPA III is to acquaint students with their career opportunities as well as enable industry, state, and local representatives to meet the students and faculty of Texas A&M University. The event is open, but not limited to, all classifications of majors in the College of Agriculture. asylum was rejected. Assistant U.S. Attorney Ronald Fonseca filed his opposition Fri day to a request by the 25 to get out of the Orleans Parish Com munity Correctional Center. Fon seca claimed the Haitians were in the United States illegally. Edwin Chauvin of the Immig ration and Naturalization Service refused to confirm or deny that the asylum plea had been rejected. “The U.S. attorney has in structed me not to discuss the case while it is pending in court,” Chauvin said. The Haitians’ attorney, James Gray III, said denial of asylum did not affect his efforts to get them out of jail. “I had assumed they would deny it, ” he said. “I don’t think it changes the basis of the habeas corpus suit. There’s a long process involved. The basic question is whether it’s in their best interest to let them go, whether it’s in the best interest of the government to hold them.” Fonseca said the State Depart ment earlier this week recom mended the Haitians’ request for political asylum be rejected. He said INS officials were in the pro cess of notifying the 25 of the ruling. If the local immigration service complies with the State Depart ment’s recommendation, the Hai tians will be brought before an INS judge Sept. 14, according to court documents. U.S. Magistrate Marcel Livaudais completed his report on the motion filed by Gray to get the Haitians out of jail and sent it on to U.S. District Judge Morey L. Sear for review. Fonseca said the government was “moving with all deliberate speed.” “In addition to requests of other aliens, presently there are approximately 2,000 Haitians who are being detained by the United States awaiting exclusion hearings or deportation,” Fonseca said. The 19 men and six women were picked up July 16, 150 miles south of the mouth of the Missis sippi River. Immigration officials ordered the oil company to take custody of the refugees when the ship docked in Chalmette, La. Federal authorities took over custody July 24, and one day later the Haitians were transferred to the correctional center. Vegas trips, Texas firm under fire United Press International CONCORD, N.H. — A Texas- based firm offering 3-day vaca tions to Las Vegas has come under the scrutiny of the New Hamp shire attorney general’s office. Attorney General Gregory Smith said Friday the firm Pass port to Pleasure has been promot ing the trip, which includes hotel accommodations, meals and a gambling package reportedly worth $500. Smith said some people have reportedly given the firm their credit card numbers over the phone, but then declined to buy the trip. Later, he said, they have been hilled for the trip. He said there are also questions about the quality of the hotel and the meals offered and the availa bility of sufficient hotel space. Smith said the gambling pack age is also routinely offered by the Las Vegas Chamber of Commerce for less than $5. The firm is currently being in vestigated by the Texas attorney general’s office due to a large num ber of complaints about its busi ness practices. Smith said.