national Battalipn/Page 9 January 19, 1982 Culh What’s Up at Texas A&M Tuesday E5, Arum ■i-LORS oi ITS A1EA1![ MSC BASEMENT: Meeting in “Rumours” at 7 p.m. to discuss upcoming shows. TAMU STUDENT DIETETIC ASSOCIATION: Han ning and Business meeting at 6:30 p.m. in 126 Kleberg. CHI ALPHA: Meeting in the AH Faiths Chapel at 7 p.m. for prayer, planning and Bible teaching. TAMU ASSOCIAION OF MARTIAL ARTS: Demonstra tions on Jan. 18, 19, 20 and 21 at 267 East Kyle at 5:00 p.m. Wednesday NATIONAL AGRI-MARKET ING ASSOCIATION: Meeting to discuss seminar and trip to Denver at 8:00 p.m. in Kleberg Lounge. SOCIETY OF WOMEN ENGINEERS: Meeting to work on conference at 7:30 p.m. in 103 Zachry. TAMU POLO CLUB: Mandatory meeting at 8:00 p.m. in the Animal Industries Building. OCA: Meeting at 6:30 p.m. for the Apartment President*Offic ers, and Comm. Chairmen in the OCA Cubicle. MSC OPERA AND PERFORMING ARTS SOCIETY: Simon Sai gon's Riggoletto Operalogue at 7:30 p.m. in the Thea ter. Admission: $1.00. I1ILLELCLUB: Welcome back - wine and cheese party at 7:30 p.m. in the Jewish Student Center. Thursday SURF CLUB: Surfing Movie “W'e Got Surl” by Hal Jepsen will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in the Heldenfels Bldg. Filmed in Calif., Hawaii, Bali-Bata, and some new footage. CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST: Everyone welcome in 105 Harrington Classroom Complex. MSC CEPHEID VARIABLE: Movie “Dragon Slayer” at 7:30 and 9:45 p.m. in Rudder Theater. Worse weather predicted in March United Press International “Astrometeorologist” Joseph Goodavage, who predicted in 1978 that this winter would be one of the coldest and deadliest on record, says the worst is yet to come — in March. Goodavage, whose weather forecasts are based on the activ ity of the sun and planets, said in a 1978 interview with the Detroit Free Press that the winter of 1981-82 would be one of the worst on record and produce more than 200 weather-related deaths in the United States. The death toll has already far ex ceeded 200. , * V In a followup interview pub lished Sunday, Goodavage, who is also a science writer and the author of “Our Threatened Planet,” had more bad news, saying even worse weather is on the way. PjCompany trying to cap eaking natural gas well bed by tin ? to five-ii ysaid, “h K J Kk 4,000 Aim in 1982 r more. America ■year sum k genera! . Moretta po ward ill -s had w ew decadu ingcuredi because (l nong tta c leukemi leukemia Will# ;er. ovaria uld rathe lie shoved eone P - r -ve police istal work orting le mailboxes aw a m icle. epupwi n anothei jwd, and Jeep." ned rntoa nimpeda diind be- he said he drive stuck his if he had ped bad bons, 22 ithorized md jailed nd d onal - Narco- iken up Prison’s s behid •nnessef . tipped i inmate veredM at lea st [ercovef therofa inmate ecteditt o deii v ' Prison, d Sun- vestig 3 ' Robert [ted on muggk astriej' Marvin te who g-fiHed nd dis prison- Id, 18- s to the United Press International ALLISON — In the remote exas Panhandle, a huge crater filled with choppy, cold water surrounds a well spewing a hazy cloud of natural gas into the sky, as more than two dozen ear- thmovers attempt to dig 150 feet into the ground to stop its flow. The well, which blew out Nov. 3 approximately 8 miles southeast of Allison, has been releasing more than 20 million cubic feet of gas per day over the sparsely populated countryside. Some involved in the process have estimated the expense of the massive digging and capping effort at approximately a half- million dollars a day. A spokes man for Apache Corp., which is responsible for the well, de clined to estimate the cost but said the expense was covered by a well control insurance policy. Officials in Apache Corp.’s Minneapolis, Minn., office say the well, which initially blew out Oct. 4 but was recovered a month later, began releasing “an uncontrolled flow of gas from the wellhead.” Workers and area residents tell a different story. “The pumper was driving off after checking the well and find ing it had 11,000 pounds of pressure,” said Orville Carter, who has a construction firm at nearby Canadian. “He heard an explosion and turned around to see the Christ mas tree and the pipe shooting hundreds of feet into the air.” The pipe and Christmas tree — pipes and valves fitted onto the wellhead to control gas flow and prevent a blowout — fell back into a virtual crater the ex plosion cut into the earth. Now heavy equipment oper ators are digging day and night in efforts to relocate the top of the pipe releasing gas from the well. A Woodward, Okla., well ser vicing firm, Cudd Pressure Con trol, is in charge of the danger ous operation to literally dig out the well hole. Although workers say chances of the well igniting are remote, highly flammable gas hangs over the work area. Bob Cudd, who supervises the operation for Apache, de clined to comment on the well blowout except to say: “Apache is doing everything humanly possible to get this well under control.” Although 150 feet is an esti mate, no one knows how far heavy equipment operators will have to dig before the pipe is unearthed enough for Cudd’s crews to cap the bellowing well. The Christmas tree and addi tional pipe were found at about 80 feet beneath the earth’s sur face. So far workers have dug more than 100 feet. The well sits about 500 feet from a county road, where pas- sersby pause to take photo graphs and watch the massive digging operation. After two months of digging, workers have created a huge hole resembling a dry lake bed. The well crater, filled with water oozing in from beneath the ground, is bound by a 10-foot- high, man-made dirt fence vyith- in the huge hole. Apache spokeswoman Betty Watson in Minneapolis said the company hopes the well can be put back into operation, but another well is being drilled near the blowout site to be used as a relief well if needed. Parker Drilling Co. of Tulsa is drilling the relief well, which workers say will be used to offset the immense pressure forcing gas from the blown well. Parker spokeswoman Susan Dornblaser said Parker had the drilling operation listed as “a confidential project” for Apache and could not release informa tion on its activities. Apache, a well operating company, does not have a drilling operation. Each load of dirt from the hole is dumped atop a huge mound growing daily near the crater. Semi-tractor trailers haul thousands of gallons of water daily pumped from the smaller crater where the gas spews into the air. Bulldozer laborously pull the multi-ton trucks up the steep embankment for dumping. The feverish digging, the un ending water pumping and hauling process, and hardhatted workers’ plans to go into the hole and cap the high pressure well are all part of a “unique operation” for which no time limit can be set, one man at the site said. “They can’t get to the casing so they just have to dig down until they find it,” he said. “This is dangerous. This has never been done before.” And, he said, the dangers are part of the job. “This is a different breed of person out here in the oil field,” he said. “They do things that are dangerous to the rest of us and they don’t see it that way.” Keep in Stop With the Latest News, Sports, Fashions and Entertainment, Subscribe now to The Houston Chronicle for 50% OFF regular subscription price. The Chronicle delivered to Texas A & M students, faculty & staff: Jan. 18th — May 14th (excluding Spring Break) Only $11.50 Jan. 1st — May 31st (including Spring Break) Only $15.75 Call 693-2323 or 846-0763. Houston Chronicle COLD HARD CASH! FOR YOUR USED BOOKS NOW! Loupot’s is paying cash or giving 20% more in trade on used textbooks now! ’FLOUPOT'SK NORTHGATE At The Corner Across From The Post Office lyiiiiiiTiiiiiiiniiiiiii H M MSC OPAS proudly presents Texas Opera Theater “Rigoletto” January 28/8 p.m. Rudder Auditorium/TAMU Tickets available at MSC Box Office or Telephone MasterCard / VISA orders & pick up at the door 845-1234 *6 Mi XIIIIIIIIIIIXTIITIIIIII THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH WELCOMES YOU SUNDAY SERVICES 7:30 A.M., 8:30 A.M., 9:00 A.M., 11:00 A.M. CANTERBURY Meets in Episcopal Student Center WEDNESDAYS 5:30 P.M. FRIDAYS 6:30 A.M. ST. THOMAS EPISCOPAL CHURCH 906 Jersey St., 696-1726 % (South edge of Campus) ^ Day students get their news from the Batt. is now accepting applications for MEMBERSHIP Applications may be picked up in Room #216 MSC in the Hospitality cubicle. Interviews will be held Jan. 25-29 from 5:30-9:50 p.m. Applications are Limited ■■■■