Page 10/The Battalion/Weblnesday, April 13, 1983 PLANT SALE! • HANGING BASKETS • TROPICALS • VEGETABLE PLANTS SATURDAY APRIL 16 10 A.M. ’TILL 3 P.M. FLORICULTURE-ORNAMENTAL HORTICULTURE CLUB AND THE HORTICULTURE CLUB SUTTER’S MILL CONDOMINIUMS OPEN HOUSE MODEL OPEN Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Located on Stallings Drive in College Station Behind Woodstone Shopping Center Features: 2 Bedroom iVt and 2H baths • Fireplace with wood mantel • Sloped cypress ceilings • Built-in microwave ovens • Frost free refrigerators with ice-makers • Private 2 car garage • Swimming pool For information contact Stanford Real Estate Investments. 696*6500/ 846*5741, Located between Dominik Drive and University Oaks Blvd. on Stallings Drive. Fjjft A project of Stanford Associates, Inc. UlTj ilHU'd EXICC r mov< fed th< an eme Itonce tinning fo]i lnb( i met lister Ai nmerce ■nandez Carlos! sent the VeUzqu Iry's e ve, ‘the nplaeec Which way is right? photo by Ton| It looks like someone goofed when painting these arrows on the pavement of an exit at Post Oak Mall in College Station. The arrows, on the mail’s east side, seem to indicate a great freedom of The arrows by the van show right and left only, but the arrows in front Unemployment high, but... "■ty'cleail Jobs available in March The cro titled s dfen, c ed api United Press International WASHINGTON — The gov ernment reports state employ ment offices had about 74,000 jobs available on March 1 de spite a nationwide unemploy ment rate of more than 10 per cent. The Labor Department said Monday more than half of the 161,000 positions listed with the state job banks during February were either filled or canceled. It said this left 74,000 jobs, or 46 percent, still open at the begin ning of last month. Jobs still available March 1 included those 1 typists, cashiers • secretaries, and tellers, accounting clerks, real estate and insurance salesmen, miscel laneous salesmen, waiters and waitresses, chefs and cooks, security guards and corrections officers, motor vehicle mecha nics, sewing machine operators, construction workers, and pack aging and materials handling workers. The most openings in a single occupation available during February were in clerical and sales, with 42,100 positions listed by employers with 162 slate job banks throughout the nation. There were 29,100 openings for service workers, and 20,800 professional, tech nical and managerial openings. Also on Monday, citv officials and construction industry lead ers told Congress they back a SaO-hillion-plus longterm jobs program. ITie Senate Public Works (Committee hearing f ocused on a bill that would spend at least $53 billion over the next 10 years re pairing Americas highways, bridges and public buildings. “America is a nat ion of ruins," said Sen. JenningsRandi W.Va., who is spons measure along withC Chairman Robert Su Vt. of New Orleans Mara Modal praised the bill® of the U.S. Confd Mayors, but said ( Arps of EngineerssW a less important rolti seeing public works to lion. Ihe EconomicD ment Administrationai agencies should takeilit stead, he said Villa Oaks West apartments Pentagon asks hotline upgrad ed M app [world man anni liioni en here b b J 1 [United A'ASHI omnent olderii I to n Convenient to campus Brand new Spacious floor plans On-site leasing and management Pool, fireplaces, laundry room Now preleasing! 1107 Verde Drive between FM-2818 and Villa Maria Road 779-1136 United Press International WASHING EON — The Pen tagon proposed Tuesday up grading t)ie “hotline" between the leaders of the United States and the Soviet Union and estab lishing a new direct communica tions link between their two military commands to reduce the risk of nuclear war by acci dent or miscalculation. z\ report, mandated bv Con gress last year and released bv Defense Secretary Caspar Wein berger, outlined a number of long-awaited measures that drew heavily from proposals made by Sen. I lenry Jackson, D- Wash., and others. I he Pentagon, in a written statement, said the proposals re flect “the conviction that we can and should improve existing mechanisms to control crises which might lead to the use of nuclear weapons.” “We must also make every effort to ensure against nuclear war ever occurring between the l nited States and I he Soviet Un ion as a result of accident, mis calculation or misinterpreta tion,” it said. Ihe key recommendations call for upgrading the White House-Kremlin “hoi adding the capability I* L speed transmissions < L pages ol text, maps® graphic s and establish® ^ similar high-speedfacs* ^p between the military 011 L < enters of the twosupc ^ The report also t#^, hancement of thecoitfjji computer data tral1 capability and P 1(l P®Mp e agreement that woula leaders to consult mt^fX a terrorist-inspired na dent. tssior those “Each ol ould if solve crisis situ 5 MUUUm- vent theescalauonol®f| admits," the Pemaf said. “Taken f TJ l would mark sigmfej toward eliminating.® that accident or misi non could lead to mi* 1 wit President R ea S an J' ( proposals are cotiMs goal of reducing th j lear war and pro" them full consider^ next few weeks be formal recotnnie# Congress. Monday, April 18 Rudder Theatre 8 00 p m FREE F JC ITlemorucd Student Cenien, Money for lofli needed %