The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 31, 1983, Image 13

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    Wednesday, August 31, 1983/The Battalion/Page 13
Today Has, beeajjost
MRIDLE! ZHAA TO
mm IN LINZ FOR
VO HOURS ms
I HATE REOiSTRATlOhl,
iVe CtOT a ton of
Books to buy.
THE (ri/Y AT THE ADD-DROP
TABLE WAS SO RUDE TO
FIE. ITWA5 LlKEXWASNl-
EVEN THERE.
Do YOU KNOW WHAT
X MEAN?
UH, YES JEN...
Shuttle lights up night
with a flawless launch
ago,” skt
■ “Jack
show bee
he term
people even
en show
screens, Ed
ver went ti]
Revision, ft
on’t think
it also is
)0th bii
hijority of telephone workers
$ack on the job after strike
aid,®
United Press International
Cape Canaveral, Fla. — The
shuttle Challenger rocketed the
First black American spaceman
and four other fliers into a 184-
mile-high orbit early Tuesday,
riding a brilliant spear of fire
that turned night into day in a
spectacle seen 400 miles away.
The launch was flawless and
the astronauts got down to work
quickly with Guion Bluford, one
of four blacks in the space corps,
using a biological processing
machine to purify living cells for
the first time in space.
Four and a half hours after
their raip-delayed blastoff, mis
sion commander Richard Truly,
co-pilot Daniel Brandenstein
and mission specialist Dale
Gardner told mission control
what it was like to take off in the
middle of the night atop two
fiery solid booster rockets.
Dr. William Thornton, the
fifth crewman and at 54 the old
est man in space, rode on the
lower deck of Challenger’s cabin
and apparently missed much of
the show.
To spaceport observers, it was
like an instantaneous sunrise.
The flame gushing from Chal
lenger’s boosters cast an eerie
orange glow that brightened in
seconds to virtual daylight inten
sity over the spaceport.
To the astronauts aboard
Challenger, at one point it
seemed like they were “inside a
bonfire.” That was when the two
boosters were kicked away by ex
plosive charges to parachute
into the Atlantic ocean near two
waiting recovery ships.
“It looked like we were just
totally enveloped in a ball of
flame,” Gardner said. “The
flame appeared to be all around
us, like we were in the center.
“It looked like we were in a
ball of flames for about 15
seconds. In fact, it looked like it
was never going to stop. That
really surprised us. It was quite a
ride.”
Truly said the liftoff was like
driving through a fog bank with
an internal light that “got brigh
ter and brighter.”
Before liftoff, President
Reagan saluted Bluford on his
historical trip.
WE NEED DELIVERY DRIVERS
Must have own car &
insurance.
Salary plus Commission
Call
846-4809 — 693-0035
"she said
let. But I® United Press International
in’t afraidtlearly 700 directory sales
sales
ise, “Suet
and ‘
ig from s
ed
pie in Western states re-
ned on strike Tuesday, but
telephone workers were
on their jobs providing
btor assistance and catching
fen orders for repairs and in-
ation.
Negotiations in Denver and
\ngeles sought to end those
|es continuing against
Jintain Bell and Pacific Tele-
tS B 11 L° s Angeles, John Vivrett
"he International Brother-
of Electrical Workers, said
ool Emplo
• two unioiisi
rcentoftb
chers and
gueddi
istrict 1
id was
ployees p. Unite{ j p ress International
JALLAS — City officials and
: Unified Sdfrj c * b companies Tuesday
d the decision of the 1 exas
road Commission to give up
xdusive regulation of air-
taxi cabs, marking the end
ne firm’s monopoly,
ellow Cab of Dallas Inc., has
ti the only firm to receive a
ise from the commission
the D-FW’s opening in
about 450 Yellow Pages
and support personnel were
“still holding out” in his city.
He said bargaining was to re
sume Tuesday in the strike,
which is “really starting to hurt.”
Bargaining also was being con
ducted in Denver.
“We’re a long way apart right
now,” Vivrett said. “The com
pany is proposing take-back
offers in our wages.”
Elsewhere, almost all other
workers were on the job after a
22-day walkout, and American
Telephone & Telegraph Co.
spokeswoman Edie Herman
axi regulation
anges authority
r bankrup
Chapter?
:cy Code,
$1.7 milk
year and f
lion in dek
rict is the
tate, whicl
itricts.
■ teacher
29,000, a
)0 due to the
ficials esti®
i, district
she was g®
e will be &
Is for the it
next week
it (the dei
probabl) 1
: to open.'
the
Monday’s decision by
mission to allow the air
’s governing board the au-
ity to issue licenses to taxi
is drew praise from city offi-
and applications to begin
ice from at least two com
ics, Terminal Cab Co., and
i Dallas.
Tom James, the city’s con
sumer services director, said the
commission’s decision “means
that local authorities can reg
ulate local service and by provid
ing a wide range of choices,
should be in the public interest.”
Yellow Cab officials were cri
tical of the commission, saying
the decision would hurt the pub
lic by overloading the airport
with cabs.
Yellow Cab, under the pre
sent license agreement, subcon
tracts with other firms for the
right to pick up passengers,
charging each company $1 per
pickup.
Under the commission’s new
rule, taxi firms licensed through
the airport board will not have to
pay the fee to Yellow Cab.
tor the Cut
That Falls
Into Place
Naturally
Full Salon
Service
for Men
and Women
Open Moh.-Sat. 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
Also Late by Appt.
VISA'
"'SS 9 *
i Dri v{
ion. Tex*
846-S 751
OUGLAS JEWELRY
15% STUDENT DISCOUNT
WITH CURRENT A&M ID
(REPAIRS HOT mCLUDED)
Keepsake
Registered Diamond Rings
PULSAR SEIKO,
BULOVA & CROTOFI
WATCHES
AGGIE JEWELRY
USE YOUR STUDENT DISCOUNT TO PURCHASE A
DIAMOND FOR YOUR CLASS RING (AND LET US SET
IT FOR YOU)
212 n. Main AND Culpepper Plaza
Downtown Bryan College Station
822-3119 693-0677
MC VISA DINNERS CLUB AM EXPRESS
LAYAWAYS INVITED
said in Washington “everything
seems to be fine.”
In Denver, Mountain Bell
spokeswoman Nancy Barnett
said almost 99 percent of the
47,000 work force was back on
the job, but 295 directory sales
people in Colorado, Utah, New
Mexico, Arizona, Idaho, and
Montana remained on strike as
negotiations continued in De-
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Kappa Sigma
FRATERNITY
ANNOUNCES
FALL RUSH ’83
Thursday, Sept. 1st 8 p.n\.
South Sea Island Party
Elks Lodge
Friday, September 9 8 p.iri.
Kappa Sigma Country Club Party
Willowwick Party Room
Wednesday, September 14 8 p.m.
Final Ruish Party
Willowwick Party Room
Call Brian or Mike at 696-5656 for more information
See future Battalion ads for upcoming parties!