Page 4/The Battalion/Wednesday, August 1, 1984 CONDOMINIUMS LIMITED LEASING AVAILABLE if GREAT LOCATION SUPER PRICES LUXURIOUS AMENITIES EFFICIENT MANAGEMENT Open 8 to 6 M-F Saturday 10 to 6 Sunday 1 to 6 (409) 764-0504 (409) 846-5745 904 University Oaks #56 College Station, TX 77840 Coast Guard corrals crude experience college living at its finest. Select an apartment so close to campus it’s like living there but without all of the restrictions. Call today! Scandia 401 Anderson 693-6505 Aurora Gardens Aurora Ct. 693-6505 Sevilla 1501 Holleman 693-2108 Taos 1505 Park Place 693-6505 United Press International LAKE CHARLES, La. — The Coast Guard took advantage of favorable winds Tuesday to build a makeshift corral around a 690-foot British tanker that ran aground, spilling more than 1 million gallons of crude oil into the Gulf of Mexico. The winds blew the oilslick, esti mated at 11 to 14 miles long and about 200 yards wide, out into the Gulf, away from shoreline wildlife preserves in Louisiana and Texas, the Coast Guard said Tuesday night. Thunderstorms raked the area, but apparently did not change the direction of the massive slick, head ing southwest on a course parallel to the shore, officials said. The tanker Alvenus, carrying 1.7 million gallons of Venezuelan crude oil, struck an uncharted shoal or other submerged object in the ship channel Monday on its way to port at Lake Charles. The ship, with a large crack in its bow above the waterline, drifted back to the open gulf and struck bot tom. Officials said 40,000 barrels of crude leaked during the first 24 hours. The Coast Guard said the ship re mained seaworthy and would be moved as soon as containment of the slick progressed. Some crude will be pumped from the tanker into a barge, officials said. Authorities described the corral as a floating plastic fence designed to surround the oil while pumps are used to suck crude off the water sur face. Two helicopters, which took 14 crew members to shore, and a Coast Guard cutter stood by in case the huge vessel began to take on water. But some of those 14 were returned Crosby: five years too harsh United Press International DALLAS — The prospect of serving five years in a Texas prison on co caine and weapons charges dis tresses musician David Crosby, but proscutors said Tuesday appeals may well keep him out of jail for up to five years anyway. Crosby, appearing Tuesday on the “CBS Morning News,” said he considers the five-year drug sen tence he received on Aug. 5, 1983, too harsh because officers caught him with only a “fingernail of some substance,” later identified as co caine. The 42-year-old musician was also charged after his 1982 arrest in a Dallas nightclub with possessing a loaded .45-caliber automatic and re ceived a three-year term to be served concurrently with the drug charge. Crosby, who is currently touring the country with Crosby, Still and Nash, is free on an appeal bond. ULTIMATE CLASS. Experience it at Walden Pond. WALDEN POND APARTMENTS offer a distinctively new design in afforda ble luxury living. With prices starting at only $335, you can enjoy classic features such as a private lake, wooded jogging trails, pool, hot tub spa, exercise room and a showcase clubhouse for entertaining! A unique architectural design gives you the apartment you’ve always wanted including a fireplace, vaulted ceiling, ceiling fan, ample storage, private terrace or balcony, designer interior, washer/ dryer connections and large arched windows. Call or visit Walden Pond today and experience an exciting new lifestyle this fall! For best selection, reserve your apartment now! Walden Pond 700 FM 2818 696-5777 (offFM 2818 at Holleman) Developed by Guy King Enterprises Incorpated to the vessel by public health officers who said the crew members had an undetermined rash, Coast Guard of ficials said. A crew of 21 remained aboard. In Washington, Rep. John Breaux, D-La., called for the ship to be unloaded immediately to prevent its breakup and stop additional spill age. The ship belongs to Alvenus Corp. of London, which assumed responsi bility for the spill. Conoco Oil Co. owns the cargo. The owner and its U.S. agent both have agreed to coor dinate the cleanup. Traffic into Lake Charles was lim ited to vessels with less than 35-foot drafts. If the wind shifts, the oil slick — located 30 miles southeast of Port Arthur, Texas — would threaten the Sabine National Wildlife Refuge on the Texas coast and the Rockefeller Wildlife Refuge across the Louisiana line. The shallow, often swampy coast along the gulf is vital for shrimp and oyster production, and provides a rich habitat for waterfowl, shore- birds, songbirds, alligators and a wide range of fur bearers. Biologists said the only way for the spill to cause severe damage would be for a strong south wind to push the oil into the marshes through one of the narrow passes splitting the strip of sandy beaches. “If we had to have a spill, it couldn’t happen in a better place,” said Allen Ensminger, refuge divi sion chief of the Louisiana Depart ment of Wildlife and Fisheries. Around town Science students must take exam Any junior or senior in the College of Science who has not pi?, viously taken the English Proficiency Examination should plan to take the test August 9 unless they have completed English 301 witha minimum grade of C. Students in the College of Science are required to pass either English or the test in order to qualify as a degree candi date. The English Proficiency Exam will lie administered by the En glish Department. Students in the Biology, Chemistry, Mathematic? and Physics Departments should register for the exam in 313 Biolog ical Sciences Building before August 8. Chamber sponsors computer seminar The Small Business Council of the Bryan-College Station Cham ber of Commerce will present a seminar on “Microcomputers in Small Businesses,” Thursday at 7 p.m. in the chamber of commerce building at 401 S. Washington. The cost is $10 in advance and $12.50 at the door. Please call the chamber office at 779-2278 forad- vance registration. SPCAto hold dog bath and dip Sunday The Brazos Valley SPCA will !>e having a dog dip on Sunday from 12 to 5 p.m. in the Manor East Mall parking lot. A Ilea dip will be given for a donation of $3 and a bath and a dip for $5. For fur ther information, please contact the Brazos Valley SPCA at 775- 6491. Driving safety class offered The Texas A&M After Hours Program will sponsor a driver safety course Aug. 3-4 and Aug. 10-11. This course may be used to have certain traffic violations dismissed and to receive a 10 percent discount on automobile insurance. Registration is 8-5 Monday through Friday in 216 MSC. For more information, call 845-9352. Expansion (continued from page 1) Building also is being designed and Facilities and Planning will begin ad vertising for construction bids in January. The new building will be located at the intersection of FM 60 (University Drive) and FM 2818 and will cost an estimated $7.5 million. Employees working in the current Systems Administration Building will be moved to the new administra tion building. Administrative offi cials currently working in the Coke Building will move to the old admin istration building. Peel said the old building will be renovated before the move. The Coke Building will be used for faculty office space. Facilities Planning and Construc tion also is designing a plan to land scape the western part of the cam pus. This project will be contracted for next spring. Buildings currently under con struction on West Campus are: • The Medical Sciences Library, located at FM 60 is scheduled for completion in May 1985. The Li brary is part of the $10 million pack age for construction of the Medical Sciences Complex located across the street from the Veterinary Medicine Complex and will be used by both veterinary and medical students. • The Agricultural Engineering Research Laboratory, located near Agronomy Road, will be completed in February 1985 at a cost of $1.8 million. There also are several buildings under construction on the mam campus. Students and faculty can no longer drive or park on Spence Street from University Drive to Ross Street because it has been closed off to facilitate construction of the new Engineering and Physics Building. Parking Annex 7 was torn down to make way for this $18.8 million project. The building should be fin ished by December 1985. A short section of Spence Street from Ross Street south has been closed for construction of the new Chemistry Building. The building is scheduled for completion in May 1987 at a cost of $18 million. Peel said that eventually most of the area surrounding this building will be made into a landscaped mall. A new Physical Plant, which will be located at the West Campus, is cur rently being designed, he said, and the old building will be torn down. A 2,000 car parking garage will kl built on that site to compensate fu the loss of parking in the mall area A new Civil Engineering - that would tie into the McNew neering Lab is being designed. Bt sides being a classroom site form engineering students, it will hous the Texas Transportation InstitB and the Engineering Design Group Renovation also accounts In much of the construction on cat pus. The buildings being renovaw are: I • The Civil Engineering Coia plex on Spence Street was “indt * plorable condition,” Peel said, and: now being renovated. He said that the building was ok a veterinary hospital, and that "noil ing had been done to it” since tk time. The project, which cost million, should be completed in Ai l gust. • Renovation of the outside c: the Academic Building will be ished in November. The projects $926,000. • The interior of the Veterinai 1 Medicine Complex also is beingrt furbished at a cost of $2 million Newly Redecorated Laundry Facilities Pool il. Sun Deck Very Large 1 bedroom units Nice 2 bedroom, 2 bath units with split bedrooms. Huge walk-in closets Perfect for Roommates Pinfeather * 3200 PINFEATHER OFFICE HOURS 9-6 Mon.-Sat. 12-5 Sun Weiborn « S2 «> CO 2 > c Near Shuttle Bus Club Room On-Site Security Phone 822-7321