Page4/The BattalionATuesday, January 15, 1985 THANKS AGGIES l For again making Loupot’s your used books headquarters. If you still need books, we can still save you money on used books — good as new, but cheaper. Northgate- At the Comer Across from the Post Office What’s up We can CUTit... We can perm it . . . We can frost or bleach it . . . We can shampoo and set it . . . We can blow dry it . . . We can curl it . . . We also do manicures and pedicures All at prices that won't cut into your budget. Haircuts School of Hair Design 822-7579 1711 Briarcrest Drive, Bryan Hours: Monday 12:45-5:30 Tuesday-Thursday 9:30-5:30 Friday 8:45-5:30 ORNAMENTAL HOR H * m 105 New Horde governm in 402 Rudder more mfbi N: will meet at 7 p.m. in tl 11pot’s) for a Hee-Haw Howe more information. V ; will roeel at 7 p.m. in 301 for a general d.j. teran staff must attend arid newcomers are 45-5923 evenings for more information. VARIABLE: will show -Flash Gordon" in re at 7:30 p.m. and 10 p.m. Tickets are -UB: will at 5;45 p.m. in room) for an organizational meeting. L.< 693-1052 for more information. fCERS; will meet at 8 p.m. in the MSC. her will be available on the Texans consider nuclear waste site United Press International TULIA — Panhandle residents got another chance Monday to tell U.S. Department of Energy officials their concerns about the possibility of putting a national high-level nu clear waste dump in Deaf Smith County. DOE officials had a morning me dia briefing in Amarillo and have scheduled a 6:30 p.m. public brief ing session in Tulia. A similar brief ing is scheduled in Hereford Tues day night with a Wednesday meeting planned in Austin. The briefings are informational sessions only, say DOE officials who plan public hearings on the matter in Texas next month. Similar brief ing sessions also were conducted last year when nine sites in six states still were under consideration. DOE officials in December nar rowed the sites to three top candi dates foi' continued evaluation for the $25 billion project. The three sites are in Washington state, Ne vada and Texas. The proposed Texas site is a 9- square-mile plot about 16 miles north of Hereford and 8 miles southwest of Vega. Only one site* be chosen for the undergroundti pository slated to start operatingil 1998. If located in Texas, the dunn would be under the C Aquifer, the Panhandle’s prime*}] ter supply. Farming spokesmen have wamdl that contamination of the aquiferi| Texas could harm the water sup for the seven other states alsousioil it. Those states are South I Wyoming, Nebraska, Coloradtl Kansas, New Mexico, OklahomaaiJ 'Texas. The Texas attorney general’s t Tice has filed a lawsuit in the5thCj| cuit Court of Appeals in New leans challenging the g^vernmemil site selection process. Gov. Mark White also has visitt Hereford urging residents tour their congressmen in protest. Hetal suggested state water regulation about drilling through an might stall the DOE’s plan todrilli:| exploratory shaft in Deaf Smtl County. Texas still recovering from storm United Press International The Battalion SPREADING THE NEWS SAN ANTONIO — San Antonio residents more accustomed to palm trees swaying in the sun than snow flying in blizzards stayed away from work and school Monday, still reel ing from a deadly “storm of the cen tury” that dumped a record 13.5 inenes of snow on the Alamo City. T he snowstorm has caused at least five deaths throughout South Texas. City officials said damage from the storm will total into the millions, in part because of insurance claims resulting from damage to houses and carports. Mike Sebald, a State Farm Insur ance claims agent, reported more than 700 claims by midafternoon Monday, and Allstate Insurance Co. representatives said they had re ceived a similar number of calls. Each claim averaged about $1,000, Sebald said. Police reported about 800 minor traffic accidents during the weekend storm. Traffic was Tight because freeways within the city were closed and businesses were urged by Mayor Henry Cisneros to remain closed Monday. Cisneros said he was encouraging a return to normal activities Tuesday and praised business leaders for co operating with his request to close during the storm. Highways were re opened Monday afternoon as skies cleared and temperatures rose to 49 degrees. The snowstorm was the second in San Antonio in a month, but Cisne ros said it would not influence the city to buy snow-removal equipment. “If experts were to tell us we could expect changes in basic weather pat terns, we might have to buy some snow equipment,” he said. “I don’t think there’s any way we could jus tify it on the basis of this.” In the last 18 months, San Anto nio has had a record-breaking freeze, its earliest ever heat wave with 100-degree temperatures in April, its driest summer on record and this week's record snowfall, the mayor said National Weather Service special ist Jim Ellis said the snowstorm was San Antonio’s worst since the NWS jan keeping records in 1885. ri It was the storm of the century,” he said. “It broke every record.” The city’s record snowfall for one day was 4.7 inches on Jan. 30, 1949. The record for a single winter was 7.4 inches in 1925-26. “The storm and the snowfall was not a freak occurence, but the begi LEADERSHIP... Striving to expose our members to the rewards and responsibilities of campus, community and chapter involvement. IIKA has members in every level of campus and communi ty life across the nation. PI Kappa Alpha National Fraternity ...was founded In 1868 at the University of Virginia SCHOLARSHIP... Through programs developed to maximize academic performance, and by offer ing alumni-sponsored grants and low-interest scholarship loans to assist in financing education al expenses. Pi Kappa Alpha works to promote the academic efforts of our members. 1985 SPRING RUSH DATES .has over 125.000 members Jan. 15 Jan. 17 lues.: Thurs.: has over 180 collegiate chapters in forty states Jan. 22 Tues ..provides scholarships and loans through its Memorial Foundation . publishes a quarterly magazine, the Shield & Diamond, with a circulation In excess of 90,000 “Beer & Punch” “Pike Cabana” Margaritas Informative Smoker Aggieland Inn 7:00 pj.m. Coat & Tie “Green Fog Party” All Parties Start at 9:00 P.M. at the Pike House SERVICE... The measure of man is what he gives of himself. IIKAs give considerable lime and energy through organizations such as Big Brothers of America. Muscular Dystrophy Association, the Heart Fund and many other philanthropic and service associations. Jan. 24 Thurs.: ATHLETICS. . , The experience and rewards o( athletic competition are an important part of the growth and development of a young man The college fraternity provides an ideal setting to maximize these benefits through keen athletic competition, and IIKA’s success in this area has long been one of our trademarks. ...maintains a professional staff working in chapter services, finances, housing, alumni, rush and expansion has a Chapter House Fund with a ne? worth in excess of $2 million to assist chapters in remodeling and building of new edifices Traditionally The Sharpest Men on Campus ALUMNI... Alumni are the strength and backbone of Pi Kappa Alpha Over 1 20.000 initiated brothers give true meaning to tradilior.. Their volunteer service, from local chapter advisors to national officers, insures that IIKA will continue to grow In Ihe future and be a significanl pari ot the lives of thousands of college men and alumni has a Resident Counselor Program where qualified student members are salaried to help chapters needing special assistance Ron or Jimmy Joe or Keith 693-8598 693-2733 amount of snow that fell was,” Ellis said. Storm-related fatalities included Paul Richter, 64, of San Antonio, who had a history of heart problems and died Sunday of an apparent heart attack while clearing his drive way of snow. In Houston, Richard Anthony Pe- tree, 25, died Sunday when his car was hit on an icy bridge by a vehicle driven by a Houston police officer. Saramma George, 44, a nurse at Ben Taub Hospital in Houston, was killed Sunday on her way to work when her vehicle skidded on an icy bridge and struck a telephone pole. Eugene Lewis, 56, apparently died of carbon monoxide ashyxia- tion in Corpus Christi riter burning something in a small barbecue grill to keep warm in a car. Dorothy Denise Thompson, 38, of Austin, was killed Saturday in a two- vehicle accident on icy streets. In Juarez, Mexico, across the bor der from El Paso, police had not identified an elderly woman, be lieved to be a transient from the inte rior of Mexico, who apparently froze to death Saturday. Public schools, city and county government and most businesses were closed Monday in San Antonio. “It’s like another vacation day cause the mayor got on the TV ordered everybody to stay off roads,” said officer Jerry Torralni the Bexar County Sheriffs Offc “It’s like a holiday.” In the San Antonio suburb Hollywood Park, Fire Chief Ma Matter said most stores were d Monday, but liquor stores among those that opened. “Everybody needs a little an freeze,” he quipped. In Del Rio, which received e» inches of snow, a man and his pit nant wife were rescued by police; ter their car broke down. Police: an officer took the woman to a pital in time f or a safe delivery. Snow blanketed the Hill Count and parts of West and Central Tex Friday night, Saturday and Sundaij Hardest nit was an area south line running from El Paso east Midland through Austin to Brya College Station. 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