The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 04, 1985, Image 6

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    Page 6/The Battalion/Monday, November 4,1985
Battalion Classifieds study shows
trade woes
hurting Texas
WANTED
$100 $100 $100 $100 $100
Asthmatic males or females to partici
pate in a 10 day trial of a safe and effec
tive over-the-counter asthma prepera-
tion. $100. incentive. Call 776-0411.
$100 $100 $100 $100 $100
24tufn
$500.00 Prize. Would you like
to see your favorite joke
published? If so, for
consideration, please send it to
“Jokes”, P.O. Box 741112,
Houston, Texas 77274*1112.
$500.00 prize for the best joke
published. Judging to be by
independent judges. Please
acknowledge in writing if you
would like for your name to be
used in publication. All jokes
submitted are subject to
publication and become the
property of “Jokes” and none
will be returned. Contest open
to college students only.
Deadline for submitting jokes is
Nov. 30, 1985. No Aggie jokes,
PLEASE! 46ti 1/4
FOR SALE
BOSE 201 BOOKSHELF SPEAKERS. $200. or best
offer. Need cash fast. One month old. Original pack
aging and papers. Call 260-1070. 42t l 1/4
Mustang CT 1983. T-Tops, 22,000. $8995. Also, Party
stereo! 120 watts per channel, $400. 693-5505. 43tll/5
FOR RENT
Bargain! BR, 2 bath, 4 blocks north of campus.
$380./month. 846-0779, (713) 440-0264. 27tl 1/5
OFFICIAL NOTICE
HELP WANTED
AGGIELAND REFUND POLICY
Yearbook fees are refundable in full during
the semester in which payment is made.
Thereafter no refunds will be made on
cancelled orders. Yearbooks must be picked
up within 90 days from time of arrival as an
nounced in The Battalion.
Students who will not be on campus when
the yearbooks are published, usually in
September, must pay a mailing and handel-
ing fee. Yearbooks will not be held, nor will
the be mailed without the necessary fees
having been paid. 33ti2/i8
TEXAS WATER RESOURCES INSTITUE seeks an information
specialist. Duties include planning, writing and production of
institute publications, summerizing water resource information for
radio and T.V. news cast and assisting with technology transfer
programs. Minimum gualifications: Bachelor’s degree in
Journalism or related field and, one year experience in preparing
informational material for the public. Training in T.V. or radio
production is desired. Salary $18-26,000 depending on
qualifications. Submit resume and three professional references
by Nov. 8 to: Dr. Wayne R. Jordan, Texas Water Resources
Institute, TAMU, C.S., Tx. 77843-2118. Texas Water Resources
Institute, Part of the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, is an
Ec^iahOggortunit^jAffirma^^
RECEPTIONIST
Dental Receptionist. Top pay,
benefits. Experience with people
a must. Send Resume to:
Box 4463
Bryan, Tx. 77805
perienced cook for day & evening shifts,
rson at Cenare. 404 E. University Drive.
38110/23
>ply in
otl 1/5
Defensive driving. Insurance discount, ticket deferral,
call: 8a.m.- 5p.m. Mon-Fri. 693-1322. 13tl2/18.
SERVICES
Save money & a trip to the
washateria. We rent-um &
service them free. 9:00 to 5:00,
779-0867. AFTER 6:00 call
822-6477 or go by 405 W. 25th
St. 46111/8
ON THE DOUBLE
All kinds of typing at reasonable
rates. Dissertations, theses, term
papers, resumes. Typing and
copying at one stop. ON THE
DOUBLE 331 University Drive.
846-3755. 9ittn
STUDENT TYPING. 20 years experience. Accurate,
reasonable, and guaranteed. 693-8537. 36tl2/12
Drafting illustration charts and graphs for dissertations
and papers. 268-0026. . 44tll/13
Recording engineering classes. Call Pat: 693-5514 or
693-6297. 43tll/12
Typn
after
Expert Typing, Word Processing, Resumes. All work
error free. PERF
ATTENTION
GRADUATING
SENIORS
If you have ordered a
1986 Aggieland and will
not be attending A&M
next fall and wish to
have it mailed to you,
please stop by the En
glish Annex and pay a
$3.50 mailing fee along
with your forwarding ad
dress so your Aggieland
can be mailed to you
next fall when they ar
rive. 33112/18
DIRECTORY REFUND POLICY
Directory fees are refundable in full
during the semester in which payment
is made. Thereafter no refunds will be
made on cancelled orders. Directories
must be picked up during the aca
demic year in which they are pub-
lished. 33ii^ia
IFECT PRINT. 822-1430.
T Go. F
s. 696-:
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
sonable prices. 696-2962, anytime.
40tl2/9 rni
T yping for theses, dissertations, term papers. Will
transcribe dictation, reasonable rates. 693-159831U 1/4
Word Processing: Proposals, dissertations, theses,
manuscripts, reports, newsletter, term papers, re
sumes, letters. 764-6614. 36tll/15
$10. - $360. weekly/up mailing circulars! No quotas!
Sincerely interested rush self-addressed envelope: Suc
cess, P.O. Box 470CEG, Woodstock, II. 60098. 21tll/8
FOR SALE
WINTER BREAK siding at Steamboat Springs and
Vail from $75., or sunning at South Padre Island and
Daytona Beach from $99.! Hurry, call Sunchase Tours
for more information toll free 1-800-321-5911 or con
tact a Sunchase Representative TODAY! When your
winter break counts.. .count on Sunchase! 44tll/15
15-watt reciever, 3-way speakers, great shape, great
price. Call 696-8122. 46tll/8
Hewlett Packard 11C, $35. 15C, $65. 693-3065 46tl 1/7
1977 Buick Century Auto, Air, PS/PB, AM/FM, Cruise,
Make offer. 775-6244. 44U1/6
LOST AND FOUND
Male grey Pursian Minx. 12 lb. cat. $25. reward. 693-
3775,693-9513. 44tll/13
Battalion Classifieds
Call 645-2611
$100 REWARD
Lost 1984 University of
Houston mens class ring
during the night of Sat. Oct.
26, in the commons area. If
found please call Callie at
260-6982.
$100 REWARD
Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Texans are
losing thousands of jobs, billions of
spending dollars and millions of dol
lars in oil and gas tax revenues be
cause of the nation’s trade imbalance
and the strong U.S. dollar, accord
ing to a new study.
The study, conducted by two
Southern Methodist University pro
fessors, was released over the week
end by Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D-
Texas.
Bentsen, a member of the Joint
Economic Committee and a leading
sponsor of trade legislation, said the
study is an attempt to show that in
ternational markets and economic
policies do have an effect closer to
nome.
The study backs Bentsen’s conten
tion that l/.S. industries are being
forced to compete against foreign
manufacturers who enjoy unfair ad
vantages.
“Texas businesses have been play
ers in the world marketplace for de
cades, and they can meet these chal
lenges if allowed to compete on a
level playing field,” concluded the
g rofessors who authored the study,
ernard L. Weinstein and Harold T.
Gross.
The implications of the changing
world marketplace, in the meantime,
are “severe” for the state’s three big
industries — energy, high technol
ogy and agriculture, they said.
‘‘Generally they are manifested in
three fairly distinct ways — job
losses, purchasing power losses and
state tax revenue losses,” Weinstein
and Gross reported.
The professors said Texas is no
longer the “archetypical Sunbelt
state” but instead is being “buffetted
severely by changing patterns of
world commerce and today boasts an
unemployment rate that exceeds the
national average.”
Texas’ October unemployment
rate jumped a percentage point over
September, to 8.1 percent, while the
national figure remained the same,
at 7.1 percent.
“The problem is that we don’t
have an effective trade policy, and
we don’t have a good energy policy,
and the farm policy is not working,”
said Bentsen in a statement released
with the study.
The strong dollar is making it
harder for Texas industries to sell
Student Leader Profile
Class of '87 president working to get students involved
Cindy Webb
By MEG
CADIGAN
Stuff Writer
When Class of
’8 7 President
Cindy Webb got
involved with her
class council as a
freshman she
says the size of
Texas A&M sud
denly seemed less
overwhelming.
“ W h e n y o u
come down and
you’re not in
volved and you
don’t know anyone, that’s when it seems really hu
ge,” Webb says. “Now it doesn’t seem like 7,000
people are in your class. It seems like there are 100
people you know really well.
Webb was the Class of ’87 Social Secretary her
freshman and sophomore years. She says one activ
ity she enjoyed the most during her stint as Social
Secretary was working on the annual class ball.
“Getting involved (with Class of’87) gave me the
opportunity to work with some really wonderful
people,” she says.
Webb, a junior finance major, says she decided
to run for class president this year because she
thought her ideas, as well as her interest and expe
rience, could help the class.
Webb says she would like to promote unity in the
Class of ’87.
“One of our goals this year js to make sure the
PR gets out, and gets out on time,” Webb says.
“That way everyone at least knows what’s going
on.”
She says the class has been successful in thisarei
so far. However, Webb says she would like to set
more class members involved in council attivities,
Webb’s interest in social and civic activities didai
begin with her college career. As a high schoolsti).
dent in Mansfield — population 10,000 — her fa
vorite project was working with a school counseloi
on a Christmas project to feed needy people.
“We had about five families that were veryneedil
and we took everything (food and supplies) to I
them,” Webb says.
She says the counselor has been working on t
n ect every year for more than 20 years.
t was something that, he always said, youti
it over to God and pray to God, and He will alwau |
come through," Weob says. “And He alwaysdit
Webb says her hobbies are reading, aerobics
swimming, waterskiing and stitchery.
“I also spend a lot of my free time just visiting,
she says, “fm a visitor.” . .
So it’s not suprising that her impression of ABII
as a f riendly school drew her here.
“It’s just the atmosphere here,” she says. “Eve
ryone is so friendly and caring, that it just seemed
like the places for me.”
Once at A&M. Webb says she found all of die
Aggie traditions a little confusing. She says her fa
vonte tradition now is Muster.
“I think that’s the most uniuue thing atm
A&M," Webb says. “That’s something that will be
done for every single Aggie."
As to her plans for next year, Webb says, “li
would be ham to give up working with the class.”
She says she will probably run for of fice again.
In the not-too-distant future Webb says she plans
to go to graduate school and work in finance, eithei
on the corporate or banking side.
goods overseas while imports in
crease, according to the study.
The state has lost 120,000 jobs
since April 1981, most in the energy
industry, the study said.
With the loss of jobs, many of
them high-paying, there are $2.b bil
lion fewer dollars in the state to
spend at the establishments of Texas
merchants, the professors said.
A decline in drilling activity has
reduced the state’s major sources of
revenue — severance taxes on oil
and gas production and sales taxes
on manufactured equipment.
It has been estimated that for ev
ery dollar-a-barrel drop in crude oil
prices, Texas loses $40 million in
severance taxes, $30 million in fran
chise and other taxes, and $30 mil
lion in taxes on sales of oil field
equipment, the study said.
Domestic drilling activity has
fallen to 1978 levels and capital ex
penditures are down 30 percent,
they said.
According to figures from the Oil
and Gasjournal, said the professors,
the number of refineries in Texas
rose by 11, from 45 to 56, between
the years 1975 and 1980.
But between 1980 and 1984, 23
refineries closed in Texas.
“Automated refineries abroad
possess a critical advantage over
tage
labo
American refiners, whose labor costs
are increasingly the only variable
cost over whicn control may be exer
cised,” the study said.
Texas’ high-technology industry
has seen a turnaround after years of
growth because of over-production
of semi-conductors and computers,
the strong dollar overseas, andtiB
petition with japan, the studysa f
Thousands or workers haveb K
laid off because of the slump. E
professors said, noting (hat Di K
based T exas Instruments pom I
$3.9 million loss in the secondiji 1
ter of this year.
TI recorded a $85.9 millionp®
during the same period last year F
„ Agncultu re has been uliablet®
fectively sell its products abroad®
spite its competitiveness in term:®
technology and resources and®
government-backed loans and slip
dies, said the study.
The professors said this "sukJ
strongly that recently ills mav!
tributed principally to the eflecil
the strong U.S. dollar.”
46t11/5
FR tSlLL YOlffsifr SrEAKING-
Rupt>ER, AUpirojquM
MON. N0V.4 7-30 PM
APMI^IOM FREE
■5F0NS0RED ST.MAKVS CATO0MG SfWpeNTS