5 Monday, October 3, 1988/The Battalion/Page 3 ! Local Briefs Book sale to benefit B—CS libraries State and Local Wazobia’s Afro-Caribbean beat rocks small, enthusiastic crowd Responsive audience contributes to ‘fun’ show The Friends of'the Library will sponsor a used book sale Thurs day, Oct. 6 until Saturday, Oct. 8 in the Manor East Mall. The sale will be held Thursday from 10 a.m.-9 p.m., Friday from 9 a.m.-9 p.m. and Saturday from 9 a.m.-3 p.m. On Sunday, books will be half- price from 9 a.m.- noon, and “Aspects of British Painting 1550-1800” will be on display in the Rudder Exhibit Hall from 8 am.-11 p.m. daily through Oct. 31. The exhibit consists of paint ings taken from the collection of the Sarah Campbell Blaffer Foundation. Today is the f irst day to request parking permit refunds from the University Police Department. For refunds on red, blue and motorcycle permits, students must fill out a request form and sacks of books will sell for $1 after noon. More than 400 boxes of best sellers, children’s books, cook books, pictures and records have been donated for the sale by peo ple in the community. Proceeds will be used to im prove the Bryan and College Sta tion library systems. The exhibit will include paint ings by Thomas Gainsborough and J.M.W. Turner. Interested parties can schedule an appointment for tours of the exhibit for groups of five or more. For more information about tours or the paintings, call 845- 8501. present proof of payment. Request forms can be filled out at the UPD. Permits paid for but never is sued will be refunded in full until the end of the semester. By Becky Weisenfels Managing Editor Wazobia was greeted by a small but enthusiastic crowd Friday night in DeWare Fieldhouse as it showed Texas A&M why it was voted Hous ton’s Best Reggae Band. The five-member band played a consistent stream of fast-paced, rhythmic music that kept the audi ence dancing all night. Besides reg gae, the band played different styles of African music, including Soca, Juju and Makossa. Wazobia began its performance with extended versions of UB40’s Review “Red Red Wine” and Bobby McFer- rin’s “Don’t Worry, Be Happy.” The band then deserted top-40 radio fare, but kept up the pace with songs with foreign lyrics and a strong Afro-Caribbean beat. Periodicallv throughout the per formance, the lead singer, Kelly, held the microphone out to the audi ence, inviting everyone to join in singing parts of the songs. Great acoustics, talented musicians and a responsive audience made the show fun. It was disappointing to note that the band drew only a few hundred people. Concert sponsor MSC Town Hall said about 400 tickets were sold, which Town Hall Chairman Keith Spera said was about average for a band without big-name recognition. With less than 1 percent of A&M’s students and faculty attending the concert, the majority of Aggies missed out on an excellent opportu nity to hear a top-notch band. After a 10-minute intermission, the band returned to the stage, asking the audience, “Are you ready to reggae?” The audience re sponded by yelling “Yeah!” and the band was on its way. After technical difficulties forced a 5-minute delay after the first song of the second set, Wazobia dedicated a song to Aggies called “Reggae Dance.” During one song, as the band members danced and strutted on stage, audience members formed a dance line that slowly grew as it circled the floor. Throughout the evening, people who had been in the stands at the beginning of the show slowly emptied out onto the floor to join the dancing. Kelly told the audience that Wazo bia comes together for everyone, re gardless of race, creed or color. He said Wazobia plays for “oneness as children of one father.” Members of the band are Terry, vocals and guitar; Coles, synthesizer and Drumulator; Darryl, drums; Lee, percussion; and Kofi, bass. The band was voted Best Reggae Band in a 1987 poll of Houston mu sic fans. British paintings exhibited in Rudder Parking permit refunds available Better business officials warn of radon inspection scams plai ft-:. IVI lesteii d upo: DALLAS (AP) — A warning that one in every three homes in America has excessive levels of radon, a ra dioactive soil gas that can cause lung cancer, probably will open the way for inspection scams, a Better Busi ness Bureau official said. After tests in seven states showed higher levels of radon than pre viously were thought to exist, the Environmental Protection Agency urged all U.S. homeowners last month to test their residences for ra-. don. “We expect radon testing to be- :ome a big scam,” said Deborah Ve- ryzer, director of operations for the Better Business Bureau of Metro politan Dallas Inc. “It’s an odorless, colorless, invisi ble gas. You can’t tell by looking if you have a radon problem. That’s bound to invite a lot of con artists into the trade.” Concern about radon has mush roomed in the past two weeks — in the wake of warnings that the gas is second only to cigarettes as a cause of U.S. lung cancer deaths. The EPA’s call for nationwide res idential radon tests followed tests in Arizona, Indiana, Massachutses, Minnesota, Missouri, North Da and Pennsylvania showing that one in three homes had radon levels ex ceeding the EPA’s safety standard of four picocuries per liter of air. A picocurie is a minute measure of radioactivity, corresponding to the disintegration of about two at oms a minute. Breathing air with a concentration of four picocuries of radon per liter poses a lung-cancer risk equivalent to that of smoking about a half a pack of cigarettes a day, according to the EPA. Previously, the EPA estimated that radon posed a problem in no more than one in five homes. Radon is produced when uranium decays in soil. Outside, it dissipates quickly in the atmosphere. But when it seeps into homes — through cracks in foundations and walls, spaces around drains and pipes — it can accumulate and attach itself to t StM idwa iple rt o .•nthf send: rd on ; to slov s),tau! minjj lJN!’ ;nei| uses» bout, caged! mie Apple Macintosh, Youi* Ticket to Success The Time is Now!! d sp« :e ti , You# nor/ 1 Apple Computer iti# 01 lij t, att If you have purchased your Macintosh during this promotion: Step 1: Take your completed order form to room 212 of the Memorial Student Center Monday, October 3 from 10:00 AM - 6:00 PM or Tuesday, October 4, from 10:00 AM - 3:00 PM. Step 2: Make your payment at this time. Step 3: Pick up your Macintosh!! 0 fSjjjjjjjjiMtfj 1988-89 Season Pass To Academic Success Presen t your curren tTAMU kloi tif ica don Card and a $50 reservation fan to reserve your Macintosh Computer. < MickoComiajlilrCenter Computer Sales and Suppbs There are still some Macintoshes available. Place your order with the Micro Computer Center. We will have the brand new Macin tosh IIX and the Macintosh SE 40MB/2MB! Be the first to have one! MicroComputerCenter Cbrnputer Sales and Supplies In the Memorial Student Center At the entrance to the Texas A&M Bookstore Monday - Friday 7:45 AM - 6:00 PM Saturday 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM (409) 845-4081 dust particles in the air, which are then inhaled. Although no comprehensive test ing program has been undertaken in Texas, results from private labs indi cate that high radon levels are rare in the Dallas-Fort Worth area and in most parts of the state. Texas soils generally contain less uranium, especially near the surface, than those in many other parts of the country, according to geologists. In addition, few Texas homes have basements, which are especially sus ceptible to radon permeation. “But the only way to tell for sure in any given home is to have it tested,” said Hank May, a radiation expert in the Dallas regional office of the U.S. Environmental Protec tion Agency. “There are hot spots in Texas like everywhere else,” May said. “Radon can come up through a single crack in a geologic formation. If you have a house built over that crack, that house might have problems. And one next door might not.” In Texas, as in most states, there are no licensing requirements for ra don testing companies or repair con tractors. The tests are relatively simple and inexpensive, ranging from about $10 for a do-it-yourself kit to per haps $100 for testing by a profes sional. Testing is done with either char coal canister filters — the quicker, less expensive devices that yield readings after being exposed for a few days — or with alpha track de tectors, more costly filters that must be left in the home up to two or three months. Both types must be sent off for analysis. When high levels of the gas are found, home repairs, ranging from Fixing floor and foundation cracks to improving basement or crawl-space ventilation can almost always rem edy the situation. Officials urge homeowners to get references, get written estimates and get a second opinion before commit ting to costly repairs. A AGRICULTURE + CAREER EXPOSITION 0©T©HilH 4TIH1 §TO Smidl FUDOIFS Mil m ©©ftsteo 3 4K£[h) - Fir©® EBIB© ©0©®gt) FosOd] ipm ° Tpoifi) {TM oft Lasftsj) ©©S®[b®ir Mb ° ©snr®@[r ° U H ]®gi[nra Mdl H o3®poiTi] ° Qpm !F®®Q Sodl© [R®©®pt£o®oT] aft [H]oflft®OT] Spm ° 8pm ©©OTfipaouo®® Aftftsoidmg: A. Duda & Sons/Valley Onions LERE Program Agri. Workers Mutual Auto Insurance Co. Kentucky Fried Chicken Corp. Alpha Gamma Rho Fraternity Kraft, Inc, Amer. Institute of Real Estate Appraisers Maintain, Inc. American Cyanamid Monsanto Agricultural American Society of Farm Mgrs. and Rural Appraisers Merck MSD Ag. Vet Association of Texas Real Estate Economists NAMA Barefoot Grasas Lawn Service North Haven Gardens, Inc. Burger King (Nortex Nursery) Cargill Inc. Northrup King Co. Chemlawn Pfizer City of Dallas-Parks and Recreation Dept. San Joes Cattle Co. Clarence Davids & Sons, Inc. Servi-Tech, Inc. Deere & Co. Society of Real Estate Appraisers Down Chemical USA Standard Meat Co. DuPont Ag. Products Synstex Animal Health Environmental Care, Inc. Texas Ag. Extension Service Excel Corp. Texas Parks and Wildlife Farm Credit Bank of Texas Touch of Green, Inc. Funk Seeds International Texas Society of Prof. Land s' Holly Farms of Texas Mgrs. and Appraisers ♦ lAM’S Dog Food Co. Uncle Bens, Inc. IBP, Inc. And Others V