Wednesday, January 25,1989 The Battalion Page 7 7 New sounds at KANM Better equipment means better student radio By Juliette Rizzo iat states 1 Califon “•'able sin, ture stap idustrie Si •°nal ini, ,si 'ig nun (as ) that »ti«n ofu Hiversitiej e said. electnn newiui that aresi are thej; and fu oughersai er in the son' nonth ano •p me, 3re I wen; i e way hoi •e I had." ysteries.fc he reads; 5 books., urriculat; • the REy; 1 rages othi >e money the REi ly raised nee the pi next mom g needed o call l-jf ) House n survey: ce Andre rooks, Be it, Dallas, san Antot phurSprii 'aso, ’ , 50; Ik ry li Got ; Ralph Leath, houston, is Christi. 80. irivi ty in hunt' STAFF WRITER Students who tune in to KANM, Texas A&M’s stu dent-operated radio station, will be turning up the vol ume to hear the new sounds and improved specialized programming offered by the station this spring. At least that’s what KANM programmers hope. In anticipation of switching from a cable broadcast station to an FCC (Federal Communications Commis sion) licensed station in the fall, Alex Luke, KANM pro gram director, said the station is in the process of ac quiring new equipment to enhance the quality of its broadcast. “We are working to acquire new equipment with plans to install it sometime within the next month,” he said. “We are planning to be on the air in the fall or, by the latest, next spring. And one thing required to go over the air is good equipment.” Last year, after working with Student Government and the Fiscal Department, the station received a sub stantial amount of money from the University for fur ther development of the station. “We set aside some of the money for new equip ment,” Luke said, “and an allotment to go over the air.” Essentially, as far as equipment goes, Luke said they are “getting a new station.” Since the station has been broadcasting for the last 15 years, a lot of the equipment is old and in need of replacement, he said. Pending Final delivery are a new 10-channel mixing board for disc jockey’s use in mixing cassette tapes to re cords and compact discs, CD players, cassette tape decks, and an on-the-air sign. KANM also is waiting for approval to have a transmitter site on campus. Steve Krebbs, KAN M’s engineer, said the station’s outlook for the future looks promising. “Since we broadcast on cable, we’re not getting enough publicity,” he said. “After all, not everyone can afford cable. We should attract a bigger audience.” Luke said it is hard to believe the station has been around for so many years and so few students know about it. He also feels that no one really knows it is a student organization or that the station broadcasts, merely be cause it is a cable station. “We are a student organization just like the sailing 99.3 FfVl CABLE • TEXAS AS.IV1 UfM IVER S I T T club,” he said.“We have a small but loyal audience, and it has been steadily increasing.” He said this semester looks to be one of the best yet as far as specialty programming. “We program according to the response we get,” he said. “We offer a wide variety of music from hard core punk and new wave/progressive to classical, Christian rock, country, reggae, and classic rock. We even have a Broadway show, and this semester, we will have a fe male vocalist’s show and a classical music broadcast from OPAS (Opera and Performing Arts Society). He said their best response is from the new wave shows because more DJs are willing to do them. The shows make up as much as 60 percent of the format. “We offer almost anything as long as there is a DJ,” he said. “This is our best semester yet for specialty shows.” In the future, if the station begins operating as an FCC licensed station and assumes a full FM broadcast, it will have to operate under FCC regulations and have its DJs licensed. But the station will remain programming as a free-format station. Krebbs said the station’s constitution currently states that the station refrain from playing the same Top-40 songs that are played on local stations. This will con tinue when the station is licensed to assure the uniqueness of the station. Music selection may have to change slightly to meet with regulations in terms of pro fanity, he said. The station will broadcast this semester 24 hours a day, seven days a week on FM channel 99.9. Texas oil drillers stay cautious despite jump in crude prices HOUSTON (AP) — Texas oil producers who might otherwise be celebrating the jump in crude prices at the start of the new year are in stead taking a cautious approach and citing their history. Only a year ago, the industry had kicked off 1988 with renewed opti mism; prices were up, OPEC gener ally was behaving, predictions were improving and increased activity in the oilpatch suggested that most oth ers felt the same way. It was beginning to look more and more as if 1987 had been the bottom and 1988 would be the year for the gradual rebirth of Texas oilFields. It didn’t turn out that way. Widespread predictions that crude prices could average in the $18-per-barrel range and gradually keep rising were replaced within months by fears that prices could dip below $10 per barrel. Industry watcher Baker Hughes Inc. projected an average 1,070 rigs would be searching for oil and gas during 1988, but by year-end the number proved to be 936 — some 14 percent below the predicted level. The number of drilling permits is sued in Texas during January 1988 was nearly 18 percent higher than in the same month of 1987. But by year-end the number was down 11.5 percent and there were 5 percent fewer producing wells. In fact, as the shining New Year’s predictions began to tarnish, drilling and production declined so quickly that many companies underspent their budgets. “We didn’t have all that bad of a price last year on oil, but what we also didn’t have was stability,” said Earl Swift, president and chief exec utive officer of Houston-based Swift Energy Co. “If you’re going to try and make 20-year projections, you like to see the price stay the same for at least a day or two. “Even if the average turns out to be $16 or $17 (per barrel), if it’s $ 12 now it’s hard to forecast that it’s going to be $17 tomorrow.” Although Swift and others believe anew OPEC accord reached last No vember could add stability this year, last year’s results brought further re trenchment and caution among Texas producers. Houston company bucks trend, plans 197-foot European rig GALENA PARK (AP) — In a rar ity these days for the economically depressed oilfield equipment indus try, a Houston-area manufacturer Tuesday dedicated a new oil rig that officials said would be the largest and deepest land rig to drill in Eu rope. T he 197-foot-tall rig was assem bled by Houston-based National Oil- well for INA-Naftaplin of Yugosla via and will be used to drill in the Dinarides area of that country near the coast of the Adriatic Sea. The $10.5 million so-called “su per-deep” rig is capable of drilling three wells simultaneously to depths of up to 25,000 feet and is touted as having a unique brake system that controls the speed of the pipe going into the holes in the earth. “All of our new business is for overseas,” said Donald W. Vogel sang, general manager of drilling equipment for National Oilwell. “There was an abundance of rigs or dered during the boom days, and there are a lot available rigs (for do mestic use).” Bozidar Omrcen, vice president for INA-Naftaplin, saw the rig for the first time Tuesday at a Texas barbecue that marked the comple tion of the 10-month project. “We are very satisfied,” he said. “This is a big day. A lot of people are here to celebrate.” His company pumped 22 million barrels of oil in 1986 and is the lead ing marketer of oil and gas in Yugo slavia. Tuesday’s delivery is the larg est of three rigs made for INA- Naftaplin. The celebration in a warehouse adjacent to the rig was a dim re minder of the heady days of the late 1970s and early 1980s, when oil prices approached $40 per barrel, construction of oil rigs was non-stop and rig dedication parties were the norm. Pat Smith, spokesman for Na tional Oilwell, recalled times when at least seven rigs were being assem bled at one time in the industrial area east of Houston. For some companies now, seven rigs would be a good year, industry officials acknowledge. For example, this week’s latest Baker Hughes Inc. count of rigs looking for oil in the United States was 789. The lowest the count reached last year was 880. In Decem ber 1981, the tally peaked at 4,500. The rig sent off Tuesday is the first to be completed in months by National Oilwell, company chairman Bob Smith said. Despite crude prices that have topped $19 per barrel in the futures market this month, many industry experts are predicting a flat year and projecting an aVerage $15-per-bar- rel oil. “I think most companies felt that oil prices would stay in the $16-to $18-a-barrel range for most of 1988, and they planned their budgets based on that belief,” said Victor Burk, a partner in the Houston of fice of the accounting firm Arthur Andersen & Co. “As they got into late summer and the prices started softening, the companies started reassessing some of the projects they had planned,” Burk said. “And then as prices dropped even more in October, a lot of projects were put on the shelf.” Hardest hit were the state’s inde pendent oil companies that focus on the “upstream” exploration and pro duction business. “It was a disappointing year for the industry as a whole, especially the exploration phase of it,” Hous ton independent oilman Michel T. Halbouty said. “There are very few wells being built onshore,” he said. “What little exploration there is onshore was be ing done by the surviving indepen dents, and there are very few of us left.” The Residence Hall Association is now accepting applications for the following positions: ■Public Relations Director -Texas Residence Hall Association Conference Chair Applications are now available in the RHA Office, 215 Pavilion and are due Mon., January 30th. If you have any questions please contact Mary at 260-0151 MSC JORDAN INSTITUTE FOR INTERNATIONAL AWARENESS YOU ARE HERE ...but don't you wont to know about the rest of the world! The MSC Jordan Institute aims to bring the world closer to the Texas A&M campus through international speakers, exhibitions, and travel; cultural programs, and international career seminars. All interested students are invited to apply for membership in the Jordan office— located in the Browsing Library, Room 223G of the MSC. New membership application deadline is Jan.27. ^ Super Special %• ^ Centurion Cavaletto Blemished Paint reg $249 95 NOW $159 88 Check These Features Alloy rims * Shimano index shift *Quick release wheel * all sizes Crome moly frame * assembled with full warranty. Valley Cyclery ^ FM 2818 behind K Mart 764-2000 <=7 tt Southwestern Black Student Leadership Conference January 26-29,1989 Today’s Black Leaders: Our Hope For Tomorrow jj Career Fair January 27-28 Companies: Kroger Co. Shell Oil J.C. Penny Westinghouse Conoco U.S. Marines Chase Education Finance 9:00a.m.-5:00p.m. 231 Memorial Student Center Touche Ross Exxon U.S. Air Force Southwestern Bell C.I.A American Airlines UT School of Allied Health NCNB-Dallas Mobil Inroads/D-FW Tenneco Prufrock AT&T For Information 151 BizzelWest 845-4551 * Must have a resume for admittance. Center for Retailing Studies presents Don't Guess Go Retail! January 29,1989 College Station Hilton 2:00 to 6:00 p.m. Reception 6:00 to 7:30 CALL BATTALION CLASSIFIED 845-2611 For - -- FAST Results