The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 04, 1989, Image 8

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    Paged
The Battalion
Tuesday, April 4,1989
Battalion
Classifieds
South Texas landowner
wants back oil revenues
• NOTICE
They are here!
Graduation Announcements
may be picked up
Tuesday April 4
through Thursday
April 6
in
MSC Gallery-first
floor-front
9am-8pm
For those who did not place an order:
Extra Announcements on sale
Tuesday-April 11 Sam.
MSC STUDENT FINANCE CENTER
Rm 217
First Come-First Serve
125104/06
SENIOR MARKETING
MAJORS-
Sell our University licensed indoo
r/outdoor ice cream parlor type
furniture to retailers, organiza
tions, cafes, cantinas, etc.
Metal seats embossed with ‘A & M
Aggies’.
University colors.
Contact P. H. Breese, Import Tra
ders, 720 S. Florence, EL Paso,
TX 79901.
915-544-1214.
125104/10
w OJPKYIVJChD
mhwmm
WOMEN NEEDED
FOR A NEW LOW-DOSE ORAL CONTRA
CEPTIVE PILL STUDY. ELIGIBLEWOMEN
PARTICIPATING IN THE 6 MONTH
STUDY WILL RECEIVE THE FOLLOWING
FREE:
•oral contraceptives for 6 months
•complete physical
•blood work
•pap smear
•close medical supervision
Volunteers will be compensated. For more
information call:
846-5933
G & S studies, inc.
(close to campus)
URINARY TRACT
INFECTION STUDY
If you PRESENTLY have the following
signs and symptoms call to see if you are el
igible to participate in a new Urinary Tract
Infection Study. Eligible volunteers will be
compensated.
• PAINFUL URINATION
• FREQUENT URINATION
• LOW BACK PAIN
G&S studies, inc.
(close to campus)
846-5933 17110/31
Teacher and teacher’s assistant 1989-90 school year in
Montessori pre-school/kindergarten. Ability to speak
and teach French or Spanish. Teacher must have el
ementary or early childhood state certification and/or
Montessori teaching credential. Call 779-0290.
116t04/05
ON 1 H£ DOUIil.h. Professional Word "Processing,
laser jet printing. Papers, resume, merge letters. Rush
services. 846-3755. 181tfn
* HELP WANTED
MODELS/ACTORS
COUTURE, the largest commer
cial modeling agency in the U.S.,
with offices nationwide, is
pleased to announce our Austin
office is now accepting applica
tions. We offer excellent opportu
nities to earn $75. to $150. per
hour, or $500. per day, part-time,
full-time, in character or product
print for those seeking 2nd in
come. No experience necessary.
If selected co-training provided
(no fee). Screening at 6:30 and 8
p.m. sharp. NO CALLS.
Aprils, 1989
College Station Hilton
Couture Modeling Agency
125104/05
THE GREENERY
Landscape Maintenance
Team member
Full-time or Part-time
Interview Mon-Thurs
from Sam - 9am
823-7551
1512 Cavitt, Bryan
11813/31
Business Graduates: Cenare, local upscale Italian res
taurant, seeks agressive candidates for position of assis
tant manager with growth potential. Restaurant expe
rience preferred. Send resume and salary history to
P.O. Box 5744, Bryan, TX. 77805. 125t04/07
Immediate openings for cocktail servers & bartenders.
Apply in person only. Ramada Inn Bistro, 1502 S.
Texas Ave. 123t04/06-
Ticket agent wanted for shuffle to Houston. Call col
lect if necessary. (713)440-7633. 122t04/04
COUNSELOR POSITIONS available in residential
therapeutic camps near Dallas, Texas. BA/BS required.
Live-in position. $13,500 starting salary; excellent ben
efits; career ladder. Girls’ camp (214)549-2377; Boys’
camp (214)769-2500. 123t()4/06
Pizza Classics now hiring delivery drivers, part-time,
earn up $10./hr. All shifts available. Apply in Person.
696-0234. 124t04/07
Typing-Word Processing-® 1.50 page double-spaced,
$2. rush. 589-2793. 120t()4/07
Experienced librarian will do library research for you.
Call 272-3348. 103t04/04
I yping. Resumes, Theses, Dissertations, Laser Print
ing-Call Notes-n-Quotes for competitive rates 846-
2255. 124t04/14
Pop’s Barbeque is now hiring front line servers, cash
iers, & bus personnel. Apply in person at 2319 Texas
Ave. S. 124t04/07
Instructors needed: MSC University Plus is currently
seeking instructors for classes in a variety of special in
terest areas including languages, arts & crafts, business,
health/self-help, and do-it-yourself. Call 845-1631 for
more information. 124t04/07
WORD PROCESSING, RESUMES, AND GRAPHICS
LASER PRINTER. PERFECT PRINT. 822-1430.
84t05/03
PROFESSIONAL RESUME & WRITING SERVICE
420 TARROW, SUITE 114, 846-4968. 115t04/05
COLLEGE MON EY-Private Scholarships. You will re
ceive financial aid. Guaranteed. Federally approved
program. Scholarships, 74011' Louisburg, Raleiirh, NC
27604, (919)876-7891. 11 lt03/20
GRE-Need help preparing for grad school exam- Call
Kaplan at 696-PREP. Free diagnostic exam. 121t04/04
TYPING- WORD PROCESSING- Personal Attention-
Excellent Service- Professional Results- 764-2931.
106t05/03
Typing: Accurate, 95wpm, reliable. Word Processor 7
days a week. 776-4013. 119ttfn
Cal’s Body Shop-We do it right the first time! 823-
10 32ttfn
COUNSELOR’S BOY’S CAMP
WESTERN MASSACHUSETTS.
Good Salary, room/board, travel
allowance and beautiful modern
facilities.
Must love kids and have skills in
one of these activities; arts &
crafts, nature, fencing, overnight
hiking, ropes archery, oil water or
land sports.
Call (914)381-5983 or write Camp
Winadu, 5 Glenn Lane, Mamaro-
neck, N.Y. 10543. lasttfn
NEW ENGLAND BROTHER/SISTER CAMPS-
(mass.)-Mah-Kee-Nac for Boys/Danhee for girls. Coun
selor positions for program Specialists: All Team
Sports, especially baseball, basketball, field hockey, soc
cer, and volleyball: 25 tennis openings; also archery, ri-
flery, and biking; other openings include performing
arts, fine arts, yearbook, photography, cooking, sew
ing, rollerskating, rocketry, ropes, camp craft; All wa
terfront activities (swimming, skiing, sailing, windsurf
ing, canoeing/kayak). Inquire |&:D Camping (Boys) 190
Linden Ave., Glen Ridge, NJ 07028; Action Camping
(Girls) 263 Main Road, Montville, NJ 07045. Phone
(boys) 201-429-8522; (Girls) 201-316-6660. 1 14t04/04
* LOST AND FOUND
LOST’ Near MSC: Gold Cross Pen, inscribed Nclda’.
Reward. 845-4821. 125t04/04
FOUND: WOMEN’S Mountain bike - pav for ad and
identify. Call 846-7545. 121t04/04
$75. Reward for lost diamond ring initials T.L. Senti
mental Tom 846-8976. 120t04/10
mmx-
* PERSONALS
Adoption: 1 exas professional couple wishes to adopt
infant. Warm, caring, stable, active family. Call Bill or
Marcia COLLECT after 7:00p.m. or leave messatze.
(713)541-6744. 95ttfn
M TORRENT
Cotton Village Apts.,
Snook, Tx.
1 Borm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $248
Rental assistance available!
Call 846-8878 or 774-0773
after 5pm. . Hi
• FOR RENT
Valley View Apartments in Pecan Ridge, 2 bdrm., l l /2
bth, rents start at $310./mo. Options include: fenced
yard, w/d conn., fireplace. 846-4384. 118t05/04
CreekWood Apts, efficiency w/unique floorplan, study
desk, private porch, w/d conn. Rents start at $245./mo.
846-4384. 118t05/04
April Bloom 2-3 bdr. duplex, near shuttle. 846-2471,
776-6856. 87tfn
3 bdrm/2 bth 4-plex with w/d, on shuttle bus route,
starting at $400./mo. Summer rates available. 764-0704
or 696-4384. 116ttfn
AVAILABLE NOW: 2 Bdrm./I Bath new house on a
ranch 25 miles from TAMU. All appliances, low utili
ties, $285./mo. Marden Red Brangus, Kurten. Call eve
nings. 589-2766. 1 17t04/05
♦ FOR SALE
mtmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmtmrnmmmmmmu
’83 KAWASAKI GFZ-305. WHITE. GOOD CONDI
TION. RUNS GREAT. $850. 260-6348. 125t04/12
Mjusuri 12-speed, 2 years old, road 27 in. road bicycle.
$ 195. John 764-6805. 123t04/06
1985 Honda Nighthawk 650-5000 miles, helmet 8c
cover included. $1600. 696-2615. 123t04/06
Men’s senior boots: larger sizes, used but not worn out.
$300. pair. (505)989-8419 mornings. 118t04/05
’86 Honda Spree Scooter. Black, 600 miles. Good con
dition. $375. 260-8383. 122t04/07
Land Commissioner tries to protect school fund
AUSTIN (AP) — Land Commissioner Garry Mauro
Monday branded as “outrageous” a bid by South I exas
rancher-oilman Clinton Manges to reopen a long-
closed legal case over oil revenues from Permanent
School Fund lands.
Likening Manges to a rattlesnake, Mauro urged the
Legislature not to grant Manges the opportunity to sue
the state over a settlement the rancher agreed to in
I 984 .
“I’m angry. I’m furious. I’m outraged,” Mauro said.
“I am outraged that a man who got a fair settlement, a
settlement he wanted and agreed to, would go back on
his word. And I am appalled that anyone would stoop
so low as to attempt to steal money from the Permanent
School Fund.”
Mauro said that Manges, his wife and his children all
signed the 1984 pact dividing the land in Duval County.
But Sen. Hector Uribe, D-Brownsville, recently intro
duced a resolution to give Manges permission to sue the
state over that agreement.
“You know, some people say that Clinton Manges
never signed a contract he wouldn’t break,” Mauro said.
“And I’ll tell you something. From where I stand, those
people are right.”
Manges was not available to comment, said his Duval
County Ranch Co. office in Freer. He did not immedi
ately return a phone call from the Associated Press.
At issue is an agreement Manges and his family
signed in 1984 that settled a 1982 lawsuit the rancher
brought against Mobil Oil Co. The state had joined
that action. Qln
Under the agreement, Manges received nearl
50,000 acres of private land and, Mauro said, Vr 1
to waive all rights to receive any proceeds” over theo
sixteenth royalty he had retained with regard to Hl%
acres of Permanent School Fund land. ’ ^
Income from oil production on those school fu d
lands goes to finance public education in Texas. nd
According to Uribe’s resolution to allow Manges t
sue the state, Manges now seeks half the $3 niilli 0 °
earned from those 14,720 acres and half of any futur 11
earnings.
Voicing confidence that the state would win if th
case were reopened, Mauro said he was reminded c/
story about a rattlesnake taken in by an elderly woman
The snake later bites the woman and explains, “But you
knew I was a snake before you took me in.”
“I urge the Legislature to kill this,” Mauro said, “It
should never have seen the light of day.”
Uribe, a lawyer who said he has done unrelated led
work for Manges in the past, said he introduced the
lawsuit proposal because it is a citizen’s right to sue the
> state over such disputes.
“It’s been a time-honored tradition that when some
one feels that they have a cause of action against the
state, that a resolution is presented to the Legislature
This is really nothing out of the ordinary,” Uribe said
HONDA ELITE 150 1985 MODEL EXCELLENT
CONDITION. $750. 693-9867. 124t04/07
A&M
Steakhousel
Delivers
846-5273
Problem Pregnancy?
*«We (is ten, We care, We hc(p
•Free Pregnancy Tests
y •Concerned." Counselors
Brazos Valley
Crisis Pregnancy Service
3620 E. 29th Street
(next to Medley's
24 fir. hot Cine
823-CARE
don't
let
your
business
bomb.
call 845-2611
to advertise
at ease
Corsicana man builds radar
to detect tornado formations
Tornado facts andfigures
Here are some tornado facts from the National Weather Service
and news accounts:
• Tornadoes can occur in any month, but are more frequent from
April through June and between 3 and 6 p.m.
• Most tornadoes track southwest to northeast, but their paths
can spiral erratically.
• The portion of a thunderstorm adjacent to large hail is where
tornadoes are most likely to occur.
• Most injuries and deaths in tornadoes result from flying debris.
• Less than 2 percent of all tornadoes are classified as violent,
with wind speeds of more than 200 mph and a path averaging 26
miles. The longest tornado on record went 219 miles across Missouri,
Illinois and Indiana in March 1925.
• Tornadoes travel at an average 30 mph, but can stand still or go
70 mph.
• The largest single outbreak of twisters on record was in April
1974, when 148 storms killed 300 people in 13 states over two days.
CORSICANA (AP) — When tow
ering thunderstorms threaten,
Lloyd Huffman fires up the Doppler
radar he built from military surplus
parts.
Unlike conventional radar, Dopp
ler can detect the speed and direc
tion of raindrops within a storm, al
lowing Huffman to spot rotation
that could indicate the formation of
a tornado and warn the weather
service and local authorities.
“It just kind of grew over the
years,” Huffman said of the radar
he’s been tuning up in anticipation
of the April-through-June tornado
season.
With a few differences — cost be
ing a big one — Huffman’s S-band
Doppler is like the NEXRAD system
being tested at the National Severe
Storms Laboratory in Norman,
Okla., and planned for nationwide
installation in the coming decade.
Huffman asked the laboratory for
the plans to build his Doppler. “Af
ter they believed us, they gave us the
information we needed,” he said.
Huffman built his first radar sta
tion in 1976, using World War II
surplus Army and Navy equipment
and putting the antenna on the local
hospital. He began working in 1979
on the present station, which became
Doppler-capable in 1985.
“I’m very interested in thunder
storm structure,” he said.
Huffman, 42, has a degree in
physics from North Texas State Uni
versity. After working as a commu
nications systems designer for Moto
rola in Dallas, he returned to his
hometown in 1974 and started his
own communications business.
Huffman and his crew staff the
station whenever severe weather is
possible. He’s in microwave link with
WFAA-TV in Dallas and talks by ra
dio with National Weather Service
meteorologists in Fort Worth.
The radar can detect rain inten
sity for several hundred miles, but
can only process Doppler informa
tion for about 150 miles. The radar
pulses about 1,000 times a second,
sending a beam about 1 and a half
degrees wide. The reflected data is
sorted into “range bins” each 150
meters deep.
A computer remembers and com
pares the location of raindrops, al
lowing it to determine the speed and
direction. “The speed of rotation is
the rate of change of phase angle —
that’s the velocity,” Huffman ex
plained.
The computer assigns a color to
each velocity — red indicates
movement toward the station, green
is away — painting a picture of the
storm.
The right combination of colors
on the southwest corner of a thun
derstorm provides a “meso-cydone
vortex signature,” indicating rota
tion.
After several minutes of obser
vation and tilting the radar beam up
and down, Huffman might spot
elongation into a cylinder that could
mean a tornado. . .
He then makes sure the National
Weather Service knows and uses po
lice-band radios to notify authorities
in surrounding counties.
Lawmaker hopes to restrict bumper stickers
AUSTIN (AP) — Bumper stickers containing pro
fanity and suggestive messages are obscene and should
be severely restricted, a state lawmaker sponsoring such
legislation told a House committee Monday.
Holding up numerous stickers that drew cackles and
gasps from the audience. Rep. Senfronia Thompson
told the House Criminal Jurisprudence Committee, “I
don’t think this is the kind of language, the kind of dis
play that you want your 4-year-old to learn.
“I don’t think this is the kind of display we want to
see up and down our roadways,” said Thompson,
whose bill would require stickers with certain language
or messages to be printed in type no larger than one-
eighth inch.
Violation would be a class C misdemeanor. The bill
was sent to subcommittee.
Jack Lewis, mayor of Haltom City, a Fort Worth sub
urb, testified in favor of the bill and told the committee:
“I do not believe the framers of our Constitution na
this in mind when they talked about freedom of ex
pression.” /
He said the bumper stickers are offensive and t at
the messages on some could provoke violence.
“I’d hate to pull up behind a car with this on 1 e
bumper with a grandchild — which just happene 0
me recently,” Lewis said. -i
Richard Avena, executive director of the T e5 ^ s T
Liberties Union, testified against the bill, as did Jon
Boston, representing the Texas Criminal Defense La"
yers Association. ,
Avena said that while he also finds some of t e
bumper stickers offensive, he opposes Thompsons t
because it calls into question First Amendment rig
and freedom of speech.
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