' L Page 6 The Battalion Tuesday, July 18,1989 Battalion Classifieds Bush’s air pollution cleanup plan unlikely to meet goals, expert says lues NOTICE GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS may be picked up beginning July 18 thru July 28. Student Programs Office Rm. 216 N, 9am-8pm M-F. EXTRA ANNOUNCEMENTS will go on sale in the Student Finance. Rm. 217 Wednesday July 19. 8 a.m. First Come-First Serve Wt* buy-sell good used furniture. Bargain Place. Across from Chicken Oil. 846-2429. 171108/02 SERVICES HELP WANTED PLUS A is now interviewing new instructors for Fall ’89. We have openings in these areas: * Bartending * Oil Painting * Crochet * Resume Writing * Interviewing * Massage * Self Defense * Landscaping * Mexican Cooking * Chinese Cooking * Italian Cooking * Basics of Cooking * Financial Planning * Buy/Sell A Home * Buy A Car * Stereo Selection * Star Watching And Many More.... Do you have a new course idea ? V. Call us @ 845-1631 SKIN INFECTION STUDY G & S Studies, Inc. is participating in a study on acute skin infection. If you have one of the following conditions call G & S Studies. Eligible volunteers will be compensated. * infected blisters * infected cuts * infected boils * infected scrapes * infected insect bites (“road rash”) G & S Studies, Inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 ?e PATELLAR TENDONITIS (JUMPER’S KNEE) Patients needed with patellar ten donitis (pain at base of knee cap) to participate in a research study to evaluate a new topical (rub on) anti-inflammatory gel. Previous diagnoses welcome. Eligible volunteers will be com pensated. G & S Studies, Inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 ifi93-0187 I72t0720 With flexible hours? Offering valuable training and business experience? Interested in free use of a per sonal computer? Are you a Sophomore or above? Full time student? Computer familiar? With at least a B average? If all your answers are ‘yes’, you’ve made the grade! Man power needs you as a COLLE GIATE REP to promote the sales of the IBM Personal System/2 on campus. For experience that pays, call to day. •8<) NINJA (>00 RED WHITE BEL E SIAOO. OBO. GOOD CONDITION. 82:(-:ilSI (21 -DABI-4421 1 7< It 07/20 1983 Chevrolet X-28 Cmnarn- White. I-tops, stereo. A/C. $4300. 774-4779. I69t07/26 SCOOTER! -S3 Honda Elite 130. Cood condition; nen tires. $900. including helmet. Call Margie: 843- 1 133(AM); 84(>-07(>b(I i M). 169t<>7/19 Mobile home, 2 bdrm.. I hath, w d. furnished. Two miles f rom campus. (409)332-4289. I(>8t07/21 • ANNOUNCEMENT Manpower Personnel Services 505 E. University Dr, Bldg 401 846-3535 Contact Lawanna NEED CREDIT:-:-:' V ESA and M.iMcmtrd oitli no Clfdil < lici k. Also IKU , i cclii lard::: l-or 0<-\i. .->113 I 72t07IS The Battalion Mat tire \i udent couple to manage small apt 1 omplexes. Send emplovment hisiorv to 1300 Walton Dr. C.S. I \ 77S40 or call 846-91 9b !0-(>pm 170107 20 Iniversitv Plus needs Mudent workers with good woodworking -.kills. Apple 9-3 MSC basement (cralt center). See W av tie or Dana 843-1631 170t07 20 • SERVICES IA ri\C- WORD PROCI SSINC- Personal Auention- Extfllein Service- Professional Results-76 1-293 I 1700)8 |U k_»N 1 HE DOL bLt Protessional Word Processing, lasei jet printing. Papers, resume, merge letters. Rush services. 846-3755. , 181tfn Number One in Aggieland WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Bush’s plan for cleaning up the nation’s air is unlikely to meet its goal of eliminating unhealthy levels of urban smog by the year 2000, the main author of a new air pollution report to Congress said Monday. T he report by the Office of Tech nology Assessment, which advises Congress on scientific issues, said even if all known methods of pollut ion control are used, many cities will remain above federal limits for smog-causing ozone by the end of the century. It said residents of the most pol luted cities — Los Angeles, New York and Houston — may have to live with unhealthy levels of smog for another 20 years or more. Bush said last month in proposing a sweeping revision of the 1970 Clean Air Act that his measures would mean the vast majority of the approximately 100 cities currently in violation of ozone limits could gain compliance by 1995. The president said all cities would be within the limits by the end of the century. The Office of Technology Assess ment study, which was begun two years ago, did not specifically ana lyze the Bush proposal, but Robert Friedman, the report’s main author, told a news conference the adminis tration’s forecast was probably too rosy. “I don’t see how they’re going to do it,” he said. “I hope we are wrong and they are right, but I fear that will not be the case.” He said in an earlier interview that between 30 and 45 cities proba bly will still be in violation of the ozone standard by the year 2000, even if all available anti-pollution technologies are used. Among these are Atlanta, Dallas, San Francisco, Washington, D.C., Boston, Balti more and St. Louis, he said. The report did not include a com plete list of cities and their prospects for compliance. Ozone is formed when hydrocar bons from car exhaust and other sources mix in sunlight with nitro gen oxides released by the burning of fossil fuels such as petroleum. Ozone is beneficial in the upper atmosphere, where it filters the sun’s rays. But closer to the ground, ozone turns into choking smog that some scientists believe could cause perma nent lung damage by limiting the lungs’ ability to ward off infection. The OTA study said that each year, about 21 million people are ex posed during outdoor exercise to ozone levels above the federal stan dard, each of them for about nine hours a year, on average. About one- quarter of these people live in Los Angeles. “Though experts disagree about the level of danger that ozone actu ally poses to the population, a large portion of the American people live in places where ozone concentra tions far exceed those known to be completely safe,” the study said. The White House is expected to unveil later this week hill deiai its clean air proposal, which waii nounced June 12 in outline ft; Draft legislation incorporaij Bush’s proposals has been circulij; on Capitol Hill in recent days. Friedman said lack of detail® original administration planmaij impossible to f ully explain whyE, believed more gains against smog are possible than foresee the OTA study. The Environmental Proti Agency said in a written response the Office of Technology Asm rnent study that it did not take account the administration! sumption that state and local ernments would take their owni pollution measures to suppler, the federal measures proposed Bush. The EPA said an administnt bill woidd include “strong enlt rnent and compliance provision! see that non-federal activitiesare; plemented and succeed.” By Je Soviet officials meet with striking miner Biggest strike in country’s history threatens to cripple industry MOSCOW (AP) — Senior officials flew to Si beria and met with coal miners Monday in an ef fort to end the Soviet Union’s biggest strike, which is spreading to the main coal fields and threatens to cripple industry. Premier Nikolai I. Ryzhkov said the special commission met with a new regional strike com mittee that demands a greater voice for miners in running the industry in western Siberia, 2,100 miles east of Moscow. State television said eight mines had been struck in the Ukraine’s Donetsk Basin, the main coal region 1,450 miles south of Moscow. The of ficial news agency Tass said more than 2,000 miners were striking at six mines in Makeyev, ad jacent to the administrative center of Donetsk. Tass said the Donetsk miners’ demands were fewer than those in western Siberia: more rapid reduction in the bureaucracy running the mines, longer vacations and improved housing. In remarks to the Soviet legislature before re ports about the Donetsk strikes, Ryzhkov said 110,000 miners and sympathizers were striking in the Kuznetsk Basin, the nation’s second-rank ing coal production area. Politburo member Nikolai N. Slyunkov led the Moscow delegation, which Tass said conferred with miners in Kemerovo and then with a strike committee in Prokopievsk. Mines in both cities and seven others are in volved in the week-old strike. Each city has two representatives on the com mittee, which was formed late Sunday night, said committee spokesman Valery Serdtsev. In the first Kremlin comment on the strike, Ryzhkov said it threatened production at some metallurgical and power plants. Weekend press reports said coal production had been cut by 1 million tons and a coal short age had interrupted work at the Magnitka steel complex in the Ural Mountains. Ryzhkov said in televised remarks to the legis lature that he and President Mikhail S. Gorba chev sent a telegram to the miners Sunday urging them to return to work and promising to address their grievances. He said any decisions made in Kuznetsk also would affect Donetsk miners. The strike apparently is the largest in the viet Union since the Bolshevik revolution of ISI and the civil war and turbulence that followed Official Soviet histories do not mention a: strikes since then, and underground repot speak only of sporadic work stoppages neither! widespread or prolonged as the mine strike Slyunkov’s commission was instructed to slue what Ryzhkov described as social problems inih Kuznetsk Basin and prepare a plan foreconoui development of the region, Tass said. Demands by the miners include highenvage better food, housing and working conditioi and a greater role in running the industry. The premier said he opposed using force be cause violence would only make things worse, and noted that the legislators were asked last month to draft a law on strikes and collective bar gaining, Tass reported. Soviet law does not forbid strikes, but they were suppressed before Gorbachev gained power in March 1985. Local party government officials were noli eluded on the strike committee, but press rep said they declared support for greater autonou from the Coal Mining Ministry, which runsl) mines from Moscow and controls many sect services in the coal basin. On the special commission with Slyunkovwei Coal Mining Minister Mikhail I. Shchadov;S« phan A. Shalayev, chairman of the All-Unic Council of Trade Unions, and Deputy Premir Lev A. Voronin, chairman of the State Comm:: tee for Material and Technical Supply, whiii oversees industry. vas pn ant. In ector c Cam lirecto [ohn D eplace ties of football positior when / ract. As a Cannot person don’t b ment.” St DAL Cowbo' bach sa to be i soon-to post at that he “viable The that S< Cowbos a 1970s the Hal this wei by Pete “I ha and res Hi Ho Hi Ho It’s off to camp we go As you watch their minds work, you’re amazed by their fresh approaches, their leaps of logic and their creativity. Imagine what they could do with the skills gained at Computer Camp. Computer Camp is for children between 6 and 14 years of age. Enrollment in computer Camp is limited. Registration is on a first come first served basis. Campers must be pre-registered and payment received before July 19, 1989. To register please come by ComputerLand, 1140 E. Harvey, College Station, or call (409) 693-2020. All registrations will be confirmed. Computer classes may be cancelled if minimum attendance requirements are not met. Morning Session: 9:00 - 11:00 am Monday - Friday Session I: 6-8 years old Session II: 9-11 years old July 24 - July 28, 1989 July 31 - August 4, 1989 Session III: 12-14 years old August 7 - August 11, 1989 Pre-registration Price: $99.00 Afternoon Session: 1:00 - 3:00 pm Monday - Friday Session I: 6-8 years old Session II: 9-11 years old Session III: 12-14 years old July 24 - July 28, 1989 July 31 - August 4, 1989 August 7 - August 11, 1989 Pre-registration Price: $99.00 ComputerLand ® Business to business. Person to person. 1140 E. Harvey, College Station, Tx 77840 (409) 693-2020