Page 4 The Battalion Tuesday, July 25,1989 The B Battalion Houston industries • f report lower level ^lassmeas of toxic chemicals V HOJP WANTED ' f • EOHSALE si PLUS Yamaha 250 motorcycle with trunk, only 7700 mi. $400. 693-5342. 17St07/25 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 ? Call us @ 845-1631 Female model needed for cover of new publication for A&M students. F.xperience preferred but not required. ( all (593-0049 leave message. 176t07/27 Secretary'll (20 hrs./wk.-flexible) responsible for rou tine duties such as answering a telephone, scheduling clients, filing, typing, distributing mail, preparing sta tistical reports, and acting as receptionist as needed. Some occassional evening hours may be required dur ing clinic. State Of 1 exas Genetic Screening and coun seling Service With State Benefits. Prefer some pre- \ ions experience in a medial setting. Report to TEC for typing test and application. 801 East 29th Street Bryan. 17(5107/25 Schlotzky’s is now accepting applications for p/t and f/t shifts. Apply in person only, between 2-5 p.ml75t07/25 T 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 1 fiQttfn 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 7€ NEED CREDIT??? VISA and Mastercard with no credit check. Also new credit card!!! For details, call (702)825-3750 ext. 505 172t0718 TYPING- WORD PROCESSING- Personal Attention- Excellent Service- Professional Results- 764-2931 170t08/10 Experienced librarian will do library research for you. Call 272-3348 166t09/01 ON THF. DOUBLE Protessional Word Processing, laser jet printing. Papers, resume, merge letters. Rush services. 846-3755. - ISltfn m Mi Cotton Village Apts. Snook, TX. 1 Bdrm. $200., 2 Bdrm. $248. Rental assistance available! Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5pm. i 4 7ttfn S400. 2 Bdrm. house, fence, appliances, near TAMT. 764-7363,693-5286. I76i<)7/28 WALK TO CLASS, 2 Bdrm., 1 Bath Apt., small com plex, $210. + bills, 696-7266. 173t07/26 Vet Student? Share country home, barn. $50./wk. 778- 0752, 776-0029 1 75t07/27 2B/lkSB duplexes Sc 4 plexes. On shuttle. W&D in cluded. Low utilities. Summer rates available. 2 blks. from campus. 846-4384. 162tfn 2 B I 1 -’ b. Pecan Knoll 4-plexe.s. 5 min. from AKM. Options: fireplace, fenced, w'd conn., xtra storage. Now preleasing. Wvndhain 846-4384. 174ttln NOTICE We buy-sell good used furniture. Bargain Place. Across from Chicken Oil. 846-2429 171108/02 i OL R MODEL Golf Clubs. Individual C lubs. Sets. Golfing Accessories 846-9423 1 76t08/01 1983 (Chevrolet Z-28 Camaro- White, T-tops, stereo, .VC. $4500. 774-4779. 169t07/26 Like new bike, 19’, Trek, great condition, tuned. Call 693-2417. 173t07/26 1977 V.W. Bus, 90,000 mi., good condition. $1,300. or best offer. Call 846-2578. 174t07/27 $^0 HOUSTON (AP) — In reports that are part of new federal public disclosure requirements, five major Houston-area industries said they reduced the level of toxic chemicals their plants are pouring into the air. The companies’ industrial com plexes, which reported 1987 releases of airborne toxic chemicals that were among the largest in Harris, Galves ton and Brazoria counties, reported combined reductions in those emis sions of 22 percent in 1988, accord ing to a Houston Chronicle analysis. Some company officials acknowl edge, however, that actual reduc tions are not as great as the figures reflect. The new reports were due to gov ernment officials by July 1. Their statistics covered the second year of a public disclosure program that has focused unprecedented attention on toxic air pollution and figured prominently in the debate over strengthening the Clean Air Act. The Chronicle analysis shows that the combined 1988 estimates of Amoco Chemical’s Chocolate Bayou plant and the multiple facilities of Dow Chemical at Freeport, Exxon in Baytown, Shell in Deer Park and Union Carbide at Texas City totaled about 24.9 million pounds of toxic substances released to the air. The 1987 total was about 32 million pounds. “It’s obviously good news that the figures show some reductions, but whether we can depend heavily on the figures is the question,” said Ken Kramer, director of the Lone Star Sierra Club. “It will take several years of data to demonstrate conclusively that re ductions are taking place in pollut ion emissions to the air,” he said. Several industry representatives conceded that in a number of cases, the 1988 numbers exaggerated the actual reductions. Among the reasons are overesti mates of 1987 emissions and better calculations for 1988. John Leverton, Union Carbide’s principal engineer for health, safety and environmental affairs in Texas City, said some emission reductions were achieved there last year. What s Up Wednesday MUSIC PROGRAMS: will have a Lyric Art Festival Concert at 7:30 p.m, inRn der Forum. NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS: will meet at 8:30 p.m. For more information» tact the C.D.P.E. at 845-0280. se CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST: will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 301 Rudderlo: COG CCC weekly meeting. Commi said Mi ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS: will meet at noon. For more informationconte seek a the C.D.P.E. at 845-0280. fi| te g, Items for What's Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 216 ReedMcDm no later than three business days before the desired run date. We only puts the name and phone number of the contact if you ask us to do so. What's Up< a Battalion service that lists non-profit events and activities. Submissionsarr. on a first-come, first-served basis. There is no guarantee an entry willmn. have questions, call the newsroom at 845-3315. cuinati games. Rose the con e ar irhpossi | The the Oh has tei from h mine if games, HR, he coul If he b Workers unite against new drug testing polic)* - 5 at Texas Instruments ^ “The tiate th Houston man kills wife before shooting himself; no clues found by police AUSTIN (AP) — Some Texas In struments Inc. workers have orga nized an underground group to op pose the company’s new drug testing policy, a newspaper reports. The group, clubbed Citizens Ad vocating Protection of Privacy, was formally organized last week and al ready claims a membership of more d ! INYADS. BUT REAL HEAVYWEIGHTS WHEN RESULTS REALLY COUNT. HOUSTON (AP) — Police say they have no clues as to why a real estate investor shot his wife and then himself with a gun he had purchased about an hour earlier. “There was no note,” homicide Detective Brian Foster said. “We do know that on at least two occasions there were domestic disturbances at the house in which police were called.” Police said Billy Krumbein bought a five-shot Rossi revolver for $170 at a sporting goods store near his southwest Houston home about 3:45 p.m. Sunday and later shot his wife, Ila Jean Krumbein, 46. Krumbein, 58, and his wife died a few minutes before 5 p.m. at their home. started, but it was only a few min utes,” Foster said. Krumbein confronted his wife and fired all five shots from the .38- caliber pistol at her, striking her in the chest, Foster said. “It looks like they struggled over the gun,” he said. “We believe it started in the bed room. All we really know is she ran into the den where their 17-year-old son was and told him she had been shot.” “We don’t know how long he had been home when the shooting The son ran to a neighbor’s house to call for help. Ila Jean Krumbein died near the front room door. After she was shot, her husband walked outside to the garage behind the home and emp tied the shell casings from the pistol, Foster said. than 20 TI engineers and software developers, the Austin American- Statesman reported. Operating in secret and often in danger of losing their jobs, they say, members of the group have posted anti-drug testing signs on telephone poles near TPs Austin plant and amassed a comprehensive computer data base about national drug-test ing laws and procedures. The group plans to begin a low- key lobbying effort aimed at per suading state legislators and the Austin City Council to restrict the use of drug tests in Texas and Aus tin. Drug-testing programs like the one proposed by TI are forbidden in six states and at least two cities, Ber keley and San Francisco, Calif. The newspaper said the group is linked to other employees through an advanced TI computer and tele communications network and has distributed hundreds of pages of drug-testing literature. And through a computer messag ing system dubbed “Snicker-Net,” members of the group and supporters swap stories aboui | testing failures and trade ideasii® ways to sideline the company)| icy. For many employees, thisisi* first clash with TI. “This is a family feud we’itj now, and I’m heartbroken tha:I have to deal with it in this way,"a CAPP member, a softwareenja with 6.5 years tenure, told then paper. “Some of us view this as a I the engineer said.“ It really huni| to be treated like this. TI, the Dallas-based tedinorlj company, announced inJuneasTom L; to begin mandatory drug id leader c later this year of its 50,000 domt®. Whil employees, including the 2,0" : into th< Austin. ll’ rts ’ J Company officials say TI isadd come re ing the testing program beausfK In tv drug-related problems in the vJrcrirnm place that are estimated to cost: ers on t businesses $ I 40 billion annuallv B “We T he new policy brings TI: got,” Jc compliance with a federal law! nninj requires companies that dodefa ning ag if they c related work to certify that em|A ees involved in the defense projcf work in a drug-free environmem Neil McGlone, a company spoifj man in Austin, said that regard: of CAPP’s efforts, the issue i whether TI will have drug ted said of isn’t up for debate. '“h s gt what t ^omatterwhat you’ve go to say or sell, our Classi fieds can help you -do the big job. Falling Comal River water level may dry up recreation business in New Braunfels by Labor Day NEW BRAUNFELS (AP) — Although the hotels are full and tourists are renting inner tubes and spending money, those in the river-dependent recreation busi ness say the river could dry up by Labor Day. City officials said water levels in the spring-fed Co mal River are the lowest since 1984, although still well above the stagnant levels that caused the city to post warnings at the river in ’84 because of a buildup of fecal coliform bacteria in the water. bahn, which uses recirculated treated river water, the falling river levels may cut short this year’s good sum mer. Last week, the falling aquifer level triggered manda te Battalion Classified 845-2611 Normally, the constant flow of the springs flushes out impurities, but in droughts the water’s movement slows as the springs dry up. Inner tube renters said they will try to squeeze as much business as possible into the following, while hop ing for rain to replenish the Edwards Aquifer, an un derground limestone formation that feeds the springs. When people call me, I do not lie to them. I tell them what the (river) level is and let them be the judge. It’s low, but it’s clear and it’s tubeable.” — Donna Brown, Landa Trailer Park manager “Mother Nature runs everything. Right now the Co mal is still clean and it’s moving,” tube impresario J.R. “Jay” Felger said, as he loaded his converted school bus with inner tubes and prepared to shuttle some custom ers to the river. New Braunfels Chamber of Commerce officials said the estimates show the city’s water recreation industry can pump up to $22 million into the local economy. But except, for a giant water park called the Schlitter- tory water conservation measures contained in a New Braunfels city ordinance. The water levels in a New Braunfels test well were at 621 feet above sea level. The springs dry up completely when the levels hit 619 feet, which could occur in four weeks at the well’s current rate of decline. “When people call me, I do not lie to them. I tell them what the (river) level is and let them be the judge,” said Donna Brown, who manages a riverside camp ground, Landa Trailer Park, with her husband. “It’s low, but it’s clear and it’s tubeable.” Count of oil gas rigs rises after lapse The agreer choices Syracu: ark S HOUSTON (AP) — The mini* 0ne her of oil and gas rigs workingli we |j. ro the United States rose by lOtotoj p 00 [jj a tal 830 after slipping by five laSj S y Stem week, according to Baker Huglfll S p 0rt j, ^ nc - . ffranchi Prior to last week’s decline, p| Aith count increased for seven conset j; p oot b a utive weeks. A year ago, thenumj )j as cor] her of working rigs totaled 9051 th e a b s Baker Hughes reported Monda' geve The company’s rig count—tiii| SU pp 0r widely watched industry index oil cannot drilling activity — reflects tK additio number of rigs actively explorinj Cm e for oil as of last Friday, not tbl Birmin number of rigs actively produfjOaklan ing oil. Houston-based Hughes Tool Co., an oil toolmaker compan' that merged with Baker Intern? tional Corp. of Orange, Call has kept track of the rig cou» l since 1940. In December 1981, at dtf height of the oil boom, the count reached a peak of 4,: But oil prices plunged to less that $10 per 42-gallon barrel in tin summer of 1986, prompting ; collapse in the rig count thatW tomed out at 663. Antoni xamp ould t easui in Peor be anoi franch SUPERCUTS We Cut Hair For Your €go Not Ours... The Nation's #1 Hair Styling Salon Is Coming To College Station UUatch For Our Opening July 29th Grand Opening Soon To Follow Hours Su creut $8 Mon.-Fri. po.m.-9p.m. Culp0pp0r PIqZO Studsntr&Professors Sat. 9 a.m.-8 p.m. ' 1 1 UJ/I.D.-$7 Sun. 10a.m.-5p.m. I _) I V I 0XQS MV0nU0 Children 13 one! under-$6 AT A&M NEARLY EVERYBODY (36,000 active, affluent Aggies) Reads The Battalion