Tuesday, November 27, 1990 The Battalion Page 3 q 45-3: and- it to m in ' not con- pov- nces 1 you chil- d 20 and oday las a :s. A : you 3wer oiug ‘tire, jram >era- lieap that, :or it mse- n 20 20% lem- ■nces off re main- vill be •ss and aid, or HA, STOP raises money o fulfill holiday wish lists 3y ELIZABETH TISCH (The Battalion Staff Texas A&M residence halls will [raise money to fulfill holiday wish [lists for local needy families. I RHA Vice President of Opera- jdons Jennifer Wylie says this is the jthird year the halls will “adopt” fam- [ilies for the holiday season, j Students Together Opposing Pov- [erty (STOP) will begin the program [by soliciting funds from hall resi dents and end by donating the money or completed “wish lists” to (their families on Dec. 7. ‘‘Families have requested food, | toys, clothes, space heaters and mon- Man threatens clerk with club Brazos County Crime Stoppers is [asking for information regarding a |Nov. 15 robbery at Patel’s Pantry in | Bryan. A surveillance camera revealed (the suspect was covering his face with his shirt when he rushed to the counter, threatened the clerk with a long club and took money from the | cash register. The suspect is described as a white | man in his 20s who is about 5-feet-8 inches tall with long brown hair. He was last seen wearing a soiled, yellow and black plaid long-sleeve shirt and | blue jeans. The Bryan Police Department and Crime Stoppers need help iden tifying the person responsible for this robbery. If you have informa tion that could be helpful, call 775- TIPS. When you call, Crime Stoppers will assign you a special coded num ber to protect your identity. If your call leads to an arrest and grand jury indictment, Crime Stop pers will pay up to $1,000 in cash. Crime Stoppers also pays cash for in formation on any felony crime or the location of any wanted fugitive. “Families have requested food, toys, clothes, space heaters and money. ” — Jennifer Wylie, RHA vice president of operations ey,” she says. “And the students of the halls have requested for more families than any year before.” Although students will never per sonally meet their adopted families, a profile providing information about the families fs provided to STOP members. “The students will know if they are donating gifts for a single mother of two or a larger family,” she says. Wylie says the majority of the halls are participating. “The halls are anxious to partici pate,” she says. “They think it’s a great way to serve the community and it doesn’t take a lot of time ei ther — and that is important, espe cially during finals.” Halls are asked to solicit about $50 from residents. If more is raised, the money will be placed in a general STOP fund to be used when needed by the local families, Wylie says. Bush meets Salinas; discusses trade policy AGUALEGUAS, Mexico (AP) — President Bush conferred with President Carlos Salinas de Gor- tari Monday in a state visit ex pected to focus on U.S.-Mexican trade barriers and the Persian Gulf crisis. Making his first official visit as president, Bush said maintaining excellent relations with Mexico was one of his “most important foreign policy objectives.” But even oefore his guest arrived, Sa linas signaled difficult talks, ac cusing the United States of trade protectionism. “Today, American products can enter the Mexican market without restriction,” he told the Monterrey daily El Norte. “But ours are detained at customs, and there are always many restric tions.” Bush, in a statement coinciding with his arrival, noted that he’d visited Mexico “more often than any other country” and said he had “developed especially deep ties and respect for its people.” On landing at the airport in Monterrey, about 60 miles south west of this small farming and cattle community that is Salinas’ ancestral home, Bush got a red- carpet greeting. He then accom panied Salinas by helicopter to a charro — or rodeo —in the Mexi can president’s hometown. The pair put pleasure before business, sitting side by side in shirtsleeves under a glaring sun and watching Mexican dancers frolic before proceeding later to a luncheon and talks. It was the fifth time Bush and Salinas have met since they were both elected in 1988, but Bush’s first trip to Mexico as president. Bush wants a free trade agreement with Mexico akin to the pact the United States reached with Canada two years ago —- one which lifted trade bar riers between the two countries. But even as the United States and Mexico worked toward achieving such an accord by 1992, trade frictions remained. Number of U.S. rigs rebound, ends decline HOUSTON (AP) — After two weeks of declines, the number of working oil and gas rigs in the United States rebounded with a healthy 72 additional rigs operating this week to bring the total to 1,175 nationwide, Baker Hughes Inc. re ported. “Some of that clearly is im- E rovement of the weather that had een bad for the past two weeks, particularly in Oklahoma,” Ike Ker- ridge, a vice president at Baker Hughes, said Monday. “But it also relates to the seasonal upturn ex pected during the last quarter of the year.” The number of rigs had plum meted by 41 rigs over the past two weeks, following heavy rains in the Oklahoma area. A year ago this week, the number of working rigs was 1,037. Kerridge said he could not fore cast changes for the count, but be lieved it would grow in December because drillers will be using any re maining funds in calendar-year bud gets. “I still expect to see a rig count around 1,250 in December, but whether that will be at the beginning of the month or the middle or the end, I can’t say,” Kerridge said. “The weather and the random movement of rigs that can effect it makes it impossible to predict on a week-by-week basis.” Decreases in the previous weeks came on the heels of a milestone ear lier in the month when the number of working rigs reached 1,144 — a high figure not seen since Dec. 28, 1987. Baker Hughes has kept track of the rig count — the widely watched index of drilling activity — since 1940. At the height of the oil boom in December 1981, the count reached a peak of 4,500. But the rig count plunged to a low of 663 after oil prices collapsed in the summer of 1986. Texas led the major oil producing states for the week, by adding 23 rigs to the count, followed by Oklahoma, whose count increased by 16, and Louisiana, which added 11 rigs. t use you ,gs they do ■ople who linion to ously at id no d looney -e, at leas: t in cite in you lumalism T TWO DAYS OF FUN. FUN. FUN FOR FREE. FREE. FREE! DelcoGlectroniGS GET TO KNOW OMOTT vurtrai-n LEADER IN AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRONICS’* GMAC FINANCIAL SERVICES TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY DECEMBER 3 & 4 COURTYARD IN FRONT OF SBISA DINING HALL 10:00 A.M. - 4:00 P.M. SPONSORED BY PHI SIGMA EPSILON N We Buy Books Everyday at Texas A&M Bookstore -Bn* MSC Jordan Institute for International Awareness JORDAN FELLOWS PRESENTS: The following Aggies will relate their international travel experiences; Marty Butler: “A Semester as an Austrain Business Student” Ursula Cuzzi: “Learning from Paris and Others” Andrew Gardner: “Italian Culture: Education and Religion” Wednesday, November 28, 1990 room 230 MSC 7:30 p.m. MSC Recreation, the College Station Parks Department and the Brazos Valley Fitness Association present... Jingle Bell Fun Run December 2, 1990 Entries may be picked up in the Student Programs Office (Room 216 of the Memorial Student Center), the Parks Department (in Central Park), or the Manor East Mall parking lot (event day only). Registration Fee: $ 10/person (includes jingle bells and a t-shirt) For more information, call 845-1515 or 764-3486. Professional Computing HAS A CALCULATOR FOR YOU! CALCULATORS FOR BUSINESS $37.50 $70.00 14B....$59.50 i 17BII...$80.30 19BII..$129.95 CALCULATORS FOR SCIENCE & ENGINEERING 205.. ..$37.50 215.. ..$37.50 225.. ..$44.50 275.. ..$59.50 32S $50.95 42S .$88.95 28S $173.90 48SX..$259.95 BUSINESS HOURS M-F 8:00-5:30 SAT. 10:00-3:00 HEWLETT PACKARD Authorized Dealer 505 CHURCH STREET COLLEGE STATION (409) 846-5332