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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (July 9, 1986)
Battalion Classifieds Page 4/The Battalion/Wednesday, July 9, 1986 FOR fl€NT GOLDEN RULE Renting to Christian Non-Smokers 2 bd./2 ba. Furn. Apts, Locked storage, Free laundry, bus. UTILITIES & CABLE PAID!! Telephone connected. One deposit for all! Deposit earns 5% interest. 150/mo. share bedroom. 275/mo. private bd./ba. CALL 693-5560 TODAY! 172t7/11 DOMINIK DUPLEXES 2 and 3 bedroom, 2 bath, large fenced yard, w/d connections. Furnished 3 bedroom HOUSE on shuttle. Washer/Dryer, Large Yard. $550. 846-2014 3 Bdrm/2 Bath 4-Plexes with washer/dryer & all kitchen ap- pliances. Near TAMU. From $350/mo. Call for appt. 846-1712/696-4384/693-0982 168tfn IN THE I luge duplexes close to Milton. Two and three bed rooms. with washer and dryer connections. Fire place, ceiling fans, and lenced raids. 84(}-‘2471. 846-8730, 6D3-I027. I'niversity Rentals. I’.O. Drawer CT, College Station. 77840. 163tfn The Question? How am I every going to find time to study and have enough time for myself too? Increase your reading rate, comprehension, and recall ability. Money Back Guarantee Call the Rapid Reading Workshop at 696-1222 Enrolling for 2nd Summer Session now. Room with bath, near campus. Phone-696-7450J 70t7/9 Room in lovely home, near campus. Private, entrance, bath. 846-0919, after 6:00. 170t7/l 1 Nice 2 bedroom/2 bath. Washer/Dryer connection. $300. summer rate. Will pre-lease for fall. Associated Brokers. 693-5544. 168t7/24 ROOMMRT6 LURNT6D Nice, furnished duplex. $ 120/mo. Summer only. Back yard, w/d. 693-3138, after 5. 170t7/l 1 LOST AND FOUND Gold I.D. Bracelet in Room 303, Read Bldg. Great sen timental value!! Reward offered!!!!!!! 693-1299.7lt7/l 1 FOR SRl€ Honda Aen 693-7612. 125 Scooter. Mint condition, red. Call 170t7/l 1 H€IP WflNT€D EASY SALES — Selling ads in the five outstanding young Texans Convention Program. Sell by phone or in person. Work own hours. High Commission plus Bonus. Call Paul. 775-7885. 17U7/11 BE A BLESSING!! BE A VOLUNTEER P.E. TEA CHER AT WORD OF FAITH CHRISTIAN SCHOOL (Grades 1-12). CALL 778-0982 or 779-5710. Ask for Patricia. 168t7/9 GOVERNMENT JOBS. $ 16,040-$59,230/yr. Now hir ing. Call 805-687-6000 ext. R-9531 for current federal list. 167t8/14 BUSINESS OPPURTUNITV £ $ $ MONEY' $ $ $ If you’re interested in making inoney-Cali 696-5937. Anytime!!!!! 170t7/16 S€RVIC€S ON THE DOUBLE All kinds of typing at reasonable rates. Dis sertations, theses, term papers, resumes: Typing and copying at one stop. On The Double 331 University Dr. 846-3755 iset CASH for gold, silver, old coins, diamonds Full Jewelry Repair Large Stock of Diamonds Gold Chains TEXAS COIN EXCHANGE 404 University Dr. 846-8916 3202-A Texas Ave. (across from El Chico. Bryan) 779-7662 SCHULMAN THEATRES 2.50 ADMISSION 1. Any Show Before 3PM 2. Tuesday - All Seats 3. Mon-Wed - Local Students With Current ID’s. Typing, Editing, and Library Research Assistance. Call for details. 779-8376. 167t9/3 Typing, Word Processing. Accurate. East. Reasonable Rates. Sharon 776-1451. 845-8800. 168t7/9 WORD PROCESSING. All kinds. Experienced. De pendable. Reasonable Rates. AUTOMATED CLERI CAL SERVICES. 693-1070. 168t7/31 Typing - Experienced, East, Accurate and Reasonable. Call Cindy 693-2271 or Candy 693-8537. 168t7/18 Word Processing: Proposals, dissertations, thesis, manuscripts, reports, newsletters, term papers, re sumes, letters. 764-6614. 169t7/18 Up to $15 hour processing mail. Weekly check guar anteed. Details write: BDL, 12610 Central, Suite 97- ST, Chino, California. 91710. 165t7/l 1 Expert Tvping. Word Processing. Resumes, Accurate, Fast. PERFECT PRINT. 822-1430. 159t8/27 Tvping. Word Processing lot Thesis. Dissertation, Re ports. Reasonable Rales. 6(13-1598. 16U7/1 1 TYPING: Accurate & Fast, call after LOO. anytime weekends. 776-4013. 172t8/2 Man charged Waldo in effort to burn wife to death by Kevin Thome: HOUSTON (AP) — A man ac cused of dousing his wife with gaso line and setting her ablaze was charged with attempted murder Tuesday, atithorities said. Shirley Smiley, 29, remained in Hermann Hospital’s burn unit in critical condition Tuesday with sec ond- and third-degree burns over 90 percent of her body, hospital spokeswoman Marijo Gordy said. Smiley was attacked Monday af ternoon in her Houston apartment, authorities said. Two children she was babysitting were not harmed and were picked up later by their parents, according to investigators. Jackie Robinson Williams, 39, was arrested Tuesday morning in Sugar Land and then transferred to the Harris County Jail, said Robert Mackey, chief arson investigator for the Houston Fire Department. Williams, who told authorities he was married to Smiley, remained in jail Tuesday in lieu of $100,000 bond, Mackey said. Earl Nelson, a maintenance man in the apartment complex where the woman was attacked, was the First person to reach her Monday. “At first I heard some screaming and I thought it was some kind of domestic light,” Nelson said. “I turned the corner and I heard some one screaming ‘She’s on fire, She’s on fire,’ and I turned around and saw this woman with flames all over her. “I grabbed a rug (from the front door of an apartment) and the first thing 1 had to do was get her on the ground. Then I put the rug over her and smothered the flames.” Police said an area resident told them they saw a man buy a soft drink bottle full of gasoline at a nearby service station a few minutes before the woman was burned. IT's time To CELEBRATE/ I'M THE NEW LAB ASSISTANT FOR DR. GLADSTONE/ I'M NED, THE EXISTENTIAL. PHILOSOPHER/ QO—7 H /~v^ H Harsh Reality by Gish CAA/ YOU 0£U£«/£. veLL,MY THAT MYHAhi the CoHPUTBfl HACKER JAYS THAT WAS A 0AT£ THERE i5 SOMCOWE IOOfs/r KA/Qub X TUST U/OftJDER. IjJHAT THEY OJtt-L FlUO TO TALK ASOvaTT 1F YOU. L-lKfL PRo6rRAHMlH(jJH’d ojhat LAAttMA&ci do you use/ f\ / M £'3 W/A EL.IE IVOUU3 You like to learn COMPureR ^(LOO-RAMMia/F : Shoe by Jeff MacNel! GOIH6TC0B any APYANCeMENT INTUIT c,vmeRx>&ATW UNrrEP£TAT&?VYtfWE ‘Not for the tame’ Controversial Galveston park billboards to get new slogan •DENOTES DOLBY STEREO i PLAZA 3 226 Southwest Pkwy 693-2457 ‘THE KARATE KID PG 2:40 7:20 5:00 9:40 ‘TOP GUN pg 2:45 7:25 5:05 9:45 ‘RUTHLESS PEOPLE R 2:30 7:30 4:50 9:50 MANOR EAST 3 Manor East Mall 823-8300 •BACK TO SCHOOL PG-13 2:30 7:25 4:50 9:45 LABYRITH PG 2:40 7:20 5:00 9:40 THE GREAT MOUSE DETECTIVE G 2:10 7:15 3:50 9:00 5:30 SCHULMAN 6 T■ 2002 E. 29th 775-2463 AMERICAN ANTHEM PG-13 2:20 7:25 4:40 9:50 TRIP TO BOUNTIFUL PG-13 2:35 7:20 4:55 9:45 COBRA R 2:30 7:35 4:50 9:55 RAW DEAL R 2:25 7:10 4:45 9:35 POLTERGIEST II PG-13 2:40 7:30 5:00 9:55 ‘UNDER THE CHERRY MOON PG-13 2:15 7:15 4:45 9:40 GALVESTON (AP) — Two bill boards criticized by some residents as projecting a wild image for a beach park will be altered to include a tamer slogan, but will keep photo graphs of a bathing beauty, officials say. The billboards, erected two weeks ago on Interstate 45 between Dickin son and La Marque, promote Gal veston’s R.A. Apffel Park as a place “Not for the Tame.” The ads also include a photo graph of a woman in a one-piece swimsuit lounging against a car. Members of the Galveston Beach Park Board said they did not know about the billboards until they started receiving complaints from is land citizens, some of whom claimed the signs were inappropriate, in poor taste and sexist. Board chairman Meyer Reiswerg said, “We had tons of people write to us and tell us they were disgusted, that the signs were sexist, very male- oriented.” Board members said some people believed the signs invited trouble at the park on Galveston Island’s east end. Each weekend during the tour ist season, the park caters mainly to thousands of young people. Trustee Mary Ellen Reinarz said, “It’s not a lawless beach where there’s nothing but debauchery going on. We do have the public trust and I don’t think the citizens of Galveston want the kind of image originally portrayed on the bill boards of their town.” “I thought the combination of the slogan and the model together was what was such a problem,” she said. Reiswerg said the signs will be changed by next week to includelh(l new slogan, “Super Beach." TM woman will remain. Parking Systems Inc. of Houston) the company that holds the parking franchise at board-operated beadiei on the island, hired an ad agencvis erect the signs, which direct beach goers to the appropriate park: i areas. Company representatives saidl they wanted to get the signs up bel fore the July 4 weekend and didnoi know they had to get permission from the board, Reiswerg said. ind poi low phi an< sev Th ces foi the ipa rm the ve< avt los M< White turns down invitation to become member of GOP AUSTIN (AP) — Thanks but no thanks, Texas Gov. Mark White said Tuesday after being invited to be come a Republican. Aides to the Democratic governor distributed copies of a fund-raising mailing from the Republican Na tional Committee that was sent to the govenor’s mansion in Austin. It included a “personal invitation” from President Reagan to become a sustaining member of the GOP and to contribute money. The invitation asked for donations of from $15 to $500 or more and urged recipients to help “the Republican Party in lay ing the foundation for a Republican victory in 1986.” White, who’s seeking re-election against Republican Bill Clements, said he would stick with his own party. In a letter to GOP National Chair man Frank Farenkopf Jr., White said Reagan hasn’t been much help to Texas. “The Republican administration in Washington has failed to respond to the crisis in this country brought about by falling oil prices caused by Saudi Arabia,” the governor wrote. Since the oil price plunge started last winter, White has urged Presi dent Reagan to impose a tariff on imported oil. He says failure to im pose the tariff is making the nation once again dangerously dependent on foreign oil supplies. “The administration’s failure to respond to this crisis is crippling the oil industry in Texas and has put thousands of Texans out of work,” White told Farenkopf. The invitation White received said sustaining membership in the Re publican Party meant White would be invited to participate in an annual membership survey, consulted on major issues, eligible for special re ports on 1986 campaigns and candi dates and “asked to take part in grass roots efforts to help the president pass his programs through Con gress.” “Thank you again for your con sideration,” White replied, “but I will be working with the Democratic Party in laying the foundations for Democratic victories.” Man wins police molestation suit SAN ANTONIO (AP) — A jury has awarded a 20-year-old man more than $27,000 in damages after ruling in his favor in a civil rights suit against a police officer who the plaintiff claimed sexually molested him. Reyes Ruiz alleged that Milton Barrera Jr. molested him between 1981 and 1983. Among his allega tions, Ruiz said Barrera kissed him while they discussed the Bible. An internal investigation by the San Antonio Police Department re sulted in a 30-day suspension for Barrera. Criminal charges of sexual abuse against Barrera were dropped in February by the district attorney’s office. After the jury’s decision was is sued Monday, the police department said Barrera would remain an offi cer pending an examination of the verdict. Barrera’s attorney, Wayne Hamp ton, said the civil verdict should have no effect on the officer’s job because the departmental investigation of Barrera’s conduct is “all over and done with.” The attorney also said he will dis cuss the possibility of an appeal with Barrera later this week. Hampton said Barrera is “judgment free” because he has no resources with which to pay the damages ordered by the jury. Bar rera refused comment. Ruiz said he does not care if he collects the money. He just wanted people to know the truth, he said The jury awarded Ruiz $27,495 after deliberating five hours Thurs day afternoon and Monday morning after the nine-day trial. Ruiz had tes tified he lived with Barrera as the of ficer’s ward from 1981 to 1983. Ruiz said he was sexually as saulted by Barrera after the officer won his trust with talk of God. Prosecutor in UT sniper case ‘could have won’ KERRVILLE (AP) — The prosecutor who led a grand jury probe into a fatal sniping at the University of Texas in 1966 says he would have fought an insanity defense and could have won a conviction if the killer had lived. State District Judge Toni Blackwell, who was Travis Gounty district attorney at the time, said Charles Whitman knew what he was doing when he opened fire on the UT campus tower in Austin on Aug. 1, 1966. Whitman, 25, killed 16 people and injured 31 others before po lice gunned him down. The grand jury agreed with the assessment that a pecan-sized tumor at the base of Whinnan’s brain, coupled with his taking of aspirin and amphetamines, led to the rampage. “I would have had no problem prosecuting Mr. Whitman, if he had lived long enough to be ar rested and indicted,” Blackwell said Monday. “I would have looked lor a vig orous insanity defense,” said Blackwell, a retired judge who is presiding in the organized crime trial of a Hill Country family. “He wasn’t a blithering idiot. He planned it. He was aware of the circumstances that he was probably going to lose his life when he got on that tower. I could have won,” he said. COPY CENTER 693-COPY 2 • 7 » HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE STUD' Wanted: Patients with Higl' Pressure, either on or off blood pressure medication to participate in a High Blood Pressure study. $100-$20C monitary incentive offered for those chosen. Call 776-0411