The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 16, 1968, Image 3

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THE BATTALION Friday, February 16, 1968
College Station, Texas
Page 3
Read Battalion Classifieds Daily
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
Political
FOR SALE
Announcements
Subject to action of the Dem
ocratic Primary May 4, 1968.
For Congressman, Sixth Con
gressional District:
OLIN E. TEAGUE
(Re-Election)
WANT AD RATES
On* day
14 per word each addition
44 per word
ional day
Minimum charge—60tf
Classified Displs
wor
linin'
Classified Display
90gS per column inch
each insertion
1966 Simca 4-door GT. 21,000 miles
left
warranty left. 846-8809 or 846-2496. 534t8
1968 Dodge Coronet R/T 440 Magnum,
4-speed positraction, disc brakes. Call 846-
3918. 534t8
1965 Mustang air conditioned, radial
tires, excellent condition. Phone 589-2490
after 5 p. m. 534t2
SUPERCALIFRAGILISTICEXPIALIDO-
IOUS modestly describes A&M Record
ing Company’s four-track custom cart
ridge servic«
om cai
Ige service. Call 823-5979 or write P. O.
Box 1968 for details. 533t3
GUITAR AMPLIFIER “Heath” 60 Watts
all transistor, Hammond reverb, tremelo
4 - 12” Jensen speakers, $199.00
offer. ANSEL 823-5979.
ueio,
best
633t3
FOR RENT
Apt.
Apartment available March 1st.
pt. 4-E Fairway Apt. 823-0330.
$180.
636t5
Three apartments, 1814 Fin Feather
Road, Unfurnished, Space for animals.
Contact W. F. Davis at 822-3518. BSltfn
Apartment available Feb. 1. $76 plus
itilitiea. Contact Judge W. C. Davis,
utilities
846-436!
avis,
7tfn
STATE MOTEL, rooms and kitchen, day
the University, 846-
and weekly rate, near
1410.
262tfn
THE BRYAN ARMS
APARTMENTS
“Congenial Living"
Separate Adult & Family Areas
“Children Welcome”
Model Apts. Open For Inspection
From $120 - All Utilities Paid
1602 S. College Avenue
Resident Manager - Apt. 55
Phone 823-4250
Make Your Deposit Now
VICTORIAN
APARTMENTS
Midway between Bryan &
A&M University
STUDENTS ! 1
Need A Home
1 & 2 Bedroom Fur. & Unfur.
Pool and Private Courtyard
3 MONTHS LEASE
822-2035 401 Lake St. Apt. 1
WE RENT
TYPEWRITERS
Electric, Manual, &
Portable
OTIS MCDONALD’S
429 S. Main — Phone 822-1328
Bryan, Texas
TRANSMISSIONS
REPAIRED & EXCHANGED
Completely Guaranteed
LOWEST PRICES
HAMILL’S TRANSMISSION
118 S Bryan —Bryan— 822-6874
AUTO INSURANCE
FOR AGGIES:
Call: George Webb
Farmers Insurance Group
3400 S. College 823-8051
HOME & CAR
RADIO REPAIRS
SALES & SERVICE
KEN’S RADIO & TV
303 W. 26th 822-2819
TYPEWRITERS
Rentals-Sales-Service
Terms
Distributors For:
Royal and Victor
Calculators &
Adding Machines
CATES
TYPEWRITER CO.
909 S. Main 822-6000
Classic Wax
Cal Custom
Accessories
Hurst Floor Shifts
Enco & Conoco 31 qt.
Amalie & Havoline .. 35£ qt.
We stock all local major brands.
Where low oil prices originate.
Quantity Rights Reserved
Wheel Bearings
50% Off
Parts Wholesale Too
Filters, Oil, Air - Fuel
10,000 Parts-We Fit
96% of All Cars - Save
25 - 40%
Brake Shoes $2.98 ex.
2 Wheels — many cars
Auto trans. oil 25$
AC - Champion - Autolite plugs
Starters - Generators
All 6 Volt - $10.95 Each
Most 12 Volt — $11.95 Each
Tires—Low price every day —
Just check our price with any
other of equal quality.
Your Friedrich Dealer
Joe Faulk Auto Parts
220 E. 25th Bryan, Texas
JOE FAULK ’32
21 years in Bryan
Bed, Bookcase headboard, footboard, sides.
French provincial style, Cherrywood fin
ish. Excellent condition, 846-4785, after
5, 822-0842.
1964 Plymouth Fury, 426, 4-speed, Clean.
Phone 846-2472. 532t4
For sale by owner, three bedroom house,
entral air and heat,
lots of storage space, central air and heat,
beautifully landscaped lot, College Station;
846-6669. 531tfn
2 Roping Saddles. Call 822-3980 after 5.
1961 Chevrolet Impala. Four door, six
cylinder, stick shift, new tires, radio,
heater. Clean. $550 cash. Phone 822-4972.
628tfn
Party records, Golf-Game, Bud Fletcher
albums, Ken Idaho albums. Play-boy maga
zines, all kinds Texas Aggie Champion
es, all kinds Texas Aggi
stickers—many other novelty and
en,
Loupot’s) open 8 ;
;r novelty and gag
items—Aggie Den, North Gate (next to
m.
a week—come see us !
till ? seven days
525tfn
4,000 used golf balls 5c, 10c, 30c. Aggie-
nd Recreation Center. Redmond Terrace
620tfn
land
Center.
HELP WANTED
Aggie for part-time job. Nights and/or
weekends. Manager 846-9927. Dutch Kettle.
633t7
Medical Assistant for doctor’s office.
Some nursing experience required. Must
Some nursing experience
furnish references and give resume of ex-
■rience and educational and personal
penence and educational and person
background. Write P. O. Box 608, Bryan,
Texas. 529t8
Wanted, two registered nurses for su-
■rvisor on 3 to 11 shift at Madison Count:
pervisor on 3 to 11 shift at Madison County
Hospital, Madisonville, Texas. Excellent
Salary. Call collect, DI 8-2631, Miss Gloria
Rice or Mr. E. G. Clark. 466tfn
CHILD CARE
HUMPTY DUMPTY CHILDREN CEN
TER. 3400 South College, State Licensed.
823-8626, Virginia D. Jones, R. N. 99tfn
SPECIAL NOTICE
PERSONAL
GEORGE —• Did you know that 8,000
e treaties have been signed since 1500
peace treaties have been signed since 1500
B. C. ? How long do you suppose they
were kept? Call 846-3711 and find out.
534t3
ATTENTION
Research Professors
Graduate Research
Assistants
You may be eligible for special
income tax benefits.
For this and other tax problems
contact.
Blocker Trant
4015 S. Texas Ave.
Phone 846-7842
OFFICIAL NOTICE
Official notices must arrive in the Office
E Student Publications before deadline of
ne
1 p. m. of the day preceding publication.
THE GRADUATE COLLEGE
Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree
Name: Omran, Abbas Omran
Degree: Doctor of Philosophy in Genetics
nation : Inheritance of cold hardini
Dissertation: Inheritanc<
stance, and certain agi
characters in flax. (Linum usitatissin-
nce of cold hardiness
id certain agronomic
isse
disease resistanci
’ Inum
urn.)
Time: Tuesday, February 20, 1968 at 1:30
m.
P. l
Place: Room 202, Agronomy Building
Wayne C. Hall
Dean of Graduate Studies
533t3
Pre-Veterinary Medicine Students
■Veterinary medicine studen
pect to qualify as apr
to the professional
cine students who ex-
iplicants for admission
the professional curriculum of the
College of Veterinary Medicine in Septem
ber 1968 may secure application forms in
the Registrar’s Office beginning Monday
the Registrar’s Office beginning Monday,
February 26, 1968. May 1, 1968 is the
deadline for filing applications and tran
scripts with the Registrar. 632tll
“SPRING AWARD SCHOLARSHIPS”
WANTED
Wanted: Girl to share duplex. Contact
Patty Parker 846-2331 nights. 535t5
LOST
From North Gate — two German Sheperd
Dogs — male and female. Call Betty
Melcher 823-0241, 313 First. 535tl
WORK WANTED
Typing. 846-3290.
522tfn
GM Lowest Priced Cars
$49.79 per mo.
With Normal Down Payment
OPEL KADETT
Sellstrom Pontiac - Buick
2700 Texas Ave.
822-1336
26th & Parker
822-1307
AUDITIONS
7 p. m. Monday, Feb. 19
COFFEE LOFT
For anyone interested in doing
any kind of performance or
program on Friday or Saturday
nights this semester.
FREIGHT SALVAGE
• Brand Name Furniture
• Household Appliances
• Bedding
^ Office Furniture
• Plumbing Fixtures
All damaged items restored to full
utility by our repairs department.
C & D SALVAGE CO.
32nd & S. Tabor Streets — Bryan
Application forms for Spring Award
:holarships may be obtained from the
Student Financial Aid Office, Room 303,
YMCA Building during the period February
12th - March 31, 1968. AH applications
12th - March 31, 1968. AH applications
must be filed with the Student Financial
Aid Office by not later than 6:00 p. m.
April 1, 1968. Late applications will not be
accepted. 631t30
Preveterinary Medicine Students
All students who expect to register in
pre-veterinary medicine for the Spring
pre-veterinary medicine for the
Semester 1968 must have their
Academic Advisor. A
approved by their Academic Advisor. A
form signed by the Academic Advisor
and listing approved courses must be
presented at registration.
SOSOLIKS
TV & RADIO SERVICE
Zenith - Color & B&W - TV
A Makes - TV - Repairs
713 S. Main 822-1941
AUTO REPAIRS
All Makes
Just Say:
“Charge It”
Cade Motor Co.
Ford Dealer
Watch Repair
Jewelry Repair
Diamond Senior
Rings
Senior Rings
Refinished
C. W. Varner & Sons
Jewelers
Noth Gate 846-5816
LOOKING FOR A NEW
CAR FOR ONLY
$1767.00
COME TO
Hickman Garrett Volkswagen
AUTHORIZED DEALER
1701 So. College Ave. 822-0146
Now Leasing
The New Luxurious
Trinity Gardens
• Two Bedroom, 1% Bath • Expert Yard Maintenance • Formal
Living and Dining Rooms • All Electric Built-in G. E. Kitchens
• Custom Drapes and Carpets • Carrier Central Heating and
Air Conditioning • Very Large Privately Fenced Backyards
Washer-Dryer Connections in Garage • One Block from New
Elementary School • Attached
• Children and Pets Welcome.
Garage • Rentals $159.50
for information call:
846-2614 or 846 - 5070
Trinity Place & S. W. Parkway
College Station
Son’s Parents
‘Gave Enough’
JACKSONVILLE, Ore. <A>) —
The parents of Douglas Rowden,
whose two older brothers have
been killed in Vietnam, will fight
to keep him from being drafted.
“I feel we have donated enough
to the Vietnamese cause,” said
Harvey Rowden.
“I don’t know what they could
do,” said Col. Leonard Hicks,
Oregon Selective Service director
in Portland. “I understand he is
not their sole surviving son.”
THE ROWDENS have a fourth
son, Malcolm, 10. The law pro
vides that a sole surviving son
cannot be drafted.
The Rowdens, who learned
Tuesday that their son John, 21,
had been killed with the Marines
Feb. 10, said they had written
to the Red Cross, to the draft
board, to the Marine captain who
notified them of John’s death,
and had retained a lawyer to try
to keep Douglas out of service.
BURY SAIGON DEAD IN MASS GRAVE
As the battle for Saigon ebbs, the dead are buried in mass graves in Saigon cemeteries.
Here a bulldozer operator pushes earth over the corpses of about 200 people in mass
grave in communal cemetery in northwestern Saigon. (AP Wirephoto via radio from
Saigon)
THE ROWDENS’ first son,
James, 21 at his death, was killed
with the Marines two years ago.
John had enlisted because he
thought his dead brother would
have wished it.
Slow
Vance’s Talks May
Release Of Pueblo For U. S.
Douglas, 19, has been ordered
to report March 13 in Portland
for a routine pre-draft physical
examination.
Hicks said, “I’m sure our man
power officer will look at this
carefully and see what we can do.
We are compassionate and the
boards are compassionate but it
is federal law.”
Aggie At Academy
NamedReg.Officer
Army Lt. Col. Albert C. Leh
man, a 1957 Texas A&M graduate
who is now a regimental executive
officer at the U. S. Military
Academy, has been awarded the
Legion of Merit.
SEOUL (A?)—Communist North
Korea will weigh carefully the
results of talks between South
Korean leaders and Cyrus R.
Vance, President Johnson’s
trouble shooter. One result may
be that the Communists will be
far from in a hurry to release
the captive USS Pueblo and her
crew.
The Communists are likely to
conclude that Vance’s promise of
“immediate consultations” be
tween the United States and
South Korea in the event of new
North Korean aggressive thrusts
is far short of what the Seoul
government had been demanding
of Washington.
get back their ship and men is
understood by the South Koreans,
the secret two-way meetings have
had an abrasive effect on their
Colonel Lehman was cited for
service with the 809th Engineer
Battalion in Thailand. He was
assigned to the military academy
in the summer of 1967.
The Legion of Merit was pre
sented by Brig. Gen. Bernard W.
Rogers, West Point commandant.
Colonel Lehman graduated
from the academy in 1952 and
studied mechanical engineering
at A&M.
THOSE WHO know the ways
of the Korean Communists say
that they will want to watch and
wait now, to see just how much
damage they have done and might
yet do to U.S.-South Korean re
lations.
It would seem logical for the
North Koreans to take part in
more secret meetings with the
Americans on the fate of the
Pueblo. Such secret meetings—
there have been five since the
ship was captured—exclude the
South Koreans and this has been
a touchy matter in Seoul. While
the anxiety of the Americans to
nerves.
THE FINAL communique is
sued after Vance’s talks with
President Chung Hee Park and
other high South Korean officials
says the two countries reaffirmed
acommitment “to undertake im
mediate consultations whenever
the security of the Republic of
Korea is threatened.”
South Koreans have been say
ing that they wanted the United
States to be as tough as possible
in its attitude toward North Ko
rea’s harassment of the South,
to threaten quick retaliation and
to build up South Korea’s de
fenses to a point where it could
strike back quickly.
Vance reported just before his
departure for Washington that
he considered his mission to Seoul
a success. If it has the effect of
stilling some of the criticism of
the United States from its strong
Asia ally, success can be claimed
for the mission, at least to a
limited extent.
But what has happened in the
past three weeks still rankles
in South Korea. In this respect,
the Communist gamble in seizing
the American intelligence ship
Jan. 23, two days after dispathing
an assasination team to Seoul
assigned to kill President Park,
probably will be considered in
North Korea to have paid off.
THE COMMUNIQUE noted
that “extraordinary measures”
have been and are being taken to
strengthen South Korean and U.S.
forces in Korea so that they will
be ready to deal with any con
tingency. But there is no explicit
promise of meeting South Korea’s
demands. The communique simply
notes that Vance joined in recog
nizing a need for continuing
modernization of this country’s
armed forces.
FINAL
MAKE - UP
Pictures For 1968
Agg-ieland
All Seniors and
Graduate Students
Thru Feb. 17.
University Studio
, .mat
the interviewers
won’t tell you
about
General Electric.
They won’t tell you about all the job opportunities
we have for college graduates — engineers, science,
business and liberal arts majors. Not that they
wouldn’t like to. It’s just that there are too many
jobs and too little time. In a half-hour interview
our man would barely have time to outline the
scope and diversity of the opportunities we offer.
That’s why we published a brochure called “Start
ing Points at General Electric.” In plain language
it will tell you exactly how and where a person with
your qualifications can start a career with General
Electric. Pick up a copy at your Placement Office.
Then arrange for a productive session with our
interviewer. He’ll be on your campus soon.
GENERAL ELECTRIC
An equal opportunity employer
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