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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (June 7, 1978)
Page 4 THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 1978 The Battalion Classified 5 blocks from campus. Almost new 4-plex apartments; furnished and unfurnished, 2 bedrooms. Immediate occupancy. 822- "341. 154t20 Trailer Park, $40.00/mo. Horses $15. 6 miles to A&M. 822-4029. 158t6 A[it. for two. $100.00. '/> utilities paid. 846- 5132. 157t4 IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY AND PRELEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL SEMESTERS 1&2 BEDROOMS Furnished & Unfurnished LONGMIRE HOUSE 2300 Longmire Drive Southwood Valley - Off FM 2818 College Station On Shuttle Bus Route Swimming Pool Ample Parking $175.00 to $245.00 *★★★★***★***********★*★★★***★* 1824 WILDE OAK CRICLE Bryan $160.00 to $235.00 CALL 693-8850 For Appointment OR Free information sheet with floor plans and additional information to be mailed to you. No obligation. Evenings & weekends Call 693-1884 - 846-8145 D.R. CAIN COMPANY 3002 S. Texas Ave. College Station Male roommate for summer and/or fall. Studious, neat, prompt in paying bills, energy conscious. House $95/mo. +V3 utilities. Own room. Call Jaime 845-5611 or Glenn 845-1251 ex. 60, 8-5. Or 846-5517 after 6. issta Furnished one bedroom apt. 406 Eisenhower. Gas, water paid, $130. 822-3340, 779- 3700. 159t2 NEW APARTMENTS. Efficiency $135 month. One bedroom from $150 month, two bedroom from $175 month. All bills paid except electric ity. Villa West Apartments, south of Villa Maria. Lorraine Peterson, Manager. 822- 7772. . 75tfn The Charles Hotel in downtown Bryan has va cancies for A&M students. Economical rates by the week and by the month. Come by and check with us at 201 S. Main, Bryan. isate; SUMMER SPECIAL Bdrm Unfurnished $169.50 New 4-plexes Fully Carpeted Central Air & Heat 693-6893 or 846-2426 Cheyenne Apts. Brentwood off of Anderson St. Luxury furnished duplex. Very large bedroom. Built-in kitchen with all appliances. Refrigerator with icemaker. Country atmosphere. Lo cated off Dowling Road across from Bohanan Stables. $215 per/mo. & utilities. No pets. 693-8534. Summer only. i33t36. Two female roommates for sum mer and/or fall. Studious, neat, prompt in paying bills, no pets, energy conscious, non-smoker. House $95/mo. 1/3 utilities, own room. 845-1251, ext. 60, 8-5. 846-5517 after 6. i57y4 Local programmed lawn fer tilization company needs part-time or full-time help for door to door sales campaign, no hard-sell involved. Will train. Call 779-0105. 15915 HELP WANTED Night auditor 5 days (40) hours per week. 11 PM to 7 AM. Apply Mr. Hawley, 1601 Texas, Bryan. issts Part and full time help wanted. Apply in person. Pizza Inn, College Sta tion. 413 S. Texas. 15714 For advanced students, a married couple, or single, spacious three-room, bath, a/c apartment. Furnished, good taste, conve nient to university, quiet excellent neighborhood, bills paid. Inquire -E22-6668. 15912 FALL SPECIAL Lease Now for the Fall $219/2 Bdrm Unfurnished 10% Discount for Full Year Lease New 4-plexes Fully Carpeted Cheyenne Apts. Brentwood off of Anderson 693-6893 or 846-2426 Room for Rent in upstairs apt. 5 minutes from campus. Available now through Au gust. $87.50/mo. Bills paid. Call 846-3824 after 5:00 p.m. 15614 The Houston Chronicle has im mediate openings for route carriers. Salary ranges from $300-$550 per month. Applicants must have after noons free from 1-5 p.m. and de pendable transportation. Also taking applications for summer and fall semesters. Call Julian McMurray 693-2323 or 846-0763. i29tfn Home Nursing needs R.N., B.T. for Brazos Valley, good pay, day work, travel allowance, fringe benefits. 779-0211 158112 THE NEW VILLAGE GREEN APTS. 401 University Oaks • College Station Now Leasing FAIRWAY APARTMENTS 3300 S. College Summer Rates $149 large 2 bedroom unfur nished $169 large 2 bedroom furnished $149 large 2 bedroom unfur nished $169 large 2 bedroom furnished I Now leasing for fall. (860 sq. ft.) Swimming pool, washateria, near university and on shuttle bus route. 822-4964. • Efficiencies - 1BR - 2BR, 1B - 2BR, 2B •pool - tennis courts - club room •furnished or unfurnishedl • on shuttle bus route 693-5432 VILLAGE OAK APARTMENTS nAtflitTiAN OAKS APARTMENTS ATTENTION APARTMENT HUNTERS! SUMMER LEASES “30% DISCOUNT” You can SAVE up to $374.00 when you sign a summer lease. Please come by today and see how much we can help you save. We are now leasing for Fall & Spring semesters. 1 o Furnished & Unfurnished Efficiency, T 2 & 3 Bedroom Apartments All Utilities Included No Escalation Clause or Fuel Adjustment Charge 24 Hour Emergency Maintenance Service Two Swimming Pools Tennis Courts Party/Meeting Room Health Spas, including Saunas for Men & Women Three Laundry Rooms Rental office open Monday through Friday 9-6 Saturday 10-5 Sunday 2-5 693-1110 1501 Hwy. 30 693-1011 157113 3200 Pinfeather now taking applications *1&2 bedrooms *Summer/Fall rates Turn, or unfurn. 822-2366 1-817-772-6031, Waco Delivery people needed part-time or full-time. Flexible hours. Must be 18, have own car and insurance. $2.75/hr. plus tips and commission. Apply Domino’s Pizza, 1504 Holle- man. 693-2335 after 4:30. iseta Dependable students (male or female) for morn ing paper routes close to campus. Excellent income for part-time job. Call 846- 8032. Need TV technician. Must be able to work on solid state TVs. Apply in person at AAA House of Curtis Mathes, 25th St. and Main, in Bryan. 15713 WANTED Typing. Experienced, fast, accurate. All kinds. 822-0544. isetM Full time typing. Symbol 7723. ' . ... HELP WANTED Battalion Classifieds Call 845-2611 LIBRARIAN City of Bryan is accepting applications for a children’s libra rian. Prefer applicant with a degree in library science or closely related field. Excellent fringe benefits. Apply in per son or send resume to: Bryan Employment Office 300 3. Washington Washington Bryan, Texas 77801 Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer M/F ad Full Time Summer work available for High School or college students who will desire part time work with us this fall. Start $2.75/hour. Must be neat and dependable. Apply in person only. WHATABURGER Bryan College Station 1101 Texas Ave. 105 Dominik Summer of ’78 utility rebate $78.00 cash each month for new summer tenants of SCANDIA ★ SAUSALITO ★ SEVILLA You will receive $78.00 in cash each month (June, July and August 1978) simply by leasing an apartment in Scandia, Sausalito or Sevilla before June 15. No gimmicks. Come by the office on the 15th of each month and pick up $78.00 in cash. Most tenants will find $78.00 more than adequate to cover power bills during the summer. If there's money left over - you get to keep it. We call it the Summer of '78 utility rebate. You'll call it too good to be true. Call or come by today. Offer ends when the projects are full. (Offer does not apply to leases now in effect.) f A Sevilla (off Anderson Street): 693-6505 (FM30/Huntsville Hwy): 693-4242 \ • a • J For employment information at Texas A&M University dial 845-4444 24 hours a day. Equal Employment Op portunity through Affirmative Action. Texas A&M University SPECIAL NOTICE ATTENTION SUMMER AND VET GRADUATES You may begin ordering your Graduation announcements May 29th thru June 16th in the Student Finance Center, Room 217, Memorial Student Center, from 8:00 to 4:00, Monday thru Friday. isstg Weight Watchers has now simplic ity, more flexibility and many new foods. College Station class meets Thursday 5:15 p.m. Luthe ran Student Center, 315 North College Main. For free booklet and further information call 822- 7303. 157135 SERVICES WE WANT YOUR CALCULATOR PROBLEMS If TI or HP makes it, we have it or can get it in 24 hours. loupot’S BOOKSTORE Northgate — Across from the post of fice Low cost travel to Israel. Toll Free 800-223- 7676, 9 a.m. -7 p.m. NY time. 15515 Service For All Chrysler Corp. Cars Body Work — Painting HALSELL MOTOR COMPANY INC. Dodge Sales and Service Since 1922 1411 Texas Ave. — 823-8111 PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICES. 846-9109. 158112 Call 823- 392tfn FOR SALE B&W console t.\. Mnke oiler. 693-9221.159(2 1973 AMC Gremlin: PS, PB, ; ir, radio, "X - package. 846-7662 alter 5. 159(3 68 YVV. Sunroof, radio, $300. 846-0191.159(3 AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: ( all: George Webb Fanners Insurance Group 3400 S. College 823-8051 ALLEN Oldsmobile Cadillac SALES - SERVICE "Where satisfaction is standard equipment 2401 Texas Ave. 823-8002 PUBLIC AUCTION A large shipment of western saddles and tack of all kinds will be auctioned off. Approx. 100 Saddles 16”, 15”, 16” seats. Some padded, some hand tooled, buck stitched, and silver laced. Some are ranch using saddles, some are plain or rough out, Tooled Roping and cutting horse trees. Some Longhorn, Circle Y, silver show saddles, youth and child’s saddles. All adult saddles have a 5 year written guarantee. PARTIAL TACK LISTING Large quantity of Tex-Tan and Circle Y tack. 510 and 610 Sunbeam clippers. Trammel Bits, Roy type bits and spurs. Ranch pads, kool pads, wool blankets, ropes, big lead ropes, bridles, cinches, whips, neats- foot oil, show headstall, show halters, halters of all kinds. Breast collars and western pic tures. 100’s of items not listed. Each item sold will be offered for inspection. “All name brand merchandise” Terms: Cash or check with proper I.D. Sunday June 11th, 1:30 p.m. V.F.W. 2818 West Bypass Bryan, Texas Auctioneer Bryan Stacy Licensee Phone: (713) 823-0542 #TXGS-019-0017 Farm credit tigli([/j FOR RENT FOR RENT FOR RENT HELP WANTED JOB OPPORTUNITIES United Press International CHICAGO — Farm credit is get ting tighter because of higher de mand for money and more stringent credit requirements, a study done by the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago showed Tuesday. The study surveyed banks and production credit associations in In diana, Iowa, Colorado, Georgia, Minnesota, Montana and the six Plains states stretching from North Dakota to Texas. Replies from both banks and PCAs indicated the loan refusal rate early this year was about two per centage points higher than normal, the bank said. Banks reported refus ing 6 percent of the requests for new loans in the 75 days preeeeding the survey. PCAs refused 9 percent. The report said most of the refus als probably represented requests from loan customers who already were at their debt carrying capacity. “Nonetheless,” it said, “the sur vey found that a small proportion of farmers that had been 1977 would not have q such financing under conditioj year.” Banks reported 3 percent J farm loans they granted I would not have been quali year. PCAs said they w< have financed 4 percent o| day on ■ loans if the applications wn - s upplie< ceived this year. 5,500 ur The bank said legislationn j as t 20 i in Congress might help ft jjf e . hungry for credit to help a drop in grain prices. A fede Both houses of Congress the indie passed legislation expanding S. Thain vising Farmers Home Ad®: ton by t tion loan programs and it app ‘ A< conference committee differences and the measure! signed into law, the bank si:j The legislation contains* provisions which would hell vidua! farmers and those sill their farms in limited pari® and closed family corponl New car sales hit all-time high in Maj| United Press International DETROIT — New car sales in the United States hit an all-time high of 1.15 million in May, rekindl ing industry predictions that 1978 will be a boom year for the au tomakers. General Motors and Ford Motor Co. each posted their best sales month ever and led the domestic industry to cumulative sales of 962,985 units, up 11 percent over May 1977 figures. Import car sales accounted for 194,000 of the industry total. Though down 15 percent from last year s record, it was the second best May ever for the imports. “This performance gives added strength to our forecast of total U.S. industry sales of 15.5 million cars and trucks in the 1978 calendar year,” CM Vice President Robert D. Burger said. Ford Vice President Gordon B. MacKenzie said with “leading eco nomic indicators up slightly and a record number of people holding jobs, we would expect strong car and truck sales to continue through the summer months.” GM’s May sales of 547,327 units set a new industry record for any month. It also amounted to a 9.7 percent increase over May 1977 TBWE7T CHECKUP IT CAN save YOUR LIFE. Johnny Bench American Cancer Society, i Uni WASP 1961 de< ruled 7-5 ing bod Recon sti sales. Ford’s total of 269,38h best one-month performance f g ^ ping last year's figure by 19i ^ i ]] iam cent. . Chrysler Corp. reported C er ‘ n y men| 127,672 for the month, upli jj e i r 0 ffj cent from a year ago. A®: a : j Motors Corp. posted salesofl ^ out units, up less than 1 percent )rc Ji nan( The combined industry toti s j n ac j passed by 1.2 percent the pc ^ record set in May 1973, print: R ama g es Arab oil embargo and theons ! ( j en j a i s two-year recession. Houston quizzes instructed Tnmeni he prac ipproval Disse inquist, ^hief Ji acted ( vercon The i $ome b ho wi oard tc ;ence di ow has The ’ ivil R any pe tate la onstitu In m hemsel ons” ilainant NATO forces can’t match Soviet Union In toe By United Press International MIAMI — North American Treaty Organization forces cannot match the Soviet Union in chemical and biological weapons despite a buildup in NATO strength, accord ing to Gen. Alexander Haig, Su preme Allied Commander in Europe. DES Haig was asked at a news confer ence Monday about a reported in crease in U.S. and NATO chemical warfare weapons. He said the build up has been going on for three years but still is “less than satisfactory.” The Soviets, Haig said, have been giving “great attention to their chemical-biological warfare capa bilities, both in an offensive and de fensive mode.” He said the United States and NATO had been hampered by a pol icy of “extreme restraint in the de velopment of both offensive and de fensive chemical and biological weapons. “We have improved somewhat, but we remain today essentially de ficient to what I call a retaliatory of fensive or deterrent capability,” he said. Haig refused to speculate on whether the Russians might use chemical or biological weapons, such as nerve gas, in case of war. “Tve got to be concerned not with Soviet intentions, but Soviet capabilities,” he said. “And they have the capability today to launch extensive chemical biological offen sive action against the West.” e amc irojecti “Peo] Resolution United Press International HOUSTON — To ensurell dents aren’t smarter tk teachers, the Houston Indq School District has startedq: prospective instructors on common denominators and* structure. The school board voted last to upgrade hiring standards quiring some proof teachers the material they will be along to students. A group of prospective tej took the exam, designed grade students, Monday. Robert McCain, assistants: tendent in personnel, saidrfitj cants’ scores would only bea the hiring decision. “We’re looking for basic sH| petencies and however we that is what we’re after,” said. “We re not interestedi:| ing people uptight. But test: part of school work and if a tea: Amerie nervous about that it might bf their fo advantage in dealing with estaun have to take them all the tint today. The exam was a surprise f Betw< future teachers. food do] “I never expected anythin Uten this," Angela Johnson, a' amount graduate, said after the 90-»xecuti\ test. taurant “When I called this morniiij Cana mentioned something about but they sounded so casual! wished they could have gi' more information, like why take the taking this and what it is suppt ! the sup tell about us.” said. “S often gi — takii Cana childre for less a simil mings. But tomers boom ] United Press International Some r WASHINGTON - A resit survive to allow seven more years IbC On cation of the Equal Rights An ! some c ment has passed its first test weren subcommittee, but its real IG The ahead in the full House Jtf) today Committee. ; supper The resolution would pro' 1 hind fc 14-year ratification period! Thi ERA, setting the final deadr averag state legislative considerad 1 ( said. March 1986 instead of thejf Wf expiration date of March the kk The House civil and con 1 ' for the tional rights subeommittc W< proved the extension 4-3 M more 1 and sent it to the full jui U P aro panel, which is expected to it later this month. Between now and then, si ters have their jobs cut out Iff The full committee is "split on the proposition, accord' subcommittee chairman I Edwards, D-Calif. Edwards hopes the nee can be found to move the EBA lution through the Judiciary mittee, but concedes it is a task since “a bunch oflawyt® * the panel will he weighingciff the wording and legal rainifc J of the extension. It is a controversial pnl breaking the normal pattern lowing only seven years f l! states to consider and accept ject constitutional amendf Opponents call it a classic f' of “changing the rules in the of the game.” passes initial test •••