Page 4 THE BATTALION TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1978 METAL BELT BUCKLES $398 H ONLY AT THE OUSE OF SOOTS ti 91 112 NAGLE # IN THE GREYHOUND BUS STATION •NORTHGATE WE TRY TO UNDERSELL EVERYBODY NOCONA BOOTS/CASUAL SHOES ASTRO TENNIS SHOES LOWEST PRICES ANYWHERE” MARY OF THE OAKS MONTESSORI PRESCHOOL is proud to announce the arrival of Miss Lydia Cumings to Bryan-College Station She is trained in the Montessori Method by the widely acclaimed director of The Montessori Foundation of Minnesota in St. Paul, MN, MR. A.M. JOOSTEN. Miss Cumings grew up in Saudi Arabia and Nigeria. She has travelled exten sively in Europe, Asia, and Africa. Her high school diploma was earned in Grapevine, Texas and she has a Bachelor of Arts in Science from the College of St. Scholastica in Duluth, Minnesota. Lydia Cumings will teach a newly formed afternoon class at Mary of the Oaks, River Rd. in the Oak Hills Addition. There are several openings for new appli cants aged 2V2 to 3. If interested call Veronika Motekaitis, 846-8264. The Battalion Classified SPECIAL NOTICE FOR RENT THE GRADUATE COLLEGE Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree Name: Adams, Lavada Ann Degree: Ph.D. in Industrial Engineering Dissertation: NEW AND FUTURE GRIEV ANCE LABOR ARBITRATION ISSUES IN THE PRIVATE SECTOR. Time: 10:00 a.m. on July 19, 1978 Place: Zachry, Room 337E G. VV, Kunze Dean of the Graduate College 5 blocks from campus. Almost new 4-plex apartments; furnished and unfurnished, 2 bedrooms. Immediate occupancy. 822- 154120 7.341. THE GRADUATE COLLEGE Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree Name: Sagr, Abdulaziz Nassir Degree: Ph.D. in Computing Science Dissertation: COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF ERROR DETECTION AND RE COVERY IN SYNTAX DIRECTED COMPILERS. Time: 9:00 a.m. on July 14, 1978 Place: DPC, Room 104 G. W. Kunze Dean of the Graduate College 4 bedroom 2 bath 2 car garage, CH/CA on V2 acre. Close to cam pus. Privacy fenced. $425/mo. & deposit. Call 512-282-0583, Aus tin, or 846-7597. i7otie 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 Service For All Chrysler Corp. Cars Body Work — Painting HALSELL MOTOR COMPANY INC. Dodge Sales and Service Since 1922 1411 Texas Ave. — 823-8111 FOR RENT GLEN OAKS MOBILE HOME PARK “Private Country Living’’ Spaces available for travel trailers up to 35’ in length. Six miles from cam pus. Call 693-5670 after 1:00 p.m. 16419 Been helping AGGIES move 20 years. Let us help you save money. Make your reser vation now for a U HAUL TRUCK or TRAILER. ANY ANDERSON 66 & U HAUL RENTALS, 2010 SO. COLLEGE - BRYAN. 822-3546 822-6286. 172115 VILLAGE OAK APARTMENTS 3200 Pinfeather now taking applications *1&2 bedrooms *Summer/Fall rates *Furn. or unfurn. 822-2366 1-817-772-6031, Waco 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 ORIOLE 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 156141 WANTED Typing. Experienced, fast, accurate. All kinds. 822-0544. 1.56U4 For Rent Professional typing from 75c page, symbols, English M.A. 846-1360. Also tutoring and editing by hour. lema PINE RIDGE DUPLEXES • Brand new — two bed room • Central air and heat • Fencdd yards • All appliances • All gas • Shuttle bus • August occupancy Days 779-8853 Nights & Weekends 822-6651 or 846- 6098 170110 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 office GARAGE SALE Garage Sale July 15 & 16 7a.m. - 9 p.m. 100A Fairview. 846-1032. 17114 HELP WANTED ALLEN Oldsmobile Cadillac SALES - SERVICE "Where satisfaction is standard equipment" 2401 Texas Ave. 823-8002 RN’s and LVN’s Staff nurses for 3-1 4 and 11-7 shift and also ICU nurses for 3-11 and 11-7 shift. Shift differentials for 3-11 and 11-7 shift. Call or stop by Grimes Memorial Hospital, 210 S. Judson St., Navasota 77868, (713) 825-6585. Ask for Mrs. Mahnke or Mrs. Winkelmann. I62tfn AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 3400 S. College 823-8051 HELP W ANTED NEVV APARTMENTS. Efficiency $135 mouth. 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 Austin fundraising company expand ing to Bryan needs sportsminded indi vidual to work part-time hours for full time pay. Call Mr. Cutcher person to person collect (512) 255-7334. 17215 Student wives wanted. Several full time, light assemblies and packaging. Steady work. Q Beam Go., 4109 College Main. 167111 FOR SALE For Sale. Six foot sofa Ted $50. 822-7220.17213 1975 Sit/tiki TSI00. 693-0758. Good c ondition $375. 17lt4 75 Vega 1 lalelihaek. mileage. $1,995. 846- l-speed, 1032 afti radio, good gas r 5 p. m. 1707 For Side. 1961 Ford $150. Call 845-6353. Falcon. Good condition 17013 EXECUTIVE SECRETARY Seeking mature and qualified profes sional secretary. Require minimum of 80 wpm shorthand, 60 wpm typing and extensive office management experi ence. Minimum starting salary of $3.92/hr. with exceptionally good fringe benefits. 5 day work week. In quire at Texas Employment Commis sion to Mrs. Ann Stallings. Ad paid by employer. EOE 2-story, 3 bdrm, 2 bath townhouse; fire place, cent, air/heat; 8 mo. old; Trash compacfer, separate utility room, 2-car carport, ample storage, fenced decked patio w/gas grill, house built around glass atrium; Corner lot; Access to pool; Near A&M; By appointment only, 845-3238, after 5,846-1270. 16716 ATTENTION SINGLES Wanted Fast Food Personnel FREE FOOD PAID VACATIONS ROOM FOR ADVANCEMENT. EXCELLENT WORKING CONDITIONS. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. Part & full time positions available for the following shifts: 11 a.m.-2 p.m. 7 p.m.-2 a.m. 5 p.m.-2 a.m. Starting pay $2.70/hr. Apply in person at Der Wienerschnitzel 501 S. Texas Ave. Between 2-5 p.m. daily 164117 With rent going up and real es tate value increasing, home ownership makes lots of sense. $1,500 will put you in a new town home. APRIL COURT Call 846-5701 Century 21 George Green Realty IZflill, We need a capable, experienced sheetrock finisher to work part time on remodeling jobs. If you qualify please call, JOE COURTNEY, INC. 846-5796 or 693-1818 164tfn ATTENTION STUDENTS Tire of rent increase? $1,500 total, move-in costs will make you the owner of a new town house. Monthly payments of $225 which include everything but telephone and electricity. APRIL COURT Call 846-5701 Century 21 George Green Realty 1 70111 Battalion Classifieds Call 845-2611 ‘Briarwootf •Mpartmcnts Exercise Rooms (Men & Women) 2 Swimming Pools " Sauna Baths Tennis A Volleyball Courts Recreation Center 1. 2, 3 Bedrooms Furnished and Unfurnished Special discounted sum mer rates. “All bills paid during summer!” Call now for information. Call Now For Information 693-3014 not Hwy. 38 893.2933 Huntsville Hwy. national news te Carter pondering chan^ in ICBM missile strateg j United Press international could be moved around from one to consultations on tlie neitf M - . „ . , . , . :»l. /-'L.-.j WASHINGTON — President Carter is back in the Oval Office, reportedly pondering whether to in form the Russians he has decided to build multiple-hole installations for America’s missiles when the current SALT protocol expires. The president spent 10 days at Camp David, the mountaintop re treat in the nearby Catoctin Mountains of Maryland, and re turned late Sunday. Aides said he did some paperwork on his vacation, including approving Secretary of State Cyrus Vance’s condemnation of the Soviet Union for deciding to place two prominent dissidents on trial. Carter reportedly is weighing a decision on informing the Soviets the United States may alter the status of its Minuteman ICBM missile system by digging thousands of underground silos so the missiles another. That system, plus one to put the missiles on tracks for concealment purposes, would make the ICBMs less vulnerable because an enemy would never be sure where they were located. Both have been under considera tion at the Pentagon and the White House for months, but the Wash ington Post said Sunday the decision in favor of multiple silos has been all but made and Carter is pondering telling the Russians. Carter leaves Thursday for a visit to West Germany and a two-day economic summit in Bonn to discuss mutual problems with leaders from Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and Canada. The Europeans and Japanese are expected to press Carter on plans to stiffen the sagging dollar by reduc ing oil imports, and Carter plans Chat ntroversy with mut Schmidt. jniteff i Sen. William Proxim TIN — in an interview on CBS s ove Nation hroadvast Sunday for < ter s biggest job at tin ds to 1 tli be to con vine the Japanese (to) adop expanding their ecoi rapidly and I think th tions the Germans are Since becoming pred has been reluctant tost Washington. His long stretch away from the I was a nine-day, sevei last winter. This time Carter ren presidential retreat fa period, with the except return to ih«- WhiteHt the Jul\ Fourth firewi and an H-hour tour ( l\ il \N .u b.itt li _;i limn n tax r iree of ion fro legisla ieral s* r, inert mptioi tion v eads fi by sc y pass the go isistanc n of a jquirin il of I Nazis rally in Chicago, vow th will ‘finish job’ as Jews protest to imp xes. )ov. Bi >rs also Tout ai nal an an on t nents ; iture ii have i United Press Internutiunal CHICAGO — A small hand of brown-shirted Nazis Sunday pre dicted a Jewish holocaust in America, hut their diatribes left a crowd of several thousand people feeling flat. Frank Collin, Chicago’s Nazi leader who denies the Jewishness of his own father, strutted on the top of a white van and shouted to the crowd: “I can’t believe there was a Holocaust. But ii there was, they (Jews) deserved it. Just as they’re going to deserve it this time.’’ Michael Allen, the leader ol the National Socialist Party of America in St. Louis, spelled it out. Of the Nazi massacre of Jews in Europe, he said, “This time we re going to finish the job. Twenty-three Nazis with swastika armbands showed up for the rally under a swastika emblazoned ban ner of “white victory. They shuf fled nervously before television cameras until Collin began his high-pitched tirade. There were scuffles and police — 1,500 strong — reported 65 arrests. At least four injuries were reported. The sweaty crowd in Marquette Park appeared i to have expected a great deal more action than that. The Nazis had fought for the right to demonstrate in the racially-tense neighborhood for two years, carry ing their case to the Supreme Court and winning it last week. Yet the Marquette Park affair might have caused little fuss had Collin’s Nazis not attracted the world’s attention earlier by threatening to march in the Chicago suburb of Skokie, which is 35 per cent Jewish. Protesters from around the coun try had vowed to block that march and some were in Marquette Park Sunday, though most of them were barred by police. About 2,000 people were in the jiark and 3.000 others — mostly counter-demonstrators — were re ported by police in the area. Most of those listening to Collin appeared to be on his side, but there was a stri dent group that attempted to drown out the Nazi speeches. When it was over, hare-chested youths in the park seemed to want more and milled about for almost an hour in the muggy, 90-degree heat. A group of people wearing Jewish skull caps was chased until p came to their rescue. One of tlx black youths venturing into the was beaten. His clothes were from him before police could i him. Youths shook their fists in faces of Jewish d who gathered youths cried. Counter-demon vocal, chanting' and "Go to hell Dm Frs But if s olence. rowing th in tl v >u or it! Ni i rain >fthe ,t (lit tt -ach it to ni that n< Oil entitlements unfaii to Texas, Bentsen claim'"; United Prc** Intcntationul WASHINGTON — An oil pay ments program that started out with a single purpose has been tried for so many other things it is a “Rube Goldberg contraption" that penalizes Texans to help New Yor kers, Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D-Te.xas, charged Monday. Bentsen asked the Senate energy conservation subcommittee to op pose a Department of Energy suggestion which would increase the entitlements program as it applies to residual oil. He said the entitlements program has strayed far from its original in tent to equalize the cost of crude oil to refineries. “The entitlements program has become a Rube Goldberg contrap tion, one that is troublesome to both the public and private groups that have become entangled in its bureaucratic tentacles,’ he said. Tlie i up win soaring refiner high-pr get payment cheap dome; ntitlements pre ’ii foreign oil It v wh red i onlv had mported c from refine ticoikat th« , United UMO' and a ( peused ; of hi ill fee vere c nurder ed fro onday. 3 Josej diur, h 1 charj. day B d as 1 2:3 a. i 1 unea Phillip r son, 34, ai The program was late to residual oil, imported and others as an iiulu: largely in the eastern Uni Tlie residual oil cntitlem out at 30 percent — that ference in price was only ered by the payments fr purchaser to another. ige de pi The Department o! poses to raise the resl nited Pi LAS - dge wl nd a d< earing tith •inent to lracticii • 9 TEXAS A&M SWUPT NOW DOING IMPRINTING, LETTERING, & NUMBERING ON T-SHIRTS em anc agains aed hi: ig Nc a ted ar int to t ff if I 1 once in et. Peo methin to hit 1 said th s held a /entnall ers oi no sen; aid inst s he ke use. taker metime : range, ire I can act Atti would s wheth s was ir AND hru ih leva i“-/hirh CAPS In the Memorial Student Center