The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 06, 1981, Image 4

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    ’age 4 THE BATTALION
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1981
M f, I
Battalion
Classifieds
HELP WANTED
ROOMMATE WANTED
SERVICES
WANTED: Person to clean office 2-3 hours
per week. Additional work may be available
693-9729. 89t4
Roommate wanted to share one bedroom
apartment. 693-5420. Sausalito. 90t5
Transmission fixed reasonably. 846-2919. 91t5
Now taking applications for weekend shifts at
SCHLOTZSKY’S. Apply in person only be
tween 2 and 5 p.m. 100 S. Texas. tin
Female roommate wanted. Will have own
room. Furnished. All bills paid. Call 845-
0695, 696-1890, 845-5039. 90tl0
Professional typing 779-2683.
TYPING. 693-9519.
OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS. 693-6386.
83t35
WANTED: Part-time bartender at Bryan Elks
Lodge. No experience necessary. Call 846-
2096 after 3:30 pm.
WANTED
Will do fast accurate typing in my home. Day
or night. Call 846-9330. 86tih
DEPENDABLE MEN, WOMEN
OR COUPLES for present and
future Houston post routes. Early
morning hours. Papers rolled by
machine. $200-$750/month. 846-
2991.696-8032. 38ttn
Bass player wanted for blues, medium rock
jamming. Call 845-3734 days or 846-7657 eve
nings. 91t3
PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Free abortion
counseling and referrals. Call (713) 779-2258,
Bryan. 73tft>
Day cook wanted at Col
lege Station Pizza Hut. M-F
9:30-5pm. Starting 3.65/hr.
THE TUMBLEWEED
Waitresses and DJ
needed to work at
THE TUMBLEWEED
Call for appointment. — 846-5675
or come by 3607 S. College
Ave. 88 tin
MECHANIC
NEEDED
815
Texas Ave.
College Station 9015
CASH FOR OLD GOLD
Class rings, wedding rings, worn out
gold jewelry, coins, etc.
The Diamond room
Town & Country Shopping Center
3731 E. 29th St., Bryan
846-4708 ittn
Volunteer reader needed for visually handi
capped student. If interested please Jeri at
846-4596. 87t6
Russian-English translations. Call 846-1365 af
ter 5pm. 90t5
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
LOST
LOST TWO SETS OF KEYS linked together.
Lost the 23rd of January. Contain 3-gas 1-tool
box 2-padlock 3-house and 2-suitcase keys. If
found please call 693-5558. 85tl4
LOST DOG MALE 65 lb. black labrador.
Lost Saturday at 3:45 pm by library. Red
collar. Reward. Please call Philip 823-0846.
89t5
TEXAS CORRUGATORS, INC. is looking for
a young, dynamic individual to sell storm sew
er products in the Houston area. The job
includes a new car, expense account, normal
company benefits and a good starting salary. A
Civil Engineering background is preferable,
but not necessary. We will be on campus at
the student Placement Office for 1 day ONLY,
March 10, 1981. Make your appointment ear
ly: Ronald R. Porter, Vice President, 713-443-
3400. 87tl4
FOR RENT
Brand new 300 feet from campus, 2bedroom
Ibath, no pets, $360. 693-5030. 91tl5
For Sublease one bedroom
apartment $215 per month.
Grade East Apts, for more in
formation call 696-0244 after
5pm. 8917
SPECIAL NOTICE
FULL OR
PART TIME
'Day Shift
'Night shift (til 10pm.)
'Weekends
'Flexible hours to fit your schedule
'Rapid advancement
'Cashier experience helpful
Starting Salary
$3.50/hour
Apply in person only.
9:30-11:30am. (if possible)
WHATABURGER
Bryan College Station
1101 Texas 105 Dominik
6tfn
Weight Watchers has a new excit
ing food plan and complete pro
gram for taking off the pounds de
liciously. The College Station
class meets Thursdays, 5:15 at
the Lutheran Student Center, 315
N. College Main for further infor
mation call 822-7303. 90«n
GREENLEAF
HOSPITAL
Greenleaf is a growing, innovation
psychiatric hospital looking for
that special person who qualifies
as a RN, LVN or Mental Health
Worker to join our staff. Currently
there are both full and part time
positions available.
If interested, please stop by the
hospital at 405 West 28th in
Bryan, or call 822-7326 and let us
tell you about our facilities.
BEAT INFLATION
and make money! For information
send long stamped self addressed
envelope to:
NMSI
1900 Dartmouth Unit 1-F
College Station, Texas
77844 eetio
(0
b
5«
Z N
ON
Q Q.
Now hiring
Delivery Personnel
Must have own car
and insurance.
$3.50/hour
plus commission and tips.
Apolv Domino’s Pizza
4407 Texas Ave.
after 4:30 p.m.
THE COLLEGE STATION POST OFFICE WILL BE
TAKING APPLICATIONS FOR THE CLERK-CARRIER
POSITION FROM FEB. 2 TO FEB. 16.
Starting salaries for these positions are 8.44/hr. Hiring is
based on exam score. If you are interested in attending a
workshop to help you make your maximum score on the,.
Clerk-Carrier Exam. Call 693-5233 after 6pm for more
information. gm
SERVICES
OFFICIAL NOTICE
Typing. Experienced, fast, accurate. All kinds.
822-0544 54»fa
Typingll Reports, dissertations, etc. ON
THE DOUBLE. 331 University.
846-3755. _ 178tfo
Typing, symbols. Notary Public. 823-7723.
taotfa
r ^Service For A|l T|
Chrysler Corp Cars
ha^e°M®
COMPANY INC.
■ Dodge Sales and Service Since 19221
1411 Texas Ave. 823-8111 itfnij
“SPRING AWARDS
SCHOLARSHIPS”
Deadline - March 2, 1981
Applications forms for the Spring
Awards Scholarship Program may
be obtained from the Student Fi
nancial Aid Office, Room 310,
YMCA Bldg. All applications
must be filed with the Student
Financial Aid Office not later
than 5:00 p.m. March 2, 1981.
LATE APPLICATIONS WILL NOT
BE ACCEPTED. 78t3i
FOR SALE
HELP WANTED AT
FARMER’S MARKET FAST
FOOD RESTAURANT IN
BRYAN
POSITIONS AVAILABLE
ASSISTANT MANAGER:
Hours 3-10 p.m.
Monday-Saturday
Experience required.
LUNCHTIME:
Hours 11 a.m.-2 p.m.
Monday-Friday.
EVENING:
Hours: 5-10 p.m.
Any Days.
2700 Texas Ave.
Bryan
822-6417 78tfn
§
TYPING
WORD PROCESSING
All Kinds
"Let the Professionals Assist You"
BUSINESS ASSISTANCE SERVICES
707 Texas Ave. C-306
696-9550 87tfn
79 Capri turbo only 22,000 miles. PS/PB tilt,
am/fin 8 track, CB, sunroof $4895. Call 696-
8710. 91t7
For sale 1967 Mustang 13,000 miles. 351 4-
speed hurst, interior being restored, many
extras. B.O. may consider trade for car or
motorcycle. 845-4677. 91tl0
4-15" mags with tires 846-2919.
91t5
TYPING.
All kinds. Let us type your propos
als, dissertations or theses oh bur
WORD PROCESSOR. Fast
service. Reasonable rates.
B/CS 209 University East
846-5794 i estfn
’76 Triumph Spitfire. 4-speed, heater, radio,
looks and runs good. Good mpg, new top. 846-
6659. 91t5
’73 Olds Delta 88 white convertible new top
new cassette deck new carpet. $2000. Call
693-9870. 85t7
78 Grand Prix good condition. 822-0002. 91t5
ROOMMATE WANTED
Female roommate wanted. 50% off first
month’s rent. Call Lynne 845-0675. 88tl5
UNEXPECTED
PREGNANCY?
Services through \
the 20th week. 1
Awake or Asleep.
Women’s Health Services
of Houston and Dallas, Texas.
Off Metroplex Gyn. Group
Toll Free 1-800-442-4076i8tioi
’75 Pontiac Ventura. Good condition $2100.
Call 693-7810, 696-7683. 87tl0,
1978 Yamaha 750 silver and maroon mag rims,
luggage rack and back rest. Excellent condi
tion $1800 negotiable. Call 696-8934. 82tll
’73 Audi 100 LS 4-speed air AM/FM stereo
cassette 25 M.P.G. call Jeff 846. .-2882. 81tl4
1980 Suzuki GN400X low mileage. $1100.
693-7929. 90tl0
G.E. refrig. 16 cuft. $150. Call 696-0084.9014
Roommate wanted male $100 per month and V2
bills. Vi mile from campus. 693-3906 after
6pm. 91t7
Roommate wanted spring semester. 2bed-
room/2bath, furnished, shuttle bus. $118/mo.
+ Vi electricity. Call 845-0755, 696-3949.905
FREE rent thru February. Spring
semester roommate, (one or two-
Female) Briarwood Apts. Private
bathroom attached to bedroom,
kitchen, breakfast room, large den
and bar. Shutle bus. $175/mo. +
electricity. Part furnished. 693-
6666. eats
HELP!
Looking for
female roommate —
DESPERATE!
Call
Trade 846-3930.
Low rent.
Connecticut
Phoney money leads police L
ex-governor .
dies of cancer to San Antonio operation
United Press International
HARTFORD, Conn. — Flags
were ordered flown at half staff today
for former Gov. Ella T. Grasso, the
Italian immigrants’ daughter who
built a 27-year unbeaten political
legacy to become the first woman
governor elected in her own right.
Grasso, 61, died of cancer Thurs
day night at Hartford Hospital. Her
husband, Thomas, and the couple’s
two children, Jim and Susane, were
at her bedside.
Gov. William O’Neill, sworn in
New Year’s Eve to succeed the ailing
governor in her second term, was
visibly distraught in discussing the
incomplete funeral arrangements.
“She will not be replaced because
she is irreplaceable, nor will she ever
be forgotten,” O’Neill said. “My
heart goes out to the Grasso family .
my own personal heart is breaking as
well.”
Grasso’s body will lie in state at
the Capitol from Sunday morning to
Monday morning. A funeral mass
will be said Monday at St. Joseph’s
Cathedral in Hartford. All state flags
were ordered flown at half staff.
Former President Jimmy Carter
said he would miss Grasso “dearly.”
“Ella Grasso represented all that
is good and promising about politics
and public service. As one of the
most prominent women in this coun
try, she had great strength, skill and,
when required, toughness,” he said
in a statement from his Atlanta office.
“She gave of herself so that each of
us felt her love and understanding,”
said Sen. Christopher J. Dodd, D-
Conn. “We knew Ella cared and
cared deeply.”
The official cause of death was
listed as cardiac arrest due to multi
ple organ failure and metastatic can
cer of the ovary.
Grasso ended her life with the
same grit she displayed in in politics
— a record that culminated in her
becoming the first woman in the na
tion elected governor in her own
right.
The former two-term congress-
woman was elected Connecticut’s
chief executive in 1974 and again in
1978. She was seen by state voters as
the protector of the status quo who
ran the state with frugality — and
without an income tax.
Grasso’s cancer was first di
agnosed in April 1980, when physi
cians found a cluster of malignant
cells on an ovary. She underwent a
hysterectomy and eight weeks of de
bilitating radiation treatments.
Fatigue and nausea forced the
governor to curtail her usual dawn-
to-dusk pace. Although she* rallied
briefly in the summfer, she'btegan to
look noticeably drawn and tired. >
She was back in the hospital in
November for phlebitis of the left
leg. Doctors, however, found during
routine tests the cancer had spread.
Chemotherapy was prescribed in an
attempt to arrest the disease.
Grasso had struggled to maintain
a limited work schedule throughout
the ordeal, but announced Dec. 4
she could not fight the disease and
perform her duties as governor at the
same time.
“Regretfully, it is my belief that I
do not have the stamina or the en
durance for the rigors of the new
legislative session and the myriad
problems which face the administra
tion of a vital and vibrant state,”
Grasso said. “Accordingly, it is my
intention to resign as governor on
Dec. 31, 1980.”
AUTO INSURANCE
FOR AGGIES:
Call: George Webb
Farmers Insurance Group
[3400 S. College 823-8051
aTTSn 1
Oldsmobile
Cadillac
Honda
SALES - SERVICE
"Where satisfaction is
standard equipment
2401 Texas Ave.
779-3516
>:as
O FHTICAL^
Prescriptions Filled
Glasses Repaired
216 N. MAIN
BRYAN 822-6105
8 a.m.-5 p.m.
8 a.m.-1 p.m.
FOR SALE
’78 Silver fiat Xl/9 ED. Excellent condition
call 696-7732. 92t3
Sofa with matching chair (brown vinyl). Also
full size mattress and springs. Reasonably
priced. Call after 6:00. 822-1751. 92t5
’67 Ford Econoline, extra long van. Excellent
body rod knocks. $400. Timberridge Apts.
#130, George. 92t5
Escort radar receiver used 9 months. $200.00.
Call Eric 693-2559. 92t3
Black nauhide love seat and recliner, 7 ft. sofa,
coffee table, pictures, twin mattresses. Call
693-5909 10am-5pm after 5pm 779-2694. 92t4
United Press International
SAN ANTONIO — Arrests of four
men in Georgia and Texas and sei
zure of more than $5,000 in bogus
$20 bills broke up an extensive coun
terfeit operation in San Antonio, a
Secret Service agent said Thursday.
Two of the four suspects, all San
Antonio residents, were taken into
custody in an Atlanta lounge Jan. 27,
and word of the arrests apparently
caused the other two men to dump
bundles of bogus bills in downtown
San Antonio, beginning Saturday,
said Barney Boyett, special agent in
charge of the local Secret Service
office.
Charged Wednesday in San Anto
nio with possession of counterfeit
$20 bills and with conspiracy in con
nection with their possession were
Gene McCloud, 36, and Gaylord
Stevens, 31.
McCloud was jailed in lieu of
$50,000 bond and Stevens was jailed
without bond. Stevens was arrested
Saturday and McCloud was taken
into custody Wednesday, Boyett
said.
Boyett said the ring — believed to
have printed thousands of the $20
bills — was traced to San Antonio
after Earl Milton Carpenter, 32,
James Gilmore Brown, 38, weii
arrested in Atlanta.
The agent said the two menflewt
Georgia with about $11,000 incout
terfeit money and had passed IDi
15 of the $20 bills before they wej
arrested.
The local operators began
ing the bogus bills in bundlesoni
streets Saturday, apparently to {(*
rid of them, Boyett said.
He said $3,100 in bogus bills n*
confiscated. Later, a teen-age
turned in $1,600 he had found andi
man gave police $500 worth he ti:
located.
C
Texas farmworkers boycott
two biggest juice companies
United Press International
AUSTIN — With crimson flags
flying, members of the Texas Farm
workers Union announced Thursday
a national boycott of the state’s two
largest juice producers. They poured
cans of the juice into trash cans on
the Capitol steps to emphasize their
effort.
Union representative Jesus Moya
said the group would picket an
H.E.B. supermarket Thursday after
noon, and move on to other stores
statewide “until we are able to clean
them off the shelves.”
The union declared a boycott
against Texsun and Big Tex juices —
the biggest orange and grapefruit
juicemakers in Texas — and planned
picketing of food stores carrying the
products.
About 30 farmworkers, carrying
flags at a news conference, braved
the wet weather for this latest effort
to win collective bargaining rights.
The group had arrived in Austin in
two buses Wednesday to lobby for a
collective bargaining rights bill.
For three weeks the union has
been on strike in the citrus fields of
South Texas, demanding a decent
wage scale, adequate toilet facilities,
a guaranteed eight-hour work day
and an accident insurance plan.
“We work in the valley making
less than minimum wage, with no
compensation, no accident plan, and
not even getting warnings against
pesticide," Moya said in an inter
view. “We have no protection in the
those fields. We’re at the bottom of
the barrel.”
Rep. Sam Hudson, D-Dallas,
sponsor of the collective bargaining
rights bill, said at the group’s new
conference, “It’s despicable tin
most things taken for granted®
being denied.
“The Legislature is beset witii
very important task of being sen
equal rights are brought to all pee
pie,” he said.
If passed, Hudson’s bill wight
farmworkers the right to selecta»
ion to represent them in contort
negotiations with citrus growers,
Moya said the Vegetable Growec
Association, the National Rij
Work Committee and the Fara
Bureau have committed $500,00(
fight the proposed legislation.
“They h ave got professioi
strikebreakers undermining tk
efforts of farmworkers, ” he said. Al
the legislative level, they’re payiE
lobbyists to have a negative effect};
the collective bargaining rights bl
Juvenile courts ABA’s concern
United Press International
HOUSTON — Juvenile courts should stop trying to
act as substitute parents and instead impose real crimin
al justice on juvenile offenders, a panelist at the Amer
ican Bar Association mid-winter meeting argued
Thursday.
“A juvenile court judge is not an effective substitute
parent and shouldn’t try to be one,” said Orm W. Ketch-
am of the National Center for State Courts. "Juvenile
courts are and must be considered courts, not treatment
centers.
“They need the financial and administrative support
of the entire state judicial system... to have the author
ity, dignity and accountability of a court. ”
David Gilman, former staff director of the ABA Juve
nile Justice Standards Commission, said lawyers nation
wide should seek uniformity in state juvenile justice
systems.
“There are as many juvenile codes as there are
states,” Gilman said. “Each state legislature has its own
goals. We should be trying to establish national stan
dards.”
He suggested nationwide adoption of his ABA agen
cy’s recommendations, some of which he said have be
gun to be implemented in several statqs.
Gilman agreed with Ketcham that juvenile offenfc
should be sentenced according to the seriousness
their crimes and not according to their social histories
He also said constitutional procedures, sucbii
guaranteeing the defendant a lawyer, should If
observed the same as they are in adult criminal trial'
More than 3,000 lawyers registered for the convert
tion that continues through Tuesday with meetings
seminars and speeches on topics of interest to lawyers
Chief Justice Warren Burger will deliver a state oftb
judiciary address on Sunday. John Henry Faulkoflen
will speak on the last 25 years in the civil rights move
ment.
Other speakers include Sen. Howell Heflin, D-Als
former chief justice of the Alabama Supreme Court an:
a leader of that state’s court , reform, and F, Wi))ii
McCalpin, board chairman of Legal Services Corp
America.
The schedule features sessions the future oflej
services, anti-trust law, health planning, lawyer#
petency, professional codes, civil liberties, taxes,'##
borhood dispute resolution, children and wome
lawyers.
The ABA House of Delegates will meet to consii
resolutions on policies and procedures.
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Order compliance may break Mexican lav
United Press International
HOUSTON — A second Mexican
lawyer testifying as an expert said
Thursday a Mexican drilling com
pany would violate Mexican law if it
complied with an American court’s
orders in damage suits arising from
the Ixtoc oil spill.
Ignacio Borgua, a professor of law
at the National Autonomous Univer
sity of Mexico in Mexico City, told
U.S. District Judge Robert O’Conor
that Perferaciones Marinas del Golfo
(Permargo) cannot supply records
the judge has demanded.
Permargo was drilling contractor
for the Mexican state oil company on
the Ixtoc well that blew out of control
in the Bay of Campeche June 3,
1979, spewing millions of barrels of
Very good Alfalfa hay from Colorado. Call 693-
6004. 90tl0
Safeway
(Correction)
Wed., Feb. 4
Coors Light Beer
Should have read
Coors Beer
S & F Beverage Co. • El Paso, Texes
1—r 4 w*«hi * fcrtrref Ce. netinhw.
U
tboU
Coors
Beer
12 Pock
12 Oz. Cons
The Battalion regrets any inconvenience this may have
caused Safeway’s customers.
oil that drifted into the GulfofMei
ico and onto Texas beaches.
Several private America!
citizens, the State of Texas and tb
U.S. Government have filed
million worth of damage suits, sew
al of them naming Permargo as t
fendant.
O’Conor is hearing testimony an:
argument on his jurisdiction topic
ceed to trial in the case.
“If Permargo does voluntarilypi»
duce the documents, they will ba>
violated Mexican law and will ba«
incurred serious liability,” f
said through a translator in respon?
to questions from Permargo lawf
Ted Hirtz.
“It is forbidden by the constituti®
and secondary laws of my country,
can’t be done nor should it be dot
because it violates the law and tb
causes serious damage.”
The hearing began Wednesday
and another expert on Mexican Ia»
Hector Sanchez-Trevino, said Met
ican law prohibited American cob
jurisdiction over Mexican coi
panies.
However, under cross
examination by plaintiffs’ lawyer)®
Jamail, Sanchez-Trevino finally®-
the companies might be able toco®'
ply voluntarily.
Unlicensed
‘doctor’ has
fake degrees
United Press International „
HOU STON—A man whose S'
was decorated with phony di
was the first person in Texas t#
convicted of practicing psycholo?
without a license.
James Arthur Norris, 65, wasco®
victed by a jury Wednesday. It *'*;
revealed during his trial he had io-
doctors at local hospitals his #
“Attitudinal Healing Foundatio 8
would treat distressed children.
doctors alerted investigators to tl*
fraud, said Assistant District Attf-
ney Russ Turbeville.
An undercover police officer, f
ing as a patient, was treated by N®
ris with his techniques designed 8
reduce stress. Norris charged $35'
hour.
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