1 Bat attalion/Papi June 30, M McCulh | HELP WANTED ow hiring busboys. Apply between 2 m|5 p.m. at 404 University Drive ISt. 114tfn PROCESS Of VATION. trtiime help needed M-W-I' 4:30-7:00 lalfHay on Saturday. Apply in person tephenson Chiropractic Center Cedar Ire* Plaza 1313 Briarcrest. No phone «lls|ilease. 160tfn bc|car land, drive tractor, evenings and Battalion Classifieds etc. HELP WANTED Male dancers needed for inter view, call 693-2818 or 696-0004. ; 46tfn OH HO IS!, ft ELECTRONICS is accepting appli- Hs for car stereo installers at the Bryan ■ Applications may be picked up at | store 163t5 i translation needed, 5-3660. SUBWAY - leal speciality sandwich shop is |king energetic people to fill re- Insible positions. Flexible $rs, competitive wages. Apply in *son 1701 S.W. Parkway #204, 16613 FOR SALE 1981 Honda, CM400E, excellent condi tion, runs great, 55 mpg, $1100, 696- 6276. 16513 SONY TELEVISIONS: New KV-2145RS Remote Cable - Ready W/warranty $825.00, Also Used 17" Remote, $375.00. Call 693-9789. 163t6 2.5 cubic dorm refrigerator, $110. 68' Opel Kadet, runs good but body damaged, make offer. Call 260-2785. 166t3 1974 Kawasaki 250, runs good, $450, 260- 1740. 166t6 Beautifully refinished old oak desk. Ideal for a student, 775-6414. 16615' \ HOUSTON CHRONICLE is cur ly taking applications for newspap- Voute carriers for summer & fall [testers. Routes take 2V2 to 3 hours with salary from 400 to 800 | month. All routes receive a gas wance also we need soliciters for ; ^summer & fall semester. If interest ed ivase call Julian McMurrey 693- 123. sotfn Mexican Dresses Very low prices; hand choosen; simple or ornate; 100% cotton; all colors; all sizes; special orders taken. Call: 696-8790. s thus a signifu that the rei|c ace and securiiti country to re: erhaps by the study said, ny Gen. A# , a former conn d forces in Em r superintenda who co-chairej; here was a “suk us reached nil tat the draft si ared at draft law shoi make it moree SCHLOTZSKY’S Now accepting applications for full-time day shift. Apply in person only. Schlotzsky’s in Culpepper Plaza. Must be eighteen years old. FOR SALE ATTENTION AGGIES I Drar Chests 49.95 5 Diwr Chests 59.95 Student Desks 79.95 , I 5 PC. Dining Set 79.95 ! Sola Sleeper 235.00 Sola & Chair Sets 149.95 Recliners 99.95 3 PC. Coflee/end Table 59.95 I Twin Mat Sets 79.95 ' Full Mat Sets 89.95 Bed Frames 15.00 TEXAS FURNITURE OUTLET 712 Villa Maria 822-5929 | 95tfn FOR RENT Battalion/Page 5 June 30, 1982 POST are accepting applica- for fall semester. Apply early. 846- I, M6-2911. 160tfn )rs fceded college girls to work with Je of the best skin care pro- jgiams in the world. Set own ps. For free complimentary feke-up and more information. ‘Call 846-9259. issti? Spendable men, women a used home.’ OR COUPLES for present and fu- 5 ratt chainm l e Houston post routes. Early Home Loan! P. n 9 S' P|P® rs r °' led by i . ,1, jfchihe. $200-$750/month. 846-2911 846-0396 24tfn i regulates tht 1 i industry, sail s savings 1 ability to coni: ome buyers in the optionofle newly consult er access to« absence of FULL OR PART TIME •ate mortgage!. a y Shift ight shift (til 10 p.m.) 'eekends be to lower® exible hours to fit your schedule er time and pro apid advancement Starting Salary $3.65/hour Apply in person only. 9:30-11:30 a.m. (if possible) WHATABURGER i cost the troi]vP an College Station 1101 Texas 105 Dommik y an additions _ igottn ' billion witkP ^ rs alone. ^irls ills Yamaha ’79 XS 400 fairing, lug gage rack, back rest, excellent condition $1195 or best offer. 3 cy cle trailer $295 or best offer. Call 260-7786 or 693-8054. FOR RENT WHY BOTHER WITH ELECTRICITY BILLS? At the VIKING... One check pays all your housing expenses, including top maintenance service, all electric kitchens, pool, lighted tennis courts, and security guard. Compare our summer rates today As low as $ 250 BILLS PAID Wm. J. Garrett ‘47 ABARTMENTS 1601 Holleman, College Station, Texas 713/693-6716 SWENSEffS Hirir met r jiring now for the rest of the Sum mer & Fall Semester. Full or Part- le. CULPEPPER PLAZA DISHWASHERS, COOKS, FOUNTAINEERS & ICE CREAM MAKERS. POST OAK MALL ICE CREAM SCOOPERS. : fR from thek^ Apply in person at desired locatlo 1 n 24tfn port on the® ssue of Seven* video gamesrf ivas made by Et 'manoftheedic ent of Mills ( , Calif. Is who playgai an show drai® on tests inspai logical reasoi th abstract sb NEED A JOB? i to develop peatedly hai to pull a trii a car throufi , how to shob ell says, lat girls haK E skill —theysinf been encouraf practice thisf $1800 for six weeks work. In- irviews on Thursday, July 1 st, one day only. Rudder Tower om 402. Interview times 10 am., 1 p.m., 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. 16712 Redstone Apartments College Station Texas Ave. At Brentwood • All Four-Plexes • 2 Bdrm, 1 Bath • All Electric • Walk to Krogers St TG&Y • Walk to 5 Restau rants • $200.00 Deposit • W/D Connections • Refrigerators • Dishwashers $ 375 00 ONE YEAR LEASE Leasing Information 696-1848 D.R. CAIN RENTAL PROPERTIES “YOU HAVE A CHOICE” ' Apartments-Townhomes-Duplexes 1-2 BEDROOM/FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED Go ir ou 3.50 175 1.75 ask BRAZOS H< APAI JUS 'ollege Station sbuthwood Valley- HAWK TREE DUPLEXES Hawk Tree Dr.-College Station -In Southwood Valley- BRIAR OAKS TOWNHOUSES LONGMIRE HOUSE APARTMENTS SHUTTLE BUS SERVICE 2300 Longmire-College Station -In Southwood Valley- BRIARCREST APARTMENTS Prairie Flower Circle Bryan-Off Briarcrest Dr. Briar Oaks Dr. Off 29th St. Bryan CALL OUR RENTAL YELLOWHOUSE ST. APTS/4-PLEXES SHUTTLE BUS SERVICE Welsh & S.W. Parkway- College Station PECAN RIDGE DUPLEXES Commanche Drive Bryan-Off Booneville Rd. WILDE OAK CIRCLE Apartments Duplexes; 4-Plexes Wilde Oak Circle Off 29th St.- Bryan OFFICE FOR APPOINTMENT... iD.R. CAIN COMPANY-3002 S. TEXAS AV.-COLLEGE STATION GLENWOOD APARTMENTS “All Brand New” 1 Bedroom U/F Ceiling Fan Spa-Whirlpool Laundry Room Kitchen Appliances Plus Carpet & Drapes Free Cable Vz Month Rent Free 2011 LaBrisa off 2818 Phone 779-3220 Think tank Trans-Am 1978 racing extras. $5500, 846- 2520. 164t7 DRUMS-5pc. drum set plus more! $650 call 693-4325 nights. 16615 1981 Yamaha XT-250 motorcycle, low miles, good condition, have two, call 693- 5966. 167U1 924 Porsche. 1978. Silver. Low mileage. Bud: 693-3311. 167tl FOR RENT Summer leases 2 bedroom I'/z bath 4-plexes, close to campus, washer/dryer in each unit. $425/mo., 693-8685. 121tfn BARGAINS! 3 bedroom $335.00, 2 bedroom $285.00, 779-3550, 696-2038, 846-2951. 16U8 Tree shaded duplex Southwood Valley 2 bedroom 1 bath $415/mo., 696-6276 or 775- 5191. 165t3 PARKWAY APARTMENTS 1, 2, & 3 bedrooms, 2 swimming pools, shuttle bus, laundry facilities, se curity guard. 1600 South west Parkway, 693-6540. 2 bedroom 2 bath duplex all kitchen ap pliances w/d connections, yard maintained by owner, 2203 Crest (off Manuel Drive). $325/mo. June-July $425/mo. there after, $200 deposit, 696-7714, 693-0982. 158tfn Four-plex for lease. Two bedroom IV2 bath studio. Washer/dryer connections. Privacy fence. $360/month. No pets. Call Kathy Mayfield, 846-5701, 696-7355. 164t6 University Acres Apartments- country liv ing at reasonable prices. Call Jane at 696- 4203 (Joe Courtney, Inc.). 80tfn WANTED (continued from page 1) — Establishing a directory for computer users in the southwest United States. If this is done, Madden says, industrial compu ter users will be able to know what kind of computer facilities exist and where they are. This will be part of a larger effort to collect and dispense informa tion to the business community. “We need to move into an area defined with some clarity where we can become well known,” Madden said. “I would like to see us move beyond the studies that are on the edges of our expertise. I’d rather see us walk away from a project if we can’t do it very well. “I think there will be some studies that we don’t have the expertise to do. We will refer those to someone who could do it, and do it right.” However, Madden empha sized that anybody in the college of business will potentially be available to help with research projects, thereby expanding the “available reservoir of talent.” Madden said he sees the group as a “synergistic vehicle to build a relationship with the business community to get facul ty members in college of busi ness faculty interacting with the business community to improve their expertise and of course as a service to industry. The Univer sity is a repository of expertise — this provides a vehicle for con tact.” Madden said two projects already in the making will pro vide funds for the group. One is a study for a possible industrial park south of College Station, involving more than $50 million in property slated for high-technology research fccilities. The 2,300-acre site will also include housing for some of the industrial park’s employees and recreational facilities, in cluding a golf course. The other project involves a local realtor who wants to know how his company is perceived in the Bryan-College Station area. This project will employ two graduate students — one doc toral and one master’s candidate — with funds provided largely by the realtor. “With us supposedly in a re cession you wouldn’t think peo ple would spend that much on research, but the situation itself creates unique problems that need to be solved,” Madden said. “Even Bryan-College Station is being affected by the reces sion. It’s harder for businesses to justify spending money, but we’re trying to sell answers to problems; farsighted business people will take the risk just to stay in business.” Madden said the goal is to be self-supporting by the end of the year, and perhaps to make a profit. If a profit is made, he said, the money will be put back into experimental projects. “We’d like to be able to get to a point where we can develop something on our own and then bring it to the business commun ity,” Madden said. “Some people in the business community have no idea there is a way to access the technology on this campus,” he said. “This is an ideal vehicle to make our exper tise available to the business community, and also to give fa culty members one more touch with a real problem ... and also let us buy research time for them. “I think anybody that teaches worries that they’re getting out of touch. This way, we don’t, and we furnish a service to the business community, too.” Refugees’ release ordered by judge 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 i« n AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: i Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group , 3400 S. College 823-8051 United Press International MIAMI — A federal judge Tuesday ordered the govern ment immediately to release nearly 2,000 Haitian refugees held in detention camps in the United States and Puerto Rico. U.S. District Judge Eugene Spellman handed down his long-awaited decision in a cour troom crowded with immigra tion lawyers and Haitian activ ists. The order, if left unchal lenged, would allow for the re lease of 1,910 Haitians, some of whom have been held for more than a year. But the government has said it would appeal, which would have the effect of staying the re lease of the refugees. The judge set down a seven- point program for the release of each refugee: •Each Haitian must have an individual sponsor and a volun tary agency sponsor approved , by the INS. •The sponsors must agree in 1 writing that Haitians make ” weekly appearances before a j third party. •INS must obtain full identi fication of all Haitians. * *Each Haitian must receive legal documents, including au thorization for employment in the United States. •Each refugee must be re leased regardless of whether he has legal counsel. •Asylum hearings for Hai tians with legal representatives must begin immediately. Those that don’t have an attorney must report to the INS within 30 days to begin the asylum process. •All Haitians are ordered re leased for the “full period of the legal process,” unless they fail to report in weekly. Spellman’s ruling followed his June 18 decision that the Haitians had been held for the past year illegally. He said the immigration service violated federal administrative proce dures last year by failing to warn attorneys and refugee organiza tions that it would begin detain ing refugees pending hearings. Spellman’s decision came in a class-action suit demanding freedom for the Haitian re fugees held in the United States and Puerto Rico. He ruled June 18 the refugees were being held illegally. Current federal policy is to keep refugees confined during the often lengthy asylum pro cess. SERVICES Lawn service mowing, edging, trimming, 696-0562. 157t20 Call Cathy for all your typing or word processing needs. 696-9550. 131tfn Typing. Wake-up services. 823-7723.157U6 Typing service-Fast, accurate, reliable. Will take rush jobs. 693-6411. 159tl0 Typing on word processing equipment. Ex perienced. We understand form and style. Automated Clerical Services, 693-1070. 159128 Will type for U. $1.00 page 48 hours, $1.25 page rush. Leslie, 775-8397. 165t5 Keypunching or WYLBUR 846-8022.165U6 -■ 1 Lesbian/Gayline 846-8022. 165t26 Typing!! Reports, dissertations, etc. ON THE DOUBLE. 331 University. 846- 3755. 178tfh | DISSERTATION TYPING. Fast. Low prices. 500/Page rough draft. Call 696-7002 6 p.m.-10 p.m. 163U2 ’ Quality Typing 693-4264. 163t26 ALLEN Oldsmobile Cadillac Honda SALES - SERVICE “Where satisfaction is standard equipment’’ 2401 Texas Ave. 779-3516 Now You Know United Press International Thousands of lives are saved each year by the use of car seat belts even though only about 15 percent of American drivers and passengers use them, according to the Automotive In formation Council. The Council cited an expert’s estimate that one-third to one- half of all fatalities in auto acci dents could have been pre vented by seat belts. One expert said the habit of using a seat belt will become permanent if a rider uses it consciously 12 straight times. ROOMMATE WANTED Need roommate for fall in Humble. Ralph 530-5064 or 260-6452 after 7:30 p.m. 167t2 WORD-PROCESSING: Papers, theses, dissertations, Letter-perfect printing, 696- 8910. 143t30 MISC. Free kittens call 696-7272. Typing experienced fast, accurate, all kinds, 822-0,544. 846-9707. 131tfn JOB OPPORTUNITIES TYPING. All kinds. Let us type your propos als, dissertations, reports, essays on our WORD PROCESSOR. Fast sen/ice. Reasonable rates. Business Communication Services 4013 Texas Ave. S. 846-5794 i65tfn J" Service For All | Chrysler Corp. Cars Body Work — Painting HALSELL MOTOR COMPANY INC. ij Dodge Sales and Service Since 1922 |y ^ 1411 Texas Ave. 823-8111 tifn^J dl •al * a * job For employment information at Texas A&M University dial 845-4444 24 hours a day. Equal Employment Opportunity through Affir mative Action. Texas A&M Universitv BRAZOS SAVINGS Rate Update 3-Month ~ _ Market Certificate 13.269% (rate fixed for term) $7,500 minimum ZYz-Year Money Market Certificate 16.072% Effective Annual Yield 14.700% (rate fixed for term) $100 minimum deposit RATES EFFECTIVE AS OF FOR LEASE June 29, 1982 NOW LEASING FOR THE SUMMER Better hurry! While they last, one and two-bedroom units available at special discounts for the 6-week summer session, starting as low as $204 per month. Excellent condition, see to appre ciate. Furnished or unfurnished. Call today. EAST GATE APARTMENTS 713/696-7380 401 Lincoln Drive East, College Station, Texas Fall Leases Now Available Wm. J. Garrett ‘47 Rates are subject to change. Call Brazos Savings for today’s rates. Federal regulations prohibit the compounding of interest on 3-month certificates. Savings are insured up to $100,000 by an agency of the federal government. Regulations impose a substantial penalty for early withdrawal. BRAZOS Savings College Station Branch Office: Texas Ave. at Southwest Parkway • 696-2800