Malion/pJ igust 11 Battalion Classifieds state Battalion/Page 5 August 11, 1982 SERVICES 5 on word processing equipment. Ex- ed. We understand form and style. |iated Clerical Services, 693-1070. 159t28 SERVICES FOR SALE Lesbian/Gayline 846 8022. 165t26 Kitchen table, 696-3917. (ES nces i CompM, ill: ei lathy for all your typing or word .sing needs. 696-9550. 131tfn y Typing 693-4264. ling. Fast, accurate, professional. 83, 775-4204 after 5:00. I83t4 Typing!! Reports, dissertations, etc. ON THE DOUBLE. 331 University. 846-, 3755. 178tfn Typing and word processing 260-9137. Typing experienced, fast, accurate, all kinds, 822-0544, 846-9707. 184tfn Service For All Chrysler Corp. Cars ' Body Work — Painting HALSELL MOTOR COMPANY INC. dge Sales and Service Since 1922 | 1411 Texas Ave. 823-8111 Ofn^j FOR SALE Overseas appliances, brand new. Air condi tioning, refrigerator, etc. LOW prices. 846-4948 after 6:30 p.m. 18514 Mobile Home - 12 x 50 Kirkwood. $6100, call 823-7053 or 1-259-7620, evenings. 185t3 MUST SELL bicycle, good condition, 693- 3963 after five. 184t2 Ideal home for TAMU family. Four blocks from Eastgate. 1800 square feet, large shaded fenced lot. $82,000. Financing .available with $12,000 down. 693-7594. 182t5 Buy & sell good used furniture, antiques, dishes, raise. 3 miles TAMU on Hwy. 60 W., 846-3457. 'l84t7 Round dinette w/4 chairs. $30 also, “queen” wicker chair, $25, 846-8170 after 6 p.m. 184t2 1976 Olds Starfire, good condition and good gas mileage. Needs minor repair. Call 775-4226. 181t6 AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 3400 S. College 823-8051 Clements of Energy says Department a necessity FOR SALE ATTENTlbN AGGIES New Homes lath I/Draped Ic g Pool lusServIctl Compiii) ties 10% effective interest on payments for the first year (without negative amortization). Move in 3 weeks for as little as 5,000.* You’ll want to visit Oak Creek. Getting to school or work doesn’t have to be a hassle. And when you live at Oak Creek, you could be there in only three minutes. We encourage you to relax. We give you all the benefits of home ownership without all the problems. Our townhomes offer protection from inflated housing costs, equity appreciation and tax deductions. Oak Creek gives you more than financial benefits. We offer plenty of extras like a swimming pool, whirlpool hot tub, fireplace, skylights and ceiling fans. And best yet, your weekends are not burdened with maintenance tasks. We have professionals who mow the lawn, clean the pool and keep the grounds. Oak Creek Townhomes. If hassle-free living sounds inviting, you’ll want to drive by. But don’t wait. At this price, with these extras. Oak Creek will sell soon. For Sales Information call Adelle Jones GRI/Broker 696-8888 ©aK CReeK Imperial 10% financing available only through Au- Igust 1982. Move-in costs are subject to change | without notice due to circumstances not con trolled by developer. 4 Diwr Chests 49.95 5 Drwr Chests 59.95 Student Desks 79.95 5 PC. Dtntng Set 79.95 Sofa Sleeper 235.00 Sofa & Chair Sets 149.95 Reclfners 99.95 3 PC. Coffee/end Table 69.95 Twin Mat Sets 79.95 Foil Mat Sets 89.95 Bed Frames ~ * 15.00 TEXAS FURNITURE OUTLET 712 Villa Maria 822-5929 Chevelle 1966 maroon excellent running condition, $1000, 696-1616. 185t2 United Press International AFTON, Okla. — Calling energy as important as weapons to America’s defense, Gov. Wil liam P. Clements Jr. told the Na tional Governors Association that President Reagan should not abolish the Energy Depart ment. While not mentioning the president by name, Clements bluntly differed with those, in cluding Reagan, who want to eli minate the department. Clements presented his prop osed energy policy to the asso ciation Monday and invited comments and recommenda tions. Clements said the United States has no national energy ALLEN Oldsmobile Cadillac Honda SALES - SERVICE “Where satisfaction is standard equipment’’ 2401 Texas Ave. 779-3516 Used furniture cheap, 775-5129 before 10 p.m. Great for student apt. 18413 Industrial 1 \ Park \_aBris® ■ gj Is COLLEGE 1 STATION MOBILE HOMES Biggest sellers in the World CHAMPION REDMAN & the sexiest floor plan WOODBROOK WESTERN PLACE All homes are affordable, sale priced, ready to move in or be delivered anywhere. TEXAS WORLD SPEEDWAY 693-2500 Call Anytime Home of SPEEDWAY PARK ESTATES Quiet, convenient country living. , Texas m STEREO EQUIPMENT LIQUIDATION SALE Home and Auto components at great savings, 10", 12", 15", speaker systems, turntables; receivers; AM/FM auto tape systems; Sat. only, 826 Vine, 846-8041. 185t2 FOUND expenses! all electfl ndsecurj oday SPAID /693-67l { I ;.S. Some ,| d August l semes!#': 0/mo. 2 . water [ .m.) or® , weeken th ftirnis! 16 children 1460. Safe, comfortable, custom townhomes. Chadwick on Carter Creek, Chadwick on Carter Creek. The address holds the promise of presigious living in the English tra dition. Serene. Secure. Special. The townhomes of Chadwick fulfill the promise. Rich in detail and design, Chadwick gives unique definition to life. Each townhome has the distinctive features of a custom home. And from start to finish, the quality of Chadwick highlights beautiful living. Drive by Chadwick on Carter Creek. Or call Lisa Haenisch Hicks, 696-1750. Chadwick could be your address. From $139,000. Chadwick ON CARTER CREEK iportuiiir A Carter Creek Parkway, Inc. Development Chadwick cabinetry from Mutschler, the cabinetry craftsmen. Hfl MUTSCHLER A Triangle Pacific Company Univ el fiib NEED $ TO FINISH COLLEGE?? The National Scholarship Re search Center can help solve your problem. Let our vast computerized data banks match you with your share of the available $3,000,000,000 (MUCH OF WHICH GOES UNUSED!!) 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For the complete infor mation package send a large self-addressed stamped en velope to: NATIONAL SCHOLARSHIP RESEARCH CENTER DRAWER T-21 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS 77844 184t FOR LEASE plan and a building energy crisis. “I believe that energy is as important as food and fiber to the economic vitality of Amer ica,” he said. “I feel that energy is as important as any weapon system to the defense of America.” He said his plan involves steps to make us “substantially more independent of imported oil than we are today.” “Perhaps the most significant strategy,” he said, “is one of management which calls for continuation of the Department of Energy to act as a focal point for updating the national ener gy plan. “There are those who say we do not need a special depart ment concentrating on energy and that we cannot have one without its being a regulation machine. I don’t buy that. In the world of Washington, percep tion is power.” Reagan has proposed the De partment of Energy be abo lished and that its functions be divided among other agencies. Clements said the Energy De partment got off to a bad start under President Carter and in herited a “burden of regulatory controls” imposed by Congress. He praised the Reagan admi nistration for “disbanding some of the burdensome regulatory apparatus.” He said Reagan has taken the general attitude that energy decisions should be based on free market prices and availability coupled with private sector decisions on investment. “Basically I agree with this,” Clements said, “but I fear that some of the needed long-term actions will not meet the test of private sector return on invest ment. This policy relies on max imum use of the free market and minimal intervention of govern ment. However, there is a role for government in understand ing the world energy supply- demand situation as it affects America.” Oklahoma Gov. George Nigh said he agreed with the basic ob jectives in Clements’ proposal. Nigh said such a policy should focus on the premise the United States and the world have “an abundance of natural gas” that will last well into the next cen tury. “I believe we would really be missing the boat if we did not design our national energy poli cy based on the fact of natural gas and coal abundance rather than an assumption of scarcity,” Nigh said. ;d increased use of natural gas to fuel transportation vehicles within the next decade. Lawyers try to halt execution of Texan Mobile home, Broadmoor, 12x60, excellent shape, appliances and partially furnished, 823-7342. 181t6 Houston “Spartans" Senior '82 class ring. Call to identify: (713) 762-5424 Galves ton. 18512 United Press International CORPUS CHRISTI — Attor neys representing a Death Row inmate, scheduled to die Thurs day for the 1976 murder of a policeman, planned to drive 160 miles to Brownsville to personal ly deliver a copy of their delay request. Corpus Christi lawyer Doug las Tinker said a request for a stay for Henry Martinez Porter would be driven Tuesday from Corpus Christi to Brownsville, where U.S. District Judge Hayden Head Jr. of Corpus Christi is hearing cases. Tinker filed the request late Monday in Corpus Christi fed eral court but wanted to deliver a copy to Head by noon Tuesday in order to speed up action on the petition. “We will deliver a copy to him (Head) in Brownsville. That gives us an extra day, although I can’t predict when he will make a decision,” Tinker said. Tinker said if Head did not issue a ruling today “we’ll have to go another direction.” Porter, who is in his late 30s, is on Death Row in the Texas De partment of Corrections’ Ellis Unit in Huntsville for the slaying of Officer Henry Mail- loux in 1976. Mailloux was killed in a burst of gunfire after he pulled Por ter’s car over on a Fort Worth street during investigation of a series of robberies. Tinker said Porter “initially said he didn’t want anybody to file anything, but he changed his mind.” “When I went up to talk with Henry after he was indicating he didn’t want any further appeal, he signed a document authoriz ing me to continue his appeal,” Tinker said. Tinker said he was seeking the stay from a federal judge be cause state courts had refused to stop Porter’s scheduled death by injection. Tinker contends State District Judge Gordon Gray — who handled both Porter’s Fort Worth trial — overturned on appeal — and a retrial in Corpus Christi — improperly excluded potential jurors opposed to capital punishment. The lawyer said he also be lieved Gray erred in handling a purported oral confession and should have postponed the second trial to give defense lawyers time to check evidence that Porter once underwent psychiatric treatment. ROOMMATE WANTED Quiet male or female graduate student, share house, on campus perimeter, $125/mo. + utilities. Jenny 845-0818, any time. 184t5 SPECIAL NOTICE Texas Briefs United Press International HOUSTON — Nearly 200 more people in the petroleum industry have been laid off this week by two companies citing the recession and declining de mand for oil or oil well service equipment. Wainoco Oil Corp. reported reducing its U.S. staff by 28, in cluding 18 at its Houston head quarters. Officials said the layoff represented 12 percent of its work force of 240. ' Six of the layoffs were in Wainoco’s Lafayette, La., office, three in Denver, a spokesman said. Midland-based NDT Systems Inc., a manufacturer of non destructive oil field tubular test ing equipment, cut its Houston staff by 38 people and its Mid land staff by 125. The layoffs represented about 40 percent of the firm’s employees. Prior to this most recent layoff, NDT had consolidated operations by reducing its facili ties from nine to two and cutting its work force 10 percent. Now You Know United Press International Bark of the yohimbe tree, a traditional African aphrodisiac, may prove to be the cure for im potence in some men. Researchers at Queens Uni versity in Ontario tested the potency-enhancing potential of the drug called yohimbine, while treating a group of diabe tics for impotence and paresthe sia, a “pins and needles” sensa tion that affects the lower limbs. Although aware of the drug’s reputation as an aphrodisiac, re searchers were surprised when most of their patients reported simultaneous improvements for both conditions. But that test was with men whose problem was deemed organic. Future research is still needed on impotent men whose problem is believed to be emo tional. * YOU’LL LOVE THESE * * NEW DUPLEXES * ^Patios with wooded back yards,*. ^ very private! 2 bedroom, large! jj,walk-in closets, compartmented! bath, kitchen w/bar, frost free re-! ^frigerator, laundry room off kitch-! 3^en. Vaulted living room with fire-! ^ place 2 miles from campus (off! *Welsh) shuttle bus service, a! *must to see — $495.00. Heather! !Childress, 696-1242. isne 3r nr ir ir-*■ ir ?r ■*■★★★★★★ $Hri The Corps of Cadets gets its news from the Batt.