The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 24, 1983, Image 8

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    battalion Classifieds^ etc.
HELP WANTED
.•her needed for nursery school. Must
i degree-also student to clean. 846-
.. 78tfn
art the New Year off right by
trning extra money. Sell AVON
id enjoy the profits. For more
formation call 696-0751.
?6t10
ie HOUSTON CHRONICLE is cur-'
itly taking applications for newspap-
route carriers for summer & fall
mesters. Routes take 2 1 /z to 3 hours
r day. with salary from 400 to 800,
r month. All routes receive a gaS)
owance also we need solicitors for
3 summer & fall semester. If interest-
please call Julian McMurrey 693-
I23. - ~ '—SQtfrtf
SALES/DEMO
EZ Play Organs
Some Piano
Part Time
Fun Job
For KcyboAnd
Dpointment Sj CENTER
764-0006 —-n .
w »m »' INC.
POST OAK MALL
College Station. TX 77840
80tfn
art-time cashier and counter
elp. Flexible hours. Apply in
arson between 10 & 11 and
-4. 201 Dominik.
76t5
GUITAR TEACHER
Part-Time — Acoustics
you play but have not
aught you may still be
ualified.
For
764-0006
KEyboARd
Center
Inc.
POST OAK MALL
College Station. TX 7T840
• EPENDABLE MEN, WOMEN
)R COUPLES for present and fu-
^re Houston post routes. Early
lorning hours. Papers rolled by
lachine. $200-$750/month.
846-2911 846-0396
24tfn
art-time daytime and evening
ositions. Cleaning offices availa-
le now to industrious, reliable
tudents with phone, transporta-
on and references. Home Care
lervices, 846-7759.
76U0
FULL OR
PART TIME
□ay Shift
Night shift (til 10 p.m.)
Weekends
Flexible hours to fit your schedule
Rapid advancement
Cashier experience helpful
Starting Salary
$3.65/hour
Apply in person only.
’ 9:30-11:30 a.m. (if possible)
WHATABURGER
.’jryan College Station
■ 101 Texas 105 Dominik
190tfn
TEXAS RESEARCH an oil and
‘,5as firm needs young, attractive
oerson for typing 5 days a week
.'.or morning job. Must Type at
east 50wpm. Pays $4.00 pr/hr.
Contact Carolyn at 846-9730.
7715
IS YOUF
INCOME
SMALLER THAN
OUR POTENTIAL?
(f you’re bright, ambitious and
ve a strong drive to succeed, our
NTURY 21®office has career oppor-
lities to prove your worth. As a
NTURY 21 sales associate, you can
rn up to your maximum potential,
i'll give you the training you'd expect
m Number 1, the financial tools and
> management support. Call us, today!
Ontuifc*.
21
in i,.
Jacob Beal Real Estate, Inc.
775-9000
3211 Texas Avenue, Bryan
Ask for Mike Beal 76t3i
FOR RENT
orage 10x20, $22 up, 693-2339. 76131
FOR RENT
CRUISE SHIP JOBS!
$28,000 a year. Caribbean, Hawaii,
,d. Call Cruiseworld for guide, direc-
, newsletter. 1(916) 973-1111 ext.
80117
2 bedroom apartment one block from cam
pus. $205.00 per month for sublease, 846-
5378. 78t4
Duplex for rent. 2 bedroom 1 bath all
appliance hook-ups. $300 month, $200 de
posit. Contact Peggy or Bernice, Apex
Realty, 693-4455. 75t7
UNIVERSITY ACRES
COUNTRY LIVING AT
REASONABLE PRICES
1 and 2 bedrooms on Cain Road
off Wellborn Road. Cali Jane at
696-4203 (Joe Courtney, Inc.)
76tfn
NEW MINI
WAREHOUSES
5x5 —
5x7 —
5x10 —
5x12 —
10x10 —
10x15 —
10x20 —
10x25 —
10x30 —
$25 mo.
$30 mo.
$32 mo.
$35 mo.
$45 mo.
$55 mo.
$62 mo.
$68 mo.
$80 mo.
THE STORAGE CENTER
3007 Longmire
College Station
(near Ponderosa Motel and
Brazos Valley Lumber)
764-8238 or
696-4203 15tfn
Spacious 1 and 2 bedroom apts.
Also, 2 bedroom studios. Conve
nient to campus. Call or come by
Investor Real Estate, 305 East
33rd, Bryan, 779-3656.
75t12
JANUARY RENT FREE
In these new deluxe 4-plexes
with fireplaces, washer/dryer,
cathedral ceilings, fenced
yards, & more. Call 693-8685.
63tfn
RENT SLASHED
Spacious two bedroom IVz bath
four-plex with washer and dryer,
close to campus. Large kitchen,
walk-in closets, large deck in rear.
693-8685. aotfn
SOUTHWEST VILLAGE
One and two bedrooms available
for immediate occupancy. Call
693-0804 or come by the office at
1101 Southwest Parkway.
29tfn
MINI WAREHOUSES
101 Jersey West (comer of Jersey &
Wellborn across from Olsen field)
THE STORAGE CENTER
696-4203
(Office at 512 West Loop)
36tfn
DUPLEX CLOSE
TO CAMPUS
3 bedroom at 205 Montclair. Ideal
for students. Call Jane at 696-
4203. (Joe Courtney, Inc.)
76tfn
DUPLEXES AND HOUSES
2 & 3 bedroom in Bryan/CS. Kitchen
appliances, W/D connection, carpet,
drapes, fenced yard.
JOE COURTNEY, INC.
696-4203
(Office at 512 West Loop)
36tfn
ARBOR SQUARE
One and two bedroom furnished
apartments available for im
mediate occupancy. Call 693-
3701 or come by 1700 Southwest
Parkway.
29tfn
CASA DEL SOL
One and two bedroom apartment
available for immediate occupan
cy. Call 696-3455 or come by 401
Stasney in College Station.
28tfn
4-plex apts. College Station.
Large 1 bedroom, $260.00/Large
2 bedroom, $325.00, w/d connec
tions. Water paid. No pets. Va OFF
OF FIRST MONTH’S RENT ON 9
or 12 MONTH LEASES. 779-1613,
M-F, 779-3162 (PM and
weekends). 75,1 6
FOR RENT
Very nice two bedroom apartment,
$285.00. Two bedroom house, $500.00,
779-3550, 696-2038. 75tll
Fairview, College Station walk to
A&M. 2 bedroom home. Ap
pliances, fenced back yard, ga
rage. $400.00 a month. Jacob Be
al Realty, 823-5469.
80t10
Two bedroom bouse fenced yard, Wellborn
area. 693-4070, 693-2339. 76131
STUDIO APT. on shuttle bus
route, cul-de-sac backs up to Bee
Creek Park, lots of trees.
1BR/1BA, deck off living room.
$300/rent $200/security deposit.
Available now. 846-5779.
80t11
WANTED
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 1tf "
WANTED:
Baseball and
football cards.
Call Mark 693-7882.
Tutor needed for physics 207. Call 693-
6897 after 6:00 p.m. 81t3
ROOMMATE WANTED
M/F roommate. Newer, furnished $200.00
+ 775-3766. 79t5
Male roommate needed for spring semes
ter. 2 bedroom Sutter’s Mill Condo.
$250.00 own room. $150.00. Share room.
764-9348. 8115
Female roommate needed: $140/mo. + V)
bills own room. Call Tammy 845-3516 after
5:00 call 779-6584. 8112'
Female roommate $ 150/month + Elec
tricity. Own room & bath. New. 846-
2851.' 7915.
Roommate needed. Large house. Own
room. $200/month. More information call
845-5269 or 779-0533 p.m. 7815
FOR SALE
1976 Mustang P.S., P.B., air conditioning,
4-speed, Hatchback, 260-3396. 7815
'78 Telecaster, excellent condition, $550 or
best offer, 775-5834. 7915
'76 Plymouth Sport maroon/white, $1400,
696-0180. 7915
Twin bed with headboard, $65. Call 775-
8503. 7814
1968 Mustang Fastback, $2100, OBO, 260-
7277. 7918
Kneissl skis, hook N77 bindings with ski
brakes, poles, 693-9789. 8015
LOST
LOST: My book money in white envelope
on campus. REWARD. 845-4603. 8012
FOR LEASE
Patio home 717 Lincoln, five blocks
from A&M on shuttle bus route. 1100
square feet. 2 bedroom 2 bath, fire
place. Full kitchen & W/D connections.
No bills. Deposit required. Minimum
lease: 6 months, $550/mo., available
February 1st. 696-3754 or 779-0554.
69tfn
Sublease furnished efficiency Country
Place Apts. Linda, 260-9253 after 4:00,
846-9161. 7915
SERVICES
Service For Ail
Chrysler Corp. Cars
Body Work — Painting
HALSELL MOTOR
COMPANY INC.
Dodge Sales and Service Since 1922
1411 Texas Ave. 82^1 V1^ HfnJ
SPECIAL NOTICE
ATTENTION
MAY GRADUATES
Veterinary
Graduates
Order your announcements/invita
tions NOW! MSC Student Finance
Center, Room 217, MSC. Mon.-
Fri. 8 AM-4 PM. LAST DAY Tues
day, February 8, 1983!
WANT BETTER GRADES?
Change the quality of your reading and study methods.
READING EFFICIENCY
a non-credit course
SECTIONS MEET TTH 9:30 or MW 12:00 $60
FEE INCLUDES COURSE MATERIAL. REGI
STER NOW IN
Classes begin January 24th
The Reading Lab
Texas A&M
718 Harrington
845-8050 ?5ti i
Battalion/Page 8
January 24,1983
Survey
Continued from page 1
Cadets may have had some in
fluence on that response, but
not much.
“By the extent of their partici
pation, they have a great deal of
influence on student elections,
but otherwise they probably
don’t have much effect,” Lutt-
beg said.
hometown size was between
100,000 and 1 million tended to
be the most liberal with 27 per-
“If the
campus is conserva
tive, the Corps is the epitome of
the conservative student. But
they don’t necessarily shape stu
dent opinion.”
Three out of four Corps
members surveyed said they
were conservative — compared
to 53 percent for all students.
Overall, 61 percent of
the males questioned
said they were conserva
tive while only 45 per
cent of females ques
tioned said they
conservative.
were
While Corps members tended
to be more conservative, women
tended to be slightly more liber
al, especially on the two military
questions. Overall, 61 percent of
the males questioned said they
were conservative while only 45
percent of females questioned
said they were conservative.
cent saying they were liberal.
Students who said their home
town size was more than 1 mil
lion tended to be as conservative
as other students, with 57 per
cent saying they were conserva
tive.
While hometown size and sex
have some effect on political be
liefs, Luttbeg said class tends to
have little impact on them.
“There’s not much signifi
cance in class and political be
liefs,” he said. “Most data indi
cate that conservatives go to cer
tain schools and liberals jjo to
others. College experience
usually has no impact on politic
al beliefs.”
But even with the conserva
tive responses on many ques
tions, Texas A&M may be be
coming slightly more liberal, at
least on social issues. Luttbeg
agreed, saying that the migra
tion to Texas of people from
other states and the increase in
the number of women students,
may be making the campus
slightly more liberal.
"There has probably
some (change) with the grovj
of the University, probably
creasing conservativism,” L
beg said. “I wouldn’t stakt
great deal of money on it,bu!
“If the campus is con
servative, the Corps
the epitome of them
servative student,
they don’t necessani
shape student opinion.
— Dr. Norman
might guess that it(TexasAil
is becoming more liberal.”
Tuesday: Should the drinki;
age be raised?
Hometown size had some
effect on political beliefs, with
students from rural areas tend
ing to be slightly more conserva
tive. Students who said their
Attorney says teacher-
clients following rules
United Press International
HOUSTON — An attorney
for two school employees
SHRIMP ARAMA
MONDAY AND TUESDAY
NIGHT
$5.95
FRIED SHRIMP
OUR REGULAR $7.95
Platter with all the trimmings
AGGIE OWNED AND OPERATED
CLASS’60.
KI££’S
ssaTOOD ana stsgk
Bast 29th Street at Carter Creek
charged with injury to a child for
allegedly forcing a 9-year-old
special education student to eat
broccoli asked prosecutors to
dismiss the charges on grounds
his clients followed school guild
lines during the incident.
Lawyer Carol Vance, in a
meeting with Harris County
prosecutors, argued the misde
meanor charges should be drop
ped or referred to a grand jury
because the employees followed
widely practiced procedures for
dealing with disturbed children.
“I don’t think all the evidence
has been reviewed that should
have been reviewed by the police
department and the district
attorney’s office, before charges
were filed,” Vance said Friday.
“If you took every charge that
came through the door without
a careful review, I think you
would have a chaotic situation
for teachers,” Vance said.
“Ms. Barbalato and Ms. Wil
liams were strictly following the
policies and procedures set up
for this kind of special education
class.”
Rosemarie Barbalato, 22, and
aide, Patricia Williams, 35, each
were charged with injury to a
child after allegedly forcing Cal
vin Charles Herring to eat broc
coli after he had already eaten
two helpings of pizza from two
plate lunches he bought at
school.
AG
ST
ST
Bl
PI
T
$
$ 1
1* dv ^
*4?
^ ^ {P 1 O O 1 O
JT) ^ p njp
OH
oo
DOLLAR DAYS
oo
Tuesday & Thursday
oo
oo
5 p.m. til Close
cn
oo
*1 SPECIAL
GO
Pressed Ham & Cheese Sub
and
GO
o*
Turkey & Cheese Sub
GO
o>
NO LIMIT
GO
GO
AGGIELAND SUB-WAY
o>
o>
109-111 Boyett St.
846-8223
(NEXT TO Open 7 Days
CAMPUS A Week
THEATER) 11:00 a.m.-MIdnlght
GO
GO
$
$ J
i $ $ i
($:;$$$$
$
The boy claimed the pairhs
his arms and legs and shovedik
food in his mouth. The this
grader was later treated for:
strained ligament in his rigi
arm.
A school district spoktJ
woman said the teachers fora I
the child to eat the broccoliafteBf
he disobeyed orders to dot
The spokeswomn also said is
boy spit food at the teachen
Vance reminded prosecutor
that the boy was in a specialc
for disturbed children—theitf
havior Intervention Center-I
which includes special rulesan|
requirements to help disclipfei
students. su
School officials hired VanetT
former Harris County Distn:|
Attorney, to represent tit I
women on the criminal charge
Officials said the employees! - . "
lowed district policy in discipl" ‘ u , e
ing the child. 3er<)
" ppgre
Prosecutor Andy Tobias s. "ently
his office would further inve illeged
? ;atinthe case and may considefocaine
iling charges against two CM NB
school employees allegedly day th;
volved in tlie Jan. 12 incident dent
“Any time any defense atto:attend<
ney comes forward with anyt L as V'
dence that his client is notguilt us ed, 1
we have an obligation tolooll hi
that evidence," Tobias said. Wasliii
A court hearing in thecaMpfe'
was scheduled for Feb. 8. |‘ on g r
|uana ;
of jocc:
and W
Former agents
trial opens todaj
United Press International
HOUSTON — Former CIA
agent Edwin Wilson, already
sentenced to 15 years in prison
on an arms smuggling convic
tion, goes on trial today on
charges of exporting 20 tons of
plastic explosives to Libyan ter
rorists in 1977.
The second in a series of four
trials accusing the former feder
al agent of various illegal deal
ings with terrorists was sche
duled to begin amid allegations
that Wilson plotted from his
prison cell to hire hit squads to
kill two federal prosecutors and
five witnesses.
i Wil
:on, V:
be reai
As!
illegal
idmin
Bd ~
served on Wilson’s attorney have t
claimed the former CIA ageml As
attempted to arrange the co: reache
tract slayings of two U.S. JustBjust <
Department prosecutors t’tonigh
volved in three upcomingtriatj ^
against him and at least five maLj ^
jor witnesses involved in
trials.
The network said prosecutofitj* ^
planned to present evidence
CBS News reported federal
ithorities, in court papers
CLASSIFIED
ADS« -
SERVICES
Alterations Repairs and Custom Clothing
done in my home Call Pam 693-6538.64tl9
Karen’s Typing service, 775-6126. 67t84
Complimentary Mary Kay facial. Diane
McCleary, 693-0104. 78t20
Typing!! Reports, dissertations, etc. ON
THE DOUBLE. 331 University. 846-
3755. 178tfii
"Problem Pregnancy? Free pregnancy test
ing and referrals. (713) 524-0548.” 188tih
University Bookstore now offers 24 hour
film service for as little as $2.99 for 12 exp.
c-41 print film. 42tfn
Papers due already? Word processing, fast
turn-around, reasonable. 10% discount
through January 31. EastMark Executive
Suites, 693-5895. 78t9
Jury
to begin at 1 p.m. MondayKp^st
federal court. m
Assistant U.S. Attorney M
Powers Saturday refused con pat c
ment on the matter. acloa
Def ense attorneys could noipe H
be reached for comment. | T1
refus«
than
comb
THE HARLEM
GLOBETROTTERS.
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1
7:30 PM
G. Rollie White Coliseum
tickets: $7.00 (reserved) all others $6.00 (adults) $5.00 (students)
tickets on sale: MSC Ticket Office 8:30-4:30 daily
Sears Post Oak Mall
kjf
i"
CHARGE BY PHONE (Visa/Mastercard) ,
845-1234
i