liiiiittiVi'iYlYiW Battalion Classifieds national HELP WANTED FOR RENT Battalion/Paj March 1, Experienced Waitresses, Cooks & Barten ders. Apply at the ZEPHYR CLUB, after 4 p.m., 913 Harvey Rd. College Station. 106t8 Two bedroom duplex, water/cable, bus route, close to Kroger, 696-8351. 104U0 Needed Recept. at Brazos Aviation for Sat. & Sun. 8:00-4:30. Call 696-8767 for appt. 103t5 Programming positions (Full & part-time with established computer firm. Good pay and future. Call 696-5554. 107t5 SOUTHWEST VILLAGE One and two bedrooms available for immediate occupancy. Call 693-0804 or come by the office at 1101 Southwest Parkway. 29tfn Representative states views Service station attendant, 815 Texas, College Sta-| tion. Apply in person. DEPENDABLE MEN, WOMEN OR COUPLES for present and fu ture Houston post routes. Early morning hours. Papers rolled by machine. $200-$750/month. 846-2911 846-0396 24tfn 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 EPA chief’s actions ‘wrong WANTED FULL OR PART TIME *Day 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 Bryan College Station 1101 Texas 105 Dominik 190tfn Innertube Water Polo, Volleyball Triples and Water Polo teams are needed for Intramurals! Entries are now being accepted in the IM- REC Sports Office, 159 East Kyle. $10.00 entry fee must accompany each team registration. For further information call 845-7826. Entries close on Tuesday, March 8 at 7 P.m. 106t7 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 1 «" INSTRUCTOR SHAPE WAY Part-Time Position Ideal for Students Average 16-20 hours per week Evenings & Saturday Mornings Training Program Provided Apply in person, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-Friday 3710 E. 29th, Bryan 106t(n FOR RENT VILLA WEST APARTMENTS 3500 Pinfeather FOR RENT Efficiency $200.00. 1 Bedroom $230.00 & UP. 2 Bedroom $260.00 & UP. *1'/2 miles From Campus. ‘Adult Property. ‘Shuttle Bus. *No Pets Please. 99114 ARBOR SQUARE One and two bedroom furnished apartments available for im mediate occupancy. Call 693- 3701 or come by 1700 Southwest Parkway. 29tfn DUPLEX CLOSE TO CAMPUS 3 bedroom at 205 Montclair. Ideal for students. Call Jane at 696- 4203. (Joe Courtney, Inc.) 76tfn MINI WAREHOUSES 101 Jersey West (corner of Jersey & Wellborn across from Olsen field) THE STORAGE CENTER 696-4203 (Office at 512 West Loop) 36tfn 4-plex apts. College Station. 2 bedroom, $325.00, w/d connec tions. Water paid. No pets. V2 OFF OF FIRST MONTH’S RENT ON 9 OR 12 MONTH’S LEASES. 779- 1613, M-F, 779-3162 (PM and weekends) 95tfn 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 NEW MINI WAREHOUSES — $25 mo. 0 — 10 — 15 — 20 — 25 — B0 — $30 mo. $32 mo. $35 mo. $45 mo. $55 mo. $62 mo. $68 mo. $80 mo. THE STORAGE CENTER 3007 Longmire College Station and (near Ponderosa Motel Brazos Valley Lumber) 764-8238 or 696-4203 UNIVERSITY ACRES COUNTRY LIVING AT REASONABLE PRICES 1 and 2 bedrooms on Cain Road off Wellborn Road. Call Jane at 696-4203 (Joe Courtney, Inc.) 76tfn Table Tennis and Badminton play ers needed for Intramurals! En tries are now being accepted in the IM-REC Sports Office, 159 East Kyle. For further information call 845-7826. Entries close Tues day, March 8 at 7 p.m. 10617 I .need SWG tournament tickets. Call Dan 693-9312. lOltlt) NEWPORT CONDOMINIUMS: A New Class in Student living; 3 minutes from Campus; Compact, Efficient space; Securi ty; Wasber/Dryer in each unit; From $399.00; 402 Nagle, 846-8960. 82trn WANTED! Intramural HORSESHOE DOU BLES TOURNAMENT PARTICI PANTS! And... it’s FREE! All equipment furnished! Come to IM- REC Sports, 159 East Kyle and enter today! For more information call 845-7826. 10117 United Press International WASHINGTON — If En vironmental Protection Agency chief Anne Burford delayed a Minnesota toxic waste cleanup to justify stalling action on a California site so she could dam- age Jerry Brown’s Democratic Senate bid, it would be “immor al,” a congressman says. Rep. Gerry Sikorski, D- Minn., said Sunday the allega tions of delayed action provide a reasonable cause for Minnesota funds being blocked in the weeks before the Senate elec tion. He said Mrs. Burford went so far as to announce twice, on Aug. 17, 1982, and again in a visit to the state on Sept. 27, 1982, that the money to clean up the St. Louis Park, Minn., site had been released but it did not arrive until early this year. Four EPA officials have alleged that money for both the Minnesota site and the Stringfel- low Acid Pits in Avon, Calif., was held up without legal justifica tion. Sikorski said with these disclo sures, and others, Mrs. Burford should resign. “She’s dead wood at this point.” Rep. Claudine Schneider, R- R.I. and Rep. James Florio, D- N.J. also issued resignation calls. In fact, Florio suggested Mrs. Schneider would be the ideal re placement for Mrs. Burford. Florio said, “Unless and until he (President Reagan) replaces the administrator with someone who has unquestionable creden tials, this albatross will not be taken from the president’s neck.” Asked at a GOP reception in Denver if she still plans to re main in her post, Mrs. Burford said, “Hell, yes,” The Denver Post reported Sunday. A subcommittee headed by Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., meets in private this week to hear from subpoenaed EPA em ployees who had anything to do with the cleanup of the String- fellow dump. Also, the half- dozen panels investigating the EPA’s $1.6 billion Superfund waste cleanup program begin the task of digesting sub poenaed documents. EPA officials said they were told Mrs. Burford was worried that providing the $6.1 million for California’s Stringfellow site would aid the Senate campaign of Brown — who made environ mental problems a big issue in his campaign. The EPA officials said that to justify blocking funds for the California site, Mrs. Burford ordered a study that tied up $1.9 million in planning and cleanup funds for the city-owned site in the Minneapolis suburb. Che micals leaching in the ground at that site, once owned by the Reil ly Tar and Chemical Co., have begun to contaminate drinking water. With 90 percent of federal funds virtually approved for both sites, Mrs. Burford in early August halted release of any Su perfund cleanup money for city- or state-owned sites pending a study on how much federal aid they should receive, the officials said. Sikorski said thatJ funds for the St. LouiJ were not released unlil year, with the onset ofj officials of the MinnesJ turn Control Agencv him a year’s delay will “If what these EPAj say is true — and 1 thil more than likely—yotl situation which exempii political decision-niall wrong and to somei moral," said Sikorski. Oil price cuts will help economy, claims adviser United Press International WASHINGTON — Cuts in the price of oil worldwide will help economic recovery but also will lower government re venues, President Reagan’s top economic adviser says. Both Martin Feldstein and Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker said Sunday that lower oil prices would help keep infla tion down but the international consequences of a dogfight within the Organization of Pet roleum Exporting Countries would create new problems. In separate television inter views, the two men expressed a common conviction the eco nomy is moving modestly up ward, with Feldstein saying the coming year’s performance will be somewhat better than the administration’s three percent growth prediction. Volcker said the expansion will be “fraction ally higher” than three percent. lion dollars. But. . . if it makes for a stronger recovery. . . then that can more than offset those kind of impacts,” he said. Volcker said, “Some declines in oil prices are a good thing for the economy. They help on the inflation front and they help on the expansion front at the same time.” well as for energy exf in the United States.” Noting the latest inflation report, shov sumer prices up only 0. in January, they also interest rates should a drop as the economy the recession. But Feldstein said, “Roughly speaking, every dollar a barrel that the price of oil comes down . raises the deficit by about a bil- But he said the “financial fall out... of a very sharp de cline . . . could be contained but it certainly creates problems for some foreign oil exporters as Reagan told thena ernors Sunday night: House dinner that weathered the worst 1 storm and now thet covery has begun.” SERVICES ■ 1 /4 MILE FROM CAMPUS 2 bedroom 4- plex 693-9878, 693-0553. 94t20 Typing on word processing equipment. Ex perienced. We understand form and style. Automated Clerical Services, 693-1070. 86t53 "Problem Pregnancy? Free pregnancy test ing and referrals. (713) 524-0548.’’ 188tfn Typing, experienced, fast, accurate, all kinds 822-0544. 88tfn TYPING 823-7723. Service For All Chrysler Corp. Cars Body Work — Painting HALSELL MOTOR COMPANY INC. | Dodge Sales and Service Since 1922 ^ 1411 Texas Ave. 823-8111 1tfn^| Intramural : Uniforms : 20% team discount* \ Jobs bill: little help seen United Press International WASHINGTON —The com promise jobs bill headed for House passage this week will make only a small dent in unem ployment, President Reagan’s top economic adviser acknow ledges, but it is the only measure the president will sign. Treasury Secretary Donald Regan said Sunday $4.6 billion is the top figure Reagan will accept in a jobs bill. “I wouldn’t want to see these jobs bills get out of hand,” Regan said in an interview on ABC’s “This Week with David Brink- ley.” “I think 4.6 is about the outer limit.” Martin Feldstein, Reagan’s top economic adviser, said the jobs bill will have only “a small effect” on unemployment totals. The best medicine for the jobless, he said on CBS “Face the Nation,” is a sustained recovery, not legislative fragments that only “nibble at the edges” on the problem. But it is the only bill provid ing emergency relief that would be signed by President Reagan, who believes his economic prog ram will generate its own recov ery without need for additional federal spending. Reagan wanted only $4.3 bil lion, the House will give him $4.6 billion, and an ell made in the Senate^ the figure. Rep. Jamie Whitten,! chairman of the Housed nations Committee, steered the S4.6 billionc through his panel Fridi! out significant change! of a deal worked out!» I the Democratic leaden® White House. Reti 20 y TRI-STATE A&M SPORTING GOODS Need your papers in a hurry? Fast. Accu rate word-processing. EastMark Executive Suites, 693-5895. 87t20 3600 Old College Road H46-474UI H4B-474# Typing!! Reports, dissertations, etc. ON THE DOUBLE. 331 University. 846- 3755. 178tfn Karen’s Typing service, 775-6126. 67t84 ODDBALL COMPUTER PRO GRAMMING, 846-4263. 107t3 TYPING reasonable cost, 846-8192. 105t4 FOR SALE Mustang 1965, good condition. Must sell. $2000.00, 779-3536. 103t5 Full Bed w/headboard, $150. Call Tammv 779-6584. 10612 Honda 250XL, ’75 good condition, $550 or best offer, 696-0586. 107t4 14K cubic zirconic pierced earrings, 693- 6211. 107t5 Intellivision Video game with 10 game car tridges. $200, call 696-6654. 104(4 1980 Suzuki TS185, good condition, $800 or best offer, 260-4360. 105t5 TS-O Prescriptions Filled Glasses Repaired BRYAN 216 N. Main 799-2786 Mon.-Fri. 8-5 Sat. 8-1 COLLEGE STATION 8008 Post Oak Mall.. 764-0010 Mon.-Sat. 10-9 p.m. Texas State « Ophticae be Since 1935. FURNITURE WAREHOUSE 4 Drwr Chests 44.95 5 Drwr Chests 54.95 Dresser/Mirror 94.95 5 Pc. Dining Set 69.95 Sofa Sleeper 235.00 Sofa & Chair Sets169.95 Recliners 89.95 3 Pc. Coffee/end Table 69.95 Twin Mat Sets 79.95 Full Mat Sets 88.00 Bed Frames 15.00 TEXAS FURNITURE OUTLET 712 Villa Maria 822-5929 95ttn ROOMMATE WANTED M/F roommate, 2 bedroom duplex, $185, 775-3766. 104t5 Room for rent, $140/mo. Call Tammy 779- 6584. 106t2 SPECIAL NOTICE Triathlon and Superstar partici pants needed! These competi tions are free. Stop by the IM-REC Sports Office, 159 East Kyle for more information or call 845-7826. 106t7 COLLEGE STUDENT MAGAZINE offers you a unique opportuni ty to meet single college stu dents and graduates who you would enjoy knowing, but might not meet otherwise. Call our toll-free number (9 a.m.-6 p.m., Monday through Friday), give us your name and ad dress, and we’ll mail you free information today. Dial 1-800- 334-2226. 10415 OFFICIAL NOTICE Battalion Classifieds Call 845-2611 HELP WANTED Position opening up at IBM this summer for individuals interested in Technical Writing. Come by 420 Harrington or call your CO-OP Of fice at 845-7814 immediately. 10615 MSP TOWN HALL LOS. End Your Spring Break |p es ?her to With teaturir: Jalaxy stars. ®nsii AdAftt I Amii sounds! lush Cal nionarc limousii a rain st oi First Mr ijumi, jkith an diamon , if In Concert ip Sunday, March 20 G. Rollie White Coliseu Tickets: 5 50 , 6 50 , 7 00 Info: MSC Box Office 845-1234