The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 15, 1983, Image 4
Page 4/The Battalion/Wednesday, June 15, 1983 Battalion Classifieds FOR RENT LOCALLY OWNED PROPERTIES “IT MAKES A DIFFERENCE” CASA BLANCA G, COURTYARD T APARTMENTS “COLLEGE STATIONS STANDARD OF QUALITY” 600 UNIVERSITY OAKS C.S. STALLINGS DR. AT HWY. 30 & UNIVERSITY OAKS 693-2772 - 846-1413 ‘‘CONVENIENT QUALITY CLOSE TO THE CAMPUS” 4110 COLLEGE MAIN -BRYAN- SHUTTLE BUS — SECURITY PROGRAM — CABLE TV — LAUNDRY MEETING ROOM — POOLS — RECREATIONAL FACILITIES NEW TOWNPLEXES WOODWAY VILLAGE ONE MONTH FREE RENT 2 Bedroom, bath, W/D connections, major kitchen appliances, carpet, drapes, convenient to TAMU. JOE COURTNEY, INC. 696-4203 Office at 512 West Loop OTHER DUPLEXES AND FOURPLEXES AVAILABLE. CALL FOR INFORMATION. SERVICES TYPING. All kinds. Let us type your propos als, dissertations, reports, essays on our WORD PROCESSOR. Fast service. Reasonable rates. Business Communication Services 100 W. Brookside 846-5794 isstfn FALL HOUSING QUIZ? 1. Apartment ? 2. Condo ? 3. House ? Answer House Why? Lease/Purchase! Gets you and future family Ags a real place to live PLUS the tax advantages of ownership MINUS the debt. Call B.B. Scasta Inc. for information. 775-5870. >ack porch, Fenced yard, $350, 775-5191. 150tli apts. Three blocks From campus, central air. $2(M) to $300, 779-3700. I54t9 WOBD PHOOESSINC. Papers, dissertations, etc. Fast, accurati able. 846-6200. reports, , reason- 157112 Pat s T\ pinu Serv ice, 693-8361. 157(12 Custom Typing and word prove sumes. last, reasonable. 779-7868 'ising, rc- 157120 K’S TYPING SERVICE. Reports, Thesis', etc. 775-7710, 272-8200 (after 5) 16()tll Seamstress: Women’s and Children’s, for mal and casual wear. Some alterations. Call Noami, 846-6291. 160t3 PROBLEM PREGNANCY? F nanev testing and also referrals. Texas (713)524-0548. ee preK- Houston, 152138 Typing, experienced, fast, act kinds 822-0544. mate, all 153tfii SPECIAL NOTICE Battalion Classifieds Call 845-2611 SUMMER GRADUATES NEW MINI WAREHOUSES Sizes available 5 x 5 to 10x30. THE STORAGE CENTER 3007 Longmlre College Station (near Ponderosa Motel and Brazos Valley Lumber) 764-8238 or 696-4203 Managed by Joe Courtney, Inc 75tfn ON YOUR MARK, GET SET, GO-ORDER YOUR GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS ROOM 217. MSC 8:00 AM - 4:00 PM MSC STUDENT FINANCE CENTER MONDAY — FRIDAY LAST DAY, JUNE 15, 1983 154 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 JOB OPPORTUNITIES FOR SALE A BARGAIN FOR 3 STUDENTS — practically new 3 bedroom, 2 bath 4-plex. Washer/dryer plus all kitchen appliances included. Close to university. As low as $145 per student. 696-7714/693- 0982. 129tfn 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 University 1973 VW Super Beetle, good condition, $1300 or best offer, Kathy, 693-3741. 160t3 1980, 14x60 mobile home on large wooded lot horse pasture. Must sell. Best offer. 696-3462. I60t5 Suzuki 450, 1981, helmet, 6500 miles, $1000, 693-1264, after 6 p.m. 159(7 Avon to scl 2880. buv. call Donna, 696- 1.57(8 78, Suzuki TS 125 excellent conditions $500. (/all 696-0244 alter 5 p.m. 15817 Honda 125 ’80 model bought new 1981, good condition, low mileage, 846-1104 al ter 5:30. 181(5 OFFICIAL NOTICE 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 Misc. Kitchen table, 4 chairs. Call Frank alter 6 p.m., 846-3413, 779-6421. 159(5 HELP WANTED SUMMER LEASES Close to campus. 2 bdrm 1V2 bath with washer and dryer. Large walk-in closets, spacious floor plan. Large sundeck in rear. $325, 693-8685. 138tfn AVOID FALL INCREASES RENT. Now available 2, one bedroom duplex, A/C, cable, large rooms, $100 deposit, $225, 779-4692, also 693-1984 for infO. ifintr* Education majors with business minor. Full-time work. Must be able to plan classes and present classes. Come by 409 N. Texas between 9-4 Monday-Friday. 15815 New Night Club Now Hiring All Positions SCANDALS 693-2818. 1- ATTENTION LIBERAL ARTS STUDENTS: CO-OP positions for fall are being filled now. The following positions are open: IBM (Journalism) in Houston Reynolds. Allen & Cook (Law Firm) in Houston Dillard’s (Management Trainee) in College Station The Brazosport Facts (sportswriter) in Klute, Texas Internship in Senator Lloyd Bentsen's Washington office Kroger (Management Trainee) throughout Texas IBM (Marketing) throughout Texas Foley's (Management Trainee) in Houston Sakowitz (Management Trainee) in Houston Psychology Technician (Dept, of the Army) in Alabama LOST LOST: Ladies watch at TAMU pool. If found call 260-5469. 160t5 ARBOR SQUARE One and two bedroom furnished, apartments available for im mediate occupancy. Call 693- 3701 or come by 1700 Southwest Parkway. 29tfn 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 LOST: Male dog solid black, $50 Howard, 1-925-5746. 15915 TYPING. Fast service, reasonable rates, 696-0914. 158(5 SUMMER RATES!! 1-plexcs close to TAMU. 2 bedroom. 1 bath, $250 a month. YV/D connections. Wa ter paid. No pets. Mondav-Fridav, 8-5, 779-1613. ' i52tlii WANTED Southwood Valley, 3 bdrm., place, garage, wood deck. 5191. 2 bath, $625, 1500.1 Southwood Valley contemporary duplex, 2 bdrm, Hollywood bath, covered back porch, fenced. W/D. $425. 775-5191.180(1,, 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 When Is Your Selling No Secret^ At All? WHEN OVER 30,000 PEOPLE _ READ IT IN THE BATTALION If you ve gof something to lliSjSBfiril w" we J l >' 00 ' mes r^LuT^I’lj sage across! And our big f-JJf/J readership guai you lots of prospects' 845-2611 Fire marshal says hotel in violation of fire code United Press International FORT WORTH — A fire which started in rolled carpeting piled in an entry hall early Tues- day destroyed one building in a sprawling Ramada Inn com plex, killing live people, injur ing 30 and forcing 150 guests to flee into a vicious thunderstorm. Fire Marshal Don Peacock said the five victims apparently died from smoke inhalation. They were found during three room-by-room searches scat tered along the length of the 87- unit, two-story brick and wood building, the only one of five buildings in the 303-unit hotel complex that burned. Assistant Fire Marshal Ches ter Robinson said the carpeting partially blocked one of the ex its. Guests had to step over the rugs to go in or out of the glas sed-in entryway into t(ie hall ways. “This hotel is in violation of the fire code for blocking an exit corridor,” Robinson said. “We ll more than likely issue a cita tion.” Expanding on the legal ques tion, Peacock said, “I’m sure it (the carpeting) helped create smoke in the building. The max imum penalty in a case of a viola tion is a $200 fine.” Neither man would speculate as to whether the carpet slowed the evacuation. A spokesman for four area hospitals said 30 persons were treated, primarily for minor smoke inhalation, cuts and bruises. Peacock said three of the bodies were found on the second floor, at each end and the middle of the building. The fourth victim was on the first floor at the east end. The fifth was not discovered until five hours after the fire started. “They were pretty badly burned,” he said, “but I’m sure the smoke got to them First.” The fire broke out at 3:24 a.m. CDT. A witness said the first flames were in a pile of rol led carpeting on the west end of a building in a first floor breeze way. Heavy smoke, blown by high wind from the thunder storm, billowed upward and through the hallways into the building. Flames followed quickly, burning eastward on the wind. T he lire went to five alarms — 26 pieces of equipment and 100 firefighters — within the first hour. Heavy rain and lightning from a thunderstorm rolled across Fort Worth about an hour after the fire broke out, serious ly accelerating the amount of smoke and dealing misery to the people evacuated from the ■<***■■ Y, '^BHi WQyr COV_>POM DAY rL t V DonTclM : come: give us a try EXPIRES 6/29 £1.09 VALUE. I# w/covpon TREE: OAMPLES^MIIUNIVERSITY o696-5508 Get Your Xerox Copies at Northgate Above Farmer’s Market Inexpensive, High Quality Copies We Specialize In REPORTS and DISSERTATIONS Also: Self-service copying, typing, reductions and enlargements, binding, resume writing, editing, business cords, wedding invita tions, stationery and many other services. One stop service for reports and dissertations. ON THE DOUBLE 331 University 846-37SS HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 7 a.m.-IO p.m. Sat. 9 a.m.-6 p.m. burning building and four near by structures. The fire was brought under control just before dawn, though mattresses and rugs con tinued to smolder into the morning. Boh Beike, 32, night auditor at the hotel said, “We showed 86 as registered in there, but that’s give or take a lew because not everyone is honest with you.” Guest Richard Brain of Lafayette, La said, “I woke up and some people outside were blowing their horns and holler ing, ‘Fire.’ I couldn’t find my pants at first, then 1 got a chair and broke the window out. Ab out that time, two women in the room above mine broke out their window and glass fell all over me.” Teacock said the building had no smoke detectors, alarms or sprinklers. It was built 10 years ago, prior to passage of a city ordinance requiring such safe guards. Most of the evacuees, many wearing pajamas or blankets, were given shelter in the lobby of a savings and loan company across the street from the hotel. Leon Kilpatrick, an Oklaho ma businessman,/fractured his left ankle jumping out a window and was admitted to All Saints Hospital. A woman who suf fered a f ractured heel from a window wasadi St. Joseph’s Hospital,k: al spokesmen refusedtoi her name. One guest, a f rom New York Citjt dined to give his name,i was standing in the hole in a nearby building) looked across the pah and saw the lire in ai near the carpet. “Within a minute its the whole buildingwasei| with smoke," he said. ' flames, initially, stayedi hallway. Then, they(iht| started breaking some were jumping,hi were af raid tojump.Wt| lady to jump. I brolek and she almost I Bh )\ving smoke redtij bilk v to near zero on h state 30 adjacent to th Authorities temporanli the exit nearest theh« t ommuters slowed toac ti \ and see the hotel thro heavy rain and smoke Two Oklahoma CityS < ials were stayingatt attnd a regional mee standardizing fire I hev were fire chief Om d\ and chief Jerry Smith er was hurt. Sergeant poisone by water hemlod United Press International LOS ALAMOS, N.M. — Au thorities confirm that a moun tain hiker died from eating wa ter hemlock and said his com panion, who also ate the rare and deadly plant, was in good condition at the Los Alamos Medical Center. Officials ;it Kirtland Air Force Base late Monday identi fied the dead man as Air Force Sgt. Dwight J. Ulrich, 26, who reportedly became one of only 84 known victims of water hem lock poisonings. The hospital ized man is Senior Airman Allen Dombrausky, also of the air base located in Albuquerque, N.M., who joined Ulrich in eating what they thought were water carrots during a hike Sunday in the Jemez Mountains. Dr. John Smialek of the state Medical Examiner’s Office said the Poison Control Center in Albuquerue told him that only 83 water hemlock poisonings have been described in the world. A third Kirtland li man First Class I Livens, did not eat < It’s a d< ! people except! wild plant, which thetiB counted along theeastil the Jemez River. B /"v ^ I lavens joined a hihB) (I 1 another party in adntEj| j cardiopulmonary res on Ulrich for 2Vt (ta futile effort to save him Jeff (kill of the Sandoval® Sheriff’s Departmentsi*| s-\ < v Dombrausky was takeiij. d Los Alamos MedicalCet® ambulance alter an en® United belie power emergency landing on tiftpey hoy \\.t\. (.ill said. in( l killed Leslie Jones of the®bend. Control Center said he® hard to distinguish froiiH^* ler '^ plants such as wild par®®*' 81 sa y art ichoke or wild carrot,® f 161, sometimes called Queen®' 11 S Lat e. She said hemlock®^ (,re sometimes called fool's®' 18 P* aN “look different at J®" Hern times in their growth.' ® e ' lovv f jpter hit a higli®ONRC able and had toitffihnty an kinko's copies JMter th Hn was Insulinlx: PROFESSOR PUBLISHING inhalatiij predict Class Readers at low costs to students. for more information call: 846-8721 or come by: 201 College Main MSC Summer Dinner Theatre presents \ RICH evenings of June 22-25 * room 201 MSC N 1C UTS MEALS STUDENTS NON - S TUDENTS We d ne sd a y Refresh men Is 82.50 8 3.50 Thursday Friday B - B * Q Dinner 86.50 89. 50 S 7. 5 0 Saturday Buffpl Dinner $10.50 Purchase tickets 24 hours in advance at MSC Box Office. United Press InternaM SAN ANTONIO-I c ard Medical School pi predicts some diabetics! able to inhale insulin th! nasal spray within thretf yars. In findings present day at the Americanf •: Associat ion’s 43rd Intert'lf:: Scientific Session inSat- nio. Dr. Alan C. Moses* ■ technique involves a nth'' insulin and abilesahii mercially available nasi 1 applicator. “We found that thej ef fectively crossed thetuf cosa and produced a pr« crease in insulin in the a corresponding dectf blood glucose levels Moses, a Harvard profess a resident of the Beth Hospital in Boston. He cautioned that lot; applicability of the if 1 ! was not yet known at more study was needed^ could he used on a wide basis. “However, if it does feasible with continued insulin by inhalation o available to patients three to five years,"Mo* Almost 11 million An'! have diabetes, a disease pancreas in which not insulin is produced. Ift essential to proper!) sugar and other foods. The nasal inhalation' que will probably not# place insulin injections,h time nasal administration replace extra injections* a mealtimes, he said. “BEA: ‘SWOI “SAVi LI! TICKETS GO ON SALE: JUNE I I) i n n rr» - 6 3 0 -7:45 IN THE HAS’ WES J