The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 21, 1983, Image 8

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    Battalion Classified
FOR RENT
T^\EARLY BIRD
SPECIAL!
move in before finals
5 FREE RENT
until classes begin in January
ALL BILLS PAID
$295
and
up
1-2-3
Bedrooms
# APTS.
306 Redmond - 693-2614
NEW MINI
WAREHOUSES
Sizes available 5 x 5 to
10x30.
THE STORAGE CENTER
3007 Longmire
College Station
(near Ponderosa Motel and Brazos Valley Lumber)
764-8238 or
696-4203
696-5487
34tfn
2 bdrm. 2 bath dupiex^37o7
mo. or bdrm. 2 bath 4-plex
$435/mo. All kitchen ap
pliances; washer/dryer in
cluded at no additional charge
with 12 month lease; $30/mo.
for shorter lease period. Close
to campus and shopping cen
ters. Thomas Properties, 696-
7714 or 693-0982; after 6p.m.
696-4384 or 693-4783. sstie
Close to TAMU, Manuel
Drive, C.S. 2bdrm., 1 bath, w/
d connections, water paid, NO
PETS. $335/mo. 779-1613,
M-F.
35tfi
ARBOR SQUARE
One and two bedroom furnished
apartments available for im
mediate occupancy. Call 693
,3701 or come by 1700 Southwest
Parkway.
SOUTHWEST VILLAGE
One and two bedrooms avail
able for immediate occupan
cy. Call 693-0804 or come by
the office at 1101 Southwest
Parkway.
183tfn
HOUSES,CONDOS
TOWNHOMES &
duplexes
torrent. Call John Gregg or
Rick at Green & Browne Realty.
846-5701; 846-5196
BARCELONA
One and two bedroom apartments
available for fall/spring. Call 693-
0261 or come by 700 Dominik in
College Station.
' 183tfn
Z bdrm. 1.5 bath duplex. 10 minutes to
.ampus. $350. Call B. B. Scasta, Inc. 775-
1870. 177tfn
Three room duplex, kitchen, hath, $250. Southgate
January 1. 845-3866, 693-2345. 58tl
Convenient location 2 bedroom 1 1/2 bath, spacious
apt. all appliances including w/d, water paid near
shuttle bus. 693-3213
-5412
\<-w duplex Brvan residential area, moderately
prieed 821-879.1 alter 4:45. 58t5
OFFICIAL NOTICE
AGGIELAND REFUND POLICY
Yearbook fees are refundable in full during the
semester in which paymenbt is made. There
after no refunds will be made or cancelled
orders. Yearbooks must be picked up during
the academic year in which they are published.
Students who will not be on campus when
yearbooks are published, usually in Septem
ber, must pay a mailing and handling fee.
Yearbooks will not be held, nor will they be
mailed without the necessary fees having
been paid.
33tfn
DIRECTORY REFUND POLICY
Directory fees are refundable in full
during the semester in which pay
ment is made. Thereafter no re
funds will be made on cancelled
orders. Directories must be picked
up during the academic year in
which they are published.
PERSONALS
PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Abortion pro-
jceclures and referrals—Free pregnaney
testing. Houston, Texas (713) 524-0548.
187t76
WANTED
Needed ride to and from down
town Bryan to Physical Plant 5
days a week. Working hours 8
to 5. Please call 822-0872 from
7:30 to 9:00p.m. 54t4
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
SPECIAL NOTICE
ATTENTION
GRADUATING
SENIORS
IF YOU HAVE
ORDERED A 1984
AGGIELAND AND
WILL NOT BE ATTEN-
DIN A&M NEXT FALL
AND WISH TO HAVE
IT MAILED TO YOU,
PLEASE STOP BY
THE STUDENT PUB
LICATIONS OFFICE,
ROOM 230 REED
MCDONALD BUILD
ING AND PAY A $3.50
MAILING FEE ALONG
WITH YOUR FOR
WARDING ADDRESS
SO YOUR AGGIE
LAND CAN BE
MAILED TO YOU
NEXT FALL WHEN
THEY ARRIVE . 55t19
ALLERGIC
INDIVIDUALS FOR
ANTIHISTAMINE
STUDY
We are searching for 100
male, cedar or tree allegic
individuals to participate in
a scientific research study,
Dec. 83 through Feb. 84. All
applicants will be tested to
determine CEDAR orTREE
allergies before the study
begins. $100 for 18 day par
ticipation.Call after 5:30pm
775-0425.
53t6
HELP WANTED
Delivery help wanted. Aver
age $4-6/hour. Apply in per
son between 5-10p.m. dai
ly. 2400 S. Texas Avenue
across from Kroger’s, C.S.
58t13
£hanello\s pizza
Needs PIZZA MAKERS,
PHONE PERSONNEL, AND
DELIVER PEOPLE. We need
full-time and part-time. Apply in
person CHANELLO’S PIZZA,
301 Patricia Ave. or 2404 S. Texas
Ave. 38tfn
WANTED
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
i 24tfn
National Company Expanding
to Bryan-College Station area.
Immediate openings for food
counselors, good part-time or
career opportunity call 822-
5409 or 713-644-5307. 57t3
Real Estate appraiser trainee
position available in Houston
area for recent college gradu
ates. Contact Lee C. Burns &
Co., Inc. (713) 359-1110.5719
HOUSTON CHRONICLE is currently
hiring route carriers & solicitors for
immediate fall semester openings
Pay ranges between $400-$600 per
month plus gas allowance. For appt
please call Julian or Andy at 693-2323
or 693-7815 after 2:00 p.m.
Part-Time
Help Wanted
Grapevine
personality.
696-3411. E O F.
Page 8/The Battalion/Manday, November 21, 1983
Female Bartender, Hostess & Waitresses,
SILVER DOLLAR, 845-4591 or 775-
7919. 188tlu
Warped
by Scott McCullar
Still no answer to ‘why’
PART-TIME help wanted. Apply at Piper’s Gulf.
Comer of Texas and University. 56t5
Investigators slow cleanup
United Press International
BAYTOWN — A spokesman
for the Southern Pacific Rail
road Sunday said investigators
know generally what happened
in a two-train collision which kil
led four people, hut do not know
why.
“We know that the work train
ran into (he cars parked on the
branch line,” said spokesman
FOR SALE
We have one car too many! Will
sell ’81 Omni, 4-door, $4200 or '82
Dodge 400LS, 4-door, $6800. Ex
ceptionally clean. Each has air,
automatic, cruise, AM/FM stereo
plus many extras. Nelson 845-
5057 or 845-5446 for appointment
to test drive. sets
Trailer-$8000-finance-furnished; central A/H;
washer/dryer. 846-1985 evenings. - 39t20
’72 Skyline Mobile home 2 bedrom 1 bath, car
peted, 12x50. $6400. Must sell, 775-1760. 56t5
TAKARA BICYCLE 12-speed $225, 846-3852 after
5 p.m. 56t4
Hanglider. Great shape Sensor-210. Best offer. Call
696-8837. 57t4
Batteries restored guaranteed 500 Carson, 822-
ilia 39t25
ANBA Ski pants-size 34-matching para-man s
medium-matching sweater-Lange ski boots size 10-
Make me an offer-call 260-9756-9 to 5 ask for
Boh 5St3
2 bdrm 2 bath end unit. Blinds, fans, fence,
$48,500. Call B.B. Scasta, Inc. 775-5870.
177tfn
ROOMMATE WANTED
Female to share condo, fire
place, washer/dryer, micro-
wave, pool, Jacuzzi. Close to
campus, $200 per month. All
utilities paid, 696-6176 after
5:00p.m. 58t2
Two roommates needed! Great apt. with w/d.
Cheap Rent! 822-2336. 54t5
Male roommate Spring semester, new two bedroom
townhome on shuttle bus route. Call Mike 696-
8332. 5715
Female roommate needed own bedroom and bath
$250 month 1/2 utilities. Margaret 846-9480.50t 10
SERVICES
UJORD
PROC6SSING
S€RVIC€
Post uuord processing ser
vice available for term reports,
term papers and uuhatever.
Reasonable prices. 10% dis
count uuith student ID for over 5
pages.
12/15/83
TH€ COMPUT6R
PLfiC€
707 Texas five.. Suite 1086
764-1190
5317'
ATTENTION GRADUATES
Preserve your diplomas, precious documents
& photos. Transform them Into beautiful, last
ing laminated wood plaques superior quality
TO ORDER CALL
ARTEMIS PLAQUES
775-6705 46t24
TYPING.
All kinds. Let us type your propos
als, dissertations, reports, essays
on our WORD PROCESSOR.
Fast service. Reasonable rates.
Business Communication Services
100 W. Brookside i
846-5794 isstfn
ON THE DOUBLE
All kinds of typing at reasonable
rates. Dissertations, theses, term
papers, resumes. Typing and
copying at one stop ON THE
DOUBLE 331 University Drive,
846-3755. tottn
Typing. Close to campus.
Theses, dissertations, re
ports, resumes, letters,
693-9689. 52t21
Typing <m word processing equipment. Experi
enced. We understand form and style. Automated
Clerical Services, 693-1070. 15158
AGGIE TYPING CLUB-$i.OOper page, no limita-
timi 764-0501-1:00 to 5:00 1>M. 4Q(20
WORD PROCESSING. Papers, reports, disserta
tions. etc. Fast, accurate, reasonable. 846-
6200 4812$
Typing, experienced, fast, accurate, all kinds, holi
days & weekend work, 822-0544. 52tl2
TYPING. Reports, Research papers, etc. Fast ser
vice, near campus. 696-0914. 56t5
GAYLINE (new number) 775-1797.
Quality, professional typing. Reasonable rates. 20
years experience. Marilyn. 693-7515. 52110
Typing 20 years experience means professional ser-
vice. 693-8.537 or 693-6483. 49t27
1 or 2 roommates wanted, walking to campus, lots of
space, good price, 846-9163. 57t8
LOST
Immediate opening, part-time handyman for prop
erty management company. Approximately 20
hours weekly, some Saturdays. Call Jacob Beal
Realty, 823-5469. ' 53110
Add-a-bead necklace with gold and pearl beads.
REWARD! Kathy, 779-2025 or 845-4921. 57t5
Hey Ags lost class ’84 ring name inside. If found
please call 775-8788. 55t5
Tony Aleman. “But why, we
don’t know.
“We have not moved the
equipment out of there. We are
making measurements, analyz
ing the data at the scene. As soon
as we accomplish that, our work
crews will come in and start
righting the equipment and
cleaning up the scene. We hope
to begin that today o r
tomorrow.”
Aleman said investigators
from the National Transporta
tion Safety Board, the Texas
Railroad Commission, local law
enforcement agencies and the
Southern Pacific were studying
the crash site to try to determine
what went wrong.
The only crew survivor, con
ductor James Wilbert Muchow,
59, of Hempstead, was in satis
factory condition Sunday at
Herman Hospital in Houston.
Muchow, riding in the
caboose, suffered two broken
legs and a broken arm, and had
to lay helpless more than two
hours before the wreckage was
found.
Authorities said Muchow
would he the main witness who
would he interviewed about the
accident.
The crash Saturday morning
was the second fatal rail accident
in Texas in eight days.
Last Saturday, an Amtrak
passenger train derailed in Mar
shall east of Dallas, killing four
people and injuring some 100
others. On Wednesday, a Kan
sas City Southern freight was di-
^ALPHA PHI
OMEGA^
FOOTBALL
Cmumsj
MSC
th (17)
9-4
t 081
9-2
m-t (21,22)
9-4
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9-12
Sbisa & Commons
th (17)
11-2,5-7
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Quad
11-2,5-7
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Prices: ^5,
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FREE On Campus
Delivery
Saturday
game day
2 Off Campus Pickup Locations
Typing. Symbols. Rubber stamps. Name/address
stickers. Reasonable rates, 823-7723. 29tfn
GARBOMEDICS, INC.
AUSTIN BASED
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
Project Engineer
Assist with, the development of new mechanical products into manufacturing. Re
sponsible for project management, product cost and schedule control. Coordinate
between design, manufacturing engineering, quality control, precision machine pro
duction finishing, process development and Q.C. evaluation. Requires BS Mechanical,
Material, Industrial Engineer with hands-on mechanical machine shop experience
or research experience in mechanical & physical property relationship.
Scientist Positions
Provide technical support to Department of New Product Technology. Major emph
asis will he to expand activities in polymer science for CMI corporation for use in
medical implant devices
Scientist I/Chemist
Individual will perform, under supervision or semi-independently (1) the synthesis
of monomers and intermediates required for, and the polymerization of, ultimately
human-implantable polymeric materials, and (2) the serial preparation of implant
able-grade test samples as well as their post-implant analyses. Must have a B.S. or
equivalent in chemistry or chemical engineering, good acumen for and dexterity in
handling organic materials in glassware.
Scientist I/Engineer
Individual will perform under supervision, or semi-independently (1) the design,
fabrication and assembly of apparatuses and fixtures required for the serial prepara
tion and mechanical testing of original and implant-recovered polymeric materials;
(2) the serial preparation and analysis of implantable and implant-recovered test
samples; and (3) assistance in experimental animal implantations and explanations.
Must have B.S. or equivalent in mechanical or biomedical engineering, good exterity
and some general understanding of known mammalian physiological processes.
CarboMedics can offer a competitive salary, extensive benefits, and the potential for
professional advancement in beautiful Texas Hill Country! Please forward a resume to
our personnel department or call:
GMI
Carol J. Vaughn
Senior recruiter
1SOO-C East Anderson Dane
Austin, Tx. 78788
C818) 837-1741
Equal Opportunity employer M/F
CARBOMEDICS. INC
continued from
verted into a lumber yard in
northeast Louisiana, collided
with flatcars and exploded, kill
ing one person and injuring six.
In Saturday’s accident, the
work engine, which handles
switching of cars in the heavily
industrial Baytown Yard, was
pulling 10 hopper cars and a
caboose before dawn when it
crashed at 20 miles an hour into
41 tank cars standing on the line
waiting for assignment to trains.
The force of the impact man
gled the caboose, knocking it 27
feel off the tracks. The first two
tank cars behind the caboose de
railed, a third car was partially
knocked off the tracks and the
fourth car landed on lop of the
locomotive, shearing off the
hack end of the engine.
Aside from physical dang
Dr. Emily Davidson, a Tei
A&M psychology professor,san
the emotional scars the raoii
leaves on the younger
could cause problems.
“The gruesome, bloody pan
will affect those kids under ill
age of 12,” she says, “whileil
shootings and riots won’t be
much of a problem. Thelili
kids see this type of violences]
every night.”
She says nightmares w
the biggest problem the chi
will face.
However, the headofilti
educational psychology depa:
ment at Texas A&M disay
and says the film was not a
tremely violent.
Michael J. Ash says the fils
was not sensational; it simiT
dealt with an unpleasantsubje
matter.
“ I t bought it was a well
prepared film,” Ash says."Ilpj
pretty soft. The film maht
could have made a muchm®
terrifying film. It (the
didn’t go out of its way toll
horrible.”
Ash said that the film wills,
mulate people to thinkabouitli
possible consequences of
lear war.
“It was thought-provoking’
Ash says. “It will get peoplt
discuss things that theynormab
don’t talk about. School boani
have recommended that lie
teachers discuss the I
their students. I think thisisa:
excellent idea.”
Ash also says that politicalb
lief s were balanced in the film
“It was very even-handed
political undertones. Ith
more believable than I thou
it would he and well within
bounds of artistic taste.” 1
Soviets
re-entr
readied
United Press international
MOSCOW —Two Soviet
monauts are simulating Eai
gravity by wearing a sped
vacuum suit to prepare fort!
return home after nearly
months of orbiting in theSalvi
7 space station, Tass sa
Sunday.
The of ficial Soviet ne*
agency did not say when
men, who blasted off June
would return to earth, but Wet
ern experts have predicted ibe
will re-enter the atmosphen
during the night late this wed
possibly Thursday.
Cosmonauts Vladimii
Lyakhov and Alexander Alo
androv are taking turns pulli)
on a special pneumatic vacua
suit called a “chibis,” wind
through dif ferential pressui
simulates the Earth's grawM
the hotly, Tass said.
They are taking other medi
al measures in preparation
their return home, Tass sail
hut gave no details.
“The crew went throughlli
whole program,” Tass saii
“There were no failures,
tenseness in relations was felt
tween the cosmonauts. The
tire program was carriedouU
planned.”
Tass said the two cosmonai#
also were preparing the Salyut
orbiting space station logo®
automatic pilot as it will be®
manned after they abandoni
The Soviets attempted
send a replacement crew told
station hut a launch pad expk
sion in September scuttledd*
mission. The thiee-persoiutt 1
escaped unharmed.
U.S. eases
travel rules
for Soviets
United Press International
WASHINGTON —Thef
eminent has eased some 1®
on Soviet diplomats traveling
the United Stales, but alsoc’
dared several major cities
limits for the first time, the
Department said Sunday.
“We did present totheSo^
Embassy a new set of areas ind*
United States closed to travel
certain Soviet citizens,” de]#
ment spokeswoman Solid 11
McCarty said.
“At the same time,"!! 1
added, “we also reiteratede
long-time policy favoring
mutual abolition of travel rt*
triclions by both countries."
The new travel rules, (Id
vered in a confidential note I*
Wednesday, were issued afltt
lengthy State Department stud
of the Kremlin’s 1978 revision
its restrictions on travel ind*
Soviet Union by U.S. diplomat
McCarty said.
It is the first revisionoftra*
regulations for the Soviets sin 1
1967.
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