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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 22, 1983)
\YW v\\\\U' Mill IWWWWMUl 1\\\ Ulll/ i- .11 Battalion Classified Page 12AThe Battalion/Tuesday, November 22, 1983 FOR RENT NEW MINI WAREHOUSES Sizes available 5 x 5 toi 10x30. THE STORAGE CENTER 3007 Longmire College Station (near Ponderosa Motel and Brazos Valley Lumber) 764-8238 or 696-4203 696-5487 34t16 2 bdrm. 2 bath duplex $370/ 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. sene HOUSES,CONDOS ’ TOWNHOMES & ’ DUPLEXES for rent. Call John Gregg or Rick at Green & Browne Realty. 846-5701; 846-5196 Close to TAMU, Manuel Drive, C.S. 1 bdrm, w/d connections, water paid, NO PETS. $335/ mo. 779-1613, M-F. SOUTHWEST VILLAGE One and two bedrooms avail-r able for immediate occupan cy. Call 693-0804 or come by the office at 1101 Southwest Parkway. . _ 183116 FURNISHED FOUR BED ROOM HOME FOR RENT. Spring semester, close to cam pus, decks, trees and fenced yard, office, garage workshop. 845-3139 (days), 693-3894 (eves), sat? BARCELONA One and two bedroom apartments available for fall/spilng. Call 693- 0261 or come by 700 Domlnik in College Station. ARBOR SQUARE One and two bedroom furnished apartments available for im mediate occupancy. Call 693- 3701 or come by 1700 Southwest Parkway. 2916 Convenient location 2 bedroom 1 1/2 bath, spacious apt. all appliances including w/d, water paid near shuttle bus, 693-3213 54t7 New duplex Bryan residential area, moderately priced. 823-8793 after 4:45. 58t5 2 bdrm. 1.5 bath duplex. 10 minutes to campus.-ISSO. Call B.B. Scasta, Inc. 775- 5870. 177tfh 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 ^RECTORY 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 cedures and referrals—Free pregnancy testing. Houston, Texas (713) 524-0548. 187t76 WANTED •cash- before YOU SELL your old gold, silver, and rare coins to just anyone, let the profession als at Texas Coin Exchange make you our high cash offer! Texas Coin Exchange has! been in business in Bryan for over 25 years, with a large selection of rare coins and gold coin jewelry. We also stock: •Black Hills gold jewelry •Gold chains by weight TEXAS COIN EXCHANGE 404 University Dr., C.S. 846-8916 3202A Texas Ave., Bryan 779-7662 CASH FOR OLD GOLD Class rings v wedding rings, worn out gold jewelry, coins, etc. The Diamond Room Town & Country Shopping Center 3731 E. 29th St., Bryan 846-4708 LOST Hey Ags lost class '84 ring name inside. If found please call 775-8788. 55t5 Help Aggies lost '84 class ring, Tuesday, November 15. Inscription inside. REWARD. Please call 693- 1488. 59t5- SPECIAL NOTICE ATTENTION GRADUATING SENIORS IF YOU HAVE ORDERED A 1984 AGGIELAND AND WILL NOT BEATTEN- 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 Add-a-bead necklace with gold and pearl beads REWARD! Kathy, 779-2025 or 845-4921. 57t5 HELP WANTED Part-Time Help Wanted Grapevine personality. 696-3411. E.O.E. 55 ti B 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 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. Real Estate appraiser trainee position available in Houston area for recent college gradu ates. Contact Lee C. Bums & Co., Inc. (713) 359-1110.5719 WANTED 11 ' "' 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 24116 I^A^ELLO’S PT25A 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. 38t1n 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 Apartment maintenance and material handler. Must have plumbing experience, 260-9783. 59tl() Female Bartender, Hostess & Waitresses, SILVER DOLLAR, 846-4691 or 775- 7919. 188tfn Immediate opening, part-time handyman for prop erty management company. Approximately 20 hours weekly, some Saturdays. Call Jacob Beal Realty, 823-5469. 53tlO PART-TIME help wanted. Apply at Piper’s Gulf. Corner of Texas and University. 56t5 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 2 bdrm 2 bath end unit. Blinds, fans, fence, $48,500. Call B.B. Scasta, Inc. 775-5870. 177tfn Hanglider. Great shape Sensor-210. Best offer. Call 696-8837. 57t4 TAKARA BICYCLE 12-speed $225, 846-3852 after 5 p.m. 56t4 '72 Skyline Mobile home 2 bedrom 1 bath, car peted, 12x50. $6400. Must sell, 775-1760. 56t5 Trailer-$8000-finance-furnished; central A/H; washer/dryer. 846-1985 evenings. • 39420- AN BA 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 Rob. 58t3 Batteries restored guaranteed 500 Carson, 822- 1719. _ 39t25‘ 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 Female roommate needed own bedroom and bath $250 month 1/2 utilities. Margaret 846-9480.59*10 1 or 2 roommates wanted, walking to campus, lots of space, good price, 846-9163. 57t8 Male roommate Spring semester, new two bedroom townhome on shuttle bus route. Call Mike 696- 8332. 57t5 SERVICES Typing. Close to campus. Theses, dissertations, re ports, resumes, letters, 693-9689. 52t21 Quality, professional typing. Reasonable rates. 20 years experience. Marilyn, 693-7515. - 52tI0 Typing 20 years experience means professional ser vice. 693-8537 or 693-6483. 49t27 Typing, experienced, fast, accurate, all lands, holi days & weekend work, 822-0544. 52tl2 Board, computer games top list Toys bought for grown-ups, toi United Press International The toys under the Christmas tree this year may bring squeals of delight from adults as well as children. Grown-ups are buying more toys for themselves and other adults — including flashy, high- tech video games and traditional dolls and trains. Nearly all the more than 130 board games and 70 computer and video games produced by the Avalon Hill Game Co., of Baltimore, are designed for adults. Its best seller to store buyers worldwide is G.I. Anvil of Victory, a $30 military game, according to Ronald J. laPorte, Avalon’s marketing manager. Board game manufacturers have responded to the video challenge with adaptations of popular electronic games such as Pac-Man, Frogger and Donk ey Kong. Computer chess games in clude Grand-Master Chess, $500, and Monopoly Paymas ter, $65. New board games include: Monty Plays Scrabble Brand Crossword Game, $150; Milton Bradley’s Upwords, $10, a three-dimensional word game; Carolina Biological Supply Co.’s Oh My Deer, $17.95, which allows players to try to control the progress of a deer herd through a six-year life cycle in the wild; and Selchow & Right- er’s Trivial Pursuit Genus Edi tion, $40, with 6,000 trivia ques tions for two to 24 players. M It looks as though Trivial Pursuit is going to be this year’s winner,” said Ian McDermott, senior buyer for F A O Schwarz, the famous New York-based toy store. One of the biggest adventure games is Sierra On-Line’s Time Zone — at about $100, a micro epic of 12 disk sides with 1,300 places to go from the stone age to the space age in nine time periods. The game is so vast that Source Telecomputing Corp., of McLean, Va., has created a national solving club, The Vault of Ages, for subscribers. Another lifestyle change re flected in toy sales is the con tinued popularity of such hob bies as collecting and operating trains. Norman Ricken, president of Toys R Us, the nation’s largest toy chain, said people tend to buy expensive, adult- and fami ly-oriented toys during hard times instead of spending on vacations and other luxuries. That helps explain the im mense popularity of videogames, which can cost hun dreds of dollars as families add accessories to plug into existing sets. One example is Turbo, for $70, a high performance race car game. Coleco Industries has intro duced a third-generation video game system for $160 per set. Several firms make home models of arcade games. Coleco expects to ship one million of its table-top versions of arcade favorites such as Ms. Pac-Man, Donkey Kong Junior, and Zaxxon, to retail at about $50 each. To enhance the color quality of home computers and video game systems, Panasonic makes a 13-inch Grade Color Monitor, featuring the depth and feel of arcade games, for about $450. ADAM (under $600) is a com plete, single package family computer with all necessary hardware and software, includ ing a letter quality, daisy printer. The Smith Corona Correct III Messenger, $600, and the plug-com| Messenger Module,Si together transform a ty| into a computer primer. Dolls have replaced the second most popular tible after stamps, sai Schwartz, national sales ger for Madame Ale Dolls. Alexander’s new lines® a Ladies of the Opera sJ featuring such characttl Mimi from “La Boheme" For $6,500 you can! World Dolls’ 16-inch porta Marilyn Monroe, compleic| full-length, white minkc Ben Kahn, a silver meshgot Louis Nichole, and dial earrings and necklace. Kennedy continued from page 1 Warren, to investigate the assas sination. The Warren report con cluded that Oswald had acted alone. Critics of the Warren report say it ignores evidence that Oswald and Ruby were a part of a conspiracy. In 1978, the House Select Commission on Assassi nations reported the shots that killed Kennedy and wounded Connally had been fired by Oswald. based on a recording motorcycle policeman’s But, from a radio, a fourth shot was fired from a grassy area just west of the depository. The report says the shot missed. In 1982, the National Academy of Sciences reported the fourth shot had been re corded at least a minute after the assassination. On Nov. 22, 1963, the United States lost its 35th president, who had challenged youth to, “ask what you can do for your country.” The University of Texas Health Science Center in Dallas issued a news release from the physicians who treated Kennedy after the shooting. “Americans will never forget the horror of blood and bullets that began that Friday after noon and ended in a television murder two days later,” the re lease read. “A nation remem bers a silent young widow, her pink suit stained with her hus band’s blood, removing her wedding ring and placing it on the finger of the man she loved.” Jackson continued from page 1 Minister) Begin — until a solu tion had been found. “Neither (President Ronald Reagan nor Soviet Premier Yuri Andropov) has the courage to risk polities for the people,” he said. “We need a president who will risk polities and personal career and save the world from nuclear holocaust.” Jackson said that, if elected, he would challenge Andropov to meet him in Geneva and would he willing to stay with him “as long as (former Presi dent) Carter stayed with (for mer Egyptian President) Sadat and (former Israeli Prime The United States needs a president who will create the atmosphere that everyone is im- portant and everyone has a place, Jackson said. He said minorities must get involved if they are to have a voice in politics. Jackson said his candidacy is registering more minority vo ters than all the other candi dates combined. issue, Jackson said. The paign will open the door minorities to become more solved in all levels of govi ment. And defending his pi to choose a woman rum mate, Jackson said if Ini Chandi and Margaret nuti can run their countries,' the poor can survive threey of Reagan, sure a woman run this country.” Asked if the United State ready for a black presideu But the possibility of electing a black president isn’t the main Jackson said. If Texas A&Ma start a black freshman quarte | back. I’m ready to run. Robots get ready to move into homes and vacuum Texas and N freshi I Sail United Press International GOLDEN, Colo. — While s SCHULlMAN THEATRES Mon-fmly nita-Sch 8 Tue-(mly nito-ME III SCHULMAN 6 2002 E. 29th 775-2463 775-2468 THE BIG CHILL 7:10 9:k MR. MOM 7:20 9:40 THE GREY FOX 7:309:50 AMITYVILLE-3D Trm A CHRISTMAS STORY 7:359:55 TRADING PLACES: Serving Luncheon Buffet { Sandwich and Soup Bar Mezzanine Floor Sunday through Friday 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. thousands of Americans are rushing out to buy the personal computer they hope will enrich their children’s lives, a handful of others are holding out for the personal computer they are sure will vacuum their carpets — a robot. The robotics industry is tak ing off, both technologically and in sales interest, observers say. One of the leaders in the in dustry is RB Robot Corp. of Gol den, which says it will have by L early next year a robot that can 5 vacuum your floors, remind you L that your mother-in-law’s birth- day is tomorrow as well as ba- lance your checkbook. ^ In the opinion of robotics in- clustry analyst Jeannine Athas, • “someone is going to make a lot f* of money.” “It’s the industry of tomor row. I intend to stay on top of it,” said Athas, who works for Con sulted! International, a high- tech consulting and research firm in California. K United F JEW Ok aid punt iprings for lifted lit |28 decis jed New New Orl mnevert f night, i ve into a MANOR EAST III Manor East Mall 823-8300 7:15 9:40 RUNNING BRAVE 7:25 9:45 ALLTHE RIGHT MOVES 7:15 9:50 NEVER SAY NEVER AGAIN Delicious Food Beautiful View Open to the Public “Quality First” Athas recently completed a study of the robotics industry and market for a group of potential investors in Europe. In the process, she said, she unco vered an industry on the verge of exploding onto the commer cial scene. The robotics industry is ex pected to have sales of $13 mil lion in 1983, her analysis shows, with the average robot costing $2,200. In 1984, those sales are pro jected to total $40 million, and by 1986, they will reach $750 million, she said. By 1988, the industry have sales of $2 billion, at® ‘ e ^ 1 c ' ing to Athas, and theaufc’J. 1 9 ua cost of a robot will havedrej to $1,600. ; The RB Robot Co., A said, manufactured the! mass-produced inielld robot, called Toby, whichra trod need to the marleiL November of 1982. MasM^ ^ es duction began the nextm Tl' ear ^ c ' Currently, Toby cangentljr 11 tae ) musical tones, move aroun® vanta S e floor sensing obstaclesinilijB rter - . and moving to avoid theni.Jr ut Kl( when hooked up to a compi|r e ^ re<a tv J keyboard and screen, caij ed In ^ used as a home computer i en , stu 1 In the next three orf® 1513113 months, however, RB oft® his sj: said, Toby’s capabilitiesi«lB tcarne< J panel dramatically. Am other things, Toby will be alt vacuum the floor. “In the first partofl98ij navigation system willbeal* map t he floor plan of house,” said RB spokesm Nelson. It will have a ta w' ! u 1 *" attachment, as well as a<® aiK:e , enabling the owner to pro(WT nn S s the time the robot is to vai the floor. “The robot also voice recognition ca that you can program it by talking to it,” Nelsonsa Other options for the] robot owner will includeate lar alarm attachment, and! sors that can detect fire and 1 the fire department. The four robots on then ket now are just the “Model of the robotics industry, ho* er, she said. ond wir es and nday nt Morten H-yard tie •he Saints VI could u p the im< to the left SERVICES ON THE DOUBLE All kinds of typing at reasonable rates. Dissertations, theses, term papers, resumes. Typing and copying at one stop ON THE DOUBLE 331 University Drive. 846-3755. ions ATTENTION GRADUATES Preserve your diplomas, precious documents & photos. Transform them into beautiful, last ing laminated wood plaques superior quality. TO ORDER CALL ARTEMIS PLAQUES 775-6705 46124 TYPING. All kinds. Let us type your propos als, dissertations, reports, essays on our WORD PROCESSOR,, • Fast service. Reasonable rates. Busines$ Communication Services 100 W. Brookside ' I 846-5794 isatib TYPING. Reports, Research papers, etc. Fast ser vice, near campus. 696-0914. 56t5 WORD PROCESSING. Papers, reports, disserta tions, etc. Fast, accurate, reasonable. 846- 6200, AGGIE TYPING CLUB-$1.00 per page, no limita- tion. 764-0501-1:00 to 5.00 PM. 40t20 Typing. Symbols. Rubber stamps. Name/address, stickers. Tteasonable rates, 883-7723^ ~ 29t6 Typing on word processing equipment. Experi enced. We understand form and style. Automated s,- 693-1070. I5t58 A Picture Worth a Thousand Words That Costs But a Few Dollars. MSC Camera Bonfire Print Sale Pre-sale: 1st floor tables MSC 10am-2pm Nov. 14-18,21,22 8x10 - $3.50 11x14 - $8.00 16x20 - $15.00 Official TAMU Bonfire photo Prints ready Nov. 26th Prices increase after Bonfire Aasli spoil befrw duct: Matf or pf Prov asis med Indi of in huir able equi barn Indi fabr tion (2) sam Mus and Cart prol our