V\Y),\: , . . i. Battalion Classifieds FOR RENT Page 14/The Battalion/Monday, January 16, 1984 r PEPPER TREE APARTMENTS Landmark Properties, Inc. •Shuttle bus •Free cable tv •Security guard •Partyroom •Swimming pool •Laundry facilities *1-2-3 bedrooms *6 different floor plans •Lots of closet space •Excellent maintenance crew •Convenient to shopping areas FREE • Scuba Diving classes • Martial Arts classes 2701 Longmire Tutoring Service Aerobic classes 693-5731 Hours: 9 to 6 Mon.-Fri. Sat. 10-4 Drive College Station 75110 NEW MINI WARE HOUSES Sizes available 5x5 to 10x30 THE STORAGE CENTER 3007 Longmire College Station (near Ponderosa Motel and Brazos Valley Lumber) 764-8238 or 696-4203 696-5487 SOUTHWEST VILLAGE APARTMENTS Best Atmosphere In Town. Like Living In A Park. WE FEATURE Interior Green Space with Creek & Trees-Swimming Pool-Club Room- -Jacuzzi-Sauna-Tennis Court- s-Shuttle Bus Service- 4 Distinctive Styles of Apt. NO DEPOSIT REQUIRED Children & Pets Welcome 1101 Southwest Parkway College Station, Texas 77840 409-693-0804 CASA DEL SOL TWO BLOCKS TO CAMPUS Pool, Jacuzzi, basketball goals, on premises security guard, 1st class mainte nance. 401 Stasney, C.S. (409) 696-3455 A 2 or 3 bedroom, 2 bath near TAMU, washer/dryer available from $350/mo. 696-7714 or 693-0982 after 6p.m. 696-4384. 75tfn Deluxe 2 bedroom 1 1 / 2 bath 4- plexes with washers and dryers. Some with fireplaces, fenced yards, cathedral ceil ings. Large walk-in closets, lots of cabinets. 693-8685, 775- 1600; 696-1660. 7 4ti4 A Bargain! 2 bedroom unfurnished apartment in modern, wooded 4- plex. 1.7 miles from campus. Near shuttle. Washer and dryer connec tions. Low rent! 693-7761. 7416 14x72 Schultz mobile home set-up, Live Oak Park, $16,500. Call Collect 512- 778-5135 after 7, Kay. Ivory single bed mattress box springs frai lent condition, SlUU.tX). 823-7069. Excel- 74t2 SERVICES SHORT COURSES McKenzie-Baldwin Business College Business Administration Executive Secretarial Word Processing & Computers 822-6423 72ti4 OLD LONDON CHIMNEY SWEEPS Residental Chimneys $45.00 Call 696-3648 Typing 20 years experience means professional ser- vice. 693-8537 or 692-6463. 49t27 SERVICES GAYLINE 775-1797- ROOMMATE WANTED Female/male roommate wanted to share duplex with washer/dryer. S170 + utilities. Two bedroom, one bath, call for info. 764-8886. 7ot5 SPECIAL NOTICE Soccer entries will only be accepted in the IM — Rec Sports Office, 159 East Kyle through Tuesday, January 17 at 7P.M. Re member to bring your ID and the team entry fee. For more informa tion contact the IM — REC Sports Office at 845-7826. 75t2 Although Intramural basketball has already started, the IM — REC Sports Office is currently accepting a limited number of late basketball entries. But don’t wait too long — drop by the IM — REC Sports Office, 159 East Kyle or call 845- 7826, Today! 75ts HELP WANTED FARM PATCH FRESH FRUIT & VEGETABLE MARKET Now hiring full or part time CHECKERS Apply in person between 1 — 4. 3519 S. College 779-7209 75t5 Immediate openings; Part- time evening telephone sales positions. Work from home or office. Excellent commission with guaranteed hourly wage for IN-Office training. Call Mark, 846-7592 or 846-8315 between 1-4 p.m. 74t10 SWENSEN “S Now interviewing for full time or part time COOKS, DISHWASHERS & FOUN- TAINEERS. Flexible hours, competitive wages. Apply in person at Culpepper Plaza, College Station. 75120 CENTRAL TEXAS HARDWARE Need part-time help for shop and cutting area. Some labor. No phone calls! 1901 Texas Avenue, Townshire Shopping Center. 75f3 Beautiful large one bedrm apt. Washer/dryer, built-in bookcase, large deck overlooking woods, 809 Yegua. 1-273-1797. 75t2 A big reducation, 3 bedroom, 2 bath in 4-plex, $375 near TAMl : , 693-5286. 74t6 FOR SALE Is it true you can buy Jeeps for $44 through the U. S. Government? Get the facts today! Call (312) 742- 1142 Ext. 8390. ' 75,4 AIRLINES ARE HIRING! Flight Attendants Reservations! $14- $39,000. Worldwide! Call for Directory, Guide, Newsletter. (916) 944-4440 Ext. TEXASA- &MAIR. 74t13 CRUISESHIPS ARE HIRING! $16-$30,000! Carribean, Hawaii, World. Call for Guide, Directory, Newsletter 1-(916) 944-4440 Ext. TEXASA&M- CRUISE. Hughes Aviation wants four part time employees willing to exchange work hours for flying hours. Interested? 779-6120. 74t5 Babysitter needed to sit on Saturday evenings. 775- 4957. 1 75t3 Part time housekeeper wanted 3 hours a week on Thursdays. 693-0022. 75t3 WANTED: Creative, energetic individual to work consistently 2 — 4 hours per week, placing and filling posters on campus. Earn $500 or more each school year. 1-800-243-6679. 7515 Part time. Delivery 6c warehouse person. Must have good driving record. 6 — 12 hours per week. Call Bill Deggs 775-4333. 75t5 Telephone sales. Temporary. Day or evening hours available, full or part time. Earn extra spending money. Call 693-5530. 75tl5 Apartment maintenance and material handler. Must have plumbing experience, 260-9738. 7QtlO Debate (continued from page 1) Mondale tried repeatedly to inturrept Glenn, saying, “Point of personal privilege! Point of personal privilege!” He finally said, “There’s just been a six mi nute speech and all of it is baloney.” Both men jumped to their feet before a stunned but amused audience of about 800. Mondale shouted as Glenn tried to interrupt him: “I have the floor! I have the floor!.” “The reason we have a $200 billion budget deficit is because you voted for Reaganomics,” Mondale scolded Glenn. “He voted for the B-l bomber, poison nerve gas. And he uses voodoo numbers to say what my programs would cost. My posi tion is responsible.” Askew sought to defuse the argument, quipping: “You’re both right about each other.” Jackson tried to play the role of peacemaker, but that didn’t stop Sen. Gary Hart, D-Golo., from leveling another blast at Mondale. “This party will not regain power as long as we listen to the leadership of the past Hart said. “Fritz (Mondale) you can not lead this nation if you prom ise everybody everything. “You’re right and I have not,” Mondale said. “I have promised to educate our children . and put America back to work and what is America if not that kind of promises?” Prior to the outbreak, the de bate had been a lively exchange among the candidates with little rancor. Hart did try to take some early shots at Mondale and the old style leadership he says most of his rivals are productions ar e. Each of the candidates seemed bent on carving out his own turf and image. Mondale worked hard on being presidential and experi enced, starting sentences with phrases like, “I was around when it worked,” or “I was at Camp David.” Former Sen. George McGovern, D-S.D., came to Mondale’s defense and said Democrats should avoid gang ing up on the front-runner and concentrate on defeatim? P* dent Reagan. Sen. Alan Cranston Dtia said he and Glenn did not J for Reaganomics as charJ only for the president’s ta«L because it was the only a 2F live available to fight in eJ;V McGovern was the cle ' liberal in the crowd; Askenl Sen. Ernest Boilings,D-Scl more conservative; GlenJr calm, organized alternatij Mondale; Jackson soughuol credible and responsible car/ date; and Cranston, theleadi peace candidate. Mideast (continued from page 1) “There was a lot of sniper fire on the airport. There is a little shelling around the airport,” Salam said. “Nobody has been hit and no plane has been hit.” The radio said the attack came just after an exchange of rocket-propelled grenades and anti-aircraft fire between army positions just south of the air port and the Druze Moslem re bels in the hills just to the east. The attack came at dusk in a day in which Syria, apparently confident of a U.S. withdrawal from Lebanon, vowed not to leave Lebanon until Israeli and American forces were gone. “President (Hafez) Assad has said that once an Israeli and an American withdrawal is achieved there will be no prob- ^ m ^BSSBSS3Sm SI £ “CHRISTINE”(R) — idftYw 11 1 “EDUCATING RITA” JP£> —rawsg SUDDEN IMPACT” (R) -S terms’Sf ENDEAR MENT” (PO) 7:35-9:35 g “HOT DOG” THE MOVIE Barbra Streisand “YENTL”(PQ) s &CHULMAN THEATRES Mon-Fmly Nite-Sch 6 Tue-Fmly Nite-MEIII SCHULMAN 6 2002 E. 29th 775-2463 775-2468 7:20 9:45 SACRED GROUND 7:35 9:55 UNCOMMON VALOR 7:25 9:45 MAN WHO LOVED WOMEN 8:45 SCARFACE 7:15 9:40 THE BIG CHILL 7:30 9:50 D.C. CAB MANOR EAST III Manor East Mall 823-8300 7:25 9:45 TWO OF A KIND 7:20 9:40 RISKY BUSINESS 7:15 9:35 ANGEL something for everyone in the want ads HELP WANTED Cashier needed Ol* J6c\V Country Stores. Apply in person at any location. '4t6 NORTH GATE PIZZA HUT needs Drivers and Cooks. Appl\ between 2 — 5. 75t5 Delivery work. No lifting. Temporary. Female or male. Must have own car. Call 693-5530. 75tl0 Fry Cook $4.50 per hour, dinner shift. Apply in person between 2-4 p.m.. Hill’s Restaurant F. 29th Street at Carter Creek. 74t6 Waitresses wanted. Silver Dollar, 846-4691 < 7919. •775- 75t20 PIZZA EXPRESS Now Hiring Delivery People • $3.75 Per Hour — Base Pay • 6% Commission on all deliveries • TIPS Apply 2314 Texas Avenue 319 Patricia (after 5:00p.m.) Monday thru Sunday! Counter help positions also available. lem to pull out Syrian forces from Lebanon,” official Damas cus radio said. The broadcast said that Sy rian forces, which originally en- tered in 1976 to end the Lebanese civil war, “did not come to Lebanon following an American decision and will not leave pending an American de cision.” The tough stance by Syria coincided with the departure of Lebanese Prime Minister Ghefik Wazzan and Foreign Minister Elie Salem for the Islamic Gon- ference in Gasablanca, Morocco. Salem is to hold another round of talks on the future of Lebanon with the foreign minis ters of Syria and Saudi Arabia during the conference. The last meeting of the three foreign ministers in Saudi Ara bia a week ago broke up without progress, with Syria insisting on the abrogation of the U.S.- mediated troop withdrawal agreement that Lebanon and Israel signed last May 17. British Foreign Secretary Sir Geoffrey Howe found Assad “uncompromising” during a meeting in Damascus last week, the London Sunday Times re ported. It said Syria wanted the message relayed to Secretary of State George Shultz during their Sunday meeting in London. The newspaper said Assad was so confident that public pressure in the United States will soon force President Reagan to remove the Marines from Beirut that Syria will make no concessions in Lebanon. The United States has a 1,800-man contingent in the 5,500-man multinational peace keeping force, which includes troops from France, Italy and Britain. Syria has an estimated 40,000 troops in the country and Israel another 30,000. Choice beef for stock shot on the hoof Jpen. Ill die DANCE INSTRUCTORS NEEDED © Sociel'jr Auditions for ballet and tap teachers will be: Tuesday, Jan. 24, at 7 p.m. in 268 E. Kyle For information call: VlCkl 260-5808 Rebeca 845-2665 _ § AJUDimCNS FEB. 21- 23 At) IP L| CAT I© NS A\A*I AH I MSC 21C PTE FEB, 3 4r v tM SARIIETT SIFCW^' United Press International DENVER — At the National Western Stock Show, the blow dryers whistled and the shears snipped at the gleaming hair on the backs of huge bovines as cat tlemen prepared their stock for “on-hoof” judging. The “on-hoot” appraisal has visual appeal and attracts large audiences. It gives the ranch families and their magnificent animals a chance in the big-city spotlight. But the fed beef cotest held in a nearby slaughterhouse is far more important to most cattle men and breeders. In the fed beef competition, three judges rate carcasses for quality. The results can mean hun dreds of thousands of dollars for ranchers over a period of years by helping them determine which sires produce “choice” beef. “These cattle are judged on the same things that would de termine their economic value to us,” said Rod Bowling, vice pres ident for research and develop ment for Greeley meat packer Montfort of Colorado, Inc. The beef packing industry will pay a premium for heel that receives the “choice” grading from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The price currently being paid for choice beef is $1.04 a pound, while the next category, good,” yields $.99 a pound. That means an extra $35 per head for an average, 700-pound carcass with a “choice” grading. An average feedlot conn 300 head of cattle. Thatmea difference of approximate $10,500 per lot. “There is no specific i value you can put on this," Ben Houston, president ofi Colorado Cattle Feeders ' ciation. “The benefits arc i rived over a long period lime.” you ii I viett : dt (The king id ab In ov( Willi; B) ■ Onl He said the show not oil helps the breeders identify best blood lines, butithelpso tie feeders determine the id. economical feeding method qJ Ranchers from seven tu ■ it brought their cattle to theca U* petition at the NationalWesra Stock Show, which startedits: day run last week. They m allowed to submit six head! slaughter, and could enter r. five of the six in the contest,a r n S 1 John Matsushima, a professotl I ^ animal sciences at Colorai r ran State University who supenis the contest. After the meat wasjudgd the winning carcasses werei" played in a cooler for theinsj* lion of the other cattlemen a the public. _ Larry Lind, 39, of Eaton,u orado, has won first or secoi place in the competition ef- times. “Mainly, it shows if y ou doing the right thing. Ifjj know the sire, you can pre the quality of the beef he produce,” said Lind. Lind two of his bulls have produi all of the winning carcasses far, and he can sell thebul men for $10 to $15 a unit Gangs threaten Illinois suburb United Press International EVANSTON, Ill. — Evan ston, the grand, smug, slightly prissy lady of Chicago’s North Shore, is finally learning about the grim facts of life. It is a frightening process and Evanstonians are scared. Scared that five street gangs, three of them owing allegiance to some ol the worst in Chicago, are prowling its leafy, gardened streets. Scared that people are being shot, stabbed, beaten and killed; that dope pushers, muggers, stickup men, bad sorts of all sorts are operating in their city. Scared their cherished belief that Evanston is somehow in- noculated against the sin and brutality of less worthy com- mumties (particularly Chicago, WHY PAY MORE? Buy Used Books and LOUPOT’S BOOKSTORE Northgate — Across from the Post Office that ugly place across the line) is very likely a misg 111 decision. „ ..j, “The fear is there M Smith said. “They’re all rush to get home before it g els dark on the street.” Smith is the black pubh 1 of a weekly community new ter. He, along with WilburHJ son and John Ingram, whipped together a ban some 250 men who cruise ston’s streets at night, 0 for trouble. . — “What we’re doing is ^ r rol, not to have aconfrontato said Ingram, an worker for Evanston Town High School. “If we can something before it getss then we have no problen 1 ' . “If there’s 15 or 20 an ^ want to start something, there’s 10 men there, - gone. The idea is. we re y toring. We re afraid for 0 drenifwe let this get out otn^ and that’s the fiat case. The Evanston poke , been worried about Oie g / for years. The city c ? un .J woken up. So have the and the churches. “Evanston has af' va v j| visioned itself as a su n ' grand old lady of .he J Shore,” Sgc. Gerald B the police organized cr , said. “It has a large elder P lation, a very wealthy cr tion of people. , c. r? A walk across Howard?! gets you from Chicago ston and what used different world. L , There is Northwester versity, one of the natlo ^-i ier e and most handsome. the national headqtiarte Woman’s Christian ance Union, still relishing temptation of the naU rS prohibition some 60 y ea 0