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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 27, 1984)
Battalion Olassifiod Page 8 ^" he Battalion/Monday, February27, 1984 Battalion Classified senate to vote ri HELP WANTED LOST PR WRITER/AE Trainee position in small Houston PR agency for re cent graduate with strong writing skills and high GPA. One-year previous Houston residency required. Send re sume to Julie Pratt, McDaniel & Tate, 5615 Kirby Suite 440, Houston, Texas 77005. 10012 LOST: TexavTrxas A&M Football game. Heavy gold bracelet. REWARD. Please eall (713)461- 4093,;IQOiO FOR RENT THE GREENERY is interviewing for positions on: ‘LANDSCAPE MAINTE NANCE CREWS ‘LANDSCAPE INSTALLA TION CREWS (Starting Pay $4.00 per hour) The Greenery is located at 1512 Cavitt (Near Ron Yokem Toyota) 823-7551. lOltU) Comfortable, spacious rooms available in large restored home in Bryan s Historic district. $160 per month, $100 deposit. Kitchen, washer/dryer privileges, cable T. V. connection, good parking. Private or shared bathroom. 811 East 29th Street, Telephone 775-0809. 95tio A 3 bedroom, 2 bath near TAMU, washer/dryer in cluded. $495/mo. 696-7714 or 693-0982 after 6p.m. 696-4384 7 „ n 30 part-time 10 full-time Pizza De livery men needed. Flexible hours. Paid daily. Apply in person only. CHANELLO’S PIZZA 2404 Texas Avenue Parkway Square Center or 301 Patricia Street. 103110 ASSISTANT MANAGER TRAINEE- wanted at FARMER’S MARKET BAKERY AND DELI.Minimum 35-40 hours/week. Restaurant ex perience required. Apply in per son, 2700 Texas Avenue, Bryan. 99110 CLOSE TO TAMU 4-plex 1 bedroom 1 bath, un furnished, all electric ap pliances, water paid, w/d con nections $270/mo. 779- 1613.94114 SERVICES TYPING All kinds. Let us type your proposals, dissertations reports, essays on our WORD PROCESSOR. Fast service. Reasonable rates. BUSINESS & COMMUNICATION SERVICES 100 W. Brookside 846-5794 92158 Female afternoon bartender. Waitresses, bar- tender. Call For Appointment, 846-4691 or 775- 7919. 104tll Needed: Dental receptionist-assistant. Will train. 775-1838. 94tl4 AIRLINES HIRING!! STEWARDESS, Reserva tions! $ 14-39.kOOO. Worldwide! Call for directory, guide newsletter. 1-(916)944-4440 TEXAS A&M AIR 87tl() 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. 9itfn OFFICIAL NOTICE TYPING. Reports, Research papers, etc. Fast serv ice. near campus 696-0914. 102t5 ATTENTION LIBERAL ARTS CO-OP STUDENTS If you have not checked in with our of fice within the last month, please con tact us as soon as posible. Summer and Fall positions are being filled at this time. We can be reached at 845- 7811, ■ ATTENTION LIBERAL ARTS STUDENTS CO-OP positions for summer and fall are being filled at this time. Contact 845-7814 or come by 420 Harrington Tower for more infor mation. 10315 K’s service. Dissertations. Thesis, Reports, etc. 775-7710 or 822-5027. lOOtlO Fastest tvping in town. 20 vears experience. Reli able. 693-8537. 693-6483. ' 92t30 TYPING We understand form and style. AUTOMATED CLERICAL SERVICES 110 Lincoln 693-1070 90136 WANTED FOR SALE 1973 Plymouth Valient. Excellent condition, in side and out. Radial tires; re-built engine; new oil and water pumps. $900. Call 693-5788 105t5 Is it true you can buy Jeeps for $44 through the U. S. Government? Get the facts today! Call (312) 742- 1142 Ext 8390. 75t4 Mustang Special option TRX aluminium rims 1982-84 $200.00, 696-5548,Ron. 105t5 1982 Yamaha Towny 50cc motorbike, low mileage, $350 includes 2 helmets, 846-7546. 103t5 1975 Yamaha 650, low miles, good condition. 693- 7059 after five. 103t5 COMPUTER OWNERS If you would like to sell your Computer, we wfll buy it. (we need Mcln- tosh s) 214-722-4489. IQltlO All wood 36x19 desk. 2 love seats sofa. Call 696- 8615. 105t5 PERSONALS SKI VAIL/Beaver creek call TOLL FREE 1-800- 222-4840 for discounts, Condos & equipment. 95t20 ROOMMATE 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 slock: •Black Hills gold jewelry •Gold chains by weight TEXAS COIN EXCHANGE 404 University Dr., C.S. 846-8916 3202A Texas Ave., Bryan 779-7662 82t42 Female roommate needed to share furnished house with other female sudents. South of campus, walking distance, quiet neighbor hood. Non-smoker, non-drinker $58.00 monthly. Bills paid. Free laundry facilities, 696-5286. losts SPECIAL NOTICE FOR RENT 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 75tfn IM WRESTLING WEIGH-INS are TO NIGHT from 4.30-6p.m. in East Kyle Men’s locker room #173. Entries will be acepted during that time. It’s FREE...just remeber to bring your Stu- dent/Rocreation ID! For more informa tion contact the IM-REC Sports Office, 159 East Kyle, 845-7826. 10511 SLAM DUNK CONTEST PRELIMI NARIES will be held TONIGHT, Mon day, Feb. 27 at 7 PM on the Main Floor of G. Rollie White Coliseum. Entries will be taken at the contest site. It’s FREE...just remember to bring your Student/Recreation ID! For more infor mation contact the IM-REC Sports Of fice, 159 East Kyle, 845-7826. I05tl 3 bdrm., 2 bath in 4-plex near TAMU $350.00. Work, lower rent. 693-5286. 105t5 Room, large furnished, bath, 1 block TAMU, private entrance; $150.00. - Work lower rent, 693-586. 105t5 TABLE TENIS PLAYERS! It’S time to prove who’ the best! So..sign up for IM Table Tennis Singles Tournament be fore 7 PM Tuesday, February 28 in the IM-REC Sports Office, 159 East Kyle. There is no entry fee. For further infor mation call 845-7826. 105t2 EARLY BIRD SPECIAL Sign a summer or fall lease on a one, two or three bedroom apart ment at BRIARWOOD APART MENTS before March 1st and be entitiled to our “Early Bird” rates. Apartments start as low as $190 per month. on prayer United Press International Lost Ladies gold Rolex watch with diamonds. Pos sibly in or around Rudder Center Friday evening. Reward, 779 7150 101t7 LOST: Female Blue Heeler. REWARD. (1)836- 5664 days (1)836-2986 nights. 103t4 Wedding ring lost on campus: Ladies white gold, checked pattern, reward, 846-1286. 103t5 LOST: High school class ring during Dead Week. REWARD. Call 693-8025. 105t4 WASHINGTON — Presi dent Reagan Saturday launched the opening salvo in an attempt to amend the Constitution to al low voluntary prayer in school, calling the prohibition on school devotion “intolerance against a genuine religious free dom.” He urged Congress to give the required two-thirds appro val to the amendment coming up in the Senate next week. Reagan devoted his weekly radio speech, a paid political program broadcast on the Mu tual network, to an attack on the 1962 Supreme Court decision outlawing state-sponsored prayer and subsequent federal court rulings against prayer meetings by students in public schools. The president has made re storing prayer in school a major campaign theme for his re-elec tion and said in his nationally broadcast news conference on Wednesday it is one of his top three priorities before Congress right now. /G / c, v \ '“x <1 Ky- JJ l \>U i- / / / \ \ \\ OL' Nud 5. Mlf: 1 HAVe Mi Ldiesm\ LOUD PARTIES m% f/F / 4 7 JiSfe i • J \ i-d J Hart narrows gap with Mondale B) United Press International WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manuscripts, transcriptions, reports, term papers, 779-7868. 9U25 ADOPTION- Loving, educated couple desires white newboi Expenses paid. Confidential. Legal (617)358-6354. Collect. 88t9 Number One in Aggieland &£hulman THEATRES Mon-Fmly Nlte-Sch 6 • Tu*-#mly Nlte-MEIII Student Disc. M-W $2 with I.D. SCHULMAN6 *• 2002 H. 29th 775-2463 775-2468 CONCORD, N.H. — Sen. Cary Hart, bouyed by a poll showing him finishing second in Tuesday’s New Hampshire primary, said Sunday the race for the Democratic nomination boils down to a contest between him and Walter Mondale. Hart’s new optimism came from a Washington Post-ABC poll that showed front-runner Mondale still well ahead, with 38 percent of the New Hamp shire vote to 24 percent for Hart. But it showed Sen. John Glenn of Ohio had slipped into third place with 14 percent of the vote. The Mondale camp seemed XSSU™ 7:35-9:55 RECKLESS 7:30-B:5t UNCOMMON VALOR 7:35-9:55 RISKY BUSINESS 7:25-8:45 FOOT LOOSE TTflCT' LASSITER 7:15 9:35 WEEKEND PASS MANOR EAST !l! Manor Fast Mall 823-8300, 7:10 9:3S YENTL 7:20-9:40 NEVER CRY WOLF TSTHs BROADWAY DANNY ROSE Mon.-Fr! t»| 6 p.m 30 o* the f*f »hc* dey Saturday 4 Sunday. Senior (6^ * *sver> Anvtir^* Students ail day Frida*/ All Seats Tuesday POST OAK MALL CINEMAS 764-0616 5:00-7:30-10:00 11-Academy Nominations “TERMS OF ENDEARMENT” (PG) 5:30-7:40-9:40 ‘UNFAITHFULLY YOURS” (PG) 5:15-7:45-9:55 “STAR 80” (R) ENDS THURSDAY CINEMA 3 315 COLLEGE NORTH 846-6/‘14 8:00 Only (Mo Disc.) 8 Academy Nominations “THE RIGHT 8TUFF”(PG) 5:1 £-7:30-10:00 Academy Nominated Straep A Otter In “SILKWOOD” (R) 5:45-7:45-9:45 BLAME IT ON RIO” (R) unconcerned about Hart’s new strength. The former vice presi dent left New Hampshire briefly to campaign in Maine and Vermont, the next two stops on the political calendar after New Hampshire. In Portland, Maine, Mondale refused to make any prediction on Tuesday’s outcome but said he is “doing quite well” in New Hampshire. The Post-ABC poll showed civil rights activist Jesse Jackson had 7 percent; former Sen. George McGovern of South Da kota, 6 percent; Sen. Ernest Hollings of South Carolina, 4 percent; Sen. Alan Cranston of California, 1 percent, and for mer Gov. Reubin Askew of Florida, less than 1 percent. At stake officially are 22 dele gates to the Democratic national convention in San Francisco in July. But for many Democrats the stakes are even higher — who will become Mondale’s chief challenger for the Demo cratic nomination and which ones will be able to continue the campaign through March 13, when nine states hold primaries and caucues. President Reagan has no se rious opposition for the 22 dele gates in the Republican pri mary. Hart said he is surprised to be so far in front of Glenn, his chief rival for second place, so early. “This race has solidified fas ter than our somewhat conser vative, cautious approach,” Hart told reporters on a cam paign swing through southern New Hampshire. Hart said the time is fast ap proaching when the race will come down to a contest between him and Mondale. “We’re going to begin to deal with multiple states," Hart said. “The contest will become much more like a national campaign." In a last-ditch effort to sway undecided New Hampshire vot ers, some 350 Hart volunteers canvassed the state during the last weekend before the pri mary, said Hart’s deputy state coordinator, Susan Casey. Hart’s surprise second-place showing in the Iowa precinct caucuses last week brought in a flood of contributions tliat will help pay for the $125,000 New Hampshire TV campaign blitz in the final week, she said. Despite the new poll, Glenn I AUS1 he! was c campaigned vigorouslyh i used to be coumedoui ^j nst0 n "We expect lodot st0 ] t . ev < ably better than we ^ fexr Iowa,” Glenn said on TjThe “Meet the Press”televi y anis a gram. “We have a lotc;§j es h< support in New Hamps E r T es> a expect to do very we: E ( j > an Glenn, who finished show hind Mondale in It-T Willitt knowiedged heisslippi. 25 poin polls in three Southern mu in that hold primaries or, W2I57 wi Tuesday, but he said il Texas, cause his effortsarefooM^yf a New Hampshire now. H n f ere Tuesday could be f 0 hurrah for several DemEyy; (m contenders, although j n a r \ owed to go on regal L er t h how far back in the fit!:r ea i ec j q finish. Ej ly mc Cranston, Hollin. Lnghoi Askew are considereditiM caree v ulnerable, with JacbB nts y, McGovern seen likely ear ij erl j through at least the to| ing March 13. Asked on CBS’s “Fml Williai _|ited h Nation" if he will fold den City he fares poorly in Ne» Id Kansas, shire, Cranston said:“lidded to ready deployed my trraafreshm Maine and I intend ton “ljust Maine to show whjtloi they mac that state." said. AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 3400 S. College 823 8051 ACLU says Reagan is subverting civil From 1 gies let game wa: urt pre and it w United Press International Spaghetti & Meat Sauce Platter $2.95 Sangria Pitcher 03.50 Special good 4 p.m.-7 p.m. Sunday thru Thursday 404 East University I>r. 696-7311 lion. Tex crimination in federal::on ea^ , WASHINGTON — The Reagan administration has un dermined Gongress and the courts by refusing to enforce civil rights laws as they were in tended to be enforced, the American Civil Liberties Union said Sunday. The ACLU issued a 28-page report outlining a “radical and shameful assault” on civil rights enforcement that “could plunge the country back into historic patterns of race and sex dis crimination.” “The assault is being led by President Reagan, directed by his White House advisers and carried out by the attorney gen eral and top officials in the De partment of Justice,” it said. “Its effect is a drastic curtailment of civil rights protection for mil lions of Americans and the un dermining of our Constitution and the rule of law.” The report, entitled “In Con tempt of Congress and the Courts,” listed a series of inci dents in which it said the ad ministration ignored or failed to enforce the Voting Rights Act, the Fair Housing Act and non-disrimination provisions of federal tax laws. It also said the administration refused to protect the rights of the mentally handicapped and “contravened congressional in tent” of laws banning sex dis- essions. education programs. T'he Justice Deparimtii ied the allegations. “Although the orgffii hasn’t shown us thecoiiiit| letting us see the so- port, from the title: clear that it was purely political motives«B en swit prepared by peoplewbs °f some don’t know what they’re:® an g e a about,” spokesmanTonllp 6 g a P t< said Sunday. JPftime. “The Reagan admrf ^ 0,: ui is vigorously enforcingil*l stror ig rights laws and has done: !’ anie ou three years. We have ImPP 8 l a ck more criminal civil than any administratis*“yy e ^ have moved into new “ a| ^ protect the rights of in$ g 0 j n to ! ‘ nalized persons and f*®' women,” he said. nan “In every area old ted y enforcement — ployment and schools- cord shows we havet great deal to protect ^ rights of individuals, clearly shown by thesul)) increases in budgetandf* nel for the Civil Rigl sion,” Decair said. ACLU charged the ad® lion has repudiated the't mental elements of dvi , ^rw a law. i 40 -fo o trie r etn Texas State MSC Representative^ Race POLITICAL FORUM “Its actions are at^ the Congress and the 1 p 1 ? do- and it has created a da® 1 F s w ^n crisis which could pliu? iP ardr lt country back into histod IF op e terns of race and sex di- il ® 0vvn h; nation,” the report said. “In a manner t dent in recent history,d rent Justice Departmf" unilaterally sought toll' reach of its own civil forcement authority and® other executive agi said. w as (way (1 10315 NEELY LEWIS and RICHARD SMITH discuss It charged the adniint- gutted a 1980 law pb Justice Departmentauthf' file lawsuits to protect ^ of government-financed 1 " tions. Crime Education Permanent Univ. Fund Mon. Feb. 27 8 : 00pm 610 Rudder FREE zfclTlemonLcd Student Centen It said the depart® 1 ' failed to file suits to conditions at mental stitutions, despite its otf; ligations showing wid^ abuse in such facilities. “Assistant Attorney" William Bradford Reyn 0 repeatedly distorted th ( pose of the legislation.’ llv It cited a case inwhid 1 nolds refused tobrin^ spite an investigati 01 showed emotionally dh children at three Idaho!; stitutions “were subj# 11 abuses that included tion by the hospital report said Reynolds co 110 that no constitutional were at stake. oorri);