The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 28, 1984, Image 8

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Battalion
Classified
Page 8AThe Battalion/Tuesday, February 28, 1984
HELP WANTED
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.
101H0
Shrimpboat
sinks in storm
R.i
by Paul Dirmd
i/w another terri&lz
DREAR] LAST AJ/MT, SOAJiA.
A NIGHTMARES
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.
103t10
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.
99t10
United Press International
GALVESTON — A 60-foot
shrimpboat sank in rough
weather in Galveston Bay early
Monday, and the three crew
men spent more than six hours
in the water before they were
rescued.
Coast Guard spokesman Don
Hope said the Miss K.A. sank
shortly after midnight as a
storm front carrying high winds
raked the Houston-Galveston
area.
“The captain of the vessel
stated it began taking water
over the bow and capsized sud
denly shortly after midnight last
A small space
in the right place
makes. . .
A BIG SALE!
Battalion Classifieds
Female afternoon bartender. Waitresses, bar
tender. Call For Appointment, 846-4691 or 775-
7919
LOST
Needed: Dental
775-1838.
eptionist-assistant. Will train.
94tl4
OFFICIAL NOTICE
LOST: Texas-Texas A&M Football game. Heavy
gold bracelet. REWARD Please call (713)46l'-
■4093. IQOtfl
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-
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. 103t5
Lost Ladies gold Rolex watch with diamonds. Pos
sibly in or around Rudder Center Friday evening.
Reward, 779 7150 101t7
LOST: Female Blue Heeler.
.5664 days (1)8:16-2986 nights
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
FOR RENT
FOR SALE
197,3 Plymouth Valient. Excellent condition, in
side and out. Radial tires; re-built engine; new
oil and water pumps. $900. Call 693-5788 105t5
Skiers, Rossignol CM, Hanson Slolom, Scott Poles,
693-1264 evenings, Phillip.
106t6
Black Lab puppies, really cute. Six weeks old. $10,
822-7812.
106t5
Mustang Special option TRX aluminium rims
1982-84 $200.00, 696-5548, Ron. 105t5
Rockette Mobile Home; 1966
model 8x35. All new plumbing,
water, heater. Excellent con
dition and location, paved
streets, parking, pool after
5:00,822-4914. 106t5
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. 95
A 3 bedroom, 2 bath near
TAMU, washer/dryer in
cluded. $495/mo. 696-7714
or 693-0982 after 6p.m.
696-4384
75tfn
CLOSE TO TAMU
4-plex 1 bedroom 1 bath, un
furnished, all electric ap
pliances, water paid, w/d con
nections $270/mo. 779-
1 61 3.94114
SERVICES
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 CoVnputer, we will buy it. (we need McIn
tosh's) 214-722-4489. 10H10
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
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
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. 9ltfn
Female roommate needed to
share furnished house with other
female sudents. South of campus,
walking distance, quiet neighbor
hood. Non-smoker, non-drinker
$158.00 monthly. Bills paid. Free
laundry facilities, 696-5286. losts
SPECIAL NOTICE
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. 10512
tm
TYPING
We understand form and style.
AUTOMATED CLERICAL
SERVICES
110 Lincoln 693-1070
90136
WANTED
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
3 bdrm., 2 bath in 4-plex near TAMU $350.00.
Work, lower rent. 693-5286. 105t5
Room, large furnished, bath, 1 block TAMU, pri
vate entrance; $150.00. Work lower rent, 693-
6286. 105t5
•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
c.s.
404 University Dr.
846-8916
3202A Texas Ave., Bryan
779-7662 82142
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. 103t5
night,” Hope said. ‘‘The
weather at the time was seas 3 to
4 feet and winds 35 to 40
knots.”
When the general emergency
call went out, the tug San
Thomas dropped its tow to as
sist in the search and picked up
the first of the three crewmen
from the water about 6:35 a.m.
A Coast Guard utility boat
and a Coast Guard helicopter
from Houston joined the search
and the other two men were
found about 7 a.m., also in the
water.
The captain of the sunken
vessel was identified as Brian
Schannon. Schannon and crew
member Ben Crenshaw were
declared in good condition and
released after exaination by a
Coast Guard medical corpsman.
But Paul Carpenter, 20, of
Kemah was admitted to John
Sealy Hospital in Galveston suf
fering from exposure. Car
penter was listed in good condi
tion.
Hope said the sunken vessel
was a potential navigation haz
ard lying northeast of Red Fish
Island and that a radio warning
was being transmitted.
asmurfmare! u was
vjhats wow ,
viiTHSriiMfsrr f
mK Therm clte 1
awful!!
IF you WORKED IN A /XnfclTi
SRREfoe/t mSMRER TOO
mjLDNT' STOCKSMVRFS. CouXTT
SMURFS. IWamSHUKFG. KIDS
SCmiMs'MMA,! UAM tflRfr
TD KILL SAURFSOlt (
Z GOBS YOU
uk£ mcfflALm
MdRAJlitirTHEti. ji
m
Nuke waste shipping rule stand
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The Su
preme Court Monday rejected
New York City’s challenge to
federal rules allowing highly ra
dioactive nuclear waste to be
shipped through cities.
The justices rebuffed the
city’s arguments that the envi
ronmental consequences and
possible alternative routes must
oe considered before
the radioactive
through cities.
The court, saying the case is
hauling
material
not in its jurisdiction, let stand a
ruling that said the government
need not prepare environmen
tal impact statements before
shipping radioactive waste mat
ter.
Dr. Fred Millar, nuclear
waste policy specialist for the
Environmental Policy Institute
in Washington, D.C., said the
action means New York City
must now negotiate with sub
urbs and adjacent states to see if
some alternate route can be
worked out, possibly involving
barge shipment.
Under current federal regu
lations, only a state agency —
not a city — can set alternative
routes. Millar, however, noted
that Boston has been successful
in devising alternative routes.
he Agg
gaii their
straight nat
the same w
last — as ch
Other cities, concerned about
the safety of radioactive waste
shipments through their areas,
also have been seeking alterna
tive routes. Dallas-Fort Worth
last month devised alternative
routing. Officials in Cincinnati
TYPING. Reports. Research papers, etc. Fast serv-
ice, near campus 696-0914. 102t5
WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses,
manuscripts, transcriptions, reports, term papers,
779-7868. 9H25
Fastest typing in town. 20 vears experience. Reli
able. 693-8537, 693-6483,. 92t.30
Get Your Xerox Copies
and Columbus, Ohio,art:
to < nine U|> null Mimlai|lik inc | g|
keep shipments tanked to pit
through their cities. Aggjes WOi
were only o
l he increased concer pekect gan
I mm legislation ConBfhe Agi
passed last year to de j t0 j 0 pen th
■ eiui.il '\siein for soraB e k t ., l( |
. | ( .ii \s.iMe from touA in |, lM ,
atomic power plants. . 1 i ou i
suit, truck and rail timsiBboach Bt
lion of radioactive raa j 0I | ;iS | V vt
expected to increase: Aiidaya at
tially pitchers in
the duo
coaches rav
Texas prisons relieving
overcrowded condition-
v
■Lopez p
innings gi\
runs, and
tilt win.
at Northgate
Above Farmer’s Market
Inexpensive, High-Quality Copies
We Specialize In
REPORTS and DISSERTATIONS
Also: Self-service copying, offset printing, typing, re
ductions and enlargements, binding, resume writ
ing, editing, business cards, wedding invitations, sta
tionery and many other services. One-stop service
for reports and dissertations.
THE DOUBLE
331 University 846-3755
HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 7 a.m.-IO p.m.
Sat. 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
United Press International
HUNTSVILLE — The
Texas Department of Correc
tions has only six tents left out
of the dozens that dotted prison
grounds during the past two
years as part of an effort to re
lieve overcrowding.
Sometimes even the six tents
at the Diagnostic Unit are
empty. And since the unit is get
ting a new cell block to replace
the makeshift structures, the six
probably will be dismantled this
spring.
The tents are actually ply
wood and screen structures
used to house overflow inmates
during their two-week stay at
the unit.
In the last six months, TDC’s
population has been dropping
slowly from last year’s all-time
high of 38,000 to the current
35,300 as of last week. The fig
ure changes weekly as inmates
come and go.
With new prison facilities be
ing constructed, prison officials
say they expect never to use
temporary structures again.
Even though prison officials
believe they have laid the over
crowding problem to rest, U.S.
District judge William Wayne
Justice of Tyler — who is mon
itoring court-ordered prison re
forms — has scheduled a hear
ing in J tine.
Attorney William Bennett
Turner of San Francisco, who
represents inmates, will he tell
ing Justice there still is an over
crowding problem, particularly
in common areas.
Justice ordered major re
forms in 1981 after years of liti
gation that began with the filing
of a hand-written complaint by
inmate David Ruiz.
Since the sweeping order in
1981, Turner ana attorneys for
the slate have negotiated set
tlements to most major issues,
but they have made little pro
gress on minimum space per in
mate. Turner wants one inmate
per cell.
But Rick Gray, aiur* veHC
lor the stale, said TDfi Sluiwil
never agree to one inraM-
cell, and the 5th U.S.c| 0jnta L(
Court of Appeals aWi frf 3S
ref used in an interim rufe
older single-celling.
‘‘1 don’t think we’repreji
to provide every prisoner
private room," Gray said. 1 * p[
question is not gvingtlw: ^ ( . JU ' ie <
ers a perfect world, but [Wtfirj
/'/live! it iif i/~\r$oI cI'indotvlc" Ollllll
who each I
a result of thatdeasijfe eaI ano
e can’t be toodottn™ cxas
runs in th
lungs, hi tl
stroked a L
constitutional standards,
Turner is a little
hie as
“We|
Turner said. “As i
recognize that some
ling may not be harmful,ill
on a temporary basis
Turner expressed
about crowdng in
areas — day rooms,
rooms, dining areas,
showers and even the 0
“that are carrying
to work when they have
par ity to carry 40.
[gtes sco
{tied two
the final 8-
he def
lion softb
next game
Friday at
tola name i
M S C
^ AGG IE rj N EM/\
PRE SENTS
Once in awhile
someone fights back.
AL PACINO
in
Wednesday, February 29
7:30 pm 701 Rudder
dje
Ar
Tickets are $ 1.50 with TAMU I.D.
Advance tickets available at MSC Box Office Mon.-Fri.
8:30-4:30
Tickets also on sale 45 minutes before showtime
Oil tanker sinks;
two crewmen die
United Press International
NEW ORLEANS — A 661-
foot tanker crippled by an ex
plosion and floundering in high
seas went down in the Gulf of
Mexico with 24 crewmen
aboard, authorities said Mon
day. Two crewmen were killed
and three injured.
A Coast Guard spokesman
said the American Eagle went
down in rough seas about 180
miles south of New Orleans
about 6 p.m.
Two of the 24 crewmen
aboard were killed and three in
jured, the spokesman said. Two
crewmen were missing and oth
ers were being transferred by
rescue boats to a nearby oil rig,
the Coast Guard said.
Three other crewmen died
Sunday and three were injured
when an explosion rocked the
tanker and fractured the front
hull, causing the vessel to floun
der in rough seas.
The Coast Guard said the
vessel sank shortly after issuing
a distress signal that the vessel
was breaking up.
"§£MULMAN
THEATRES
Mon-Fmly Nite-Sch 6
• Tue-Fmly NUe-MEMI
Student Disc. M-W
$2 with I D.
The tanker was
after attempts to tow J
shore were abandoned Mi
because of the bad *
The three men injured
explosion had been bi
ashore by helicopter,
The cause of the explo
has not been determined,
A tugboat sent out fro:
Arthur, Texas, to brit
American Eagle into Gal' 1
was delayed at sea by !|
winds and rough seas.
“They’re (the tugboato|
tors) having a tough tii«
ting out there," a CoastG
spokeswoman in New Or
said.
Officials at the AtW 1
Foreign Steamship
New York City declined to
tify the victims of Sundays 1
until relatives had been
lied.
Spokesman William &
said company executives
been forced to depend on c J
ination gathered by a'
Guard helicopter that'
on the disabled vessel.
The tanker was Heading
Orange, Texas, after spell
time in ballast at Savannah
when the explosion
about 180 miles south"
New Orleans, Geiger said
( |
I,,. I
SCHULMAN6
v 2002 E. 29th
775-2463
775-2468
7:35-9:55
RECKLESS
7:30-9:50
UNCOMMON VALOR
7:35-9:55
RISKY BUSINESS
1:25-9:45
FOOT LOOSE
—‘m^ar
LASSITER
7:15 9:35
WEEKEND PASS
ri'f.m
5:00-7:30-10:00
ll-Academy Nominations!
"TERMS OF
ENOEARMENHF
5:30-7:40-9:40
“UNFAITHFULLY
YOURS” (PG]
5:15-7:45-9:55
“STAR 80” (R) I
ENDS THURSDAY
7:20-9.40
NEVER CRY WOLF
7WTS?
BROADWAY
DANNY ROSE
tt.OO Only (No Disc.)
8 Academy Nomination! I
“THE RIGHT9TUFF7&J
5:15-7:30-10:00
Academy Nofnlmted
StreGpACfwto
“SILKW00D"W
5:45-7:45-9:45
“BLAME IT ON RIO "'