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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 8, 1984)
Battalion Classified FOR RENT brazosland realty services, inc. ATTENDING TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY THIS FALL? YOU’LL NEVER PAY RENT AGAIN! Ideally located, good starter investment, very affordable. Good condi tion owner anxious to sell. LIVE-IN INVESTMENT -CLOSE TO A&M UNIVER SITY. Well kept, 2BR/ B. Storage buildings, land scaped front and fenced back yard. COVERED PARKING is only one of the features of this 2 bedroom condo on shuttle bus route near A&M University in Southwood Valley. AVOID HOME MAINTENANCE AND ENJOY TAX SHELTER while living in Woodbrook Condos. 2BR/2B on shuttle bus route. Excellent Financing available. $60,000.00 PERFECT FOR STUDENT HOUSING! These town- homes are great investment property with unique floor plans. 2BR/2B, covered parking, and on shuttle bus route. $58,000.00. EXCELLENT CONDO-TOWNHOME INVESTMENT! Quality construction and decorating. 2BR/2V2B, lots of storage, fireplace, and 2 car detached garage. nati Live with the Best at PEPPER TREE APARTMENTS 2701 Longmire 693-5731 M-F 9-6 Sat 10-5 Sun 1-5 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 HELP WANTED Telemarketing company is seeking graduate students degreed in the physical sciences. Good communications skills and familiarity with ana lytical instrumentation required. One of the openings also requires familiarity with oilfield terminology. Training program, work at home, technically challenging, outstanding pay. Please send resume to TeleSales Technology, P.O: Box 667, Humble, Tx. 77347 11115 Auto Mechanic and attendant heeded. Refer ences needed. Apply in person only, 815 Texas, College Station. 107t8 Interested in making $200-$400 a month work ing the hours you want? Call 779-9656 after 5:30p.m. 109tl0 RESERVE YOUR SUMMER STORAGE NOW Don’t get stuck! Call: 775-5870 PAC RAT MINI STORAGE PERSONALS A 3 bedroom, 2 bath near TAMU, washer/dryer in cluded. $495/mo. 696-7714 or 693-0982 after 6p.m. 696-4384 75tfn SPRING BREAK Going down highway 77 to the beach for Spring Break? If inter ested in free beach campfire wood, call 696-7336 between 6 and 10p.m. for details. nsu ;SKI VAIL/Beaver creek call TOLL FREE 1-800- |222-4840 for discounts. Condos & equipment. 95t20 SPECIAL NOTICE Large two bedroom apt. 413 Sulphur Springs,, central air, garage, fenced yard, $300, 779- 3700. Illt3 Need a ride to Denver? Call Beckey after 7:00 p.m. 822-2771. 110t4 WANTED HELP WANTED PijCGl -Hut. Now hiring COOKS, COUN TER HELP & DRIVERS. Flex ible hours. Apply in person. 1103 Anderson #103, C.S. EXPERIENCED COCKTAIL WAITRESS Local Nightclub. Apply in con fidence between 4-7p.m. Mon- day-Friday Only. 815 Harvey Road C.S. Ask for Despain PR WRITE/AE Trainee position in small Houston PR agency open for recent graduate with strong writing skills and high GPA. One-year previous Houston residency required. Send resumes only to Sheri Rayburn, McDaniel & Tate, 5615 Kirby, Suite 440, Houston, TX 77005. 113t2 SWENSENS: Now interviewing for PART— TIME COOKS, FOUNTAINEERS, DISHWASHERS AND WAIT PERSONS. Flexible hours, com petitive wages. Apply in person at Culpepper Plaza, College Station. TEXAS COIN EXCHANGE Now Selling loose di amonds for Aggie rings and other personal jewelry. For best prices be sure to check with us. Never a sale, just best re tail price in town. Yes, you can layaway. 8 pt $46.00 1 o pt $57.50 20 pt $150.00 Setting additional $25.00 846-8916 Wanted used windsurfer or beginner sailboard. Call Sue 845-2977 or 696-3357. 11 1 to LOST LOST: Ladies Gold watch, be tween Police Station and Francis Hall. Gift with high sentimental value. Please call 696-7758. REWARD. ii2t4 FOR SALE 200CM Graphette snow skis. Skied on once. $ 125.00, 696-3890 (w/out bindings) 110t5 Airstream 31ft. on shuttle bus route. Great for single or couple. 775-6477. 110tl5 Dodge Dart 74 1 owner, $950, 117,000 miles, 693- 1221. 11lt4 Left handed guild guitar mint copdition. Hard cover ease included. 693-1715 109tl0 Experienced gift item personalizers needed for part-time help. For more information inquire at CONTAINERS & MORE, 693-5805. 108t7 Small motorcycle (FA50) 1982 is in good shape, 846-6304. 112t3 Female afternoon bartender. Waitresses, bar tender. Call For Appointment, 846-4691 or 775- 7919. 104tll Special - '/i carat fine quality diamond. Ideal for Senior ring. $375.00 693-0100 112t5 (SchlotzsKy’s) Now accepting applications for Full-Time Day Positions. Apply in person only. 112t3 Page 14/The Battalion-Thursday, March 8, 1984 First heart-liver transplant patient wants to go home to family, friend! United Press International PITTSBURGH — Stormie Jones, who made medical his tory at age 6 last month by un dergoing the world’s first simul taneous heart-liver transplant, faced the press for the first time Wednesday and said she wants to go home. Appearing tired, pale and ill at ease, with her lap covered with reporters’ microphones, the Cumby, Texas, girl an swered questions at a Children’s Hospital news conference with short phrases. Stormie said she felt fine and, like any youngster far from home, she said she wanted to go home, and see her sister, Misty, and classmates at school. When asked what she thought of Pittsburgh, the youngster replied, “Awful.” “I want to go home,” she said, adding later that, if she could, she would tell her friends and her sister “that I love them.” Then the small, pale, blonde, brown-eyed youngster, dressed in a pink dress with a white pi nafore, looked down as her lower lip trembled and she be gan to cry. Stormie’s mother, Lois Jones, 27, accompanied her to the news conference. “She’s doing well, but she’s still not used to all this and it’s a little upsetting,” said Jones, adding that she does not know when Stormie will be released from the hospital. and I hope this time someone remembers. It’s the Man up stairs who made this all possi ble.” the double procedure. “I’ve had no indication, that decision is up to the doctors.” Stormie was taken off a liquid diet two weeks ago. “She’s had some stuff from Burger King, pizza and hot dogs,” said Jones; she attributed her daughter’s rapid progress to the girl’s strong constitution and to God. Doctors had said the dual transplant was Stormie’s only chance of survival. The child re quired a liver transplant be cause she suffers from a rare genetic disease that creates ex tremely high levels of choles terol in the blood. “Her progress is soii belter than expected,"s Basil Zilelli, Stormie’s | cian. “It’s only beenihjetl since she’s been posi-opl But the risk is constant. "The risk is constant*] gan rejection, and she'llli | he monitored verycarefc] the rest of her life.'Zitfl “I think she’s always had the stuff, but I’ve said this before, However, she had under gone two double-bypass opera tions and her heart was too weak to withstand the stress of a liver transplant, necessitating “But as time goes on it could lessen and there's son why she may not be lead a normal life ai point." testifies in pool table rape trial y TRA1 Spot lelley Keal tier Wedne kas A&M l victory o in the fii aeader. B: United Press International FALL RIVER, Mass. — A hysterical, sobbing and angry woman who says she was gang- r *2. Mon Fri til G p m 1st 30 minutoft of tti<» tst feanir* of thc« »1t*v Saturtlay £ Suntlay Citizens <6f> & Anyln Students ali na t Friday All Seats Tuesday POST OAK MALL O CINEMAS *3 704 06 16 5:00-7:30-10:00 ll-Academy Nominations “TERMS OF ENDEARMENT” (PQ) 5:30-7:40-9:40 ’UNFAITHFULLY YOURS” (PQ) 5:10 7:30 9:55 “AGAINST ALL ODDS” (R) CINEMA 3 8:00 Only (No Disc.) 8 Academy Nominations “THE RIGHT STUFF”(PO) 5:15 7:3010:00 5 Academy Nominations ‘THE DRESSER” (PG) 5:45-7:45-9:45 “BLAME IT ON RIO” (R) SCHULMAN THEATRES OFF ADULT TICKETS I 1st SHOW SAT.-SUN STUDENT DISC. MON.-WED. s 2 WITH I.D SCHULMAN 6 2002 E 29th 77S2f6j 775-2468 7:35 9:55 HARRY & SON 7:25 9:45 FOOTLOOSE 7:20 9:40 £ vin< tecta! Showing 8:00 only KOYAANISQATSI 15 9:35 WEEK! [HD PASS *9:55 RISKY BUSINESS MANOR EAST III Manor cast Mall 823-8300 7:15-9:35 SAHARA 7:25 9:45 NEVER CRY WOLF 7:25-9:45 BROADWAY DANNY ROSE SERVICES TYPING Reports, dissertations, term papers, re sumes. WORD PROCESSING Rea sonable rates. Executive Secretarial Services at Main entrance to A&M on Texas Avenue, 121 Walton, 696-3785. 107118 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 TYPING AH 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 92t58 TYPING We understand form and style. AUTOMATED CLERICAL SERVICES 110 Lincoln 693-1070 90t36 WORD PROCESSING. Papers, reports, disser- tations, etc. Fast, accurate, reasonable, 846- 6200. H0t5 Fastest tvping in town. 20 vears experience. Reli- able 693-85.37 693-6483. 92t30 TYPING. Svmbols. Rubber stamps. No job too small. 823-7723. I09t7 TYPING. IBM Correcting Selectric, Letter Gothic, symbols, etc. Fast, accurate reasonable. S.W. Valley 693-4313. 98t5 WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manuscripts, transcriptions, reports, term papers, 779-7S6S. 9lt25 TYPING, fast service, reasonable rates. Near campus. IBM Selectric, 696-0914. 109t5 raped on a barroom pool table could not identify three men now on trial for the crime, a po lice officer testified Wednesday. New Bedford police officer Ronald Doyon told a Bristol Su perior Court jury that he ac companied the woman, 22, as she walked through Big Dan’s Tavern in New Bedford shortly after the March 6, 1983, inci dent, and tried to identify her attackers. The mother of two circled the horseshoe-shaped bar and looked directly at defendants Virgilio Medeiros, Jose Medei ros and Daniel Silvia, the officer testified. She paused in front of each man, and said, “He was in the bar, but I’m not sure if he did anything,” Doyon testified. When he met the woman out side the tavern, she was hysteri cal, sobbing and angry, her face was red and swollen, and her hair was in disarray, Doyon said. He added that he could de tect the odor of liquor on her breath, but he did not think she was drunk. The woman told him she wanted to go back to the bar, and “point out those bastards who had raped her,” Doyon said. Doyon’s testimony agrees with the one given by another New Bedford officer, Carol Sacramento, who said that the woman could not identify her alleged attackers because they all began to look alike. But last week on the witness stand, the woman identified all six defendants as the men she believes participated in the as sault. Doyon’s testimony differed from most previous accounts of the incident, because he said the woman told him she was raped on both the bar counter, and on the tavern’s pool table. Most other witnesses, including the woman, have said all the rapes occurred on the pool table. Doyon’s testimony came in the trial of four of the six men charged in the incident. He al ready has told his story to the jury hearing arguments in the separate trial of the other two defendants. Adding details to his earlier testimony, Doyon testified he had found under the pool table a pair of men’s undi stained with green m matched the color of ihtl fell top. Another officer leslif* when Silvia was arresiedi wearing no underwear. Earlier, officer Louis who is not related lo l e no-hitter fendant, testified that i Ly. But he Medeiros told him ho| 0 think at involved. gjt’s alway: He said Medeiros resp |e your oi to questions by sayinglit jd “But yot j r going to help, adding it liinglikey to) tk; deiros also told him unit let it get to bartender for informatin Designated Daniel Cunha, the bard didn’t let testified he overheanmi, or his hit fendants Daniel Silvia an k hit a two-t and Virgilio Medeirosatttccnd inning discussing events of tli fiont to stay vious night. 11 the secc Stock slump blamed on deficit Ihe win in (he Aggies "eahey, a ge Statio no-hitle on a No [ftfield wit I was the cl come to odble-headi raped out to I- four ini an Jimmy nd. But United Press International NEW YORK — Stocks fell for the third consecutive session Wednesday in a demonstration of Wall Street’s concern that both the strong economy and huge budget deficits are going to force interest rates higher. Despite some late bargain hunting, analysts said the mar ket also is being hurt by foreign investors pulling out their money because the dollar has been in a severe slump. Some energy issues skidded when Rep. John Seiberling, D- Ohio, introduced a bill to pro hibit mergers between the na tion’s 20 largest oil companies following the California Stan dard-Gulf Oil and Texaco- Getty pacts. The Dow Jones industrial av erage, which skidded 12.67 points Tuesday, dropped an other 8.90 to 1,143.63. It has lost 27.85 points in the past three sessions and analysts pre dicted it would pierce late-Feb- ruary lows; The Dow transportation av erage dropped 8.54 to 499.18 and the Dow utilities average shed 1.06 to 126.88. The New York Stock Ex change index lost 0.98 to 89.09 and the price of an average share decreased 34 cents. Stan dard & Poor’s 500-stock index shed 1.68 to 154.57. Declines led advances 1,259-369 among the 1,987 issues traded at 4 p.m. EST. Big Board volume totaled 90,080,000 shares, up from the 83,590,000 traded Tuesday. “The oil merger boom that was the only froth in the market that made investors think some thing might be better is gone and there’s no other ball game around,” said Dudley Eppel of Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrelte. Bonds plunged when Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker indicated the economic growth and large budget deficits could put pressure on interest rates. He also said the deficit-cutting measures under consideration in congressional committees would not address problems of 1984. “I think there are great fears Congress won’t be able to to anything about the deficit,” said James Meyer of Janney, Mont gomery 8c Scott, Philadelphia. “And the supply and demand battle for funds over the next several months doesn’t look good.” Several analysts said the slowed down volume lately indi cates foreign investors have be gun to flee the U.S. market now that the dollar has begun to slide from its lengthy perch atop the international exchange ladder. Total volume of NYSE issues listed on all U.S. exchanges and over the counter at 4 p.m. to taled 102,989,500 shares, up from 96,873,300 Tuesday. On the trading floor Oil, which agreed to a SI 3.4 billion merger wit fornia Standard, was active NYSE-listed issue, Vh to 64 %. Sexal (eased 7 /«. Mesa Petroleum, stands to earn a $760 from its Gulf holdings, lo 16 5 /m. Atlantic whose bid Gulf reject! unchanged at 45. Is to score ra Texaco, which is k ^ -pop Getty Oil lor $10.1 billiot earn has y< third on the active list,uf 3n The American Stock Ex change index shed 1.71 to 207.55 and the price of an aver age share fell 12 cents. Declines topped advances 407-159 among the 771 issues traded. Volume totaled 5,730,000 shares compared with 6,260,000 Tuesday. The National Association of Securities Dealers index of OTC stocks lost 3.08 to 249.16. 39 Vt The stock plunged Tuesday after Texaco would buy back 25.6 mi its shares bought by Bass ers Enterprises. ,-to-back inning, t R..: lie Aggie lead for g in the bo two more elief pitcl Rock K to seal th xas A&M to 11-1, w remains forth Te: |oo many : ’t as if we York Yat “Californ AT&T was the secondi active issue, unchanged t Trendsetting IBM, a Hi Tuesday, was fourth, off] ' 107 Vh. earn we vi a doul On the Amex, Gulf I rd thus fat Canada led the actives, 14 Vh. The company is exp to be bought out now dial has agreed to merge witliS Grand jury indicts home administrator charged with thrashing boy in his care United Press International DALLAS — A disciple of the late Lester Roloff, who himself clashed with the state over disci plinary practices at his homes for wayward children, could go to prison for up to 10 years if convicted on felony charges of brutalizing a 15-year-old boy in his care. A grand jury Tuesday in dicted Greg Blood, 22, adminis trator of Old Paths Boys Home, on two counts of aggravated as sault, accusing him of beating One of his charges with bailing wire, an oak paddle and his fists. The unlicensed home is lo cated in Glen Heights in south Dallas County. Hugh Lucas, assistant district attorney, said the grand jury will hear additional evidence later this week against Blood; his wife Nacole, 18; and the home’s owners, Don and Mar tha Vincent — Blood’s in-laws. The Vincents have said most of the boys were placed with them because their parents ei ther did not want them or could not control them. “Many, not just a few, of the parents have been hostile,” Lu cas said. “Many feel it should be kept within the church Or fam ily, that it shouldn’t be aired in the courtroom. Others feel it was necessary discipline.” On Feb. 11, the boy appealed for help to an ambulance driver responding to a call in the neighborhood. Sheriffs dep uties removed all 10 residents, ranging in age from 8 to 15, from the home that same day. Blood said at the time he had punished the boy justly accord ing to Biblical standards and those set by Roloff. The Vin cents were followers of Roloff, who died in a 1982 plane crash. Blood has said his methods made good Christians out of boys he characterized as “spoiled rotten brats, homosex uals, liars, thieves and at tempted murderers.” The boy told deputies Blood thrashed him when he could not complete 23 laps, punish ment for not tidying his room. Next day, the youth left some gloves outsidf Blood ordered more laps boy said after he ran alx* most a mile, Blood I ing him with a piece of [ pipe and, when he fell ground, jerked him up hair and slapped his fact peatedly. The boy said Blood tltf dered him to a garage, he was hit 62 times with paddle. If Blood is convicted oi gravated assault with a dil weapon and aggravated as resulting in serious I harm, his sentence could to 10 years in prison, said. G STUDENT ERNMENT hat 10-2 lo nly blemi it that exas A&M ern Louis e series th Field. Thi its first i to play a in Mono in Rustor 8' TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY If You Received A Student Government Survey, Please Return It By March 19, 213 Pavilion B