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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 23, 1984)
Battalion Classified ROOMMATE WANTED HELP WANTED iale/Female roommate $162.50. Big duplex wn bedroom, 696-7978, 845-5095. 119t5 FOR RENT fl RESERVE YOUR SUMMER STORAGE NOW Don’t get stuck! Call: 775-5870 PAC RAT MINI STORAGE B.B. Scasta, Inc. 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 ROOMMATES NEEDED Female for fall to rent master bed room in 3 bedroom 2 bath house. On shuttle bus route. Washer- /dryer. $150/mo./girl to share. $200/mo. own room. 846-5010. 11714 A 3 bedroom, 2 bath near TAMU, washer/dryer in cluded. $495/mo. 696-7714 or 693-0982 after 6p.m. 696-4384 75tfn Available April 1st 3bdrm. 4- plex 2 bath w/washer & dryer. $375.00. Near TAMU; avail able now 2bdrm. 2-plex 1 bath walk to TAMU, $275.00. Call 272-8422. nrtio PIZZA Drivers and inside help needed. $3.65 an hour plus 6% commission on all deliv eries. Call Pizza Express, 696-7785 or 846-7785 for in terview. 11713 Hard-working, eager, people who like people wanted for 2 available positions. Please call or submit Resume. ON THE DOUBLE 846-3755 331 University Drive PIZZA Enthusiatic salesperson wanted for full or part-time driving position. Must know campus, have good driving re cord, and be able to drive a standard. Pay based on ability and desire to work. Call Pizza Express 696-7738 to sched ule and interview. 11713 Sublet 1 Ixlnn. stutlin apt. !£27">/mo.. sluittle. SOI) si|. It. 090-3001.090-0839. SI.V1H39. I I7t5 OFFICIAL NOTICE LIBERAL ARTS MAJORS Summer job opportunities available with In ternal Revenue Service in Austin and San An tonio. Social Security positions open also. Call today to schedule an interview. Act now to take advantage of these and other Co-op posts. Call Liberal Arts-Cooperative Educa tion Office, 845-7814, or come by 420 Har rington Tower. 11515 LOST LOST: Gold Emerald and diamond bracelet. High Sentimental value. Please call Jill, 646-0373 118t5 SPECIAL NOTICE , Austin's best selection books. I-tee lists. Alph; 29th. Austin. 78705. et music and spng (ientet. <> 1 1 West I I 7t8 WANTED: SPRING INDIVIDUALS FOR ANTIHISTAMINE STUDY Must meet the following re quirements: Male Adult History of allergy symptoms Willing to be skin tested for tree allergies Participate in an 18 day anti histamine study Would like to earn $100 Call between 6pm and 10pm. 775-0425. SUMMER JOB CAMP COUNSELOR Working with physically and mentally handicapped near Dallas. Remaining openings for men. A rugged, yet reward ing experience. For informa tion and application write Camp Soroptimist, 7411 Hines Place, Suite 123, Dal las, TX 75235 or call 214-634- 7500. ii7t5 PiQQI -Hut I Now hiring COOKS COUN TER HELP & DRIVERS. Flexi ble hours. Apply in person. 1103 Anderson #103, C.S.ii6t4 Now hiring restaurant help at FARMER’S MARKET BAK ERY AND DELI. Full and part- time CHEFS available. Cashier and restaurant experi ence required. Apply in person. 2700 Texas Avenue, Bryan. Long Term Care Ombudsman to work in pro gram for the elderly. Must have own car. Col lege degree and experience working with el derly in social services and/or nursing homes required. Mail resume to Area Agency on Ag ing, Brazos Valley Development Council, PO Drawer 4128, Bryan, Texas 77805-4128. Ap plication deadline is March 30, 1984. 117t6 Nonsmoking student is needed for an elderly lady as live-in help. Private quarters upstairs. Free room and board. Main duty is to be there at night. Call Mrs. Harrison 822-1374, i i7t3 WANTED: ALLERGIC INDIVIDUAL FOR NASAL INHALER STUDY Must meet the following require ments: Male Adult History of allergy symptoms and onset within the last 2 weeks of the following: Sneezing, Nasal Congestion, Running Nose, Itchy Nose, Eyes, or Throat, to participate in an 28 day nasal inhaler study. $200 incentive. Call 775-0425 between 6 p.m. and 10 p.m. Page 10/The Battalion/Friday, March 23, 1984 Mining exec faces large civil suits United Press International ATOKA, Okla. — A mining company president who says he has found the world’s largest gold deposit in southern Okla homa is facing more than $770,000 in civil suits stemming from oil and gas ventures, a United Press International in- FOR SALE 20 w/ch Technics receiver, two 12” 3-way loudspeakers. $225 takes all or will sell sepa rately, 696-0962, 845-7348. ’77 Fiat convertible 124 Spi der, 5 spd., AM/FM cassette $2400.00. Sony 9pc. remote control ste reo system 3 mo. old $1400.00,696-8034. 11715 Irish Wolfhound puppies. AKC $300.00. J.C. Chap man, Box 248. Jewett. TX 75846 (214)626- 4658. 116t5 Airstream 31ft. on shuttle bus route. Great for single or couple. 775-6477. 110tl5 vestigation revealed Thursday. ' Daniel B. Thomas, the presi dent of Morningstar Inc., a company involved in a reported gold find in Atoka and Bryan counties, is being sued by Trend Oil Co. for breach of contract, Tulsa County court house records show. Thomas, along with Atoka Christian Explorations Inc. and the Los Angeles Church Loan Co., is involved in the search for gold in Atoka County. Thomas has called the strike the largest in the world. The operation is being funded by the church loan company, a non-profit religious corpora tion headquartered in Norwalk, Calif. Atoka Christian Explorations was formed three years ago by three Atoka residents who say God led them to the gold. They since have set up a trust fund through the church loan com pany and say they will donate all mining profits to religious work. Additionally, UPI has 7'.l Yanuilia XS75II . low mill's, hdmi'ts $1 100. 11713 I KK.. 1.2 mUii lit l. FIRST $73 I>(i:f-<i532. Ask tor (irc^, I 17i3 ‘80 Suzuki GS550L, windshield, backrest, and rack, 14,000 miles, $1595,0.B.O., 693-8308. 119tl0 HELP WANTED SWENSEN’S: Now interviewing for PART— TIME COOKS, FOUNTAINEERS, DISHWASHERS AND WAIT PERSONS. Flexible hours, com petitive wages. Apply in person at Culpepper Plaza, College Station. Mechanical I’.nginccM for Mechanical and llv- dranlic design projects. Temple area. BSMK or MSMl.. high GI*R. creative and pmctical design aptitude, knowledge off.Al). 693-2959. 1 17l5 Frogii ter. Basic and asseinhh lanc|uage e\- pcriencc on Apple II tec|uired. Knowledge ol IBMpc desirable. Pan-Time, blexible schedule. 693-2959. ||7i5 Mechanical l.nginccr lor design projects part- time. College Station. |r.. Sr., or Grad, level, high (.PR. creative and practical design apti tude. 693-2959. I | 7t5 SERVICES DEAR PROFESSOR: Help is available for your grade record keeping woes with GOOD GRADER! GOOD GRADER is a computer program that stores your class names and grades, averages the grades according to your weight scheme, plots the grade distribu tion for any grade set, and computes the mean and each students percentile according to McCall's T distribution. GOOD GRADER makes accurate curve grading possible in a matter of minutes plus it gives you a printout with full grade records at any step in the grad ing procedure. GOOD GRADER is available on diskette for the IBM PC and IBM PC com patible computers for $20 plus $5 for the dis kette. Apple or other users may obtain a list ing for $5. Send check or money order to Prof. John W. Freeman, P.O. Box 2671, Houston, Tx. 77252. 118t2 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 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 92t58 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 WORD PROCESSING: Disscnacinns. TIr-si-s. Mauusiripis. TraiiMTiplions. Reports. Term papers. 779-781.8. I I7ll5 Expert typing, word processing. All work guar anteed. Error free. PERFECT PRINT. 822- 1430. 114t5 IF THERE'S LEADERSHIP INYOUOCS CAN BRING ITOUT. OCS (Army Officer Candidate School) is a 14-week challenge to all that’s in you... the mental, the physical, the spirit that are part of what makes a leader. If OCS were easy, it couldn’t do the job. It wouldn’t bring out the leader in you, or help you discover what you have inside. But when you finish and graduate as a com missioned officer in the Army, you’ll know. You’ll know you have what it takes to lead. And you’ll be trim, alert, fit, and ready to exercise the leadership skills that civilian companies look for. If you’re about to get your degree and you want to develop your leadership ability, take the OCS challenge. Call your local Army Recruiter, and ask about CCS. SFC Woody, US Army Recruiting, Bryan, Texas 409-775-2199 ARMY. BE ALL YOU CAN BE. learned Thomas set up least three limited partnership com panies about three years ago in Tulsa and incorporated a fourth company in Arkansas in 1979 “to explore, market and produce resources from the earth.” A suit filed in Tulsa Dec. 9, 1981, on behalf of Trend, a Texas company with offices in Tulsa, alleges Thomas and Good Earth Energy Inc., the Arkansas corporation, violated an agreement to transport gas from wells in Atascosa County, south of San Antonio. The suit alleges that after Trend spent $100,000 installing a transport system, the wells owned by Good Earth Energy went dry. Attorneys for Good Earth Energy say the company had no contractual obligation to supply the gas once the wells failed to produce. Trend attorney Benjamin P. Abney of Tulsa said the case was due to go to trial in a couple of weeks. Thomas was the director of Good Earth Energy, and a gen eral partner in Good Earth Bar tlesville Associates, Good Earth Osage Associates and Good Earth Nowata Associates. All four companies were reg istered in Oklahoma in 1981 and are limited partnerships in volved in oil and gas drilling in vestment programs. Another suit is pending in a Tulsa Gounty district court against Good Earth Energy on behalf of Oil Services Inc., a Kansas company seeking to re cover $3,058.72 for “goods and merchandise that were purcha sed.” transferred to Morningstar, i Utah corporation, to increas the company’s assets, are ownd by Good Earth Energy anil Good Earth Bartlesville As» ciates. The oil and gas propertia consist of two gas wells, onepai dally completed oil well andi partially completed gas well,(In UPI investigation shows. Thomas is a general parte in both companies, record show. Thomas told UPI earlier tkii week the oil and gas leases wen transferred in exchange (oi United Pres DALLAS —T /ear-old slayir ure official i vas a cover-up nvolved in ag nent scandals onvicted swi isles said Thu Henry H. M lartment of A ho was at one Iryan, was in lusiness dealii bund dead, si bolt action A Thomas and Good Earth En ergy also were sued by Hardesty Realtors of Tulsa for more than $7,000 in back rent for a Tulsa office in the Exchange National Bank Tower. more than 111,000 shares ol ds Robertson A Hardesty official said the overdue rent was paid last fall. UPI also has learned Okla homa oil and gas properties Morningstar stock to boost llit company’s assets so it couldbt listed with Moody’s, a natioml stock listing company. Thomas first said no stod transactions would take until ore was being mined, In remembered the transactionif ter a UPI reporter asked fepi about it. Krueger woos Valley area voters A later inve humation re lad also suffe ixide poisonit he head, yet i ied as a suicid Until this wt billie Sol Es lore a Roberts liry Tuesday ■obereclassifit I Estes, 58, s ■lends in the ■hided Presid Bohnson, was < United Press International EDINBURG — U.S. Senate candidate Bob Krueger, scram bling for Democratic primary votes in the all-important Rio Grande Valley, pledged Thurs day to work for federal eco nomic aid and a regional hospi tal for the problem-plagued Valley area. Krueger, in the midst of a three-day swing through the poverty-stricken but voter-rich lower Valley area, said the Val- PERSONAL SAFETY AND ' AWARENESS WORKSHOP ...offering insights into maintaining freedom for modern lifestyles Sat. March 24 9am-1pm PROGRAM • Rape and Personal Assault Prevention • Methods of Self De fense (Wear Appropriate Clothing) • Ways to Positively Educate Children About Their Safety \M » » T A&M Consolidated High School sponsored by Humana Hospital and Brazos County Rape Crisis . Center SPEAKERS Carolyn Ruffino Brazos County Rape Crisis Center Mahesh Dave, M.D. Child & Adolescent Psy chiatrist Brad Lamb Dir. United Martial Arts College Lt. Bernie Kapella College Station Police Dept. SCHULMAN THEATRES Disc. 1st SHOW SAT. & SUN. STUDENTS - MON-WED. $2 SCHULMAN 6 2002 E. 29th 775-2463 775-2468 * I* * MON-FRI 7:20 9:45 L SAT-SUN * 2:40 5:00 * 7:20 9:40 * * What an Institution! MUN-TRI7: Fastest tvping in town. 20 vears experience. Reli able. 693-8537. 69.3-648.3. ' 92t30 Typing. Reports, Research Papers, Edueation Units, etc. Near campus. 696-0914 llBtlO Tvping. Svmbols. Rubber stamps. No job too small. 823-7723.’ 116t9 I rom till- .iiiHidi <>! (. AKKII I III SI IIMINt i nil. Ill ADZOM .iikI ( IIKISI |S| * * * * * * * * * * * Stephen Kincj^ Children of the Cor IN An ,tc1ul( rmihtmurr GAYLINE-current events, peer counseling, re ferrals. 775-1797 (5PM-midnight) 119t3 MON-FRI 7:25 9:45 SAT-SUN 2:45 5:05 7:25 9:45 MON-FRI 7:20 9:40 £ SAT-SUN 2:40 5:00 7:20 9:40 HK ALFRED HITCHCOCK’S t REAR J-WINDOW,PO, MON-FRI 7:30 9:50 SAT-SUN 2:50 5:10 7:30 9:50 BASKET: CASE : MON-FRI 7:15 9:35 £ SAT-SUN 2:15 4:30 7:15 9:35 * * ★ ★ * MANOR EAST MANOR EAST MALL '323-8300 i MON-FRI 7:25 9:45 SAT-SUN 2:45 5:05 7:25 9:45 * From the first laugh, you’ll be hooked! { '•V'- % * * * * ♦ * * * * * * M SCLCCTCO TMCATRf s ‘technicolor® LENSES AND PANAFLEX® CAMERA BY PANAVISION® if MON-FRI 7:15 9:35 X MON-FRI 7:20 9:40 SAT-SUN 2:35 4:55 7:15 9:35 £ SAT-SUN 2:40 5:00 7:20 9:40 t NEVER CRY J WOLF if lyJ'ljMf'' L- * Ar _ 105 S. Main PALACE g PEDRO EL DE GUADALAJARA EL DIABLO EN PERSONA yl ley is in dire need of a regional, non-profit hospital to serve Hi dalgo, Cameron and Willacy counties and surrounding areas. In many South Texas coun ties, he said, there is but a single doctor for each 3,500 residents, many of whom are too poor to afford care except from non profit hospitals. Compounding the problem, he said, is the double-digit un employment in the Valley caused by a deadly winter freeze and the devaluation of the Mexican peso. Krueger, formerly a U.S. congressman, also said he would work to see approval of a $66 million public works project forsp If cheating V now pending in WashingtonlaB the troubled area. j “Unemployment in theVitT ley is as high or higher tla| anywhere in the counml Krueger said. “And the gel tures of the federal governmol United Pres, to remedy that situation are ill WASHING" adequate. ■ouse counsel defiantly called Kr ueger’s Irequem tnps* ent 0 f a sp the Valley have undersconB^^gy to , the emerging political forceliijng |,i s co , the region, where seve: 1(l lie ygeneral groups have launched unpreoL, ^ la k e mor dented voter registration dm aimed at getting out the Deni cratic vote for the May priiM and for the November geno election. Grand jury indicts Texas lawmaker United Press International EL PASO — A Texas lawmaker was indicted by a state grand jury today on 16 counts of using taxpayers’ money to pay off gambling debts. State Rep. Bobby Valles, D-El Paso, surrendered and was booked into El Paso Gounty Jail. Bond was set at $20,000. The grand jury returned the indictments after hearing three days of testimony about why Valles placed Laurinda Ghris- tensen, wife of an alleged gam bler, on his state office payroll in 1982. She was paid $12,000 between January and October, 1982, according to state re cords. Courthouse sources indi cated the charges against Valles involved four payments to Mrs. Christensen, with the counts H SOUTHERN 5)r^( $2.25 Till lit (••tun starts on •■ck «croon. Sonior Chiiom o»or 65 anytimo. Studants an Friday. All saats Taasday. ■ President Rc his heels, pled pvithdraw his Meese — “my lfor 17 years” - ■mfidence an Iquiry would cle ■ The Senate Biiuee has del; jon Meese’s sel ■on’s top law e icer pending th gjminary Just investigation o providing for a choice of foJ cial irregula: criminal charges on eachofu Meese. four payments. BThe probe Mrs. Christensen and kwjisdosure of a husband, Dana, were graniifree loan to M immunity from prosecution si ment burdene gambling and narcotics chard of cronyism, in exchange for their testimoi'P in a letter t against Valles, a district ney’s spokesman said. Valles waited impatiently I several hours before beiifl called to testify for about! minutes. He then walkfftthicsinGovei quickly through the courlhoiuM Smith pro A short lime later he ''‘Iwith his top a< called back into the grand jr what to do. room where he spoke for abrsi Meese, in a 10 minutes. He declined tof at the White 1 swer questions from newsmeaBursue the vi He was called in againathirfeame, the hor time. Bid the con fid Police officers said theyha«Bent of the been questioning Valles' prest inominating m< and former aides about work Mrs. Christensen while on Valles’ payroll. The Christensens were rested at their home on Dec. H lugh inquiry when police seized recordsiki the high level indicated a large-scale bool making operation was takiif place in the home. Valles is a candidate forff| election in the May 5 Dete cratic primary. He has been® dorsed by a nu including teachers unions id jWhile House state employees organizations. val William F man he hop Beese asked Si ifeek court ap ispecial prosec In a statenu BO-minute me< Reagan said, impartial, pre )1 medication wh Id’s long care lice.” Reagan saic in his $69,8 House job pos lumber of group firmed for tl Post Oak Man Cinemas Speakes said I involved in an SAT/SUN: 2:30-5:15-7:35-9:45 WEEKNIQHTS: 5:15-7:35-9:45 SEAN PENN Mtacing irith the ffoon rtSTTI A PARAMOUNT UKtl «ct The smash hit of the season- Every performance a standing ovation! ment matters. Senate Re Howard Bake vately with M Predicted the SAT/SUN: 2:40-5:10-7:15-9:30 WEEKNIQHTS: 5:10-7:15-9:30 Della reese DUDLEY MOORE UnfolthfuRij TWENTIETH CENTURV-f starring in the national tourof the Broadway musical SAT/SUN: 2:20-5:00-7:30-10:00 WEEKNIQHTS: 5:00-7:30-10:00 Rachel Ward j Jeff Bridges against all odds COLUMBIA PICTURES i E)LUE5 NI GMT ~ 315 College North 846-6714 WEEKNIQHTS: 8:00 (No Disc.) Notnlnalad Baal Plctura Baal Supporting Actor Sam Shoppard O IBB SAT/SUN: 2:00-5:00-7:30-9:45 WEEKNIQHTS: 5:00-7:30-9:45 JAMES GARNER .A UNIVERSAL RELEASE TANKI ■ (EEL |■‘This is entertainment to warm body and soul together ' (■Clive Barnes. New York Posl More than two dozen great jazz and blues standards! t j^mers. SAT/SUN: 2:15-5:15-7:45-9:50 WEEKNIQHTS: 5:15-7:45-9:50 Seven men with one thing In common... UNCOMMON VALOR ~ A PARAMOUNT PICTURE MSC Town Hall/Broadway March 27 8:00 pm Rudder Auditorium For ticket info- 845-1234 Mastercard DIRECT FROM BROADWAY! 1982-83 Tony Nomination- “BEST MUSICAL spacious * I n shut! Ust y eE ■Spoc ^-Uour '“Pie \