Battalion Olassifiod Page4/TheBatta|ion/wednesda y>^ a y 23 > 1984 FOR RENT Live With the Best at PEPPER TREE APARTMENTS 2701 Longmire 693-5731 M-F 9-6 Sat. 10-5 Sun. 1-5 Villa West SUMMER RATES *Quiet & Convenient Location ‘Short or Long term leases available *No children or Pets Efficiency From $185 1 Bedroom From $220 - $265 2 Bedroom From $250 - $300 3500 Pinfeather M-F 8-5, Sat. 8-12 822-7772 casa tel sol 2 Blocks from Campus Summer rates $200 Yearly rates $275 1 Bedroom Church scrou street 2 blocks from food stores, etc. ' 2 block* from nite life on Univentlly. In addition we have Pool Basket Ball Goals Jacuzzi • . On premises Security— . Large Party Room Game Room 1*{ Class Maintenance ' Open T Days per waafc Moo.-Sat. 1:30-3:30 Sunday 1:00-3:00 / •. 401! College Station. Ta. 146133 D.R. Cain Rentals 1-2-3 Bedroom Apts. Townhomes Duplexes College Station: ‘Brazos House ‘Hawk Tree ‘Longmire House ‘Navarro 4-plexes ‘Yellowhouse Bryan: Briar Oaks Briarcrest 4-plexes Pecan Ridge ‘Wilde Oak Circle SUMMER SHUTTLE BUS 693-8850 693-8345 3002 South Texas ALL BILLS PAID Summer Rates Starting At 1BR $265 2BR $375 VIKING Apartments Hours M-F 9-5 S-S 9-2 693-6716 NEED A MINI WAREHOUSE? WHY? We give Free Storage with a fall lease (limited offer) Call now for details WILLOWICK APTS. 430 SW Parkway 693-1325 £9 NOW TAKING FALL LEASES 3 bedroom, 2 baths with washer & dryers. From $435/month. Sum mer rates also available. Call 696- 7714 or 693-0982 125tfn SUMMER RATES On 3 bedroom, 2 baths with washer & dryers. From $335-395/month. Near shopping cen ters and campus. Limited number available during summer For appointment, call 696- 7714 or 693-0982 ’25tfn Swiss Chalet. Two bedroom, one bath, washer, dryer, par tially furnished, walking dis tance, (713) 495-1386, eve nings, weekends, $475 negotiable. isits Double Tree Condo. Leasing one bedroom, one bath micro- wave oven, ice-maker refer, walk-in closet, hot tub, pool, steam, security, shuttle bus, quiet, 693-3232, 1901 W. Hol- leman Dr. ism Timber Ridge Apartments 1 & 2 BDRMS available. 3 blks from campus. Summer Rates $225.00 & up Fall Rates $300.00 & up $50.00 Deposit With This Ad 846-2173 i4sti s Furnished 1-2 bedroom apts. special $260/mo. 12mo. SCHOLARS INN 401 Cooner 846-3050 144t10 One or two bedroom studio apartment avail able. Off Southwest Parkway on Potomac. Also on shuttle bus route. Call 696-2282 for more in formation. 150t6 Attractive Spacious duplex, privacy fenced, bike distance. Available August, 693-0338 evenings. 149t5 REDUCED RATES. One bedroom with study. Convenient Bryan location. Only $275. Call Anne 693-8850. 147t7 4-plex close to TAMU. One bedroom now available, 1 bdrm. & 2 Bdrm. available for summer & fall. One bedroom $260/mo. 2 bdrm., $325/mo., water paid. 779-1613. 123t30 Furnished two bedroom apts. Two blocks from campus, 415 Nagle now available, 779-3700. 15 lt3 HELP WANTED SUMMER RATES AVAILABLE Starting at 1 Bedroom $195 2 Bedroom $295 EAST GATE APTS. 401 Lincoln Dr. E. 696-7380 SUBWAY America’s #1 speciality sandwich shop, is seeking 1 energetic & dependable full-time sandwich maker to work primarily 9:30 a.m. — 5:30 p.m., Mon-Fri. Sal ary negotiable. Training provided. Apply in person at Parkway Square, C.S. except between 11 a.m. — 2 p.m. i3s SAVE $$$ • Super Roommate • 2-2Floor Plans • Spacious (650 sq.ft.) 1 Bedroom Low summer and 12-month rates BRAZOS HOUSE APTS. 693-9957 14717 WAIT PERSONS Immediate openings for experi enced wait persons & cooks. Full or part-time. Will Train. Apply in person at SWENSEN’S Culpepper Plaza College Station uplex 53Z5 per baths, washer/dryer connections, ceiling fans. Close to A&M. Telephone 693-2305 or(214) 934-2920. 152tl4 Renters needed for nice duplex by the side or room, Richard 846-8094. 150t3 PART-TIME JOB Grounds person needed. Newport Apartments 3-4 hours 3 days. Hours are negotible. Call 846- 8960 MWF 9:00-12:00, 101 New port Apartments Office, 402 Na gle, College Station. vi49ts SOCIAL CHANGE JOBS Professional positions with Public In terest Groups (PIRGs) available na tionwide. Work on environmental/so cial justice/arms control issue. Send resume to: Janet Domentiz/PIRGs/37 Temple Pla ce/Boston, MA 02111. (617) 423-1796. Summer jobs also. 15211 Experienced picture framer- part-time-flexible hours, 775-7294. 15lt2 Gandhi, others, sign statement Leaders urge arms halt United Press International The leaders of six nations from India to Argentina called on the United States, the Soviet Union and the other nuclear powers Tuesday to reverse the arms race and stop the “rush to ward global suicide.” The statement was signed by India’s Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, President Miguel de la Madrid of Mexico, President Julius Nyerere of Tanzania, Prime Minister Olaf Palme of Sweden, Prime Minister An dreas Papandreou of Greece and Argentine President Raul Alfonsin. “We iirsfe. as a necessary first IN THE ^HTM7 TP “I^IT T THIATRrS r s 2.25 Mon-Fti til 5p.m 1st 30 minutes of the day i st feature of the day Saturday & Sunday EXCEPT • INDIANA JONES" POST OAK MALI CINEMAS 764-0616 9:00-7:19-9:30 Moscow on thn Hudson (R) IN DOLBY ST 5:15 7:30 9:4! “BREAKIN’ (PG) 5:00 7:45 10:00 ‘FINDERS KEEPERS’ rINUhHb NhhPEHS (R) Advanced Tickets for “Indiana Jonas” on Sala at Dillard’s In Post Oak Mall ON TWO SCREENS “INDIANA JONES”(PQ) TODAY TIMES: 10:00am 12:45 3:00 9:15 7:40 10:00 NO DISCOUNT-NO PASSES NO REDUCED ADMISSION 12:00 2:30 5:00 7:25 9:45 ‘ROMANCING THE STONE” (PG) ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ SCHULMAN THEATRES »1 OFF ADULT TICKETS 1st SHOW SAT.-SUN. STUDENT DISC. M-W *2 WITH I.D. * * * * * 7:30 9:50 CONQUEST 7:25 9:45 FOOTLOOSE * * •* * * ** * 7:35 9:55 7:25 9:50 ★ ROUGE ACADEMY Z. 7:15 9:55 + j THE NATURAL f 7:20 9:40 J SIXTEEN CANDLES * * FIRESTARTER 5 * * * * Jf 7:15 9:40 THE BOUNTY J ; * Jf MANOR EAST III Manor East Mall 823-8300 + MAKING THe'gRADE £ t » 7:25 9:45 * * om aoi_. + 7:25 9:45 SPLASH * SERVICES 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 WORD PROCESSING: Papers, dissertations, reports, etc. Fast, accurate, reasonable, 846- 6200. 149t7 TYPING. Research papers, reports, etc. Fast service, near campus, 696-0914, 142t9 SPECIAL NOTICE If you have $229 and a way to Dallas or Houston, you could be in Europe tomorrow with AIRHITCH(tm), (212) 864- 2000, (800) 372-1234. 142115 PERSONALS New credit card! No one refused! Also, infor mation on receiving VISA, MASTERCARD with no credit check. Free brochure. Call 602- 951-1266 extension 505. 151t3 FOR SALE Very attractive home. Wheeler Ridge, 3 bedroom hollywood, bath, living & dining rooms, large study, built-in ex tras, ceiling fans. 1600 square feet. Landscaped yard with privacey fence. Large deck (hot tub negotibale) $82,500, 4015 Woodbriar, 775-4393. 15113 Is it ture you can buy Jeeps for $44 through the LLS. Government? Get the facts today! Call (312) 742-1142 ext. 8390. 15lt4 Mobile home. Two bedroom, one bath Washer- /dryer. Call 779-8596. 146t7 Sailboot international 470, 15.5; fiberglass, floa tation, extras for racing w/trailer. Call 693-0087, 845-2496. 151t3 step, the United States and the Soviet Union, as well as the United Kingdom, France and China, to halt all testing, pro duction and deployment of nu clear weapons and their deliv ery systems to be immediately followed by substantial reduc tions in nuclear forces,” the statement said. U.N “Today, the survival of hu mankind is in jeopardy,” said the statement. “The rush to ward global suicide must be stopped and then reversed.” Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau and Pope John Paul II were expected to issue back-up statements to the plea. ambassadors from the six countries presented the statement in New York to the mission chiefs of the five nu clear powers. U.S.-Soviet talks on nuclear arms control were stymied last year when the Russians walked out of two sets of negotiations in Geneva because of the deploy ment of new American nuclear missiles in western Europe. “Neither the American peo ple nor the Soviet people want war. I think, by and large, mil lions all over the world want peace and to be able to live their lives in harmonious conditions,” Gandhi said in an interview with NEC’s Today Show. Around tom McLennan Aggie Moms , host social The Waco-McLennan County Aggie Mom’s Club willjJ hosting a “Welcome Home” social May 25 from 4 to 7 p,ml at the Lake Air Towers Condominium pool on Cobbs Dritjl in Waco. Food and beer will be provided for McLennan County students and their dates. R.S.V.P. by calling 77’f 8040or772-4328. Soldiers attacked on Salvadoran road United Press International Salvadoran leftist guerrillas claimed Tuesday that they am bushed a three-truck convoy of the U.S.-backed army, killing 25 soldiers and wounding 15 oth ers. The army immediately den ied the assertion. In Nicaragua, the govern ment said it crushed an attack by CIA-supported insurgents in the central province of Mat- agalpa and in other northern regions, killing 41 rebels, while 15 of its soldiers were slain. The American Catholic Con ference sent a letter to the Hon duran government asking it to reconsider relocating the 12,000 Salvadoran war refugees who are living in camps near the Honduran-Salvadoran bor der. Honduras announced last November its decision to relo cate the refugees to Olanchito, a good agricultural zone, 120 miles north of Tegucigalpa, say ing they would have better liv ing conditions and security away from the frontier. A Defense Ministry spokesmen labeled the claim by the Salvadoran guerrillas “com pletely false.” Military officials at the Third Infantry Brigade in San Miguel, where (he troops are stationed, were unavailable for comment. Funeral home operators in San Miguel who normally han dle army burials said they had received no corpses nor had they been contacted by military officials. The clandestine Salvadoran Radio Venceremos claimed one vehicle of the three-truck con voy was destroyed in the am bush, carried out with mines and rifle fire against a specially trained “hunter battalion” that was withdrawing from a mili tary sweep. II said the elite rebel Rafael Arce Zablah Brigade carried out the attack on a road be tween Giudad Barrios and Gha- peltique, two towns 63 miles east of San Salvador. It claimed 25 soldiers were killed and 15 others injured. It gave no rebel casualty figures. A soldier stationed in Giudad Barrios and reached by tele phone said a 30-minute fire- fight occurred Monday between infantrymen on foot and rebels south of the town but no casual ties were recorded. Track program to have registration Registration for the College Station Junior Olyrapicil ill be lime 4 and 5 at Oakwood School from 9 to 10:3)1 By The will be Jt a.m. and 6 to 7 p.m. The program begins June 6 anttl A&M Consolidated track and ends July 2. Cost for the rn ’ rar gram is $12 per youngster or $24 per family. The clirraot® 11 ’ acce f of the program will be flexible with Little League, softbalP 6 l * and vacations. For more information or late registration I BaseU contact Jaes Giese at 696-7292 or 696-0544. Tuesday - I The Speaker to discuss wafer issues year, hav'< pete in t Kng hel ter, OklaE It mar 1- 1978 tha iach Coe Dr. Herb Grubb, principal planner of the Texas Depart ment of Water Resources, will speak about “Future Waterfi 3 Issues,” May 28 at 10 a.m. in 607 Rudder. The seminarisB 1611 ” 1S sponsored by the Futures Focus Group of the Texas Agr | oui ne y' culture Extension Service. ■Lhancll the Ags t< west Co ships, an Defensive driving course offered E ‘ l In 197 F The Brazos Valley Safety Agency will conduct a de jjeated twi< fensive driving course May 29 and 30 at the Ramadalm nating th< The eight-hour course will be from 6 to 10 p.m. both days ijihose Mid Students must attend both sessions. Registration beginsat Edinburg, p.m. at the Ramada Inn or students can pre-register by call BBut thi ing 693-8178. Cost for the course is $20. B)ves no The course can be used to have certain traffic violation search of i dismissed or to get a 10 percent reduction in automobilein ■ surance rates. 0v Arts council host juried art show The Arts Gouncil of Brazos Valley is sponsoring a Juried Art Show, painting exhibit and sale Saturday from 9 p.m.to 2 p.m. at the Messina Hof Vineyard. The theme of the shot is the “Beauty of Messina Hof.” Artists will be painting at the show as well as selling some of their works of art. Participating artists include June Boyd, Iva Butcher, Ro salie Gotropia, June Dudley, Helen Finney, Betty Graham. seve chiding t United ’WASH l and cajoli wjek for [open thre< dav in Was I The owr Rose Marie Lindsay, Helen Perry, Roxy Pike, Maurice Schulz, Henrietta Stephenson, Gary Tatterson, Amy Wal ton, Rosemary Wilson, Johnnie Griffin, Jon Mondtick.Le vert Carpenter, Ed Hoag and Pat Davis. Arabia Saudis to use $1 billion to improve air defenses- cohipetitio lusiness d tention is when 14 ci five Sup Each cir ute pres* morning t> afterm United Press International Saudi Arabia, armed with a U.S. offer to protect oil tankers in the Persian Gulf against Ira nian air strikes, said Tuesday it was beefing up its air defenses with $1 billion in im provements. Iran warned the United States and its allies against at tempting to support Iraq and the Western allies in the Gulf region, saying it would “give a crushing response” to such ef forts, according to the Islamic Republic News Agency. The announcment coincided with a Japanese appeal to Iran and Iraq to stop attacking civil ian oil tankers in the Persian Gulf and a pledge of continued efforts to end the Gulf War. Foreign Ministry officials in To kyo said. The officials said the appeal was made by Japanese Foreign Minister Shintaro Abe in a two- hour meeting with an Arab League mission now in Tokyo, which includes the foreign min isters of Iraq and Kuwait. Riyadh’s $1 billion system will use electronic equipment man ufactured in Saudi Arabia and financed partly with foreign money, sources said. It was not described further and the source of the funds was not identified. It was believed the system will be linked to American AWAGS aircraft stationed in Saudi Ara bia. In Washington, officials said they had received no request from the Gulf countries for U.S. warplanes to move to Gulf airbases to provide air cover for the oil tankers. They said no such request was expected at the present time. The officials said President Reagan reaffirmed a pledge to protect the strategic waterway in a letter to Saudi ruler King Fahd saying the United States would discuss any requests for military assistance from Gulf nations. Richard Murphy, assistant of secretary of state for the Near East, went to Riyadh to deliver the letter. There was no immediate Saudi reaction but Saudi Oil Minister Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamani said Monday he (tide think the United Slzatesshoii intervene militarily in the& as it might provoke a confron lion with Moscow. The Iranian Foreign Mi istry condemned what it call the United States and its all “desperately searching forat lution hoping to save (In President) Saddam (Hussci their own interests and those their agents in the region,"d Tehran news agency reptf said. Iran has repeatedly said | will close all oil routes ini Gull if Iraq continued atladi ships loading oil from Iran Kharg Island terminal. Irani warplanes have damaged so ral oil tankers in recent weeks STARTS TODAY and the r&mptLG up uuom CO HARRISON FORD "INDIANA JONES AND THE TEMPIE OF DOOM" KATE CAPSHAW-AMRISH PURI • ROSHAN SETH • PHILIP STONE -SL KE HUYQUAN Ewciti/ePnMucws GEORGE LUCAS m FRANK MARSHALL Associate Produew KATHLEEN KENNEDY k.»JOHN WILLIAMS WILLARD HUYCK&GLORIA KATZ s«..,GE0RGE LUCAS ROBERT WATTS STEVEN SPIELBERG a paramount picture ' | Nomtolcn Irom Bitonlre Boofcs| lOnpnil Sounflrid on POtYDOR Retorts and bpes] [PGlPMBfPH GUOMCE SWOSTH)’4S»] THSfUUMYKPO MEKSt FORYOWgROtWtW| ©EEHMESIH 315 College North 846-6714 | TIMES TODAY 10:00-12:45-3:00-5:15-7:40-10:00 ADVANCED TICKETS ON SALE AT DILLARDS NO PASSES NO DISCOUNTS NO REDUCED ADMISSION TICKETS \ f<