The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 19, 1984, Image 6

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    Battalion
Classified
FOR RENT
2 Blocks from Campus
Summer rates 1 bedroom $200 2 bedroom $250
Church icrou street
2 blodcs from food stores, etc.'
2 blocks from nite life on University.
In addition we hnve
Pool Basket Ball Goals
Jacuzzi • _ On premises Security** .
Large Party Room
Game Room Isf Class Maintenance- '
Open 7 Day* per week
Moo.-Sat. 1:10-5:30
Sunday 1:00-3:00 .
/ .401
College Station. Ti.
33 146133
jessk
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
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
136tfn
ALL BILLS
PAID
Summer Rates Starting At
1 Bedroom $265
2 Bedroom $375
Hours:
M-F 9-5 S-S 9-2
VIKING APTS.
693-6716 154112
BOYETT PROPERTIES
House, Condos, 1 or 2 bedroom
apts. furnished or unfurnished.
Beginning at $250/mo. walking
distance to campus, 846-8014.
159125
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
New Mini Storage Facility for rent. All sizes. Compet
itive Rates. 10% Aggie Discount. 693-0358 160t22
FOR SALE
1961 VW Beatle, Classic, light
blue. First owner 15, second own
er 19 years. In-town transporta
tion. New clutch, battery, inspec
tion. Best cash offer over $1500.
See at 506 East Brookside. 846-
0584,845-1143. i54t4
Students! Tired of tittle box type Apart
ments? You can own your own home
for less than you pay for rent. Payments
start out as low as $125.00 a month.
Call for more details. Yellow Rose Mo
bile Homes-Bryan. 779-8222 i60t2
Vet. School-Med. School-Grad.
School. Payments start at $125.00
a month. You need long term hous
ing to beat the rent rut. Call for de
tails- Yellow Rose Mobile Homes,
779-8222 16012
Attention Aggie freshman! Apartment Beater!
Payments start out as low as $125.00 a
month. New 2 bd. 1 bath, includes, furniture,
drapes, refrigerator, stove. Don’t get caught
in the rent rut-Buy a home of your own-Great
tax savings for Mon and Dad. Call for details-
Yellow Rose Mobile Homes-Bryan-779-8222
16012
Cheap Housing! Several low cost pre
owned mobile homes, Several available
with refrigerator, stove, drapes, and
A/C. Some with owner financing. Act
Now! These won’t last! Yellow Rose
Mobile Homes, 779-8222 i6ot2
1978 Yamaha SR-500, header, OIL-Cooler. Great
Around town transportation. $625. 696-3588.
157t5
’75 Nova 2dr Hatchback, air, cruise, reliable car,
$ 1100.00,846-0633, Eve. 158t3
Sell Roses In Nightclubs. Good Pay, short hours. Call
Ed At 846-4289. 157t5
14x80 Broadmore, 3br, 2 bath, Central Air, Set up,
Must sell, Call 775-2444. 157t6
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
125tfn
SUMMER
RATES
AVAILABLE
Starting at:
1 Bedroom $175
2 Bedroom $295
EAST GATE APTS.
401 Lincoln Dr. E.
696-7380
Two bedroom efficiency type apartment. Close to cam
pus. Call after 6:00 pan. 846-8575. 159l4
Duplex $325 per month, two bedrooms, two-
Ibatns. washer/dryer connections, ceiling fans,
dose to A&M. Telephone 693-2305 or(214)
934-2920. - I52tl4
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
142120
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 1451151
IS IT TRUE YOU CAN BUY JEEPS FOR $44
THROUGH THE U.S. GOVERNMENT? GET THE
FACTS TODAY! CALL 1-312-742-1142 EXT. 8390. 160t4
WANTED
TEXAS COIN
EXCHANGE
LARGE STOCK OF 14
KARAT GOLD CHAINS
(sold by weight)
We buy old gold in any form:
Class rings, dental gold, etc.
LARGE STOCK of
LOOSE DIAMONDS
Shop us before you buy
“Never a Sale, Just The
Best Price In Town”
Our everyday low prices are up
to 70% less than what most retail
ers charge for jewelry.
We charge $15.00 to mount a
diamond in your aggie ring
(your diamond or ours)
404 University Dr.
846-8916
3202-A Texas Ave.
(across from El Chico, Bryan)
779-7662
•CASH*
BEFORE YOU SELL your old
gold, silver and rare coins to
just anyone, let the profes
sionals at Texas Coin Ex
change make you our high
cash offer! Texas Coin Ex
change has been in business
in Bryan for over 25 years,
with a large selection of rare
coins and gold coin jewelery.
We also stock
•Black Hills gold jewelry
•Gold chedns by weight
•Loose diamonds
TEXAS COIN
EXCHANGE
404 University Dr., C.S.
846-8916
3202a Texas Ave., Bryan
779-7662 iS4ti9
PLITT theatrfs
$2.25 DISC. TILL 1ST
SHOW STARTS
POST OAK MALL «
CINEMAS O
761-0516
“MALIBU
HOT SUMMER” ( r)
12:15 2:30 4:45 7:15 9:45
“GHOST BUSTERS” (PG)
CINEMA 3
315 COLLEGE NOR". H
846-6714
12:45 3:00 5:15 7:4010:05
“INDIANA JONES” (PG)
2:00 4:00 6:00 8:00 10:00
“BREAKIN”(PG)
12:00 2:30 5:00 7:25 9:45
“ROMANCING
THE STONE" (PG)
ir-w w ir ir w w ir w ir ir
* SCHULMAN
{ THEATRES
$1.00 OFF Adult Ticket
.fc 1st Show Each Day
^ (excapt Qramllns & Star Trek III)
*
*
*
*
*
★
SCHULMAN 6
2002 E. 29th
775-2463 775-246f
2:45 5:05 7:25 9:45
GREMLINS
2:50 5:10 7:30 9:50
*
j POLICE ACADEMY j
2:40 5:00 7:20 9:40 *
f BEAT STREET f
tT:40l{):00 £
IstreetsoffireI
£ 2:10 4:40 7:15 9:55 +
* THE NATURAL t
+ 2:85 5:10 7:35 9:50 *
£ SIXTEEN CANDLESf
MANOR EAST III
VLihor East Mall
823-8300
2:38 4:99 7:30 9:35
STAR TREK III
70mm 6-tr«ck Dolby
*
+ 2:35 4:55 7:15 9:35 ^
^ Walt Disney’s ^
* THE RESCUERS *
£' , “^T3R5nS7«r , ~“£
* SPLASH *
SKYWAY TWIN
DRIVE-IN
200t' F i'91h 822-3300
w EAST: HARD BODIES and ^
£ WHERE THE BOYS ARE J
X WEST: MOSCOW ON At,
X THE HUDSON -to
X and AGAINST ALL ODDS *
*¥ ¥ ¥ ¥
The
Battalion
Number One
in
Aggieland
LOST AND FOUND
Found: Black puppy on A&M Campus. Call 696-3827
or 845-3313. 160t3
PERSONALS
New credit card! No one refused! Also, information on
receiving VISA, MASTERCARD with no credit check.
Free brochure. Call 602-951-1266 extension 505. 154t3
HELP WANTED
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16-6559-$50,553/year. Now
hiring. Your area. Call 1-805-687-6000 ext. 9531. 154t8
Bartender wanted Elks Lodge. No experience nec
essary. Call after 4:00 PM 846-2096 Karen. 16015
Domino’s Pizza needs 15 drivers for store opening in
Townshire Plaza, June 15th. Apply within. 822-7373.16013
COOKS
Immediate openings for cooks, part-
time or full-time. Day & night shifts
available. Apply in person at
SWENSEN’S
CULPEPPER PLAZA, COLLEGE
IQOilii
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
TYPING
Personalized services. We care.
We understand form and style.
AUTOMATED CLERICAL SERVICES
110 Lincoln 693-1070
160115
WORD PROCESSING. Personalized Service. Experi
enced in A&M Formats, requirements. Dissertations
welcome. 846-3833. 160t24
GAYLINE—Current events, referrals, peer counseling.
775-1797 (5:30PM-12 midnight) 7 days. 160t3
Lawn mowing, trimming, flower beds, etc. 822-5137.
155t8
Course in taxidermy offered, Tuition fee charged. Call
846-0141, Palermo Taxidermy. 157t9
Math Physics M.E. Tutoring at your convenience
$5/hr. 779-7060. 157t10
Bikinis-wearing the latest style? L nwanted hair perma-
nentlv removed. Pamela Shirlev Electrolysis, 846-3141
or 823-0637. 155tl2
Police try
to kill fear
of crime
United Press International
HARTFORD, Conn. — Trial pro
grams by police departments in
Houston and in Newark, N.J., ap
pear to have reduced fear of crime
in even high-crime neighborhoods,
officials at the National Sheriffs As
sociation said Monday.
Fear of crime and what to do
about it was among 25 seminars for
1,500 sheriffs attending a five-day
conference of the nation’s largest
law enforcement organization.
President Reagan will deliver a
major law enforcement address
Wednesday, the first president to
appear before the 45,000-member
association.
Fear of crime destroys the social
life of cities and hurls business, said
Sheriff James R. Metis of Lexington,
S.C., but police can do something
about it.
Police in the voluntary one-year
programs in Houston and Newark
succeeded in reducing community
fears in four trial areas by knocking
on doors, talking to residents, get
ting criminals off street corners and
buses and getting other government
agencies to help where possible,
Metis said.
The National Institute for Justice
spent $74,000 to send two teams of
sheriffs to the cities several times
during the year to check on the pro
gress.
Another $1.8 million Police Foun
dation grant will be used to measure
the programs’ success with before-
and-after comparisons of crime rates
and community fears in the target
and control neighborhoods.
A full report is expected in De
cember.
“We’re talking about a real success
story,” said Asheville, N.C., Sheriff
Thomas Morrissey, who led the
Newark evaluation team. “They took
criminal prevention techniques and
used them in the inner city where
they were really needed.”
Newark police made an intensive
effort on “public order enforce
ment,” clearing loiterers from street
corners, using radar to check speed
ing and using undercover police to
reduce drug sales and purse snatch-
ings on buses. They set up criminal
detection road blocks in the neigh
borhoods and “mini precincts” in
store fronts.
Gyms were opened for teenagers
and juvenile offenders were diver
ted to community clean-up rather
than detention. Police went door-to-
door to interview residents “who had
felt abandoned,” Morrissey said.
Metis said Houston police tried to
“increase the quality and quantity” of
their contact with the public by
opening police community centers,
distributing neighborhood newslet
ters and organizing a neighborhood
cleanup. They used off-duty police
officers for the “direct citizen con
tact program.”
Defensive driving course begins today
The Brazos Valley Safety Agency will conduct a defensive driv
ing course today and Saturday at the Ramada Inn. The eight-hour
course will be from 6 to 10 p.m. today and tomorrow. Students must
attend both sessions. Registration begins at 5 p.m. at the Ramada Inc
or students can pre-register by calling 693-8178. Cost for the count
is $20.
The course can be used to have certain traffic violations dis
missed or to gel a 10 percent reduction in automobile rates.
By TRAVIS TINC
Sports Writer
tTexas A&M’s new woi
■ball coach and assislai
Bector, Lynn Ann Hicke
■t her coaching pliilosi
■llycoaching at all —- it’s
■1 really want to consult
The College Station Parks and Recreation Department isspon pl |er We H * K ‘ a Lind
soring an outdoor Co-Rec Volleyball and Three on Three Basktt- l 01 ""* leam an< * wt> * )e
ball program. Entries close Friday. The entry fee for volleyball i;
$150 ami for basketball it is $90. Both seasons will begin July 9. For
further information contact the College Station Parks and Recre
ation Department at 764-8773.
Volleyball, basketball registration starts
Students awarded Gulf OH Scholarships
mentally prepared
ne," Hickey said in a
lerview from her home i
Kansas.
hy would Hickey ra
Her herself a teacher a
|ich?
I Probably because she is
Bickey received a bachelo
Two Texas A&M/University students have been awarded Gulf jEducation from Ouach
Oil Honor Scholarships. Paula D. McCann, a junior, petroleum eri Diversity, graduating Sm
gineering major and Christian J. Corley, a junior, geophysics major
were awarded the scholarships based on academic achievement and
extracurricular activity.
The two-year scholarship provides for 80 percent of all tuiiion
and room and board; provides an opportunity for summer employ
ment with Gulf between the junior and senior year and gives an un
restricted grant of $ 1,000 to the school.
Embryos still frozen
United Press International
Jude.
■Hickey moves into h<
lad coaching position af
ftlhe last five years at K;
University.
Ilf Hickey’s accomplisl
Kansas State are any ind
ffhat's in store for Texas /
women’s basketball
iy finally turn itself arou
[Hickey hasn’t begun
the Aggies yet, but
ngs a 125-59 career r<
confines of G. Rollie \
m — no one’s going to
|n 1984, Kansas State
Jo the NCAA regional to
An
MELBOURNE, Australia
Australian legal official recom
mended Monday that two “or
phaned” test-tube embryos should
remain frozen pending passage of
legislation to determine if they
should be implanted in a surrogate
mother.
stale health minister could setcoi
lions of the program and thusdtlcapturing its third Big
cide what should be done with iMence title in a row. Th
embryos.
The embryos, conceived by the
“in-vitro” fertilization method then
frozen in liquid nitrogen three years
ago, have stirred a legal and ethical
debate since it was revealed the cou
ple that produced them, Mario and
Elsa Rios, both of Los Angeles, had
died.
Authorities must decide whetli
to destroy the embryos or impla
them in the womb of a surroga;
mother and let them develop to k
turity.
“COLLEGE PARK, M
determit ommers hasn’t been to
They must also
Doctors at Melbourne’s Queen
Victoria Medical Center learned last
week that Rios, 57, a property devel
oper, and his wife, 40, had been
killed when their light plane crashed
in Chile in April.
— — j — — —__ — .did r. *
whether children who develo# ame ln > °fi» say 25 years
from the embryos could inheritii now w ^° ^ a, T R°enick<
Rios’ estate. Jn 1 wa ‘ t to meet fi ie m.
er$l million Sunday w
Keenan said the legal status ofili am homer,
embryos was unclear. “Theyma) l i# Ms. Sommers, 45, won
belong to anyone,” he said. > WMAR-TV Equita
Dr. Carl Wood, head of the Mti lomerun Derby during
bourne “in-vitro” fertilization tei
said he had asked for theadviceo;;
special committee on the ethics
the test-tube baby program
Grant
United Press Interna
ining of the Baltimore C
The Rios’ left an estate worth an
estimated $ 1 million, raising the pos
sibility that the minute embryos
might be heirs to a fortune.
With the “in-vitro” technique
eggs of women who cannot com
a child by natural methods are
lized with sperm in a glass con
The egg is then surgically imp
in the woman’s womb.
Jim Keenan, attorney-general of
the state of Victoria, said he would
recommend doctors keep the em
bryos frozen until the government
had the legislative power to control
the test-tube baby program.
Under pending legislation, the
In the frozen embryo metl
embryos are placed in liquid niu
gen at minus 200 degrees
grade two or three days after fe:
zation. They are saved for future
in case the first embryos imnlani
fail to develop.
A&M students advise Unitedbank
By HOLLY ROBINSON
Reporter
Two Texas A&M students have
been elected student advisory direc
tors by the Unitedbank of College
Station.
Renell Carter and Steve Schwarz-
bach attend meetings of the bank’s
directors to advise them about the
needs and attitudes of Texas A&M
students. Though the students can
not vote, they participate in commit
tees and work on projects along with
the other board members.
“These are not honorary appoint
ments,” President Jim E. Scamardo
said, “but full advisory directorships
for which the recipients will receive
monthly director fees. Their positive
input and ideas will receive appro
priate consideration.”
Carter, a junior finance major
with a 3.70 grade-point ratio, has
been named to the College of Busi
ness Administration Fellows Pro
gram and is a member of Beta
Gamma Sigma, the national scholas
tic honor society in business. She is
working as a summmer intern at Re
public Bank in Dallas and plans to
continue a career in banking.
“The main advantage of the pro
gram is that we get to see first hand
how decisions are made,” Carter
said.
Schwarzbach, a junior finance ma
jor with a 3.25 GPR, is a member of
the Finance Association. He is also a
member of the Student Aggie Club
and has been selected for the Col
lege of Business Fellows Program.
Schwarzbach is planning on a bank
ing career, but he says his experi
ence on the board would be valual
in any business.
“It’s an opportunity that the an
age college student doesn’t have,’
said.
Bank officials say the stuefc
dirctorship program, begun in Dt
cember 1980, is one of the
scholarships available to Texas AiS
students in addition to proviefc
practical experience.
“It’s better than reading about
or dicussing theories,” Scamanl
said. “The students can experie®
the decision making process tl>
they don’t get in the classroom.’’
Scamardo said the program c
poses the bank to the topstudenis
Texas A&M. “We get first shol
their employment.” he said. “Even
they don’t choose a job with us, i
have friends forever.”
C.S. s
Tim Cartwright sli
doubleheader at Ols
Gallery Datsun
COOLING SYSTEM
PRESSURE TESTING
■Inspect all Belts & Hoses—
$-| C00
EMC
parts and installation of parts extra
Ken Speaks-service manager
1214 Texas Ave. 775-1500
rx»c
DOC
HUMANA HOSPITAL
Bryan-College Station
Has an immediate opening for
1
SPECIAL PROCEDURES TECH0N0L0GIST
(ARRT)
in the Radiology Department. Position is full time
and does involve call.
Would accept part time empolyment with flexible
hours during daytime.
Contact Personnel Office
EOE 775-4200 M/F
K
MIC
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The
Battalion
We won’t be unders
Check us first!
^J402Texas
^S\VV.\VVA\*"V
Number One
In
Aggieland