Battalion Classified FOR RENT WE PAY YOUR UTILITIES •Plus Tennis, Pool, Sauna •24 hr. Emergency Maintenance •Shuttle Bus Route •Security Guard •Balconies & Patio •Individual A/C & Heat FALL RATES START AT 1 Bedroom $328 2 Bedroom $439 Rates to Increase July 15~Hurry! Wm. J. Garrett ‘47. Mon-Fri 9-5 1601 Holleman 693-6716 Sat 9-12 casa tel sol 2 Blocks from Campus SPECIAL FALL RATES Free Cow Hop Burger, Fries, & Tea to each student seeking an apartment LIMITED TIME ONLY Church across street 2 blocks from stores, etc 2 blocks from nite life on University Pool Jacuzzi Large Party Room Game Room Basketball Goals On premises Security 1 st Class Maintenance Open 7 days per week Mon.-Sat. 8:30-5:30 Sunday 1:00-5:00 401 Stasney College Station, Tx. 696-3455 SMALL LIVING SPACE? HIGH RATES & DEPOSITS GOT YOU EFFICIENCIES — $250 500 square feet - Huge walk-in closets - Must see to believe PERFECT FOR ROOMMATES All Bills Paid Except Electricity - No Utility Deposits! Pools - Tennis & Basketball Courts - Saunas - Exercise & Game Rooms - Shuttle Bus Come By - See Our Apartments - Best for less PLANTATIONS OAKS APARTMENTS 1501 Harvey Road 693-1011 Mon.-Fri. 8-5:30 Sat. 10-5 Sun. 2-5 Managed by TOWER PROPERTIES,LTD. GGIELAND Jftamk ALL BILLS PAID 1 BEDROOMS Furn. Deals. S35 Mo. Up START Eff. 1-2-3 BR's s 170 Security Guard Plus Utilities FALL FREE RENT BETWEEN SEMESTERS! Deposit $125 One Sem. Lease OK Shuttle Bus 306 REDMOND*693-2614 24 Hr. Service 112 Mi. to Campus 3 Pools Close Shopping Club Room Pets OK Large Closets ^ Balcomes«Patios &>&>U Extra Parking 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 F'OR RENT-2br.-l bath house on 2 acres in Bryan. Large Oak/Pecan trees. Berry patch, storage buildings, sun deck, 5 minutes to campus, horses OK. $420/mo., 706 Pal- asota. 817-595-1886. 176tl0 SPECIAL NOTICE FOR RENT Live With The Best At APARTMENTS 2701 Longmire 693-5731 M-F 9-6 Sat 10-5 Sun 1-5 PLANTATION OAKS APARTMENT 1 & 2 BEDROOMS—FROM $295.00 Everything you want in Apartment living. Great Rates - Low Deposits - Super Location - All Bills Paid Except Electricity - No utility Deposits - Shuttle Bus - Pools - Tennis & Basketball Courts - Saunas - Exercise & Game Room 1501 Harvey Road 693-1011 Mon.-Fri. 5-5:30 Sat. 10-5 Sun.2-5 •Quiet Secluded Atmosphere •Hot Tub-Pool •Front door Parking FALL RATES START AT $285 i , r' —r— i r 696-7380 Behind Red Lobster FOR SALE FOR SALE: DATSUN 210-’81 5 spd., a/c, am-fm cas sette. 823-0041 day; 775-3611 after 7p.m. 178t7 LARGE WOODED LOTS Come see our beautiful Park. We furnish water, sewer, & mowers. And for: STUDENTS ONLY We have LOWERED our deposit and LOWERED our RENT for the next 12 Months. Clearleaf Hills MobileHome Community 920 Clearleaf 779-2865 Less than 10 min. from school. lerna HELP WANTED NOW TAKING FALL LEASES 3 bedroom, 2 baths with washer & dryers. From $435/month. Summer rates also available. Call 696-7714 or 693-0982. BOYETT PROPERTIES House, Condos, 1 or 2 bedroom apts. furnished or unfurnished. Beginning at $250/mo. walking distance to campus, 846-8014. 159125 Leasing nice 3-bedroom 2-bath home $600/mo. Prefect for professor call after 5p.m. 846-0410. 178t5 Room & board. Home style foods. $200/mo. Utilities paid. 779-8600. 17615 Computer Programmer. IBM pc and Apple experi- 174t5 ence. 693-2959. $6.00/hr. Lemo driver needed part-time 10-20 hrs. wk. Petite gires preferred. Call 846-4751. 178t3 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. 91tfn WORD PROCESSING. Personalized Service. Experi enced in A&M Formats, requirements. Dissertations welcome. 846-3833. 160124 NAVASOTA, TEXAS Pop.6000 PUBLIC WORKS DIRECTOR Responsible for street mainte nance, landfill, sanitations, city garage, wastewater treatment plant, water and gas utilities. Street maintenance and repair experience preferred. Mini mum two years, successful management experience. Civil engineering degree and regis tration in Texas required. $1,956-$2,572/mo. (depending on qualifications). Send re sume to: Ron Allen, Ray Asso ciation, Inc. 508 West 12 Street, Austin, Texas 78701, (512) 478-4699. EOE. i76t4 MARKETING MAJORS: Exciting sales opportunity- Bryan/College Station area. Be your own boss! Set your own hours! Must be ambitious, aggressive, neat appearance with dependable transportation. Please send brief resume to: P.O. Box 2662, Conroe, Texas 77305 Attention Mark Herring. PART-TIME HELP WANTED. GRAPEVINE PERSONALITY. 696-3411 Typing and word processing. Reasonbie rates. Exec utive Secretarial Services, 696-3785. 173tl6 WAITRESSES, BARTENDER & D.f. Silver Dollar, 846-4691,775-7919. 163t21 TYPING-Theses, term papers, etc. near campus. Call Mary 846-0285. 175t6 Part-time runner for local oil company. Must have good tj'ping, reliable transportation, neat appearance. $3.50 hr. Phone Susan at 846-9730. 176t5 MISCELLANEOUS GAYLINE Sunday through Friday 5:30 until mid night, 775-1797. I77t3 For expert typing and word processing, call 693-0389 after 6 p.m. 177tl0 Typing and word processing. Reasonable rates. EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAL SERVICES, Across from A&M’s main entrance on* Texas Avenue, 696- 3785. 173tl6 BELLYDANCING for any occasion, $35.00, 693-0077. Page 6/The Battalion/Friday, July 27,li Fleetwood Mobile home ’78 14x56, 2bdrm. 1 hath, cen tral air/heat, washer/dryer, storage bldg. Wooded lot 7 mi. from A&M. Fenced area for horse. 693-6920 after 8:00p.m. 175tl4 Mobile home for sale: Off Highway 60, 48 feet long; two bedroom, partially furnished, carport, screened porch. Call David 846-5226. 177tI7 Moving! Must sell 14x65 mobile home, more information, 693-3145, negotiable. 176t3 Cabbage Patch Pals professionally crafted, designed to your order. Faking Christmas orders now. $50.00, 822-5137. 175tl3 Moving to LSU Baton Rouge? 3 bdr. brick, fireplace llVfe% fixed assumption. Call after 5p.m. & weekend, 846-9049. 176U8 FUJI 21' 12-speed touring hike $260.00 or ofter, 822-2169, Diane. 176t5 Around town Shortterm summer loon applications due Today is the last day for Texas A&M students to apply fori Short Term Loan for the summer session. Applications will beat cepted for the fall semester beginning next week. Short term Its applications are available in the Office of Student Financial Aid,It catcd on the second floor of the Pavilion. Defensive driving class begins Monday The Brazos Valley Safety Agency is sponsoring a defensivedrii “ sda ' ing course Monday and Tuesday from ii to 10 p.m. attlu- Ramadi Inn, College Station. The course can be used to receive a lOpercer.’ reduction in automobile insurance rates or for the dismissal of a in; fie line. Registration is at 5 p.m. Monday at the Ramada Inn.Thefa is $20. Chamber of commerce to meet Tuesday The business forum committee of the Bryan-College Statioi Chamber of Commerce will meet at 11:45 a.m. Tuesday atlheAj. gieland Inn. The cost of the buffet luncheon will be $6.57. Thefea tured speaker is Ed Brady, new executive vice president of thecham her. Brady will discuss community development and his role as executive vice president of the chamber of commerce. Glashow to continue affiliation with A&M Dr. Sheldon Glashow, who shared the Nobel Prize in Physicsfosi, his work on the fundamental forces of nature, has agreed to con-! finite his “University Scholar’’ affiliation with Texas A&M Univetro and will visit the campus at least three times during the comingaa demic year. Glashow, who is Higgins Professor of Physics at Harvard Univer sity, said the first visit is scheduled for Sept. 10, with other visits is October and sometime in the spring. He will also continue his work with the four-university censor tium proposing Texas as the site of a $2 billion-plus superconducH ing super-collider, an unprecedented scientific device forexplonE; nature’s smallest particles. Rice University, the University of Hous < ton, the University of Texas and Texas A&M are cooperating wilt i the state’s leadership to convince the federal government the projo: should be located nearby. Savings and loan collapse probed United Press International WASHINGTON — Empire Sav ings and Loan Association was on “snaky ground” several years before its March collapse and a federal agency should have moved to stabi lize it, a House oversight panel chair man said Thursday. “There was something lacking,” said Rep. Doug Barnard, D-Ga., whose Government Operations sub committee investigated the bank’s failure. “Empire was on very shaky ground for two or three years before it finally closed. “Had close attention been given to the S&L by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board — I don’t know whether it would have saved it, but it would have minimized the damage.” The Mesquite S&L had $308.9 million in deposits when it was closed March 14. The payout on in sured deposits will be the largest di rect payoff in the 50-year history of the Federal Savings and Loan Insur ance Corporation. Almost all of Empire’s assets were loans on condominiums under con struction outside Dallas. The bank’s chairman, Spencer Blain Jr., has denied allegations he personally E rofited from proceeds on Empire’s >ans, procured fraudulent apprais als of real estate projects or was| volved in quick, successive salesf property designed to boost itssi i paper. Barnar sarnard told reporters therew« “many reasons” for Empire's piiB lems — such as an overconcentrati* of loans in one area — but“itfaiB because of overall mismanage!™ dating back many years.” Barnard’s panel held hear;! earlier this year on the Empireo lapse, and also examined tne l?i| failure of Penn Square of Oklahoi City and last year’s failure of Uniifl American Bank in Knoxville,Tenti “This really completes the qc on failed institutions,” Barnard “The regulatory agencies did tfl move fast enough when alertedil difficulties in the institutiot j There’s got to be better manaj; ment on the part of the agencies.' worm Barnard’s Commerce, Consul and Monetary Affairs Sulxommill Thursday unanimously approved 94-page draft report detailing 1 S&L’s failure and sent it to the committee for consideration week. He said specific details woii not be revealed until the report’sl rial adoption. Sbedroom 2 bath 4-plexes w/washer & dryer, close to campus & shopping center. Ideal for 3 stun- dents at $399/mo. 696-7714 or 693-0982 after 5p.m. or weekends 696-4384. izettn Two Bedroom House rebuilt, redecorated Central Air, 806 MitcheU $350.00, 775-0349 173ll0 Two bedroom Furnished or unfurnished Apartment three blocks from University. Northgate, 779-3700 ed Apat e, $250.00 up. 173tl0 THEY’RE HERE!!! Pick up your graduation announcements orders NOW! MSC Browsing Library Room 223 Extra Announcements Go On Sale July 23rd at 8:00 a.m. MSC Student Finance Center Room 217 Bronx carpenter wins $20 million in lottery United Press International NEW YORK — A retired Bronx carpenter living on disability checks Thursday won New York state’s $20 million Lotto jackpot, the richest prize ever awarded to a single lottery player. “I was stunned,” said Venero Pa- gano, 63, accompanied by his wife, Angelina, and two sons, Carmine Joe, at a ceremony at Lotto headquarters in Manhattan. He said he did not expect his new multimillionaire status to change his life dramatically and said he would continue to grow tomatoes in his back yard. He said he watched the drawing of the six winning numbers on tele vision Wednesday and woke up his wife to tell her they were multimillio naires. Pagano said he bet $5 and picked the winning numbers at random — some from a telephone number and the others were numbers he saw on the side of a taxi cab. Pagano, a skilled carpenter, $ he worked as a construction ' man for many years but was foi to retire in 1977 when he fell job site and broke his back. Union disability and social rity checks have provided Pa[ with a comfortable — but not lust rious — retirement, he said. He will get an initial paymei two weeks of $761,904 after I and then will receive 21 moreaatiij payments. Between Sunday and Wednei a midweek record $18.6 worth of tickets were sold, all double the highest previous Nc York total of $9.7 million on MayS The winning numbers were 5,Si 42, 18, 17, 1. The supplement^ number was 44. The jackpti reached $20 million because tliftf were no winners in any of thel! three drawings. h