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 STUDENT SPECIAL Large Wooded Lots Come see our beautiful park. We furnish water, sewer, and mowers. CLUBHOUSE/LAUNDRY SWIMMING POOL MINUTES TO A&M CABLE TV available NEAR FM 2818 2 CAR PARKING BRING THIS AD AND FOR STUDENTS ONLY: We lower our deposit and lower our rent for next 12 months. CLEARLEAF Mobile Home Community 920 Clearleaf 779-2865 Less than 10 minutes from school. CASA del 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 Open 7 days per week Mon.-Sat. 8:30-5:30 Sunday 1.00-5:00 Basketball Goals On premises Security 1st Class Maintenance 401 Stasney College Station, Tx. 696-3455 GGIELAND A 24 Hr. Service' •1 /2 Mi. to Campus 3 Poofs Close Shopping Club Room Pets OK FREE RENT BETWEEN SEMESTERS! Deposit $125 One Sem. Lease OK Shuttle Bus 306 REDMOND*693-2614 ALL BILLS PAID 1 BEDROOMS Furn. Deals. J35 Mo. Up START Eli. 1-2-3 BR’s s 170 Security Guard Large Closets Plus utilities Balconies*Patios FALL^ZZU Extra Parking Live With The Best At APARTMENTS 2701 Longmire 693-5731 M-F 9-6 Sat 10-5 Sun 1-5 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 Fal- asota. 817-595-1886. 176U0 For Rent or Sale. 2 BDR 1 '/2 bath townhome in excel lent condition. Available Aug. 15. $400/mo. 4509 #2 Carter Creek Oakwood Townhomes. Call Collect (817) 483-1131 179tl0 Room & board. Home style foods. $200/mo. Utilities paid. 779-8600. 176t5 Two bedroom Furnished or unfurnished Apartment three blocks from University. Northgate, $250.00 up. 779-3700 173U0 Two Bedroom House rebuilt, redecorated Central Air, 806 Mitchell $350.00, 775-0349 173tlO Leasing nice 3-bediooiii ‘2-bath home $6(M)/ino. |rerfect for professor call after 5p.m. 693-0787 178t5 3bedroom 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 BOYETT PROPERTIES House, Condos, 1 or 2 bedroom apts. furnished or unfurnished. Beginning at $250/mo. walking distance to campus, 846-8014. 159t25 ROOMMATE WANTED Male roommate wanted to share 5 year old house (washer and dryer included.) Fenced yard with deck; catheral ceil ing and fireplace, $225 per person. 822-3389 176t5 Battalion Classified 845-2611 •Quiet Secluded Atmosphere •Hot Tub-Pool •Front door Parking FALL RATES START AT $285 696-738(7 Behind Red Lobster FOR RENT 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 SPECIAL NOTICE ATTENTION GRADUATING SENIORS If you have ordered a 1984 Aggieland and will not be attending A&M this fall and wish to have it mailed to you, please stop by the Student Publications Office, Room 230 Reed McDonald Building and pay a $3.50 mailing fee along with your forwarding address so your Aggieland can be mailed to you when they arrive. 18018 Community Outdoor Sale, 1303 Skrivanek, Bryan (off 29th across from Schulman Theatres) August 3rd, 4th, 5th, from 9 a.m. to dusk Precious gems, handmade jewelry, pottery, plants, handpainted porcelain china, walihangings, handmade jewelry, handcrotched clothes, 775-5001. 17914 HELP WANTED Part-Time Carpet Cleaning posi tion available now for industrious self-starter with phone, transporta tion and good references. Training will be provided HOME CARE SERVICES, 846-7759 i79t4 Part-time runner for local oil company. Must have good typing, reliable transportation, neat appearance. $3.50 hr. Plhone Susan at 846-9730. 176t5 Part-time help wanted. Applying at Piper's Gulf Texas Avenue at University Drive. ] 80t l() GOVERNMENT JOBS! $16,559-$50,553/year. Now hiring. Your area. Call 805-687-6000 ext. R-9531.175t8 $6.00/hr. Lemo driver needed part-time 10-20 hrs. wk. Petite gires preferred. Call 846-4751. 178t3 Part-time handy man. Approximately 20 hours weekly. Tools and transportation necessary. Call Jacob Beal Realty at 823-5469. 180110 Programmer for IBM, PC and Apple. ASM experience on PC helpful, 693-2959. 180t5 Paris Restaurant and Bar Now hiring waiters and wait resses. Apply at 4501 South Texas Avenue. 846-3696. 179t4 Officer Manager-Receptionist for dental specialty. Ex perience in professional office required. Send resume to Ri. 4 Bos 460-A, College Station, Texas 77840179tl0 PART-TIME HELP WANTED. GRAPEVINE PERSONALITY. 696-3411 175114 WAITRESSES, BARTENDER & DJ. Silver Dollar, 846-4691,775-7919. 163t21 FOR SALE Mobile home for sale: Off Highway 60, 48 feet long; two bedroom, partially furnished, carport, screened porch. Call David 846-5226. 177117 Cabbage Patch Pals professionally crafted, designed to your order. Taking Christmas orders now. $50.00, 822-5137. 175U3 14x72 '83 mobile home. 2/2 bedroom, bath, all electric ap pliances. Ceiling fans, utility room, Bel-Air Park #63, 823- 5924. 180t7 1979 Yamaha 400XS, low mileage, excellent condition, helmet included, great commuter bike for fall, $695, 696- 5448 after 12 o'clock noon. 180t5 FUJI 21' 12-speed touring bike $260.00 or offer, 822-2169, Diane. 176t5 Moving to LSU Baton Rouge? 3 bdr. brick, fireplace 11V6% fixed assumption. Call after 5p.m. & weekend, 846-9049. 176118 FOR SALE: DATSUN 210-’81 5 spd., a/c, am-fm cas sette. 823-0041 day; 775-3611 after 7p.m. 178t7 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 TYPING. Reports, Research Papers, etc. Fast Service, near campus. 696-0914. 179t7 Typing and word processing. Reasonable rates. EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAL SERVICES, Across from A&M’s main entrance on Texas Avenue, 696- 3785. 173tI6 For expert typing and word processing, call 693-0389 after 6 p.m. 177tl0 Page 6ATie Battalion/Wednesday, August 1, 1984 Today’s Almanac United Press International Today is Wednesday, August 1st, the 214th day of 1984 with 152 to follow. The moon is moving toward its first quarter. There is no morning star. The evening stars are Mars, Mer cury, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn. Those born on this date are under the sign of Leo. They include ex plorer William Clark in 1770, Star- Spangled Banner author Francis Scott Key in 1779, author Herman Melville in 1819, actor Geoffrey Holder in 1930 and comic actor Dom Deluise in 1933. What’s up Thursday TAMU SAILING CLUB: Dr. Tohn Vance of the Mechanical Engineering Department will talk on the forces involved in 11 sailing in 404 Rudder at 7 p.m. CHI ALPHA: will meet at 7 p,m. in 402 Rudder to discuss “How to Appeal to Authority." CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST: will meet at 7 140 MSC. p.m. m 1 Stal teai Island lives up to its name United Press International PARADISE ISLAND, Bahamas — Paradise Island carries the perfect name and wears it beautifully. The lush palm trees, white sand, warm breezes and blue waters combine for a vacation that is pure heaven. Even the occasional, brief passing rain showers are welcome. There are several hotels, resorts and villas on the small island directly across the bay. Perhaps one of the best vacation opportunities is pro vided by Club Mediteranee. With nearly 100 clubs around the world, Club Med has perfected a combination of relaxation, activities, entertainment and friendly atmo sphere to keep the vacationer satis fied. even just vegetating on the beach or by the pool. Club Med bills itself as the “anti dote for civilization,” a slogan that surely fits the mood and atmo sphere. The pay-one-price vacation also removes many of the worries facing travelers to other spots. Guests at the village need spend nothing, except for drinks, once they’ve paid for the trip. There are optional extras — such as scuba diving, para sailing, moonlight champagne cruises and midnight shark fishing, but you won’t go starving for activity without them. A week-long vacation during the summer season from New York goes for $949, plus a $30 membership fee. The cost includes airfare, ground transportation to and from Nassau International Airport, all meals and enough sporting activities to exhaust even the mostly athleti cally inclined. For the guests at Club Med’s Par adise Island village, there is no work, no strain, no reality. The days can last from dawn to dawn and are filled with more than a dozen sched uled activities. But guests, called GMs, are free to do as they please — Tennis is the sport at Paradise Is land, with 20 courts available, 10 of them illuminated for night play. Guests can choose between 2 , /i hours daily of intensive classes or a daily hour of quality instruction. The Har Tru courts are kept in good condition. A typical day begins with break fast and leads into activities, trips and sporting events that start about 9 a.m., with jogging and calisthenics. Tennis, snorkeling, sailing, wind surfing, archery, yoga, swimming lessons, volleyball or basketball are all offered at the village. Lunch and dinner briefly inter rupt the activities, leading to a 10 p.m. cabaret show and an all-niglii disco that “closes when the las dancer goes home.” Perhaps the greatest adventure ii the club’s twice-weekly picnic to Rose Island, a deserted beach about U minutes by boat from Paradise Is land. The picnic quickly turns intoi sangria holiday, as guests take pan in games, snorkeling, swimmingand a luncheon. Club Med is designed to make ii easier for people to meet. Guesis seem relaxed and ready to talk, and everyone is on a first-name basis. Ev erything is done in groups, there are few private lessons, and meals are served at tables of eight, which are filled as people arrive. After dinner, the club’s employ ees, known as “GO’s” — for gentle organizers — put on cabaret show that range from dancing and lip syn cing along with popular songs lo skits that border on the absurd They’re not professional entertain ers, just a group of tennis and wain sports instructors, office worken, hostesses and others having a good lime. For those looking for a differeni type of vacation. Paradise Island of fers inns and villas scattered along the sandy beaches, as well as hotdi owned by Loews, Holiday Inn and Resorts International, which oper ates the island’s only casino. I per R01 1-2 IOC I'n in con hoc spo thn ( the taki Graduate students Photo by REBECCA DIMEO Peter Chung leads his class through an Electrical Engi- neering 305 laboratory. wo a v lin Fr; nu bo be; (continued from page 1) cause the principles of math and sci ence are the same throughout the world. This means, however, that he is not able to incorporate his experi ences into the material. Throughout his work at Texas A&M on a master’s and now a doc torate, Chung has taught the labs for several different engineering courses. His problems with language include one students don’t usually think about. “In the beginning of every semes ter students complain that I can’t communicate with them,” he says. One native speaker of Arabic finds Texas accents as hard to un derstand as Chung. “The language barrier is there (in the classroom) and it’s unfortunate,” says Nabil AbouKhair, a Lebanese master’s student in biochemistry. “The hardest thing for a foreign stu dent at Texas A&M is to adjust to the southern accent.” AbouKhair is finishing his second year at Texas A&M. Although he has been on a research assistantship this past year, he taught a biochemis try lab his first year. Like Pablo Got- tret, AbouKhair says his problems grew more out of his position than his nationality. “If there was a hostility against me for being foreign I didn’t feel it,” he says. “Some students are going to hate you anyway, especially the ones with the low grades.” Language didn’t create a problem for students assigned to AbouKhair for one good reason: he has no ac cent. In fact, other than his name. nothing marks him as an interna tional student. “When I taught here, people did not notice that I was from a foreign country,” he says. AbouKhair’s ties to Lebanon, however, still are strong. He serves as president of the Lebanese Stu dents’ Association. Originally he wanted to study at the American University in Beirut but couldn’t communicate with officials there be cause of the civil war in Lebanon. Despite the fighting, he plans to re turn to Lebanon after graduation. Still, he understands the language problems student have with foreign teaching assistants. “Communication between a stu dent and a TA is the most important part of the job,” he says. “Students and TA’s should talk slower and fo cus more on what the other is trying to say.” (Tomorrow: Students and admin istrators discuss their views on the effectiveness of foreign graduate teaching assistants.) House denounces Burford choice United Press International WASHINGTON — The House, fol lowing the lead of the Senate, voted 363-51 Tuesday to denounce Presi dent Reagan’s choice of former EPA chief Anne Burford to head an envi ronmental advisory committee. A total of 109 Republicans joined in approving a non-binding resolu tion condemning the selection of Burford to chair the National Advi sory Committee on Oceans and At mosphere and asking Reagan to withdraw it. Only two Democrats joined the 49 Republicans who voted against it SERVICES WORD PROCESSING. Personalized Service. Experi enced in A&M Formats, requirements. Dissertations welcome. 846-3833. 160t24 TYPING-Theses, term papers, etc. near campus. Call Mary 846-0285 175t6 Typing and word processing. Reasonble rates. Exec utive Secretarial Services, 696-3785. I73tl6 something everyone in the Classified 845-2611 and Burford’s defenders termed the resolution “nothing but a political football trying to raise the specter that the Reagan administration is against the environment.” The Senate last Friday, in a 74-19 vote, approved an identical resolu tion. White House spokesman Larry Speakes said earlier this week that Reagan, vacationing at his California ranch, stands by his appointment of Burford and will ignore the congres sional resolutions. In House debate Tuesday, Rep. Don Young, R-Alaska, insisted that TEXAS COIN EXCHANGE LARGE STOCK OF 14 KARAT GOLD CHAINS (sold by weight) We buy old gold in any form: Cla$s 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 Burford is qualified for the position and Rep. Ron Marlenee, R-Mont., said Democrats, by pushing the reso lution, appeared “willing to kick this lady while she is down.” Rep. James Scheuer, D-N.Y-, called her appointment “anothersad chapter in the Alice-in-Wonderland story of Anne Gorsuch Burford and the Environmental Protection Agency.” I Molinari, one of Burford’s few supporters in the House debate, termed the appointment both “dumb” and “insensitive,” but said the committee makes no policy.