The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 28, 1984, Image 12

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    Battalion Classifieds
HELP WANTED
Wanted
delivery
persons
Earn $5-$8
an hour from
salary, tips,
and commission
Daytime Hours
Available
Apply in person
between 1:00 p.m.
and 5:00 p.m.
1504 Holleman, C.S.
693-2335
4407 Texas, Bryan
260-9020
Townshire Center, Bryan
822-7373
(ft
b
5<
SE N
OH
O Q.
®1980 Domino’s Pizza, Inc.
19t2
HELP WANTED
Nights & Weekends
Apply after 4:00 p.m.
20t3
PART-TIME
CREDIT INTERVIEWS
Excellent opportunity for outgoing
well dressed individuals to do
credit interviewing at prestigious
department store at Post Oak
Mall. Flexible day or evening hrs.
or weekends. Call Mrs. Bitterbaum
Friday 5 p.m.-9 p.m., Sat.9 a.m.-
12 p.m. at 696-7777. 18t3
Church Organist wanted
at University Lutheran
Chapel for Sunday
Morning Services. Call
846-6687 or 846-8902. 20t5
Earn $4.00 Hour work. 12/hours week, call Lyle, 846-
6536. 20t2
Need reliable person lor occasional evening and week
end babysitting for two children—ages 5 and 3. Evening
number 779-1177. 20t5
Registered Dental Ilygienst needed for busy practice.
Call 693-8277. 16t5
KITCHEN HELP, COUNTER HELP, WAITPER-
SONS NEEDED for new restaurant; all hours avail
able. Apply at LA TAQUERIA and TORTILLA FAC
TORY, 102 Church St. behind the DELUXE, 846-
0228. 18t6
FARIS now hiring all positions. Apply in person 10-5
p.m. M-F. 14tlo
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $ 16,559-$50.553/year. Now
hiring. Your area. Call 805-687-6000ext. R-953L. 13t8
Female afternoon bartender. Waitresses, DJ —Silver
Dollar, 775-7919, 846-4691. 190t24
LOST AND FOUI^D
Men’s Pulsar watch found between library and Reed
McDonald Building. 846-5540. 18t3
ROOMMATE WANTED
Male needed for large one bedroom in Sevilla $150
plus Vt> utilities, 695-1414 daily, 693-5851 evenings,
Mike. 20t5
Roommate needed for 2 bedroom 2 bath condo,
$200.()0/inontb, Cripple Creek, 696-0491. 13t8
PERSONALS
PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Abortion procedures and
referrals—Free pregnancy testing. Houston, Texas
713/524-0548. 10t64
GIRLS WAIT! Don’t let some scissor happy person
ruin your beautiful hair! If you really care about your
hair and want someone that will take the time to find
the style best for you. Call Billy by appt. 846-3435. 16t3
WANTED
ATTENTION INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS-We
buy Sc trade for your country’s products, souvenirs, ar
tifacts, etc. EVERGREEN IMPORTS, 505 University,
next to Interurban Restaurant. 18tl0
FOR RENT
Walk to Class from...Your Own 1
bdrm. 1 bath apartment. Study with
out pets or children making noise
around you. Laundry facilities on sight
and a convenience store next door.
What more could an Aggie ask for?
Call Apartments & More, 696-5487.-letao
In the country, but close to
TAMU! University Acres is the
place to be. 2 bdrm. 1 bath from a
low $225 with some bills paid.
Pets welcome. Call Apartments &
More, 696-5487 letso
3 bdrm. 2 hath 4-plex close to TAMU w/washer Sc
dryer. $350.00. 272-8422. I3tl()
FOR RENT; Two bed apts., furn/unfurn. $250-$285,
415 College Main, Northgate, 775-0349, 15t30
FOR RENT
Mini Warehouse
Sizes of 5x5 to 10x30
The Storage Center
764-8238 or 696-5487.
16t30
Townhouse, 1527 Wolf Run, 3 bedroom, 2 baths,
newly re-painted, new carpets and roof, $6()0/month,
utilities not included 190t24
Here’s what you’ve been waiting for! A garage apart
ment off S. College Avenue for only $225. Call today.
Apartments 8c More, 696-5487. 16t7
SERVICES
TYPING
All kinds. Let us type your proposals,
dissertations, reports, essays on our
WORD PROCESSOR. Fast service.
Reasonable rates.
BUSINESS & COMMUNICATION
SERVICES, INC.
100 W. Brookside 846-5794 12129
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
MIDLAND HEIGHTS INTERNATIONAL
• Word Processing
• Creative Resume
• Translation/Simultaneous Interpretation
(French, Greek, German, Italian, Portuguese,-
Russian, & Spanish)
• Copying (Will print colors)
846-6486
403 University Dr. W. (above Campus Photo)
•Concise»To the PointeAn accurate
representation of your abilities...this is what
your resume should be. WE ARE THE
RESUME EXPERTS!
MIDLAND HEIGHTS INTERNATIONAL
846-6486
403 University Dr. W.
Above Campus Photo 14110
BRENTON-GREGORY ESCORTS. Male escorts avail
able for any occasion. Alex 696-7958. 20t 15
Let Suzy Type It! Second paper typed FREE. Details
775-8476. 20tl2
WORD PROCESSING. Dissertations, papers, reports
etc. Top quality. Fast, accurate, reasonable, 846-6200.
lOtll
COMPUTYPE. Word Processing, letter-quality print
ing. Reports, dissertations. Reasonable rates. Satisfac
tion guaranteed. 846-8486. 16tl0
Expert Typing, word processing. All work error free.
PERFECT PRINT, 822-1430. 1 lt20
TYPING ALL KINDS, after 4.30 call 693-6677. 14t9
Find
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in a hurry
PROFESSIONAL TYPING
ON THE WORD PROCESSOR
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$1.40/PAGE
COPYING-.040
403 UNIVERSITY DR. W.
ABOVE CAMPUS PHOTO
AT NORTHGATE
846-6486
FOR SALE
Must sell 1975 Kawasaki Zl-900, fast, $1300 or B.O.,
696-9627 16t5
Hobie Cat ’78-16 ft. Blue & White sailboat w/trailer and
gear, nice condition $2400.00 Call 775-6297 after
4p.m. 16t7
1981 Mitsubishi Champ, Hatchback, a/c, new tires,
four speed, power/economy selector, negotiable! 693-
3740 13t 10
IT 58C Programmable Calculator for sale, $100. Eve
nings after 5:00 p.m. 696-7153. 20t3
16' Prindle Catamaran, great condition, stored inside.
Extras included, 696-7499. 19t3
Synthesizer Korg Poly 800 digital programmable 3
months old, $650.00, 764-8992 16t5
1969 Impala in good running condition, $500. Contact
846-5517. 17t4
'81 175KE Kawasaki Enduro for sale. Needs no work.
15(H) miles $600.00. Call 764-2756. 19t5
Never used coupon booklet, $30.00. Call 775-9849.19t2
PANNING
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Battalion
Classified!!!
845-2611
Page 12AThe Battalion/Friday, September 28, 1984
Reagan claimed
press ‘distorted’
embassy remarks
United Press International
WASHINGTON — President
Reagan, under mounting attack
from Democrats, complained
Thursday of “distorted” suggestions
that he blamed the bombing of the
U.S. Embassy in Beirut on intelli
gence shortcomings in the Carter
administration.
And White House spokesman
Larry Speakes said Reagan did not
believe there had been an intelli
gence lapse in Lebanon and retained
confidence in the CIA after the third
such attack on a U.S. installation in
17 months.
The comments came as the White
House tried to contain a controversy
touched off by the explosion and
marked by an exchange of charges
and countercharges in the heat of
the presidential campaign.
The sudden debate over the ad
equacy of U.S. intelligence capabili
ties in Lebanon sprung from Rea
gan’s remark Wednesday that “the
near destruction of our intelligence
capability in recent years before we
came here” had left the United
States vulnerable to acts of terror
ism.
While at least one aide confirmed
the president was pointing a finger
at the Carter administration, which
shifted emphasis from cloak-and-
dagger spies to technical means of
intelligence gathering, Speakes said
that was not Reagan’s specific intent.
Reagan complained to reporters
“about the way you distorted my re
marks about the CIA.” Speakes said
the complaint was with “representa
tions in the media that the president
was putting blame entirely on the
Carter administration.”
Instead, he said, Reagan was al
luding to “a decade-long trend” of
pressure on the CIA to turn away
from traditional means of spying.
But Speakes went on to acknowledge
the biggest shift that “weakened”
this facet of the CIA — the firing of
hundreds of agents — took place
during the Carter presidency.
In a written statement. House
Speaker Thomas O’Neill challenged
Reagan to stop “trying to pass the
buck and instead realize that the
buck stops with you, Mr. President.”
Reagan was briefed on an admin
istration inquiry into the bombing
Thursday by Robert Oakley, head of
the State Department’s office to
combat terrorism. Speakes said Oak
ley told Reagan “the principal weak
ness that he observed derived from
the fact that the terrorists struck be
fore work had been completed on all
security measures” for the embassy.
Legislation talks stall
on immigration issue
United Press International
WASHINGTON — With com
promise talks stalled, legislation to
overhaul the nation’s immigration
laws — and to free perhaps millions
of illegal aliens from the fear of de
portation — appeared to be at
death’s door Thursday.
With Congress scheduled to ad
journ Oct. 4, the failure of House
and Senate negotiators to reach
agreement on a single issue, the pro
tection of legalized aliens against job
discrimination, may have marked
the end of a four-year drive to
achieve immigration reform.
Similar legislation expired nearly
two years ago in a lame-duck session
of the last Congress when House
leaders took the bill off the floor in
the face of a “filibuster by amend
ment” conducted by Hispanic mem
bers opposed to it.
Negotiations seeking a compro
mise on differing bills passed in this
Congress broke down Wednesday
when Sen. Alan Simpson, R-Wyo.,
rejected a House-proposed anti-dis
crimination amendment and two ef
forts to modify it.
“Now we have reached a standoff
— the true sticking point,” he said.
With many members absent as the
House adjourned for the Jewish hol
iday Rosh Hashana, there was no in
dication Thursday negotiations
might resume, even though leaders
on both sides had indicated a will
ingness to talk.
“It’s up to the other side,” said
Rep. Peter Rodino, D-N.J., the chief
House negotiator, after talks col
lapsed.
In the Senate, assistant Demo
cratic leader Alan Cranston of Cali
fornia noted he had said two months
ago that the bill appeared to be
dead.
“It now looks like rigor mortis has
finally set in,” he said.
Cranston said the negotiations
were “doomed to failure” because of
the conferees’ “inability to come up
with a formula to protect the rights
of American citizens seeking jobs
and the rights of American business
men providing thosejobs.”
T he bill under negotiation would
grant legal residence to aliens who il
legally entered the United States be
fore Jan. 1, 1981, and seeks to dis
courage the entry of others by
penalizing employers who kno
wingly hire them.
No one knows how many would
benefit, but the Immigration and
Naturalization Service estimates at
least 1 million to 1.5 million.
Talks ended when Democratic ne
gotiators refused to go as far as de
manded by Simpson in watering
down the anti-discrimination
amendment, which was adopted
404-9 by the House.
If passed by the House, it would
let aliens file complaints of discrimi
nation by employers on the basis of
“alienage,” which would be added to
race, national origin, religion and
sex as grounds for job discrimina
tion charges.
But Simpson said the provision,
even if modified as proposed by
Rep. Romano Mazzoli, D-Ky., would
still prevent an employer from hir
ing a citizen over an alien.
Opposition to the bill has been in
tense and was ropunting even before
the talks broke down in their ninth
day.
Gromyko blasts U.S. policy
in tough speech to U.N.
United Press International
UNITED NATIONS — Soviet
Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko
said Thursday American foreign
policy had been taken over by mili
tarists bent on destroying U.S.-So
viet relations and set the stage for a
chilly meeting with President Rea-
gan.
Gromyko, in an unrelentingly
tough speech before the U.N. Gen
eral Assembly a day before his meet
ing with Reagan, accused Washing
ton of sponsoring state terrorism
and seeking military superiority over
the Soviet Union through a buildup
in nuclear weapons.
“All we hear is that strength,
strength and above all strength is the
guarantee of international peace,”
Gromyko said of the Reagan admin
istration. “In other words — weap
ons, weapons and still more weap
ons.
“The tug-of-war between the
groups that determine U.S. foreign
policy has been won by the militaris-
tically minded. They attempt to de
value the existing Soviet-American
accords by wrecking what has been
achieved earlier through long and
painstaking work on both sides.
“Statements are being made at the
highest official levels that the United
States is within its right to deliver a
first nuclear strike, that is to say to
unleash a nuclear war,” Gromyko
said.
Secretary of State George Shultz,
who sat silently through Gromyko’s
75-minute speech, said later he was
“disappointed” with what he said
were the Soviet foreign minister’s
“distortions.”
In his speech, Gromyko made two
specific proposals for resolutions to
be enacted by the General Assembly
— one reserving outer space exclu
sively for peaceful uses, and the
other banning “state terrorism.”
As examples of such terrorism,
Gromyko cited the U.S. invasion of
“tiny Grenada which dared to assert
its sovereignty,” and Nicaragua,
whose people “are heroically resist
ing in the face of an undeclared war
organized by Washington.”
“It is sad and disappointing that
Mr. Gromyko should give us yet an
other misrepresentation of history
and distortion of the role of the
United States — the peaceful and
constructive role of the United
States — in world affairs,” Shultz
told reporters as he left the assembly
hall.
“We can only say, as the president
did on Monday, that we will try, and
try again, to bring forth a more con
structive relationship with the Soviet
Union,” Shultz said.
Reagan, in his U.N. address Mon
day, called for a constructive dia
logue with the Soviets, and U.S. offi
cials described Wednesday’s private
meeting between Gromyko and
Shultz as “a good start.”
In an apparent reference to Presi
dent Reagan’s recent statements that
the United States does not accept the
Yalta Agreements dividing up East
ern and Western Europe, as sacro
sanct, Gromyko said, “We would
caution against yielding to this dan
gerous psychosis and are calling for
sober mfndedness. No one has the
right to disrupt what has not merely
come to be pillars of international
law, but was born of inumerable sac
rifices during the last world war.”
Gromyko said the Soviet Union
remained ready to reduce and fi
nally eliminate nuclear weapons, but
he made no new specific proposals
for doing so.
If
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GOLD? ^
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Battalion
Classified!!!
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