The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 01, 1984, Image 8

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    Page 8/The Battalion/Monday, October 1, 1984
*★★★★★★★ ★★★★★*★**!
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Battalion Classifieds
HELP WANTED
FOR SALE
HELP WANTED
Nights & Weekends
Apply after 4:00 p.m.
Church Organist wanted
at University Lutheran
Chapel for Sunday
Morning Services. Call
846-6687 or 846-8902. 20t5
I i .ii Nicsjli-i A1)M-1 \ (ciiii|>iiici trimiu.il wilh V.iilii
\ A :!l)ll h.uid. modem Ideal lot suident |)io K ram-
mei. SI.MI. 7711-lilMiS. Jit.")
Teen-ager
hijacks bus
in Oklahoma
I.e;n SituLi ADM-.'**A (omptiui terminal with ventcl
:*)Un hand modem. Ideal lot suident plot*rammer.
77‘MWHiS. ‘ill.’)
United Press International
Hohie 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,
lout speed, power/econotnt selector, negotiable! 698-
8740 l: ' 110
I f 58C I’rogt ammahle Calculator for sale, $100. Eve
nings after 5:00 p.m. 696-7153. 20t3
16' I’rindle Catamaran, great
Extras included. 696-7499.
uditiou. stored ittsitle.
19t3
Is it true you can by jeeps for $44 through the U.S.
Government? Get the facts today! Call 1-312-742-1142
ext. 8390. 16t4
(LITT
$1.2S
TIM 1st fMiwr* ttmrtm on •
On SAT A SUM. StMtamU ID Frt*U T
I*.!! i-tiiiu* workers needed lor telephone interviewing.
(iood opportnnitN lor experiem e. Sd.7.’). (iontiu t Bel in
.il xn-.TTVJ. 2 I Mi
WEEKNITES BOTH THEA^|
315 COLLEGE N. ,»4»-«7l7] | IN THE MALL 7M-IWU
Tukxn Steak I hi
tiotts. 846-57 I I.
accepting applii atiotts all po
! Il2
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
SAT/SUN: J:»0-*:J»-7:1S-«:»
WEEKNITES: 7:1S-«:J»
GHOSTOUSTERS
am muMai Dam avkhovd
E2
THEMUPPETS
TAKE MANHATTAN a
PARIS now hiring all positions. Apply in person 10-5
p.m. M-F. 14tl0
1SAT/8UN: 2:M-5:00-7:3C-»:5r
WEEKNITES: 7:30-9:5S
CUNT
£ASTWOOD
Need reliable person for occasional evening and week
end babysitting tor two children—ages 5 and 3. Evening
number 779-1177. 20t5
Earn $4.00 Hour work. 12/hours week, call Lyle, 846-
6536. 20t2
SCHULMAN THEATRES
COMING SOON
ROOMMATE WANTED
3P
Ml TEACHERS « COUNTRY
IM SHOW SAT. ANDSUN., ALL SEATS
f A MONDAY KTAM FAMILY NIGHT - SCH.«
- TUESDAY - ETAM FAMILY NIGHT ME III
X. -MON.-WED. FOR ALL STUDENTS WITH
Aa* CURRENT LD. TO AAM -BUNN J.C.-BRYAN
HIGH SCHOOL - AAM CONSOLIDATED
Male needed tor large one bedroom in Sevilla $150
pins ‘/j utilities, (593-1414 daily, 693-5851 evenings,
Mike. 20t5
SCHULMAN 6
'775-2463 * 775-2468 J
PERSONALS
THE RIVER RAT |
GIRLS WALL! 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
■ ENYftli NOUS 7*3o
(BETWEEN US) *50
PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Abortion procedures and
referrals--Free pregnancy testing. Houston, Texas
713/524-0548. 10t64
FOR RENT
In the country, but close to
TAMU! University Acres is the
place to be. 2 bdrm. 1 bath from a
low $225 with some bills paid.
Pets welcome. Call Apartments &
More, 696-5487 letao
Mini Warehouse
Sizes of 5x5 to 10x30
The Storage Center
764-8238 or 696-5487.
Walk to Class from...Your Own 1
bdrm. 1 bath apartment. Study with
out pets or children making noise
around you. Laundry facilities on sight
and a convenience store next door.
What more could an Aggie ask for?
Call Apartments & More, 696-5487. istso
rEVENCT'Of
THE NERDS
’ 7:25
9:45
PURPLE RAIN
1 Dolby • 7:5$
s**™ 19:551
THE WOMAN
7:20
IN RED
9:40
THE BEAR
735"]
9:40 i
MANOR EAST III , r‘‘..L
Here’s what you’ve been waiting for! A garage apart
ment off S. College Avenue for only $225. Call today.
Apartments & More, 696-5487. 16t7
3 Ixlrm. 2 bath 4-plcx close to 1 AML’ w/washer &
dryer. $350.00. 272-8422. 13t 10
FOR RENT'; Two bed apts., furn/unfurn. $250-$285,
415 College Main, Northgate, 775-0349. 15t30
SERVICES
•Concise«To the Point«An 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 i4tio
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.
91 tin
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
^ Find
good help
in a hurry
PROFESSIONAL TYPING
ON THE WORD PROCESSOR
•DEPENDABLE
•ACCURATE
• FAST
$ 1.40/PAGE
COPYING-.04c
403 UNIVERSITY DR. W.
ABOVE CAMPUS PHOTO
AT NORTHGATE
846-6486
COMPUTYPE. Word Processing, letter-quality print
ing. Reports, dissertations. Reasonable rates. Satisfac
tion guaranteed. 846-8486. 16tl0
Expert Ivping and word processing. ( all 698-U3 89
2U23
Expert Typing, word processing. All work error free.
PERFECT PRINT, 822-1430. 1U20
TYPING ALL KINDS, after 4:30 call 693-6677.
Let Suzv Type It! Second paper typed FREE. Details
775-8476. 20tl2
BREM ON-GREGOR Y ESCORTS. Maje escorts avail
able for any occasion. Alex 696-7958. 20tl5
Qiialin Ttpcwriicr Repair: Mam makes and models
Reasonable rales. 846-4304. 211'
FOR SALE
Cnmpntei-Ka\ Pro II portable with primer. Lots of
software. $995.00. Also 9x12' tent, slighth used
S60.00. Call 268-0363 al ter 5:00. ' 21t5
81 175KE Kawasaki Enduro for sale. Needs no work.
15(H) miles $600.00. Call 764-2756. 1915
823-8300
IRRECONCILABLE I
DIFFERENCES
7:15
9:351
1 ALL OF ME
7:20
9:40
DREAMSCAPE
Dotty
Stereo
P T:»-
• 9:45
EL RENO, Okla. — A teen-ager
who allegedly held a straight razor to
a Continental Trailways bus driver’s
throat and demanded a straight-
through trip to California Saturday
apparently had become angered by
frequent routine stops, authorities
say.
Lemuel Lewis, 18, who had
boarded the bus at St. Louis, “just
went berserk” when the bus made its
third stop between Tulsa and Okla
homa City, a passenger said.
“Man, I’m going to get that bus
driver if he stops again for no rea
son,” Brian Huggins of Washington,
Okla., quoted Lewis as saying.
Lewis reportedly pulled a straight
razor and held it to bus driver Ger
ald Stewart’s throat following a
lunch stop at a fast food restaurant
at Wellston, Okla., about 10 a.m. Sat
urday.
“He said, ‘Take me straight to Los
Angeles. If you stop I’ll slit your
throat,” said passenger Pam Lee, a
University of Oklahoma freshman.
Lewis was arrested some 50 miles
down the road, about 1,300 miles
short of his desired destination, after
a chase by Oklahoma Highway Pa
trol troopers and local police offi
cers.
Trooper Bruce Watkins spotted
the bus speeding on Interstate 40
about 11 a.m. and attempted to stop
it, but the bus driver appeared to be
deliberately ignoring his orders to
stop.
“It just went right through Okla
homa City,” Highway Patrol spokes
man Stewart Meyer said, adding that
units from several law agencies
joined in the pursuit at speeds of 65
mph to 85 mph.
The bus finally exited the inter
state about 30 miles west of Okla
homa City and headed north on
state highway 270, stopping about
one-half mile later. The driver then
fled the bus, with the hijacker in
pursuit.
After a minor scuffle, Lewis was
disarmed and subdued. Meyer said
Lewis, whose hometown had not
been determined, was treated at an
El Reno hospital and then taken to
the Canadian County jail in El Reno.
He said no one else was injured,
but an unidentified passenger who
complained of chest pains was taken
to the El Reno hospital for obser
vation.
Meyer said Lewis faces hijacking
charges.
Around town
Science students must take exam
Any junior or senior in the College of Science who has not pre
viously taken the English Proficiency Examination should plan to
take the test Oct. 2 or Oct. 15 unless they have completed English
301 with a minimum grade of C. Students in the College of Science
are required to pass either English 301 or the test in order to qualify
as a degree candidate.
file English Proficiencv Exam will he administered by the En
glish Department. Students in the Biology, Chemistry, Mathematics
and Physics Departments should register for the exam in 313 Biolog
ical Sciences Building prior to exam.
Big Event job requests accepted now
job requests are now being accepted from the Bryan-Coilege Sta
tion community for projects for the Big Event. Student organiza
tions wishing to volunteer for this 4-hour service project are encour
aged to pledge. Deadline for organization pledges is Nov. 1. Job
requests will still he accepted after that date. Contact Mark Manilla at
696-5930, or Maritza Pena at 764-0770.
Mauro and Edwards to address Aggies
Texas Land Commissioner Garry Mauro and state Senator Chet
Edwards will speak on “Aggies in State Government" at 7 p.m. to
morrow. The program will be in Rudder Thealei and is sponsored
by Young Democrats and Political Forum.
Voter registration deadline approaches
Saturday is the last day to register to vote in the November elec
tion. Aggie GOP will have registration tables in the MSC, Blot kei
and Zachn
y this week.
Student contractors club organized
The TAMU Student Chapter of the Associated Builders and
Contractors has been formed. The organization’s goal is to sttulv
and develop an understanding of the Merit Shop and Free Enter
prise philosophies of the Associated Builders and Contractors, Inc.
It shall accomplish this by acquainting student tneml»ers with issues
of importance in the construction industry and with professional
members of the construction industry. For more information, con
tact Rick Rodriguez at 822-0801 or Rob Jenkins at 764-8228.
Firearms program will be offered today
The Brazos County Sheriff s Department will be offering the Na
tional Rifle Association Voluntary Practical Firearms Program to
area residents during the week of Oct. 1. The program is designed to
teach fundamental safety and handling of handguns to persons who
know little about them, but keep them for purposes of sport or home
defense. Registration f ee is $7. For more information, pick up an ap
plication form at Brtizos County Sheriffs Department, Outfitters
Sporting Goods, Shootist or Tri State Sporting Goods.
Good grades in English
predict college success
matter what
you've go to say
or sell, our Classi
fieds can help you
do the big job.
Right now, dur-*
ing International
Classified Adver
tising Week, is a
great time to put
the Classified
to work for you!
University News Service
All the emphasis on the impor
tance of science and math in paving
the way for success in college and a
high-tech career may be overlooking
the true key to “making it,” a Texas
A&M study indicates.
Good grades in high school En
glish may be the best predictor of
success in college, said Dr. Harold L.
Pace, who conducted the research
for his dissertation in educational
administration at A&M.
Pace, currently registrar at Loui
siana Tech University at Ruston,
came across that finding while
looking at the effectiveness of col
lege remedial work among students
at Louisiana Tech.
“We found that grades in high
school English and the number of
English courses completed in high
school were highly correlated with
all success variables in college,” he
said.
In fact, grades in high school En
glish were more highly correlated
with grades in college math than
were grades in high school math,
Pace said.
“You’ve got to be able to deal in
logic in math, and the English lan
guage is a good teacher of logic,” he
said. “Being able to communicate
and read is essential to every subject
— history, math, science and En
glish.
“What this study shows is that if a
student doesn’t have a good back
ground in English and a command
of the English language, he’s going
to have problems in college,” he said.
Pace’s findings on the effective-'
ness of remedial work were equally
as interesting. Colleges and universi
ties are spending thousands of dol
lars on the remedial programs for
students who didn’t get an adequate
education in high school, but his
study indicates these programs may
not improve regular college work.
Participants in the study were
drawn from students who had com
pleted remedial work and those who
entered the university in 1981 be
fore the courses were available. The
two groups, each consisting of about
100 male and 100 female students,
were matched on several factors in
cluding ACT scores, high school
Jimmy Carter has 60th birthday,
keeps busy fund-raising for library
United Press International
ALL:
•
The
Battalion
845-2611
WASHINGTON — Jimmy Carter
celebrates his 60th birthday today,
busy with enough private projects,
his aides say, that he is having no
problems adjusting to life as a past
president.
Asked by United Press Interna
tional how it feels to reach three
score years, Carter replied, “Old.”
Carter’s aides say he is busy with
fund-raising for the Carter Presi
dential Library and the Carter Cen
ter, busy teaching at Emory Univer
sity, and busy traveling.
“I think he’s adjusted very well to
being a former president and enjoys
being able to speak freely, some
thing you can’t do in the White
House,” said Dan Lee, Carter’s chief
aide.
Indeed, with the election drawing
near. Carter has made it clear he has
no love lost for Ronald Reagan, the
man who beat him in the 1980 White
House race.
The former Georgia governor
and his wife, Rosalynn, had no big
celebration plans to mark his birth
day. Instead they were packing last
week for a tour of South America
beginning Tuesday, featuring visits
to Peru, Brazil and Argentina with
the “Friendship Force,” an exchange
group he promoted when he was in
the White House.
The Carters will not be around
for the last lap of the presidential
race, which pits Walter Mondale,
Carter’s vice president, against Rea
gan. But they did attend a Georgia
state Democratic picnic at Lovejoy,
Ga., Saturday where Reagan was the
chief target.
Carter ripped into Reagan and
declared, “I’m here to say we’re
going to win. We’re going to win be
cause we’re together, because we’re
right.”
Reagan in turn has been relentless
in his charges on the campaign trail
that Carter’s policies led to high in
terest rates, “weakness” in foreign
policy and military strength and a
myriad of other failures.
The conflict between the past and
present chief executives boiled over
last week when Reagan blamed the
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grades in math and English and
types of high schools.
After comparing the two groups’
grades in regular college course
work, Pace found there was no dif
ference in the grades the two groups
made.
“The people who had completed
remedial work stayed in school
longer, but they didn’t make any bet
ter grades than the control group,”
he said. “We were looking for a
relationship between remedial and
normal college work and we didn’t
find anything that indicates reme
dial work helps improve students’
performance when they begin col
lege-level work.”
Pace said the results are only in
dicative of one university, but that
the remedial courses at Louisiana
Tech are “standard remedial courses
which the people here at Tech think
are very good.”
“The results of this study put a
question mark in front of the validity
of remedial work for college stu
dents,” he said. “Are we really doing
any good? Are we really gaining any
thing?”
latest bombing of the U.S. embassy
annex in Beirut on “the near de
struction of our intelligence capabil
ity” during earlier administrations.
White House aides said he was talk
ing about the Carter years.
Carter demanded an apology. In
stead, Reagan telephoned his prede
cessor Friday to assure him that he
was not talking about him and to ex
plain that his remark had been “mis
interpreted.”
But Carter indicated Saturday
that he still was irate over what he
called the “steady stream of false al
legations over the past four years
that everything that went wrong or
every mistake was the fault of some
one else.”
Carter jabbed Reagan with the
declaration that the Republican’s
“only foreign policy success” was to
get an appointment with a Soviet
diplomat — a reference to Reagan’s
meeting Friday with Soviet Foreign
Minister Andrei Gromyko.
Carter recently spent a week in
New York on a “Habitat for Human
ity” project.
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4-
THE
RICHARD
SMITH
STORY
C
Last Spring, Bill Presni!
our former State
Representative resigned
from office in order to
to work for Texas K(k
This allowed Gov. Mali
White (Dem.) to call a
Special Election to fill the
vacancy. Would you
believe he set the
election during AfifM’s
Spring Break? He did
Why? To keep the Aggies
from voting. He knew we
could make a difference.
There are only 45,000
registered votersic
Brazos County (which
alone makes up this
State Representative
District.) There are
37,000 students atAtfll.
s o obviously if we
register to vote and vote
we can makea
difference. As it turned
out, many Aggies
register to vote and voted
absentee forAggiej
Richard Smith ’69. Heis ji
the only experienced,!
c o n s ervativej
independent candidate
who can go to Austin
and get the Job done. To
Richard Smith AdsTM Isn't
Just a part of the district)
AfifM is a commitment
and a concern that all 1
Aggies share. It ended up |
that over 13,OCX) people j!
voted last March. Ourjl
candidate, Richard!
Smith, lost by 29 votes |
(to force a runoff). Byi|
two tenths of one percent 1
of all the votes cast last |
March our candidate lost i
s
The conservative
Republican lost to Mark,
White’s choseni
Democrat, Neeley Lewis 1
That was the Special)
Election. |
The Battalion Editorial
Board called the i|
scheduling of the Special 1
Election by the.
Democrats “an attack cm
Texas ASPM students,
staff and faculty,
members.” The Studentij
Senate passedaj
resolution in opposition)
to the setting of the 1
election date when [
Aggies could not vote, >
Governor White (Dem,) j
refused to even see the,
student government!
leaders concerning the j
issue. The Bryan-Coilege ,
Station Eagle Editorial*
Board said, “Let’s face it, ]
this whole thing smacks t
of partisan politics at its’
most petty level.",
“...Democrat Party officials!
had described March 10 Jf
as a ‘convenient day’ for »|
the election.” Convenient’
to keep the Aggies from J
voting. Convenient for»
the Democrats to unfairly ’
help Neeley Lewis. ,
On Nov. 6, we have a i
chance to prove that we j
won’t be pushed around *
again. Richard Smith >
and Neeley Lewis are on j
the ballot again-this »
time in a fair fight. We
will determine the
winner, if we register to *
vote (the deadline is Oct. ’
6) and then vote on Nov. ,
6. Mark White and the !
Democrats can’t set this ?
election when the Aggies *
can’t vote. It’s up to us! *
MORAL:
TOGETHER WE
GAN MAKEA
DIFFERENCE.
Jif
you want to help>
4- make a difference,
J join Aggie G0F or
J call the Smith
4- headquarters at
J 846-0047.
4-
4- paid Political Ad
★ ★★★★★★★★★★★
The
new Kii
For I
for a m
broken
over Ai
rest of <
For i
starting
unansw
A&A
seemed
pected
“Kev
the ye;
mentall
At that
got hut
and re;
play. Il
justanr
deal wit
Stun:
ter in ;
winninj
goal to;
The
to be f
Teal fo
broken
stretcht
A&M s
over to
he was
room.
Alice
have s;
A&M’s
culiar a
It CO!
win ju
backsla]
place oi
became
were gc
Funr
place.
In a
and mi
of the i
Tr