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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 4, 1984)
Page 8/The Battalion/Thursday, October 4, 1984 Battalion Classifieds HELP WANTED FOR RENT 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 ®1 980 Domino’s Pizza, Inc. 24t2 " ' BUS PERSONNEL needed nights and weekends. Flexible hours. $4.50 to $5.50 per hour. Apply in per- ' p#lic<in v son between 8 a.m.-12 Uihorf noon. E.O.E. 24tio MEN, WOMEN, STUDENTS: For present & future newspaper routes. Early morning hours. $200-$800/mo. BRAZOS NEWS SERVICE 846-2911,846-1253. 24t10 Church Organist wanted at University Lutheran Chapel for Sunday Morning Services. Call 846-6687 or 846-8902. 20t THE HOUSTON CHRONICLE needs a newspaper route carrier for a combination dorm and motor route. Route pays over $500 month, plus a full gasoline allowance. Hours approximately 3-6a.m. 7 days/week. Please call Julian McMurrey 693-2323. 2318 MAKE UP TO $10/HOUR Chanello’s Pizza needs Drivers with own car to deliver best pizza in the best time. Apply in person at 301 N. Patricia or in Parkway Square. J ^ I COMMERCIAL TEAM CLEANING I positions available. Nights & I weekends. Above minimum pay. I Paid travel & vacation. Flexible f hours. Must have car, phone & I references. Home Care Service, 1846-7759. Need tutor for M.K. 327, call 693-6897 or 693-5538. If you can’t teach it. don’t call. 22t4 Teacher needed mornings for four year old class. Must have degree, 846-5571. Also need student to clean in afternoons. 846-5571. 24t5 Couple or individual to work part-time on small boys ranch. Must live-in. Prefer non-smokers. 589-201623t5 Part-time workers needed for telephone interviewing, (•nod opportunity for experience. $3.75. Contact Betty at 845-5332. 21t6 ROOMMATE WANTED Male roommate wanted for 2 bedroom 2 hath condo, •S200 utilities paid. Cripple Creek. 696-0491. 24t4 Need roommate free rent for feeding horses, call 822- 0632 after 6:00 p.m. 22t5 Male needed for large one bedroom in Sevilla $150 plus l /2 utilities, 693-1414 daily, 693-5851 evenings, Mike. - 20t5 Female roommate. Lovely 3 bdt. house, $ 158.00/mo., 846-2275. 23tl0 PERSONALS PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Abortion procedures and referrals—Free pregnancy testing. Houston, Texas 713/524-0548. 10t64 FOR RENT Mini Warehouse Sizes of 5x5 to 10x30 The Storage Center 764-8238 or 696-5487. 16130 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. letso 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 istso FOR RENT; Two bed apts., furn/unfurn. $250-$285, 4 15 College Main, Northgate, 775-0349. 15t30 SERVICES TYPING Personalized Services. We care. We understand form and style. Beginning our fifth year. AUTOMATED CLERICAL SERVICES 110 Lincoln. C.S. 693-1070 12t4 TYPING Reports, dissertations, term papers, resumes, word processing. Reasonable rates. EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAL SERVICES at Main entrance to A&M on Texas Avenue, 121 Walton, 696-3785. 10t2 3 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. 91 tfn NERD DATES Are you looking for that special someone to share your calculator with? If so, call Rusty and Brandon at 260-BUKO for a romantic evening at the computer center. As TriLambda Brothers, we pledge to be your most favorite nerds. Please call!! Quality typewriter Repair: Many makes and models.. Reasonable rates. 846-4304. 2115 BRENTON-GREGORY ESCORTS. Male escorts avail able for any occasion. Alex 696-7958. 20tl5 COMPUTYPE. Word Processing, letter-quality print ing. Reports, dissertations. Reasonable rates. Satisfac tion guaranteed. 846-8486. 16tl0 Expert typing and word processing, ('all 693-03889 21'23 Expert Typing, word processing. All work error free. PERFECT PRINT, 822-1430. Ilt20 Let Suzy Type It! Second paper typed FREE. Details 775-8476. 20U2 For a Compliincntarv Man Kav facial or re-orders. Call Debbie. 260-8373'. 24t8 FOR SALE lamiputcr-KavPro II portable with printer. Lots of software. $995.00. Also 9x12’ lent, slightly used $60.00. Call 268-0363 aftei 5:00. 2lt5 Lear Sicgler AD.M-3A computer terminal with ventel 300 baud modem. Ideal lor student programmer. $350.779-6068. 2H5 Yamaha 250 Excitor. 2 years old. 3200 miles. Excellent condition. 696-8198. 24t2 I ear Sicgler ADM-3A computer terminal with Vadic VA 335 300 baud, modem. Ideal for student program mer. $450. 779-6068. 21t5 ’74 Volvo, new tires, sun roof, a/c, runs great, $ 1800. 846-0975. 23t5 1980 Honda CX500 custom. Perfect condition. $1050, call 764-8341. 23t5 WANTED CASH for gold, silver, old coins, diamonds Full Jewelry Repair Large Stock of Diamonds Gold Chains TEXAS COIN EXCHANGE 404 University Dr. 846-8916 3202-A Texas Ave. (across from El Chico, Bryan) / 79-7662 191130 I need a ride to Huntsville on the weekends of the 5th and 19th. Will pay. Chris, 693-0670. 24t2 We buy and sell used stereos. Call for details. 846-4607. 23t30 When Is Your Rental No So€ret" At All? WHEN OVER 30,000 PEOPLE ' READ IT IN THE BATTALION G«f into circvlofionl lot our clotiifi*d faction deploy rental tervice* . . . a fast, efficient to do butinetft? Make Your Dollars Count! Advertise in The Battalion 945-2611 What’s up Thursday WRITING OUTREACH: the session “In Search of the Big Cahoona: Writing Essay Exams,” taught by Evie Sweet- Hurd, will be offered at 4 p.m. in 251 Francis. BETA ALPHA PSI: is meeting at 7 p.m. in the Ramada Inn Penthouse. The professional meeting will be sponsored by Peat Marwick. SOCIETY OF WOMEN ENGINEERS: a program about in terviewing at the Placement Center will be presented at 7 p.m. in 104B Zachry. CIRCLE K: will meet at 5:15 p.m. in 216 MSC to leave to work on the Kiwanis nature trail. A regular meeting will follow at 7 p.m. GUATEMALAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION: will meet at 8:30 p.m. in 504 Rudder. POSSUM KINGDOM AREA HOMETOWN CLUB: the pic ture for the Aggieland will be taken at 6:15 p.m. in the MSC lounge. COMPUTER SOCIETY (ACM-IEEE/CS): Dr. Simmons will talk about the DOD software Engineering Institute at 7 p.m. in 103 Zachry. The resume book will also he dis cussed. MSC AMATEUR RADIO: Mike Durbin from DAI SAT Corn, will speak at 7:30 p.m. in 140 MSC. Bonlin also will ne discussed. CO-OP STUDENT ASSOCIATION: Kevin Carreathers will speak about “The Care and Feeding of Your Professor” at 7 p.m. in 504 Rudder. MSC CEPHEID VARIABLE: the award winning movie “The Gladiators” will be shown in Rudder Theater at 7:30 and 9:45 p.m. BETA BETA BETA BIOLOGICAL HONOR SOCIETY: is meeting at 7 p.m. in 107 BSBE. Anyone interested in ap plying for membership is invited to attend this meeting. HAYS COUNTY HOMETOWN CLUB: the nicture for the Aggieland will be taken at 6:40 p.m. in tne MSC main lounge. OFF-CAMPUS CATHOLICS: a get together will be held at 7:30 p.m. in #605 Old Oak Tree Apartments. Catholics in the neighborhood are invited to a home mass. Refresh ments and fellowship will follow. IM-REC SPORTS: at meeting for all triathlon participants will be at 6 p.m. in 164 E. Kyle. AGGIES AGAINST DRUNK DRIVERS: will meet at 7 p.m. in 607 Rudder. CHI ALPHA: will meet at 7 p.m. in 410 Rudder for worship, fellowship and Bible study. SWAMP: is meeting at 8:30 p.m. in 510 Rudder. TAMU INTERNATIONAL FOLKDANGERS: will meet at 8 p.m. in the MSC. Beginners and experienced dancers are welcome. EL SALVADOR STUDENT ASSOCIATION: is meeting to discuss future activities at 7 p.m. in Rudder Tower. AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS CLUB: is meeting at 7 p.m. in 1 12 O&M Building. Driving classes erasing By LORI BROOKS Reporter If you have recently received a speeding ticket and don’t want it on your driving record, there is an al ternative. A defensive driving course can be taken once in a two-year pe riod to dismiss a ticket from your driving record or to reduce your in surance up to 10 percent. Municipal Court Clerk Pam Seay says. If you receive a ticket in Bryan or College Station, you must call the Municipal Court and schedule a date to meet with a judge, Seay says. If you don’t want to pay the ticket, you can request approval to take de fensive driving. After approval, you must post a cash bond in the amount of the fine and enroll in a defensive driving course within 90 days. Upon com pletion of defensive driving, take the certificate of completion to the court and the ticket will be dismissed from your records. Your money will be mailed back in the form of a check, Seay says. If you receive a ticket in another city, you must appear before the judge there, but you can take the de fensive driving course here. “You can take defensive driving anywhere in the state as long as it is certified by the Department of Pub lic Safety,” Seay said. Four defensive driving courses are offered in the Bryan-College tickets Station area. The first course is of fered by MSC After Hours two to three times a month. The cost is $22, which, if paid at the time of registra tion, will insure a place in the class. The Brazos Valley Safety Agency also offers a defensive driving course four times a month. The cost of the course is $20. Defensive driving courses also are offered by two local residents. How ard F. Goldsmith Jr. offers his course four times a month at the A&M Church of Christ and the Ag- ieland Inn, Ballroom A. The cost is 20 and enrollment is limited to 50 people per class. Joyce Lewis offers her course twice a month, once on Saturday for eight hours or on Tuesday and Wednesday nights for four hours each. The cost is $20, but the cost will be $22 after the first of the year. Regis tration is 15 minutes before class, but you can call Lewis to secure one of the 20 places in the class. Lewis claims her courses are dif ferent than the others. She said her course focuses on values, attitudes and behaviors. Students sit in a circle and discuss their values and atti tudes about life, why they got the ticket and try to change their behav ior in driving, Lewis said. Her course offers a 10 percent discount in insurance. Lewis and her instructors are certified by the De partment of Public Safety. English official calls British inventor fake United Press International DALLAS — A British inventor, ac cused of bilking millions from wealthy Texans in exchange for rights to sell his water-fuel device, was never granted a doctorate de gree in “dimensional metrology” as he claimed, an English university of ficial testified Wednesday. Ronald Albert Lasteed, in fact, never attended the University of Keele, England, said David Cohen, the university’s registrar. Lasteed was indicted by a federal grand jury on multiple charges of fraud. Prosecutors said investors sank more than $2 million in his scheme to produce and market “lon- agen,” a fuel supposedly costing 5 cents a gallon and made from ion ized water particles. The dictionary defines metrology as “the science of weights and mea sures.” A1 G. Hill, an heir to the estate of the late H.L. Hunt, testified Tues day that he was the target of efforts by Lasteed and a Houston promoter, Joseph Shea Peeples. Peeples will be tried at a later date. Prosecutors said Lasteed — through the efforts of Peeples — fal sely claimed he was protected by the Central Intelligence Agency and un der White House orders not to re lease the fuel formula to foreign na tions. Lasteed’s trial is expected to last through next week, prosecutors said. Lasteed’s attorney, L. Lee Bailey, said Peeples created the falsifications about the formula and Lasteed’s background. If convicted, Lasteed faces a maxi mum penalty of 50 years in prison and a $27,000 fine. Upstairs Jewelers - r j - ' I “HOUSTON’S 47th ST” 713-270-1054 .15 CT RD DIAMOND, MOUNTED IN YOUR CLASS RING FOR 89. 00 OR .25 CT 189. 00 WHOLESALE PRICING COME UPSTAIRS AND SEE OUR FINE DIAMOND QUALITY & UNUSUAL CUSTOM JEWELRY. National Bank of Commerce Bldg. Sharpstown Mall 7500 Bellaire Blvd.. Suite 902 Houston. Tx. 77036 ra THE WH- EPISCOPAL * CHURCH & STUDENT CENTER Announce CLASSES FOR THOSE INTERESTED in PREPARING FOR CONFIRMATION and or learning more about the Episcopal Church CLASSES MEET IN THE CHURCH Beginning 8:00 P.M., Sunday, Oct. 7 906 Jersey College Station (So. Side of Campus) Ph. 696-1726 8 rolls. | Regularly $777 | I No limit on number of | I purchases per coupon. I g Offer expires 10/11/84 J ■ 1905 Texas Ave. 693-1669 I ■ 705 N. Texas Ave. 822-2819 I ■ 512 Villa Maria 822-5277 I I Chicken ’n rolls The Battalion Number One in Aggieland YOU DON'T KNOW WHERE TO EAT OUT? Check the Battalion ads! Battalion Classifieds Call 845-2611 4- l THE l RICHARD : SMITH 3 STORY * * * 4- * Last Spring, Bill Presnai J our former Stati Representative resign®! 1 £ from office in order to go! + to work for Texas A^i 4- TTiis allowed Gov. Mails 1 J White (Dem.) to call a! * Special Election to fill thfi + vacancy. Would you | J believe he set thei * election during AW * Spring Break? He did! J Why? To keep the Aggies i * from voting. He knew we 1 J could make a difference, i 4. There are only 45,00(11 + registered voterslil J Brazos County (which! + alone makes up thist 4- State Representative! £ District.) There ars( 37,000 students at AW £ so ob viously if we, + register to vote and vote! 4- we can make a j; J difference. As it turned! * out, many Aggies did i 4- register to vote and voted! £ absentee for Aggiei * Richard Smith ’59. He is 1 £ the only experienced,, * conservative, I * independent candidate' £ who can go to Austin, 4- and get the job done. To 1 4- Richard Smith A6?M ia| J just a pairt of the district! * AGfM is a commitment 1 J and a concern that all! + Aggies share. It endednpi 4- that over 13,000 people' * voted last March. Our, candidate, Richard 1 Smith, lost by 29 votes J J (to force a runoff). Bp two tenths of one percent' £ of all the votes cast last' * March our candidate lost * The conservative £ Republican lost to Mari * W r hite’s chosen *- Democrat, Neeley Lewis. £ That was the Special * Election. *■ The Battalion Editorial £ Board called the * scheduling of the Special | £ Election by the! + Democrats “an attack oil if Texas A&M students,! £ staff and faculty! members." Tbe Student'! 4- Senate passedaj J resolution in opposition! * to the setting of the 1 * election date when] J Aggies could not vote, i if Governor White (Dem.)' ^ refused to even see the, * student government' leaders concerning thej £ issue. The Bryan-College i + Station Eagle Editorial 1 4- Board said, “Let’s face itj J this whole thing smacks i jf of partisan politics at Its 1 £ most petty level.’i £ “...Democrat Party officials' + had described March 101 * as a ‘convenient day’ for i the election.” Convenient' 4- to keep the Aggies from J J voting. Convenient for if the Democrats to unfairly *- help Neeley Lewis. J On Nov. 6, we have a * chance to prove that we £ won’t be pushed around J again. Richard Smith jf and Neeley Lewis are on J the ballot again-this 4. time in a fair fight. We 4- will determine the J) winner, if we register to jf vote (the deadline is Oct 4- 6) and then vote on Nov, J 6. Mark White and the jf Democrats can’t set this J election when the Aggies J can’t vote. It’s up to us! * * * J MORAL: * TOGETHER WI1 J CAN MAKE A J DIFFERENCE, * * *- * *- J If you want to help *make a difference, £ join Aggie GOP or J call the Smith jf headquarters at } 846-0047. Political ad Paid For by j4- The Richard Smith Campaign rrfl