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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 16, 1984)
Battalion Classified WANTED CASH for gold, silver, old coins, diamonds Full Jewelery Repair Large Stock of Diamonds Gold Chains TEXAS COIN EXCHANGE 404 University Dr. 846-8916 3202-A T exas Ave. (across from El Chico, Bryan) 779-7662 19U3C I WANT TO BUY 1982-83 Aggieland yearlxiok- $25.00. Call Donna - 713-266-6000 or 713-890-4432 . 3D2 Need tickets to A&M vs T exas football game. Call col lect for Wes (713)667-9898 after 5:00. 30tl0 ' PERSONALS New credit card! No one refused! Also, itifbnnalion on receiving VISA, MASTKRCARl) with no credit check, f ree brochure. ( all 602-951 -1266 extension-505. 13t3 PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Abortion procedures and referrals—Free pregnancy testing. Houston, Texas 713/524-0548. • 10t64 Battalion Classifieds LCall 845-261 li HELP WANTED WAITRESS BAR WAITRESS DESK CLERK Full & part-time Apply jn parson PONOEROSAj Ponderosa Motor Inn Texas Avenue at the Bypass MEN, WOMEN, STUDENTS: For present & future newspaper routes. Early morning hours. $200-$800/mo. BRAZOS NEWS SERVICE 846-2911,846-1253. 24110 Fcimik* oftornoon I>artcutler. Dollar, 775-7919 or 846-4691. FOR RENT GIRLS! GIRLS! GIRLS! We got ‘Em at PEPPERTREE Guys Too! Peppertree Apartments 2701 Longmire College Station 693-5731 FOR RENT TIRED OF CRAMPED QUARTERS? Find a couple of roommates and live cheaper than in the dorm. 3 bdrm. 2 bath, washer/dryer connections. Some 2 stories, fire places/ceiling fans/fenced yards. All on shuttle bus route. University Rentals, 846-2471 or 846-8730. 3It 10 es ami D.J. Silver 28t 16 Local church needs Choir Director & Custodian (hous ing available). For either position respond with qualifi cations experience & references to P.O. Box 3254, Bryan, Texas 77805. 30t6 Enthusiastic Responsible Person needed as Orthodon tic Assistant. Will Train. Send resume 2011-C Villa Maria, Bryan, Texas 77802. Slt5 Bartender wanted ELK'S LODGE. No experience nec essary. Call Karen 846-2096 after 4:00 p.m. 3112 Part-time job. No experience needed, 846-4234 in Skaggs Shopping Center. 30t4 We buy and sell used stereos. Call for details. 846-4607. 2St30 TIMBER RIDGE APTS. 1 & 2 Bedroom Flats 2-1 VS? Townhouses Now preleasing for Dec. 3 blocks from campus. Laundry & Pool. 503 Cherry St., 846-2173. 32t20 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 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, 696-5487.1 etao Mini Warehouse Sizes of 5x5 to 10x30 The Storage Center 764-8238 or 696-5487. SERVICES Find good help m a hurry • Professional Typing on the Word Processor . Dependable • Accurate - Fait * Creative Resumes • Copies — 4< 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. 10123 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 , High p»ytng executive position! RESUMES 32tl() Are mditpenvxble end pUv a major role tn helping you get a job We edit, typeset, and store n in our computers. let us be o/ help to you I MIDLAND HEIGHTS INTERNATIONAL 403 University Dr. W Across Post Office at Northgate 846-6486 TYPING Personalized Services. We care. We understand form and style. Beginning our fifth year. AUTOMATED CLERICAL SERVICES 110 Lincoln. C.S. 693-1070 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. Brookslde 846-5794 12129 GAYLINE 775-1797. information. referrals, peer eotinseling, 5:30-10:30p.m. Siiiiclay-Tlnirscluy. 28H0 For a Complimentary Marv Kay facial or re-orders. Call Debbie. 260-8373 2418 BREN l ON-CRECORY ESCORTS. Male able for any occasion. Alex 696-7958. i is avail- 20t 15 Expert typing, word processing. All work error free. PERFECT PRINT. 822-1430. 3U35 Ex|>en tvping and word processing. Call 693-03889 2U23 LOSTAND FOUND LOST: Solid silver bracelet. If found please call Manna at 696-2244. 29t4 LOST: A Sony walkman was lost in Rudder Tower Wednesday afternoon. October 10. For information call 696-4085. 31t6 FOR SALE ‘82 Suzuki GS300L excellent condition, 3000 miles with helmet. Call Jerry, 693-6762. 29t5 “1980 Corvette, 4-speed, Brown, low mileage, loaded. 846-9134 after 5. ” ^ 27t20 1981 Toyota Celica GT. S-soeed, cruise control, A.C., cassette/AM-KM stereo, and more only $6450. 846- 3889. 32t2 Computer Scientist HP-16C calculator $65. Equalizer trailer hitch $ 125. Refrigerator $95, 693-7788, 32t5 SPECIAL NOTICE STEAMBOAT, DAYTONA BEACH, SOLTTH PADRE, CORPUS CHRLSTI/PORT “A..Sunchase Tours “Break From the Books” winter and spring ski and sea trips available NOW! New Years Eve ski week from $155, Daytona from $89, Padre from $78, Cor pus Christi/Port “A” from $79. HURRY call Sunchase Tours toll free for more information 1-800-321-5911, local (303)493-6703 or contact a Sunchase campus rep resentative or your local Travel Agency TODAYI. 3 lt3 OFFICIAL NOTICE AGGIELAND REFUND POLICY Yearbook fees are refundable in full during the semester in which payment is made. Thereafter no refunds will be made on cancelled orders. Yearbooks must be picked up during the academic year in which they are published. Students who will not be on campus when the yearbooks are published, usually in September, must pay a mailing and hand ling fee. Yearbooks will not be held, nor will they be mailed without the necessary fees having been paid.3i t4 i DIRECTORY REFUND POLICY Directory fees are refundable in full during the semester in which payment is made. Thereafter no refunds will be made on cancelled orders. Directories must be picked up during the academic year in which they are published. 31t41 something for everyone in the 3 betnn, 2 bath 4-plex w/washer/dryer, close to TAMU, S350.00.272-8422. 32tl0 FOR RENT; Two bed apts., furn/unfurn. S250-S285, 415 College Main, Northgate, 775-0349. 15t30 Must sublet apt. Plantation Oaks Apt. #622, 1 bdrm. unfurn., $295.00 + electric. Phone 693-1011. 30t3 Battalion Classified 845-2611 Page 8/The Battalion/Tuesday, October 16, 1984 What’s up Friday MSG HOSPITALITY: applications for the 1985 Miss TAMU Scholarship Pageant are available in the MSC Main Hall. For more information, contact Amy Glynn at 764-1724. WRITING OUTREACH: Larry Reason' will teach a session on “Avoiding Fragments and Punctuating the Compound Sentence” at 7 p.m. in 105 Blocker. ON-CAMPUS CATHOLICS: is meeting at 9:30 p.m. in the All Faith’s Chapel. This week’s discussion is on ‘The Sacra ment of Reconciliation — Why?” followed by a mass. OFF-CAMPUS CATHOLICS: is having a “create you own ice cream sundae party” and fellowship at 7:30 p.m. in # 108 Briar wood. TRADITIONS COUNCIL: is selling boutonnieres for SWITCH OFF FOR THE KICKOFF from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. all week. MSC ARTS: the film “Shock of the New” at 8 p.m. in 604D Evans Library. TAMU ONE WHEELERS: is meeting at 6 p.m. in the Grove. Beginners are welcome. RESIDENCE HALL ASSOCIATION: is meeting at 7 p.m. in 158 Blocker. AMERICAN SOCIETY OF LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTS: is meeting at 8 p.m. in room 110C. AGGIES FOR BARTON: is meeting to discuss campaign plans at 8:30 p.m. in 301 Rudder. SADDLE-N-SIRLOIN CLUB: is meeting at 7 p.m. in 115 Kleberg. MARKETING SOCIETY: Jimmy Scamardo, president of United Bank, will be speaking on bank marketing at 7 p.m. in 102 Blocker. The Dallas trip will be discussed. TEXAS STUDENT EDUCATION ASSOCIATION: is meet ing at 7:30 p.m. in 701 Rudder. A workshop on student teaching will be presented by Dr. Blair. AGGIE GOP: is meeting at 7 p.m. in 206 MSC. Campaign work will be discussed. New members are welcome. AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERS: Sherry Looney of Arco will speak about cryogenic gas processing at 7:30 p.m. in 203 Zachry. Items for What's Up should be submitted to The Battal ion, 216 Reed McDonald, no less than three days prior to desired publication date. Security adviser denies CBS story 1980 AMC Spirit hatchback. 4-spcr(l. A.C., AM- EM cassette. PS/LB 60,000 miles, goixl student car. $2500, 846-1403after5 30p.m. 28H0 1975 Chevrolet Itnpala, low mileage, power steering, power brakes, A/C, Kerry 845-9683 3115 Shop privately. Buy X-raled products from home; Filins, books, magazines, rubbet goods, etc., all dis count prices. Rush $2.00 to PIE Enterprises, P.O. Box 54I033-B, Houston, Texas 77254. 3115 1983 Yamaha Heritage, low mileage, 650CC, 845- 5803,775-9474. 3H10 ROOMMATE WANTED Female roommate. Lovclv 3 Ixlr. house, $158.()()/mo., 846-2275. 23tl0 United Press International NEW YORK — Walt Rostow, President Johnson’s national secu rity adviser, Monday denied a CBS account of a 1967 White House meeting in which Gen. William Westmoreland was quoted as saying the United States was winning the Vietnam War. Rostow testified in Westmore land’s $120 million libel suit against CBS that the intelligence community was unprepared for the Viet Cong’s Jan. 30, 1968, Tet offensive, despite indications of “massive infiltration” on the trails into South Vietnam. Despite the information and the fact it was the “most solid indication the enemy was gohig to make a ma jor move,” the intelligence commu nity did not know what was about to happen, Rostow said. The Tet offensive, while a major defeat for the Viet Cong, was a ma jor psychological blow to South Viet namese and American war effort. Much of the afternoon’s testi mony was critical of CBS’s 1982 pro gram, “The Uncounted Enemy: A Vietnam Deception,” which led Westmoreland to file a $120 libel suit against the network. The pro gram claimed Westmoreland lied about enemy troop strength. In most of Monday’s testimony, Westmoreland’s attorney, Dan Burt, focused on the 1967 meeting in the White House Cabinet Room at tended by Rostow. He read from the transcript of the program in which CBS correspondent Mike Wallace characterized the meeting: “The Viet Cong’s army, he (West moreland) said, had leveled off at 285,000 men. And best of all, he told the president (Johnson), the long awaited crossover point had been reached. “We were now killing or capturing Viet Cong at a rate faster than they could be put back in the field. We were winning the war of attrition.” Burt asked Rostow if Wallace’s comments were true. “Not in my memory,” said Ros tow, now a professor at the Univer sity of Texas in Austin. He said the meeting focused on putting more U.S. troops into Vietnam. Rostow said Westmoreland said at the meeting the war would last an other five years at the current attri tion rate, but would last “probably only two years with greater forces.” Burt asked if he felt Westmore land was under pressure to underes timate the number of enemy for po litical reasons and again the answer was, “No, sir.” Immediately after the testimony, Wallace, co-aefendant with CBS producer George Crile and former CIA analyst Samuel Adams, a paid CBS consultant, gave the press the transcript of an unaired interview with Westmoreland. In it the general told Wallace sub stantially what Wallace said in the broadcast. Man claims he wasn’t pilot of CAF seaplane United Press International HARLINGEN — The man identi fied by the Confederate Air Force as the pilot of a World War II Hying plane in which six people were killed said Monday he was not flying the plane when it crashed into the La guna Madre. “I was aboard but I was not the pi lot,” Doug Hall, 37, of Longview, told UPI from his hospital bed where he was being treated for a compound leg fracture. “They got some kind of error in the paper work, I guess. I was the co-pilot.” CAF officials said that Hall was listed as the pilot on the flight man ifest and Ken Allmond, 60, of Tyler, was listed as the co-pilot, but that that did not necessarily mean Hall was Hying the plane. Hall, one of four survivors of the Saturday crash, declined to discuss any details other than to deny some reports that the PBY-6A seaplane’s pontoons may have hit a sandbar or struck the bottom before it flipped over and broke into pieces in the 18- inch deep coastal lagoon. Warren Wendel, who heads a Na tional Transportation Safety Board team investigating the crash, com pleted his on-site inspection Monday and flew back to Fort Worth. A spokeswoman in Fort Worth said Wendel would not release any “probable cause” of the crash until he completes his study and submits the results to the 5-member NTSB Board in Washington, D.C. She said the length of time that it would take “depends on the complexity of the accident. By the nature of this acci dent, it may take some time.” CAF officials said the plane was flying a “photo mission” about 40 miles from Harlingen, the site of the Airshow ’84 reenactment of World War II battles. The seaplane was preceded by another plane carrying photographers. The CAF is a Harlingen-based pa triotic organization that boasts the world’s biggest collection of flyable World War II vintage aircraft. “I’m not going to make any com ment other than the pontoons were retracted,” Hall said. “They were not down. But that’s the only comment I’m going to make.” Allmond , the man listed as the pi lot, was killed in the crash along with Bobbie Shutz, 55, Kilgore; Robert E. Ennis, 60, Concord, Calif; Joseph Cromer, 65, Tyler; William “Joe” Dacus, 58, Jacksonville; and Dr. Oli ver Patterson, 66, Sapulpa, Okla. Still in critical condition at the hospital was Homer Schutz, 60, of Kilgore, deputy safety officer on the flight, who suffered a broken neck.m. Recuperating from less serious in juries at the hospital were Jerry Gardner, 41, and Dan Shields, 34, both of Tyler. Bob Layton, a wing leader of the Lone Star Wing which renovated the old World War II craft, said Monday the crash “will have a considerable impact” on the Tyler CAF organiza tion. Layton said he had been sched uled to go on the ill-fated Saturday flight, but that at the last minute gave his seat up to another person who had not flown much and wanted to fly in the aircraft. The rest of the story. This past spring, State Representative Neeley Lewis was elected in a special election when former State Representa tive Bill Presnal stepped down. In a hotly contested election, a record number of Texas A&M University students voted, disputing any claim that the Aggie stu dents who desired to vote were “disen franchised” because of the date of the election. State Representative Neeley Lewis was sworn in on March 20, 1984 and immedi ately went to work to represent the best interests of Brazos County and Texas A&M University. He stepped in at a polit ically tough time when the legislature would be asked to "bite the bullet” and deal with two of the most important issues facing Texans, present and future: public education and highways. Representative Lewis could have played the game and done the politically expedient thing. He could have voted for the education reform and highway package to look good, and then voted against the tax bill which was necessary to fund the education and highway bill. That would have been hypo critical and dishonest. State Representa tive Neeley Lewis chose to do the right thing. That took courage. Texas had not had a tax increase in 13 years yet its growth was unparalleled in that period with a population increase of some 472 million people. The demands on our schools and education had attained over bearing levels, and traffic had deteriorat ed our once excellent highway system to the point that the safety of Texans was being threatened. Because Neeley Lewis had the courage to vote for improving education, paying teachers a fairer salary and meeting our highway needs, the kids won, teachers won and so did every Texan who drives our roads and highways. Moreover, because Neeley Lewis stood up and forthrightly fought an “ill conceived tuition increase” at our state colleges and universities, the students of TAMU were winners as well. That also took courage, and it proved that Representative Lewis can stand up for his constituents and not succumb to the leadership of The House. He proved he could effectively work with the leadership when he felt it was right, and could differ with them and win when he felt it was wrong. Thus the real issue of this contest to elect a State Representative boils down to who can most effectively represent the needs of Brazos County and Texas A&M University, not who can spout cliches and screech ideologies. Representative Lewis, has proven he is a responsible legislator who understands the legislative process and deals with the real issues the way he sees them, not as he would dream them to be. He has work ed hard for the 14th Legislative District for the past eight months and he has the respect of those members of the Texas House with whom he works for the ulti mate benefit of all his constituents. Lewis RE-ELECT NEELEY STATE REPRESENTATIVE Paid for by the Neeley Lewis Campaign. Stuart F. Lewis. Treasurer 4500 Carter Creek Parkway. Bryan , l