Page 8/The Battalion/Friday, October 19,1984 Battalion Classified WANTED JOB OPPORTUNITIES FOR RENT Need tickets to A&M vs Texas football game. Call col lect for Wes (713)667-9898 after 5:00. 30tl0 ATTENTION INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS We buy Sc trade for your country’s products, souvenirs, ar tifacts, etc. EVERGREEN IMPORTS, 505 University, next to Interurban Restaurant. 35t6 ROUTE FOR SALE. llamllinK pure, natural fruit juices. Service pre-establislied accounts in motels such as Holiday Inn. Ramada. Howard Johnson. Quality Inn. Rest Western, etc. Will take -S 12.500 cash, includes inventory and equipment. No sellinu—replact* product only. Will net approximately S350 per week. Write Box 360247. Birmingham.AL 35236. Include phone num- ber or call toll free 1-800-521-4849. 35t2 FOR SALE SERVICES 1975 Chevrolet Impala, low mileage, power steering, power brakes, A/C, Kerry 845-9683 3115 HF-lliC calculator, dorm refrigerator after 5. 696- 0651. S5t5 Shop privately. Buy X-rated products from home; Films, books, magazines, rubber goods, etc., all dis count prices. Rush $2.00 to PIE Enterprises, P.O. Box ■ 33-b, r" ~ 54I033-B, Houston, Texas 77254. 31t5 Hi^h paying executive positions RESUMES 32(10 Ase indrtpenvjble and pUv a majot role in helping you get a job. We edit, typeset, and store n in pur computers. let us be o/ be/p to you/ MIDLAND HEIGHTS INTERNATIONAL 403 University Dr. W. Across Post Office at Northgate 846-6486 1983 Yamaha Heritage, low mileage, 650CC, 845- 5803,775-9474. Sit 10 1980 AMC Spirit 2-dr., hatchback, 4-speed, A.C., AM- FM cassette, PS/PB 60,(KK) miles, good student ear. $2500, 846-1403 after 5:30 p. m. 28t 10 Computer Scientist HP-16C calculator $65. Equalizer trailer hitch $ 125. Refrigerator $95, 693-7788. 32t5 “1980 Corvette, 4-speed Brown, low mileage, loaded. 846-9134 after 5." 27t20 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 SPRING SEMESTER HOUSING COURTYARD APARTMENTS is accepting reservations for apartment rentals and our unique dormitory plan. 600 University Oaks (Stallings Dr. at Highway 30) 693-2772 LOST AND FOUND LOST: Gold cross pen with name ingraved. Call C.W. 260-4084. S5t4 LOST: A Sony Walkman was lost in Rudder Tower Wednesday afternoon, October 10. For information call 696-4085. SH6 HELP WANTED We buy and sell used stereos. Call for details. 846-4607. 23l30 Responsil tic Assistant. Will Train. Send resume 2011-C Villa Maria. Bryan, Texas 77802. 31t5 Female afternoon bartender, waitresses and 13.J. Silver Dollar. 775-7919 or 846-4691. 28116 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 Hn From the west coast - Jafra Skin Care Products, Lori Sicklcr, 693-3867. 33t5 Local church needs Choir Director Sc Custodian (hous ing available). For either position respond with qualifi cations experience Sc references to P.O. Box 3254, Bryan, Texas 77805. 30t6 Expert typing, word processing. All work error free. PERFECT PRINT. 822-1430. 31t35 $ 10/hr. Guaranteed. Ladies! Sell Roses in nightclubs. Safe, respectable part-time work. 846-8890. 33t5 GAYLINE 775-1797, information. referrals, peer counseling, 5:30-10:30 p. m. Sunday-Thursday. 28110 JLPS Salesperson needed part-time. Apply i. 696-9626. 35t5 TYPING-EDITING. 846-3211. Yes that’s 846-3211 for fast, accurate, reasonable word processing. 33t 10 PERSONALS PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Term papers, thesis, Ici- ters, labs. Experienced, dependable, reasonable, 693- 8537 33t3! LIKE TO DANCE? Busy Athletic engineering junior looking for intelligent, fun female not obsessed with make-up. If you're not afraid of being yourself, send letter, picture to Box 1321, College Station 77841 34t2 Kx|x-n tvping and word processing. ( all 693-03889 21'23 Needed part-time help to re-do my roof, 8 a.m. to 12 noon weekdays, all day Saturday, $4.00 per hour, 822- 4778 mornings only. 34t5 referrals--Free pregnancy testing. 713/524-0548. louston, Texas 10t64 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 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. 31M1 ^ A. Aurora 3 Bdrm. Duplexes $ 480 • Covered Parking • Convenient to TAMU and Texas Ave. • Washer/Dryer Connections 1 24-Hr. Emergency Maintenance • On Shuttle Bus Route Aurora Court College Station, Texas 693-6505 TIMBER RIDGE APTS. 1 & 2 Bedroom Flats 2-1 Vz 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 istao SPECIAL NOTICE Lose weight for the holidays! Effective, inexpensive Herbal Products. Free delivery. Janice 823-7243. 35t7 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. letap GREAT ' LOCATION! Enjoy the convenience of these three apartment communities that are close to campus and within easy access to Texas Ave. Also enjoy: • Pools • Tennis Court • Large Walk-in Closets • Private Patio or Balcony • 24-Hr. Emergency Facilities • Laundry Facilities • Professional On-Site Management SCANDIA 401 Anderson 693-6505 TAOS 1505 Park Place 693-6505 SEVILLA 1501 Holleman 693-2108 GIRLS! GIRLS! GIRLS! We got ‘Em at PEPPERTREE Guys Too! Peppertree Apartments 2701 Longmire College Station 693-5731 Wanted 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 oq shuttle bus route. University Rentals, 846-2471 or 846-8730. 31tl0 want ads Advertise an item in the Battalion. Around town Aggielcmd *85 class pictures taken now Freshmen and sophomores can have their class picture taken now at the Pavilion from 8:30 p.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Junior, seniors and graduate students can avoid long lines by having their pictures taken now at the Yearbook Associates office at 1700 South Kyle, behind Culpepper Plaza. Don’t delay getting youi pic ture taken. Driver safety course begins today The TAMU After Hours Program will sponsor a Driver Safet) Course today and tomorrow. This course may be used to have cer tain traffic violations dismissed and to receive a 10 percent discount on automobile insurance. Registration is held from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday in room 216 MSC. For more information, call 845-9352. Student Gov’t sponsors “gripe” session Student Government is presenting the first meeting oi “Issues and Grievances” Monday at 7 p.m. in 230 MSC. This willbeanop- portunity for the student body to voice concerns to Student Govern ment leaders. A forum of this type can be an invaluable means of communication. Please, take advantage of this opportunity. < 4. h Every amble ask Te> teal. fee the coni APO project will benefit Brazos Center The Agfgie chapter of Alpha Phi Omega will lie conducting a service project at the Brazos Center on Briarcrest Drive this Satur day and next Saturday from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. The members will be painting the museum, landscaping around the building and re pairing the bleachers at the Brazos County Pavilion. The prqjeci will require approximately 40 volunteers each weekend. APO is a national service fraternity based on the scouting princi pals of leadership, friendship and service. The Brazos Center pro- )ect is one of many which the members of APO will be participating in this semester. Teal /eragir E fle also |7.8 ave J‘‘Whe the play leal sai bveragi n Afte kind co t| run rr Teal me of ird-hit “I try the DB I on. [me, bi Jveors I The/ 1C los fod tha Splash-down Astronauts had great flight crew overcomes problem Je Bayh “Of c id. “W id we’ •happy w [Teal s 3 bdrm, 2 bath 4-plex w/washeWdryer, close to TAMU, $350.<)(), 272-8422. 32tl0 FOR RENT; Two bed apts., furn/unfurn. $250-$285, 415 College Main, Northgate, 775-0349. 15t30 Furnished bedroom, 1 l /i miles from campus and 1 VS blocks from shuttle, Vi utilities except gas with kitchen, washer/dryer privileges, 846-3804 34t5 United Press International SPACE CENTER, Houston — The five men and two women, who spent a crowded eight days in orbit alxiard the shuttle Challenger, said Thursday their llighi demonstrated the value of having people in orbit to handle unexpected proolcms. “We had what I cousiderpi fantas tic flight,” commander Robert Crip- pen, a veteran of four shuttle (lights, said at a news conference. < “It had its little humps, hut I think if it did anything it underscored that having people involved can make the dif ference between a failure and a success.” Crippen, pilot Jon McBride, and crew members Sally Ride, Kathy Sul livan, David Leestma, Paul Scully- Power and Canadian Marc Garneau landed at the Kennedy Space Center Oct. 13 to wrap up a siuhning Earth- study mission that was hampered throughout by a series of snags. A vital radio antenna went hay wire, a NASA communications satel lite was knocked out of action tem porarily, and the crew had trouble with a 35-foot-long folding radar- mapping antenna in the payload bay. But the shuttle fliers handled those problems and others in stride and brought home a wealth of scien tific data about Earth and its envi ronment. Scully-Power, an Australian-horn U.S. Navy oceanographer, unveiled slides of the world’s oceans that he said illustrated a “far more complex system than we ever expected.” [ore ag idary ie conf “I’ll p vn th lutes,” We nes or Durir Houstor >od off One photo showed S-mile-wiil spiral eddies, or currents, in tkl Mediterranean Sea similar to thotl first discovered during a flight in 1981. “What ( ante out of this partkiibl (light was that we were able toi«| that this sort ol structure is intera»l net ted lor thousands of mitej Scully-Power said. “I think starting a whole new look at thedfHd a ft namit situation in the oceans.” [overall Crippen, who flew two earlitfl shuttle (lights with crews of five, dj Challenger’s record seven-memlif (i ew pushed the limits of the sb tie’s capabilities. thii J;e for Jd. “A bybody “Ii was crowded, but it was® tainly doable,” he said. “Fromi standpoint of just operating in tit orbiter, five is more comfoiiaii than operating with seven.” Mission specialists David Leeffl and Kathy Sullivan broke grd during a spacewalk by successful' demonstrating techniques that be used to refuel satellites on fu shuttle missions. Sullivan, the first Amerita woman to walk in space, saidthedi would have liked more time ton* the earth go by. Garneau, the first Canadian to S in space, also enjoyed the view fro orbit. The electronics engineered ducted a series of experimentsdif iug the mission primarilyinraj’ life sciences and physics. Debate (continued from page 1) When Is Your Buying No Secret^ At All? WHEN OVER 30,000 PEOPLE READ IT IN THE BATTALION rity austerity by saying “most people don’t have the luxury to live to he 80 years old.” Gramm said, “That is not a quote from me. It was a quote from an un named bureaucrat.” Doggett, an Austin attorney who has served in the Texas Senate for 11 years, accused Gramm of going after the Social Security system, and after Gramm pledged to safeguard his mother’s Social Security check, Doggett claimed that that check for “$333 would be $214 if you’d had your way.” Social Security was an issue Dog gett hit upon again and again, and he used it to augment his contention that Texans without political action committee money were ignored by Gramm. Gramm again accused Doggett of running a dirty campaign and al leged, as he has in television ads, that Doggett was cited by a national ad vertising group for unethical cam paign ads. And Doggett, as he has before, called that a lie, citing a statement by the head of the Ameri can Advertising Association that cause the eff ect for them was grin Gramm, who stared stonilt Doggett when the Democrat riifi the quotes that have appeareditil television ads, outlined the di ence between the candidates ones ndmic issues as a simple one. “1 want to control spendingi wants to raise taxes,” Gramm said Gramm claimed his econo® package has created 7 millions jobs, 850,000 of those inTexasU provided a 25 percent tax cut 6 billed himself as “the guy »- helped save Social Security.” But Doggett accused Gramm supporting a national sales tax,»(< Doggett called “the Phil Gra® tax,” which Doggett said included fiat income tax that would repeal^ home mortgage deduction. Af ter that accusation, Grai® said, “Lloyd, you are shameless do not support a national ined 1 t&x.” 1 Gramm charged that Dog attacking him to divert atte# from what he called one of the# liberal voting records in the Senate. 1 called Gramm’s assertion hood. “I want a clean election, and I want a clean campaign,” Doggett said. “Perhaps this is the first time a candidate has accused me of mudslinging by slinging his quotes back at him.” At one point, Doggett called the tax cut program co-authored by Gramm “the Grim-Latta (bill) be- “He’s doing that becausehe“ not run on his record,”Gramms and he accused Doggett of chan? his stance on issues since hisph® and runoff battles. After Doggett cited hisoppos# to the Simpson-Mazzoli immig# bill, Gramm chastized him, Lloyd, I’m afraid you’ve chat? your tune again.”