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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 7, 1984)
Page 8/The Battalion/Wednesday, November 7,1984 Battalion Classified FOR RENT 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 Maintenance • Laundry Facilities • Professional On-Site Management SCANDIA 401 Anderson 693-6505 TAOS 1505 Park Place 693-6505 SEVILLA 1501 Holleman 693-2108 3 Bdrm. Duplexes $ 480 • Covered Parking • Convenient to TAMU and Texas Ave. • Washer/Dryer Connections 24-Hr. Emergency Maintenance • On Shuttle Bus Route Aurora Court College Station, Texas 693-6505 TIMBER RIDGE APTS. 1 & 2 Bedroom Flats 2-1 1 / 2 Townhouses Now preleasing for Dec. 3 blocks from campus. Laundry & Pool. 503 Cherry St., 846-2173. 32t20 3-bdrm. 2-bath 4-plex w/washer TAMU, $375/mo. 409-272-8422. Furnished rooms for rent. 846-3804. HELP WANTED Nowflirii We’re serving up great opportunities . . . for high-spirited, energetic people with a real enthusiasm to serve the public! We have positions open in all areas, and will be Interviewing: 1710 Briarcrest 10-4 <K, M-Sat •qiiitl o|i|»oriiiitify **i»i|iloyer ml. Major Airline seeks part- time campus rep; Sales/Marketing students preferred. Must be junior or senior. Can lead to permanent position. Send resumes to EASTERN AIRLINES, One Greenway Plaza East, Houston, Texas 77046. -4Stia SUBWAY A local specialty sandwich shop is seeking energetic people to fill re sponsible positions. Flexible hours, competitive wages. Full- /part-time. Apply in person at Parkway Square on SW Parkway, C.S. or Woodstone Shopping Center on Highway 30. PART-TIME HELP WANTED. GRAPEVINE PERSONALITY. 696-3411 EOE Local engineering office seeks part-time GIRL FRI DAY for word processing, filing, library upkeep and other challenging tasks. 779-6068. 46t5 Men and women over 18 with automobile with liability ins. to deliver telephone books in Bryan, College Sta tion and surrounding areas. Call 823-1506 9 to 4. 47t5 HELP WANTED Full-time and part-time DELIVERY PERSONNEL needed. Auto is required. Make more than other delivery personnel. Apply in person CHANELLO’S PIZZA, 2406 Texas Avenue, Parkway Center or 301 Patricia in Northgate. 4818 MR. GATH’S is now hiring part-time DRIVERS for delivery. Wages are $3.75/hr. + 6% commission. Must have own car and insurance. Come by weekdays be tween 2:30-5:00 or call 846-4809 for appointment. 39tl0 Part-time maintenance position. Experience preferred. Must have transportation and tools. Approximately 20 hours a week and Saturday. Beal Realty, 823-546910t 10 $360 weekly/up mailing circulars! No bosses/quotas! Sincerely interested rush self-addressed envelope: Di vision Headquarters, Box 464 CEG, Woodstock, IL. 60098. 45tl5 HIRING Graduates interested in Real Estate apprais ing in the Houston area. Contact Lee Burns, Inc. at (713) 359-1110, between 9a.m.-5p.m. 46t5 dryer close to 48tl0 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 dn 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.31141 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. 3it4i PERSONALS GIRLS! Has your summer perm/wave grown out? Ready to look good for Thanksgiving and Christmas? Come see me if you want someone that will take time to find and do what’s best for you! Billy, V.I.P.S. Hairstyl ists. 846-3435. But only if you care! ALL SIZES ARE AVAILABLE NOW! Bryan Mini Storages, 3213 Highway 21 West, Bryan, Texas 77803, 775-4127. 40t30 PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Abortion procedures and referrals—Free pregnancy testing. Houston, Texas 713/524-0548. 10t64 ROOMMATE WANTED Needed: Roommate for spring semester. Own bed room and bathroom on shuttle route, 764-1751. 48t5 Lovely 3 bdr. 2 bath house, $238/mo., 846-2275. 48t 10 Male roommate to share 2 bdrm apartment and 1/3 and Vfeof expenses. Call 693-1639. 48t3 Need male roommate to sublease 1/2 of 2-bedro. studio spring semester. $ 180/mo. All bills paid, Northgate area, Dave 268-0186. 47t5 WANTED WANTED: Male peekapoo puppy. Call Kellie at 696- 0102. 48t3 We buy and sell used stereos. Call for details. 846-4607. 23t30 FOR LEASE 6-month lease-sublease my one bedroom apartment. $285/month. On Southwest Parkway and shuttlebus route. No deposit. Janna. 845-9487 764-1738. 48t5 FOR SALE Rolex watch ladies Jubilee. Must sell. Call ext 106 260- 9150, after 6 693-1859. 46t 13 Melody *81 2-BR bath with cen A/H and appliances. Oak Forest Mobile Park #100. Anchored. $13,500. Call 696-2298 44t5 1981 Datsun 510, 21,000 miles loaded. Runs perfect. Must sell $5000, 696-6131. 45t4 1983 Honda Nighthawk 550. low mileage, ferring and fitted cover included. $1800, 696-0716 (Dave), (713) 859-7882 (anyone). 42t8 USED STEREOS - BEST PRICES. Fully serviced and warranty. BARGAIN SOUNDS 846-4607. 36t30 Mobile Home - 64 , xl4’ - 2 B.R. 2 BA. - 2 yrs. old- washer & dryer-Clear Title-$ 13,500. George 822-6809. 36tl5 Snow skis, poles 185cm, $100, boots sizes 7 8c 8, $50 each, 696-2/61 evenings. 46t5 1980 Honda CX500, water cooled shaft, drive plexi faring back rest luggage rack, $1000, 693-4765. 45t5 ’81 VW diesel Rabbit, air conditioned, AM/FM radio: ’82 Chevy 3/4 ton Van, air, radio, great condition. 779- 8120 after 6 p.m. 45t7 1977 Honda Civic, good mileage, great work car, $975. 1976 Yamaha RD400, many extras, low mileage. $795, 696-5339. 48tl0 '82 Honda 125. Low mileage. Excellent condition. $650.00. Cal! Don Wilder, 260-7298. 48t5 SERVICES Find good help in a hurrv . Dependable • Accurate • • Creative Resumes • Copies — 4* 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. PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Term papers, thesis, let ters, labs. Experienced, dependable, reasonable, 693- 8537 33t31 WORD PROCESSING all types, my work guaranteed. 775-6178 after 5:00 and weekends. 43tl0 Expert typing, word processing. All work error free. PERFECT PRINT. 822-1430. 31t35 Let Suzy Type It! Accuracy quaranteed. Second Paper absolutely free! Details, 775-8476. 36t20 GAYLINE 775-1797, information, referrals, peer counseling, 5:30-10:30 p.m. Sunday-Friday. 39t20 Over 30,000 people could be reading your ad in this space! Around town New SCOM course offered in the Spring S.Com.315: Interpersonal Communication will be taught for the first time during the Spring semester. The course, which is not listed in the Spring class directory, will be offered on MWF at 1 p.m. in 116 Blocker. The course examines how people communicate one-to-one. Non-majors are welcome to take this course as an elective. For addi tional information, contact Dr. William F. Owen (21 OF Blocker) or Dr. Kurt Ritter (212A Blocker), phone: 845-3452. Alex Haley to speak at A&M today Alex Haley will be speaking on “The Importance of Diverse Cul tures in Higher Education” at 8 p.m. Wednesday. The program will be in Rudder Auditorium. Tickets are on sale at Rudder Box Office. They are $5 for students and $7 for non-students. Speakers seminar applications due soon Speakers seminar applications for the Spring Seminar will be ac cepted through Nov. 21. This program is open to sophomores and juniors with moderate to heavy leadership experience. Class will meet on Wednesdays from 3 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Apply in the Student Activities Office, 208 Pavilion. Selections will he posted on the Mon day after Thanksgiving. Prof discusses role of media in Vietnam Dr. Kenneth Mladenka, associate professor of political science at A&M, will discuss the role of the news media during the Vietnam conflict. The program will begin at 7 p.m. Thursday in 601 Rudder. Dr. Mladenka was the military police duty officer at the embassy in Saigon on the night of the Tet offensive, Jan. 30, 1968. A short home movie, filmed by Dr. Mladenka during the offensive will be shown. Admission is 50(£ at the door. Culture transfer program scheduled Torsten Hagerstrand from the University of Lund, Sweden, is presenting a lecture, “Some Unexplored Problems in the Modeling of Culture Transfer and Transformation” Thursday at 8 p.m. in 112 O&M. This program is sponsored by the President’s Lecture Se ries and the Department of Geography. Statue of Liberty artifacts on display soon Artifacts of the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island will be on dis play tomorrow through Nov. 20 in the Langford Architecture Gal ley. Original newspaper clippings of the Statue of Liberty fundfais- ing efforts — dating back more fnan 100 years — are included in the exhibit. President declaring state of siege in Chile United Press International SANTIAGO, Chile — President Augusto Pinochet declared a state of siege Tuesday, saying it was nec essary to combat a wave of terrorist violence that left 10 dead in the last week and led to the resignation of his Cabinet. Pinochet also refused to accept the resignation of Interior Minister Sergio Onofre Jarpa, the chief min ister, whose decision to step down Monday was followed immediately by the other 15 Cabinet ministers. The state of siege, reimposed in Chile for the first time since 1978, increased the military government’s powers of arrests and broadened its power to restrict civil liberties, par ticularly press freedom. Pinochet annnounced last week that he was postponing plans to le gitimize political parties, and warned he would reimpose a state of siege if protests against his 11-year-old mili tary regime escalated out of control. Gandhi death set ‘two months ago’ United Press International NEW DELHI, India —An Indian government intelligence source said Tuesday the assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was planned two months ago by up to a dozen Sikhs to avenge the Indian army’s storming of the Sikhs’ Golden Temple in Punjab state. “The plot was hatched by Indians who are Sikhs,” the source said. “There was no foreign hand.” The prime minister was slain last Wednesday by two Sikhs in her per sonal security force. One of the assassins was killed by other guards. The second, Satwant Singh, 21, is hospitalized in critical condition with eight bullet wounds. The disclosure came as emer gency workers in New Delhi discov ered 100 more bodies — victims of the rioting and mass slayings that convulsed the capital and swept across northern India for four days after the assassination of Gandhi. The latest victims — mostly Sikhs killed by Hindus to avenge Gandhi’s death — pushed the death toll throughout India to more than 1,200 — half of them in New Delhi. The source said Indian authori ties have determined that six to 12 Sikhs were involved in the plot to kill Gandhi. The source said renegade police officers in Punjab — the only India state where Sikhs are the majority — had “something to do with it. We are investigating and tracking them.” The source said the Punjab po licemen under investigation may have joined the plot after they were fired from their jobs, which was about the same time as the assault the temple. Sikh militants decided tokillGa dhi after she ordered an army sault June 5-6 on the Goll Temple in Amritsar, the Sikhri gion’s holiest shrine, the sourcesi: Sikh extremists took refuge in; compound and were firing side on security forces when Gaul ordered the army operation. At least 600 people, mostlySil were killed when troops stormed | temple. The violence against Sikhs followed Gandhi’s assassination I created a refugee problem fori government of her son, Prime Ifc ister Rajiv Gandhi. The government announcedaj habilitation program for familieri the victims in the capital. Therm gram will include payments totfm who lost family members or hot) and is expected to top $25 million outright grants. Rajiv Gandhi announced that Sikh temples damaged in attack'll Hindus would be repaired at p ernment cost. M.M.K. Wali, the top admini® tor of New Delhi, told a newsconfi ence Tuesday that 25,000 Sikhrtl gees were in 12 camps and 5,1 more in temples who were m frightened to leave the shrines The daytime curfew has bet lifted in the capital, but the nifb time curfew continues, enforcedl 40,000 army troops with “shoou sight orders.” Long distance travel hard between classes By CH By DAINAH BULLARD Staff Writer The declaration came two days af ter two police were killed in the latest outbreak of terrorist violence, and a week after a new outburst of demon strations left eight people dead. In announcing his resignation Monday, Jarpa said he was stepping down because he could not stem the growing wave of terrorist violence and anti-government protests. The other ministers followed to give Pinochet a free hand in reorga nizing his government. Pinochet had originally appointed Jarpa in a move to defuse wide spread discontent. Jarpa, a civilian, replaced a general. Pinochet, who ruled since a mili tary coup deposed elected Marxist President Salvador Allende Gossens, said the government would not hold political talks until the opposition ac cepted the current constitutional timetable, which extends his term in power until 1989 and provides for an elected congress only in 1990. As Texas A&M students register for classes for the Spring 1985 se mester, relief is nowhere in sight for those with too little time between classes. The problem of back-to-back classes on opposite sides of the A&M campus is not new, but it grows more acute with the expansion of west campus. As building construction contin ues, more classes are conducted on west campus and more students find themselves caught in the 10-minute dash between classes. “This is not a new problem — it happens every year,” said Dr. Alvin Price, head of the Department of Bi omedical Science. “As faculty and administration, we have to be under standing of that.” Price said the time-crunch prob lem can sometimes be avoided by careful selection of class sections. Students can select class sections to try and correlate their schedules and class location, but they are not guaranteed of receiving the sections they request, he said. The University once experi mented with a program which pro vided for west campus classes to change on the half-hour, while main campus classes continued to change on-the-hour, Price said. The experiment failed because it wasted too much time and was too confusing, he said. “I don’t know what a good answer is,” Price said. “More and more stu dents are having the problem. We’ve had this problem in (the College of) Veterinary Medicine since we moid out here (to west campus) in 1955 1 All A&M students are subjecti the problem of too little time tween classes. However, students with majtfj from colleges such as agriculninf medicine and veterinary medkid are more likely to experienced problem because many or mosttl their classes are conducted on wd campus. Students who are earning ihs degrees from colleges that have of their problems on the main at] pus are less likely to suffer from ill time-crunch problem. Melynda Cloud, a student recoi clerk in the dean’s office in the lege of Architecture and Envii mental Design, said students majors in that college have fewpn lems with the time between classes. The 1982 Sf practicin with no days bef Chemim Texas A after a “sweaty” That the norn for a wh Doty’s a her kite her soph “I had man yea the All second t “I wante All that my knee Doty within ti practicir 1983 Spi turn. He practice, same kr more sui In C started ] row, hoi player si “She year," I Terry C courage last year we had 1 on the si to playir Doty was disc “The was real “I had ' back an< “We’re not aware of any pi lems,” Cloud said. “Actually, 1, times out of 100, it (the time pro! lem) doesn’t even affect our kids,a Willis Ritchey, assistant regisira said most complaints about a lacM time between classes occur durai the first round of exams. Tests! back-to-back classes often poseprd lems for students, he said. The time-crunch problem mayij solved when a new system is impk mented, Ritchey said. The new system is scheduled tf begin after the new student confe; ences for the Fall 1985 semester,k said, but it is uncertain what change I will be provided for in the system. Teenage ROIC students commit double suicide United Press International LINDENHURST, Ill. — The families and friends of two teen-ag ers struggled Tuesday to under stand why two honor students who seemed to have everything going for them would chose to die together in a car filled with carbon monoxide. The only clue was a crumpled note saying, “Suicide is painless.” Edward Atwood received a presi dential nomination to West Point. Amy Pintarelli was a member of the National Honor Society. Atwood’s father, Thomas, found their bodies Sunday night, side-by- side in the front seat of the family car. He said an eerie feeling came over him when he opened the ga rage door. “The first thing I saw when I opened the garage door was that hose in the tailpipe,” he said. “I knew in an instant what I had found.” The 17-year-olds were found dead in the front seat. The note with the words “suicide is painless” was found balled up in Edward’s bedroom. Edward’s sister, Linda, said the two “talked about tomorrow like there was going to really be one.” Their friends said they had every thing to live for. Amy’s life had changed since she movea into the Atwood home. Her mother killed herself in 1979 and Amy was unhappy living with her fa ther. The Atwoods were named her legal guardians Sept. 6, and she ap peared to be happy living with them. She and Edward attended a dance together Saturday night. The town of Lindenhurst is still reeling from “the shock of it all,” said Police Chief Gary Kupsack. “We can’t understand it.” Both Edward and Amy were ac tive in the local Reserve Officer Training Corps, directed by At wood’s father, a retired Army colo nel. “Ironically, we had planned a tea cher workshop for (Tuesday) and one of the presentations planned way in advance dealt with suicide counseling,” said Art Bleke, princi pal of Antioch Community High School. Task force checks truck weights United Press International LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — A 48- hour task force operation to check compliance with state laws by truck ers in four states showed that more roving patrol units were needed in Arkansas, the state Highway and Transportation Department said. The Arkansas Highway Police, a division of AHTD, cooperated with its counterparts in Louisiana, Texas and Oklahoma for the operation on Oct. 28, 29 and 30. The department said 14,605 trucks were checked by the highway police at five permanent point-of- entry stations and 35 roving patrol units. Of the 9,113 trucks weighed at the 40 locations, 138 were found to be violating legal weight limits. A to tal of 254 citations were issued for other violations, including speeding, oversized loads, hazardous materi als, safety and licensing. The department said 99 of the 138 weight violations were found at the 35 roving units, arid 241 of the citations for other violations were is sued by the roving units. “Although the majority of the trucks were checked at the perma nent stations on the high-volume highways,” highway police assistant chief John Bailey said, “the vast ma jority of the violations occurred on the low-volume highways. “Had we not had the roving units, those trucks would have passed through Arkansas and never been checked because many were trying to avoid the permanent stations.” Bailey said the operation also pro vided clues on where to locate addi tional permanent stations and where to assign mobile units. Senate to talk on women in the Band The Texas A&M Student Sen ate will discuss a resolution io- night to recommend that women be allowed to participate in tie Aggie Band. The Senate will meet at 7 p.m in 204 Harrington Education Center. The resolution cites the admis sion of women into the Univer sity, the participation of women in the Corps of Cadets and the be lief in equality as reasons for al lowing women to be band mem hers as reasons to cease all legal actions to prevent participation® women in the band. The approval or disapprovalol the resolution by a majority senators will be considered rep resentative of the Senate’s opim ion. In new business, the senate consider an absence policy revi sion bill. Student Body President David Alders and Judicial Board Chair-1 man Lindsey Dingmore will pK' sent reports to the Senate. The senate also will hear re ports from the vice presidents of student services, academic affaim external affairs, finance and nil® and regulations.