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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 14, 1984)
Page lO/The Battalion/Wednesday, November 14, 1984 Battalion Classifieds FOR RENT THANKSGIVING SPECIAL STUDENT SPECIAL Large Wooded Lots Come see our beautiful park. We furnish water, sewer, and mowers. CLUBHOUSE/LAUNDRY SWIMMING POOL MINUTES TO A&M CABLE TV available NEAR FM 2818 2 CAR PARKING BRING THIS AD AND FOR STUDENTS ONLY: We lower our deposit and lower our rent for next 12 months. CLEARLEAF Mobile Home Community 920 Clearleaf 779-2865 Less than 10 minutes from school. Free holiday turkey with new lease TIRED OR DORM LIFE! TIRED OF SMALL APARTMENT? TIRED OF INCONSIDERATE ROOMMATES? CONSIDER THE FOLLOWING 4BR House 1 mile from campus with: 2'/2 Baths Washer/dryer Fenced yard dishwasher/disposal Large Closets Large Living/ Dining Rooms FULLY Furnished 2 BR Duplex with: $100 paid on every utility bill Washer/Dryer Color TV Microwave Dishwasher Full BR & LR furniture On shuttle bus route 2 BR apartment with: Completely remodeled kitchen & bathroom Low utilities Shaded yard Quiet neighborhood Excellent for the serious student CALL 779-1519 (evenings) WR PROPERTES ... STALLS FOR RENT. Lighted indoor riding arena, walker, tack and feed room. Complete care and training available. Call 823-0349, evenings. SERIOUS STUDENTS 2 bedroom 1 bath duplex in quiet neighborhood. Carport, lots of storage. 1 mile to cam pus. No pets. 846-2014 after 4. Dominik Duplexes. 2 bedroom-2 full bath 1050 sq. ft.; 3 bedroom-2 full bath 1250 sq. ft. Spacious w-d connections, lots of storage, fenced yard. Outside pets free. Available Dec. 16th, 846-2014 af ter 4. 52120 ROOMMATE WANTED Lovely 3 bdr. 2 bath house, $238/mo. 846-2275. Fe male only. 48tl0 HELP WANTED 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. 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. DELIVERY DRIVERS WANTED Flexible Scheduling. Apply in person. MICHAEL’S RESTAURANT 2406-C Texas Ave. South, C.S. 5115 PART-TIME HELP WANTED. GRAPEVINE PERSONALITY. 696-3411 EOE Two bedroom apartment for subleasing, $225 a month. Call 845-4818, or 822-4600 nights. 53t2 3-bdrm. 2-bath 4-plex w/washer & dryer close to TAMU, $375/mo. 409-272-8422. 48U0 ALL SIZES ARE AVAILABLE NOW! Bryan Mini Storages, 3213 Highway 21 West, Bryan, Texas 77803, 775-4127. 40t30 EFFICIENCY APARTMENT, utilities furnished. $50.00 deposit, $200.00 monthly. Quiet person. 2500 l abor Road, Bryan. Call 823-1179 after 5:00. 49t5 HOLIDAY CHRISTMAS TREE SALES HELP WANTED. Full or part-time. Starts after Thanksgiving. Hours needed 8 a.m.-IO p.m. Apply in person, Farm Patch, 3519 S. College, 779-7209. 52t5 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 SERVICES Pan-time office help for local oil company. Must have good typing, reliable,transportation, neat appearance, ability to work under pressure. Phone Susan at 846- 9730 49t5 We Want You to let us do your reports, themes, resumes, dissertations. Convenient to campus. BCS 846-5794 846-3741 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 STUDENTS Don’t wait! Start earning Christmas money now. We need 28 enthusiastic individuals. Earnings from $200.00 to $400.00 a week. No experi ence necessary. Apply in person only, 707 Texas, Building D Suite 203. 5115 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 DOMINO’S PIZZA needs DELIVERY PERSONNEL. Earn $5-$8 an hour. Apply after 5 p.m. at l ownshire Shopping Center or call 822-7373. 53t3 TYPING. Research papers. Education units. Reports, etc. Near campus, reasonable rates, 696-0914. 49tl 1 GOVERNMENT JOBS! S16.559-$50,553/year. Now hiring. Your area, ('.all 805-687-6000 ext. R-9531. 53t8 PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Term papers, thesis, let ters, labs. Experienced, dependable, reasonable, 693- 8537 33t31 JNE 775-1797, information, referrals, peer eling, 5:30-10:30 p.m. Sunday-Friday. 39t20 Part-time. Apply in person FARMER’S MARKET 2700 Texas Ave., Bryan. 50t5 Female afternoon bartender, waitresses and D.J. Silver Dollar, 775-7919 or 846-4691. 49tl5 HELP WANTED Counter help needed, M-F 3:30-6:30. Sat 9:00-1:01). Apply in person. Classic Cleaners. 703 W. Villa Maria. 5115 Babysitter needed in my home for afternoons from 2:15 till 5:15,693-1975. 49t5 Teacher’s aide needed lor afternoons. Apply in per son. Humpty Dumpty Children's Center. 3406 S. Col lege. Brvan. 52t4 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.3tt4i 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 PERSONALS PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Abortion procedures and referrals—Free pregnancy testing. Houston, Texas 713/524-0548. 10t64 FOR LEASE THEY’RE HERE Pick up your grad uation announc- ment orders! MSC Browsing Library Room 223. Extra announce ments go on sale November 20th, 8:00 a.m. MSC Student Finance Center, Room 217 FOR SALE Ladies 14k white gold wedding set. Center stone weight approximately .37 ct. Total weight of set .67 ct. Appraised at $1275, selling price $850. For more information call 268-0726. 53t3 Rolex watch ladies Jubilee. Must sell. Call ext 106 260- 9150, after 6 693-1859. 46t 13 Yamaha 650 Special, maroon, new front tire, sissv bar, recently tuned, $900. call Dave at 260-7340. 5214 Yamaha Towney Moped, good condition, $280, 775- 7658. 51t4 Remodeled mobile home in Bryan 1969 12’x60\ $8,000. Call 846-1437 after 5 p.m. 51t5 USED STEREOS - BEST PRICES. Fully serviced and warranty. BARGAIN SOUNDS 846-4607 New still in the hox, manual typewriter. $60. After 5. 268-0087. 52t4 Four 45 yard line tickets to the TCU-A&M game, Nov. 24 $15 each, 845-5916. 51t5 New small refrigerator, best offer, call ASAP, 846- 7124,Ungie. 50t5 For Sale: Ski Apparel, Women’s/Adolescent’s, Good condition, $30 each. 822-4261, 7-8:30 a.m.-7-10 p.m3t5 1977 Honda Civic, good mileage, great work car, $975. 1976 Yamaha RD400, many extras, low mileage. $795, 696-5339. 48tl0 Small Sanyo refrigerator three months old, $89.00 and portable Pioneer stereo cassette player AM/FM/SW equalizer 40 watt speakers, $250. Call 696-2597. 51 to ’81 Yamaha 400, blue 8000 miles, electric start, $850, 696-5937. 51t5 $360 weekly/up mailing circulars! No bosses/quotas! Sincerely interested rush self-addressed envelope: Di vision Headquarters. Box 464 CEG, Woodstock, IL. 60098. 45tl5 Battalion Advertising — let it work for your business. Call 845-2611 Today. Wednesday LEADERSHIP DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE: is sponsor ing seminars on developing speaking skills tonight and Thursday at 7 p.m. in 601 Rudaer. MSC VARIETY SHOW: is accepting applications for per formers. Applications available in 216 MSC. MARANATHA CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: is having a Bible study at the Viking Apartments clubhouse at 7:30 p.m. UNITED CAMPUS MINISTRY: is having an “Aggie Sup per” at 6 p.m. at A&M Presbyterian Church. There will be a Thanksgiving celebration with a presentation and dis cussion on humor in the Bible. TAMU ANTHROPOLOGY SOCIETY: is presenting a pro- f ram entitled “A Veiled Revolution.” Elizabeth Warnock ernea will speak on the changing role of women in Middle Eastern societies at 7:30 p.m. in Rudder Forum. ASSOCIATED BUILDERS 8c CONTRACTORS^ Ramon Cook will speak on “Concrete and Tunneling” at 7:30 p.m. in 127B Zachry. GAY STUDENT SERVICES: for more information call GAYLINE at 775-1797. MARINE TECHNOLOGY SOCIETY: Emelio Corona will speak on “The Design of Offshore Structure on the Futu re” at 6:30 p.m. in I()4C Zachry. MBA/MS ASSOCIATION: Greg Blume will speak on “Entrepreneurship and Motivation” at 7 p.m. in 114 Blocker. Election results will be announced. TAMU STUDENT METAPHYSICAL SOCIETY: Diethart Jaehnig will present a program entitled “The Vocation of Man: Facing the Apocalyptic Task of Our Age” at 7:30 p.m. in 305 Rudder. TAMU CHESS CLUB: is meeting at 8:30 p.m. in 410 Rud der. Players of all strengths are welcome. POLO CLUB: is meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the Animal Indus tries Building. PARENTS OF THE YEAR: applications are available in the Student Government Office, 213 Pavilion and the Student Programs Office, 216 MSC. STUDY ABROAD: study in the Orient through the College of Business Administration. There will be a meeting at 7:30 p.m. in 157 Blocker. STUDY ABROAD: study in Scandinavia through the College of Business Administration. There will be a meeting at 7 p.m. in 160 Blocker. STUDY ABROAD: is presenting a program on “The Art and : 8 p.m. m 206 MSC. Culture on Medieval Italy” at 8 p ; pr al J 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. United Press International NEW ORLEANS— The oila gas industry must demand gre I Sit Unitedl Midt eather maf esignated " Valuing.” The watc Join the N (own to Cha jst to Blooti he areai [Midwest has iois and hid ma lide a lour and N access to of f shore drilling areas a freer natural gas market despitf lull in America’s energy crisis, i chairman of the American leum Institute said Tuesday. The public’s current indiffereic to energy problems could set htil the gains in energy policy mai since the first oil shortage,saidjoi Imagine F. Bookout, president ofShellOil Houston. “Today, forecasters are sayinn oversupply of oil will continue the ’90s, and that we can safelyenu a period of benign neglect with n spect to the domestic petroleumis dustry,” lie said at API’s annualcoj vention. “Accepting this view as a certain could easily lead us into repeaiis mistakes of the past.” It The government should prcp»us spring t for the f uture by opening theOuAedeep, tal< Continental Shelf to expnration,dtp hut that’s regulating the natural gas industn and equalizing the tax burdenondi mestic oil and gas compinies, U said. “Our elected officials, federalat/Buni out to b state as well, should step Inch ar® The natic look al the size of this industVsuMn DePaul, load and do something to lighenitAer for Ray he said. Hill inherit ; T he government should insist Aather,whoi giving the industry area-wideInsiiiP “We havt on the Outer Continental Shelf n sisting efforts to impose moratm on exploration in promising amj he said. The same f reedom is needediil competition for natural gas marki| which are “subject to a mazeof plex price and end-use controlstlij| are causing loss of both marketsai ntire Miclw are those tin It hers like I Iowa or Lo itng I he ur scheduk nenls,” said |hen his te Being an it o that. W< imes but i journey.” DePaul w lard Tryon reserves, he said. ■reshman He praised the industry forketAoniegys. f ing up domestic production, there® 1 ' floor gei reducing foreign imports whencoMnd Kevin sumers learned to conserve enemBwl rebounc But he said reliance on foreigneil Ihe Bin ergy sources seems likely to grow. Wake Fores 1 l>f the Mich Shuttle crew planning rescue of relay station Jie tough t (lie boards; The Big ind, like I line! up wi pl the con ft Illinois, ' |rip to the 1 t fell to Ke pne back. United Press International CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Trying to avoid another surprise, Discovery’s salvage crew Tuesday decided to put Joseph Allen on the end of the shuttle’s arm like a cherry picker to lower a second satellite into the cargo bay Wednesday. Allen and his space-walking part ner, Dale Gardner, recharged their $2 million spacesuits and said they were ready for their second six-hour excursion outside the shuttle, this time to retrieve the 1,098-pound Westar 6 relay station. “We’re looking forward to Joe and Dale bringing that one aboard and then coming back home, two days from now, ah, three days from now,” said shuttle commander Fred erick Hauck. Allen had to awkwardly hold onto the Palapa satellite — now safely se cured in the shuttle cargo bay — for 90 minutes Monday because an un foreseen protrusion prevented in stallation of a fixture to be grabbed by the robot arm. Under the new plan, he will anchor his feet to a shackle on the end of the arm while fellow space- walker Dale Gardner jets out to seize and stabilize Westar 6. Hauck then will move Discovery over to the satel lite so Allen can hold it while Gard ner attaches a mounting fixture. Anna Fisher, at the controls of the 50-foot arm, then will lower Allen and the satellite into the bay while Gardner guides it into latches on the floor of the cargo bay. David Walker will serve as salvage foreman, direct ing the operation from his vantage point at a rear window of Discovery’s cabin. Hauck fired the shuttle’s engines twice — once for only 1.2 seconds — in pursuit of Westar. By Tuesday af ternoon, Discovery was less than 500 miles away, closing at a rate of 27 miles every hour. Allen and Gardner recharged their spacesuit batteries and replen ished the breathing oxygen and cooling water in preparation for the seconti spacewalk. They also inspected the spacesuits and found that outer insulation on Gardner’s gloves had worn through from tightening mounting bolts. He planned to use a spare pair today. The shuttle is scheduled to wind up its extraordinary eight-day mis sion with a landing at the Kennedy Space Center shortly after sunrise Friday. Forecasters said the weather was expected to be good for the sec ond shuttle landing in a row at the cape. The two salvaged satellites will be returned to the Hughes Aircraft Co. factory at El Segundo, Calif., to be overhauled for sale by the insurance underwriters who financed the sal vage part of the mission. Hughes built both Palapa and Westar 6 for about $35 million each. The rockets that misfired last Feb ruary and left the twin satellitesn rooned in the wrong orbit manufactured by McDonnell f las Astronautics Co. Mission control told the asttil nauts that Hughes engineers! viewed the blueprints for Wesiarl said there should be about one-iij of an inch clearance betweeni mounting bracket and part oftilt J tellite. That part stuck upa fraflf of an inch too high on Palapa 1# that was what slowed Monday’srt trieval. I But Hauck was afraid if asini problem did occur with Westar. t len and Gardner would haveamof difficult time manhandling the sal| lite because part of the payload li is now occupied by Palapa, andtM would not be as much rooiji! jockey Westar about. “We need to keep im mind'i| we’ve got a lot less space as.iilabk® the payload bay than we had yeswr day, and if we were to comeupd a similar problem at the samepos ! in the timeline tomorrow, it conlf really cause us some problems,"If said. “We’ve learned an awful lot in tit last 24 hours about what our capaM lilies are in the contingency wotilB Hauck said. “It seems to me no* there are more uncertainties ai| perhaps a bigger hit to the timeliif if we go with the (original plan)." { Air fleet deliveries continue i United Press International WHITE SETTLEMENT — De liveries of the F-16 Fighting Falcon, backbone of the nation’s military air fleet, have continued, despite a walk out by 6,000 mechanics and engi neers at the General Dynamics plant in a contract dispute. “Since the strike, we have deliv ered eight aircraft to our customer (the Air Force),” said Joe Stout, com pany spokesman. “We expect to de liver some more aircraft this week. “Actually we’re a bit ahead of schedule. But we were ahead before the strike began.” Production has slowed somewhat from its previous 15-planes-a-month level, said a company strike coordi nator. “The assembly lines are still roll ing,” he said. “We have a diminished work force, so we’re not able to maintain the old production rate. How far we’re falling short I can’t say.” Roughly 6,000 members of the International Association of Machin ists and Aerospace Workers union, part of a total workforce of 16,000, walked off the job two weeks ago when contract talks lagged. In the first four days of picketing, 17 people were arrested on charges related to fist fights, bottle throwing, tire slashing and yelling obscenities. Last week, state district Judge Wil liam Hughes ordered strikers to des ist from blocking traffic at the plant’s main gate during shift changes. This morning, Hughes is ex pected to hear arguments from union representatives on lifting the restrictions. “We have reviewed a substanlii number of video tapes,” said Roi Tanner, attorney for the union. The tapes showing union violent! were taken by the company to.sup port their contention that imrf strained picketing would result i< additional vandalism. “We have pickets at six gates, they’re all in compliance,” said company strike spokesman, win asked to remain unidentified. “Tral fic is quite slow during other timesd the day, stop and go.” The company has the largest dt fense contract in Texas, valued i< excess of $10 billion and product) the F-16, generally considered tl< world’s most effective multi-role tad tical fighter. Lottery winners to move to Texas United Press International LOGANSPORT, Ind. — Tom and Leanne Staubitz say they’re moving to Texas after winning $2.2 million in the Illinois state lottery. Staubitz said their daughter, Ste phanie, 8, needs to be near neuro surgeons in El Paso and San Antonio because she has a sleeping disease known as narcolepsy. The Staubitz family moved a year ago from New Mexico to Logansport where he manages the local cable television company. Staubitz said he E lans to continue working in the ca- le television industry despite the lottery winning. Staubitz said she wants to return to school for three more years to get a law degree. The family will collect $98,001' year for 20 years after Mrs. Staubf picked all six winning numbers the Illinois lottery. She usedaconili nation of family birthdates and ann versaries. Staubitz said Indiana “absolute! should have a lottery.” “The money should go for hijjl ways, education and state parks,’ said. t t