The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 31, 1985, Image 4

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    Battalion
Classified
FOR RENT
BAKER STREET
MINI WAREHOUSE
5x5 to 10x30
$18 to $77
846-5794 DAYS
779-3938 NIGHTS
l ouiplex Apts. Newly remodeled $250.00 pet month.
Two bedroom, one bath, W/D connections. Convenient
to campus. 775-1790 8 a.m.-5 p.m„ 779-0992 6 p.m.-9
p.m. 73t30
Apartments for rent located in Snook, Texas. Central
heat & air, carpet. 1 bedroom start at $200 per month,
2 bedrooms start $248 per month .& $ 200 deposit. Call
840-8878 during the day. Call 1-567-7124 nights. 85t20
HELP WANTED
The Greenery
Landscape Maintenance
Team Member
Full or Part-Time
Interview M-Th
8:30-9:30a.m.
823-7551
1512 Cavitt,Bryan
8315
SAFEWAY, INC.
Has part-time evening sacker po
sitions available at the College
Station Store. Pay rate begins at
$3.45/hour. Open interview ses
sions will be held at the College
Station Safeway Store (Culpepper
Plaza) on Thursday, January 31st
from 8pm-9pm.
Equal Opportunity Employer
M/F/H/V
8413
On Saturday January 26,1985, an
accident occurred between 10-
10:30pm on Texas Avenue in Col
lege Station near Kroger’s, Dairy
Queen, Fuddruckers and Motel 6.
If anyone has any information
about the accident, Please call
collect 825-7287.
8613
Crt Typist
for medical practice,
some computer ex
perience desirable,
779-7895.
86i7
DEPENDABLE MEN, WOMEN
OR COUPLES for present and
future Houston Post routes. Early
morning hours. Papers rolled by
machine. $200-$750/month.
846-2911 846-1253 5 4t30
CRUISESHIPS HIRING! $16-$30,000! Carribean,
Hawaii, World. Call for Guide, Directory, Newsletter.
1 (916) 944-4444 xTexasA&Mcruise. ” 78t24
Medical social worker and licensed physical therapist
needed for home health visits. Contract or staff. Flexi
ble schedule 779-5733. 82il5
Luthers BBQ now interviewing for Grand Opening
Feb. 13. All positions available. Full and Part-time. Ap
ply Now: 2321 S. Texass Avenue. 86t2
Rox/ is looking for local bands, ('all 764-0520. Leave
message. 85tl()
AIRLINES HIRING! $14-$39,000! Stewardesses, Res-
ervationist! Worldwide! Call for guide, Directory,
Newsletter. 1-(916) 944-4444 ext. TexasA&Mair. 78t24
LOSTAND FOUND
Black Labrador Puppy near Brownstone Apts, on
Welsh. Answers to jasper’. Hefty Reward Offered. Call
096-0853. “ 86t4
LOST: Gold shrimp bracelet between Agronomy
Building and Biological Building. Healthy reward of
fered if found call 693-3843. '82t6
PERSONALS
PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Abortion procedures and
referrals — Free pregnancy testing. Houston, T exas
(713)271-0121. 80t69
FOR SALE
Garage Sale - Saturday, Sunday Couch ($100), Clothes,
Albums, F.u ...208-0610 after 5:00. 86t4
Computer/Printer. Kaypro Il/F.pson MX-80 includes
all software and modem program for Wylbur.
$ 1,000.00. 260-4388 Neal. ' 86t7
For sale Skis, Boots & Poles Spalding Freestyle ISO’s.
$110,093-0466. 86t 1
Modern Chrome and Wood T able with 4 chairs $200
764-7921. 86t7
I'pgrade Now! Owner, flexible financing, Beautiful,
private, custom, 2200’ home, lovely residential area.
Bryan 3 bedrooms, 2 , /2 baths, enclosed patio slashed
price $ 135,000. 77!)-1408, 845-1380. 86t5
loll Ini
silk*
. 0\ l\5. Suudv,
w/ mam oss $('».'
>.00
. \v/<>
m;iurcs>
.. $50
.00. 208-0180.
8415
MIMIC
For!
Sale. Only $100. (
;all 846-9412.
84(4
1 londa
Manna 1100. (
antlv Maroon.
Uuil'lar
Alarm Systen
I. $3900.00. (U8 i
nilcs.260-4892.
8414
NIKON
K2A
, 3 NIKKOR 1.1
•:nsks, VIV1TAR
283,
Accessories; 840-4381 5-7pm. 86t5
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
$10-$360 weekly/up mailing circulars! No bosses/quo
tas! Sincerely interested rush self-addressed envelope:
Dept. AN-7, POD910CEW, Woodstock, IL6009882ll0
ROOMMATE WANTED
Male Roommate needed to share effi
ciency apartment in home Vfe block
south of campus in quiet residential
neighborhood. Furnished. All bills
paid. Non-smoker, non-drinker. $165
monthly includes laundry facilities, 303
Dexter, 696-5286. Tets
Wrd one roommate. Have partially furnished house
two bloc ks from campus. Own bedroom. $150.00. 093-
49 lf> 83t5
Roommate needed M/F own bedroom/bath $138 plus
utilities, W/D, 693-0789. 82t5
Female roommmate needed lor cottage" off Welsh.
Gayle, 690-1483 home, 840-4751 work. ' 83t5
Roommate Wanted to share 2,000 3 bdrm./2 bath
house. $l85/mo. , A utilities. 823-1255. 85t5
HU
LITT SMTNtM
ATRES
$2«si , rfirar
Students wtttt 1.0: Frtdey
Senior CI ttzee* Anytime
Except on CKyHeet
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C
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IN THE MALL 764-06l6i
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SCHULMAN 6
775-2463
E. 29th
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SERVICES
JOB WINNING RESUMES
We Do It All! Expert services include: EDIT
ING, LAYOUT, TYPING, AND QUALITY
TYPESETTING. CUSTOM DESIGNS &
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FOR YOU!
MIDLAND HEIGHTS INTERNATIONAL
403 University Drive W.
above Campus Photo, 846-6486. 6019
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
Professional word processing/ediling. Satisfaction
guaranteed. Manuscripts, theses, dissertations. Great
rates. 775-5202 after 0 pan. 85t5
Planning a Party? D.J. Patty Service has just the music,
and this semester try our F riday Special just $125. For
booking information feel free to call DAVID KIEL
846-1838. 76t39
WORD PROCESSING all kinds. By appointment only.
Call 775-6178 anytime. 82t20
Gayline-Information, referrals, peer-counseling. Mon-
day-Friday. 5:30-10:30. 775-1797. 8U32
Oil campus tvping sett ice. Fast accurate reasonable ex
perienced. convenient. Cull Robin 2(>0-(i878.. 83i20
Professional Tvping. Twenty years experience. Labs,
thesis, term papers. ci|Ualinns. etc. (>93-8537
Typing, word processing, resumes. Lowest prices,
highest quality in town. PERFECT PRINT, 822-1430.
78t35
INY ADS,
BUT REAL
HEAVYWEIGHTS
WHEN RESULTS
REALLY COUNT.
ALL:
The
Battalion
845-2611
Page 4/The Battalion/Thursday, January 31,1985
€&*f* A THE? A ftlYVI' A f
Catholic group
sponsors talk
by archbishop
By MICHAEL CRAWFORD
Staff Writer
Archbishop Rembert G. Weak-
land, chairman of the controversial
U.S. Bishop’s Ad Hoc Committee,
will be on campus Friday to discuss
Catholic social teaching and the U.S.
economy.
Weakland’s committee drafted a
letter critical of the arms race, the
U.S. economy and American invest
ment in foreign countries. That let
ter, referred to as a pastoral, re
ceived national attention because of
its involvement in what are generally
considered non-religious topics.
The report says, “The East-West
arms race, on both the conventional
and nuclear levels, is a threat to
world peace and a threat to eco
nomic justice as well.”
The report says the arms race
drains financial resources that
should be dedicated to meeting hu
man needs. According to the report,
it also diverts many excellent minds
from projects that serve life and cre
ate new jobs into projects to kill peo
ple and create weapons that are vir
tually unusable.
Rev. A1 Palermo of the Catholic
Student Association says, “It was
criticized because people did not
read all of it. People automatically
assumed the economy would be con
demned. Others said that American
bishops had no business interfe r ing
in the economy.”
Palermo said although the bishops
are not economists, their job is still to
Find the basic philosophies behind
today’s problems.
The report went on to say, “This
review strongly supports the conclu
sion that current levels of unemploy
ment and their attendant costs are
morally unjustified.”
The bishops also criticized busi
nesses which relocate in undevel
oped countries with hopes of using
inexpensive labor.
Archbishop Weakland
“Foreign private investment, at
tracted by low-wage rates, can cut
jobs in the home country and pro
long the exploitation of workers in
the host country, as happens today
in many middle-income countries,”
the report said. “Moreover, both the
product and the technologies of the
investing Firms may be inappro
priate to the developing country —
the former, for example, by catering
mainly to a small minority of high-
income consumers, the latter
through capital-intensive processes
that displace labor.”
Weakland is on campus at the in
vitation of the Catholic Student As
sociation. He will speak Friday at
7:30 p.m. in Rudder Auditorium.
Following the speech there will be a
question and answer session and a
reception.
Palermo said this is the archbish
op’s first trip to Texas A&M.
Baby with disorder
needs new liver
By DOUG HALL
Reporter
Travis Donald Shannon, 9
months old, needs a liver transplant.
Travis, the only son of Donald
and Andrea Shannon of Nor-
mangee, suffers from a fairly rare
but fatal disorder called biliary atre
sia.
Biliary atresia is the congenital ab
sence of a bile duct from the liver to
intestine.
Shannon, a former Texas A&M
student, said the only known cure
for biliary atresia is a liver trans
plant.
Travis’ age and size increases the
difficulty of finding a capable donor.
“Travis was a normal, healthy
child until we discovered signs of
jaundice a week after he was born,”
Shannon said.
“We began to notice a yellow tint
to his skin and his eyes.
“The ideal age for a transplant is
between one and two years old and
about 25 pounds, and Travis is still
growing at a normal rate. Every
thing is working well.”
Travis already has had two opera
tions at Texas Children’s Hospital in
Houston for bowel disorders and is
on the waiting lists at transplant cen
ters in Minnesota and Dallas.
Each center has its own waiting list
and recipients are chosen on an
availabilty and need basis, Shannon
said.
Dr. Jerome Smith of the Texas
A&M College of Medicine, Pathol
ogy and Laboratory Medicine, said
the only alternative to a transplant is
to purify the blood in the body, a
process called hemodialysis, on a
constant basis.
“He (Travis) will get serious,”
Smith said.
“There is a limited amount of
time even with the hemodialysis.”
In addition to finding a liver do
nor, Shannon, a post office worker,
must find the funds necessary to pay
for a transplant operation.
“The Figure we have been given is
$250,000, but we really don’t know
because the price can vary,” Shan
non said.
Shannon said he and his wife have
insurance policies that will help
cover the cost of an operation, but
the policies will not pay for the en
tire bill.
“I don’t like to feel like I’m going
around with my hand out, but our
policies just won’t cover it all,” Shan
non said.
Friends of the Shannon’s in Nor-
mangee recently established a tax
free organization to help pay for
Travis’ medical bills.
So far the organization has col
lected $2,600 of their $60,000 goal.
Donations to the Travis Shannon
Trust , Fund are being collected at
the Normangee State Bank.
Lecture opens exhibit
by 18th century painter
By WENDY JOHNSON
Reporter
A lecture about “The Rowdy Lon
don of William Hogarth” exhibit will
be given by two assistant English
professors at 8 p.m. Thursday in 102
Horticulture Forestry Sciences
Building.
Dr. David R. Anderson and Dr.
Margaret J.M. Ezell will discuss Ho
garth’s engravings in a lecture titled
“Pictur’d Morals — The Soul in Ev
ery Face.” A reception will follow the
lecture in the M. Benz Gallery of
Floral Art.
Hogarth was an 18th century En
glish painter and engraver, and one
of the first artists in history to be re
garded as a social critic as well. He
would often attack English aristoc
racy for its dualism and cruelty.
The title of the lecture is drawn
from two quotes about Hogarth: the
first describing the moralistic and di
dactic nature of his works and the
second pointing out that every face
in Hogarth’s usually crowded scenes
displays a unique character.
The exhibit is a collection of en
gravings from the Sarah Campbell
Blaffer Foundation and is sponsored
by a cooperative effort of the Uni
versity Art Exhibits, the College of
Architecture and Environmental
Design and the Benz School of Flo
ral Design.
The Hogarth engravings will be
on display in the Benz Gallery in the
Horticulture Forestry Sciences
Building and the CAED Gallery in
Langford Architecture Center 8
a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday
and 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Sunday until
Feb. 22.
Tours will be available at the
CAED Gallery from noon to 1 p.m.
daily (except Saturdays). Group
tours are available at either gallery
by appointment at 845-8501.
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SALE
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l
HAROLD'S WESTERN WEAR
for your
VALENTINE GIFTS
A.
K
<r n\e> 6 Farri\TPatcl\,
GARDEN FRESH VEGETABLES &• FRUITS
Limit 24
per customer
Avocados
8for $1 00
Reg. 3 for $1 00
Good Jan. 31 - Feb. 2
Madisonville Snow White
Mushrooms
8 oz. pkg. RQiA
Reg. $1’ 9
Good Jan. 31 - Feb. 2 Limit6pkgs.
Potatoes
s ib. 690
Good Jan. 31 - Feb. 2 Limit 4 bags 1
We at Farm Patch want you to
shop our quality and price.
9 a.m. - 7 p.m. Monday - Saturday
3519 S. College Ave. 822-7209