The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 20, 1985, Image 13

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Wednesday, February 20, 1985/The Battalion/Page 13
Battalion Classified
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FOR RENT
■ioing
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a car artdj
11 window o(|
.500 to M
le latest wrtii
cu rred asa^
rough thtt;
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>eaker
and It
pedal arnii
to police
at injured,]
customers. Sj
BAKER STREET
MINI WAREHOUSE
5x5 to 10x30
$18 to $77
846-5794 DAYS
779-3938 NIGHTS
eotfn
WANTED
I $60 $60 $60 $60
SORE THROAT STUDY
150 participants needed with
sore throats, to participate in a
questionaire study $60 incen
tive. Call 776-0411.
$60 $60 $60 $60
.7"
Wanted: 10 overweight people to lose weight and/or
make money. Call 693-2635. 96t5
» FOR SALE
’80 Celica 5spd A/C AM/FM Cass. 4 spiers. Excl. Cond.
693-1740 100t5
Break-apart bike for sale. Bike folds up in seconds. Fits
easilv into car trunk. Great for riding around campus. .
764-7921 lOOt 10
Two Years Membership Gyms of Texas for $75.00.
Call'693-7671. 96t5
76 Buitk LeSabre, 2-door automatic V-6 engine, casset-
te/radu>, 693-2918. 98t5
Condo lor sale. 2 bedrooms I '/2 hath. W/l) included.
On Shuttle route. 696-1525. 94t9
1980 Yamaha 250-XR. 9.000 miles, $500.00. Super
'lrans|>ortati()n. Call mornings/evenings, 693-07879/15
1MPALA 68,327 PARTS: motor, trans, etc. $150.00 in
terior $ 100.00, $300.00 takes all 846-7146. 96t 10
Ski Apparel for sale. Women,s size 10 powder-suit, ado
lescent size 14. Great condition. $50 each. 822-426199t4
PERSONALS
Dr. jG’s wants Comedians, Musicians, Singers, etc. for
upcoming talent contest. Come by 4410 College Main.
98tl0
SERVICES
TYPING-WORD PROCESSING
Fast and Dependable
Personalized Service
We understand form and style.
Beginning our sixth year.
AUTOMATED CLERICAL SERVICES
110 Lincoln, C.S. 693-1070 96t31
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 Typist/word processor. Faculty: 1 do
theses, journals. Call Suzanne, 775-8476. 99t20
PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Abortion procedures and
referrals -- Free pregnancy testing. Houston, Texas
(713)271-0121. 80t69
Student’s Custom Framing-at student’s prices. Diplo
mas, posters and any art work you’ve always wanted to
frame but couldn’t because of high price of profes
sional framing. Call 696-3952 today for appointment.
You’ll be pleasantly surprised. 99t5
Gayline-Information, referrals, peer-counseling. Mon-
day|riday. 5:30-10:30. 775-1797. 81t32
LESBIAN RAP GROUP meets Tuesdays 7:30 more
info. 775-1797. 99tl0
)R
IIT
R!
tails.
CHECK THE
r
ClilSSIFIEDS
For All
Your Needs
845-2611
SERVICES
Apartments for rent located in Snook. Texas. Central
heat & air. carpel. 1 bedroom start at $200 per month.
2 lied rooms start $248 per month .&$ 200 deposit. Call
846-8878 during the da\. ( all I -567-7124 nights. 85t20
Spend Spring break at South Padre condo on beach.
Accomodates 6. $200 deposit. Call Gail 845-5340. 696-
7307 95t6
Fourplex Apts. Newlv remodeled $250.00*pci month.
Two bedroom, one bath. W/l) connections. Convenient
to campus. 775-1790 8 a.m.-5 p.m.. 779-0992 6 p.m.-9
p.m 73t30
SPECIAL NOTICE
SKI COLORADO-SPRING BREAK! Some spaces
NOW AVAILABLE. Contact Student Representative
for A&M Group—260-7058. 100t3
Spring Break Hurry! South Padre and Steamboat are sold
out - but there’s still a little space left at Daytona Beach
starting at $78, Mustanglsland/Port Aransas for $119 and
Corpus Christi at $79. Don’t wait any longer - call sun-
chase tours today toll free 1-800-321-5911 or contact your
local campus representative or travel agency, hurry! 95t6
H ROOMMATE WANTED
Female roommate needed for immediate occupancy!
Very nice apartment. Own room. Close to campus. On
shuttle bus route. $171.67 plus utilities. Call Michelle at
764-0921 or 845-2630. 100t5
Female roommate. Own bedroom, $160 W utilities.
Shuttle route, 693-4058. 98t5
Need roommate to share two bedroom apartment.
$87.50 a month plus elecricity 268-3058. 99t5
SERVICES; Alterations and custom sewing. Dennis
Ambrose 846-9625. References upon request. 309A
Foch. 91t20
Professional quality typing. Term papers. Theses, Busi
ness needs. Call Marilyn, 693-7515. 98tl4
Tvping, word processing, resumes. Lowest prices,
highest qualitv in town. PERFECT PRINT, 822-1430.
781.3.5
Pmkssional Txping. Twciuv veais experieiue. Labs,
thesiv term pa| >ei s. equations. el<. (>93-8537
WORD PROCESSING all kinds. By appointment only.
Call 775-6178 anytime. 82t20
()n campus (\ ping m i n ii e. I asi accurate reasonable cx-
pcricnced. eomciticnl. ( ill Robin 260-6878. 8.3i20
GARAGE SALE
MOVING SALE Kitchenware, baby items, freezer,
(ishtank, stereo, filecabinet, lawnmower, furniture.
696-4473. 100t8
HELP WANTED
DOMESTIC
SERVICES
693-1954
Part-Time Team
Cleaning.
Flexible Hours.
$3.85/Hour plus
Mileage. Must have
phone and
transportation.
SWENSEN’S
Now accepting applications for
wait persons and soda foun
tain workers. Part-time and
full-time. Apply in person be
tween 11:00am-2:00pm at Cul
pepper Plaza, C.S.
Sharp Sales Person Wanted for
retail Jewelry Sales. Must be avail
able Spring break and Christmas.
Texas Coin Exchange
404 University Drive. East
College Station 100t10
TELEPHONE SALES: MUST
HAVE PLEASANT VOICE. FULL
OR PART-TIME. SALARY OR
COMMISSION. MAKE 6.00 to
10.00 dollars per hour. Call 696-
3215 -
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT-Colorado Mountain Re
sort Employer is seeking male and female appli
cants for: Retail Sales, Food Service And other re
tail oriented jobs. Mid May thru Mid September
located in Estes Park, Colo. For further information
write:
National Park Village North
Mark Schifferns
740 Oxford Lane
Fort Collins, CO 80525 97t5
Delivery Personnel
needed. Apply in person
at Pizza Inn, 413 Texas
Avenue. Ask for Marshall.
Spanish
jet crash
kills 148
Associated Press
BILBAO, Spain — A Spanish
jetliner flying too low clipped a
pair of TV towers on its approach
to the fog-shrouded Bilbao air
port Tuesday and crashed into a
pine-covered hill, killing all 148
people aboard, officials reported.
An anonymous telephone
caller said the crash was caused by
a bomb placed aboard the Boeing
727 by Basque separatists, but
Iberia Air Lines president Carlos
Espinosa de los Monteros said
there was no evidence of an ex
plosion. An editor with close ties
to the separatists called the claim
“out of the question.”
U.S. Embassy sources in Ma
drid said two Americans were
among the victims. The source
gave their names as Tim Markey
and John Steigerwald, but said
their hometowns were not avail
able.
Civil guardsmen and rescue
parties reached the crash site, on
rugged 3,366-foot Oiz hill, seve
ral hours after the accident. They
said charred wreckage and bodies
were scattered over an area of
2,000 yards, and they found no
survivors.
The plane clipped off two of
the four towers on the hill that re
lay Basque radio and television
broadcasts, then plowed through
a pine forest down the hillside,
before coming to rest at a creek in
the ravine.
The site is in rugged terrain
near the city of Durango, about
18 miles from Bilbao in the Bas
que country of northern Spain.
Airline officials said 141 passen
gers and a crew of seven were on
board flight 610 from Madrid.
Talking to reporters in Bilbao,
Espinosa dismissed the possibility
of a bombing.
“There is no evidence there
was an explosion before the plane
crashed into the mountain,” he
said.
Inmate gang member
stabbed by his ‘brother’
Associated Press
HUNTSVILLE — An inmate
who was stabbed by a fellow member
of a prison gang called the Aryan
Brotherhood said he would be “dead
meat” if two brave guards had not
stepped in and rescued him from
the attack.
Otis “Sonny” Vann, 34, was
stabbed repeatedly on Feb. 11 by his
cellmate at the Retrieve Unit of the
Texas Department of Corrections.
Vann said he was being returned
to his cell by two guards. They had
backed him up to the bars to remove
his handcuffs when he was attacked.
The two unarmed guards, Roy L.
Whatley and Robert M. Tomlin,
forced the cell door open, grabbed
the. assailant and pulled Vann to
safety.
Vann said his cellmate and fellow
member had been a big
brother to him. They spent a lot of
time together and were considered
to be friends.
Vann was stabbed repeatedly and
suffered a collapsed lung as a result
of the attack.
The inmate said he felt hood
winked by the Aryan Brotherhood, a
gang of white inmates that he joined
last July.
“It started out as just whites help
ing whites in the prison system,” said
Vann. “Now they kill people just for
recreation. I stin got a conscience. I
was raised to believe in fair play. I
never hit somebody who couldn’t de
fend themselves.”
Vann, who has been in prison five
times for auto theft and assault, said
the Aryan Brothers are now har
pooning people with cuffs on.
“They’re cowards, not warriors or
soldiers,” he said. “I ain’t seen none
of them yet who would stand up to a
fight. That damn sure ain’t white su
premacy.”
He said a Hispanic gang, called
the Texas Syndicate, laughs at the
Aryan Brotherhood and are unim
pressed by the Aryan group’s motto,
“Kill to get in, die to get out.”
“There’s a bunch of guys who’ve
not killed to get in,” said Vann.
He noted a membership tatoo will
remain on his skin “until the worms
eat it off.”
Vann said he was not worried that
his talking to the press would make it
even tougher for him.
“It’s already tough,” he said. “I’m
doing a life sentence with a hit on
me. This of boy is a bit harder to kill
than they think.”
Grand Teton cabin shelters
presidents, dignitaries only
Associated Press
CHEYENNE, Wyo. — The Brinkerhoff Cabin
would make an ideal tourist attraction. It is located in
the middle of Grand Teton National Park and has a
panoramic view of the Teton Range and Jackson Lake.
But you won’t find it listed in a travel brochure. It’s
off-limits to all but presidents and dignitaries, who re
treat there to unwind.
The rustic, four-bedroom cabin, nestled among pine
trees, is one of five such retreats managed by the Na
tional Park Service. Located 30 miles north of Jackson
in northwestern Wyoming, it sheltered former presi
dent Jimmy Carter for a week in 1978 and Richard
Nixon overnight when he was president in 1971.
George Berklacy, a Park Service spokesman in Wash
ington, D.C., recalled that one time CBS reporters chal
lenged the strict criteria for guests, only to discover
Walter Cronkite had been a Nixon’s guest at Brinker
hoff Cabin.
The Park Service also has guest retreats in Shenan
doah National Park in Virginia, the Virgin Islands, Ca-
toctin Mountain National Park in Maryland and Cape
Hatteras in North Carolina.
Berklacy says the Brinkerhoff is by far the nicest of
the five retreats, mainly because of the setting.
The house, which sleeps up to 14 people, has
wooden floors, Indian-style throw rugs, wood furniture
and a large fireplace made from ancient stones from
the Wind River Mountain Range in central Wyoming.
Camp Hoover in Shenandoah National Park was the
first retreat set aside for dignitaries. It was given to the
state of Virginia by then-President Herbert Hoover
with the stipulation that it be used by presidents and
other dignitaries. Virginia turned it over to the Na
tional Park Service to manage.
The home at Catoctin Mountain is adjacent to the
presidential retreat at Camp David and houses presi
dential guests.
Stark said the National Park Service does not provide
security, although some guests, especially presidents,
bring their own. When Carter stayed at the Brinker
hoff house, security officials took up watch from Jack-
son Lake.
“Believe me, we know when the presidents come,”
Stark said.
Part-time handyman needed. Experience necessary.
Must have own transportation and tools. Call Beal
Realty 823-5469. 94t9
OVERSEAS JOBS..Summer, yr. round. Europe, S.
Amer., Australia, Asia. All fields. $900-2000 mo. Sight
seeing. Free info. Write IJC, PO Bx 52-TX-4 Corona
Del Mar, CA 92625. 90t 11
Earn $8-$24 or more per hour. Highest Commissions
paid for selling the new Jaycee Restaurant Sampler
Book. No Skills needed—Book Sell Itself. Work own
hours! Call Paul 823-1518. 96t5
(continued from page 1)
male and female faculty, unavailabil
ity of health services for women, be
haviors that overlook women and
fraternities that prohibit female
membership are only a few of the
discrimination issues examined in
the study.
Encouraging women to partici
pate in campus leadership roles is
another area included in the study,
which found women may be less
likely to be encouraged to run for
leadership positions. Men still hold a
disproportionate number of these
positions, the study said.
This is not the case at A&M, said
Wendy Hodges, Student Senate rep
resentative to the Committee on the
Status of Women.
“I see no problem with that,” she
said. “I don’t think you see much
sexual discrimination here. I think
you’ll see that a high number of
women are involved, right at about
50-50 with the men.”
There are 31 women in the 77-
member Senate. However, most
leadership positions are filled by
men.
The MSC Council Monday an
nounced its choice of the second
woman president in the MSC’s 30-
year history. Exactly half of A&M’s
Memorial Student Center Council
committees are headed by women.
Sexual discrimination is still an is
sue in the Corps of Cadets. In Jan
uary, a federal judge ruled A&M
must encourage female participation
in such all-male units as the Ross
Volunteers and the Aggie Band.
The decision settled a lawsuit filed in
1979 by then-cadet Melanie Zent-
graf, who unsuccessfully had tried to
join several major Corps units. The
A&M Board of Regents plans to ap
peal the decision.
Bonnie Krumpotic, 24, is a cadet
lieutenant colonel and battalion
commander, the highest rank ever
achieved by a female cadet in the his
tory of the Corps. Krumpotic, who
also unsuccessfully tried to join the
Ross Volunteers, declined to com
ment on the situation of women in
the Corps.
“When the Zentgraf case came up
again last fall, many women in the
Corps told the Issues and Grievances
Committee they’d seen a lot of pro
gress for women in the Corps,”
Hodges said. “When we polled
women about whether they wanted
women in the band, 300 said no and
15 said yes.
“But I don’t think people are
against women in the Corps. They’re
against changing tradition.”
The Committee on the Status of
Women, a Faculty Senate subcom
mittee, recently presented a resolu
tion urging the ruling in the Zent
graf case be accepted as University
policy.
The committee also is researching
faculty sex equity issues, and wants
to eliminate sexist language in cam
pus publications.
“The goal of the group is to study
the situation of women on campus
and find out if there are areas in
which they are falling behind or be
ing discriminated against,” said Dr.
Ethel Tsutsui, chairman of the Com
mittee on the Status of Women.
Tsutsui said the group currently is
focusing on faculty women, but that
she thinks female staff and students
also should be studied.
Virginia McDermott, an A&M
communications specialist and mem
ber of the Committee on the Status
of Women, said she thinks the role
of women at A&M should be stud
ied.
“There has been no research on
that,” she said. “It’s changing so rap
idly that people are confused. I’ve
heard some grad students complain
about sexual harassment. I think
that needs to be studied.”
BROWNSVILLE, TEXAS
TEACH IN BEAUTIFUL BROWNSVILLE!!!
-On The Border-By The Sea-
The BROWNSVILLE INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT
anticipates teacher openings in the following areas:
ELEMENTARY
★ Early Childhood (Pre-K)
★ K-Grade 6
★ Bilingual (Spanish)
★ Special Education
SECONDARY
★ English
★ Math
★ Science
★ Special Education
★ English As A Second Language
Here are just some of the benefits you can look forward to:
|3 Salary Range: B.S.-$17,800-$26,640 M.A.-$17,800-$28,920
[3 $1,000 Bonus for Special Education Teachers
[3 $500-$l,000 Bonus for Bilingually Certified Teachers
[3 Perfect Attendance Bonus
[3 Free Group-Health Insurance
[3 Free Professional Liability Insurance
13 Up to 60 days accumulated sick leave-20 days reimbursed upon official retirement
[3 $15,000 Life Insurance $30,000 Accidental Death
[3 Sick Leave: 5 days state 5 days local
[3 $48 million worth of building improvements and expansion underway
[3 Tropical climate-beach and resort areas only minutes away
13 “Old Mexico” across the border within walking distance
For more information call Mr. Oscar Barbour, Asst. Supt. for Personnel, 1050 East Madison, Brownsville, TX 78520
(512) 546-3101, Ext. 255
The Brownsville Independent School District is an Affirmative Action, Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F/H. Dr. Ronald Schraer, 504 Coordinator.