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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1985)
Battalion Classified Thursday, February 21, 1985/The Battalion/Page 11 WORLD AND NATION HELP WANTED FOR RENT ihk SPRINGS SPEdi 451515oiSd R€€D TOOL COMPflNV: On The Leading €dge of Opportunity Developing hydrocarbon and mineral resources to meet worldwide energy needs requires technical expertise, streamlined organization and superior equipment. In all of these areas, Reed is a leader, dedicated to providing the oil industry with the best available resources. Since our most important resource is human ingenuity, we're interested in recruiting imaginative, innovative, and hard working individuals. If you are a professional who enjoys the challenge of a demanding technology, consider a position with us in one of the following areas: Design engineering Field engineering fl division of the Fortune 500 company, Baker International, Reed offers salaries and benefits designed to maintain a top quality staff. For a career on the leading edge of professional opportunity. W€ Will B€ INT€RVI€WING ON CRMPUS, F€BRUfiflV 26 Or, if you are unable to attend, please contact: Robert UJ. Harper, R6FD TOOL COMPflNV, P.O. Box 2119, Houston, Texas, 77252 Hn Cqual Opportunity (mployar M/f. REED {A TOOL COMPANY \_/' 1 A International Company l. 9! 3ice DIOIIK •loin lushrooi ice ofPoi! ist- Reg. 1 /! iay-Thuwli: .-lOp.nt. id Saturdif .-11p.m. 1-2822 fl 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. I 100t8 SUMMER EMPLOYMENT-Colorado Mountain Re sort Employer is seeking male and female appli- jbants 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. 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. 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 SERVICES ON THE DOUBLE All kinds of typing at reasonable rates. Dissertations, theses, term papets, resumes. Typing and copiying at one stop. ON THE DOUBLE 331 University Drive. 846-3755. J*1 tin Planning a Party?-* DJ. Party Service has just the music, and this semester try our Friday Special just $125. For booking information feel free to call DAVID KIEL 846-1838. 76t39 On campus typing service. Fast accurate reasonable ex perienced, convenient. Call Robin 260-6878. 83t20 WORD PROCESSING all kinds. By appointment only. Call 775-6178 anytime. 82t20 Professional Typing. Twenty years experience. Labs, thesis, term papers, equations; etc. 693-8537 Typing, word processing, resumes. Lowest prices, highest quality in town. PERFECT PRINT, 822-1430. 78t35 Professional quality typing. Term papers. Theses, Busi ness needs. Call Marilyn, 693-7515. 98tl4 SERVICES; Alterations and custom sewing. Dennis Ambrose 846-9625. References upon request. 309A Foch. 91t20 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 PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Abortion procedures and referrals - Free pregnancy testing. Houston, Texas (713)271-0121. 80t69 Gayline-Information, referrals, peer-counseling. Mon- day-Friday. 5:30-10:30. 775-1797. 8U32 LESBIAN RAP GROUP meets Tuesdays 7:30 more info. 775-1797. 99tl0 LOST AND FOUND In the MSC, Men’s Miami Killian Senior High School ring with yellow stone. Sentimental value. Reward of- ferred for return. Call Leslie 260-7246. 10113 AIRLINES HIRING! $14-$39,000! Stewardesses, Res- ervationist! Worldwide! Call for guide, Directory, NHsletter. 1-(916) 944-4444 ext. TexasA&Mair. 78t24 PERSONALS CRlflSESHIPS HIRING! $1S-$30,000! Carribean, Hawaii World. Call for Guide, Directory, Newsletter. l-(916) 944-4444 xTexasA&Mcruise. 78t24 Pctrl-tiiiie handyman needed. Experience necessary. Musi have own transportation and tools. Call Beal Rein 823-5469. 94t9 WANTED Dr. G’s wants Comedians, Musicians, Singers, etc. for upcoming talent contest. Come by 4410 College Main. 98tl0 GARAGE SALE MOVING SALE Kitchenware, baby items, freezer, fishtank, stereo, filecabinet, lawnmower, furniture. 696-4473. 100t8 Large Stock of Loose Diamonds Aggie Ring Diamond Setting Charge $15.00 Large Stock Gold Chains Over 500 to Choose From I Gold Chains Sold by Weight TEXAS COIN EXCHANGE 404 University Dr. 846-8916 3202-A Texas Ave. (across from El Chico, Bryan) 779-7662 rts Serf p.tf' 12# $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 FOR SALE LInique property in Historical District. Possible no money down. House pius carriage house, $115,000 or 2 bdrm, $42,500, or all 3 for 145,000. Dr. Desmond 846-7(527, 822-9254, 775-4684 96t6 Senior boots: Worn one semester. Excellent condition. Color-British Tan. $200.00, 846-7211. 10115 ’80 Celica 5spd A/C AM/FM Cass. 4 spkrs. Excl. Cond. 693-1740 100t5 Break-apart bike for sale. Bike folds up in seconds. Fits easily into car trunk. Great for riding around campus. 764-7921. lOOt 10 1980 Yamaha 250-XR, 9,000 miles, $500.00. Super Transportation. Call mornings/evenings, 693-078797t5 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. 822-426199l4 76 Buick LeSabre, 2-door automatic V-6 engine, casset te/radio, 693-2918. 98t5 Condo lor sale. 2 bedrooms l 1 /’ bath, W/D included. On shuttle route. 696-1525. 94t9 ROOMMATE WANTED Female roommate. Own bedroom, $160 Vi utilities. Shuttle route, 693-4058. 98t5 Need roommate to share two bedroom apartment. $87.50 a month plus elecricity 268-3058. 99t5 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 SPECIAL NOTICE lies and Wanted: 10 overweight people to lose weight and/or make money. Call 693-2635. 96t5 1 SERVICES GAYLINE information, roommate referrals, peer counseling. Sunday-Friday 5:30pm-10:30pm, 775- 1797 lOltll Professional Typist/word processor. Faculty: I do theses, journals. Call Suzanne, 775-8476. 99t20 SKI COLORADO-SPRING BREAK! Some spaces NOW AVAILABLE. Contact Student Representative for A&M Group-260-7058. 100t3 FOR RENT Fourplex Apts. Newly remodeled $250.00 per month. Two bedroom, one bath. VV/1) connections. Convenient to campus. 775-1790 8 a.in.-5 p.m.. 779-0992 6 p.m.-9 p.m. 73t30 BAKER STREET MINI WAREHOUSE 5x5 to 10x30 $18 to $77 846-5794 DAYS 779-3938 NIGHTS 60tfn Funky Winkerbean by Tom Batiuk Apartments lor rent located in Snook, Texas. Central heat & air. carpet. I bedroom start at $200 per month. 2 bedrooms start $248 per month .K- $ 200 deposit. Call 846-8878 during the dav. Call I-567-7124 nights. 85t20 BALDNESS Rx with MINOXIDIL Physician Supervised CALL APOLLO HAIR RESTORATION CUMC 846-4080 1842 Greenfield Plaxa Bryan, Texas Stanley H. Kaplan The Smart MOVE! •3 MCAT'DAT Call 696-3196 for information 707 Texas Ave. 301 -C In Dallas 11617 N. Central Expwy Hr KAPLAN cm ir-ATIONAI INY AOS, BUT REAL HEAVYWEIGHTS WHEN RESULTS REALLY COUNT. ALL: The Battalion 845-2611 TLL BET THE POPULAR KIDS AREN'T AS HAPPV AS TH&U SE&AA TO BE / TM FACT , 1'PL BET THAT, INSIDE, THEV FEEL. A LOT OF HURT, PAIN , AND CONFUSION TOO ! Farm senators obstruct Meese’s confirmation Associated Press WASHINGTON — Farm-state senators used a filibuster Wednes day to thwart the confirmation of Attorney General-designate Edwin Meese III as they fought to force ac tion on emergency agricultural credit legislation. Ignoring a demand by the White House that they “get down to the business of voting” on the Meese nomination, the senators from agri cultural states, including both Dem ocrats and Republicans, tied the chamber in knots for several hours. Just hours after the White House admonished the Senate to act, Sen. David Boren, D-Okla., began read ing from a 385-page independent counsel’s report on Meese. That re port had cleared the presidential counselor of any criminal wrong doing. The delaying tactic, rarely seen in the Senate chamber in recent years, was reminiscent of the days when lawmakers would recite from tele phone books and cookbooks to stop legislation. For the next several hours, sup porters of the filibuster helped delay the vote with long speeches on the farm issue. Just after 7 p.m., however, Sen. J. James Exon, D-Neb., .emerged from a negotiating session with Senate Majority Leader Robert Dole, Agri culture Secretary John Block and Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., chairman of the Agriculture Committee, tell ing reporters: “We’re making some very interesting progress.” Then Dole, R-Kan., went to the Senate floor to announce that nego tiations would resume Thursday morning and that the senators could go home for the night. But Exon indicated that the fil ibuster would continue on the Sen ate floor Thursday until some reso lution is reached on the farm problem. Despite the parliamentary de laying tactic, both supporters and opponents of Meese agreed that his confirmation as the nation’s 75th at torney general was inevitable. President Reagan, asked what he thought about the filibuster, said, “You know what I think of it; I think it is ridiculous.” Earlier, the White House, assert ing it had the votes necessary for Meese’s confirmation, implored farm-state senators to allow the nomination “to come forward and be voted on, so the new attorney general can take office.” Meese’s critics have charged that the White House counselor violated federal ethics regulations because his financial benefactors received government jobs. Meese told members of the Senate Judiciary Committee earlier this month that he did no wrong. He re peatedly cited the independent counsel’s conclusion that he had vio lated no laws. Supreme Court hearing Nativity brews dispute Associated Press WASHINGTON — Forcing a community to provide public land for Nativity scenes could open the door to requiring approval of such blatantly offensive displays as Nazi swastikas and racist slogans, an attor ney told the Supreme Court on Wednesday. Marvin Frankel, arguing on be half of Scarsdale, N.Y., officials who have banned a display depicting the birthplace of Jesus from a village park, asked the justices to overturn a federal appeals court ruling that he said would compel the display’s re turn. However, attorney Marvin Schwartz, representing sponsors of the creche display, argued that com munities cannot ban such displays from public areas where messages are allowed for the Red Cross, the United Fund or other organizations — as in the Scarsdale park. Several Supreme Court justices disputed both lawyers’ interpreta tion that a decision last June by the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals would compel the creche’s return in Scarsdale, a wealthy suburb north of New York City. Frankel argued that forbidding the village to ban the creche would also tie officials’ hands if anyone tried to erect “a swastika, a Klan symbol, a hammer and sickle, a sign that God doesn’t hear the prayers of Jews.” Many of Scarsdale’s residents are Jewish. The Reagan administration, in a Justice Department brief that was generally in line with the justices’ comments, has argued that the ap peals court ruling would not compel the creche’s return. In other matters Wednesday, the Supreme Court: • Heard arguments on the consti tutionality of a Washington state anti-pornography law that bans material that incites “lust." • Ruled unanimously that the Western Shoshone Indians no longer may claim ownership of 24 million acres of Nevada and Califor nia land because the government has paid $26 million into a fund to settle all claims to the land. U.S., Laos work together in search for MIAs Associated Press NONG SONG HONG, Laos — American and Lao tian soldiers toiling together under the intense sun dug handfuls of earth from the forest floor, trying to find the remains of 13 U.S. airmen shot down a dozen years ago — when they were enemies. Probing carefully with tools, they exposed bone frag ments, shards of metal — signs of success in a grim task — and it appeared Wednesday that their efforts could have some political results. The Laotian deputy foreign minister said the two sides would meet Friday to discuss other searches for the remains of 576 Americans the U.S. government says are missing in Laos from the Indochina war, which ended in 1975. Soulivong Phrasidideth said Washington should “re ply to this good will” by removing the ban on direct eco nomic aid to Laos. Terry Tull, the U.S. charge d’affaires in Vientiane, said it was too early to judge that, but expressed plea- Thatcher sure with preparations the Laotians made at the site near this village in the Laotian panhandle before the joint dig began Feb. 11. Two brawny Americans in soiled T-shirts, blue jeans and headbands squatted in a 12-foot-deep crater, prob ing with knives, shovels and pickaxes for the shattered remnants of the C-130 gunship. They handed over clumps of dirt to Laotian soldiers in green fatigues, who clambered up the crater and sifted the earth through wire mesh to find grayish-white bone frag ments. Another American, using a pulley fastened to a tree, strained to pull out large metallic shards imbedded in the heart of the crater, over which loomed part of the gunship’s rusted fuselage, and a blade from one of its four propellers. Each day the escavators have found teeth, pieces of bone, bits of military uniforms, jungle boots, parachute harnesses, and live ammunition rounds the C-130 was carrying. (continued from page 1) On the streets outside, an esti mated 500 demonstrators shouted, “IRA — All the Way,” and “Maggie, Maggie, Maggie — Out, out, out.” Some carried signs reading, “Victory to the IRA” and “IRA Freedom Fighters.” Inside the building, Thatcher de nounced v the Irish Republican Army as “the enemies of democracy and of freedom, too.” She said she and Ir ish Prime Minister Garret Fitzgerald are united in seeking a political solu tion to the problems of Northern Ireland. Reiterating her support of U.S. research on a “Star Wars” shield in space against nuclear weapons, the prime minister said, “The United States must not fall behind the work being done by the Soviet Union.” Even so, a British official who ac companied Thatcher, speaking only on condition he not be identified, said Thatcher “draws a clear distinc tion” between research and actual deployment, and feels that deploy ment must be subject to negotiations with Moscow. While Reagan has held out the hope that Star Wars will lead to the abolition of all nuclear weapons, Thatcher sounded a different theme, quoting from Churchill’s 1952 address to Congress: “Be care ful above all things not to let go of the atomic weapon until you are sure, and more than sure, that other means of preserving the peace are in your hands.” She added, “Thirty-three years on, those weapons are still keeping the peace.” s Noting the resumption of U.S.- Soviet arms control talks in Geneva on March 12, Thatcher said: “They will be intricate, complex and de manding. And, we should not expect too much too soon. “We must recognize that we shall face a Soviet political offensive de signed to sow differences among us, calculated to create infirmity of pur pose, to impair resolve and even to arouse fear in the hearts of our peo ple,” she said. Thatcher said: “We know that our alliance, if it holds firm, cannot be defeated. But it could be outflanked. It is among the unfree and the un derfed that subversion takes root.” Although Congress is deeply di vided over how to trim the budget deficit — expected to reach a record $222.2 billion this year — Thatcher said: “We support so strongly your efforts to reduce your budget defi cit. No other country in the world can be immune from its effects — such is the influence of the Ameri can economy on us all.” Thatcher’s Convervative Party says the U.S. deficit is draining capi tal from around the world, pushing up interest rates and weakening cur rencies abroad. Endorsing Reagan’s call for a new round of international trade talks, Thatcher said “protectionism is a danger to all our trading part nerships.” Later, after Thatcher and Reagan had finished their private meeting in the Oval Office, they strolled across the Rose Garden to the president’s private residence for lunch.