The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 09, 1985, Image 8

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    Battalion Classifieds
SPECIAL NOTICE
ROOMMATE WANTED
THEY’RE HERE!!
Pick up your graduation announcements
orders NOW!
MSC Browsing Library
Room 223
Extra Announcements Go On Sale
April 4th at 8:00am.
MSC Student Finance Center Room 217
FOR RENT
CAS&
6el sol
PRELEASING
SUMMER & FALL
2 Blocks from Campus
Church across the street* 2 blocks from stores* 2 blocks from nite
life on University
Pool
Jacuzzi
Large Party Room
Basketball Goals
On Premise Security
On Premise Maintenance
Open 7 days a week
Mon.-Sat. 8:30-5:30 Sun. 1:00-5:00
401 Stasney College Station
696-3455
PRE—LEASING NOW FOR
HELP WANTED
SUMMER AND FALL
3/bdr. 2/bath fourplexes with all
kitchen appliances and washer-
/dryer included. From $420 to
$540 per month $IOO/discount dur
ing summer. Call Thomas Prop
erties, 696-7714 or 693-0982.
123129
DOMINIK DUPLEXES
2 Bedroom 2 Bath
3 Bedroom 2 Bath
Close to campus
Large, washer/dryer connections,
fenced yards, on shuttle. Outside
pets free.
846-2014 121t19
Only 10 positions left. Commission sales. Call Anthony
now. 696-7290. I27t3
Part-Time Help Wanted. Apph at Piper's Gulf Station
at the corner nr University and Texas. 124l5
TRF.T. membership at Gyms ol Texas. We need a typist
on a short term basis. Must type OOwpm. Hours flexi
ble. Call Lori 846-0053. 121110
WANTED
A bargain. Prelease for Fall or rent for
summer in attractive, wooded four-
plex. 2 bedroom w/dcnctn dish
washer, disposal. 1.7 miles to cam
pus. Convenient to vet and med
schools. Fall $315. Summer ($225.)
693-7761.845-7383. i 2 7t5
BAKER STREET
MINI WAREHOUSE
5x5 to 10x30
$18 to $77
846-5794 DAYS
779-3938 NIGHTS
Hurry! Only a few left. Apts, with
special low summer rates at very
moderate increase starting Sep
tember 1. 2 blocks from TAMU.
Low utilities.
127110
CASH
for gold, silver,
old coins, diamonds
Full Jewelry Repair
Large Stock of
Diamonds
Gold Chains
TEXAS COIN
EXCHANGE
404 University Dr.
846-8916
3202-A Texas Ave.
(across from El Chico,Bryan)
779-7662
SERVICES
Share my home. Private bedroom
laundry privilages. Phone 846-3804.
4th kitchen and
127t5
Mobile home lot. Wellborn area. $ 175/mo. 693-8073,
693-3041. 126t20
1981 Broadmoor 2 bdrm., 2 bath. All appliances, pri
vate lot, horse stall available. 10 minutes from campus.
$375. month. 846-0481 after 5. I26t5
Targe room, bath, furnished, private entrance, near
TAMU. utilities paid. $150-1. $200-2. 693-5286. I28l5
Storage garage available in C.S. 30.00 month. 846-
6211. 1 125tl0
Apts, for rent. Cotton Village Limited. Snook, Texas. I
bedroom start$200. 2 bedroom start at $223. (’.all 846-
<8878. 125t 10
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 96t3
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. snfn
2 Bdrm. 1 bath duplex. Quiet street close to campus.
One month free w/years lease. 822-0074. 125t20
Planning a Partv- 1).|. Pari\ Service has just the music,
and this semester li v our Tridav Special just $125. For
hooking information feel free to call i)AVll) KIF.l.
846-1838. 76t39
Duplex, 2 bdrm. 1 hath. Chi
ing fan. 693-0338 af ter 6.
need, ccii-
125t 10
Professional translation. Spanish-Fnglish. Theses, arti
cles. Reasonable rates. 845-5133 (t)r. Finlay). 823-7129
after 6. 128t23
HELP WANTED
Word processing. Call af ter 5 and weekends. 779-4935.
Cindy or Jim. ’ 128t9
DOMESTIC
SERVICES
693-1954
Part-Time Team
Cleaning.
Need Morning and
Afternoon Hours
$3.85/Hour plus
Mileage. Must have
phone and
transportation.
Graduate student or skilled per
son, during the summer, to teach
8 & 10 year old boy to advance
skills in math and science for
serveral hours/day. Also spend
time swimming, bowling, etc. 3-5
days/week. Days flexible, hours
flexible. $400.00/month. Call 764-
7921.
127110
"miI'ssinnal Typing. Twenty years experience. Labs,
thesis, term papers, equations, etc. 693-8537
Typing and word processing. Live years quality service
to the stall and students. 776-0130. I I6l36
Typing $1.50/DS page. 260-9866/day, 822-4806/ilight.
W/48 hrs. notice. Terri. 127110
Prolessional quality typing. Term papers, Theses, Busi
ness needs. Call Marilyn, 693-7515. 98tl4
Tvping, word processing, resumes. Lowest prices,
highest quality in town. I’KRKL.C.T PRIM', 822-1430.
114131
WORD 1‘ROT.l.SSlM,. Dissertations, the
l.xpet iencetl. 846-3833.
ell otne.
I Lit 20
PERSONALS
I’ROBl.l.M l’RK(..NANCY:- Abortion procedures and
iclc’ivals -- Tree ptegnauev testing. Houston. Texas
(713)271-0121. 80t69
Attention Dav id (kelly) White: The Babbit Died! 127t2
LOSTAND FOUND
Lound: Woman's bracelet. Lound April 1st. Call 822-
6699 to claim. 128t3
Reward: Gold Seiko watch lost before break. High
school graduation gift. 260-3372. 126t5
ROOMMATE WANTED
f emale roommate lor summer onlv. Near campus. Fay
1/2 lent. 1/2 miliies. Call 260-9252. 8-5 or, 696-6179 at
night. Beekv. 128t5
JUNIORS AND SKNIORS. Most people talk about
world problems. The Feace Corps solves them. We
need vou! Contact: Jenv Namkcn. Room 103B Agri
culture Building. 115t20
Tin looking for a female roommate to share my 3 bed-
room/2 bath home in N.E. San Antonio. Interested
May grads..call Susan (’84) collect at (512) 650-5639.or
leave message. 125t3
Female roommate to share 3/2 fenced house. South-
wood Valiev. $225. + 1/2 hills. After 6. 693-3200125t 10
furnished room with private bathroom for rent in
Bryan. Frefer Graduate or foreign student. Share
kitchen and utilities $ 150. 822-6549 125t4
FOR SALE
1982 Suzuki RM 125. Maintained, unraced. Very clean
and runs great. $500.00 693-1540. • 128t5
1982 Yamaha 550 Maxim. Onlv 2000 miles, exel. cond.
Extra’s. $1,650.00 Ask for Dan. 128tl0
Texas youngsters
unfit and flabby,
state official says
Must Sell! 1979 Blue Riveria. Excellent condition,
leather, loaded! AM-KM/CB. $4,600. 764-1 144. !24ta
Associated Press
Wellborn area, small 2 bedroom, owner financed,
fenced yard. 693-8073,693-3041. 126t20
Honda Shadow 500, V-Twin, water cooled, shaft drive,
quick, sacrifice, graduating, $1150. 764-8992. 126t7
1981 Honda CB750K. S 1,100. 823-5816.
CAMP WEKEELA FOR BOYS-
/GIRLS
Canton, Maine; seeks extraordinary dynamos 6/17 thur
8/16 for positions in tennis, waterskiing, sailing, athlet
ics, creative/performing arts, photography, backpack
ing, socretarles. Contact: Eric/Lauren Scoblionko, 144
South Cassady, Columbus, Ohio 43209, 614-235-6768.
108121
ALL LEATHER
Kaepa
GUARANTEED
LOWEST PRICE
IN TOWN
ATM
Childrens
39. 95
28. 95
SHOE FIT CO.
CS3u Bryan-Coltee* Slatton's Larpast Snoa Stora
ON TEXAS AVENUE
IN COLLEGE STATION
693-8269 9:30-6:00
GET ALL
THE HELP
YOU CAN GET!
The HP-41C
HEWLETT
PACKARD
University
Book Stores
Northgate
Qk 409Univ. Dr.
Culpepper Plaza /
PANNING
FOR
GOLD?
l
l
Battalion
Classified
845-2611
AUSTIN — Last year, Ross Perot
told Texans that mediocre schools
were damaging their children acade
mically. This year, Donald Haydon
will tell them their children are too
flabby and short-winded.
“The levels of fitness we see in
Texas youth now are a disgrace to
the state of Texas,” said Haydon, ex
ecutive director of the Governor’s
Commission on Physical Fitness.
He believes Texas youngsters’
strength and heart-lung endurance
are declining, and he said he will ask
the State Board of Education this
week to reverse the trend and put
fitness ahead of fun in physical edu
cation courses.
Although school officials say steps
already have been taken toward im
provement, Haydon said he plans to
urge the board to require more —
and tougher — physical education
classes.
Haydon told the Fort Worth Star-
Telegram that there is enough
blame to go around between parents
and schools, but he singled out
schools for special criticism because
all children receive some physical
training there.
“The norm in far too many
schools is that the doors are openea,
the kickballs are rolled out and the
teacher grades papers while she
watches the kids play,” he said.
“It is quite clear that we do not
have a physical education curric
ulum which engenders physical fit
ness in Texas right now.”
Glenn Peavy, director of physical
education for the Texas Education
Agency, acknowledged that the
state’s schoolchildren are becoming
less physically fit.
“At least, the State Board of Edu
cation is taking action to turn the
tide and stem the decline,” Peavy
said.
He said the basic curriculum pre
scribed by the board, which takes ef
fect in September, requires PE
classes from kindergarten through
high school to include physical fit
ness training as well as organized
play.
Haydon startled the House Ap
propriations Committee recently by
saying that the slip in youth fitness
scores parallels the slide in Scholastic
Aptitude Test scores during the
1970s and early 1980s.
Last year, Haydon’s commission
and the American Heart Association
co-sponsored tests of the fitness of
6,609 Texas students and compared
them with the results of a similar
study made in 1971, which were
used as the norm
Texas’ experience roughly paral
lels that of the rest of the nation, but
in some ineasurements, young Tex
ans performed worse than those in a
nationwide study commissioned by
the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services.
Eleven- and 12-year-old boys in
Texas took longer to run a mile than
their nationwide counterparts. But
Texas boys generally surpassed
those from the nation at large in the
number of sit-ups they could do in
one minute. Girls 10 to 12 did worse
than the national averages in the
mile run.
Securities review
needed, state told
Associated Press
AUSTIN — Texas investors
would be ripe for rip-offs if lawmak
ers kill the required state review of
new securities offered for sale, a Col
orado regulator warned Monday.
“If this law passed, in a very short
period of time you’ll have the kind
of wide-open, wild and wooly securi
ties market that has made Colorado,
Utah, New Jersey, Florida and Ne
vada open havens for con men who
operate outside the law,” said Royce
Griffin, Colorado’s securities com
missioner.
The Texas House has approved,
and a Senate committee on Wednes
day will review, a bill that would end
the State Securities Board’s merit re
view of securities.
Instead, securities could be of
fered for sale after filing full disclo
sure statements. Under merit re
view, securities cannot be sold in
Texas unless the securities commis
sioner determines they are fair, just
and equitable.
It's a layer of protection that is
needed, according to Griffin and
Texas Consumers Association Presi
dent Brad Wiewel, who held a joint
news conference.
“The power of inspection really is
the difference,” said Griffin, vice
president of the North American Se
curities Administrators Association.
He said Monday that Texans now
are cheated into believing state offi
cials predict what stocks are safe in
vestments.
“Stocks are patently risky,” said
Wolens, D-Dallas. “It makes no sense
to have a securities board say a bles
sing over a stock. The average
Texan is going to be cheated every
time he relies on the securities board
to make a judgment for him.”
Report
(continued from page 1)
termine the problems encountered
and how they are dealt with.
Hoadley estimates that it will cost
the library $90,000 a year to correct
problems anticipated by the report.
This would have to be new money,
she said, unless library funds are
reallocated. The estimate does not
include the cost of a new computer
'system.
In addition, $40,000 a year would
be required to maintain the current
card catalog system and $100,000 a
year would be required to maintain
the current on-line catalog (ALIS).
Before issuing its report, the com
mittee polled more than 1,900 fac
ulty and students and received 450
responses. Most faculty and students
said they believe automation would
be inevitable or advantageous. Only
17 faculty members unconditionally
opposed automation and 146 want
both a computerized system and the
current system to be maintained.
Drugs
Police bed
The following incidents kit
reported to the University
Department through Mondav, |
MISDEMEANOR THEFT:
• Nine bicycles and ilJ
backpacks were stolen froni,
nous iiH at ions on campus. !
• A steel post and a "no I*
king" sign were stolen fraui
driveway of Parking Annex)
• The rear view mirror J
stolen from a Honda mow
in Parking Annex42.
• A white gokl wristwaiduf
gold chain were stolen fronuJ
dent’s room in Cain Hall.
• An Chaus Gram sa
model 750-S, was stolen from)!
Const) uction Lab.
CRIMINAL MISCHIEF:
• The wooden gate-ami i
the parking control gates of Fb
ing Annex 60 were broken.
• A student in Crocket H;
reported someone smeared pt,
nut butter and hand lotionoiii
furniture and clothing.
• Flie rear tire was slashed!
a 1984 Honda motorcyclepatk
outside Moore Hall.
• The window to417Dom'
was shot out with a peiletgua
DRIVING WHILE INTOS
GATED:
• Two students were arms
on charges of driving while*
tested.
ByC
4
I These
ders abov
■ For Te
freshmen
bright as i
| Soltbal
baseball
Bgstone
ement fo
■die futur
lul at tin
■nof way
■ Mizera
Calif Sh
and the (
■ill alwax
I “1 livei
lie,” Mb
iji Calilo
when yot
I Growi
Brothers,
tough.
■ “Whei
Bie," the
\ Howe
Support
Bess.
I “All i
Bherevc
Believer
Blfair. E
Bort me.
B “Whei
FELONY THEFT:
• A 1985 Honda Acini
moped was stolen from Parc
Annex 60.
■pring I
■own to
EVADING ARREST: :|
• A student was arrested (
charges of evading arrest aftett
refused to stop lor a l'niv«l
police officer who spotted b
riding a bicycle without £
headlight.
■
Royal I
m
(continued from page!
But after contacting the Unit
ty’s office of Business Senii
lins said Royall did not have
for the use of the seal.
Gerald Smith, associate dirt
of business services, saidastudfl
student group does not have
for the use of the seal.
Collins said the business
told him that students do notha«
pay for the seal's use as longas
don't use it to market met
The complaint’s third charge
cused Royall of overspendingi|
ing the run-off election.
According to the complaint,(1
lins told the presidential candidi*
at a meeting that in the event™
run-off, the candidates invoil
could spend an additional $5il
campaign expenses.
The complaint charges thatEol
spent more than $50 duringtherl
off.
But according to Collins,thettl
mission’s co-commissioner, Lai
Madia, told a person in RoyalTsoi
paign that they could spend mi
than $50 as long as the cost j
materials for the general elefli
and the run-off did not exceedjJl
The rules of the election conic!
sion say that a presidentialcandicl
cannot spend more than $350dl
ing the general and run-off
tions.
Collins said Royall spent J2#l
during the general election and I
total for the general and ruml
elections was just under $350. Rol
spent about $60 during the rumi
Collins said.
“It was our mistake,” Collinsfl|
“We aren’t going to punish Scant 1
cause we got mixed up.”
Royall said he was glad theac® I
tions against him where found to!
unjustified.
A,
it’
ba
(continued from page 1)
“We do not find that many people
we can charge with possession,” he
said.
Kibler said penalties for posses
sion of controlled substances on
campus are determined case-by
case.
“It depends on the drug and the
amount,” he said, “and usage is
more serious than possession. For
example, we once had a student who
had been caught with a pound of
marijuana in his dorm room. It was
obvious he was going to sell it. That’s
a lot more serious than being caught
with one joint.”
Kibler said a student caught for
the first time with a controlled sub
stance usually is put on conduct pro
bation. If caught a second time, that
student can be removed from the
University for an indeterminate
length of time depending on the se
riousness of the case, he said.
The University also has the option
of expelling the student.
Kibler said students most fre :
quently are caught with marijuana,
but that there currently are two cases
pending for cocaine possession. Stu
dents rarely are caught with hard
drugs, he said.
“We know there’s drug use on
campus,” Kibler said. “But it’s im
possible to know how much.”
decides on disciplinary actionon<
individual basis, subject to app®
by the Trigon.
University-enforced penalties for
cadets caught with drugs are the
same as for other students, but
Kibler said cadets “have a lot more to
lose.”
“It depends on whether theff
son is a habitual or a first-time 1 *
fender,” Rollins said.
Cadets on commission toenteri 1
armed forces also may lose th
commissions if caught with drugs-
“They seem to get treated more
harshly, but that’s because they have
more at stake,” he said.
Kibler said the number of
cases handled by student affairs^
tuates from year to year.
Drug cases involving cadets first
are referred to student affairs for
disciplinary action, but the Corps of
Cadets also may enforce penalties,
such as dismissal.
“There have been some instances
of drug use in the Corps,” said
Chuck Rollins, Corps commander.
“It’s no secret. I’ve been here four
years, and I’ve only heard of two in
stances. 1 think that’s pretty good.”
In 1983-84, the most recert
available statistics show there *1*
14 cases involving marijuana pos#
sion on campus, and no cases in^
ing hard drugs. In 1982-83 llKJ
were 34 Cases, and in 1981"
cases were handled. In 1
there wer‘e 28 cases, and in 1979$
25,
“This is not a trend,” KiblersJ 1
“It’s the randomness of thewaf*
Rollins said there are no standard
Corps penalties for drug use. A 12-
member cadet court hears cases and
have of finding out about draff’
session and use. There are wildP
tuations because there is nosy#
tic way of identifying cases.’’
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