■ v ■ ' .. Battalion Classifieds >ared tot tive direc ed Initnl Council, s iviting :o whiltil Assodan ?rpan “to disc 'ns concci; ngwecacij jse it’s [ i said, d Ameri bout Mem ng travdj thebordtil cans pktic, ird counir.l e NewVnl chief R.|l first vi$it;[ epared. place, neither ie son oft repons e ate Deprj cans to s FOR RENT SUMMER SPECIAL 250.00 2 bdrm/2 bath duplex *299.00 3 bdrm/2 bath 4-plex *395.00 3 bdrm/2 bath 4-plex ‘Washer and dryer furnished in 4-plex. Call for an appointment to view the interiors. Also pre-leasing for fall and spring. THOMAS PROPERTIES 696-7714 or 693-0982 Luxury 4 plet. 2 bdrm., Hollywood bath, washer, Hryer, ceiling fan, large deck,Jacuzzi. Call 846-1633. 154t5 FOR SALE it 7:30 Tgani- ’one is apart- iS: ap- Pavil- infor- :LUB; 0 p.m, n. For talion, to de- BRYAN—COLLEGE STATION ROTARY CLUB Summer Antique Show & Sale Aggieland Hotel Friday June 14 5:00 p.m.-10:00 p.m. Saturday June 15 10:00 a.m.- 7:00 p.m. Sunday June 16 12 noon- 6:00 p.m. Admission-$2.00 (good all 3 days) REGISTER FOR DOOR PRIZE Free China Appraisal (2 pieces) by Mary Frank Gaston SERVICES BAKER STREET MINI WAREHOUSE 5x5 to 10x30 $18 to $77 846-5794 DAYS 779-3938 NIGHTS 6Qtfn 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. Wordprocessing by English Teacher. Professional, ac curate, fust. 693-8143. 152tl6 Word processing: Proposals, dissertations, theses, manuscripts, reports, newsletters, term papers, re sumes, letters, 779-78(58. 15(518 For Sale or Lease. Village on the Creek Condomini- mums, close to A&M, fire places, washers-dryers, shuttle bus, security, pool plus much more. Ask about our buy back plan, open weekends, 4441 Old College Road, 846- 660I, 764-9077. 155t13 Problem Pregnancy? we listen, we care, we help Free pregnancy tests concerned counselors II Brazos Valley |I Crisis Pregnancy Service We re local! ' * 4340 Carter Creek Pkwy T Suite 107 24 hr. Hotline ♦ * Bryan, TX 823-CARE J 'y mustp union cfiii ^ork area.'| IBM—PC with Hercules Graphics-card, AST-six pack, Juadrom monitor, battery back-up, plus also have lymphony and D base HI software. All brand new. be- i University prices. Call 260-4564. 157i5 |p'7l Math I Musuiiik 351 Cleveland. All original, Jtreat shape. $4000. 779-7050. 156t 12 Ihltotne Computer, with printer $625.00. Zenith H- h. 2-drives. $575.00 268-0730. 156t4 Sllllio oil. Retail 1981 Audi. 1980 King Cab. 1979 Mus tang 4\4. 409/291-0447. I55t2 mthwood off S. West Parkway, 322 like new brick. ,,000. $4,475. down $792. month. 713-681-201 C63t 16 ore of lere isac ned aded ” nOt WOnifif HAiistralian shepertl puppies & ducks. Call Della 409- 156t 12 . /4nnp tir 1 ' ■’ lul *' is. Limited openings. Sii£ir-n-s|>iee. 34(M Cavitt. Br\ an 846-9787. 152t8 ROOMMATE WANTED ()n»i room. IxiilinNiin. washer, diver, fenced yard. 7.5.00 mo. imiil 8/I.VS:.. I‘23./di.*|). Call 69(5-8307/845- 2323. Kciili. Rem regtilarh I95./ino. 156i5 MISCELLANEOUS Free Kittens. 2 black & 1 yellow. About 8 wks. old. Call in evenings or weekends. Call 272-344 1. 154t5 1 (SlSCOUESt H. M«-6714i |l» T8£ TM-MIBl 1:20-J:20-5:20-7:20-9:20 ^ (% ,a rambo" C First Blood Part II Si '12.00 2.30 ROGER MOORE 5:00 aVIEW . oi-oo " A KILL ss. r 1:30-3:30-5:30-7:30-9:30 ' “GODS MUST BE CRAZY” (PCI k. .. > /Tttl) ' 2-45 STEVEN SPIFIOERG 5^00 Prewm5 THE 705 GQONieS ® V 9.30 . mmM ^ - on ixs^rwiciv ’ 7 3 0°0 * ——— ' ' 1 1 ! WORLD AND NAT10~ Wednesday, June 12, ^SS/The Battalion/Page 5 Teen-ager shoe charged in murder case by Jeff MacNelly AKVT W/2 wm#, ' ' PB?('£.5£€R... I BUSHEP'SM A lime TW£f2£... Associatfed Press CHICAGO — A teen-ager was charged Tuesday with murdering a 5-year-old girl who was thrown from a 13th-story window after an appax- ent sexual assault at a bleak West Side housing project, police said. Oris Lee Harris, a neighbor, de scribed the victim, Shabanna McCann, as a “beautiful little girl.” Johnny Freeman, 17, of Chicago, was charged with murder in the child’s death, police spokesman John Thomas said. McCann was taken or lured to a vacant apartment on the 13th floor of a building in the Henry Horner Homes on the city’s West Side, Thomas said. John O’Keefe of the county medi cal examiner’s office said the fatally injured child was found on the ground outside the building by pro ject residents at about 9 p.m. Mon day. She died about 10:30 p.m. at Cook County Hospital, he said. “There was evidence of sexual as sault due to the condition of the clothing,” Thomas said. O’Keefe said an autopsy was scheduled later Tuesday. The McCann family had been moving Monday into an apartment on the fifth floor of the building where McCann’s broken body was found, Thomas said. Their old apartment was in another building in the complex. Annette Harris, an employee of the Henry Horner Child Devel opment Center and a friend of the victim’s mother, Joann McCann, said: “Everybody’s in shock. They’re really upset. I just can’t get it out of my mind.” Police spokesman Montgomery Jackson said the police investigation focused on Freeman, an area resi dent, after a witness said she had seen him with the younger McCann earlier in the evening. Freeman was arrested Monday at the building shortly after the child was found, Thomas said. The witness, a relative of the McCanns whose name was being withheld, spotted a man with the youngster on a fifth-floor porch from her own apartment in a nearby building, Jackson said. The witness told police she at tempted to alert Mrs. McCann be cause she didn’t know the man and was concerned, Jackson said. But the witness said before she could find Shabanna’s mother, another resi dent discovered the fatally injured child. Skyjacking Hijackers release paralyzed passenger Associated Press BEIRUT, Lebanon — Hijackers who seized a Jordanian jetliner here- and forced it on a wandering 13- hour flight before returning to Bei rut freed a woman, 65, early Wednesday and then took off again. As the Boeing 727 departed at 2:40 a.m. — 4 , /2 hours after it had landed — one of the gunmen aboard radioed, “We are going — God knows where.” During the first stage of the com mandeered flight, with more than 70 people aboard including two Americans, Tunisian officials twice refused permission for the plane to land in Tunis. It made several re fueling stops, but the sky pirates re jected pleas to free the passengers. Airport officials said the woman released here was confined to a wheelchair because of paralysis. Beirut’s Moslem “Voice of the Na tion” radio station said while the plane was still parked at the airport, the hijackers wanted to go to Tripoli, Libya, but no attribution for that re port was given. Earlier, in a radio conversation with the control tower, one hijacker told government negotiators: “If you send fuel, food, water and clean ing material, we will release some of the weary women and children for humanitarian reasons.” Conflicting reports were made about the number of hijackers. Offi cials initially reported four, but the pilot at one point spoke about six “heavily armed hijackers in the cock pit.” One of the hijackers told the Bei rut control tower before the plane landed that they would free the pas sengers and crew when all Palestin ians leave south Beirut, where their refugee camps are located. An anonymous telephone caller said the hijackers were radical Shiite Moslems but a later caller, also anon ymous, denied that. Tunisian officials closed the Tunis airport and all other airports in the country to prevent an unauthorized landing. Munib Toukan, a vice president of Jordan’s state airline Alia, said in Amman, Jordan, that all of the peo- K le aboard the plane “are in excel- :nt condition.” Among the passengers were two Americans, Professor Landrey Slade of the American University of Beirut and his son William, 16,according to a university official. A Jordanian air line official said, however, that Slade was traveling with his wife, not his son. Slade, in his mid-50s, left Beirut two days after after gunmen kidnap ped Thomas Sutherland, 54, the university’s dean of agriculture. A hijacker who identified himself as Nazih told the control tower about 20 minutes in advance that the plane was heading for Beirut. ‘Write Rosty’ appeal getting nation’s opinion of tax plan Associated Press WASHINGTON — Rep. Dan Rostenkowski’s nationally broad casted appeal for Americans to “write Rosty” on tax revision has produced between 10,000 and 15,000 pieces of mail so far, the staff of the House Ways and Means Com mittee reported. The Illinois Democrat’s pitch also has inspired the production of a “write Rosty” button that is being sported by committee aides, lawmak ers and lobbyists. It was first produced on a limited basis by Rostenkowski’s staff as sort of a gag, but now is one of the hot test items on Capitol Hill. Internal Revenue Service Commi- sisoner Roscoe L. Egger Jr. showed up at committee hearing sporting a variation on the same theme. His button said: “I wrote Rosty.” Sacks of letters are piling up in the Ways and Means Committee offices in the Longworth House Office Building. Committee aide Jamie Richardson said that all the mail hasn’t yet been opened, and that when the sacks are all opened and sifted through, the total could run as high as 30,000 pieces of mail. “Most of them are in favor of the f (resident’s tax plan, playing on the act that something is going to have to be done on a bipartisan basis,” the aide said. Reporters found in contempt of court for refusing to testify in Belushi case Associated Press LOS ANGELES — A judge in the John Belushi murder case found two reporters in contempt of court and sentenced them to jail Tuesday for refusing to testify about an interview with defendant Cathy Evelyn Smith. Deputy District Attorney Michael Montagna said, “The issue of the murder can never be resolved” with out the testimony of freelance writer Chris Van Ness and National En quirer reporter Anthony Brenna. Municipal Judge Brian Crahan sentenced Brenna to 20 days in jail and a $1,000 fine and ordered Van Ness to spend 30 days in jail and pay a $1,000 fine. Both sentences were stayed pen ding appeal to a higher court. The reporters refused to testify about interviews they conducted with Cathy Evelyn Smith, a former rock singer, who is accused of mur dering Belushi by giving him an overdose of heroin and cocaine. The star of the “Saturday Night Live” television show and such mov ies as “Animal House” and “The Blues Brothers,” was found dead in his bungalow in the Chateau Mar- mont Hotel on March 5, 1982. Later that year, the Enquirer ran a story under the headline: “Holly wood Drug Queen Confesses — I Killed John Belushi.” That was followed in 1983 by Smith’s grand jury indictment on second-degree murder charges. Crahan, saying he was reluctant to rule on the complicated issue of a re porter’s privilege not to testify, de cided that both Van Ness and Brenna would have been covered had their interviews been with an undisclosed source. However, since both writers re vealed that their source was Smith and since the Enquirer published a lengthy story based on the interview, the reporters could not refuse to dis cuss the material under oath, he said. U.S.-Soviet study of arthritis shows aspirin-like drugs to be effective Associated Press HOUSTON —A 10-year U.S.-So viet study of arthritis in children shows aspirin-like drugs are as effec tive as more expensive and costly drugs in treating the illness, re searchers said Tuesday. “We are hopeful this joint study will be appreciated the world over,” said Dr. Lev S. Alexeev, senior re searcher at the Children’s Depart ment of the Soviet Institute of Rheu matology. “The studies are particularly sig nificant because they represent 10 years of successful, productive and cooperative research between the United States and the Soviet Union,” added Earl J. Brewer, Chief of the Rheumatology Department at Hous ton’s Texas Children’s Hospital. “It’s the first time anything of this sort could be done,” Brewer said. “It also showed we could work together. In the 1970s, this was not always eas ily done.” The study included 162 children suffering from juvenile rheumatoid arthritis — 66 of them in the United States and 96 from the Soviet Union. Ludmila A. Issaeva, head profes sor in the Department of Children’s Diseases at the First Moscow State Medical Institute, said the task of the group was to “try to find the best drugs, the most compatible drugs, for treatment.” The results showed aspirin-like drugs as effective as the disease modifying drugs d-penicillamine and hydroxychloroquine, the physi cians said. Battalion Advertising — let it work for your business. Call 845-2611 Toda^ Brewer said the study was set up to determine whether the use of the specialized drugs “was truly effective or not.” “Our joint work, dedicated to helping children, ended quite suc cessfully,” Issaeva said. “We would like to believe this work, begun 10 years ago, will have many positive re sults toward alleviating this disease in children.” Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis af flicts as many as 250,000 children in the United States. It primarily af fects internal organs or is marked by inflammation of the joints. Cause of the disease is unknown. Issaeva said the study involving the two countries allowed time to be shortened and could include more people, resulting in better and more significant conclusions. History Today Associated Press Today isjune 12, 1985. On this date: In 1939, the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum was dedicated in Cooperstown, N.Y. — 100 years to the day Abner Doubleday supposedly invented the sport. In 1917, the Secret Service ex tended its protection to the presi dent’s family. In 1963, civil rights leader Medgar Evers of Mississippi was shot to death. In 1971, Tricia Nixon and Ed ward F. Cox were wed in the White House Rose Garden. In 1979, a 26-year-old cyclist, Bryan Allen, flew the man-pow ered Gossamer Albatross across the English Channel. music, music, music... 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