The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 14, 1985, Image 6

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    Page 6/The Battalion/Fridav June 14, 1985
Battalion Classifieds
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
FOR SALE
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
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 . 155113
Piano for sale. Wanted: Responsible party to assume
small monthly payments on piano. See locally. Call
credit manager 1-800-447-4266. 159t7
Australian slieperd puppies & ducks. Call Della 409-
822-6976. I$6tl2
■ Couches $20ea.; HP-IIC Calculator $45.; 35 MM
1700 Turnta-
!59t5
i v\t> iii -iiv. v-aumai'
Camera $40. Bang & Olufsen Beograt
hie $250. Call 845-0106 or 693-7732.
1971 Mach 1 Mustang 351 Cleveland. All original,
great shape. $4000. 779-7050. I56tl2
Studio Monitors l»v Gilbert Acoustics. $400/best oiler.
J VC Speakers $200/bcst oi ler. 690-0240. 15(it4
Osborne Computer, with printer $625.00. Zenith II-
89. 2- drives. $575.00 268-0730. 156t4
IBM—PC with I lercules Graphics-card, AS T-six pack,
Quadrom monitor, batterv back-up, plus also have
symphony and 1) base III software. All brand new, be
low I'niversitv prices. Call 260-4564. 157t5
HELP WANTED
Cruise I.iiKis. Resort Hotels and Auuisement Parks
are now accepting applications. To receive the most
comprehensive tom ism & travel employment pac kage
available, with detailed information and applications
write: Tourism Information Services. P.O. Box,
350187. I ampa, FI. 33095-0187. 158t6
Corporation looking lor enthusiastic hardworking self
starter to enter f ull time position in C.S. area. Excellent
entrv level sales/inanageinetu position for new grad, in
corporate setting. Full benefits, opportunity for ad
vancement. Send resume: Lvnn Harttmg. 91.3 i)-Har-
vev Rd. C.S.. l x. 77840. I58t6
Student to paint fence Saturday or Sunday- $5/hr. 704-
7921. 158t2
Part time book keeper. Flexible hours at Piper’s Gulf,
Texas Avenue at University Drive. 846-3062. 154t8
Female afternoon bartender. Waitresses, barback, 8c
DJ. Silver Dollar. 846-4691 or 268-311 1. 153tl5
Apartment maintenance person. Plumbing experience
necessary. 779-3550 696-2038. 154t8
Apply between 3:30-6:30
153t7
CHILD CARE
MY ADS.
BUT REAL
HEAVYWEIGHTS
WHEN RESULTS
REALLY COUNT.
o matter what
you've go to say
or sell, our Classi
fieds can help you
do the big job.
Right now, dur-*
mg International
Classified Adver
tising Week, is a
greet time to put
the Classified
to work for you!
Clean 3 room apartment in quiet residential area.
$225.00 monthly; water paid. Call 823-8793 after
GARAGE SALE
GIANT GARAGE SALE
UNDER THE BIG TENT
29th St. & Washington
Friday and Saturday, June 14 & 15
7a.m.-6p.m.
Everything must go!!! Furniture, Appli
ances, Clothes, Toys, Luxury Items,
Used Cars, Household goods, used
tires.
YOU NAME IT, WE GOT IT!!
Car wash-Sat. June 15-$3.00 isstz
SPECIAL NOTICE
Pool tournament. Cash prizes. Thursday night, 9 p.m.
Silver Dollar. 3606 South College Ave. 153t7
ROOMMATE WANTED
Own room, bathroom, washer, diver, fenced yard.
75.00 mo until 8/15/85. 1 25./dep. Call 696-8307/845-
2523. Keith. Rent rcgularh 195./mo. 150t5
SERVICES
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.
846-3755i sitfn
BAKER STREET
MINI WAREHOUSE
5x5 to 10x30
$18 to $77
846-5794 DAYS
779-3938 NIGHTS
60tfn
KDl’CA'l IONAI. HOI TING. Professional editing and
proofreading, 12 + years experience, Ph.D. degree.-
Theses, dissertations, publications, grant proposals,
etc. Reasonable rates, estimates provided. Gall 764-
7937. 158t 10
Word processing: Proposals, dissertations, theses,
manuscripts, reports, newsletters, term papers, re
sumes, letters. 779-7868. 156t8
Wotcl processing, call Cinch after *». 779-4935. I56|I2
Wcmlpmccssing In Laiglislt Teacher. Professional, ac
curate-. Iasi 693-8143 152116
Southwood off S. West Parkway, 322 like new brick.
68,000. $4,475. down $792. month. 7I3-681-201D53U6
SS3 CEDAR CREEK
CONDOMINIUMS
NOW LEASING
Brand New
2 BDRM/2 Bath & 2 BDRM/1 ♦/* Bath
Spacious ♦ Large Closets
Fireplace * Fenced Patios
W/D Conn.
On-Site Office 1000 E. University
Managed by United Brokers
846-1496 846-8427
Specializing newhorn thru 2 yrs. Limited openings.
Sugai -ii-spivt’. 3404 Ca\ ill. Bryan. S46-97S7. !32tS
Get
ACTION
tvkh
mwr
ADS
Try our
Battalion
Classified!
845-2611
Baptist leader:
Denomination’s
future not bright
Associated Press
DALLAS — In Texas, both win
ners and losers at this week’s South
ern Baptist Convention are predict
ing a slow erosion of the country’s
largest Protestant denomination if
the six-year rift within the ranks con
tinues.
“I think if we don’t deal with our
differences in a constructive way, we
could see a split in time. We can’t go
on indefinitely like this,” said the
Rev. Jimmy Draper, a fundamental
ist and past president of the conven
tion.
The Rev. Morris Chapman of Wi
chita Falls, another fundamentalist
leader, agreed.
“I think there will be no formal
split,” said Chapman, who helped
moderate the convention and
planned the agenda. “I think there’s
always the possibility there could be
some slight erosion.”
He and Draper were among the
winners at the convention, which
ended Thursday. Along with more
than 24,000 other delegates, they
voted to re-elect president Charles
Stanley, pastor of the First Baptist
Church of Atlanta.
Stanley defeated the more moder
ate Rev. Winfred Moore of Amarillo
by a 55 percent to 45 percent vote.
Among those in the disgruntled
minority were the Rev. Cecil Sher
man, who recently left a church in
Asheville, N.C., for one in Fort
Worth.
He was an outspoken critic of the
fundamentalists’ handling of' the
convention, particularly Stanley’s re
fusal to recognize some delegates on
the convention floor during a key
vote Wednesday.
“Down the way, if over a long
enough period of time this group
prevails, and exclusion is practiced
toward the losing minority . . .there
will be some kind of division,” Sher
man said.
He believes any such split will oc
cur in “the old Solith way. There
won’t be thousands of churches
going away and forming a new de
nomination,” he said, “but quietly,
they’ll go away.”
Sherman also predicted the pro
fundamentalist leaning of this Bap
tist convention will encourage more
cases of secret tape recordings and
greater efforts to rid seminaries of
non-fundamentalist professors.
On the fundamentalist side,
Chapman said no one is talking of a
“witch hunt.”
But he added that those with ex
treme differences with the views of
the majority may feel “their contri
bution in the ministry would not be
through the Southern Baptist Con
vention.”
The theological differences within
the denomination have had far-
ranging effects.
At Southwestern Baptist rheolog
ical Seminary in Fort Worth, for ex
ample, one professor in a dispute
witn the administrator secretly tape-
recorded a confrontation with him
in January.
Meanwhile, the outlook for a
“peace committee” approved by the
convention messengers to try to deal
with the Baptists’ philosophical di
vide is unclear, some leaders said.
“He sure seemed to get upset when I asked if he thought it uas i
essary for me to come to class every day. ”
with UJ
tan anc
puling tl
hanista
Chili war
progran
Wars,”
reservat
outer
And
khe U.S.
Texas-New Mexico controversi
heats up over national food Arn
Associated Press
so he introduced his own resot
Grand jury calls
on Texas Rangers
in Lucas inquiry
Associated Press
WACO — Members of the Texas
Rangers Homicide Task Force who
investigated alleged serial killer
Henry Lee Lucas testified Thursday
before the McLenan County grand
jury that it is probing the validity of
some of Lucas’ confessions.
The task force members arrived
at the courthouse clad in suits and
white cowboy hats.
Among those appearing before
the grand jury were Rangers Bob
Prince and Clayton Smith, William
son County Sneriff Jim Boutwell
and Department of Public Safety
criminal investigator Bob Werner,
the primary members of the task
force.
Attorney General Jim Mattox,
who along with local District Attor
ney Vic Feazell, initiated the McLen
nan County probe, led the question
ing of Col. Jim Adams, the head of
the Department of Public Safety.
Amid speculation that the 8-week-
old grand jury investigation may
soon be completed, the task force
members said during the morning
that they were pleased with the op
portunity to present their versions of
the Lucas investigation to the grand
jury.
The first called was Sgt. Prince,
who spent nearly five hours testif-
ing.
“I think they were very interested
in hearing my side of the story,” he
said. “They are very professional ju
rors.”
Prince said that, as required by
law, he would not discuss specifics of
what he was questioned about inside
the jury room, hut he was not sur
prised by the questions asked.
He said the jurors did not ques
tion him about alleged “unethical or
improper” activities of the task
force.
Following Prince into the jury
room was Ron Boyter, a DPS intelli
gence officer based in Waco. He said
the grand jury had specifically re
quested his presence.
Boyter said he has never been as
sociated with the task force and has
never interviewed Lucas.
When asked if he has been in
volved in an alleged DPS investiga
tion of Feazell, Boyter said, “No
comment.”
Last month, Feazell told news re
porters he had a conference with
Col. Adams in April, and Adams
told Feazell that he had intitiated a
DPS probe of Feazell.
WASHINGTON — A proposal to
make chili the national food has
erupted into red-hot debate on Ca
pitol Hill, embroiling New Mexico
and Texas in a tongue-in-cheek
clash.
Is it “chili” or “chile?” Not to men
tion the more incendiary question,
“To bean or not to bean?”
“Where I come from, we spell it ‘c-
h-i-l-e,”’ says Manuel Lujan, R-N.M.
He has introduced House Joint
Resolution 255, “to provide for the
designation of chile as the official
food of the United States of Amer
ica.”
Under Lujan’s resolution “chile”
would be right up there with the
bald eagle, the Star-Spangled Ban
ner and the flag.
From a basic philosophical stand
point, this is fine with J.J. “Jake”
Pickle, D-Austin.
WAS!
d Air
to the (It teams c
whether
non.
Pickle's version of the legislat
would designate chili — witn an
and without beans — as the nation'
official food.
The first shot in the “chili war
was fired back in April, when Lujii
rejected Pickle’s chili — with*
beans — recipe. Risin
fense of his Texas colleague,
Eligio "Kika" de la Garza, D-Missioi compro
saiti Lujan “didn’t know a chili fra that sole
a chestnut.”
“That’s like dec luring war in (If Thursdt
Southwest,” said Lujan’s press seen mine tin
tary, Steve Goldstein.
The controversy has elicited 4
plomacy worthy of the Geneva an®
talks from the two combatants’
tol Hill colleagues.
Nevertheless, he introduced his
own chili resolution.
Why is Pickle so picky? Why did
he eschew Lujan’s resolution?
Lujan proudly noted that one
the co-sponsors of his version oft
resolution is a Texan, Dallas Repatt
Mean Steve Bartlett.
Navy sp
jresulted
indudin
A. Walk:
j They
|that eaci
’equipiiK
“The congressman is an advert
mice,” explained Ban
of chili of cn
"His reasoning was it had beans in
it,” Lujan said. “He wouldn’t have
anything to do with chile with beans,
lett’s administrative assistant, Mar
Jane Maddox. “He believeseveryost
should have the right to choose,tl*
chili to chew.”
Published reports have revealed
that Lucas, who at one time claimed
to have killed hundreds of people,
may have been hundreds of miles
away from some of the murders that
were termed solved by authorities in
several states with assistance from
the task force.
Adams has neither confirmed nor
denied the investigation, although
he said an investigation would not
have been intitiated unless there was
justification. The FBI also is con
ducting a probe of Feazell and activ
ities in his office.
T he grand jury was scheduled to
reconvene Friday morning.
What’s up
MAN
dent Da
that he
morator
Friday
STUDENT GOVERNMENT STUDENT RELATIONS: ap
plications for this new committee are available in 221 Pavil
ion. Applications are due by 5 p.m. today. For more infor
mation call 845-3051.
TEXAS A&M MOO DUK KWAN TAE KWON DOCLUB:
is holding a membership drive from 8:30-9:30 p.m. today
in 266 G, Rollie White coliseum. For more information
conta d Scot t. at 840-94 48.
MSC GROVE 85: presents “Blow Out,” starring John Tra
volta and Nancy Allen. T he show starts at 8:45 p.m. in the
Grove. Admission $1 with a strident ID. Non-student ad
mission is $ 1.50.
CHI ALPHA CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: is meeting for
charismatic worship, fellowship and teaching at 7 p.m. in
112 Blocker.
Items for What’s Up should be submitted to The Battalion,
216 Reed McDonald, no Jess than three days prior to de
sired publication date.
s
si
one
'Texas schools need to be the besf
White: survival depends on schools
AUSTIN -— A spokesman for
grade school administrators pledged
to Gov. Mark White on Thursday
that Texas will have the best elemen
tary education program in the
United States.
White, after receiving a rousing
welcome from the Texas Elementary
Principals and Supervisors Associa
tion, told administrators the nation’s
survival depends on how well they
do their job.
Brad Duggan, association exec
utive director, introduced White to
an audience of 1,200 by saying,
“There have been a lot of men and
women who claim to be education
governors of Texas but there is only
one governor who's taken the bold
step to restructure and, important to
us, reprioritize education, a step to
create an equitable education system
and to place an emphasis on elemen
tary education.”
White’s name, if not political rep
utation, is closely linked to a 1984
special legislative session that pro
vided $2.7 billion for public school
reform.
“Starting this year, when you see
bright-eyed disadvantaged and 1^1
guage-deficient 4-year-olds comiifl
to school to try to get a chance to*4
vive in the state of Texas,” Dugpl
said, “you need to thank the govtfl
White said having the bestedufr
tion system — through college-
the country may not be goodenougl
Student to see dye laser take off with shuttle
Associated Press
EL PASO —- Clay Casarez thought a television
screen view of the space shuttle Discovery carry
ing his scientific experiment would be the closest
glimpse he would get.
But last-minute offers from sponsors to fi
nance his retuin flight will allow the Texas Tech
University elecrical engineering sophomore to
witness Monday’s scheduled launch of the space
shuttle at the launch site.
The pending shuttle flight signifies the end of
an elusive dream for Casarez, who has worked
since eighth grade on a small dye laser that will be
among 1 1 student projects flying into space if the
Discovery takes off Monday.
“I always knew my project would eventually he
carried on the shuttle, hut until recently I wasn’t
exactly sure when,” he told the El Paso Times.
A delegation of students, sponsors and project
advisers led by project manager Suzie Azar will
leave El Paso Friday morning to see Monday’s
launch of Discovery at Cape Canaveral, Fla.
The 1 1 student projects, designed by El Paso
and Ysleta school district students, is the first
Texas high school payload to fly on a space shut
tle.
Casarez, a Hanks High School graduate, said
he could not afford a return trip after traveling
to Florida in April to deliver the student experi
ments to National Aeronautics and Space Admin
istration technicians.
Azar, who has nursed the student projectsi^j
the late 1970s, said Casarez agreed toattendtli'
launch after project sponsors offered Wednestb'l
night to help finance the trip.
The student’s laser will test the ef fects of tit 1 !
weightless environment of space on theaccurao
and concentration of the laser’s beam.
Measuring eight inches long, the project als* 1
ile data tin 1
will monitor performance and compi
Cas arez later will compare with data
ground experiments.
Casarez figures his project may help pin
the accuracy of dye lasers in measuring distant
between two objects in space.