The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 27, 1985, Image 6

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    Page 6/The Battalion/Thursday, June 27, 1985
Battalion Classifieds ix/rror tvANn natton
FOR RENT
* ca$a
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 Basketball Goals
Jacuzzi On Premise Security
Large Party Room On Premise Maintenance
Open 7 days a week 401 Stasney College Station
Mon.-Sat. 8:30-5:30 Sun. 1:00-5:00 696-3455
TIRED OF HIGH UTILITIES?
Come to Tanglewood South
• Great location • Party Room/Study Room
• 2 pools • 2 Laundry Rooms
• Exercise Room/Fitness Center • Covered Parking
All Utilities Paid
411 Harvey Road, C.S.
693-1111
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
Economical year round!
TOWNSHIRE MANOR
APTS.
401 Lake. Bryan
822-2117
Water, sewer, garbage PAID
Pool, covered parking. Large Apts.
DOMINIK DUPLEXES
2 & 3 bedroom duplexes. All have
2 baths, washer-dryerconnec-
tions, large rooms, lot’s of storage!
We do the yardwork! Outside
pet’s free. 846-2014.
Best Value in Town!
Student & Family Sections
1 and 2 bedroom
Prelease for fall
1 BR starting at 270.00
2 BR starting at 310.00
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Mon.-Sat. 8:30-5:30 Sun. 1-5:30
Pets welcome
1101 Southwest Parkway
693-0804
CHILD CARE
Specializing newborn thru 2 yrs. Limited openings.
Sugar-N-Spice. 3404 Cavitt. Bryan. 846-9787. I66t30
HELP WANTED
Part time experienced short or long term auto parts
store cotinterperson. 10 to 1 Mon. thru Kri., every
other weekend. Bill Ford Auto Supply. 1136 Villa
Maria Bryan. 823-8033. 166t5
Female afternoon bartender. Waitresses, barback, &
D.J. Silver Dollar. 846-4691 or 268-3 111. 153tl5
FOR SALE
TERRIFIC FINANCING ON
PATIO HOME NEAR CAMPUS:
Brick, 3 bedroom, 2 baths. Fireplace, ceiling fan,
carport, levelor blinds. Shuttlebus. Nice yard, orien
tal garden. Terrific financing, contact U'V Realtor or
Catherine Nuzum, Glen Delle Realty 696-888S.
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-
6601,764-9077. isstia
1980 Honda Express II Moped. Good condition, great
for campus. $260. 268-2735. 166tl
1971 Math 1 Mustang 351 Cleveland. All original,
great shape. $4000. 779-7050. 156tI2
Australian sheperd puppies & ducks. Call Della 409-
822-6976. 156U2
3 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath house completely furnished! 701
Chalet, C.S. 846-2014. On shuttle bus. I60tl0
Southwood off S. West Parkway, 322 like new brick.
68,000. $4,475. down $792. month. 713-681-201IBStl6
2 bedroom house. S. College Avenue near Villa Maria.
$295. plus $ 150. deposit. 9-5, 822-3718. 164t5
I’ll pay you $500.00 cash, if you assume mortgage on
1981 mobile home. Call 775-1919. 16515
ROOMMATE WANTED
Piano for sale. Wanted: Responsible party
small monthly payments on piano. See 1<
- --‘'56.
Roomate needed. Two bedroom duplex.
$82.50/month. Close to campus. 693-1674. 164t4
credit manager 1-800-447-4266
to assume
locally. Call
159t7
Women’s bike for sale. Almost new 10 speed Schwim
light. 165.00 696-1525. 164t8
SERVICES
ST. MICHAEL’S ACADEMY
Offers a five week Summer program,
grades 3-7, for fun & learning with in
teresting academic pursuits.
July 1 - August 2.
Register with Mrs. Spencer at
822-2715
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. aitfn
putt theatres:
AQ c n i*t SHOW ONLY EACH DAY .
(Exc#p« holiday#) •
SENIOR CITIZENS ANYTIME.
[CINEMA 3H
I Post Onk Mnll 31
[~$1 £ COLLE61N. 14947141
I IN THE MALL 764-0618 1
r 1:20-3:20-5:20-7:20-9:20 V
jy- tTAtlOMr H fcrcl.
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First Blood
JSodrrSriWBO Part II IB ^
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1:3 5-1: >5-5:15-7:35-*: 35'
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r *4s
5*00 ..it <
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Aerobic instructor training and certification. Call Fit
ness Services of Texas for summer workshop schedule.
764-8259. 160t8
sshulmm Theatres
lit Afttn
Word processing, tall ('.ituiv after 5. 779-4935. 156t 11
i—iiTani'iFFTJ'.iMfc Mm
3BES M-Ul* "BSW
$2.50 Show Efirr Day
Si-mm
F DU Cl AT ION A L KDITING. Professional editing and
proofreading, 12 f years experience, Ph.D. degree.
Theses, dissertations, publications, grant proposals,
etc. Reasonable rates, estimates provided. Call 764-
7937. 1 158tl0
BAKER STREET
MINI WAREHOUSE
5x5 to 10x30
$18 to $77
846-5794 DAYS
779-3938 NIGHTS
Fleiiti
CHEVY
CHASE
2:15-4:40-7:20-9:55
*Perfject
TRAVOLTA
JAMIE LEE
Typing, over 10 years experience. Will also transcribe
dictation reasanabie. 693-1598 161116.
Worclpmccssing b> English Tc
enrate. fast. 693-8143.
Professional, ae-
I52t 16
15-8:15
Word processing: proposals, dissertations, theses,
manuscripts, reports, newsletters, term papers, re
sumes. letters. 779-7868. 165t8
PARISJEXAS
R. -,=-M
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
2:35-5:00-7:30-9:40 -
A SECRET
Admirer
Classified
845-2611
2:40-4:55-7:25-9:45
RICHARD PRYOR
MILLIONS
2:35-5:00-7:20-9:40
A MAGICAL
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FR££IXSX?&&> MOL/—1
OPINIONS- V VMS 1
Hostages in second week
Problem Pregnancy?
wc listen, we care, we help
Free pregnancy tests
concerned counselors
Brazos Valley
Crisis Pregnancy Service]
We’re local!
4340 Carter Creek Pkwy
Suite 107 24 hr. Hotline I
,
a Bryan, TX
823-CARE
+*■*****{
Sarah Watts
Pianist Teacher
Degree, Piano,
Baylor University,
l Iniversity Teaching
Experience
★ Serious students of all ages
822-6856
Reagan losing patience
Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President
Reagan, who last week described
himself as frustrated but willing to
wait out the Shiite Moslems, is being
portrayed this week as a man losing
his patience because American hos
tages in Beirut have not been re
leased.
“He wants some action,” one aide
said privately in explaining Reagan’s
order for a list of options the presi
dent might take to put pressure on
the Lebanese. “He wants something
done now.”
But Reagan, by most accounts,
was handling the hostage crisis with
more aplomb than some of his aides,
who ached for relief from an unfa
miliar sense of impotence.
“I just can’t imagine how the Car
ter people stood it for 444 days,”
said one presidential assistant, com
paring the current situation to the
Iranian hostage crisis that ended the
day Reagan succeeded Jimmy Carter
as president in January 1981.
The aide, speaking with the un
derstanding he would not be identi
fied, was expressing his exasperation
at the end of an afternoon trying un
successfully to convince a hostage’s
wife that the White House was doing
all it could to keep her informed of
efforts to free her husband.
It had been less than two weeks
since the June 14 hijacking of TWA
Flight 847, but already, he said, offi
cials felt an intense pressure to do
something — anything — to end the
standoff.
(Syrian President Hafez) Assad
wanted them out, they’d be out by
now,” the official said, expressing
some skepticism that the Syrians are,
as they have said, doing all they can
to win the release of the American
captives.
One official said the administra
tion was beginning to alter its initial
assessment that the case was one in
which a few radical hijackers could
be persuaded by their more rational
leaders to release the men still in cus
tody.
“It now appears that the situation
is being manipulated by those who
oppose us in the Middle East and
have made us targets in the past,”
the source said, apparently referring
to the Soviet-supplied Syrian gov
ernment and perhaps the funda
mentalist Moslem rulers of Iran.
“If the hostages were Syrians and
Connecticut work law
found unconstitutional
While the United States is seeking
to increase pressure on Syria and
other Arab nations to push for the
hostages’ release, the official said ad
ministration spokesmen are trying
not to leave the impression that Rea
gan plans a retaliatory strike as soon
as he gets the Americans home
safely.
Such action, or the threat of it,
might provide an incentive for the
captors to hold onto at least some of
the hostages as protection against an
attack, the official observed.
“That certainly keeps us from
making blustery threats about what
we’re going to do when we get them
all out,” he said. T he United States
nonetheless has refused to rule out
military action to punish the terror
ists if it can locate and identify them.
TENSION
HEADACHES?
If eligible, get $20 for taking
one easy dose of safe OTC
medication and keeping di
ary. Reputable investigators.
G & S Studies, Inc.
846-5933
MUSCULO
SKELETAL
FAIN STUDY
TAMU students with recent
(7 days) untreated musdeor
bone injury, get $25 for taking
safe leading prescription
muscle relaxant
G & S Studies, Inc.
846-5933
Associated Press
WASHINGTON -- The Su
preme Court, invoking the Constitu
tion’s demand for separation of
church and state, said Wednesday
that states may not force any em
ployer to give workers their choice
of a religious day off each week.
In an 8-1 ruling, the justices de
clared unconstitutional a Connecti
cut law that protected employees
Most states have laws similar to
the federal statute, but according to
legal authorities, only Connecticut
had an absolute protection for Sab
bath observance.
from retaliation for missing work on
their religious Sabbath.
Chief Justice Warren E. Burger
said for the court, “This unyielding
weighting in favor of Sabbath ob
servers over all other interests con
travenes a fundamental principle” of
the Constitution.
The state law “decreed that those
who observe a Sabbath any day of
the Week as a matter of religious con
viction must be relieved of the duty
to work on that day, no matter what
burden or inconvenience this im
poses on the employer or fellow
workers,” he said.
The decision in the Connecticut
Sabbath case did not overturn a
1964 federal civil rights law, requir
ing employers to allow workers a day
off for their Sabbath if it does not
cause “undue hardship” to the busi
ness.
The ruling also reinforced the
court’s strict standards for separa
tion of church and state — reaf
firmed just three weeks ago when
the justices outlawed daily moments
of silence in public schools if stu
dents are encouraged to pray during
that time.
Wednesday’s ruling was decried
as an attack on minority religious
groups by supporters of the invali
dated Connecticut law and is a de
feat for the Reagan administration,
which urged the court to uphold the
Connecticut law.
The case arose when Donald E.
Thornton, who died in 1982 at age
41, challenged the decision of his
employer, Caldor Inc., to demote
him from his department store man
ager’s job because he asked to be ex
cused from working Sundays. T he
store requires managers to work one
of every four Sundays, although
rank-and-file employees were
exempt under their union contract
from Sunday work.
Police find
remains of 3
more victims
Associated Press
WEST POINT, Calif. — Investi
gators probing the mountain retr eat
ol survivaitst Leonard Lake said
Wednesday they had discovered the
remains of three additional victims,
bringing the total number of dead to
at least nine.
Lake, who committed suicide by
swallowing a poison pill alter Ins ar
rest, has been linked to tire disappea
rance of 22 people.
Sgt. Ron McFall of the Calaveras
County Sheriffs Department said
detectives equipped with hand-held
infrared equipment Wednesday
continued to search the rugged,
Sierra Nevada compound about I f>0
miles east of San Francisco.
McPaii did not say where the new
hones and hone fragments were
found. He described them only as
“skeletal re mams .”
Since June 5, state and local detec
tives have discovered the bodies of
two black men and a white man and
the bone fragments of four adults
and two children.
International Students
Association Party
Where: The Agggieland
Penthouse
When: 8:00 p.m.
$3 for members
$4 for non members
The
Battalion
Number One
in
Aggieland
NO CONTEST
CHANELLO’S PIZZA
HAS FAST-FREE
DELIVERY
12” 16” 20”
pepperoni bell pepper
Italian sausage onions
Canadian bacon black olives
hamburger green olives
mushrooom anchives
jalapeno pineapple
extra cheese thick crust
All You Can Eat - Daily Specials
m
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BDUSEv*****
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4*10 p.m.
Sunday
Mon. Tues. Wed.
—emanmm amu, i —
Thurs. Fri.
Pancakes
Spaghetti
Shrimp
$1.99
$1.99
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All You Can Eat
All You Can Eat
All You Can Eat
Saturday
Special
Steak Dinnej
$4.99
Complete
At
INTERNATIONAL HOUSE of PANCAKES* RESTAURANT
|i - 1Q|J^.. College Skaggs Center
!
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Coca Cola 17 & 32 oz.
’ v,f * • :n1 av X** /.: ■ T S'. >' * -
SUMMER HOURS
1
New Menu Item!
Ribeye Sandwich
North
M Til 1a.m.
FrtSat 11-2 am.
Sun. ll-12a.m.
South
M-T 11-2 p.m & 5-1 a.m.
Fri. 1 l-2p m. &5-2 a.m
Sat ll-2am
Sun. 11-12 a.m.
CALLUS!
696-0234
846-3768
Pick up an 8” pizza and receive
a 16 oz. Coke FREE!
Over 30,000
people could be
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Swiss cheese, tomato, onion,
french fries
$4 50
all day
$1 00 Margaritas 5:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m. Everyday
1727 Texas Ave/Culpepper Plaza
College Station, Tx. 693-4054
Fun
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