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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (July 9, 1985)
llltMMilltllllllllll||||||lll||||||1ll|||||llH|||||||ll||||||lllll||||lH|||||illl|||||||tl|||||||ll|||||||ll||| HllllHI ■lillll Battalion Classifieds SPECIAL NOTICE MSC Browsing Library Summer Grads! Pick up your announcements M . NOW ' r EXTRA ANNOUNCEMENT SALE! MSC Student Finance Ctr. July 9 - 8 a.m.! First Come, First Serve! FOR RENT 3BDRM 2 BATH As low as $375/mo. * Includes washer and dryer and all kitchen appliances * Convenient to campus and shopping centers THOMAS PROPERTIES 696-7714 or 693-0982 after 6 and weekends 696-4384or 693-4783 casa 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 Economical year round! TOWNSHIRE MANOR APTS. 401 Lake. Bryan 822-2117 Water, sewer, garbage PAID Pool, covered parking. Large Apts. SERVICES processing: pm cripts. reports, i . letters. 779-7868. msals. dis ewsletters. rtations, thes erm papers. l yping, over 10 years experience. Will also transcribe dictation reasanable. 693-1598 161116 HELP WANTED 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. bedroom. I 1/2 biilh house completely lumished! 701 Chalet. C.S. 846-2014. On shuttle bus. 160t 10 Well kept 2 BDR Duplex. Ideal location. $325.00. 805 B Frio. 1-273-2479. 169t5 Luxury 2 bdrm./2 hath 4 plex. Washer, dryer, deck, Ja cuzzi. Call 846-1633. 170tl FOR SALE HOUSE FOR SALE. 2 bdr.. 1 bth. Bryan, must see! Call Bo Ward. 846-8788, 822-3217. 170t4 Women’s hike for sale. Almost new 10 speed Schwim light. 165.00 696-1525. 164t8 Is it trm- you can liny jeeps foi S44 tlirom'li tin- I’.S. Stovei-Iiiiieiil J Cel tin- tacts todav! Call 1- ! 12-742-1142 c\t. VWO. |.>2ll Southwood off S. West Parkway. 322 like new brick. <>8,000. $4,475. down $792. month. 713-681-201IB3t 16 Yamaha scooter CV80. Excellent condition with cover. 764-7877. 170t4 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. 846-3755. 9it»n 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 BAKER STREET MINI WAREHOUSE 5x5 to 10x30 $18 to $77 846-5794 DAYS 779-3938 NIGHTS Lee C. Burns and Company is now accepting resumes for Heal Estate Appraiser Trainee Postions in the Houston area. Please contact Marvin Stanton at (713)359-1110. All majors accepted. 170t5 Department of Communications has two faculty posi tions available to begin fall 1985. Need person (1) to teach reporting and editing courses and (2) to teach broadcast news courses. Salat v to $20,000 for 9 month appointment. Craduate degree with strong profes sional experience preferred. Contact Edward J. Smith, Department of Communications, Texas A&M L’niver- sit\. College Station. Texas 77843. (-409) 845-4011 by .Julv 10 application deadline. Texas A&rM is an Equal Opportunity through AI Tinnative Action Employer. Part time experienced short or long term auto parts store counterperson. 10 to 1 Mon. thru Tri.. everv other weekend. Bill lord Amo Supplv. 1136 Villa Maria. Brxan. 823-8033. I66t5 CHILD CARE Specializing newborn thru 2 vrs. 1 imite<l openings. Sugat -N-Spice. 34(M Cavin. Bt van. 846-9787. 166t30 WANTED 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 MIDLAND HEIGHTS TYPING Professional & accurate typing on word processor - Copying <& 4c Expert resume services by career writers Typesetting for resumes, flyers, posters, etc. 10% OFF ANY WORK BROUGHT IN BETWEEN SAM & 12 NOON 846-6486 403 Univ. W, across Post Office in Northgate HEADACHE STUDY WANTED: Volunteers to participate in a 3-hour Ten sion Headache Questionare Study. Mon etary incentive $$. Must meet the following: Male or Female, 18 years of age or older Frequent tension headaches. No medi cation or caffeine containing beverages within 4 hours of enrollment Evidence of tension headache at time of enrollment. For moreinformation call 776-0411. 170130 The Battalion SPREADING THE NEWS Classified 845-2611 Page 6/The Battalion/Tuesday July 9, 1985 — WORLD AMD NATION ‘Hitler Diaries’ shoe trial ends; 3 sentenced by Jeff MacNell| SHOf If I'U'M i'm having lii WITU TUP POOMUMflATinW MA rl^A Associated Press Tennis partner wanted to play weekly intermediate or better. 693-5507. 170t3 HAMBURG, West Germany — A Hamburg court convicted three peo ple Monday of arranging the sale of the forged “Hitler Diaries,” but the judge also said Stern magazine was too easily duped in the $3.1 million swindle. The prosecution called it the liter ary hoax of the century. Chief Judge Holger Schroeder told a packed courtroom that the Hamburg-based, mass circulation magazine “stood naked,” without any proof that the journals were real, as it went to press with them in April 1983. Historians and the public alike rushed to peek into the private thoughts of Nazi dictator Adolf Hit ler as Stern began publishing its sen sation. Stern hailed the excerpts as the “journalistic scoop of the post war period.” Experts quickly denounced the 60 volumes as crude fakes. Stern never got back any of the $3.1 million it paid for the fake di aries. Convicted of fraud were former Stern reporter Gerd Heidemann, 53, who procured the fake diaries for the magazine, and confessed forger Konrad Kujau, 47, a dealer in Nazi memorabilia and a handwriting expert. Heidemann was sentenced to four years, eight months impris onment, and Kujau to 4‘/a years. Edith Lieblang, 44, a friend of Kujau, was convicted of receiving stolen property — some of Kujau’s earnings from the forgeries. She drew an eight-month suspended sentence. Both Heidemann and Kujau had been held in “investigative custody” for two years, and that time will be deducted from their sentences. Lawyers for all three told the State Court of Hamburg they would ap peal and all three were released until then. Kujau, an East German emigrant, said he expected the verdict. “I wrote the things, didn’t I?” he said. Prosecutors charged that Heide mann kept at least $600,000 of what Stern paid for the diaries. Stern magazine published two in stallments of the diaries, in April and May 1983, before government experts denounced them as bogus. Stern said in a statement Monday it accepted the court ruling, includ ing the parts in which Stern and Gruner, its publishing company, and ahr were rebuked to essly. The judge said Stern and its pub lishing company helped cheat them selves by not checking the diaries’ authenticity and by carelessly fun- neling millions through Heidemann. He said Stern’s top management “failed to stop the countdown” to publication though they knew gov ernment experts said more tests were needed to authenticate the one page of the diaries Stern had asked them to verify. “No one (at Stern) asked, ‘Are the diaries really valid?”’ thejudge said. Lebanon Moslem leaders discuss U.S. sanctions, ways to bring civil war to an end As Associated Press BEIRUT, Lebanon — Moslem leaders met Monday in Syria, the power broker in this war-ravaged nation, seeking ways to halt the bloodshed and to counter U.S. sanctions imposed on Lebanon in retaliation for the TWA hijacking. The sounds of combat filled the air in west Beirut and the northern port of Tripoli, where they have be come as common as traffic noise in other cities. Two buildings used as sniper roosts were blown up in Tri poli, killing eight people, police said. Political and religious leaders of Lebanon’s Shiite, Sunni and Druse sects met with Abdel-Halim Khad- dam, the Syrian vice president, for five hours Monday in the first session of the two-day conference in Damas cus. They were expected to draw up a security plan in tended to curb feuding between Moslem militias and end a wave of lawlessness in west Beirut that has grown in 10 years of civil war. As the meeting began in Khadd^im’s office, gunmen of Nabih Berri’s Shiite militia Amal, and the Druse Pro gressive Socialist Party led by Walid Jumblatt fought a one-hour battle in west Beirut’s Mosseitbeh, Lija and Ras el-Nabaa neighborhoods. A joint Amal-Druse security committee called a cease-fire, but the fighters continued trading sniper fire and grenades. The battle began when Amal tried to put up a poster ■ SAINT-I ■AY, Franc going 100 m of one of their slain “martyrs” in Druse territory, il*| t,)r tra ^ er tr sort of act that often sets off firefights in this nationffi|| veen aujon many factions and little government. B a y- Police ^ Heavy fighting was reported in Tripoli, 50 mile|Llled and 6/ north of Beirut, between the Syrian-backed Arabia™ Police and Knights and the Islamic Unification militia. comotive an< Police said two people were killed and at least ontljais of the wounded in 10 hours of fighting in Tripoli’s Baal Moil I jumped the sen, Bab Tabbaneh and Mallouleh districts. Slowed thre A cease-fire was arranged for 3:30 p.m. by offidalsolgiouse. The the rival groups, and Lebanese and Syrian army repffiassengers. resentatives. I The U.S. An official statement in Damascus said Syria’s Traits preliminary port Workers’ Union decided Monday to “take anuirJ Americans v» oer of measures to confront American threats to in-K The emba pose a siege of Beirut airport,” according to theofftcui Americans : Syrian Arab News Agency. Ind the fiftl The statement followed a meeting in Damascusbc! ipactory cor tween union president Nasser Mohrez and theleaderof the Lebanese transport workers, Abdel-Amri Najda. Mohrez said Syria and Lebanon were calling an et traordinary session of the Pan-Arab Federation o!| Transport Workers to “adopt a collective Arab react against the U.S. measures.” The Reagan administration has denied U.S. landing rights to Lebanon’s passenger and cargo-carrying au| lines and has said it is taking political and legal stepsto isolate Beirut International Airport, which it called; haven for hijackers. pmiauiui y uui Wc Off, Flash fires continue to blaze out of control in western U.S. Associated Press for acting care- A savage 55,000-acre Galifornia brush fire destroyed five homes Monday and sent thousands of peo ple fleeing flames and choking smoke, challenging fire forces al ready weary from hundreds of blazes across the western United States and Canada. Firefighters beat back a 30-foot wall of flame that licked at the north eastern flank of San Luis Obispo, Calif., but wind gusts sprayed chunks of embers over rooftops, streets and yards. The advancing fire, which started 130 miles northwest of Los Angeles on July 1, was among the latest and largest of a series of fires which have killed three, leveled more than 140 homes and chewed through more than half a million acres since late June. Many fires still burned out of control Monday. Firefighters battled brush, forest and range blazes, large and small and many lightning-caused, in Cali fornia, Idaho, Oregon, Utah, Mon tana, Washington, Nevada and Ore gon on Monday. Other fires in Arizona, Nebraska and Wyoming were either contained or controlled over the weekend, fire fighters said. The San Luis Obispo fire started near Santa Margarita Lake, gutting seven homes and 14 other buildings in its earlv going, said California Di vision ol Forestry spokeswoman Rhonda Lazzarini. But Monday morning, erratic winds fanned it into a firestorm that advanced on the city of 35,000, and thousands fled their hillside homes ahead of the wall of flame. By mid morning, police said at least five homes were charred. SACRA? ornia’s top 'onday th oisonings ounding s iberate mi 'Ot by pes ious crops State Fo< for Clare E uming it wming it v He said fCeived infc t0 that effe Highways and the airport wert closed, telephone lines were jammed and municipal water pressure dropped as people sprayed their homes. Smoke looming over the cilv kept aerial firefighting equipment on the ground. “That fire’s getting close,” said resident Dan Dorn as evacuation or ders were barked over a loudspeaker in his neighborhood. “It could take the hillside and come down. “I sure hope those guys can stop it.” He then loaded his family in his possession-packed station wagon and left. Poll: Most Americans find time to exercise Associated Press NEW YORK — Almost six in 10 Americans exercise to keep fit, according to a Media General-Asso ciated Press poll. Most of those who don’t run, lift weights, bicycle or otherwise put their bodies in motion blame lack of time or say their stren uous schedules give them enough of a workout. In h nationwide telephone survey of 1,402 adults con ducted by Media General and the Associated Press, 57 percent said they exercised in addition to their normal daily activities. till In a nationwide telephone survey of 1,402 adults, 57 percent said they exercised in addition to their normal daily activities. Walking was the most common form of exercise, with one-third of the respondents saying they walked to keep physically fit. Half of the re spondents said they got their exer cise indoors: jumping rope, lifting weights, dancing and doing calisthe nics, aerobics or yoga were among the exercises mentioned. “I think the American public is more sophisticated about how to exercise for fitness purposes, but I don’t think they’re as sophisticated as we would want them to be,” said Ash Hayes, acting director of the President’s Council on Physical Fit ness and Sports. The Media General-AP poll found that four in Wpeople without a regular exercise program said they got enough exercise in their normal daily activities and three in 10 said they didn’t have time to exercise. Other reasons for not exercising in cluded not liking exercise, laziness and boredom. Among those who exercised, 52 percent exercised by themselves and 48 percent exercised with friends, relatives or with a group such as an exercise class. Forty percent said they exercised daily; 48 percent said icy One-third of the exercisers said they had started exercising for en joyment. Twenty-seven percent said they did it to improve their health, ana 21 percent said they wanted to lose weight. Despite the recent popularity of road races and other recreational competition, racing was not a con cern for most of those in the survey Respondents in the Media Gen eral-Associated Press poll included a random, scientific sampling of 1,T adults across the country May 1-7. For a poll based on about 1,4. interviews, the results are subject to an error margin of 3 percentage points either way because of chance variations in the sample. Horse Quality Hay for the discriminating feeder.New Mexico Alfalfa-top quality, fine leafy and green. Average weight per bale on this shipment 83 lb. at $6.75 per bale. Brazos County Coastal Bermuda highly fertilized and har vested at under 4 weeks growth-fine, leafy and green, wire tied at $3.65 per bale. Each lot of our hay will have a protein test from TAMU. Load and part load prices available on New Mexico and Kan sas Alfalfa. LLOYD JOYCE AGRl SERVICES 1302 GROESBECK ST. BRYAN, TEXAS 77803 / 823-7596 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 PAIN STUDY TAMU students with recent (7 days) untreated muscle or bone injury, get $25 for taking safe leading prescription muscle relaxant. G & S Studies, Inc. 846-5933 Tut WE BUY BOOKS EVERY DAY! And remember we give 20% more in trade for used books. LOUPOT’S BOOKSTORE Northgate - Across from the Post Office 846-0636 Master's Styling Center Lower Level of Memorial Student Center Texas A&M Campus Styles for Men and Women Mid-Summer Special Shampoo and Cut M $10 For the month of July ^iiiii