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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (July 16, 1985)
Battalion Classifieds FOR RENT 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 401 Stasney College Station Mon.-Sat. 8:30-5:30 Sun. 1:00-5:00 696-3455 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 16 8tfn §putlMfet\lIlage Apartmeqjjs 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 Economical year round! TOWNSHIRE MANOR APTS. 401 Lake. Bryan 822-2117 Water, sewer, garbage PAID Pool, covered parking. Large Apts. A bargain at $300.00! 2 bdr- m.unfurnished apt. in fourplex. Washer/dryer connections, trees, near shuttle, 1.7 miles from campus. 693-7761 or 845- 7383. 173112 SONNENBLICK APARTMENTS 3700 Plainsman Large 2 bedroom, Excellent Loca tion Near Bryan High Covered parking, pool, laundry room $100 deposit 1 month free $279/mo. 846-6874 693-7542 i73t4 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. Well kept 2 BUR Duplex. Ideal location. $325.00. 805 B Frio. 1-273-2479. . I69t5 FOR SALE Hewlett Packard 41 CV with stat. pac $150. Call 696- 2695 after 5:00. 172t5 Is it true you can huy jeeps I'ui 344 thmuyll the U S. government? Get the facts tutlav! Call 1-.312-742-1142 ext. 8390. ‘ 152tl 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 Tennis partner wanted to plav weekly or intermediate or better. 704-792I. 173t3 CHILD CARE S|K*iiali/in^ newlMHit thru 2 wv limited openings. Sugai-N-Spice. 3-KM l C ia\ in. Bryan. S-4()-^|7S7. H>ht30 HELP WANTED Corporation seeking enthusiastic hard working indi vidual for sales/mgmt. Excellent opportunity for a new graduate w anting to slay in C.S. area for entry level po sition in a corporate setting. Send resume: Lvnn Har- tung.913 D Harvey C.S. TX 77840. 173t2 15 students needed to conduct telephone interviews Monday thru Thursday 5:30-8:30 p.m. July 15th to August 15th. Transportation needed. Tontact Dept, of Rural Sot iologv. 845-5332. $4.00 to $4.50 per hour. 1 7115 Lee C. Burns and Company is now accepting resumes for Real Estate Appraiser Trainee Postions in the Houston area. Please contact Marvin Stanton at (713)359-1110. All majors accepted. 170t5 Experienced bicycle mechanic needed. Part time pre ferred. 260-981 1. 173t5 WANTED 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 SERVICES TYPING-WORD PROCESSING *Fast and Dependable •Personalized Service •We understand form and style •Beginning bur sixth year AUTOMATED CLERICAL SERVICES 110 Lincoln. C.S. 693-1070 MIDLAND HEIGHTS TYPING Professional & accurate typing on word processor - Copying @ 4e 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 BAKER STREET MINI WAREHOUSE 5x5 to 10x30 $18 to $77 846-5794 DAYS 779-3938 NIGHTS 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. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING. Large or small jobs. ABEL SERVICES. 846-ABEl. 173tl0 Word processing: Proposals, dissertations, theses, manuscripts, reports, newsletters, term papers, re sumes, letters, 779-7868. 172t8 Typing, over 10 years experience. Will also transcribe dictation reasanable. 693-1598 161116 Visa/Mastcr Card. You can get them. Free information. Diversified Services, P.O. Box 15406, Gainesville, FL. 32604. 17 It? HELP WANTED MODEL AUDITIONS FOR POST OAK MALL MERCHANTS. Thursday July 18, 7-8 p.m. at Post Oak Mall. Professional experience not necessary. Please bring photo. 17313 THE HOUSTON CHRONICLE Needs carriers for immediateopen- ings as well as for fall semesters. Routes earn between $400.-$700. per month plus a generous trans portation allowance. Please call JulianMcMurrayJ59^32v^^i7it8 Worker needed. Odd jobs, 693-5286. 172t2 f PUTT THEATRES $2.50 1st sum omr each dat (Except Holidays) SENIOR CITIZENS ANYTIME ] Post Oak Mall 3 ,N mall 2:30-S:00-7:30-10:00 The h£at is on at Saint Elmo's Fire. EAtILIO ESTEVEZ ROB LOWE t. Elmos Fire 2:45-5:00-7:15-9:30 STEVEN SPIELBERG Presents we GOONieS 4— m k a .. lUC SCCWGT Of THC SHC-Rk CINEMA 3 31S COLLEGE N. ®*® ®*’* 1:20-3:20-5:20-7:20-9:20 STALLONE is back as... RAMBO First Blood Part II ® Summer Kiddle Show*. Tueeday Doors Open 9:30 a m - "BUGS BUNNY'S toot RABBIT TALES"-Feature 10:00 a.m. Page 6/The Battalion/Tuesday July 16, 1985 lAfhrti’c iiri Tuesday /i'ltSTOBENT GOVERNMENT: is sponsoring a hook exchange i ffii : in 214 Pavilion through today, • / ; ^ CO-OP ASSOCIATION: is meeting at 7 p.m. in 302 Rudder. Jo Hudson wih speak on communications in &:workingen- vironmenn : CHRISTAINS ON CAMPOS: is meeting at noon in 505 Rud- der to have fellowship and Bible study concerning the as- • SS&t’ FILM SOCIETY: is having an organizational meeting at . .. 117:45 p.m. in the MSC lounge to discuss the fall program. GREENPEACE: is meeting at 7:30 p.m. in 504 Rudder. • ; Items far What*s Up should be submitted to The Battalion, M 216 Reed McDonald, no less than three days prior to de sired publication date. Dallas police hire 3 refugees to aid communications Associated Press DALLAS — Dallas police, who of ten face language and social barriers while helping members of the city’s Southeast Asian population, have hired three refugees to help commu nicate with the newcomers. Officer Ron Cowart said police have had to deal with a tremendous communications gap, which the city has not yet been able to penetrate. “The only way we can help them is if they help us,” said Cowart, who has worked with the refugee popula tion for two years. “Often times, if a crime is being committed, they just shut their doors. They are in fear of their lives and think they are next.” Police hired Thao Dam, once a civil affairs officer for the National ist army in South Vietnam. He uided villagers for 15 years until aigon fell to the Communists in 1975. Dam said his job in Dallas will be much the same — “helping my peo ple.” Police also hired Pov Thai, a 23- year-old Cambodian refugee, and Warriors Le Keovilay, a 38-year-old Laotian refugee, to serve as public service representatives to tne estimated 16,000 Vietnamese, 8,000 Cambodi ans and 8,000 Laotians in Dallas. “The new refugees that just came here need a lot of help from us,” Dam, 50, said. “When ! came here, I saw that many of our people have problems with the culture. Every thing is different here. They don't know any little thing about Ameri can laws.” Police also are hoping the liaisons will help stem increasing crime in Dallas’ refugee communities. “In Vietnam, the police force had to deal with Communists so they got to be tough with the people,” Dam said. “People here still think the po lice are unfair. They don’t like to talk to or report to the police.” The new officers will dress in plain clothes until people in the com munities trust them. The three recruits will walk door- to-door introducing themselves. They will be called on as translators and plan to start crime prevention programs. Survival game players participate in fantasy Associated Press DENTON — They come every weekend, rain or snow, freezing cold or 100-degree heat, to test each other and themselves as “warriors.” Survival Games Inc. offers day long immersions into childhood fan tasy, where participants can play war games, stalk each oilier and be stalked. Why? Tom Levesque, who attended a session here with four friends from nearby Dallas, said, “It’s a chance to be a kid again.” Another participant, Gary Davis, jokingly told the Dallas Morning News, “I like to kill and maim.” About 40 men and two women were divided into two teams during a recent session. Each team — one with yellow armbands and the other in orange armbands — has a flag and flag base. The object is to cap ture the other team’s flag and flaunt it from your base. Each game lasts about an hour, then there’s a rest period and an other round. If no one captures a flag, the team with the most survi vors wins. Players are armed with .68-caliber pistols that fire paint pellets color- coded for each team. Sometimes the pellets don’t break. If they do, the splash of bright orange or yellow paint means the hit player is elimi nated. “We’ve only got two rules,” Capt. Terry Vallejo, a hotel security worker and team captain, said as his team prepared to file off into the woods. “Take no prisoners, and never say die.” His team is made up of 17 work ers from the Adolphus Hotel. On the opposing team, there is Levesque, who works during the week selling X-ray equipment; Da vis, a construction superintendent; Larry Johnson, a computer techni cian; and others. “We’re the rookies,” Johnson said before the first game, as he looked over Vallejo’s troops. Walt Harrison, business manager for Survivor Games Inc. of North Texas, which has staged the games in Denton for two years, explains the rules. Then the whistle blows, and the games begin. Soon, both flags have been cap tured and are being returned to the respective enemy bases. The orange team manages to hoist the yellow flag first and win. “I couldn’t tell the good guys from the bad guys,” Mitchell McDaniel, who works for an executive search firm, said of the first round. Once, he admitted, he fired at teammate, Levesque. But they all agreed that they would do it again. He said he is careful about the game’s image. “People relate it to military train ing, to terrorism or insurgency,” he said. “They don’t understand it’s a game,” he said. French pair can’t go home, go to Paris, Texas to wed Associated Press PARIS — Although Yannick As- tarie and Florence Lohier couldn’t o home to France for their wed- ing, they can still say they were married in Paris. The Dallas couple exchanged vows on Sunday — Bastille Day, one of the biggest holidays in France — under an arch of pink-blossomed crepe myrtle trees in a park in down town Paris. “We saw the movie, ‘Paris, Texas,’ and the town was so famous in France after the movie, I said we should get married in Paris, Texas,” said the 33-year-old bride, who is manager of a store at a Dallas shop ping mall. Residents of this Northeast Texas city treated the wedding as a big event. About 25 residents joined the cou ple and their friends and Mayor George Fisher made them honorary citizens. “Alter she had the idea, I jumped on it, and she called there and they were very enthusiastic about it,” said Astarie, 31, an accountant for a French bakery in Dallas. The two met a year ago at the Dal- las-Fort Worth International Air- ort. Lohier was beginning a new usiness in Dallas and Astarie, a na tive of rural Mussidan in southwest France, was helping French firms get a foothold in Dallas. The couple left Dallas with 25 friends and 30 pounds of puff-pas- try hors d’oeuvres for the reception. Astaire explained that he and his wife chose a small town for their wedding and honeymoon because they enjoy exploring small Texas towns on weekends. Problem Pregnancy? we listen, we care, we help Free pregnancy tests concerned counselors Brazos Valley Crisis Pregnancy Service We re local! 4340 Carter Creek Pkw-y Suite 107 24 hr. Hotline Bryan, TX 823-CARE • Special discounts • Free copies • Watch for your card in the mail kinko's 201 College Main 846-7008 FACULTY CLUB Bake in the Sun or Bask in Fun! Now, weekend Tanners, there’s a better way, Perfect Tan! You can work on your tan a couple of times a week to get a rich, natural look without burning. Just relax and enjoy our fan- cooled tanning beds while listen ing to music through stereo headphones. Stop sweating it out on the weekends and enjoy your time in the sun. For a Tantalizing look that’s Safer-Than-Sunshine, Get a Perfect Tan! Free Introductory Session til January 1, 1986. Call today for an appointment! Our hours are: 9 am to 9 pm Monday through Saturday 764-2771 V J 2:10-4:54.7:24.9:55 CLINT EASTWOOD PALE RIDER dj; — • 9 ® 2:40-4:45-7:10-9:30 'MrOKNlCI CHEVY CHASE is JOHN BOOtti j ITetihis 2:35-5:00-7:30-9:40 RED SONJA ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER EH? 2:45-5:05-7:25-9:45 BEVERLY HIU-S ZV*-' . j ‘Stemb’. MILLION Stude jlege Stati NO CONTE CHANELLO’S PE HAS FAST-FREE DELIVERY 12” 16 ” 20' pepperoni bell pep? Italian sausage onions Canadian bacon blackoto hamburger green oik mushrooom anefc jalapeno pineapp. extra cheese thick cue nd bene All y<: The: ceeds goi “This hit’s a pr Straight i High; [free Kin! “1 thi [will recei given out High [of the citi The: and will right on [hit Foch Main aga High Jential si hem tol “The streets tl the polio High finishing first fern; “I fit with wall “Thi: could pa run this i And Coca Cola 17 &32i SUMMER HOUR: North M Til 1a.m. Fit.-Sat Il-2a.m. Sun II-12 a.m. South M-T ll-2p.m45li FA ll-2p.m&5i! Sat ll-2n T Sun. Il-12,». CALLUS! 696-0234 846-3768 Pick up an 8” pizza and rea a 16 oz. Coke FREE! When Is Your Rental No Socrot At All? WHEN OVER 30,000 PEOPLE READ IT IN THE BATTALION G*» into C/rCwleltOl' 1 If h __ clouifitd mfton d’lplnl I *'J your f*n»ol I 1 ^ J it • o Ion, way to do bnoWl 845-2611 9 • v-, ZAIffAPE 4004 Harvey Rd. College Station, Tx. RESTAURANT 308 N. Main Bryan, Texas Coupon Tue.sduv thru Thursday Jose’s 5:O0-9;45 Zarape 5:00-8;45 2 for 1 Special Buy one dinner and get the second dinner of equal or less value FRF E Not good with any other special or coupon Please present coupon when ordering Ail gitikd Fit.iituv. Seafood and Alcohol not inelwk'd -.Tuesday-Sunday ’ - *7, « *• 11:00 a.m.-9:45 p.m.*. , •*, j Closed Monday . - * T *• , * * • « Jose’s • > •/, V%. Tuesday-Sunday ’ •* 9:30 a.m.-8:45 * :■ *V* Closed Monday‘j,. *' ** • V j* ‘‘A Zarape* \ - * •* i • *. *. lUmWMMUMtlUUMl