The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, July 18, 1985, Image 4

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    Battalion Classifieds
FOR RENT
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
Mental health
Hospitals add to staff, meet court order
Associated Press
411 Harvey Road, C.S.
693-1111
OOtfn
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 lestfn
casa
iel sol
2 Blocks from Campus
Church across the street* 2 blocks from stores* 2 blocks from nite
life on University
Pool
Jacuzzi
Large Party Room
Open 7 days a week
Mon.-Sat. 8:30-5:30 Sun. 1:00-5:00
Basketball Goals
On Premise Security
On Premise Maintenance
401 Stasney College Station
696-3455
^Village
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.
D. R. CAIN RENTALS
*now preleasing *
$100.00 deposits
Shuttle bus Service
LONGMIRE HOUSE APARTMENTS
YELLOWHOUSE APARTMENTS
BRAZOS HOUSE APARTMENTS
693-8850
3002 S. Texas Avenue
College Station 174t3 Q
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.
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 17314
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
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
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
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. 173U2
Wi'll kept 2 Ixlr. duplex. Ideal location. SiWo.OO. 8<):5A
Frio Circle. Available August 1:>. 1-273-2479. I74ta
FOR SALE
New Apple 300 modem SI00.00. Unopened parallel
interlace $70.00 prices negotiable. 822-7055. 174t5
Hewlett Packard 41 C\ r with stat. pac $150. Call 696
2695 af ter 5:00. 172t5
CHILD CARE
TYPING-WORD PROCESSING
•East and Dependable
•Personalized Service
•We understand form and style
•Beginning our sixth year
AUTOMATED CLERICAL SERVICES
110 Lincoln. C.S. 693-1070
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. 9itfn
BAKER STREET
MINI WAREHOUSE
5x5 to 10x30
$18 to $77
846-5794 DAYS
779-3938 NIGHTS
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 8AM & 12 NOON
846-6486
403 Univ. W, across Post Office in Northgate
Specializing newlrorn thru 2 vrs. Limited openings.
Sugat-N-Spice. 3404 Cavitt. Bi vall. 846-9787. 166t30 ’
Word processing: Proposals, dissertations, theses,
manuscripts, reports, newsletters, term papers, re
sumes, letters, 779-7868. 172t8
HELP WANTED
Typing, over 10 years experience. Will also transcribe
dictation reasanablc. 693-1598 161116
THE HOUSTON CHRONICLE
is currently excepting applications for immediate
route carrier positions. The positions require work
ing early morning hours delivering papers. Some
seasonal soliciting is also required. Call Andy at
693-7815 for an appointment. . 7t - fq
TYl’ING/WORl) PROCESSING. Large or small jobs.
ABEL SERVICES. 846-ABEL 173tl0
AUSTIN — State mental hospi
tals met a court-ordered deadline
for increased staffing but could have
problems staying in compliance, the
coordinator of a special panel said
Wednesday.
The hospitals achieved compli
ance through a combination of pa
tient reduction and hiring, accord
ing to the court-appointed panel
monitoring MHMR. David Pharis,
panel coordinator, said the actual
change was a net of 925.
The report also said “. . . that the
rate of staff attrition in the hospitals
is affecting the hospitals’ capacity to
remain staffed at authorized levels.”
Problem Pregnancy?
a we listen, we care, we help
♦ Free pregnancy tests
a concerned counselors
It Brazos Valley
It Crisis Pregnancy Service]
1 > We’re local!
4340 Carter Creek Pkwy
Suite 107 24 hr. Hotline|
I Bryan, TX 823-CARE
The Texas Department of Mental
Health and Mental Retardation is
under an order by U.S. District
Judge Barefoot Sanders of Dallas to
to reduce the number of patients or
hire more mental health workers.
Sanders had set a May 31 deadline
for the agency to either hire 900
workers or reduce the patient load
by 900.
A report showing the depart
ment’s progress was filed Tuesday in
Sanders’ court.
The overall goal is a staff-patient
ratio of l-to-5 during day shifts and
l-to-10 at night by September.
The report expressed concern
about the department’s ability to re
main in compliance since “. . . the
rate of discharging patients from the
hospitals may be slowing.”
During a Wednesday interview,
Pharis said it has become more diffi
cult to find patients who can be re
leased because most of the patients
who could be discharged have al
ready been released. The remaining
ones are quite ill, he said.
The 1985 Legislature gave
MHMR $(54.4 million to meet the
court order.
Around town
Soccer ccilnpTegisIration Is open
The Bryan Parks and Reereation Youth Soccer Camp will be
held August 19 through 23 lor boys and girls ages 4 to 6. Camp is
each day from 8 aum. to 10 ajm. The fee is $35- The fee is $40 tor 7
to 12 year olds. The sessiphTor that age group is being held August
26 to SO from 8 a.ra. to 14 deadline is August 1. To
register-caJltlie779~5622v:^^^^:-.:.^?] ; l:v
TAMU club hosts spaceweek exhibit
The TAMU L5 Space Flight Club h having the Third Annual
Spaceweek Exhibit at Post Lak Mall through Saturday- The exhibit
space
esters and brochures from many space companies. There will also
oe a space art contest for those under If
mitted to the information desk at the mall.
State birthing
centers forced
to close doors
Associated Press
SAN ANTONIO — Three Rio
Grande Valley birthing centers have
been forced to close because of a na
tionwide cutbacks in malpractice in
surance.
The clinics affected are the
Brownsville Community Health
Center and Su Clinica Familia
branches in Harlingen and Ray-
mondville. The three facilities
stopped delivering babies last week
when their insurance coverage ran
out.
“The options in the valley are now
ital, a la
a nospitat, a lay midwne, going to
Mexico or waiting until the last min
ute and calling it an emergency,”
said Jose Camacho, director of the
Texas Association of Community
Health Centers.
'Hill Street Blues' gets
aid from Dallas police
Associated Press
DALLAS — A chance meeting on
a Colorado ski lift sparked a
friendship that has provided the
television series “Hill Street Blues”
with some free material from the
Dallas Police Department, actor
Charles Haid says.
Haid, who portrays Andy Renko,
a loud-mouthed, tobacco-chewing
patrol officer, said he met Dallas po
lice Sgt. David McCoy during the
Peace Officers Downhill Race in
1980.
Haid said this week in a telephone
interview during a break from
filming the show in Los Angeles.
“We’ve stolen a lot of strange ex
pressions from them,” he said. “We
use some cases and just their general
attitude . . . Part of Renko’s sense of
humor and the way he talks funny
comes from the guys in the Dallas
department. And there’s a few ex-
f iletives that got by the censor direct
rojp the DPD.”
“It’s very frustrating to sit there
with the money to run a birthing
center and save children’s lives and
not have the insurance through no
fault of our own,” he said. “It’s a vi
cious cycle.”
Last year, almost 1,000 babies
were delivered at the clinics for low-
income mothers. The clinics have
been the only option between high-
tal birt
The actor dubbed McCoy “the of
ficer my character would most like to
be like.”
Since the race, the Dallas Police
Department has provided the show
with phrases, stories and characters.
Haid has made an important con
tribution to the Dallas police, McCoy
said. On Saturday, Haid and several
other Hill Street regulars will be in
town for the Dallas police rodeo.
Haid has participated three times
previously in the event, which raises
money for the Shriners’ Hospital for
Burned Children in Galveston.
priced hospital births and the tradi
tional lay midwives for these low-in
come women, officials said.
The State Board 6f Insurance has
been asked to provide insurance for
certified nurse midwives through
the state’s Medical Joint Underwrit
ing Association.
But such a provision is not ex
pected to help the situation because
there is no statutory provision for
the underwriting association to in
sure the birthing centers, officials
said.
The insurance crisis arose last
year when the Mutual Fire, Marine
and Inland Insurance Co. decided to
discontinue liability insurance to
about 1,400 certified nurse mid-
Convict feared sheriff, escaped from jail
Tennis partner wanted to play weekly or intermediate
or better. 764-7921. 173t3
Associated Press
TENNESSEE COLONY — Con
victed kidnapper James Wesley
Foote said he broke out of jail be
cause he feared the Johnson County
sheriff would kill him.
While free, he feared he had been
allowed to escape so law officers
could kill him for running, he said.
Foote, who escaped July 4 by
climbing a fence at Johnson County
Jail, is back in a Texas prison unit
serving a life sentence for the kid
napping of Amy McNiel, 13, of Al
varado.
In his first interview since his re
capture* Foote told the Dallas Times
Herald he spent his short-lived free
dom moving by night, and hiding
and sleeping by day.
Foote, 34, said he remained free
because people were not paying at
tention and his friends were willing
to help him.
But he said his escape had been so
easy that he began to fear the sher-
iffs office wanted him to flee so they
could hunt him down and shoot
him.
Johnson County Sheriff Eddy
Boggs said, “That’s totally false.
Ain’t no way I’m going to threaten a
man or allow that to happen.”
Foote was transferred to the John
son County Jail from a Texas prison
unit for questioning in the murder
fal&.
no wny I’m going to
threaten a man or allow
that (murder) to happen. r *
| ^fohmah.County Sher*
of a Colleyville woman when the es
cape occurred. He is now at the Cof-
field Unit.
He said he decided to climb the
fence at Johnson County d aring an
exercise period, because he feared
he would be pinned with the Colley
ville murder and possibly get the
death sentence.
Foote said he ran through down
town Cleburne and across U.S.
Highway 67 until he reached a rural
area near State Highway 174. He
stopped, he said, because he twisted
his ankle while climbing the fence,
and he needed to rest and hide.
He buried himself in a shallow
trench in a plowed field and covered
himself with straw, he said. And he
said he could hear the helicopters
and bloodhounds searching for him.
At nightfall, he started traveling
again, he said. He hitched a ride
with a teen-ager to Interstate 35, and
a truck driver picked him up later
the same day.
“My roughest ordeal was when
the truck driver let me off at the Da
iry Twin right there (in Alvardo
where the McNiels live).
“I was afraid of going through Al
varado in Johnson County,” Foote
said. “I didn’t want to be caught in
Johnson County. I thought if I
would have been caught in Johnson
County I wouldn’t be here today.”
Although the sheriff and the Mc
Niel family feared Foote would seek
revenge — a wish he expressed after
his conviction, Foote said he wasn’t
interested in bothering the family.
Foote made his way toward Blos
som near the Oklahoma border,
where his parents live.
He escaped with four quarters in
his pocket, he said. But he was afraid
to phone his parents for fear the
lines might be tapped. So on July 8,
he said, he called a friend whom he
would not identify.
SCHULMAN THEATRE
S2.50 1
2:30-4:50-7:20-9:55
EXPLORERS
YOU DO*n NflD A DBTVHTS UCtHSi
2:30-4:50-7:15-MsT
Gerreodyfw |
ihe ride of you Sit fi
dO&scfflSJ*
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" 2:20-4^0-7: l5-^05
HOID OUT FC» MAO MAX
rxa a KB GBtATia AJDvtwniK
MEl GIBSON.
MAD MAX
CXXae*~s}-9 K3
Silverado
2:1 (J-4:50-7:20-9:55
Va&~2J2!} ti l
2:J5-4:«-7:JM4 |
CLINT
Eastwood
PALE RIDER
THE \D\EVnJRIMO\lE
OF THE YEAR.’ j
->TTO" Htf WHTUar '[
★ ;
2:40-4:45-7:10-9:30
CHEVY CHASE is
Fletch ^
-mthfornuumi E
JOHN BOORMMiJ
2:35-5:00-7:30-9:40
RED SONJA
AKrtOLD
samAfUEnroorn
Sc®,
2:2S-4:4S-7:lMJt |
An American tutUKiry
2:45-5 815-7:25-4:45
bevercthiixs
MILLIONS,
B
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PUTT THEATRES
__ __ 1st SHOW OUT EACH W!
$2‘.50 (E»c.pt Holidiyi)
SENIOR CITIZENS AHHW
Post Oak Mall 3 '"THEmau ««
2 30 S 00-7:30-10:00
The hear is on at Saint Elmo's Fir
EMILIO ESTEVEZ ROB LOWE {
it. Elmo's Fire
2:45-5:00-7:15-9:30
STEVEN SPIELBERG Presems
nteGOONieS Y
Jon ocN-enrvjre i ,^i ^
fTT7 O l-*-
. . TMC SKXCTornK
SH€-B\ ^
JSi
CINEMAS 315 COLLEGE N.
1:20-3:20-5:20-7:20-9:20
STALLONE is back as.
RAMBO
First Blood Part
r2 15-4 45-2 IS 9 45 ill -.-
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7:45-10 00 H i» nothin*tjg
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Summ.r KMdl* Shorn, TuMdm
S BUNNY
Doors Open 8 30 a m "BUGS
1081 RABBIT TALES - Faalur
mm
non say:
that we
Cornmoi
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Two can
one ent
July 21
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
Coca Cola 17 & 32 oz
SUMMER HOURS
North
M-T11-1 a.m.
Fri.-Sat 11-2 a.m.
Sun. 11-12 a.m.
South
M-T 11-2 p.m. & 5-1 am
Frl. 11-2 p.m. & 5-2 im
Sat H-2a.m.
Sun. ll-12a.m.
CALLUS!
696-0234
846-3768
Pick up an 8” pizza and receive
a 16 oz. Coke FREE!
The friend took him to a hunting
booth in the woods somewhere be
tween Bonham and Paris, Foote
said, and came back with a bag full
of clothing and food and a note that
said someone would pick Foote up
July 10.
The
Battalion
SPREADING
THE NEWS
Since 1878
ROOMMATE WANTED
Large 3-bedroom duplex, 4 miles north of campus.
$150. p/mth. 775-2278 I75tl0
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
JuliarLMcMun|B^693^323^i7it8
Wanted: Photojournalism and or Commercial Artist
major to design a logo and brochure for small local cor
poration. Can776-0411. 175tl0
99C Margarttas xSa j
Margaritas made with jBfVl
Tequila Sauza products.
really fine eats
Daily from 4-7 p.m.
Experienced bicycle mechanic needed. Part time pre-
ferred. 260-98II. 173t5
• ****••• • • ••• • • • • • •• •* ••• •
i»'ii^»i iliWI"
Dally Specials •
4-10 p.m. j
Sunday
Pancakes
Mon. Tues. Wed.
Spaghetti
Thurs. Fri.
Shrimp
Saturday'
Special
Steak Dinng
$1.99
$1.99
$4.99
$4.99
All You Can Eat
All You Can Eat
All You Can Eat
Complete
At
INTERNATIONAt HOUSE of PANCAKES^ RESTAURANT
103 N. College Skaggs Center
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