•**a*^6 i vr..: *vA ! 4 ; .i Page 10/The Battalion/Thursday, September 26, 1985 Battalion Classifieds Texas artist to exhibit Slouch By Jim Earle FOR RENT TIRED OF HIGH UTILITIES? Come to Tanglewood South • Great location • 2 pools • Exercise Room/Fitness Center • Party Room/Study Room • 2 Laundry Rooms • Covered Parking All Utilities Paid 411 Harvey Road, C.S. 693-1111 casa del 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 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 STUDENTS! IF YOU ARE NOT SATISFIED WHERE YOU LIVE ... and you are free to relocate and decide to move, I will give you cash back for Sec. Deposit you have paid • Give you 1st week free rent • Payall utilites icl., Cable TV, • and move your furni ture free. CALL AGGIELAND 693-2614 HELP WANTED BUSBOYS NEEDED Apply in person PELICAN’S WHARF, 2500 Texas Avenue S., College Station. Equal Opportunity Employer The Houston Chronicle is taking applications for carriers, on imme diate route openings. Earn $400. to $700. per month plus transpor tation allowance. Please call Ju lian at 693-2323 or Andy at 693- 7815. 7t9/18 HELP WANTED Male needed for cleaning nursery school. 846-5571. 18t 10/2 Crusieship Hiring Data. Phone 707-778-1066 for di rectory and information. 10t9/30 Part time evening cook. Grill and fryer experience nec essary. Pay is commensurate with experience. Apply 1- 2 p.m. Monday thru Friday at Ft. Shiloh. 2528 T exas Ave. in C.S. 12t9/30 NEED A JOB? Visit exotic funny smelling dorms. See natives in their natural habitat. Meet interesting people, and serve them PIZZA! • DOUBLEDAVES needs delivery drivers and inside help at both locations. • Drivers earn 5 - 7$/hr., inside help starts at $3.50. • Ride our delivery bikes and save gas. JOIN THE FUN CREW TODAY V Pizzaworks) 326 Jersey 211 University 1819/30 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 FALL WEED ALLERGIC STUDENTS If you are male, 18 years of age or older, and have al- lergy symptoms in the fall, you are needed to participate in a 16 day allergy medication study. $200 incentive for those chosen to participate. For more information call 776-0411 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 SAFEWAY’S INC. has immediate part time openings (12-24 hours) for sackers at theCollege Sta tion store. Pay rate is $3.45 per hour. ($3.55 per hour after 6p.m.) Applications and interview sessions will take place Thursday the 26th from 8:30p.m. - 10:00p.m. at the College Station store (Culpepper Plaza). No phone calls please. Equal Opportunity Employer M—F—H—V ROOMMATE WANTED Account Representative General Motors Acceptance Corp. Challenging & diversified maxi mum opportunity to advance ex cellent benefits. Apply 4103 South Texas Avenue, Bryan. An Equal OpportunityEmployer. M/F. Female Christian Roommate. $108. + month. Call 693-3424. SERVICES utilities per 17t9/26 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. 9i«n AIRPLANE BANNER TOWING Home football games - Kyle Field. Call Alan Taylor (713)721-6290. Derry Air, Inc., Houston, Texas. ^3,30 Planning a party? Plan to use the Disc Jockey Party Service. Special fall rate $37.50 an hour for profes sional music and D.J. Call DAVID- Kiel 846-1838. Ref: by Jay Norris. 119 13 HOME COOKED DINNERS Choose from 2-3 main courses Monday-Friday 5-7 Phone: 696-2381 1-5 1119/: Expert Typing, Word Processing. Resumes. All work error free. PERFECT PRINT. 822-1430. 10U2/6 Letter quality word processing. Why pay more? $1.50 page. 696-9149. 14t9/26 Typing for theses, dissertations, term papers. Will transcribe dictation. Reasonable rates. 693-159812t 10/8 Professional Academic Typist/Word Processor. $1.25/ds page; Volume rates. 764-6600. 17tl0/8 Plumbing repairs, small, large jobs. Licensed, afforda ble. 823-7723,779-6197. 9t9/26 Word Processing. Call Cindy. 779-4935. 10tl0/4 Educ.ttiuitul Editing. PrnlrsMon.il editing and pritol- reailiug. Pli.l). degree. 12+ vear* ptofessioii.il expeli- eme. 761-7937. Il'CHl GAYLINE Information, peer-counseling, referrals, Sunday - Friday. 5:30p.m. - 10:30 p.m. Call 775-1797. FOR SALE Buy • Sell • Trade Top cash money for good used furniture. Furniture Liquidation Mart, Pooh’s Park. M - S. 10 - 6. 693-3742. 1981 Honda Passport Moped. Very dependable trans portation. Call 693-8993. 18t 10/2 Kor Sale 14x80 1982 Skyline. $300./mo. payments OR buy for $16,000. After 5p.m. 779-2310. 16t9/30 Mini-Card calculator. Does basic calculator functions, plus much more. ONLY $3.99. 823-7804 after 516t9/27 Educational Editing. Professional editing and |>root reading. Ph.l). degree. 12+ vears professional expeti- erne. 764-7937. 119/30 1966 Ford Mustang. Candy apple red. black interior. Excellent condition. Call 260-2150. llt9/27 Raleigh Gran-Sport 10 speed bicycle w/extras for sale. Call Jimmy 764-8613. 16t9/26 TRIUMPH TR7, 1977. A/C, AM/EM Stero, low mile age, 5-Speed. $3395. Call Scott 260-4959. 12t9/27 '84 Chevy pick-up camper, tape stereo, 846-406B.+ 9/27 ’77 Kawasaki K-Z400, excellent condition, new paint, seat and lire. $575, 268-0902. 15 + 9/27 1985 BMW 635 CSI Auto. Polaris-Pacific, 11,000 miles. $34,500.774-0033. 17U0/8 Toyota Supra '83. Like new, good mileage, extra front and rear spoiler. Evenings: 693-8401. 17tl0/l WANTED Guitar teacher part time. 764-0006. Keyboard Center, Post Oak Mall. 7t9/tfn BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY SI0.-$360. weekly up. Mailing circulars! No (|tiotas! Sincerely inlet esied t usli self-addressed envelope: Suc cess. P.O. Box 170(;F.G. Woodstock, II. 60008. ltO/27 Aid. INTERNATIONAL students. We buy your country’s products. Come by Evergreen Imports Inc. 505 University Drive E. Next to Interurban. 16t9/30 LOST AND FOUND Lost: Small ladies cocktail ring. Rubies and diamonds. Reward. Call Diane: 845-4749 or 779-7585. 18tl0/2 Lost: English Springer Spaniel. Liver/White. Answers to Arthur. Red collar. Southwest Parkway area. Call 693-8912. 17t9/30 Lost 9/19/85, black sketch book. 8”xl0”, near Villa Maria intersection. Has address Route 1, Box 535, Hearne inside. Eight years of ait notes inside. Valuable only to owner. Call 845-1351 or 693-0380. RewaPSWlO/l 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 BASEBALL CARDS TO BUY. 764-7983. SPECIAL NOTICE There will be no parking on the lot know as the mud lot. This will only be for a short period. Any cars that are there after 6a.m., September 24, 1985, shall be towed away at the owners expense. 1519/27 Indian works Associated Press SAN ANGELO — Sculptor Lin coln Fox has returned to his home town bearing southwestern Indian bronzes for a special exhibit. The bronzes, on view at I man Gal leries, depict Indians catching and dancing, carrying game or wearing ceremonial headdresses. The Indian men are powerful, with rippling muscles. They seem imbued with mystical qualities. The women are different. Their forms are stylized with soft lines and indistinct shapes. Children rest in their arms or tug on their skirts. “Women need to be handled dif ferently from men,” Fox said. “An other reason is that I sometimes work with stone. I have that in the back of my mind. Women lend themselves to that.” Fox, 43, has exhibited works in museums and galleries around the nation, including the Smithsonian in Washington, D.C., the National Aca demy of Western Art at the National Cowboy Hall of Fame in Oklahoma City, and the Armand Hammer In vitational Exhibition at the United World College in Albuquerque, N.M. The works will be on exhibit here through Oct. 1. In 1984, Fox won the Medal of Honor at the Grand National Exhi bition in New York City. He won over 97 other invited entries at the nation’s largest sculpture exhibit. Buyers can expect to dig deep into their wallets for the sculptures. They range from $150 for a clog amulet to $82,500 for a bronze titled “Shaman With a Bear Skull.” The exhibit also includes print portraits of Indian women and cast paper, which is a deeply embossed impression on handmade paper. Fox said he became interested in Indians and the outdoors when he was a child growing up in San An gelo. “Indians understood how things interrelated,” he said. “If they were gathering wild plants, they left a few for the next season.” One influence was his best friend’s grandfather. “He loved kids and the out-of- doors,” he said. “He taught us to talk to the fish and how to catch them. He taught us to make bows and ar rows.” R 1^ “/ think I’ll make a clean breast of it with the NCAA and tell them about that time I bought a cup of coffee for that football player." Forgery conviction maintained by court Word processing: large or small. ABEL SERVICE. 100 W. Brookside. 846-2235. 12t9/20 Defensive driving. Insurance discount, ticket deferral, call: 8a.m.- 5p.m. Mon-Fri. 693-1322. 13U2/18 j Treat Yourself i} J to a Battalion! 5 J It's Good News NEEDED: Part-time employee for maintenance odd- /jobs and tractor work. Hours flexible. $5./hr. Phone 690-0903. 18U0/3 \ggiesM\e and eniliOsiaMi< pel Inc da\s a week. Honrs live lo ask Im Sharon. > win k oil pllon, . I’honc 7li l-O.VJs I liO I’i, o 420 Tarrow, #110 268-2759 Ag’s — Have more time to devote to your favorite past- times! ✓—-■— (YAMooj Let SOS type your school papers 25% OFF DURING SEPT. Associated Press AUSTIN — A state appeals court Wednesday upheld the forgery con viction of Barr McClellan, a former Austin lawyer and ex-husband of former Mayor Carole McClellan Ry- lander. McClellan was assessed a 10-year sentence, which was probated, after a jury found that he had passed a deed of trust as true “when no such original existed.” McClellan appealed on 16 points of alleged error, including the con tention he could not receive a fair trial before any judge in Travis County. He filed a pre-trial motion chal lenging all the judges’ participation in the case, “claiming legal and polit ical opposition existed against him.” according to the 3rd Court of Ap peals. A hearing was held before J udge Herman Jones, and MpClellan testi fied that members of his law firm —- Clark, Thomas — had told him th« were not going to let him succeed in practice in T ravis County. After that, according to court re cords, McClellan said he hadlostalll but three of 178 contested matten | before Travis County judges, “k ing him to believe that he could noi| receive a fair trial in the county be fore any of the judges.” Jones overruled the motion, and I Justice Quentin Keith, writing for the 3rd Court of Appeals said: “The broadness of the challenge I and the vagueness of the evidenctof bias led Judge Jones to overrule the motion to recuse, and our review of the record does not lead us to the conviction that there was an abuseot discretion. For aught that appearsh the record, appellant’s clients should have lost 175 of the 178 cases he tried: at least, no evidence was intro duced showing that any appellate court had ever reversed a single ad verse decision.” Husband, wife painting team enjoy work despite wasps Associated Press the LUFKIN — Since giving brush-off to working for other peo ple, Sandra and Jim Dyke have drawn one conclusion about Lufkin: every house has wasp nests. It is the kind of thing one notices when one spends hours perched atop a ladder balancing a full can of paint. The Dykes should know. They are a husband and wife team who work together painting just about any thing — interiors, exteriors, furni ture, and industrial projects. They launched their local business, called Jim and Sandra Dyke Paint Contrac tors, last spring after moving here from Oklahoma. A can of wasp spray is standard is sue for them now, but weapons don’t necessarily win the war. Confronted with 10 wasps flying in battle forma tion recently, Jim Dyke beat a hasty retreat. He droppea his can of poi son spray and it rolled off the steep roof. Reduced to squirting them with Windex, he kept edging backwards. He said he would have fallen off the roof if he hadn’t backed into the chimney. Such is the life of a painter. It is a life they say they enjoy very much. “We enjoy working together and we enjoy working outdoors,” Mrs. Dyke said. ^ Their paint-splattered white clothes could almost serve as a scrap book with different colors represent ing different jobs. Each new under taking offers the variety that is another part of what they enjoy about their chosen vocation. Some days are quiet and some are more lively. “It’s very peaceful, painting,” Mrs. Dyke said. “Especially when you’re painting off to yourself. Usually he works off on one side and I’m on the other. We can work all day and only see each other at break and lunch.” To liven up things, they some times listen to the radio and Mrs. Dyke will dance on her ladder. Dyke said he doesn’t dance on his ladder because, “I’m scared ITl fall.” What he enjoys most is the feeling of accomplishment when a job is going well. Always conscious that time is money, he said that he is hap [ piest when they make good time. T hey made the decision to be [ come self-employed becauseitalkwj them to make more money per job I The drawback is that jobs areiiiS guaranteed. Mrs. Dyke said, “Noth-[ ing is ever sure . . . You don’t have [ that steady income." All in all, though, they still prefer| to be their own bosses. “I think we have a better familvj life. On a rainy day we can bev our daughters. We don’t haveiol worry about losing our jobs if < aunt dies and we want to go to her! funeral,” Mrs. Dyke said. Working together calls formutuil respect. "I don’t think we would getalonn if he tried to be my boss or 1 triedtt be his,” she said. If a difference of opinion arise, they maintain professionalism and keep it to themselves. “Arguinn on the job,” Dyke said, “that’s somt- thing you don’t do.” ,Jwe1 . ^ *8* JULY TC