Page 6AThe Battalion/Wednesday, October 9, 1985 Battalion Classifieds Birai FOR RENT ‘Aakfc Cd$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 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 S380./iii(>nili. 846-0779. (713) 110-0264. 27t 1 1/5 SERVICES r /.-2S. wiili I M/AM. S - it.uk. I’H. I*S. AC. lot SW.I.V ot mttke im- ni l . Call 21)0-1 a()7, 27i 10/1:) 1981 Kord-KI5<). 4x-1, $3500. 696-0679, Mike alter 7:00 pan. 26tlO/14 Complete 40 pc. or 15 pc. china service for six. 846- 8222. 26t 10.14 1 KM sollware. Coini> out ol business sale. Business, si i- eniilic. personal. l-.Mtenie priee oils. 690-6288 \iiv- tiine. 25110/1.a A.^t^ie spec ial 8\35 mobile home in park. 115'.60 near campus. 83.500.00. 779-8938. 272-3116. 25l 10/1 I BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY ALL INTERNATIONAL students. We buy your country’s products. Gome by Evergreen Imports Inc. 505 University Drive E. Next to Interurban. 26U0/14 $10. - $360. weekly/up mailing circulars! No quotas! Sincerely interested rush self-addressed envelope: Suc cess, P.6. Box 470CEG, Woodstock, II. 60098. 21H1/8 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. gitin AIRPLANE BANNER TOWING Home football games - Kyle Field. Call Alan Taylor (713)721-6290. Derry Air, Inc., Houston, Texas. ^3,30 BATTALION CLASSIFIED PULLS! TA PING*. Research papers, report etc. Near campus. 696-0914. education units, 27t 10/10 Community Church of Bryan/College Station A study in spiritual living Sun. Service -11:00 a.m. Wed. (Bible/Meditation)-8:00 p.m. Thurs. (A course in Miracles)-8:00 p.m. 301 Spruce Bryan, Texas Ph. 775-0223 AVIATION CAREER OPPORTUNITIES Apply now for a permanent, U.S. Govt. (Civil Service) position as an Air Traffic Control Specialist. More than 2,000 openings nationwide. Three different specialities. Pres tige careers with medical, retire ment benefits, plus paid vacations. Entry-level applicants will start at $17,824 per year and could ad vance to as much as $45,000 per year. Aviation experience not nec essary. If selected you will be trained at Govt, expense. Aptitude test required. 3 yrs. general work exp. or 4 yrs. college, or combina tion. Send your name, address on postcard before Nov. 30, 1985 to: FAA, AAC-80/299, Box 26650, Oklahoma, OK 73126. EOE. ‘'He col< com i > > A Ih | tribute Univer men in Tut 5<1. 1 he to an Septen ion The tion of Beutel the lac f A hoi sponde the nice 'I In ( Ann R< nized d the he; needs than 11 women 1 he fee die gym 11 il having to a pi i\ The I ing said Lt. Bernie Kapelia points out the car identification number, which is sandblasted onto the major parts of his police van. Photo by J-iH Police sponsoring vehicle ID progm By BRIAN PEARSON Siutt VVriici (lows, T-tops and bumpers mat ked with an identification number. In an ef fort to combat the rising number of vehicle thefts in the area, the College Station Police De partment is sponsoring a vehicle identification program, a depart ment representative said Tuesday. “If the property is identified, people (thieves) are going to tend to shy away from it,” said Lt. Bernie Kapelia. Kapelia said vehicle owners can pay $65 to have the hubcaps, win- “\X’e stress that people should have then motor identification number marked on those parts,” Kapelia said. “If you want anything else done, thev thai t>e vou extra.” lie said die numbers, which are sandblasted onto the surface, will not mar the appearance ol the vehi cle. The series of numbers is about one-fourth inch high and live inches long. The vehicle identifica done through the ColU Police Department bv a the Crime Prevention Houston, Kapelia said- I program will begin whe least 10 people are iut« far, one person is inter people participated in iirst year a program ol tl ol f et ed in College Static* will Ik* Station iber ol in me t ea* 1984. ‘ have Ik miiniHi c •d from 91 to far in i cn stolen. said the iiui if at sted. So ed. Ten 184. the tv IK* was Kaj have exi Houston Ha :*tl in om intorma Kapelia said the progt help prevent the increase thefts in the College Static am could of vehicle >n area. “Ft the cars with Hi other cities have Kajxdla said. Anyone inte gram can call 764 LIT. man I>1< tically Mai io I- blood p for i lessor c Ted i l Centci i velopiiu cattle h and be should mans. ested Gilley’s owner pleads innocent to charges of attempted murder Police Bee : “ah i more o beauiv o works ii Ml he n led Associated Press A NORl 'maa Inn jrhe can salipe so the ret jhrough ing'blot 1 H<)US ION — The owner of Cil- ley’s Club, a country-western night spot made famous by the movie “Ur ban Cowboy,” pleaded innocent Tuesday to charges of attempted murder and aggravated assault. Club owner Sherwood Cryer, 63, entered his plea before State District Judge Albert Pruett. He is free on $5,000 bond. A Harris County grand jury in dicted Cryer on Sept. 50, alleging he fired a shotgun at karate instructor Randall Everett Johnston. Johnston, 27, and another martial arts teacher, Joseph Fitzgerald Ac ton, 31, were walking Nov. 26 out side the Pasadena martial ai ts studio where they worked when the shoot ing occurred. Neither man was in jured. Cryer is indic ted only in the shoot ing of Jolmsion, who now is serving a 22-vear prison sentence for bur glary. The indictments were returned despite the advice of Harris County prosecutors, who maintained they lacked sufficient evidence to pursue the case in court. Assistant District Attorney Chuck Rosenthal said that Acton told grand jurors he believed Cryer was one of two masked men who fired at him. Police using trained dogs trat ked the gunmen to (Tver's home, hut never questioned the night club owner. Grand jurors said last week it was Johnston’s identification of (Tver that led them to indict the chib owner. But Pasadena police said Johnston repeatedly tola them he could not identify the assailants. Cryer has maintained he is inno cent and said the indictments were an attempt to retaliate against for mer Pasadena Police Chief David Millican, who once served as head of security at Gilley’s. lower. 2 Texans among 9 Vietnam MIAs identified Associated Press WASHINGTON — The De fense Department said T uesday has identified nine servicemen missing from the Vietnam War from among the 26 sets of remains turned over by Vietnamese authori ties on Aug. IT. Two of the service men were from Texas. fication was made at the Army’s identification laboratory in Hono lulu. The Texas servicemen, their dates of birth, homes of record when lost and date missing: “T he identification process con tinues,” Pentagon spokesman Rob ert B. Sims said. “These are nine wlio we can identify today.” Identi- Navv Cmdr. William P. Yar brough. May 25, 1923, Abilene, Jan. 19, 1967. Air Force Maj. William F. Jones, |ime 21, 1940, Fort Worth, jan. 5, 1968. Before the identifications. 2,464 American military personnel and civilians were listed as missing in Southeast Asia, 1,375 of them in Vietnam and the remainder in Laos and Cambodia. i lte remains given to an Ameri can delegation in Hanoi on Aug brought to 99 the number the com munist government has turned over. Vietnamese authorities have said they could move faster if the United States dropped its “hostile attitude.” ! 4 • A Harringi • A telephone was ste the Civil Engineering Bui • A leal her bag and i sweat pants were suit: Kvle Field. • An HP-4J CVcakub stolen from the sixth Ik* Sterling C. EvansUbrar> • A Backpack was #k Fast Kvle. BURGLARY OF A il VEHICLE; • A batten was stole! 1979 Jeep Wagoneerpu fat king Annex40. • A Whistler radar 4 live t assette tapes, a fa and $60 of American I traveler's checks weresid? a 1984 Chevrolet pkktip in PA 56. • An Escort radar 4 was stolen from a vehicle in PA 30. 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