The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 15, 1985, Image 6

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    Page 6AThe BattalionATuesday, October, 15, 1985
Battalion Classifieds
FOR RENT
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
One block oil (itinpus. Own IkuIiooiii. Iuniislicd/ilii-
lumiNlii<l. (;n pel. w.islin (li\ri. 7(’>4-r>b.">(». .‘Hi 10/21 FOR SALE
Ibnu.iin! 1 - UK. 2 b.uli I blocks noiib ol «.iinpiis.
s isn monili. NH.-O770. i7l:*i 110-0201. 27i I I
An excellent location. 2 bedroom studio apt. close to
campus, on shuttle route. 693-9878. 21t 10/21
I oiii -ple\ one beilioom milimii'lied. wunIum di\ei.
< .ill :7'»-7:.7s.iln i .*»:oii. 2.’»il0 |S
WANTED
1980 Yamaha 250. Must sell. Call Robert anytime: 693-
7037. 29t 10/18
Uiamotul rinj< 0.68 carat, oval solitaire. 14k hand. Ex
cellent condition. Appraised $2300. Asking $1600.
846-2877. ask for Ron or Steve. 29t 10/17
MUST SELL: 1975 Bttick LeSabre Convertible. Excel
lent Condition. All power - runs great. $3250. negotia
ble. Mike. 846-9704. 29t 10/17
$100 $100 $100 $100 $100
Asthmatic males or females to partici
pate in a 10 day trial of a safe and effec
tive over-the-counter asthma prepera-
tion. $100. incentive. Call 776-0411.
$100 $100 $100 $100 $100
24tufn
1 Nt
Inn I.
H> I Xll.U SI M.\MH)l.l)S lor Mtuill-I>I<Kk
Will Im, or trade luadi-rv Hill 764.721163It 111/15
Mariiitoslt 128k ran , mx rase, additional solmaie, ra-
l>U-s. $ 1275. 845-08(18 da, s. 696-5056 evenings.
28(111/16
77 1 K7. r-xrclk-ni condition inside AND out. 55k. a/c.
Call 260-4959. 28t 10/24
Blondes. Bt uneUes, and Red heads lor hair coloring
show! 10-21-85. Phone Armstrong McCall 846-9711.
S0t 10/18
(•radtiatin)'! (•rand Prix ‘77. $ 1950, (Uill alter 4:00.
S4<>-4260 28i5
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
$10.
Sinet
- $360. weekly/up mailing circulars! No quotas!
relv interested rush self-addressed envelope: Suc-
P.6. Box 470CEC. Woodstock, 11. 60098 21tll/8
MINI m»||u.uc. ( hiiii'4 oiii ol luiMtirv* sale. IlnsiliC's. m i-
enlilii. |mi niiii.iI. 1 Micnu piHe » nlv 6*M’»-6-R8 \n\-
limc *J5i 10 15
HELP WANTED
30(10/18
Restaurant Opportunities
LOOKING FOR
AGOOD JOB
IN FOOD
SERVICE?
Red Lobster is now hiring for
the following positions:
• Day Waiter
• Day Kitchen
• Day/Night Host
• Day Waitress
• Day/Night Hostess
If you want a good job with TOP PAY
and GOOD BENEFITS, apply in
person from 9-11 a.m. or 2-4 p.m. at:
• 813 Texas Avenue, College Station
RED LOBSTER
An Equal Opportunity and
Affirmative Action Employer
30110/18
Bryan-C'ollege Station
Eagle
WEEKEND
Telephone Sales.
Flexible shifts on Fri
day, Saturday, and
Sunday. Work around
home football games.
Great commissions!
Call Lizz Clark.
779-2345.
1419/24
(il’YS. GALS, STUDENTS! Earn extra Christmas
money part time, full time positions. Apply at 1701
Southwest Pkwv. Suite 1 12. Apply between 10-1 and 4-
7. 30t 10/18
Uncle Charlie’s nightclub now hiring all positions.
140IB EM 2818. Apply in person. 30t 10/25
Cleaning j>erson needed 4 to 5 hours per week. Brazos
Ventures. 846-6060. 29t 10/17
1 need help with a Political Science 207 correspondance
course. Russell. 693-6705. 845-0346. 30t 10/17
Student couple to manage small apartment complex.
Salarv plus apartment. Call Monday - Friday. 8:00 -
4:00 P.M. 696-7709. 23tu!n
PERSONALS
HAPPY BIRTHDAY HENRY !
You wild and crazy guy.
Love and kisses, Lynn
P.S. DON’T I GET A HUG?
31110/15
LOSTAND FOUND
Lose Diamond stud caning between Bentel Health
Comer and 1 egett 1 hill. Yon. ten sentimental value!!!
Reward it round. Call 260-0649. 3ltl(l/l8
FOR SALE
Sola $80.. Ralicgh Bit v ole $75. Call Man West: 775-
5425/845-5841. 3 It 10/21
I Kl.l DINM-.R! Bin tin 1079 Cainam /-2S. »iih
IM AM. S - ttat k. I’ll. I’S. AC. Im S:I99.Y or make me
an oiler. Call 260-1.'.07. 27tlO 15
SERVICES
TYPING - WORD PROCESSING
Fast and Dependable
Personalized Service
We understand form and style.
Beginningour 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.
New Credit Card! No one refused! Also infottualiou
on receiving Visa. MasterCard with no credit check,
l or details t all: 602-947-3561 extension 505. 3 It 10/22
l t|)ing for theses, dissertations, term |xi|K-rs. Will
transt rilx' dictation, reasouahle rates. 693-1.598_3 It 11/4
Expert Typing, Word Processing, Resumes. All work
error free. PERFECT PRINT. 822-1430. 10U2/6
Cmiseship jobs. Phone 707-78-1066 for information.
30t 10/25
Lesbian rap group meets Thrusdays 7:30 P.M. New
members welcome. Call 764-8310. 2t9/4
SPECIAL NOTICE
Defensive driving. Insurance discount, ticket deferral,
call: 8a.m.- 5p.m. Mon-Fri. 693-1322. 13tl2/18
STRETCH
Your Dollars!
WATCH FOR
BARGAINS
IN
THE
BATTALION!!
A&M faculty urges
delay in due date
of fall class grades
By MARYBETH ROHSNER
Suitt Writer
The Texas A&M Faculty Senate
voted Monday to recommend that
the date, on which professors hand
in fall semester grades, he delayed.
This would mean that students
would not get their grades until Jan
uary 198(i, but Bill Rundell, chair
man of the Senate’s academic affairs
committee, said the extension would
give professors longer to review the
examinations.
“(A professor) can't read 170 ex
ams in 3(5 hours,” Rundell said.
Rundell said if the due date was
not postponed, professors may give
multiple choice final exams or rush
to grade exams.
“Almost regardless of the time it
takes to get the grades out," he said,
“we want to get the grades out prop
erly."
The Senate’s resolution suggested
to President Frank E. Vandiver that
professors lie allowed to hand in stu
dents’ semester grades as late as
Monday, Dec. 23 instead of Satur
day, Dec. 21, the previously sched
uled due date.
Assistant Registrar Don Gardner
told the Senate that if grades could
not he compiled by Dec. 21, they
would not be processed before the
staf f's Christmas holiday.
In his opening remarks to the
Senate, Speaker Jaan Laane said the
executive committee has sent a letter
to Texas Attorney General Jim Mat
tox to ask for an opinion on whether
the state Legislature’s recent elimi
nation of faculty sick leave was un
constitutional.
Laane said state Sen. Kent Caper-
ton has requested President Frank
E. Vandiver implement a policy of
granting emergency sick leave until
Mattox issues the opinion.
Also in his opening remarks,
Laane said A&M will receive Sll
million of $35 million allocated for
the Texas Advancement of Techno
logical Research Program. Laane
said over half the funds awarded to
A&M will go to the Texas Agricultu
ral Experiment Station.
In other business, the Senate
passed a resolution providing for the
awarding of posthumous bachelor
degrees to students enrolled in
courses that would complete the de
gree requirements.
Bad drinking water found
in poor Texas community
Associated Press
SEAGOYTLLE — For the 500 im-
noverished residents of the Sand-
hranch community in southeast Dal
las County, unpainted shacks,
mounds of uncollected garbage and
the stench of hogs mixed with odors
from a nearby seweage plant are a
way of life.
But a recent discovery by public
health officials has given the com
munity’s plight a new urgency. The
onlv water available to residents is
highly contaminated and unfit to
drink, county officials say.
"I was appalled to see modern
man surviving on this water," said
David Lang, a bacteriologist for the
Dallas County Health Department.
“The types of bacteria there indicate
the possibility of typhoid and dysen
tery.”
County Commissioner John Wiley
Price, who requested the test, says
(lie the power the county has in such
areas is verv limited.
As an unincorporated commu
nity, Sandbranch does not have zon
ing or health ordinances and county
government does not have the au
thority to create such restrictions.
Residents say the water quality has
decreased as the commercial activity
increased. Lang said samples from
Sandbranch wells revealed the types
of bacteria found in fecal matter. He
said this fecal matter may be the by
products of hogs grazing in the area.
Price and Rick Loessberg, Dallas
County grants administrator, are
trying to help Sandbranch residents
create their own water district. A wa
ter district would be able to apply for
state grants to raise the estimated
$315,000 needed to build a commu
nity well and filtration system. Price
said.
But Ldessberg has warned that
the district, even if approved, may
be too expensive for the residents to
operate, with water service hills run
ning as high as $33 a month.
Board delays setting
of car insurance rates
Associated Press
AUST IN — T he State Board of
Insurance on Monday delayed set
ting new automobile insurance rates
for at least 10 days in hopes of get
ting new figures on ef fectiveness of
the new safety belt law.
Board member Carol Rylander
made the motion to reopen the hear
ing on Oct. 25 saying she believed
there were newer statistics than
those considered at a Sept. 19 hear-
ing.
She said she would ask Col. James
Adams, director of the Texas De
partment of Public Safety, to be the
first witness.
At the Sept. 19 hearing, the
board's staff recommended a
statewide 1.3 percent decrease in
auto insurance for private cars,
which would mean an overall de
crease of $35 million in premiums
the next vear.
Industry spokesmen asked for a
10.(5 percent increase in rates, or a
total increase of $288 million in pre
miums the next vear.
Rylander said the staff based its
recommended insurance rates for
the next year on an estimate that 50
percent of Texas motorists would
use the seat belts while the industry
estimated only 40 percent.
"I am convinced we can have a
higher usage rate than either 40 or
50 percent," she said.
Rylander said any reduction of
deaths and injuries in future years
would be dependent on the compli
ance rate with our mandatory seat
belt law.
File law became effective Sept. 1
but violators will not get tickets until
after Dec. 1.
Wfiat
Tuesday
THE SOCIETY OF PROFESSIONAL JOURNALISTS! will
meef at 5 p.m. in 003 Reetl McDonald. This is the most iit>'
portam meeting of tfie vear,
LA TERTUIJA (SPANISH CLUB): will meet at 7:30 p.m. in
201 Han ington.
WOMEN IN COMMUNICATIONS, INC.: will have a semi*
nai entitled '‘Internships: flow to Get Them: What
They’re Like’ at (5 p.m. in 014 Reed McDonald. Everyone
w elcbrne.
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTURAL STU
DENTS: will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 305C Architecture Bldg.
NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR WOMEN: will meet at
7 p.m, in 102 Rudder.
NATIONAL SOCIETY OF BLACK ENGINEERS: wiStneet
at 7 p.m. in 510 Rudder. “Graduate School: Is it lor you?”
CORPUS CHRISTI AREA HOMETOWN CLUB: will meet
at 7:15 p.m. in 504 Rudder.
ASSOCIATED BUILDERS Sc CONTRACTORS: will meet
at 7:30 p.m. in 203 /achry to hear Ron Reder, Former V.P.
of Brown & Root.
MSC CEPHE1D VARIABLE: presents inybittycon (5; Guest
speaker: Bruce Sterling; classic bad movie: "WTestlinj
Women vs. the Aztec Mummy” at 8 p.m. and 12 p.m.in
701 Rudder.
ASSOCIATION FOR SYSTEMS MANAGEMENT: will
meet at 7:30 p.m. in 114 Blocker.
INTRAMURALS: Entries close at 6 p.m. (159 Read) lor
Horseshoe Singles, Flickerbali, Swim Meet, and Field Goal
Kicking.
1986 MISS TAMU SCHOLARSHIP PAGEANT: Applica
tions are available until Oct. 18 in 216 MSC.
SOCIETY FOR ENTREPRENEURSHIP & NEW VtN
TURES: will meet to hear Robert Owen of Arthur Young
speak: “Starting a Business’’ at 7 p.m. in 601 Rudder.
FELLOWSHIP OF CHRISTIAN ATHLETES: will meet at
8:30 p.m. in 1 15 MSC. Speaker: Coach Lynn Hickey.
POLITICAL FORUM: The Middle East Today: “Palestini
ans and their role in a new Arab world.” 8 p.m in Rudder
Theater
NUTRITION CLUB: will meet at (5 p.m. in 501 Rudder.Dr.
Crouse will sja-ak on “Nutrition and Exercise.”
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT FORUM: will tnea
at 7 p.m. in 502 Rudder.
ALTERNATIVE CINEMA: will show (he film ’‘That
Obscure Objec t of Desire” by Luis Buhuel at 8 p.m, intk
Architecture Auditorium.
HILLEL JEWISH STUDENT CENTER: will have Helm
lessons at 7 p.m.
AGGIE DEMOCRATS: will meet at 8:30 p.m. in 402 Ruddtr
ALPHA LAMBDA EPSILON: is meeting at 7 p.m. in KMC
Zachry . Anyone interested is welcome.
p.m. iti
v/r i i r.vj i uj i\ i. — r v
i: Malcolm Quantrili, Professor of Architecture, wil
<, on “A View of the Room, a Room with a View”at)
Wednesday
HISTORY FILM SERIES: will show “Joe Hill ’at
113 Biological Sciences Building East.
UNITED CAMPUS MINISTRY: will have an Aggie supper
at 6 p.m at A&M Presbyterian Church.
TEXAS A&M METEOROLOGY CLUB: will meet at 71
p.m. on the 15th floor of O&M Building.
EUROPE CLUB: will meet at 9:30 p.m. at Pizza Pub (for
merly Mr. Gatti’s).
HILLEL JEWISH STUDENT CENTER: will meet forlundi
with the Rabbi at noon at the MSC.
SULLY’S SYMPOSIUM: will be held at 11:50 a.m. in front ol
tile Sul Ross statue. The veil leaders will sjzeak.
COLLEGE OF ARCHITECTURE — FALL LECTURESE
RIES:
speak
p.m. in 201 MSC.
A.LA.S.: will meet at 7 p.m on the 4th floor Architecture
Bldg for a portfolio workshop.
LAMBDA SIGMA: will meet at 7 p.m. in 504 Rudder.
RESIDENCE HAI L ASSOCIATION: will meet at 8:30ptB
in 301 Rudder.
STUDENTS AGAINST APARTHEID: will meet at 8$
p.m. in 504 Rudder.
1986 MISS TAMU SCHOLARSHIP PAGEANT: Appfa
(ions available until Oct. 18 in 216 MSC.
CLASS OF ’87: tviil sell Class of ’87 T-shirts for $6M!0i£
the MSC through Oct. 25.
SOCIETY OF AGRICULTURE MANAGERS, APPRAIS
ERS, AND CONSULTANTS: will meet at 7 p.m. in!!)
Kleberg. Become a charter member of this new dub..)!!
majors welcome.
AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR METALS: will meet at 7 p.m
in 127B Zachry. Mr. Ron Knight from LTV Aerospacei
Defense will speak-
FRESHMAN AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY: will meet at)
p.m. in 113 Kleberg.
Items for What's Up should be submitted to The Baflafa,
216 Reed McDonald, no less than three days prior tok
sired publication date.
POLITICAL
FORUM
GENERAL MEETING
%
WED. OCT. 16
g *q
8:30 P.M.
VAADXhMR SAKHAROV
RUDDER 607
V50
8.,
AN EXCITING OPPORTUNITY
TO GET INVOLVED
TOM LOEFFLER
4&7TZemamai Student Centen
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