The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 24, 1985, Image 6

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    •uWsr'i' i*ss& P-*
Battalion Classifieds
WANTED
$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
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
HELP WANTED
Schlol7sky'« is now accepting applications tor part time
evening and weekend shifts. Apply in person only be
tween 2:00and 5:00 p.rn. SSt 10/31
Wanted: We need drivers so we can deliver our pizza
within SO minutes. If you are 18 years or older and own
a car, come by Chanello's. Cash paid nightly. 20% com
mission guaranteed at least $3.75/hr. Good drivers can
earn $H.-$9./hr. Apply in person. 33t 10/25
Experienced cook for day & evening shifts. Apply in
person at Cenarc. 404 E. University Drive. 58tl 1/5
ROOMMATE WANTED
Roommate needed immeadiately. 2 BR/I BA house.
Close to campus. S120./mo. Troy: 096-t)O87 anytime
39t 10/28
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
10. - $360. weekly/up mailin;
ineeiflv interested rush
i-SN P < ) Box I Utot k II <>0098
ailing circulars! No quotas!
tdf-acidressed envelope: Sue-
Wanted. childcare person. Some evenings, some days.
I lours/fees negotiable. Gail 268-4 162. 34i 10/24
SERVICES
FOR RENT
Word Processing: Proposal*, di
inuniiNcnptv reports, newsletter,
stimes. letters. 764-6614.
M-rtations. the'
term papers.
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
6el sol
RELEASING
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
Are you cramped in your
dorm? Call Casa Blanca Apts,
today & ask about their free
rent program. For more infor
mation call 846-1413. otmo/,.
2 1 j BK. 2 b.iih. I hlu< k\ nniih of
S’..so. nionfh. 8 16-0779. f71.3) HO-0261.
OFFICIAL NOTICE
ATTTENTION
GRADUATING
SENIORS
If you have ordered a
1986 Aggieland and will
not be attending A&M
next fall and wish to
have it mailed to you,
please stop by the En
glish Annex and pay a
$3.50 mailing fee along
with your forwarding ad
dress so your Aggieland
can be mailed to you
next fall when they ar
rive.
AGGIELAND REFUND POLICY
Yearbook fees are refundable in full during
the semester in which payment is made.
Thereafter no refunds will be made on
cancelled orders. Yearbooks must be picked
up within 90 days from time of arrival as an
nounced in The Battalion.
Students who will not be on campus when
the yearbooks are published, usually in
September, must pay a mailing and handel-
ing fee. Yearbooks will not be held, nor will
the be mailed without the necessary fees
having been paid. 33ti 2/18
DIRECTORY REFUND POLICY
Directory fees are refundable in full
during the semester in which payment
is made. Thereafter no refunds will be
made on cancelled orders. Directories
must be picked up during the aca
demic year in which they are pub-
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 33I University Drive.
846-3755. 9mn
Ciruiscship jobs. Phone 707-78-1066 for information.
30t 10/25
t yping for iheses. tlissciialion*. lertn pu|K*r*. Will
traiiM i ilK* dic tation, reasonable rales. 693-1598.3111 1/4
STUDENT TYPING. 20 years experienee. A ecu rate,
reasonable, and guaranteed. 693-8537. 36tl2/12
WORD PROCESSING. 10% discount with this ad.
Quality typing at student prices. 775-3911. 38tl0/31
GAYLINE Information, peer-counseling, referrals,
. Call
Sunday - Friday. 5:30p.m. - 10:30 p.m.
775-1797.
7t9/l 1
FOR SALE
SALE SURPLUS VEHICLE
For sale by sealed bid 31 vehicles
(Station Wagons, Pick-Up Trucks,
Jeep, Tractor). Inspection & bid
forms are available at TAMU Re
search & Extension Center, Hwy.
21, West, Bryan, Tx., Bldg. 4430,
from 9 A.M. to 4 P.M. October 28
thru November 1 and November 4
thru November 8, 1985.
38t 10/25
With $3500. you can own a home. If you
qualify for a FHA loan, and have $3500.
cash, you can move info this brick, 3 bed
room, 2 bath patio home. Fireplace, ceiling
fan, carport, levelor blinds, oriental garden,
on shuttle bus route. Contact your Realtor or
Betty Benton, GlenDelie Realty. 696-8888.
39110/24
1979 Oldsmnbile Cutlass Supreme. Excellent condi
tion. Air, radio. $2,750. 846-9486. 39t 10/25
Yamaha 76 RD-400, $700. RD-200, $300. Both run
well. 846-1200. 37l 10/26
77 TK7. excellent condition inside AND out. 55k, a/c.
(iall 260-4959. 28t 10/24
HELP WANTED
Good with Babies? Care for 6 month old in my home 8-
5, M-K. Transportation needed. 696-0570. 37t 10/26
Defensive driving. Insurance discount, ticket deferral,
call: 8a.m.- 5p.m. Mon-Fri. 693-1322. 13U2/18
Call
Battalion
Classified
845-2611
Page 6/The Battalion/Thursday, October 24, 1985
Order may
bar vote
Waldo
by Kevin Thou; I
in Houston
Associated Press
HOUSTON — City officials are
giving incomplete information about
boundary changes to the Justice De
partment in an attempt to win pre
clearance of the city’s redistricting, a
lawyer representing minority voters
saici.
“I have a very strong suspicion
that not all of the voting changes
have been reported to the Justice
Department,” L.A. Greene Jr., a
Houston lawyer, said.
U.S. District Judge Gabrielle Mc
Donald issued a temporary re
straining order Oct. 15 that blocked
absentee voting for the city’s Nov. 5
elections.
DID YOU HEAR THAT
THE YELL LEADERS
LOST THEIR COURT
CASE FOP. SEXUAL.
D/SCRlM/k/AriON ?
WHAT/? YOU MEAA/
WECA/V'T ELECT
OUR OWA/ YELL ^
LEADERS NOW?
WELL, NOT
EXACTLY...
r
c—op
$2 million county jail facili
opens after two-year delaj
By JAMES FLOREZ
Reporter
Expert T yping, Word Processing, Resumes. All work
error free. PERFECT PRINT. 822-1430. 1 0112/6
She said the new City Council dis
tricts, which the council authorized,
are not valid until the Justice De
partment approves them.
McDonald's temporary order ex
pires Friday, and lawyers for mi
nority voters contesting the election
have asked her to extend it or grant
a preliminary injunction. Either or
der would block the election.
After going through six different
contractors, three state inspections
McDonald said Tuesday that two
other judges will join her Friday in a
hearing on a request for a prelimi
nary injunction to stop the election.
*Tt is a matter more properly
heard by a three-judge court,” Mc
Donald said.
Assistant City Attorney John
Fisher denies that the city has been
less than forthright with the Justice
Department about the boundary
changes.
“We’ve submitted everything, to
the best of my knowledge, that has
occurred,” Fisher said.
and a two-year wait, the new addi
tion to the Brazos County Jail is
open for business.
The new $2 million facility, which
originally was scheduled to open in
October 1983, was built because the
old jail no longer met regulations set
by the Texas State Department of
Jail Standards.
Jail officials began moving in
mates from the old jail into the new
addition late Friday evening and
completed the move over the week
end.
“We still have a lew files and
things to move over but, for the most
part, the new jail is open and fully
operational,” says John Godfrey, jail
administrator.
The new jail, which is modular in
design, will house I 14 inmates com
pared with 75 housed in the old fa
cility.
“The jail floor (fourth floor of the
Brazos County Courthouse) is bro
ken down ipto nine separate deten
tion modules,” Godfrey says. “We’ll
house inmates in these modules
according to their classification — all
felons together, all misdemeanors
together and all those who have
been in the penitentiary together.”
Each module is divided into 10
separate cells with a larger dayroom
in the center.of the module. Each
cell can hold up to two persons and
is equipped witn its own toilet facili
ties. This set-up, Godfrey says, will
afford the inmates more privacy and
cuts down on overcrowding.
Not only is the new jail larger, it is
also filled with state-of-the-art secu
rity equipment.
“The whole jail is completely elec
tronic,” Godfrey says. ^'All doors,
both inside and outside the cells, are
opened electronically from a main
control room located at the front of
the jail. All activity in the jail can be
monitored by television cameras and
an intercom system in the cells, cor
ridors and cat-walks (hallways
around the backside of the detention
modules)."
Another new feature of the jail is
its two recreation areas
“In the old jail,” Codfi
“there was no place forint
ation. We had one partial
who hadn’t been indirectsu
over two years. Fortunately,
have a secured area on i
where the inmates can plat
hall or just get some frei
sunlight.
“We also have a multipm
room that we’re going toq
weight equipment andpt
and domino tables. W
looking at the possibilityo
weekly movies for the!
Godfrey says.
The new jail abohastmi
cells, two detoxification
kitchen equipped with boil
tional and convection ovoi
new dispatch and bookingtr
Godfrey says when reiwi
the o Id jail is completed, tint
room for another 100 inm
jail facility will be equipps
padded cell for violent b
nurses station andanteda
nation room. Renovation
tiled to be completed inJai
Professional to speak to accounting studet
By MONA L. PALMER
Reporter
A representative from the No. 2
accounting firm in the United States
will speak to a joint professional
meeting of Beta Alpha Psi and the
Texas A&M Accounting Society to
night at 7 in Rudder Theater.
Deborah Cunningham, vice presi
dent of professional meetings for
Beta Alpha Psi, says the accounting
firm. Peat, Marwick, Mitchell 8c Co.,
is bringing John Hunnicutt, its
Washington principal, to speak to
A&M accounting students.
Sandy LaGrasta, a Houston-based
employee of the company, says Hun
nicutt will discuss the recent hear
ings of the Oversight and Investiga
tion Subcommittee of the House
Energy and Commerce Committee
— commonly known as the Dingell
Hearings.
Hunnicutt is in charge of the com
pany’s federal government relations
and is the firm’s spokesman at the
hearings. Therefore, the firm's deal
ings in Washington, D.C. center
around Hunnicutt, UtGrasta says.
Hunnicutt has been invited to
A&M because many accounting stu
dents are unaware of the hearings
and their importance, she says. The
results of these hearings will directly
affect public accounting and there
fore affect accounting students, she
says.
The hearings, which began in
February, deal with the regulation of
the public accounting profession
and are headed by Rep. John Ding
ell, D-Mich., chairman of the energy
and commerce subcommittee on
oversight.
Cunningham says no*
regulate themselves throa
review system in which pra
from one firm review iht
of another.
Carrie Lamm, a Beta Alpha Psi of
ficer, says the purpose of tne Dingell
Hearings is to see if the Securities
and Exchange Commission has dele
gated too much responsibility to the
accounting profession to regulate it
self.
The subcommittee ma
concerned with the peenr
lein and have discussedik
ity of governmental reguki
counting firms.
Accounting students il
concerned about the hear
their result because the)d
to more federal regulation
counting profession, Cub
savs.
Cloctrical en&l near Lag, Computer Science and
Mathematic* Majors.
Probing the Very
Frontiers of
High Technology.
That’s Intelligence.
i
Tlie National Security Agency la responsible for
analyzing foreign communications, safeguarding our
government’s vital communications and securing
the government’s computer systems.
This three-fold mission requires unheard of solu
tions to uniquely challenging problems. This is why
NSA is—in many areas—working well into the 21st
century. Now, you can work with us.
Here are Just a few of the posslbllltl^:
Electrical Engineering. Research and develop
ment projects range from Individual equipments to
complex interactive systems involving micro
processors, mini-computers and computer graphics.
Facilities for engineering analysis and design
automation are among the most advanced anywhere.
Computer Science. Interdisciplinary careers in
clude systems analysis and design, scientific applica
tions programming, data base management systems,
operating systems, graphics, computer security and
networking—all in one of the world’s largest com
puter installations.
Mathematic*. Projects involve giving vitally im
portant practical applications to mathematical con
cepts. Specific assignments could include solving
communications-related problems, performing long-
range mathematical research or evaluating new
techniques for computer security.
On top of providing you with unheard of chal
lenges, NSA offers a highly competitive salary and
benefits package. Plus, you’ll have the chance to live
in one of the most exciting areas of the country—
between Washington, D.C., and Baltimore, Md.
You’d be smart to learn more about ail the options
you have with NSA. Schedule an interview through
your college placement office or write to the
Nationai Security Agency.
i
NSA will be on campus November 13, 1985. 5br
an appointment, contact your placement office.
Unlieard of Career Opportunities
NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY
ATTN: M322(N)
Fort Meade, MD 20755-6000
U.S. Citizenship required.
An equal opportunity employer.