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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 8, 1985)
Page 6/The Battalion/Friday, November 8, 1985 Battalion Classifieds Waldo 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 prepara tion. $100. incentive. Call 776-0411. $1 oo $1 oo $100 $100 $1 oo 24tufn Need 6 tickets to theT. U. game. (>93-9457alter3.4«tU/12 FOR RENT A*M Now Leasing! We will pay your security deposit plus, free rent for February! Starting at $250.00 3902 COLLEGE MAIN SBk comtry plan ae aDartments apartments 846^0515 B. Y. 0. B. Be Your Own Boss (Fastmar/i Apartments 7600 central park lane COLLEGE ST.. TX 77840 693-8066 Monthly Parties • $50 reduction in rent for referrals Come Make Your Mark at Eastmark 4 o z One and Y2 blocks from campus 2 BDRM/1 BATH 3 BDRM/2 BATH Limited Time Special Rates $399. $575. •Fully Furnished •Washer/Dryer •Covered Parking 402 Nagle at Northgate (Off University Drive Behind Skaggs) 846-8960 Village on the Creek has a few one and two bedroom condominiums for sale or lease. Inquire about our Buy Back Plan! Located at Old College Main and Wellborn Road. Phone 846- 6601 /764-9077. 45tn/i LOSTAND FOUND Male grey i’ursian Minx, 12 lb. cat. $25 reward. 693- 3775, 693-9513. 44tl 1/13 Gold Bolova watch lost E. Kyle, very sentimental. Re ward. Leave message. Please! 822-4594. 49tl OFFICIAL NOTICE Duplex. 2 bdrm., 1 M> bath, washer, dryer, fireplace, re- Irigerator, bus route. $375./mo. 260-8373. 49ti i/13 NF.KD A 5 MON TH LEASE? I bdrm, I bath, CL.OSE TO CAMPUS, furn. laundry, electric, pool, $330/month, call for details - 696-3512, 49i 11/8 FOR SALE '77 TR7, excellent condition inside and out. 55K, a/c, call 260-4959. 50U2/2 ■35' red Eiero S.E. is loaded. V-6, auto. trans._, 12,000 miles. $!,2(M). Take over payments. 396-3202. 50t 1 1/14 15-watt reciever. 3-way speakers, great shape, great price. Call 696-8122. 46tll/8 Vista bicycle for sale. 2 month’s old. $150.00, call 268- 0005 anytime. 49lJ 1/20 WINTER BREAK skiing at Steamboat Springs and Vail from $75., or sunning at South Padre Island and Davtona Beach from $99 ! Hurry, call Sunchase Tours for more information toll free 1-800-321-5911 or con tact a Sunchase Representative TODAY! When your winter break counts...count on Sunchase! 44tll/15 Snow skis. Rossignnl challcitgci s w/ soiomon 222 bind ings. ItyOc iii. Used twice. 696-7945. 49il 1/1 1 ROSE 901 SPEAKERS. $895. or best oiler. 693-8794 or 693-3933. 49tl 1/13 Surfboard, 511”, T.C. Quad. Excellent condition. $200. Mike, 260-7973. 48tll/8 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY 1 " ■ - $10. - $360. weekly/up mailing circulars! No <]tiotas! Sincerelv interested rush self-addressed envelope: Suc cess. P.6. Box 470CEG. Woodstock. II 60098 21tl 1/8 ATTENTION 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. 33112/18 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. 33ti2/i8 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- lished. 33112,18 SERVICES SERVICES Save money & a trip to the washateria. We rent-um & service them free. 9:00 to 5:00, 779-0867. AFTER 6:00 call 822-6477 or go by 405 W. 25th St. 46t11/8 1 vping. Theses, dissertations, term papers, dictation. Reasonable rates. 693-1598. 50t 12/10 WORDS...TO Go. Professional word processing at rea sonable prices. 696-2962, anytime. 40t 12/S SITDFNT TYPINC. 20 wars experience. Accurate, reasonable, and guaranteed.’693-8537. 36t 12/12 Drafting illustration charts and graphs for dissertations and papers. 268-0026. 44tll/13 Defensive driving. Insurance discount, ticket deferral, call: 8a.m.- 5p.m. Mon-Kri. 693-1322. 13tl2/18 Recording engineering classes. Call Pat: 693-5514 or 693-6297. 43t 11/12 Expert Typing, Word Processing, Resumes. All work error free PERFEC T PRINT. 822-1430. 1 Oil2/6 WORD PROCESSING. 10% discounTwith this ad Quality typing at student prices. 775-3911. 38t 10/31 Word Processing. Proposals, dissertations, theses, manuscripts, reports, newsletter, term papers, re sumes, letters. 764-6614. 36tll/15 HELP WANTED Part time handyman needed. Must have tools He trans portation. Afternoons preferred, and some Saturdays. Beal Realty. 823-5469. 47tl 1/8 ( HARl.rS Salesperson needed part-time. Apply in person. 696-9626. 49ill/9 by Kevin Thomcs ure, HOW, man.i ^SVeiKl! A&M Mini-Olympics chairman says games could be improved 1NY ADS, BUT REAL HEAVYWEIGHTS WHEN RESULTS REALLY COUNT. o matter what you've go to say or sell, our Classi fieds can help you do the big job. Right now, dur ing International Classified Adver tising Week, is a great time to put the Classified to work for you! 845-2611 ON THE DOUBLE All kinds of typing at reasonable rat^s. Dissertations, theses, term copying at one stop. UN I Hh DOUBLE 331 University Drive. 846-3755. gnin By JUNE PANG Staff Writer Although the students who partic ipated in Texas A&M’s Mini-Olym- pics last month enjoyed the competi tion between students from all nations, the chairman of Mini-Olym pics Committee said this year's event could have Lieen better. Naynesh Desai said, “ T he spirit of competition was really there. Espe cially toward the end, like semi-finals and finals, they had a very good fight. Most of the particii members are satisfied games.” The Colombian Students Associa tion won first place; the Puerto Ri can Association, second and the Venezuela Students Association, third in the two-weekend-long event sponsored by the International Stu dents Association. Desai, a graduate student in chemical engineering, said he no ticed an interesting tning about the games: Students cheered for comes- rtf rants from their continent if no fel low countrymen were competing. Since the Mini-Olympics Commit tee paid $800 of its $900 budget to { irofessional referees, Desai said he loped more international and American students would referee the games in the future. He also said that he hoped more women would participate in the games in the future. “In some teams, there were hardly any women participating,” Desai said. Although the number of male in ternational students attending A&M is greater than the number of fe males, Desai said the difference in participation should not have been so great. While 20 foreign student associa tions participated in the games, fan Kappa was the only team represent ing the United States. Desai said even though Tau Kappa didn’t win any events, “they came to play, and they had fun.” He said the South Americans dominated the contest. The reason for this could lie because A American students make uplhtF jority of international studeic' A&M, Desai said. Another reason for this, said, is that most of the sri from Asian and European couc® are graduate students. fheyptB bly had less time to partidpaitB said. The overall team scores wett^ dilated by adding the points team received in an event. Wii teams received five points. Sei place teams received three | and third and fourth place team) ceived one point each. Both Desai and Rajnish Rui another Mini Olympics orjE said they were pleased wtl: 1 year’s turnout. “This is only the third ycai have had Mini-Olympics?’ t said. “A lot of internationaldulf still concentrating on Interna Week (rather than preparine Olympics). Next year we will w ter organized ana have morepi pation.” Faculty Senate will meet Monday By MARYBETH ROHSNER Staff Writer The Faculty Senate will discuss exemption of final oral exams for master’s of business administration students at Texas A&M in its meet ing Monday. If the Senate and University Presi dent Frank E. Vandiver approve the proposal, which comes from the Graduate College, the MBA degree will be designated in the graduate catalog as a non-thesis degree for which a final oral examination is not reauired. Graduate College Dean L.eo Berner said that although December MBA graduates will be required to take a final oral exam even if the proposal is approved. May 1986 graduates may not. Also on the Senate’s agenda are: • A request for a graduate de gree program in health physics to be administered by the nuclear engi neering department. • The development of an collegiate faculty to coordinaie curricula for students whosede require that they attend classe side their major. • A proposal allowing the versity to return 50 percent oi ntv ed tamed overhead funds to the searcher who obtained the grant. Retained overhead fund. 1 monies that revert to the state's sury if they go unused by the searcher. Austin rookie cop aids baby birih Associated Press CEDAR PARK — A few hours into his third night as a Cedar Park police officer, Don Hughes found himself helping deliver a baby girl. “I can’t describe it,” the officer said. “It was just like I was the father. And it was only my third night on work. What a way to get initiated.” Hughes and another Cedar Park officer, Greg Knue, were patroling about 9 p.m. Tuesday when Charles Griggs pulled his car up behind them. Cathy Griggs had warned her husband that the child’s birth was imminent as they drove from their Georgetown home toward Seton Medical Center in Austin. “1 figured we needed help one way or tne other, so I just flashed the lights and honked the horn until the patrol car pulled over,” Griggs said. The officers drove into a conve nience store parking lot, and Griggs followed. “A man jumped outoftheve. and he was wax ing his hands,sa' |> ‘My wife’s having a baby, TL said. He walked to the passe side of the car, where Mrs.Cut was sitting. “I was hoping wedtr a couple of minutes,” Knue But the next thing Hughes Is | he was holding little Martha Al' P Griggs in his arms and trying# memoer his medical training. An ambulance took mother daughter to the hospital. They’re Coming SWEATSHIRTS Shirts will be on sale Monday thru Friday at the following locations: COMMONS MSC BLOCKER SBISA Listen for the “ HORNBUSTERS” sotig on K K Y S ra dio station ! Sponsored by: The Society for Entrepreneurship and flew Ventures Battalion Classifieds Call 845-2611 Typing SI.50 per page. Call Terri 693-7676. 776-5845 after 6:00. 44tlI/22