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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1985)
Battalion Classifieds HELP WANTED 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 l Pizzaworks) 326 Jersey 211 University 51t11/11 FOR RENT a t m Now Leasing! We will pay your security deposit plus, free rent for February! Starting at $250.00 3902 COLLEGE MAIN SJ!k tSBL country place apartments 846'0515 50111/8 SPECIAL NOTICE ATTENTION DECEMBER GRADUATES Graduation Announcements are ready to be picked up in the MSC Browsing Library Mon.-Sun. 8 AM to 9 PM Extra Announcements will go on sale Nov. 14, 8:00 A.M. First Come Basis MSC Student Finance Center, RM. 217 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. $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 24tufn OFFICIAL NOTICE 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 WANTED: 4 tickets to Texas game on the Alumni side, preferably 2nd deck! Willing to pay generously! Call T om 260-6879. 53111 /i s OFFICIAL NOTICE 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. 33112/18 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- lished. 33H2/18 HELP WANTED BUSBOYS NEEDED Apply in person PELICAN’S WHARF, 2500 Texas Avenue S., College Station. Equal Opportunity Employer 53t11/27 FOR RENT 402 One and V2 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 Prelease early and Enjoy the holidays More Peppertree 2701 Longmire C.S.,Tx. 693-5731 Room and balh, large, W block from campus. Utilities, t.v., included. $160. private imrance. 693-5286. 55tl 1/27 2 Bdr., 1W bath, fourplex including w/d. $325./mo. ' ; left for preleasing. 52tl 1/18 SlOO/dcp. Hurry Up! (inly 5 units I Southwood Valley 696-7 1-7183. Carlos. Duplex. 2 bdrm., 1 Vi bath, washer, dryer, fireplace, re frigerator, bus route, $375./mo. 260-8373. 49tl 1/13 SPECIAL NOTICE Student Government reunion applications now avail able thru Nov. 15. Please come and be part of the his torical event. 52t 11 /13 FOR SALE t.u. TICKETS Get them while they last. 15 yd., line 1, west side. Call Mike, 779- 2563 evenings. 53111/13 Dhurrie handbag, 3 months old, never used. Pur chased for $180.00, will sell for $140.00. Call 260-5582. 53tl 1/19 Toyota Tercel, ’82. Air, 5 speed, stereo, 37,000 miles, excellent condition. $4,350. negotiable. 693-6229. 53tl 1/22 85’ red Fiero S.E. is loaded. V-6, auto, trans., 12,000 miles. $1,200. Takeover payments. 396-3202. 50tl 1/14 BOSE 901 SPEAKERS. $895. or best offer. 693-8794 or 693-3933. 49tll/13 77 TR7, excellent condition inside and out. 55K, a/c, call 260-4959. 50U2/2 Vista bicycle for sale, 2 month’s old. $150.00, call 268- 0005 anytime. 49tll/20 78 Subaru Wagon. Clean, air-conditioning. Rebuilt en gine, 4-speed, good condition. $ 1,900. 693-3973, eve nings. 52t 11/22 CHIMNEY HILL BOWLING CENTER 40 LANES League & Open Bowling Family Entertainment Bar & Snack Bar 701 University Dr E 260-9184 !•••••••••••••• Put your , message in the night sky above the Arkansas game on Nite Flite's electronic billboard. Call Nite Flite Aero Ads (713) 334-4082 FOR SALE Page 6TThe BattalionAVednesday, November 13,198! Forecast: Job growth in ’86 to remain stead Snow skis. Rossignol Challengers w/ solomon 222 bin- dins. 160 cm. Used twice. $85.00. 696-7945. 51tll/13 Part time handyman needed. Must have tools Sc trans- portation. Afternoons preferred, and some Saturdays. Beal Realty, 823-5469. 53tl 1/15 Part time labtech, $4.50/hr., chemistry background preferred, contact Allen Vickers. 53tl 1/19 $10.-$360. Weekly/Up mailing circulars! No quotas! Sincerely interested rush self-addressed envelope: Suc cess, P.O. Box 470CEG, Woodstock, 1L6009851tl2/10 LOSTAND FOUND Male grey Pursian Minx, 12 lb. cat. $25. reward. 693- 3775,693-9513. 44tll/13 ROOMMATE WANTED Female, non-smoker. 2 bdrnis., 2 baths. Washer/dryer. On shuttle bus route. $175./mo. &: bills. 693-5181. 5 hi 1/15 1981 Kawasaki 750 in excellent condition. 1-279-3552. 51tl 1/19 WINTER BREAK skiing at Steamboat Springs and Vail from $75., or sunning at South Padre Island and Daytona 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 wintej- break counts.. .count on Sunchase! 44tl 1/15 Laser Sailboat. $1,400. Good condition. Call after 5 P.M. 764-7349. 51tll/15 75 VW Van, $300. as is. Moving to Canada. Call Ed: 845-3314 or 846-0241. 51111 /15 SERVICES American Tire & Automotive Centre 3814 S. College 846-3867. Oil, Lube, Filler reg. $17.95. Mention this ad before 11/16/85 get $6.00 off. $11.95 53111/13 ON THE DOUBLE All kinds of typing at reasonable rst^s. Dissertations, theses, term papers, resumes. Typing and copying at one stop. ON THE DOUBLE 331 University Drive. 846-3755. gitin TYPING — WORD PROCESSING, dissertations, theses, term papers, resumes. Executive Services. 121 Walton Drive. 696-3785. 5111 1/22 1 yping, research paper, education units, reports, etc. Near campus. 696-0914. 52tl 1/14 WORD PROCESSING. 10% discount wkh this a<L Quality typing at student prices. 775-3911. 38tlW31 Defensive driving. Insurance discount, ticket deferral, call: 8a.m.'-5p.m. Mon-Fri. 693-1322. 13tI2/18 CAYLINE Information, peer counseling, referrals, Sunday-Friday, 6:00p.m.-10:30p.m. Call 775-1797. 12t9/19 WORDS...TO Go. Professional word processing at rea sonable prices. 696-2962, anytime. 40tl2/9 Typing $1.50 per page. Call Terri 693-7676, 776-5845 after 6:00. 44t 11/22 Typing. Theses, dissertations, term papers, dictation. Reasonable rates. 693-1598. 50t 12/10 Drafting illustration charts and graphs for dissertations and papers. 268-0026. 44tll/13 Expert Typing, Word Processing, Resumes. All work error free. PERFECT PRINT. 822-1430. 10U2/6 Word Processing: Proposals, dissertations, theses, manuscripts, reports, newsletter, term papers, re sumes, letters. 764-6614. 36tll/15 Associated Press HOUSTON — The number of people holding full-time jobs in Texas next year will grow by about 200,000 — the same 3 percent rate of growth the state experienced in 1985, according to forecasts Tues day from Texas Commerce Bankshares Inc. “We think that will continue next year and continue throughout the decade,” said James L. Cochrane, chief economist for the Houston- based holding company. Most of the new jobs will occur in government, trade, service and fi nance areas, but not in manufactur ing, he said, adding that nationally, job growth should he about 2.6 per cent. “One basic point is that Texas for a long time has had the enjoyment of doubling any national (economic) statistic, Cochrane said. “That’s no longer going to be true, but we’ll he 10 to 20 percent above the national level.” For the U.S. economy, Texas Commerce forecasts a 4 percent growth for 1986, with a tapering off in the last half of the year. “I was told we’re a little bit on the optimistic side,” Cochrane said, com paring his forecast with those of other economists. Inflation, he said, should rise slightly to about 5 percent. Texas will do better than the fore cast if the national economy is stronger than expected and if oil prices improve. The forecast will be too optiit if tax reform legislation hinders oil industry, if tax law changesl courage investment in thestatei if protectionist moves triggerreiai lion overseas, Cochrane said. Houston would continue in 1) its slow recovery from theenerg) cession and bring to 1.6 million! number of jobs in the area-rail ing the hign-water mark at there of the oil boom in 1982. “The early 1980s were an abr. tion,” he said. Other economic indicators Texas’ largest city also willimpm with bank deposits up 9 percen 1986 to $40 oillion and retail si repeating this year’s 8 pent growth. Construction will total $2.8i — $1.75 billion non-residendal $1.05 billion residential, TexasCe merce said. The residential figure, howest: just one-third the amount the 1982 peak. Cochrane said the downtown lice space glut has been cut inhoi ton to 20 percent, just four pent age points above the natioi average. The holding company,! fourth-largest in the state, alsofo • casts a slight slowing of the rap; . expanding Dallas-Fort Worthea omy, with employment up 3pern [ hut construction down 5 percent Bank deposits should growhl | percent. Baptist rally held to protest state controls on churches Associated Press AUSTIN read a large banner spread Tuesday in front of the Capitol as hundreds of Baptist church members tested state controls. “Let My People Go,” Tut ‘ pro- STUDENT TYPING. 20 years experience. Accurate, reasonable, and guaranteed. 693-8537. 36H2/12 “Jesus is Lord, Not Caesar,” said a sign displayed by Gary Wagoner, pastor of the Harvest Baptist Church of Hamptonville, N.C. “This is primarily a Texas fight but it is a national problem,” said Wi ley Cameron, pastor of the Peoples Baptist Churcn in Corpus Christi. “We are protesting the constant en croachment of government in our schools, our homes and our day care centers.” As head of the Peoples Baptist church, Cameron takes the place of the late Lester Roloff, a fiery evan gelist who fought state attempt regulate church youth homesm Texas Gulf Coast for six years, He died in a plane crash in 11: In October of this year thele | Supreme Court ruled that church-operated homes could operate without state licenses. The state had sued the churd ter Roloff refused to havethreec dren’s homes regulated bythele Department of Human Resource ‘*One example of governmeni croachment is the Roloff homt Cameron said. “These other peo: are here because of examples their states.” “God’s Word is First,” said other sign. “Save Our Children," said a si [ ! carried by Bobby Rorrer, pasioi the Goodwill Missionary f Church in Patrick Springs, Va Razzle, dazzle and dancing feet! S)T* 4 s % 4ft js#/ MSC OPAS XIII presents Hubbard Street iwps One of the zippiest shows of the 1985 season! From jazz to ballet and modern dance to rhythmic tap. Hubbard Street's ensemble of 14 dancers exudes vitali ty, pulsating energy, and impressive flexibility. They step, spin and whirl through a magnificently set, staged, costumed and performed repertoire. "A pure joy for any lover of dance!” November 17, 1985/8:00 p.m. Rudder Auditorium/Texas A&M University Tickets available at MSC Box Office/845-1 234/MasterCard/VISA