The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 05, 1985, Image 6

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Battalion Classifieds
FOR RENT
casa
6el sol
Spring Special
Now Preleasing
2 Blocks from Campus
Church across the street*2 blocks from stores»2 blocks from
nite life on University
Pool Basketball Goals
Jacuzzi On Premise Security
Large Party Room On Premise Maintenance
Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:30 401 Stasney College Station
not open Sat. or Sun. 696-3455
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
NEW!
G L
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
HELP WANTED
Houston Chronicle looking for
early morning paper delivery
route people. $400-$700.
monthly. Call Julian at 693-2323
or Andy at 693-7815.
65tfn
Mum know tin mitl luvc nin-
< ill. ( .ill iniliu'i, 771-OIMiU,
Ii7l 12/11
'.liiin \.M. ii
I'M. Mmnl.
I llll Sill.
\-l I ill.IX .
i.illlvliw
7 l-OOliO.
(I.o mill
Hid :>:00
07i 12/11
l).o ii lcplioiic miIcn m cdi'il i
|illo. Inn mil U'i|iiiivil. I’iov
:>:00 I'.M. Mnndio-I lid.o.C;
I ol Ik C. I \|K l it'lK (• it
i well. I loins 0:00 01
ri-ooiio. ti7i 12/11
( ili/ens tkink. Km'iiIiik shill (iiliipiiti‘i u|HT.io>r. I'rioi
t (iliipiiiei • i|KT.iiiiHis e\|>ei'ience desii.iole. C iidl 770-
liliO,i.e\l. Iioran iipiKiiiiiineni. 0-1)12/0
ilO.-SOOO. Weekh/l |) iiiailine ilmdios! No (|uiilnM
Sim ereh iiiUTesled l ush sell-addressed envelope: Sin
less. !*.<) Box I70CI (i. WoodsKK k. 11. OOlIBHoll 12/10
Bait lime help (h'U|)e\
llll
.iill.iliO. ( all ()'K)-
Mile needed In
I'lillio SOviks"
s linn
001 In
FOR SALE
Bargain ai $250. Attractive 2 bedroom apt. in 4-plex.
1.7 miles Irom campus. Washer/drycr connection,
(lisliwasher disposal. Call693-776! or 775-527061112/6
(Inc I n di i x mi aparoiieiii. S:i'_'.'). inn. All lulls paid.
I’iiuI. Minna, laiindri l.u ililies. Must see in apple, iale.
(Inlv 15.000 mile
>050.00. S22-
07,12/11
1.000 miles. |tisi Sitoti:
d. air-eondiik
llll. 822-1389.
and iiiih
07,12/1 I
no i In ill i •
ch. Calls, i
lies and 1-10005
ill a, 822-1:180.
HI 195.00
07,12/1 I
\ 1 \pl
I s:;.50
hi'd,)
Neill
.illi s:’,75.
hedl)
00.1 52St) t)5lln
In) 0. id til J.nil'
lenei'd. slmllle 8:5110.
I.ins. einnplete kilelie
i!0 llilA ill!
(:lmii e Dnples. M idk-ln i lnsets.
I .ui!e t-|)le\ S2S.5 ( \71 leal. eeiliim
us. \ iird eare. (|niel. reMmahle nli-
10
1081 v.u.
l:iso.
Diesel I’ii knp. d.l.OOO miles. $2 150.00 822-
07,12/1 I
Mil.iln 12 speed hiin
81.50.00 82:1-8120.die
eellein (iiiidilitin.
Ask. Mark.
I xlia s
07,12/0
\ el
leols:
I si Inn,1. W
0-0255
'(Iroimi. one hiilh I,
nei iions. Wilier, sev
nirplexes near
age paid, t mil
.Oil 12/18
Helligciaim : imisi sell. C:l mhii leel. lixiI'lli'in eoudi-
linii. $50. Dan Wiime: SI5-2C5I Heine messiige).
07,12/0
Wrlleslei Court t
\ppriix. 1000 s,|.
near shoille. $30.i
hi hedroom llnllvwood I 1/2 hath.
It. Cpstiiirs Wiishei' sN' drier, (leek.
00:1-1750. 000-100(1. (Ml 12/18
ttress. Firm $50.00, 1973
845-0168,8-J6-3570.
$600.00.
61112/13
Shadi. ieneed. l.oi 12, Oak Forest. I4\5t). 2 heilroom.
new. I hath anil kiteheo. eential air/heat, sinrage huilil-
ing. appliaiues with washer drier, $8900. linanee.
09:1-5201) nr enllei'l 800-703-9491. (Mtl/20
Apaiaiiieot elliiietni. Walking distance to campus- I
BK. 1 I.R. $230. hills paid. Male Modem onlv. Ciill alter
5 ii.ni.. 093-1 185. (Ml 12/0
ROOMMATE WANTED
WANTED
U Will) B \SKI- 1 I1AI.I ori lCIAl.S.
Meeting: l lmrsdai. Deieinher 5 ai 0 I'.M., K
Read lluilding. Fm mi.re inlnriniilimi ,nil Ini
Ren e.iiioual Spnris a, 845-7820.
C.i it I mi Bowl aickels Wauled Smilhwesi Co
I’lavdiT. Nt.AA l iiial I. Bin . Sell. (71:11783-1)5:
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
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. 33112/18
$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
OFFICIAL NOTICE
A&M architecture class designs
modern housing for senior citize
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
AUCTION
Attention Horsemen
Christmas Special ■
The American Saddlery is over
stocked. Must auction a truckload
of western saddles and tack of all
kinds including Circle-Y, Tex-Tan,
Longhorn, Action, Billy Cook, with
14”, 15”, & 16” seats. Some hand
tooled, silver laced and buck stitch
ed. Some plain hard seats, some
children’s saddles, also English
saddles, several full silver show
saddles. All adult saddles have a 5
year written guarantee.
Partial Tack Listing
Sunbean clippers, SS spurs, SS
bits, wool blankets, stable blank
ets, ropes, bridles, silver head-
stalls, & show halters. Plenty of hal
ters of all kinds. Hundreds of items
too numerous to list. Tack to be
sold individually and in group lots
All Name Brand Merchandise
Terms: Cash, Check with proper
ID
Master Card & Visa
Inspection Time: 6:00 p.m. Sale
Day
Auction Time: Tuesday Dec.
10 7 p.m.
V.F.W. Hall
2818 W. Bypass
Bryan, Texas
Auctioneer: Tommy Hut
ton TXS 054-1338
66112/10
LOSTAND FOUND
iuImII g.u
■lalil-,
liaggrlls. Ri
ng. I t,mild di.
ai d! 846-6(136.
By GRACE LOVELL
Reporter
Society isolates the elderly by pul
ling them in nursing homes sur
rounded by splendid gardens, Dr.
George J. Mann, professor of ar
chitecture, said Wednesday at a ar
chitecture project presentation.
“They have no interaction with
the community," he said.
The Environmental Design 403
major semester project was to de
velop a scenario, and a specif ic set of
circumstances for the elderly in a
“mixed use” context, Mann said.
“Nursing homes have become
warehouses for the elderly and the
students’ challenge is to create a set
ting where die elderly are allowed to
have linkages with, and interaction
to, tfie community, and to basic es
sentials of life and living,” Mann
said.
“Their objective is to maximize
the possibility for independent living
for the elderlv througn architecture
and interior design while taking into
consideration the process of aging."
Jae Seung Park, who is now work
ing on a fdi.D. in architecture, is
writing his dissertation on “The De
sign Principles for Mixed Use Facili
ties."
Park, who assists Mann, said that
in the 1980’s 11 percent of tfie total
population is over 65.
In the year 2030, 17 percent, or
one out of five people, will be over
65, he said.
“We think accessibility to a com
munity facility is the most important
consideration,” Park said.
Idam Chukwu, a senior architect
major, called his project “The Tus-
kegee Mixed Use Facility for the El
derly, Youths & Pets.” The
Tuskegee, Ala.
“In this society, people run from
the elderly,” Chukwu said.
He included a pet care store,
which would be ran by a veterinar
ian, where people could drop their
pets off on tne way to work and walk
them during lunch.
“People are emotionally involved
with animals and the pet care facility
is in the same building as a restau-
rant and day care center,” Chukwu
said.
Randall Goye’s project "The Ly-
i.iiiiii
null. Ill
OlMI!/ ilium,Mill
ini*. Kr
i;",li. A|n>m
Mill. 21 it I-166:
i 713-
112 IS
SERVICES
Student ilcxk Mini i luiir. m in Imx springs null inamess.
846-3954. Ii4tl2/(i
OFFICIAL NOTICE
NOT A THING TO WEAR AND A CLOSET
FULL OF CLOTHES? Give yourself or that
special person a session with a personal
image consultant. $35. special.
We turn your clothes into a completely ver
satile wardrobe, that won't go out of style
and really shows your self confidence.
Wardrobe Planning
Closet Review/Evaluation
Personal Shopping Colour Analysis
Call Thelma Fischer at 764-0642
11-7 Mon.-Sat.
Gift Certificates
ON THE DOUBLE
All kinds of typing at reasonable
raCs. Dissertations, theses, term
papers, resumes. Typing and
copying at one stop. ON THE
DOUBLE 331 University Drive.
846-3755. gum
Expert Typing. Word I’rnccssing, Resumes. All work
error tree. PERFECT PRI NT. 822-1430. KH12/6
Word Processing: Proposals, dissertations, theses,
manuscripts, reports, newsletters, term papers, re
sumes, letters. 764-6614. 58ti2/5
Typing. Theses.
Reasonable rates
dissertations
693-1:598.
term papei
dictation.
5(1112/10
rd Processing: Papers
simalilc. 846-6200
reports, etc. Fast.
STCDF.NT
reasonable..
TYPING. 20 seats c\|
ml guaranteed. 69.3-8337
Defensive driving. Insurance discount, ticket deferral,
call: 8a.m.- 5p.m. Mon-Fri. 693-1322. 13U2/18
Experience Typist - IBM Selectric. Reasonable rates.
Cab' ■
I Marilyn 693-7515.
spine, lies
,lit card! No o
sing Visa. Masted!:
all 602 PIT 3301 .
Photo by min
Randy Goya (left), a senior environmental design major, shi«!
project to Jae Sung Park, a Ph.D. student in the environmenlalfe!
ie setting is
ceum" is a 23-fioor high-rise set in
Manhattan, N.Y.
Cove said, “1 chose Manhattan as
the setting because it is a congested
area where a lot of different kinds of
interaction take place.”
The building would house the el
derly and staff on the fourth
through 11th floors, and the 12th-23
floors could be used as offices, Cove
said. The first three floors could be
used for a post office, cafeteria, gro
cery store and retail stores.
Mark Windhager called his pro
ject the "Then & Now Community”
which would be located in Miami,
Fla.
The facility overlooks the ocean
and is beside a dorm for Liberal Arts
students and a clinic, Windhager
said.
Darrel Holub’s project, “Genera
tion Interaction," would be located
in College Station.
Holub said, "It would he near the
mall and in walking distance of a
church. The facility is near the by
pass so the hospital is not very far
and die residents
shuttle bus."
fhe facilitv induihiiii
center, fitness center amitj
paths.
John Bennett's projecTi
tural Forum” is set in Auskl
cilin overlooks a lake and(4
rum on the upper level*
lie used for commuit
such as concerts or s
Karen Holt's project'
pose' Senior Cenier" v*
cated in Chicago. It isafi
the elderly which include!i
buildings surrounding an
|K)ol and linked bv coveitil
ways. The main building
five story residential
porches that overlook anil
The rest of the buildingsci
spa, two reception rooms,n
and a clinic.
Eddie Mancuso's
dential facility in
maim Park. I lie facility it H
distance ofthe zoo, at
planetarium and tyvonosjilj
Insurance company buys Manges’ rand
Associated Press
SAN ANTONIO—-An insurance
company has purchased in a foreclo
sure sale most of a Starr County
ranch owned by South Texas oil
man-rancher Clinton Manges, the
In in’s officials say.
Travelers Companies of Hartford
purchased 2,754.41 acres of the
3,078-acre ranch Tuesday in a fore
closure sale on the steps of the Starr
County Courthouse in Rio Grande
City, said Robert Wehmeyer Jr., an
attorney for the company.
Travelers bought the Falcon
Ranch, which included a brick
home, for $1,275 million, Weh-
meyer said.
“We hope this will satisfy a debt
that had gone unpaid,” he said.
Manges, in a sworn personal fi
nancial statement filed in April in
connection with another case, de
scribed the ranch as being “stocked
with exotic game and sports a briik
ranch home.”
The property fronts on the Falcon
Reservoir, according to the docu
ments.
“There is a brick house,” Weh-
me\ei said. "I droveamiinit
property, hut I didn’i tee ‘
mals there."
1 he foreclosure sale®
aflei Manges lailed topav®
million promissory mite i
pi open v, court records into
County (lourthouseindicalfl
Wehmeyer said the nil
n.ills was owned byJoeSdie
refinanced the property fa;
million ihroughTravelers.
Manges assumed liie t,
14, 1678 and took over pap
the mortgage.
"X'^k tr *
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
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X-
V/ Nief ■*1' vL* vL* *xL» vl* V/
At-* ■ ■'T* «T > * •'T*
30
Xerox
copies
Brazos Valley Printing
3601 E. 29th St. *846-3024
StCklco”
as
WORDS...TO Go. Professional word processing at rea
sonable prices. 096-29(52, anytime. 40t 12/9
• P.A. Equipment
• Bass guitars
• Mandolins
• Guitars
»Banjos
> Amps
• Buy
• Sell
• Trade
• Repair
1911 S. Texas, C.S.
Across from the water tower
693-8698
4-7
Chips, queso i
Salsa, Taco FifflS;
Free, Free, Free
GAY1.1NE Inlormaiiun, peer counseling, referrals,
.Sumlay-Friday, 6:00pm-lOrSOp.m. Call 775-1797.
12t9/19
at ease
the
place
to
see
and
be
seen
to advertise
call 845-2611
Restaurant S Be-
Everyday
Happy Hour FREE TacoBi
:J: 11-7
99p Margaritas
i#: 1.00 Coronas
750 Draft
1.00 off Bard rinks
Daily Specials
Mon-Fajitas, Chicken or Beef
i^-Tues.-Enchilada Dinner
Wed.-Free regular nachos with purchase of 4 ainne m
•3; M-Th 11-10 Togoorders 3 1 gg Texas: • ;:
r e n 11 Welcome 0 \ nftfr
^ F S IVo 1 823-74/0 in front otwj
Yearbook photos fo
Juniors, Seniors, Vet$j
Meds and Grads will ^
taken through DecemWj
6 at Yearbook Associate 1 ;
Studio above Campi
Photo Center at Norf 1 !