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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (May 28, 1986)
Battalion Classifieds FOR fl€NT CAMPUS Furnished and Unfurnished • POOL • CLUB ROOM • 3-LAUNDRY ROOMS • LARGE STORAGE • 24 HR EMERGENCY MAINTENANCE HALF SUMMER RENT FOR LEASES SIGNED THROUGH MAY. SUMMER ONLY LEASES AVAILARLE AT REDUCED PRICES. Starting at $260 country place apartments 3902 COLLEGE MAIN 846>OS15 ALL BILLS PAID! AS LOW AS $235 •Extra large pool •Tennis Court •Sauna •Balconies & Patios •All Electric kitchen •Individual A/C & Heat •On Ground Mgmnt. & Security •24 Hr. Emergencey Maintenance Open Daily Mon-Fri 9-7 Open Sat. 10-5 Sun. 1-5 1601 Holieman College Station, Texas Wm. J. Garrett ’47 Preleasing Summer/Fall & Spring 409/693-6716 casa id sol Low Summer Rates Low Fall Rates 2 Blocks from campus Church across the street • 2 blocks from stores • 2 blocks from nite life on University. Pool/Jacuzzi Party Room Game Room w/Pool Table Basketball Goals On Premise Security On Premise Maintenance Hours: 8:00-5:00 401 Stesney College Station 696-3455 SUMMER SPECIAL !! Ideal for 3 Students - 3 Bdrm/2 Bath 4-plexes Includes: WASHER & DRYER AND ALL KITCHEN APR. Near University & Shopping Centers From $275. per month Call for appointment. 696-4384/696-7714/693-0982 THE GOLDEN RULE HAS OPENINGS! Christian men & women-nonsmoking. Summer-Fall/Spring Large 2 bd/ba. Furn/Unfumished Locked Storage/Shuttie by door $150./mo. share bdrm $275./mo. own bdrm Call 764-8447 or 693-2998 693-5560 15215/ Summer Special. 3 bdrm., 1 bath. Close to A&M. First five will go for $90.00 per qualified student. Minimum three. Call FCF Prop. 779-6401. 135t6/5 For Rent: Apartment efficiency. Walking distance to campus. 1 Bdrm, Ivng. rm. $210. Bills paid. Male stu dent only. Call after 5 p.m. 693-4485. 153t6/4 FURNISHED TWO BEDROOM API. THREE BLOCKS FROM UNIVERSITY. CA 8c FI, $220. DU PLEXES, $175. 779-3700 or 846-9272. 152t6/3 Nice 2 Bdrm.. 2 Bath. Washer/Dryer connections. $300 summer rate. Will pre-lease for fall. Associated Bro kers. 693-5544. 147t5/28 one Bdrui. apartment- (Fourplcx). Washer- built-in Ixinkcaso. Large covered deck. 1-273- 15415/28. Master suite with private bath in family home. 2 blks from shuttle. $200 plus 'A bills. 693-5122. 138t5/28 Summer Rates. $195. Walk to campus. 2 bedroom fourplex. 690-0066/690-2140. 147t5/28 H€U> UURNT6D PIANO DELIVERY Part Time • Flexible Hours • Average $6. Per Hour in Your Pick-Up Call 764-0006 For Appt. Post Oak Mall Telemarketing. They call you. Excellent earnings. Per fect retirees - anyone. Kay Brown, 1-913-625-7699. I55t6/6 S€RVK€S Model: No experience neccssarv. Photographer devel oping pmifnlio. 696-5557. 8-9a.in. 6-10p.ni. 149t5/28 Tvping, Editing and Library Research Assistance. Call for details. 779-8376. 153t5/28 Country Western Act forming. Need Drummer, Key boards, Lead Guitar, Fiddle and Pedal Steele. For in formation: 713-955-2929. 151t5/28 ROOMMATC UJflNTCD Part-time waitresses needed immediately at YESTER DAY'S. 4421 S. Texas Ave. 846-2625. Apply 11:30 - 2 p.ni. No experience necessary. 152t5/28 Roommate Wanted for summer session and possibly for fall. $150. per month plus utilities. 693-3545. 15U5/28 FOR SRl€ 1980 Schult Mobil Home. 2 BR, 1 •/j Bath. Skirted, quite park. 764-8875. 15116/6 1980, 14 x 70 mobile home. 3 bdrm., 2 bath, $8,000. 409-756-5335. Must sell. 153t6/4 S€RVIC€S ON THE DOUBLE All kinds of typing at reasonable rates. Dissertations, theses, term papers, re sumes. Typing and copying at one stop. ON THE DOUBLE 331 University Drive. 846-3755 tfn Word Processing: Proposals, dissertations, theses, manuscripts, reports, newsletters, term papers, re sumes, letters, 764-6614. 147t6/3 When Is Your Buying No Secret' At All? WHEN OVER 30,000 PEOPLE READ IT IN THE BATTALION e biggest selections g you could pos- wont to buy . . read classifieds. You're bound to find it! 845-2611 Page 4/The Battalion/Wednesday, May 28, 1986 World and Nation Independent counsel to investigate Deaver WASHINGTON (AP) — A spe cial federal court announced Tues day that an independent counsel would be appointed to investigate the lobbying activities of former White House deputy chief of staff Michael K. Deaver. In a one-page order, the three- member federal panel revealed that the Justice Department five days ago secretly recommended to the court that an independent counsel be named. The court gave no time schedule for the appointment. Deaver himself has asked that a special counsel be named to resolve questions of whether he has violated government conflict-of-interest rules in connec tion with his lobbying activities on behalf of the government of Canada and others. Pamela Bailey, a spokeswoman for Deaver at his lobbying firm, said “Mr. Deaver is pleased that the proc ess toward a fair hearing is on course. He requested weeks ago that an independent counsel be ap pointed, believing that such a coun sel is the only appropriate way to have the various allegations fully and impartially reviewed.” The three-member panel, com posed of senior judges of the U.S. Court of Appeals appointed by Chief Justice Warren Burger, said that when an independent counsel is named, Attorney General Edwin Meese could “disclose publicly the contents of his report and applica tion filed on May 22, 1986.” The order was issued by Judges George E. MacKinnon, Lewis R. Morgan and Walter R. Mansfield. Justice Department spokesman Terry Eastland said the report would not be issued until the inde pendent counsel is named. Deaver has faced growing crit icism of his multiniillion-dollar Washington consulting business, and has been the subject of probes by the Justice Department, the Of fice of Government Ethics, a House Energy and Commerce subcommit tee and the General Accounting Of fice, the investigative arm of Con gress. Deaver, who resigned his White House job a year ago, testif ied be fore Congress less than two weeks ago that he had “absolutely never taken advantage” of his friendship with the president and Mrs. Reagan. Supreme Court ruling gives states freedom in setting phone rates WASHINGTON (AP) — In a rul ing that could save consumers mil lions of dollars in monthly telephone bills, the Supreme Court on Tuesday gave states more freedom in setting rates. The court, by a 5-2 vote, ruled that the Federal Communications Commission may not force states to use depreciation formulas for equip ment and plants that favor tele phone companies. In the case, the Reagan adminis tration and 26 phone companies, in- cludihg American Telephone & Telegraph Co., said granting state regulators broad discretion could thwart competition triggered by the breakup of the AT&T monopoly. AT&T spokeswoman Edith Her man said the impact of the ruling on the telecommunications giant is un clear. Under a federal judge’s order, AT&T has divested itself of 22 wholly owned state and regional companies. It now has competition in providing long-distance service. The FCC’s depreciation formula promotes modernization by allowing phone companies to recover the cost of new plants ami equipment from customers more rapidly. Administration lawyers and the phone companies said discouraging investment by delaying recovery in higher rates could hurt phone serv ice nationwide. The ruling leaves states free to set their own depreciation formulas foi plants and equipment used for in state and out-of-state c alls. The com mission retains jurisdiction only over equipment and plants used exclu sively for interstate service. Caller sqA^ hostages^ 01 being kills' 1 " 1 ^ he Te BEIRUT, Lebanon(APteam begn anonvnious telephone> goli tout n; l uesdaj that American.itnlda Ru and British hostages wenWinston-S killed bv their captors, jeni, N.C. bodies were found. It j (Ibis is il to he the second hoax d 10th strai manv davs. nave been The caller to the Chmchampions dio station Voice of Leb|i A&M wi the extremist Shiite west Con group ITmin I lnl\ \V,n Magnet i ing live Americans, toiiiMaggert a men and a Briton andth tourney in u s would be left in \(>■ Jan was tin Beirut at 2 p.m. the swe: u Polite said 12 patrolsclB^ 01 - 111 the streets Itn houiv pineup \\ 11 nothing. Flit" Nels< \ m.m w In i tdephom Mai km/ir lion Monday, also clairJH^&'M w represent Islamic Holyli; I n i e i c < i w m I Mini: In isl.igo ui champion leased !>\ the end of thee Mac keni/i< ime v as 11 l t d. ors ( 1 ,L d 1 In I’.ms. l-oit Ip Classic a i |ean-Bei nard Raimondi! Morris Wi Senate that governmenteil free the French hostages j anon “appear to be prop in particular since the made last week” with li tials who visited France.! fused to speculate on d.1 success in freeing thecapti/H Islamic Hols War,whos/W. hers are believed loyal ti<^| fundamentalist Shiiteb: pj ie roat tollah Ruhollah khome hrough A claimed to hold five however, t and four French hostapiM a h ai napped over the past Si nassee, Fla. 1 he radio station is ops q | ie ^ ()l In President Amin L ante to F Phalange P.u t\. knot king < out the Agi South Fieri Africa asks for $80 billion in aid, debt relie i A&M cai nation and It 44-21 rec Alter an UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Africa asked in dustrial nations for at least $80 billion in new aid and debt relief Tuesday at a special session of the U.N. General Assembly called to consider the continent’s economic crisis. President Abdou Diouf of Senegal said the proposed new aid, more than double the current annual level of Western assistance, would be “only ... a complementary Financial contribu tion” to Africa’s own “mobilization of internal re- He asked international support for the OAU's “African Priority Program for Economic Recov ery” extending through 1990. The session is the first ever held by the United Nations on a specific region’s economic prob lems. Secretary of State George Shultz will speak Wednesday. sources. Western delegates said before the session that they would avoid making specific commitments on aid and debt relief. In opening the meeting as current chairman of the Organization of African Unity, Diouf rec ommended “a new approach to development in Africa and a new framework of international co operation.” An OAU report prepared for the session says Africa needs $45 billion in aid above current lev els and at least $35 billion in debt relief over the five-year period 1986-1990. Western aid to Af rica currently is about $7 billion a year. aulls of So Diouf told the meeting Africa hopesl/B^ 6 . s . tani gthle. measurable, manageable decision-•EH 0 the snocal session. tn a secoin Support from the United States, the P? les who donor to Africa, isc i uic al foi the piv;. a ' to approach its goal. . ie <>s ; eliminated > • i i . i „ i n Aggies did L .S. delegate Joseph Reed said last»! n ^E tin “this is not a pledging conference, and A&M' 1 W ashington’s unwillingness to consider#* 4 proposals at the meeting. Africans pledge in return to raise an equal amount in their own nations and “pull them selves up by their own bootstraps,” the report said. “The special session is an opportunity sider the basic policy reforms require longer-term economic growth,” he saii pivotal contribution of the pi ivate sectoi he featured.” Ag ■ Islamic scholar, wife killed with survival kniff The N( yfield Ch; eek awa rack tea WYNCOTE, Pa. (AP) — An Is lamic scholar and his wife were stabbed to death Tuesday and their daughter seriously wounded with a “15-inch survival-type knife,” and the FBI joined the investigation be cause of the husband’s connections to the Arab world. Ismail al Faruqi, 65, and his 59- year-old wife, Lois, an art scholar, were found dead with multiple stab wounds in their suburban Philadel phia home at 2:48 a.m., police said. Their 27-year-old daughter was found on the kitchen floor, bleeding from wounds to the chest and arms. The weapon apparently was “a 15-inch survival-type knife” found near the body of the al Faruqi, a Temple University religion profes sor, said Lt. Detective Robert Krauser of the Cheltenham Town ship police. “It’s hard to say if anything was taken,” Krauser said. There were signs of a break-in and a struggle, police said. “The reason the FBI was con tacted was because of al Faruqi’s prominence in the Islamic world,” said Sgt. Alan Butman, declining comment on reports the couple may have been-assassinated. Al Faruqi’s associates at Temple, w’here he had taught since 1968, said he was not involved in international politics, even though he traveled fre quently to Arab countries. “I am not familiar with all his movements,” said Gerald Sloyan, chairman of Temple’s religion de partment and a long-time friend. “He was in close touch with many chancellors and presidents of Is lamic universities, including those in Nigeria, Pakistan, Indonesia, Iran, Jordan, and Lebanon,” said Sloyan. “He had family in Beirut. As far as I know he was not politically in volved.” Born in Jaffa, when the Israeli town was part of British-run Pales tine, al Faruqi came to the United States after World War II. He earned his master’s degree at Har vard University and his doctorate at the University of Indiana before be coming a naturalized U.S. citizen. Al Faruqi, who also studied at al- Azhar University in Cairo, came to flaking Fern pie in 1968 from Svrjnost of versity, where lie had been inic. ciate professor of religi*]' Several . founded the graduate prfp Islamic studies. He met and married M American, at Syracuse earned her doctorate in Is The discovery of the vienj ly ing lace down with 4 wounds, followed a phone call from their daughter, Anmar el Zeindt ported “an intruder in diet Krauser said. El Zein was reported id but stable condition at Hospital. Defensive Driving. Insurance discount, ticket deferral. 8-5, Mon.-Fri., 693-1322. UnionTech. 92t5/28 CONTACT LENSES $79 00 $99 00 $99 00 pr.* - daily wear soft lenses pr.* - extended wear soft lenses pr.* - tinted soft lenses CALL 696-3754 FOR APPOINTMENT EYE EXAM AND CARE KIT NOT INCLUDED OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY CHARLES C. SCHROEPPEL, O.D.,P.C. DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY 707 SOUTH TEXAS AVE-SUITE 101D COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS 77840 1 block South of Texas & University Dr. If you an en encou oppor jysk Abott* As you of chal would organi: As the Supply organi; Right i Official Tanning Center of the Miss Texas A&M Pagent The Original, Perfect Taf Po*t Oak Square, Harvey Ro*l 764-2771