The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 04, 1986, Image 6

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    Battalion Classifieds
NOTIC6
GO FOR THE GOLD.
You’ve just about completed one big challenge—your degree. Ready for
of a Second I
e Ji . . ,
the next? Go for the gold. The gold bars of a Second Lieutenant in the Army.
It's no picnic. O.C.S. (Officer Candidate School) is a 14-week challenge
that will make you di« deep inside yourself for mental and physical toughness. When
i’ll oe trim, fit, a commissioned officer in the
you come out, you I
re Army, and ready to
exercise the leadership skills civilian companies put such a premium on.
Go for the gold. It could help you when you’re ready to reach for the
brass ring.
CAPTAIN LAWRENCE A. PADRON
1415 North Loop West, Suite 600 Houston, Texas 77008-1679
(713)229-3495/3496
ARMY. BE ALLYOU CAN BE.
FOR RENT
CAMPUS
Furnished and L'nfiirnished
• POOL
•CLUB ROOM
•3-LAUNDRY ROOMS
• LARGE STORAGE
•24 UK EMERGENCY
MAINTENANCE
HALF SUMMER RENT FOR LEASES SIGNED THROUGH
MAY. SUMMER ONLY LEASES AVAILABLE AT REDUCED
PRICES.
Starting at $260
country place
mm
apartments
3902 COLLEGE MAIN
846-0515
INY ADS,
BUT REAL
HEAVYWEIGHTS
WHEN RESULTS
REALLY COUNT.
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
matterwhat
you've go to say
or sell, our Classi
fieds can help you
do the big job.
1601 Holleman
College Station, Texas
Wm. J. Garrett ’47
Preleasing Summer/Fall & Spring
409/693-6716
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
Battalion
iel sol
Low Summer Rates
Low Fall Rates
2 Blocks from campus
Classified:
845-2611
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
UJRNT€D
Hours: 8:00-5:00
401 Stesney College Station
696-3455
The Golden Rule has Openings!
Christian men and women
nonsmoking
Summer-Fall/Spring
Large 2 Bdrm./Ba. Furn/Unfurn.
Locked storage Shuttle by door
$150/mo.-share bdrm
$275/mo. own bdrm
Call 764-8447 or 693-2998
S€RVIC€S
TYlMMi: Accutatt* & fast, call a It cm 1:00. am time
weekends. 770-401 1 56l7/3
Word Processing: Proposals, dissertations, theses,
manuscripts, reports, newsletters, term papers, re
sumes. loiters. 704-0614. 147t6/3
H€IP UURNT6D
GO\ KRN.MKM JOBS. Slli.040 - $3il.230./yi. Now
hiring. Call S03-6S7-6000 ext. R-033 1 for current fed
eral list. 130t8/14
Suinmei Special. 3 bdrm.. 1 hath. Close to A&M. First
live will go for $90. per qualified student. Minimum
three. FCF Prop. 779-0401 / 704-6303. 135t0/10
Telemarketing. The\ call vou. F.xcelfeni earnings. Per
fect retirees - anyone, kav Blown. 1-913-023-7099.
133t0/0
FIRMSHF.l) TWO BEDROOM APT. PUREE
BLOCKS PROM I MVERSITY. CA & H. $220. DL-
PPPYPS. $173. 779-3700 or 840-9272. 132t0/3
BUSIN6SS OPPORTUNITV
For Rent: Apartment efficiency. Walking distance to
campus. 1 Bdrm. Ivng. rm. $210. Bills paid. Male stu
dent only. Call after 3 p.m. 093-4483. 133t0/4
S€RVIC€S
ON THE DOUBLE
All kinds of typing at reasonable rates. Dis
sertations, theses, term papers, resumes.
Typing and copying at one stop.
On The Double
331 University Dr.
846-3755 iset
1 CRN KEY BUSINESS. Handling Ilormel. Heinz.
Campbell's and similai products. No selling. Service
commercial accounts set up by parent company. Na
tional census figures show average earnings of
$1,204.20 pel month. Requires approx. 8 hours pet
week and $13,000. cash fdi equipment. Expansion is
automatic lot those selected. Write New American.
P.O. Box 300247. Birmingham. AL 33230 oi call toll-
free 1-800-231-0363. Ask for operatoi 1-F . 13(it0/10
FOR SALS
lt*H0. 14 \ 70 mobile home. 3 bdrm.. 2 bath. S8.000.
40tl-75fi-3333. Most sell. 15:itB/4
Typing. Kditing. and Library Research Assistance. Gall
lot details. 77<>-8:S7(r. 136t9/3
1980 Schult Mobil Home. 2 BR. IW Bath. Skirted,
quite park. 764-8875. 151t6/6
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
MUSCULOSKELETAL INJURY
STUDY
Recent injury to muscles or joints
especially athletic injuries
Volunteers interested in participating
in investigative drug studies will be
paid for time and cooperation.
G & S Studies, Inc.
846-5933
156t7/1
Page 6/The Battalion/Wednesday, June 4, 1986
Oil bust hitting Odessa
Workers losing hope, leaving /ow
ODESSA (AP) — Oil Field woik-
ers have found jobs for almost a
quarter of a century by posting their
names on a tattered bulletin board at
the Tradeway Grocery.
But David Perrin attaches little
hope to the note with his name and
phone number.
“Usually that board’s full,” Perrin,
35, of Odessa, said. “People aren’t
even putting their names up. They
figure it won’t do any good.”
Lucille Grindle, 63, who owns the
tiny grocery store, said the men who
have found her business a help in
getting oil field work are now having
trouble finding any job at all.
“They’re looking, but you know
everything is so oil-related,” she said.
According to Perrin, when some
one in the oil field quits or is fired,
the drilling company already has a
replacement in mind.
A year ago the board and the door
on which it hangs were covered with
names of job seekers, and the notes
were being removed weekly. During
the boom prior to 1982, few names
were posted as out of work.
But now some roughnecks are
looking for other kinds of employ
ment, and some have already left
town, Perrin said.
Grindle said 1986 oil price fluc
tuations have created a situation that
is different from the early 1982 oil
bust.
“There were just a lot of people
here then, from Michigan and north
and east,” she said. "What’s sad
about this (slump) is, a lot of the peo
ple that are leaving and have left
have been out here for years work
ing in the oil Fields.”
And many of those working are
making far less money than before,
she said.
“They’re not questioning what
when a job is<
they pay
said.
Oil field workers who nij
or SIf an hour and worked
during the boom now are
Ac
make $7 to S9, Grindle said.
Perrin said he undersiarJB
such a cut in pay affects a far|j|he Sou
"It's kind (il hard In : ^cted to s
$203 a week — if you can Ou
Pei mi s.nd. 'I li.ueni had, ^lampions
plo\ mein c h<-< k lor M-UMi'a j Indiana);
Like many workers, he * looking
considering leaving OdessJn.
going back to construction ifYacA a
11\ <■ \ c.ii s in die oil fields : , o u I h e
lethodist
He recalled seeing a dn the r
siiikei t h.ti s.t\s. "Will ihd dth as mai
leaving < tdrssa please tin bur othei
lights. he top 10,
i lie added, hilii 0 do it w
would s\a\ until that umeorjames pull
Barnes, i
Unemployment up os prices dro,
ODESSA (AP) — Dorenda Nun
cio waited patiently in a packed De
partment of Human Services office
in Odessa to find out if she, her hus
band and two daughters qualified
for food stamps.
“If it weren’t for my family help
ing me out, we probably would have
starved to death by now,” she said.
Her husband was laid off in
March from his $300-a-week job as a
roustabout for an oil field supply
company. In late April, she applied
for food stamps, then waited an
other two weeks before getting an
appointment for an interview, Nun
cio, 25,said.
With two small children, she and
her husband have discussed leaving
the West Texas oil fields for greener
pastures. But they sought work else
where when the oil patch economy
took a downturn about three years
ago.
“It didn’t do us no good,” Nuncio
said. “It just got us farther in debt.
We’ve got too much invested. We
can’t really pick up and leave.”
Area officials say the lines for
food stamp assistance began grow
ing last winter, when the price of oil
plummeted. As trading on spot mar
kets pushed oil from about $32 a
barrel in December to less than $10
this spring, the wait for a simple in
terview for government assistance
stretched from about a week to more
than a month, officials say.
were up about 33 percent in early
1986 over the same period in 1985,
of ficials said.
Joan Morris, director of income
assistance at the Human Ser vices of
fice, said that until recently a person
could expect an interview about a
week after applying.
“Right at this point, we’re running
at something over 30 days,” Morris
said.
Morris of the Human Services of
fice said that as early as last year she
began seeing the “long-term em-
“If it weren't for my fam
ily helping me out, we
probably would have
starved to death by now. "
— Dorenda Nuncio, ap
plying to the Department
of Human Services for
food stamps in Odessa.
Although local law enforcement
agencies cannot definitely peg a rise
in the crime rate to the poor econ
omy, they do speculate that unem
ployment has fed some of the statis
tics, the Odessa American reported
in a nine-part series of stories on the
area’s oil woes.
In Odessa, for example, reported
robberies almost doubled and thefts
Clements campaign
over $34,000 in debt
AUSTIN (AP) — Former Gov.
Bill Glements’ campaign reports
show him $34,274 in the hole, but
his Republican supporters are not
worried and Democratic officials in
dicated they don’t think it’s a true in
dication of the gubernatorial candi
date’s campaign situation.
“These numbers are just going to
motivate the Glements troops to
work harder,” said Reggie Bashur,
Clements’ press secretary.
Mark McKinnon, campaign press
aide to Gov. Mark White, said, “Mr.
Clements is known for his deep
pockets and there is no doubt those
pockets will be turned outside before
November. We ll be outspent again.
There’s no doubt about it.”
Campaign expense and contribu
tions reports submitted this week
showed White has $1.7 million in the
bank, while Republican challenger
Clements is $34,()()() in debt,
Clements reported contributions
of $636,709 and expenses of
$579,326 lor the period April 24
through May 28. But his campaign is
$34,000 in the red because of a defi
cit from the previous report.
Meanwhile, San Antonio Appeals
fudge Shirley Butts announced
Tuesday additional endorsements in
her runoff race with state Sen. Oscar
Mauzy, D-Dallas, for the Texas Su
preme Court.
Butts said the new endorsements
include Bob Krueger, former special
ambassador to Mexico, and state
Rep. Frank Tejeda, D-San Antonio,
head of a House committee investi
gation into activities of the Texas Su
preme Court.
Nazi insignia painted
on candidate’s porch
AUSTIN (AP) — A swastika was
painted late Sunday or early Mon
day on the front porch of a candi
date for Travis County commis
sioner, who also is president of the
Jewish Community Council of Aus
tin.
Alan Sager says the swastika is the
latest in a series of anti-Semitic inci
dents during his candidacy. He said
anti-Semitic letters were mailed in
April to several of his supporters
and a white cross and an obscenity
were spray-painted on one of his
campaign signs last month.
Sager, who is in Saturday’s runoff
election for the Republican nomi
nation for county commissioner of
Precinct 2, said, “The truth is I don’t
know what to say. I think that people
ought to know that this kind of stuff
goes on in Austin, Texas, in 1986,
and we ought to work together to
stop it.”
Sager’s runoff opponent, Austin
businessman Zack Dawes, galled the
acts “reprehensible.”
“I certainly feel that anybody who
would do something like that is ob
viously a nut,” Dawes said.
He also said, however, “I would
sav that while it is regrettable that
anyone would pull such an act of
anti-Semitism, I feel that it’s even
worse that a candidate would try to
use this in a campaign and actually
exploit his religious beliefs. I think it
is obvious to the people that he’s us
ing this (for) political purposes and
not to expose anti-Semitic senti
ment.”
Sager finished second in the May
3 primary with 34.7 percent of the
vote. Dawes had 46.6 percent. The
winner of the runoff will face Demo
crat Bruce Todd in the November
general election.
CpI.
vou
John McAhc)
literally
do." said
robbery,
hand.
An increase in aggravate:
also mav stem from econoni
Bii
ployed” coming through the doors.
In the wake of falling oil prices,
she said, her department’s 30 work
ers have been stretched to the limit.
The state, meanwhile, has told her to
expect autumn budget cuts, she said.
“I don’t see how we could run
with any fewer people that we have
now,” she said. “Everybody’s work is
just piled up.”
While many have tinned to the
government for help, a spokesman
for the Odessa Police Department
speculated that sharp increases in
robberies and thefts may signify that
this year’s drop in oil prices
prompted others to turn to crime.
“If they’re unemployed now,
they’re going to do what they have to
»ut at 71 i
Iropped fn
ion Mond<
iis knuckle
he Mt. Sar
ornia in lat
the S\\
hips in mic
i; Rai nes
nenis two
Hmw Mot
lions. Mi \ In mi said, .is « .^i, q e( |
short. o pull out (
From January thnw$iHq t h B a]
( klessa police rci oided -I te) l ,|) Sent |
and 1,314 thefts of morel
compared with 28 robberies j
thefts of more than SSOfor
pei iod in 1985. A
Similarly, increases havetd
ported in sexual assault!. I.jis
pared with seven; aggrauiB
s.mlis. 143 compared Mil HOLST
simple .ivs.iiihs. 13(i i(impairffithhe go-;
182. Burglaries and auto joint bom
i lined and hoi mi ides hekh ;ense took
Midland (.minn Slu-i ng the Cel
Paintei said an nu iease. heir Kith i
i i nnes from 170 to (i(M .The Cell
April i oiiipai cd [ot!ies.ii jest-ol-sev<
Iasi veal lelleils problem'(cries wii
■ n ea’s ei on 106-103 vi<
Y’ou i and am iluiic n m ru|sday i
else," Painiei said, “i’eoplt lespite scoi
e;et oners now. 1 he t. Jlro's thre
g<ring, the )ol)s ai e going I .04-101 lea
itnj>a« i < d ii all at one time.'' Bill Wall
Lt. I Link .\oi ton. spokKjbints of tl
the Midland Police Deparu eran offer
he started receiving calls Walton I
month ago inquii m.; a lobeM 1’ai
land’s higher suicide rate. iL,
I he number of suicides'
changed significantly, and'
said the- national mediamusii-
that the soc ietal effects of'
drops rival those of 1929's
ol the stockmarket.
"I think they figurethattte
many rich people in .'Is
they’re killing themselves,”I*
He said he tells callers, "Wk
pie get hard up in Midland
pack up and leave. Thesefj
have money stashed away."
Horse ownei
charged in
cruelty case
GEORGETOWN (AP)
man has been charged
cruelty to animals in coiff
wit h 26 horses officials sad
starving on a 27-acre rantki
Leander.
Larry Newsome, acconfb
by his lawyer, turned hinisdj
the sheriffs office Month)
was released on $1,(
Deputy Jim Stinnett.
The horses were seized'
day, when Stinnett exeai'l
search and seizure warrant
ranch leased by Newsom*
deputy said.
Justice of the Peace Dus
Ham issued the warrant
hearing complaints abouidj
mals from the Williamson!
Humane Society.
Kathy Buckler, a spokes*
for the Humane Society,sJ* 1 |
eral people had called the
complaining about the corf
in which the animals were If
“There was nothing in
but weeds. There was no*
Buckler said of the feeding
She said she saw theskek
mains of three horses.
She also said officials ■
three bags of oats, but the'
were in no condition to (if
oats.
A hearing will be sche'l
within 10 days to determine
to do with the animals,Suf
said.
Gilliam can order eitlrf
the animals be returnedl»
owner or that they be p
the custody of the county
If the county gets thi
will be auctioned off, 8
said.
The horses are now at
mal hospital in Georgeto"
nett said.
i