The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, July 18, 1986, Image 4

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    Battalion Classifieds
NOTIC6
THEY’RE HERE!!!
Pick up your graduation
r<Jp>sf
announcements NOW!!!
/O’ °^\
Extra announcements go on
f *. • O QA
sale Tuesday, July 22nd, 8
Tl
a.m. First come first serve.
J \
MSC Student Finance
Center
17717/23
FOR fl€NT
• POOL
•CXI B ROOM
• :i-LAUNDRY ROOMS
• I.ARCiE STORAGE
•24 HR EMERGENCY
MAINTENANCE
$210 ON SUMMER LEASES ONLY. LIMITED ON
EFFICIENCY AND 1 BEDROOMS.
ALL BILLS PAID!
Starting at $260
country place
apartments
3902 COLLEGE MAIN
846'0515
ARE YOU SHOCKED WITH ELECTRICITY BILLS?
ALL BILLS PAID!
As Low As
$235
Summer/or
$368
Fall/Spring
•Extra large pool
•Tennis court
•Sauna
•Balconies
•All electric kitchen
•Individual A/C & heat
•On-grounds mgmt & sec.
•24 hr. emergency maint.
Wm. J. Garrett ‘47
1601 Holleman,
College Station, Texas
409/693-6716
173tfn
The Golden Rule
Renting to Christian, non-smok
ers. 2 Bd/2 Ba. turn apts. Locked
storage, free laundry, bus.
UTILITIES & CABLE PAID!!
Telephone connected. One de
posit for all! Deposit earns 5% in
terest. $150/mo. share bedroom,
$275/mo. private bd/ba.
CALL 693-5560 TODAY!! 176t7/16
3 Bdrm/2 Bath 4-Plexes
with washer/dryer & all kitchen ap-
pliances. Near TAMU. From
$350/mo. Call for appt.
846-1712/696-4384/693-0982
168tfn
3 BR Student Summer Special
Close to A&M. $270./375. Central
air, appliances.
764-6505, 779-6401.
17517/25
2 BR 4-|)U*x: $275. Quiet area. Pecan Ridge, 774-0626,
704-6505. 175t7/25
H€IP UJRNT6D
Position available in Montessori pte-school for elemen
tal v. KC'.K, ot Montessori certified teacher. Call 779-
0290. 177i7/29
LOST AND FOUND
Please return brass Dachshund statue 5x5". Ag. Eco.
Room 112. 1 77t7/l 8
S€RVIC€S
MCAT PREP CLASS
Starts Sunday, July 20, 6-10 p.m
Call TODAY! Kaplan 696-PREP.
Scholarships Available
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
Nice one bedroom apartment, pre-lease for Fall only.
$289. 695-61 52. 175t7/25
IN ice 2 bedroom/2 bath. Washer/Dryer connection.
$300. summer rate. Will pre-lease for fall. Associated
Brokers. 693-5544. 168t7/24
Huge duplexes close to Hilton. Two and three bed-
moms. with washer and di ver connections. Fire place,
ceiling fans, and fenced vards. 846-2471. 846-8750,
695-1627. I nivei sitN Rentals. P.O. Drawei (H . College
Station. 77840. 165tfn
Typing - Experienced, Fast, Accurate and Reasonable.
Call Cindy 693-2271 or Candy 693-8537. 168t7/18
ORE PREP CLASSES will be starting soon. Call for in
formation. 696-PREP. ' 176t7/23
Typing. Editing, and Library Research Assistance. Call
for details. 779-8376. 167t9/3
Word Processing: Proposals, dissertations, thesis,
manuscripts, reports, newsletters, term papers, re
sumes. letters. 764-6614. 169t7/18
JOB OPPURTUNITICS
WORD PROCESSING. All kinds. Experienced. De
pendable. Reasonable Rates. AUTOMATED CLERI
CAL SERVICES. 693-1070. 168t7/31
AMAZING PROFITS! Sell
Wholesale, Retail, Flea Markets,
Parties! 3,000 Quality Products.
Catalog, $3.00 (Refundable),
Ruth Reba, 86 Main Street,
Morea, Penna. 17948. i78y7 i8
FOR SRL6
Pontiac Catalina. 1976. Auto Air. AMT.M. Cruise.
$1200. Negotiable. Runs and Looks Great!!!! 178t7/22
Home owners oppoitimitv. 12 x 64 Mobile Home. 2
Bdrin. Make an offer. 775-3533. 176t7/22
‘83 Honda Moped - Blue. Good running condition.
$350. Negotiable. 846-0860. 1 73t7/22
TRS-80 Model 4. 2 Disk Drive, with printer & Modem.
Call 268-4015. 177t7/29
H€IP LURNTCD
Need worker for odd jobs. Call 693-5286. 764-7363 or
846-62 J 1. ' 1 78t7/l 8
On campus commission sales woik. 693-9984. High
commission possible. 175tfn
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $ 16.040-$59.230/yr. Now hir
ing. Call 805-687-6000 ext. R-9531 for current federal
list. 167t8/14
Good with children? Care for 1 vr. old in mv home,
fits: 8-5 (M-F). 696-0570 aftei 5 pin. 1 76(7/23
Have a toddlei hut want to woi k? ( .are for 1 vi. old in
mv home and he with vour child too. HRS: 8-5 (M-F).
696-0570 after 5 p.m. 176t7/23
Expert Tvping. Word Processing. Resumes. Accurate,
Fast. PERFECT PRINT. 822-1450. 159t8/27
TYPING: Accurate 6c Fast, call after 1 00. anvtime
weekends. 776-4013. 172t8/2
The
Battalion
GENERAL INFORMATION
Published Monday through Friday during regular semes
ters; Tuesday through Friday during summer sessions;
Wednesday only during most other weeks.
Ad reservation deadlines; 9 a m. two working days be
fore publication except for Al Ease (weekly entertainment
tabloid) which is 9 a m. Tuesday before publication, and
Back to School edition, which has various deadlines to be
checked out with advertising reps.
Ad copy deadlines: 4 p.m. two working days before pub
lication except for At Ease which is 4 p.m. Tuesday before
publication.
Circulation: 23,000 press run. Paper serves about
36,000 fulltime students, more than 9,700 faculty and
staff. Delivered to all dorms and many other campus build
ings, as well as some homes and most apartments in Col
lege Station. Other distribution at high traffic points both
on and off campus.
Reproduction: Offset.
MECHANICAL INFORMATION
Column width: 2 1/16th Inches (about 12 picas plus 4
points); between columns 1/8th inch (9 points).
Column length: 21 inches (126 picas).
Page width: 6 columns or 13 inches (78 picas).
Color: Spot only. Only standard colors guaranteed.
Page 4/The Battalion/Friday, July 18, 1986
Parks department
to offer public free
movies, concerts
By Suzie Brawley
Reporter
The College Station Parks and
Recreation Department offers an in
expensive alternative to movie and
concert-goers.
Tonight the department will show
“Swiss Family Robinson” starting at
dusk.
Every weekend during the sum
mer, the department sponsors a
movie or concert for the public at
Central Park.
Admission is free for all movies
and concerts.
“The purpose of the program is to
provide enjoyable entertainment for
the public’s leisure time,” said Susan
O’Connor, program supervisor for
the department.
O’Connor said because the movies
are geared toward families that want
to get out for an evening, the depart
ment tries to provide suitable enter
tainment for the entire family to en-
joy.
Movies are shown every other Fri
day, she said. The department be
gan showing movies this year in
April and will continue the program
through August.
O’Connor said the movies usually
draw an audience of 75 to 100 peo
ple. The animated children’s films,
however, draw the biggest crowds,
she said.
The movies scheduled for the re
mainder of the summer include “B-
lue Lagoon,” “Patton” and “Coun
try.”
Concerts and movies are sched
uled on alternating weekends.
The concerts are held every two
weeks on Sunday nights from 8 to 10
p.m.
The fifth concert scheduled this
summer will feature the band 4
Hams on Rye, Sunday, July 27.
O’Connor said about 400 people
usually attend the concerts.
Kass Prince, assistant to the exec
utive director for the council, said
the department receives some ftind-
ing for the concerts from the Arts
Council of Brazos Valley.
“The council provides most of the
funding for the concerts, while the
parks department provides promo
tion, publicity and facilities,” Prince
said.
O’Connor suggested bringing
lawn chairs to the park for the mov
ies and concerts.
While concessions are available at
the park, the department also en
courages people to bring food and
drinks. Alcoholic beverages are per
mitted, O’Connor said.
Workers strive to keep
Alomo standing strong
SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Al
though the venerated walls of the
Alamo show nary a crack, workers
are taking steps to ensure that the
shrine’s walls don’t crumble.
The Alamo staff is stripping away
St. Augustine grass that hugs the
north, south and east walls of the
Alamo. Curator Steve Beck said the
grass will be replaced with “large
beige gravel that will be complimen
tary to the shrine.”
Beck said the work that began this
week is merely “preservation main
tenance,” as the walls are crack-free.
“According to the master plan,
the shrine has hardly moved at all,”
Beck said, explaining that the walls
are at least 4 feet thick. In some
places, they measure 6 feet.
The Daughters of the Republic of
Texas, custodian of the Alamo, de
cided the grass should be removed
so ground water would not be ab
sorbed into the walls that have stood
since 1718 when the Alamo was built
as a mission to christianize Indians.
The organization wants to pre
vent a problem such as the one at
Mission San Jose, where the walls of
the 255-year-old Indian quarters are
cracking. Shifting soil, age and mois
ture seeping into the foundation are
causing the walls to split.
Alamo officials consistently mon
itor two hydrothermograms — in
struments that measure humidity.
Part of the staffs routine includes
measuring the underground water
table and rainfall accumulations,
Beck told the San Antonio Light.
Meanwhile, the removal of the
grass will make the grounds look
more like they did during the 1836
Battle of the Alamo. During the
struggle against Mexican Army Gen.
Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna’s
troops, the building was surrounded
by dirt and rubble.
White asked to discourage
vigilante border patrols
AUSTIN (AP) — A border sen
ator asked Gov. Mark White on
Thursday to tell a paramilitary orga
nization that its assistance is un
wanted in controlling illegal aliens
and drug smugglers along the Mex-
ico-Texas border.
Sen. Tati Santiesteban, D-El Paso,
said he was concerned by recent re
ports of plans by the organization
Civilian Material Assistance to patrol
the border.
“Whatever its motives, this organi
zation’s plans have a potential to
provoke needless violence,” Santies
teban said in a letter to White.
“The patrols may or may not be of
a vigilante nature, but they are vigi
lante in appearance, and could only
be harmful to our relationship with
Mexico,” the letter said.
Age protects teen from
prosecution for crime
HOUSTON (AP) — A 14-year-
old boy who admitted he strangled
and sexually assaulted a southeast
Houston woman will not be pros
ecuted for the crime because of his
age, authorities said.
Texas law will prevent the boy
from spending more than six years
in the state’s custody, officikls said
Wednesday.
The boy showed “no remorse
whatsoever” during his confession to
the killing, homicide Detective FYed
Carroll said.
No attempt will be made to certify
the boy to stand trial as an adult be
cause state law only allows such certi
fication procedures for juveniles
over 14, said Kris Moore, an official
with the juvenile division of the Har
ris County district attorney’s office.
The body of Lillian Bell Piper, a
60-year-old day-care operator, was
found in her home by neighbors
Tuesday evening. Police said the
boy, after killing the woman, sat
down and ate the victim’s ice cream
before driving off in her 1977 Cadil
lac.
The suspect was caught in Piper’s
car about 15 minutes after he left
her home. Her costume jewelry,
portable television set and an imita
tion fur coat were found in her car
after it crashed into a utility pole, po
lice said.
The teen will likely end up with
the TYC, which can hold him until
he is 21, Moore said. The boy would
have to be freed and his record
wiped clean by his 21st birthday, she
said.
French cave discovery may
shed light on cannibalism
WASHINGTON (AP) — Scien
tists say they have found solid evi
dence of cannibalism in a prehistoric
cave in France, a discovery that fuels
a debate over whether the notion of
people eating human flesh is largely
a myth.
Researchers say neolithic-period
human bones found in a cave in
southeastern France show the same
evidence of butchering as animal
bones at the same site.
The 6,000-year-old bones, dated
from about 4,000 B.C., found in the
Fontbregoua Cave, contain cut
marks and breakpoints indicative of
food preparation, scientists say in a
report to be published Friday in the
journal Science.
The human bones also were dis
carded in the same way that those
who used the cave got rid of other
food refuse found at the site, they
continued.
“The analysis of these bones
strongly suggests that humans were
butchered, processed, and probably
eaten in a manner that closely paral
lels the treatment of wild and do
mestic animals at Fontbregoua,” the
researchers concluded.
INTERNATIONAL
HOUSE of PANCAKES*
RESTAURANT
x.
All you can eat
Daily Specials
1 0 p.m.-6 a.m.
All You Can Eat
Buttermilk Pancakes
$1.99
Spaghetti and Meat Sauce
with garlic bread
$2.99
*Must present this coupon
International House of Pancakes Restaurant
103 N. College Skaggs Center
,
*2.50 DISCOUNT SPECIALS
1. TUE.-FMLY. NITE ALLSEli
2. M-W LOCALS STUDENT!
CURRENT ID
3. 1st SHOW EVERY DAY
STARTING FRI, JULY 25th
STEVEN KING’S
MAXIMUM OVERDRIVE
COMING AUG. 1st
FRIDAY THE 13thVI
DECTECTIVE SCHOO
DROPOUTS
Manor East Mall MANOR EAST 3 823-83
MON.-SUN 2:30 4:50 7:25 9:45
MON.-SUN 2:10 3:50 5:30 7:15H
MON.-SUN 2:40 5:00 7:20 9:40
Where everything seems possible
and nothing Is what It seems.
Eg:
<gj A TM STAR UUASL C 19061»3Ui nowo. UK AJ RI0U AocvtA
226 Southwest Parkway
'n&icp FORE
’■“’■"THE
CtCEAT
MOUSE
DETECTIVE
►y Mowm, DonoW DudilAw*!
tn o clcuak DUrwy cartoon.
[Til aajrrii' 1
* 8iK1fDM*«
COMING JULY25lli
JACK NICHOLSON 4
MERYL STREEP
HEARTBURN
PLAZA 3 mm
MON.-SUN. 2:30 4:50 7:15 9:35
RALPH MACCHIO PAT MORITA
Karate Kid]i
»xi*cm>n«ATms mmmm
fpol mam mm HEtwiMnu
i.
MON.-SUN. 2:50 5:05 7:35 9: S(l
DANNY DEVITO
BETTE MIDLER
JUDGE REINHOLD
HELEN SLATER
RUTHLESS
PEOPLE
» □□[ DOLBY STEREO
MON.-SUN. 2:4 5 5:00 7:25 9:15
UP THERE
WITH THE BEST
OF THE BEST
4s
TOM CRUISE
WOP GUN!
APARAMOUNTPIElli
DOLBY STEREO
5 2002
E. 29th
SCHULMAN 6
MON.-SUN. 2:40 5:00 7:30 9:55
ROBB WELIAMS-PEIER O'TOOLE
CLUB
PARADISE
MON.-SUN. 2:15 4:45 7:15 9:40
PRiNa
'tyinder the
PG-13 ■£»
UtoMWAKSLN
MON.-SUN. 2:30 4:50 7:35 9:55
SYLVESTER STALLONE
IN
COBRA
$ 1
SCHULMAN THEATRES AND KKYS 105
PROUDLY ANNOUNCE THE BEGINNING
OF ‘DOLLAR DAYS’. EACH WEEK WE
WILL OFFER MOVIES FOR ADMISSION
OF JUST *1. ALL MOVIES WILL BE
SHOWN AT SCHULMAN 6 THEATRES.
THIS WEEK WE HAVE THE FOLLOWING:
2:25 4:45
7:10 9:35
E.T.
DOLBY STEREO
PG
2:35 4:55
7:20 9:45
BIG TROUBLE
IN LITTLE CHINA
PG
2:20 4:40
7:25 9:50
ANTHONY PERKINS
PSYCHO III
A basketful of cash is better
than a garage full of 'stuff'
Have a garage or yard sale this week - Call 845-2611