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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 8, 1986)
» Page 4/The Battalion/Friday, August 8, 1986 Battalion Classifieds NOTIC6 If you still haven’t picked up your 84-85 Aggieland, you can still do so by coming to the English Annex Monday thru Friday, 8:30 - 4:30. Bring your school I.D. or a drivers license • 184tfn If you ordered an 85-86 Aggieland but will not be here next fall you can pay $3.50 and we will mail it to you . Come by the En- glish Annex M-F, 8:30 - 4:30. 184tfn FOR R€NT 822-7321 Newly Remodeled Newly Redecorated Very Large 1 bedrooms from $245. 2 bedroom, 2 baths as low as $335. many leasing specials available Pool On site staff Sun Deck Security Club Room Laundry Facilites Near Shuttle Large Closets 3200 Pinfeather, Bryan Professionally managed by Chatham Enterprises 185t8/27 FREE SERVICE! Let Student Apartment Locators help you find the right apartment, condo, duplex, or house and, re ceive a FREE PHONE ANSWERING MACHINE. Come by 403 B University Dr. W. in Northgate, or call 846-1087. 18718/8 THE GOLDEN RULE Renting to non-smokers/non-drink- ers. 2 Bd./2 Ba., furnished 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! 18117/25 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 T.xncii I vping. Word Processing, Resumes, Accurate, last. 1M-RIT ( T PR IN 1.822-1430. 159t8/27 Word Processing, Proposals, dissertations, these, manuscripts, reports, newsletters, resumes, letters. 764-6614. 189t8/14 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY OWN YOUR OWN...turn key business. Distribute Krilo 'Lay and similar snack food products through ac counts seJfip for you by the company/ No selling. Cen sus of industry figures shows average monthly profit of $1,038. on minimum cash investment of $10,000. Ex- pasion is automatic through company participation if \ou ate selected. No special vehiciy needed. Write New American. I’.O. Box 3rthfe47. Birmingham, Alabama 35236or, call toll free 1-800-231-0563. Ask forOpera- tor 4-S. 19018/8 BE THE BOSS. Own & operate multi-line vending route. College Station & surrounding area. High profit items. Can start part or full time. Experience not nec- essarv. Requires cat & $1,695. - $20,000. cash invest ment. f or details call now toll free - 1-800-824-7888 operator 511. Komet Vending, 3252 Western Dr., Cameron Park, CA 95682. (916-677-1923). 190t8/13 HELP UJflNTED Extra large 2 Bdrm., 1 Bath. 5 blks. from campus. New appliances. Renovated inside and out. $275. mo. $100. deposit. Limit 2 students. See at Spruce & Boyett. 846- 7506. \ 190t9/l WANTED-parttime student for pressroom work, needed immedi ately, approx. 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Tuesday through Friday through Aug. 15; then 20-30 hours weekly through end of August; then 20 hours per week guaranteed through Fall Semester. Hours generally 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Mon day through Friday. Pay $3.35; work often dirty. Interested, con tact Don Johnson, 845-2646 or Room 230 Reed McDonald. 189tfn Efficiency, no hills, no pets. $175. Call 823-8961. 38 acres and 3 bdrm. home. Hors 846-1534. velcome. John - 190t8/27 For Rent: Condo. 1 Bdrm.. 1 Bath, w/d, microwave bus route. (2 14)495-2123. 1 79t8/l' WALK TO (IAMBI'S! 2 Bedroom lourplex from $275.00. 690-2140. 090-0006. 185t8/27 Room in lovely home, near campus. Private entrance, bath. 846-0919 after 6:00. 187t8/8 Sell or lease condo in Woodstock. 2 Bdrm., furnished, bus route, pool. $450./mo. (713)376-7115. I82t8/12 THE HOUSTON CHRONICLE Has immediate openings for route carriers and/or sales solicitor posi tions. Carrier positions require working early morning hours deliv ering papers and can earn $400. to $600. per month plus gas allow ance. Call Andy at 693-7815 or Ju lian at 693-2323 for an appoint ment. 1B1tfn Ladies Schwinn 10-speed, $150. or best offer. New. 1- 825-3513 after 6 p.m. 187t8/12 $350. 3 Bdim./2 Ba. 4-plex. neat 1 AMI Appliances garage. 693-5280. 704-7303. 840-0211. 179t8/27 Part time Dental Assistant Position. Experience nec- essai v. Apph 2101 Texas Avenue. C S. 179t8/8 Huge duplexes close to Hilton. 1 wo and three bed rooms. with washer and dryer connections. Fire place, ceiling fans, and fenced vards. 840-2471. 846-8730, 093-1027. Univeisit\ Rentals. P C). Drawer C l. College Station. 77840. 103tfn Grapev • Personality. Call 696-341 1. 189tfn Efficiency. All bills paid. $175. 2 Bdrm. house, 4402 Poplar. $325. 2 Bdrm. apts. $200. & up. 779-3700. 187t8/12 Bergstrom A.F.B. has a position for Golf Course Su- perintendent/Groimd Maintenance, UA-9, Regular lull time. Salarv $21,804. per annum. First closing date is close of business day 8 August 86. Position is open until filled. For more information come to Civilian Per sonnel office, Bergstrom Air Force Base, Tx. 186t8/8 1 &: 2 Bdrm. Furnished Apts. North Gate C.S. 1st street. A/C, no pets. (1) 825-2761. 189tfn Part Time: Apph at Piper’s Gulf Service Station, Texas Avenue at University Drive. 182t8/7 impus commission lission possible. oik. 693-9984. High 1 75tlii UJRNTED Recent sports injury to wrist, knee or ankle? Severe enough pain to remain on study up to 10 days and 5 visits? Volunteers will be paid for their time and cooperation. G & S Studies, Inc. 846-5933 PERSONALS ADOPTION - NOT ABORTION. Loving, financially sec in e couple anxious to legally adopt Caucasian infant. Will help with expenses. Please answer our prayers. Call collect anytime. (613)557-5433. 190t8/8 Dcspeiateh seeking name and number of beautiful blonde drivei of white Ford Escort with New Jersev plates. 846-5340 evenings. 185t8/7 SERVICES T yping, Word Processing for Dissertations, T hesis, and Term Papers. 693-1598. 187t8/15 IN THE Typing. Editing, and Librarv Research Assistance. Call for details. 779-8376. 167t9/3 TYPING: Accurate, East. Reliable. W ord Processing. 7 days® week. 776-4013. 188t8/I3 ymiw Rock singer scheduled for release Warped by Scott McCitoi HUNTSVILLE (AP) —David Crosby, the rock singer who shot to fame as a member of the group Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, was slated for release Friday from a Texas prison where he has been serving time for drug possession, corrections officials said. Crosby, 44, was approved for pa role late last month by the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles. Crosby will remain in a halfway house in Houston until California corrections officials agree to allow his transfer to that state, Texas au thorities said, since he has asked to reside in California. Crosby was serving a five-year sentence for a 1983 conviction out of Dallas, where he was arrested on charges of possession of cocaine and possession of a firearm. In the late 1960s, Crosby gained fame as a member of the Byrds. Later, he teamed with Graham Nash, Stephen Stills and Neil Young to write and perform hit songs, some of them protest songs. The group performed at the legendary 1969 Woodstock Festival in New York. During his incarceration, Crosby generally shunned the press. Recently, however, he told the prison newspaper, The Echo, that he has composed some of his best music since being imprisoned. DfKDfflv FDR THE FIKST li/AE IV, ONE COLLECTION YES, RE.ME./A&ER. SACK WHE.N SOHGS^L&OHLI 7-SECONPS LONG? the-TRE all here : BA-AABTI NEED TO HOLD YOUR . j- THESE ARE THE 0RI6WAL 7-SECOND HITS, FLA'IEP IN THEIR ENTIRE!'/ THE BANDS THAT FADED (MEDIATELY INTO OBSCURITY.. . ALL SO SONGS — _ THIS 0NE / 45if®C v RECORP (oR y THE. FKDIT BATS AH&WECA ,^M r . WE CAN THE SCHLOCK &EttWS. 0H, YEAH, YEAH, BABE! OH, YEAH, BABE, )EAH* S' l _thejlah -babes ... AWD fROBABLY MORE... Waldo RECORD (oR fAIM-fl CASSETTE) f nx>LSN-l *•! i:.- /. ** I NOT FOR SALE IfjClO j J OR QREE& Ibeali (AP) — A day sente ■ airmai Kevin Thorr YOU COWINCED MY FATHER TO GET A SEX CHANCE, THEN YOU SOLO PRUGS TO 5 ^ GRADERS, SHOT YOUR MOTHER, SOLD OUR KIDS INTO SLAVERY, ROBBED 18 BANKS, BLEW UP A POLICE STATION, BURNED DOWN 5 CITY BLOCKS, AND YOU EVEN PUSHED A NUN OFF A CUFF! SO TELL ME, MARCIA, TELL ME JUST ONE THING.. THE BACK0f THE A4 P PAR™classified OFF ROUTE i a |out hi' SOMEPLACE iVCtoy a I ent x po Col duced Aii the lowes ordered i .him a disl J Ott wi Jsavenwi him 259 ( |se rved. The ct reviev M ight Jr. gSHh Fon < ^^Bir Foret If the Harsh Reality Kse then Military / U/Odt-O YOuuKe Me to a oo the O/PLOMA PEE Last week, he told the Houston Chronicle he had kicked a 10-year drug habit and wanted to resume his musical career. YEP, bWDUAVAib MMQjP ^ Crosby said the heroin and co caine he took did not enhance his creativity, but provided him with ar tificial energy. $ /l SO POP /} MMaJ AM 3-So POM AAJAjOUAJCtfPAiTS - OOPS WA r /MCONJ> £ TVS STAMPS ? Ydu me am r cam 't 6-Raduate umt/l x Pay my paPkimo- r/cxErs r THAT * \ (\ \ jm y . j . x OdM 'r tmh m MOPE EXPENSIVE, jMto Aim, o&m ObtTf They hi (oA/Mb J A&M prof doubles as musician The industi bringir Students rock with Sneaky Fell mals. By Suzie Brawley Reporter Out of the classroom and onto the stage, Pete Rizzo, along with his band, Sneaky Pete and the Neon Madmen, energizes audiences with music from the 1950s and 1960s. Rizzo, who has been teaching at Texas A&M for 10 years, says he takes about two hours off each week from teaching cell biology and doing research in his lab to practice with the band. Rizzo says he formed the four-man band in 1968 simply because he likes music and it gives him a chance to play his favorite old songs. “I don’t know how I got the name,” Rizzo says. “But somebody started calling me Sneaky Pete way back in high school, and it kind of caught on.” Rizzo, who plays rhythm guitar, says he and the bass guitar player, John Gibbs, are the only members who have been with the band since the beginning. The current band, which includes lead guitarist John Ward and drummer David Branum, has been together about a year and a half. Although Rizzo is in charge and picks most of the songs, he says everyone has a say about the music the band plays. “We all have input for the material,” he says. “We all suggest songs and we all take part in the vocals.” Rizzo says listening to the radio inspired his in terest in music after he graduated from high school. “We don’t do too many recent songs,” Rizzo says. “We specialize in ’50s and ’60s music. “There’s really no specific group we center on, we just play a big mixture. But the songs we play have to be hits so people will remember them.” Rizzo says Dire Straits and ZZ Top are proba bly his favorite contemporary bands. “They play, I think, the same ’50s and ’60s sty le,” Rizzo says. “It’s not the metal sound that many of today’s bands play.” Rizzo also writes some of his own music. “1 don’t think I could put a handle on what particular style it is,” he says. “I know it’s not jazz or folk, but I wouldn’t know what to call it. If I could describe it, Td say it was a combination of blues, rockabilly and modern rock.” The band has recorded two of Rizzo’s songs, “Honky-Tonk Boogie Shop” and “American Hot Dog,” and made a video of both songs. The video was shown last year on “15 Magazine,” a show aired by KAMU-TV, the University-operated television station. But Rizzo says his music is not really the type of music the band usually plays. “The style of most of the songs 1 write isn’t suitable for the band,” Rizzo says. “There are a lot that are, however, but we just haven’t gotten around to learning them. We don't havtah time to practice, since everyone hasajob." I He says the band is limited by hoivoftraa members can play — a maximum of one iboij week is all they can handle. “The band really is a hobby forallofus/itiq says. “If it got to be where it was pressure just wouldn’t be enjoyable anymore." Although Rizzo originally intendedihek to play to crowds with a median ageofM.hopii they would get a nostalgia kick out of iheitni he says that the band’s main clientele is now si dents. “A lot of people that come to see uswetti even born when the songs we play were out,' says. “But they like the songs and theykno* words. “1 also like the student crowd becausetb have so much energy for dancing.” Rizzo says the band enjoys playing da rather than concerts because they can realhpl to the crowd. So they play at a lot offhttrr parties and class reunions, as well as makinjit ular appearances at a small club nearcampus “But 1 don’t care where we play," Rizzosan don’t care if it’s outside or inside, a bigplatf small place, as long as there are peopled® and having a good time.” PUC seeks phone deregulation GOVERNMENT JOBS. $ 16,040-$59,230/yr. Now hir ing. C/ill 805 (>87-6000 ext. R-9531 for current federal list. 167t8/14 AUSTIN (AP) — The Public Util ity Gommission staff on Thursday proposed a deregulation plan that would allow AT&T Communica- tions to set its own long distance rates in Texas in 1989. AT&T rates now are set by the commission. All other long distance companies in Texas are free to set their own rates. “It appears from the proposed rules that the PUG staff recognizes Texas, like most other states, needs to move from a regulated to a^nonre- gulated telecommunications market place,” Pres Sheppard, an AT&T vice president, said. The commission has not set a hearing on the proposal. AT&T’s competitors are wary of deregulation. They say AT&T is a business giant that must be regu lated in order to maintain fair com petition. A petition filed Thtirsday by the PUC staff asks the commission to de regulate AT&T rates June 1, 1989, and conduct a hearing a year later to determine the effect. The commission last year rejected a proposal that would have deregu lated AT&T rates in some markets. The 1983 Legislature ordered the commission to look at deregulation. Deregulation of long distance rates was one of the goals of the 1984 AT&T divestiture that sepa rated local phone service from long distance service. The deregulation plan offered by the PUC staff does not affect local phone service. Under the proposal, new services offered by AT&T after June 1, 1987 would not be regulated. Deregulation of all AT&T rates would go into effect June 1, 1989 “if AT&T meets a simple test for lack of market dominance,” according to the proposal. The commission would take an other look at AT&T June 1, 1990 to measure the effect of deregulation. If it decided it was working well, the commission would limit itself to monitoring complaints about AT&T service. Public Utility Counsel Jim Boyle, the state lawyer who represents resi dential and small business custom ers, said deregulation could be a good thing, if carefully imple mented. Jury told murderer abused girlfriend's child WACO (AP) — The former live- in girlfriend of Clifton Eugene Be- lyeu told jurors Thursday the con victed murderer once held her 2- year-old daughter by her hair out side a second-story window and threatened to drop her. Shirley Carver of Corsicana said she grabbed her daughter as Belyeu released her. Belyeu was found guilty Wednes day of the Dec. 10 stabbing and shooting death of Melodic Bolton, 35, of West. The jury was scheduled to recon vene today at 9 a.m. for final argu ments in the punishment phase of Belyeu’s trial. Jurors can either sen tence him to life in prison or the death penalty. Carver said she and Belyeu lived together between 1980 and 1983, but she later learned that Belyeu was married to someone else. In one incident, Carver said Be lyeu picked up a lamp and threw it at his mother, and then attacked her (Carver) and ripped her clothes off. She said she ran out of the hduse naked, and Belyeu chased her down and threw her to the ground. Belyeu then kneed her in the back and forced her to eat dirt, Carver said. Carver said when she once com plained Belyeu was driving too fast, he grabbed her parakeet out of a cage, pulled the head off, threw it in her lap and wouldn’t let her remove it. Ray Adams, also a prosecution witness, said he hired Belyeu before and after Belyeu was sentenced to prison for a 1979 Collin County rob bery. Adams said his wife’s car, sto len Dec. 10, later turned up in Be lyeu’s possession. said Belyeu was friendly and always a good worker. Defense attorneys Ken Abies and Fred Horner, appointed to rep resent Belyeu, called two of Belyeu’s sisters to testify Thursday. Ann Rog ers said she never saw Belyeu beat anyone or steal anything. Betty Morgan, another sister, said Belyeu never hit her or his mother. She said all the Belyeu children worked at a restaurant with Belyeu’s mother to pay bills and Belyeu would give his mother the tips he earned as a waiter. But on cross examination, Adams During Thursday’s testimony, Be lyeu cried when he looked at his family while waiting for the jury to enter the courtroom. It was the first time he had shown any emotion dur ing the two-week trial. Dallas bank 14th in state to fail in 1986 NEW posed c we?” “ ‘Why c violent; typical inanity But that ex of hut the rel species WASHINGTON (AP)-Fi Citizens Bank in Dallas was do* Thursday by Texas Bank Commissioner James L. Sex* who named the Federal Dep® Insurance Corporation as if/ ceiver, the FDIC said. FDIC directors later appro* | the assumption of the bilities of the bank by Gfl* Bank Northeast, a newly $ s tered subsidiary of GrJ : fl Btuu shares Inc. in Dallas, FW spokesman Kat Sanossaid. , The failed bank’s only o® was to reopen Friday, with dt?’ itors automatically becoming positors of Grand Bank N® east, he said. The closing was the SGtlik failure nationwide and the h in Texas this year, the FDIC^ First Citizens Bank had i (i assets of $93.8 million, of"®' Grand Bank Northeast will same about $88.9 million 15,300 deposit accounts, Sa 11 1 said. The new corporation agreed to pay the FDICap ; [ chase premium of $1,005,50® also will purchase certain I®* | and assets of the failed bank $73.5 million, the FDIC said The FDIC will advance S® million to the assuming ban) retain assets of the failed with a book value of about J million, Sanos said. The transaction is sup approval by the appropf'l court. Hov TOC