The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 10, 1986, Image 6

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    Battalion
Classifleds
NOTIC€
ATTENTION
ALL RECOGNIZED
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
If you’ve not yet picked up your ’87 Aggieland
contract you may do so either in Room 230 or
011 of the Reed McDonald Bldg.
Aggieland Contracts are due in no later than 5
P.M. Wednesday, October 15th* at either of
the above offices.
*There is a late charge for all Contracts turned
in after Sept. 30th
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. lOiHn
H€IP UJANT€D
THIS IS YOUR LAST CHANCE!
There’s not much time left to pick
up your ’84-’85 Aggieland. 8:30 -
4:30, M - F, in the English Annex.
Bring an I.D. or Driver’s License.
Pauanella’s Resale Furniture Sc Etc. Bed’s, dinettes,
couches, odd chairs, frame pictures Sc draperies. 1411
San Jacinto. 822-4716 or 822-0226. 25tl0/tfn
A&M Winter Ski Weeks to Steamboat, Vail or Keystone
With five or seven nights deluxe lodging, lift tickets,
mountain picnic, parties, ski race, more, from $142.!
Hurry, call Sunchase Tours for more information toll
free 1-800-321-5911 TODAY! 21tl0/24
FOR fl€NT
PART TIME
RESEARCH
ASSOCIATE
Texas A&M University Marine
Education Project. 30 hrs. per
week, November - August. Bach
elors degree and curriculum writ
ing skills required. Prefer 3 years
K-8 teaching experience, and
workshop presentation skills.
Refer to: #8600865.
Send resume to: Personnel De
partment, Texas A&M University,
YMCA Building, College Station,
TX 77843.
An Equal Opportunity Affirmative
Action Employer
Extended Special: Cotton Vil
lage Apartments, Snook, TX. 1
Bedroom, $150. 2 Bedroom,
$200. Call 846-8878 or 774-
0773 after 5 p.m. 8t10/21
ROOMMATES NEEDED
ALL BILLS PAID
693-6716
Student couple to man
age 20 unit apartment
complex, 3 blocks from
campus. Apt. plus salary.
696-7414 . 27110/13
I loiiu-u oi lu'p. \v;imu-(I now! —Top I’av— Work al
I loan— Cal! Collate imliisirios - day 01
evening. 2 K110/21
I’ipet's (.nil now ateepiing pail-liine job applications.
Apply at Texas Av enue and I'nivei sitv. 28t 10/17
GOVKK.VMEM JOBS. #16,040- $59,230/yr. Now
hiring. C iall 805-687-6000 ext. R-95S1 Ini current fed
eral list. 19400/15
Experienced Handyman needed. Own tools & trans
portation. 25 + hours and Saturdays. Call Beal Realty.
823-5469. 29tl0/17
One bedroom apt. Gas/Water provided. 406 Eisen
hower. $175. One bedroom apt. all bills paid, 107 Lu
ther. Two bedroom. 403 Bovett, $270. 693-0122, 779-
J700. 30t 10/16
LOST AND FOUND
Gold Lions-Head Ring lost. Worth more to me than to
you. Please call 696-8983. 26tl0/10
H 8c 2 Bdrm. Furnished Apts. North Gate C.S. 1st uirw \ niv i i c- a i-
, A/r- *Qn.r, |KLWAKLi! Lost Chocolate point male Siamese. Aerofit
kreet. A/C, no pets. (1) 825-2761. 189tln Vea. 845-0304, 775-5475. 27U0/13
S€flVIC€S
UJANTCD
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
With Mary Kay
Try Before You Buy
So you never buy the wrong product or
shade again. For a complimentary facial,
call for an appointment.
Independent Beauty Consultant,
M. Cynthia Leigh,
696-4200. 27110/13
INJURY STUDY
Recent injury with pain to any
muscle or joint. Volunteers in
terested in participating in in
vestigative drug studies will be
paid well for their time and co
operation.
G & S STUDIES, INC.
846-5933 1t 9/3o
TYPING BY WANDA. Am kind, am length. Rea
sonable rates. 690-1113. 30U0/23
— ——
SOS WORD PROCESSING. Bold face, Greek symbols.
Underlining, Equations. Boxes, Lines, and Tables for
your every need. Speed and Quality with our Word-
perfect software and Letter Perfect printer. Chimney
Hill Business Park, 268-2777. 10tl0/23
1'ROl ESSORS EXAM 1 li.ES for Engineering, ( hem-
istiy. Calculus. Physics al University Bookstore & l.ou-
pnt's. Ml I I/-I
Chaparral Specialties Auto and Transmission Repair.
Quality work, reasonable prices. 823-2886. 600 Wash-
iiigton St.. Bryan. 26tl0/10
>_ — ,
'T YPING, Word Processing. Bank Statements Bal
anced. 696-4446. 26t 10/14
Expert Typing, Word Processing. Resumes. From
$1.35 per page. PERFECT PRINT, 822-1430. 16tl 1/26
.Help Available - Engrg. Mechanics, Thermo, Math.
,846-3147/272-8889. 26U0/10
WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, titeses. manu
scripts. reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614.
i.’ 29 tl 1/5
i PERSONALS
‘Desparaiely Seeking Stud. (Female Desires Male. Manx
Only). If Owner/Infoitnation. Call 764-7219. 1 Free
Female Kitty. 30t.l0/14
HELP WONTED
Oyster Shuckers, Wait People,
Kitchen help needed. Brazos
Landing, 103 Boyett (next to
Campus Theatre - in the old
Whole Earth Provision Building).
846-3497. 30110/10
dr'nthnsiastic, responsible person needed as full time or-
Miodontic assistant. Training available for motivated
"person. Please call 776-8689 October 13 - 17 from 8-5.
3()t 10/20
K
j'Full time typist needed. Experience in Word Proc
essing. Evenings. 846-3755. 25tl0/16
Page 6/The Battalion/Friday, October 10, 1986
World and Nation
Senate impeaches Claiborne
U.S. district judge found guilty on 3 impeachment articles
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
Senate on Thursday convicted U.S.
District Judge Harry E. Claiborne of
“high crimes and misdemeanors,”
making him the fifth federal official
in history removed from office
through impeachment.
Claiborne, a convicted tax evader
and federal prisoner, was thrown off
the bench at 4:14 p.m. EDT, follow
ing adjournment of the first Senate
impeachment trial in 50 years.
The chief U.S. district judge for
Nevada was found guilty on three of
four impeachment articles by the
necessary two-thirds majority. He
was acquitted on a fourth article, al
though a majority of senators voted
“guilty.”
Claiborne, 69, was found guilty on
Articles I and II, accusing him of the
same willful tax violations that
caused a federal court jury to find
him guilty in 1984.
Article III, of which he was ac
quitted, said the judge’s criminal
conviction alone warranted his re
moval. Article IV contended his con
duct betrayed the judiciary and the
nation.
The votes were: Article I, 87-10;
Article II, 90-7; Article III, 46-17;
and Article IV, 89-8. Sen. Ted Ste
vens, R-Alaska, voted “present” on
all four counts. However, on count
III, 34 senators joined him in “pre
sent” votes.
A conviction on any article would
have been sufficent to oust Clai
borne from his lifetime job. Until
now, he has earned his $78,700 sal
ary while in prison.
Claiborne contended that federal
agents and prosecutors he criticized
as “a bunch of crooks” were respon
sible for his court conviction.
He acknowledged that more than
$106,000 in income was not re
ported on his 1979 and 1980 tax re
turns, but blamed the errors on
firms he hired to prepare them.
Former Sen. Howard Cannon,D
New, a member of the judge's de
fense team, said after the vote, *1
feel the Senate did not give'Jin
Claiborne the trial he was entitled to.
It did not hear one solitary witness
before the full Senate.”
Cannon referred to the Senates
decison to have a 12-member im
peachment committee hear all (evi
dence.
Oscar Goodman, Claiborne's at
torney, said the Constitution was
“bruised if not broken” by the con
viction and vowed to continue theie
g;d battle, saying, "I don’t know ho*
to quit and my client doesn't no*
how to quit.”
Reagan arrives in Iceland
to begin superpower talks
REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP) — President Reagan,
vowing to “face the tough issues directly” but frowning
on quick-fix deals, arrived in Iceland Thursday night
for his weekend superpower summit with Soviet leader
Mikhail Gorbachev.
The president was greeted at Keflevik airport by Ice
land’s president, Vigdis Finnbogadottir, along with
Prime Minister Steingrimur Hermannsson and Foreign
Minister Matthias A. Mathiasen.
Given a choice by Gorbachev, who proposed the new
round of talks just three weeks ago, Reagan picked the
remote island nation on the Arctic Circle in keeping
with his desire for a low-key, businesslike session with
out the media circus that attended his first meeting with
a Soviet leader last November in Geneva.
And both sides agreed the talks would be accompa
nied by a news blackout.
Although Reagan portrayed the meeting in Reykja
vik as a private talk between two men, the Soviets were
expected to send about 300 in their official party, and
the U.S. contingent was likely to be about the same size.
More than a thousand reporters, photographers, tech
nicians and support people were ready to cover the
hastily arranged summit.
The two men meet for the first time in Reykjavik on
Saturday morning, with a second two-hour session
scheduled that afternoon and a final meeting set for
Sunday.
At a minimum, some U.S. officials have said pri-
vatelv, the United States expects Gorbachev finally to
agree on a date for the next summit, which he and Rea
gan announced last year would be held “in the nearest
future.” But several administration policymakers sug
gested the two leaders could leave Reykjavik with the
framework of a new accord and new instructions for
their arms negotiators in Geneva, designed to produce
a treaty ready for signing at the next summit parley in
the United States.
South Africa bans foreign funds
for anti-apartheid activists’ group
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa
(AP) — The government decreed
Thursday that South Africa’s largest
anti-apartheid coalition cannot re
ceive foreign funds. The group said
it expects to be outlawed soon.
President P.W. Botha issued the
order against the United Democratic
Front under the Affected Organiza
tions Act, which allows him to pro
hibit foreign funding of political or
ganizations considered to be under
foreign influence.
Botha’s action froze 100,000 rand
($45,000) in UDF bank accounts,
said Azhar Gachalia, its national
treasurer. He said more than half
the annual budget of “millions of
rands” comes from abroad, most of
it f rom Scandinavia.
Gachalia told reporters the multi
racial coalition will challenge the or
der in court.
He and the UDF president, Alber
tina Sisulu, are the only members of
the 15-member national executive
who have not gone into hiding or
been jailed under the national state
of emergency imposed June 12, Ca-
chalia said.
“This morning’s proclamation will
certainly hurt the UDF, but not to
such an extent that it will be
crippled,” he said. "We fear that in
the next few months we are certainly
considering the possibility now that
we are going to be banned.”
Murphy Morobe, the front's pub-
licit* secretary and one of those in
hiding, told The Associated Press:
"It's part of the whole strategy to be
gin to emasculate the organization.”
Survey shows
cocaine use
soaring in
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
number of Americans who use
cocaine regularly has soared
while abuse of most other drugs
leveled off in the 1980s, federal
health officials reported Thurs
day.
A government survey con
ducted in 1985 found that 5.8
million Americans had used co
caine in the previous month,a38
percent jump from the 4.2 mil
lion people reported in a similar
1982 survey.
But the eighth National
Household Survey on Drug
Abuse found little change in ihe
number who used cocaine at least
once in the past year. Their ranis
grew only from 11.9 million in
1982 to 12.2 million.
Cocaine users are resortingto
the drug more frequently, possi
ble as they exhaust what Dr. Don
ald Ian Macdonald, head of the
Alcohol. Drug Abuse and Mental
Health Administration, called a
"grace period” for mans young
people lx*f ore cocaine plavshavoc
with their lives.
Macdonald said the widening
use of crack, a potent, smokable
lot ni of cocaine, is also cutting
short am “grace period.”
Fhe survey found 44 percent
of youthful cocaine users have
smoked the drug freebase.
Thirty-eight percent of all those
who used cocaine in the month
before the survey smoked it.
^ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ£
s
8
8
8
8
LAKEVIEW CLUB h
2 miles off the East By Pass on Tabor Road
BYOB
Bring your canned Beer in your own ice chests
This Saturday & Every Saturday
DJ Playing Your Favorite Country & Rock
All ages welcome
8
s
s
•A MERCHANDISE MUST GO!
Guitar Teacher. Part time for theory and technique on
accoustic and electric. Keyboard Center, 764-0006 for
appointment. 23tll/ll
FOR SALE
1951 Spailanette 35’ Travel Trailer. Live alone inex-
pensivelv. 846-7242. (512)447-4203. SOtlO/16
4 1 AMU VS. BAYLOR TICKETS TOR SALE. CALL
693-5527. 30U0/10
’84 Honda Aero-125. 1300 miles. Mint condition. Red,
$800. 693-0882. 27t 10/10
Musi Sale Moving: ARC CHOW-8 mos. Old-Blond
House Trained Teinale-llad Shots Good Naiured
$100. 8:00-4:00 Call 845-8161 After 4:00 846-3821
Ask Toi TERI 29l3
Honda Interceptor 700, '85, 1800 miles, $2750. or best
offer. 696-6225. 26U0/10
PRO PAR TS. 3521 S. Texas. Bryan. 846-6666. Turbo
Mufflers; $9.95. Headers. $49.95. Wheels. 'Tires, and
Holly Carburetors. 29U0/29
Sonv Tll-77 320-W Mini Stereo Svstem. Brand New.
Retails $699. Make Offer. Call 846-7645. 29U0/10
LOOK! A TREE PROGRAM. NO PURCHASE RE-
QUIRED! IBM COMPA TIBLES FROM $595. COM
PUTERS. ETC. 693-7599. 29tl0/15
Couch. In great condition. $ 150. Call 846-2928.
JOIN US IN A
MARCH FOR EQUALITY
October 10
is
National Anti-Apartheid Day
Meet us at C.S. City Hall at 4:30 p.m.
Rudder Fountain, A&M Campus
Students Against Apartheid
FRI, OCTOBER 10
Rock Against Apartheid
IMH
WoTyeTvrter^r
live music &. more!
[ Jus’Wanna Oance
4410 College Main
Bryan.Tx. 77801
846-1812
Featuring
l-TEX
REGGAE MUSIC INNA TEXAS STYLE
Sponsored by
Students Against Apartheid
$5 AH Ages Welcome
8 pm
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