The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 01, 1986, Image 6

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    Battalion Classifieds
• NOTICE
M*P
• HELP WANTED
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS: A
Step By Step GUIDE TO GREEN-
CARD. From F/J/H Visas. For de
tails, send $1.00 (P&H): Immigra
tion Publications, Dept.-207, P.O.
Box 515991, Dallas, TX 75251.
64112/1
DEFENSIVE DRIVING, TICKET DISMISSAL,
YOG’LL LOVE OCR EGN CLASS! 693-I322.35tl2/17
• FOR RENT
SPECIAL!
Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx.
1 Bdrm.: $150. /2 Bdrm.: $175.
Call 846-8878 or
774-0773 after 5 p.m.
Male Roommate needed for Spring Semester, 2 bdrm.
2 bath, a pa 11. 61112/5
Sublet huge efficiency. 550 stj. ft.. $275./inonth, free
<le|K»sit. Ceiling fan, newly tcmodcled. G9S-lfi§n.t 12/12
Pieleasing lot Spting. Near Hilton. 2/3 bedroom du
plexes. 8*4(1-2471 ot (193-1027. 50U2/17
• FOR SALE
HEADACHE DETECTOR
Approved by A.M.A.
KNOW FOR SURE IF YOUR
PARTNER IS FAKING
GREAT X-MAS GAG GIFT
WHITE HEADBAND-MAROON
BULB
5 00 ea./ 5 or more 4 00 ea. Postage
Inc.
Cash, Check, M.O., No COD’S
Jayco Products Inc., Waco, TX.
76714-7622
63112/5
SERVICES
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
TYPING: Accurate, 5)5 WPM, Reliable. Word Proc
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VERSATILE WORD PROCESSING. Fast, Accurate,
Inexpensive, LaserWriter Quality. Call 696-2052.
47tl2/4
Typing and Word Processing. Thesis, Dissertations,
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Editing of theses, dissertations, journal articles, jour
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THE HOUSTON CHRONICLE
Has immediate openings for
route carriers. Carrier positions
require working early morning
hours delivering papers and can
earn $400. to $600. per month
plus gas allowance. Call Andy at
693-7815 or Julian at 693-2323
for an appointment. 38tufn
Excellent equal employment opportunity. Local finan
cial institution has immediate opening for experienced
executive secretary in the lending area. Applicant must
possess good secretarial skills, shorthand, 8c word proc
essing, experience preferred. Salary comenserate with
experience. Contact personnel manager in person only
at University National Bank. 71 1 University Drive, Col
lege Station. University National Bank is an Equal Op
portunity Employer. 64tl2/5
Care for toddler in my home 8-3. Your child welcome,
own transportation, 696-0570 after 5. 64t 12/5
GOVERNMENT' JOBS! Now hiring in youi area, both
skilled and unskilled. For list of jobs and application
call <615)859-8r35ext. 8155. ' 64U2/1
Private (Tub hiring p.t. buspersons. AM/PM shifts. Ap
ply in person, 2-5 PM, M-F, 3000 Briarciest, Suite 600,
Bryan. E.O.E. 61tl2/2
3000 GOVERNMENT JOBS List $16,040 - S59.230/VI.
Now I liring. Call 805-687-6000 Ext. R-9531. 34t 1 2/16
OFFICIALS WANTED: Orientation Meeting for all
interested in officiating Intramural Soccer or Basket
ball, Mon. Dec. 1,6 PM. 164 Read. 63U2/1
OUT DOOR TRIP LEADERS WANTED to lead day
and weekend adventure trips. Outdoor skills, first aid
certification required. Foi more information call Patsy
Greiner, 845-7826. 63tl2/2
3 to 4 bright, energetic sales people for x-mas rush.
Jewelry experience preferred but not necessary. Apply
in person T exas Coin Exchange, 404 University. Col
lege Station. d63tfn
Earn $480 weekly - $60 per hundred envelopes
stuffed. Guaranteed. Homeworkers needed for com
pany project stuffing envelopes and assembling materi
als. Send stamped self addressed envelope toJBK. Mail-
company P.O. Box 25-24 Castaic, California, 91310.
60t 12/1
• WANTED
Honda Spree ’86. 3 months old. low mileage, $425.
696-8020. 64tl2/2
Yamaha Riva ’80. Good condition, low mileage. Call
Susan at 693-9391. 64tl2/5
Is it true you can buy Jeeps for $44. through the U.S.
Government? Get the facts today! Call 1-312-742-1142
ext. 8390. 64t 12/1
I’honemat Answering Machine. Excellent Condition,
$70., 13” T.V., $150.. 9” T.V., $30. Prices Negotiable.
696-0116. 62U2/3
Eor Sale. Chevette 1981, $2000. or best offer. For in
formation call 65)6-3204. 62tl2/3
LANTASTIC SAVINGS! 2-360KB DRIVES,
8MIIZ/6MHZ TURBO, 640KB RAM, TTL MON
ITOR, KEYBOARD, IBM COMPATIBLE $699.
( OMPUTERS, ETC. 65)3-7599. 61112/2
Is it true you can buy Jeeps for $44. through the U.S.
government? Get the facts today! Call 1-312-742-1142
Ext. 835)0. 61112/5
TAKE OVER 5 ACRES. NO DOWN. $49./mo. Beauti
ful trees. Great hunting. Owner! 818/363-7906.63tl2/4
Patients with ‘acute diarrhea"
(less than 48 hours duration)
needed to evaluate potential
over-the-counter medication
for diarrhea. Volunteers will
be paid for time and cooper
ation.
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Auto Service
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OPENMON-FRI 7:30-5:30
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CALL FOR APPOINTMENT
846-5344
Just one mile north of A&M
On the Shuttle Bus Route
111 Royal, Bryan
Across S. College From Tom's BBQ
WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu
scripts. reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614.
49t 12/5
TYPING. No Job Too Small. Answering/Wake Up
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Special
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free hot line today for information and reservations, 1-
800-321-5911. 64tl2/12
♦ LOST AND FOUND
Lost, Men’s yellow gold with inlaid diamonds, wedding
ring. November 17th. Reward! 845-4462, 822-1586.
62t 12/3
Dog lost Saturday on campus. Male Sheltie, black,
brown, and white. Answers to name “Knox”. Reward!
Call 845-4324. 63U2/4
♦ PERSONALS
Pregnant? Consider Adoption. We’re a happily mar
ried, professional couple with strong family values
longing to adopt newborn. Lot’s of love, beautiful
home, bright future guar anteed. Completely legal, ex
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64tl2/5
• WANTED
INJURY STUDY
Recent injury with pain to any
muscle or joint. Volunteers in
terested in participating in in
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paid well for their time and co
operation.
G & S STUDIES, INC.
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Second Set
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FREE!
Have your C-41 color print
film processed at the regular
price and get a second set of
the same size prints free.
Choose either 3!4x5 or 4x6
prints.
Offer good Nov. 25-Dec. 4
Photographic Services
at Goodwin Hall or
Texas A&M Bookstore
in the MSC
The Aggie Perfume
Made in France
Key to meeting other Aggies
9
Located at the MSC
Call 696-9412
lessee
-S. -S . e
Page 6/The Battalion/Monday, December 1, 1986
Bentsen reportedly
met with 2 officials
at Mexican resort
SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Sen.
Lloyd Bentsen, Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby
and Texas Railroad Commission
chairman Jim Nugent met at a Mex
ico resort last August to discuss ways
to help Texas’ lagging oil and gas in
dustry, the San Antonio Light re
ported Sunday.
In a copyright story, the newspa
per said the three were brought to
gether by two of San Antonio’s most
powerful energy businessmen —
Glenn Biggs, chairman of City Pub
lic Service and vice chairman of In-
terFirst Bank of San Antonio, and
William Greehey, chairman of Va
lero Energy Company.
Between shooting doves and re
laxing in a resort near Monterrey,
Mexico, the talk was Texas.
Hobby described the trip as a so
cial outing, but said it was Biggs’ in
tention to “put together a group to
think about energy issues.”
“We discussed various ways in
which we could help put the oil and
gas industry back on its feet,” said
Hobby, who was reached in Ireland,
where he was vacationing. “We dis
cussed the state of the oil and gas in
dustry as a whole and how some sort
of an oil import fee might be a bene
fit.”
The trip began on Aug. 15. The
lieutenant governor said he and Nu
gent started their trip in San Anto
nio, where they boarded a Valero
corporate jet.
The group landed at Monterrey
International Airport, where it was
greeted by representatives of the
Paloma Blanca lodge and driven to
Sabinas Hidalgo, about 75 miles
south of Laredo.
Bentsen joined the group in Mex
ico later in the weekend.
Jack DeVore, Bentsen’s press sec
retary, said the senator arrived with
W. Grant Gregory, board chairman
of the Touche Ross Co., whose Firm
has done consulting work on the
South Texas Nuclear Project.
City Public Service and Central
Power and Light are among the four
utilities building the electric-gener
ating plant near Bay City.
Also accompanying Bentsen was
Dallas oilman and former InterFirst
Bank executive Ed Cox Sr. The
three traveled on a private plane
owned by Cox, the Light reported.
DeVore said Bentsen, who has
been the chief proponent in the Sen
ate for an import fee, took part in
the discussions, but no “specific leg
islation was discussed.”
Hobby said the group arrived at
the lodge with an “understanding
that we were all in favor of en
dorsing some sort of tariff.”
Hobby also said the group dis
cussed the merits of a recent article
published by Walt Rostow, a Univer
sity of Texas at Austin instructor
and former national security adviser
to Presidents John F. Kennedy and
Lyndon Johnson.
The article urges the quick appli
cation of new technology in the trou
bled oil and gas industry and a more
energetic promotion of an entrepre
neurial spirit throughout the indus
try.
The Light said Hobby and Nu
gent might have violated state law
during the Mexican weekend be
cause neither paid for the trip’s ex
penses. Biggs told the newspaper
that both Hobby and Nugent were
billed in September. Hobby said he
never got the bill.
“That (the hilling) is being pur
sued right away,” a spokeswoman in
Hobby’s office said.
Bureau president says
’85 farm bill helping
sales of U.S. goods
McALLEN (AP) — Texas Farm
Bureau President C.M. True cau
tioned Sunday against tinkering with
the 1985 farm bill and said evidence
suggests it is already moving some
U.S. commodities into foreign mar
kets.
“My concern is that we let the pre
sent farm program work,” True said
as the TFB opened its 53rd annual
convention.
“Although the present farm bill
has a lot of critics, we believe that it
can work if given time,” he said. “Its
main purposes are to help regain
lost foreign markets, reduce supplies
and support farm income.”
He said the farm bill appears re
sponsible for recent movement of
rice and cotton into foreign markets,
but that foreign competitors don’t
like it because of its subsidies to U.S.
farmers.
“If we go in now and undo the the
farm program, the rest of the world
will look at the United States and say
‘Yes, you passed a farm bill, but you
didn’t like it and you’re backing
up,’ ” True said.
True, a Plainview farmer who
heads the largest farm organization
in Texas, said he believes the farm
bill will eventually help move feed
grains such as wheat and corn into
the world market.
Feed-grain farmers are among
the worst hit by the depression in ag
riculture prices.
The downturn in farming and the
slide in oil prices have created a rev
enue shortfall in Texas that threat
ens sales tax exemptions for farm
ers, but True said the Farm Bureau
would fight to keep those exemp
tions from being lifted when the
next Legislature convenes.
“There are still many ways we can
cut expenditures rather than having
to raise taxes,” True said. “We’re
going to be prepared to convince the
Legislature that these (exemptions)
are important to Texas.”
Products and certain services for
farmers such as fertilizers and seed
are exempt from state sales taxes.
True said the sweeping immigra
tion bill recently signed into law by
President Reagan also may pose a
threat to farmers, particularly Texas
and California producers who rely
on Hispanic workers.
He said farmers may be reluctant
to hire Hispanics because of the bill’s
requirement that employers docu
ment a worker’s citizenship, exclud
ing migrant, seasonal workers.
The Texas Farm Bureau also does
not like documentation require
ments in the bill for granting some
illegal aliens amnesty. True said.
Illegal aliens who can prove they
have been in the United States since
1982 may be eligible for citizenship,
but True said farmers who hire
them may not have kept records to
document their workers’ claims.
A 1 exas Farm Bureau spokesman
said 1,300 delegates are expected at
this year’s convention, which contin
ues through Wednesday.
Stolen U-Haul located
Saturday in Humble
HUMBLE (AP) — A van con
taining most of the possessions of a
family moving from Houston to St.
Louis was found in Humble, but the
family will still have to wait until
Monday before finding out how
many of their belongings were re
covered.
U-Haul officials will open the
padlock on the 24-foot rental truck
Monday to determine what was
taken, company clerk Traci Creasy
said Sunday.
Dale and Annette Allen and their
two children had rented the vehicle
to move from Houston to St. Louis
over the Thanksgiving holiday.
U-Haul had not been able to con
tact the Allens, who apparently still
were en route to Missouri after they
left Houston on Friday, she said.
Calls to the family’s new home in
St. Louis went unanswered on Sun
day.
The truck was found on Saturday
in a Humble apartment complex
with the lock on the cargo door, offi
cials said.
The truck still appears to have at
least part of a load inside, said Bill
Morgan, a U-Haul service manager
who has been helping the Allens.
The vehicle was stolen early
Thursday from a hotel parking lot
despite the fact Allen had removed
the ignition’s coil wire.
“We thought we took all the pre
cautions,” Allen said earlier.
Allen had said he did not expect
to ever see the truck or its contents
again.
The truck contained most of the
family’s valuables, including furni
ture, appliances and a file cabinet
with all the family’s paperwork.
A trailer holding bicycles, a lawn
mower and other items was recov
ered by police on Thursday.
The Allens had moved out of
their Houston house and spent
Wednesday night at the hotel in pre
paration for their trip.
The family decided to move after
Allen, a Shell Oil Co. engineer, re
ceived a temporary transfer to St.
Louis that will last a year to 18
months.
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