Page 4 The Battalion Wednesday, June 21,1989 The Battalion Classifieds • HELP WANTED The Psychology Department at Texas A&M University is con ducting research on group dy namics and we need participants. We will pay you $30 for 6 hrs of your time over a 6 weeks period. If interested, please call 845-4990 and ask for Michele, or sign up outside Room 350 in the Psychology Building. 158t/tfn SWIMMING COACH To fine tune swimming skills for two good swimmers. Experience required. Lessons twice a week, after 5p.m. at a pri vate pool. Call Gay at 776-0400 (8a.m.-5p.m.) isattfn Schlotzky’s is now accepting applications for the sum- rner p/t evening & weekend shifts. Apply in person only between 2-5. 141 ttfn STARVING PHOTOGRAPHER WANTED TO DO MY WEDDING PICTURES. JULIE 846-3503 158t06/20 Office Clerk: Deluxe Burger Bar. 8-5, Monday through Friday. 846-0928. l57t06/23 Handy man needed-Experience necessary, 20 hrs./wk., tools & transportation a must 823-5469 157t06/23 • SERVICES ' SKIN INFECTION STUDY G & S Studies, Inc. is participating in a study on acute skin infection. If you have one of the following conditions call G & S Studies. Eligible volunteers will be compensated. * infected blisters * infected cuts * infected boils * infected scrapes * infected insect bites (“road rash”) G & S Studies, Inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 TStTsJ Eyping: Accurate, 95 wpm, reliable. Word Processor 7daysaweek. 776-4013. 157ttfn Experienced librarian will do library research for you. Call 272-3348 153t07/06 Cal's Body Shop-We do it right the first time! 823- 26 ]Q. _ 32ttfn )N THE DOUBLE Professional Word Processing, laser jet printing. Papers, resume, merge letters Rush services. 846-3755. . >81 tin • FOR RENT WAKE UP AGGIES! Vassar Court Luxury duplex & 4 plex 2 B/1 1 / 2 b APTS. On shuttle, 2 Blks. from cam pus, W and D incl. Large patio and low utilities. Summer Leasing Specials $299. Wyndham Mgmt. 846-4384. i47ttfn Cotton Village Apts. Snook, TX. 1 Bdrm. $200., 2 Bdrm. $248. Rental assistance available! Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5pm. i47ttfn Free Locator Service We cater to you! Call us to take the headache out of leasing. Century 21 Beal 823-5469 159106/23 3bdrm./2bth. mobile home, country setting. 2 acre.' lots of trees, available April 1st. $385./mo. + $200. de posit. 693-2128. 120t04/03 3 bdrm/2 bth 4-plex with w/d, on shuttle bus roii r *\ starting at $400./mo. Summer rates available. , 764-0704 or 696-4384. 116ttfn Walk to class, 2 Bdrm.. 1 Bath Apt. available now, $190. bills. 696-7266. 161t06/30 • FOR SALE 1985 RED ELITE 80,.$500.: MACINTOSH PLUS, 2 DRIVES. LOTS O' SOFTWARE, $1000. 696-7105 161107/06 Can you huv Jeeps, cars, 4x4’s seized in drug raids for under $100.00? Call for facts today. (602)837-3401, ext. 942. 158t6/20 1986 Honda Elite 150, red. like new. $725.00 or best offer. Darren. 693-1015 after 4 p.m. 158t6/23 Advertise an item in the Battalion. Cali 845-2611! The Bati Financial industry officials upset over governor’s veto AUSTIN (AP) — Financial indus try officials were mystified and con sumer activists appalled that Gov. Bill Clements vetoed a broadly sup ported compromise bill to alter fore closure procedures in Texas. “People are hysterical,” said Carol Abbassi, owner of an Austin business that helps people re-negotiate loans. Abbassi said she received many calls from worried clients Monday, adding, “These homeowners are re ady to slit their wrists this af ternoon.” Real estate professionals and con sumer groups claim that some Texas lenders have abused their powers by bidding unfairly low amounts for foreclosed property and then suing the borrower to collect the differ ence. The compromise bill passed by the Legislature was backed by lend ers, consumer groups and real estate developers. It allowed borrowers to request a court hearing to determine the fair value of a home or commer cial property when a lender seeks such a deficiency judgment. The bill was among 54 rejected Sunday by Clements, who said in his proclamation the foreclosure mea sure was “unwise and inappro priate.” “This bill has the potential to re sult in numerous lawsuits and fur ther delay the collection of defi ciency judgments,” Clements stated. “Such delays and further litigation are not in the state’s best interest.” People who represent debtors say the veto will keep bankruptcy rates high in Texas, as borrowers seek es cape from lender pressure. Those who have defaulted on their home loans are among those who continue to be risk from low foreclosure prices bid by lenders. Lawyer Joe Longley, a consumer lobbyist, said the veto could lead to further litigation over foreclosure disputes. The Texas Supreme Austin will present final case arguments over HL&P project DALLAS (AP) — After nearly four months, attorneys will present final arguments next week in the civil suit between the City of Austin and Houston Lighting & Power Co. over the South Texas Project. The City of Austin, one of four owners of the twin reactor plant near Bay City, contends Houston Lighting & Power Co., the managing partner, failed to inform them of problems with the plant. Austin is seeking to remove itself from the project. County Courthouse had no space available. The 2,500-megawatt plant ini tially was expected to cost less than $1 billion and be finished in 1981. But the plant was officially dedicated this spring and its cost is now esti mated to be nearly $6 billion. Attorneys rested their cases Mon day. Because of conflicts with juror schedules, closing arguments have been postponed until June 26. Judge Clarence Guittard is presid ing over the case, which has been taking place since March in a make shift courtroom set up in a strip shopping center because the Dallas Bus driver not indicted for murder When Austin called Mayor Lee Cooke for rebuttal testimony Mon day, HL&P attorney Roy Minton grilled him about former city utility director R.L. Hancock’s knowledge of the plant’s progress. Minton cited minutes of meetings attended by Hancock during the summer and fall of 1978 that in cluded discussion of some of the problems with the project. Minton also introduced as evidence two newspaper articles printed in 1978 and 1982 quoting council members who were upset with Hancock for failing to inform them about con struction problems. “I ask you honestly, mayor, isn’t this the first time you ever realized R.L. Hancock was sitting there at management committee meetings and hearing all that discussion and not bothering you all with any of it?” Minton said. DALLAS (AP) — A Dallas County grand jury on Tuesday declined to indict a 37-year-old city bus driver in connection with the May shooting death of a passenger. Chauncey J. Plummer, a Dallas bus driver for 10 years, had been charged with murder in the May 24 shooting of David Hayden, 25. Plummer picked up Hayden and a woman on a downtown street and told authorities that, through his rearview mirror, he saw the woman hand her bus pass to Hayden, who then tried to use it. The driver told Hayden he could not use the pass, an argument en sued and Plummer ordered Hayden off the bus, police records show. Hayden was shot once in the back with a handgun as he exited. Plummer told police that Hayden punched him in the jaw before he stepped off the bus. Plummer had been assaulted twice on the bus route in the past two years, once breaking his hand and the other time suffering a black eye, Dallas Area Rapid Transit spokes man Ron Whittington said. SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE g ^ Contact Lenses/ ^ t> 9 LU LU Only Quality Name Brands 0ff e r (Bausch & Lomb, Ciba, Barnes-Hinds-Hydrocurve) $ ygoo pr. *-STD. DAILY WEAR SOFT LENSES pr. *-STD. EXTENDED WEAR SOFT LENSES LU $99°° $99 00 pr. -STD. TINTED SOFT LENSES DAILY WEAR OR EXTENDED WEAR LU LU SPARE PAIR ONLY $1 00 Applies only to Baush & Lomb soft lenses with purchase of 1 st pr. at reg. price Call 696-3754 for Appointment y CHARLES C.SCHROPPEL,O.D.,P.C. < DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY LU 707 South Texas Ave., Suite 101D Jo College Station, Texas 77840 lu 1 block South of Texas & University LU * Eye exam not included Free care kit with exam and pair of lenses m CO 3TVS 3"IVS 31VS 31VS 3~1VS 3TVS 3TVS 3TVS 3TVS Court, he said, could resolve some borrower vs. lender disputes when it rules on two foreclosure-related cases before it. Brad Wiewel, a consumer lawyer and former president of the Texas Consumers Association, said, “If you look at his (Clements’) contributors and the people who have supported him, he has bitten the hand that fed him.” Robert Harris, president of the Texas Bankers Association, said his industry group had written the gov ernor recommending approval of the compromise bill. “I’m sure that some fingers are being pointed at us that we had something to do with this,” Harris told the Austin American-States- man. “We absolutely did not. When this organization cuts a deal with the Legislature and our opponents, we live with those compromises.” Rep. Terral Smith, who spon sored the foreclosure provision, said the governor’s veto will lead to more lawsuits. “We will end up with court-made law rather than legislative law. It will be costly and we don’t know' what the rules will be,” Smith said. Wednesday TEXAS ENVIRONMENTAL ACTION COALITION: will meet at 7 p.m. in 118 Civil Engineering Building. Ed Barron will speak about “Habitat Management of the Red Cockaded Woodpecker". For more information contact Geoff Smith at 764-9489. ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS: will meet at noon. For more information contact the C.D.P.E. at 845-0280. NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS: will meet at 8:30 p.m. For more information con tact the C.D.P.E. at 845-0280. GAY STUDENT SERVICES: will meet at 7 p.m. in 402 Rudder. For more infor mation contact Terry at 823-2877. Thursday LATIN AMERICAN CATHOLIC STUDENTS ASSOCIATION: will meet to have a volleyball game at 8 p.m. at the St. Mary's Student Center. NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS: will meet at 8:30 p.m. For more information con tact the C.D.P.E. at 845-0280. ADULT CHILDREN OF ALCOHOLICS: will meet at 6 p.m. For more information contact the C.D.P.E. at 845-0280. ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS: will meet at noon. Contact the C.D.P E. for more information. Items for What's Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald, no later than three business days before the desired run date. We only publish the name and phone number of the contact if you ask us to do so. What’s Up is a Battalion service that lists non-profit events and activities. Submissions are run on a first-come, first-served basis. There is no guarantee an entry will run. IIyou have questions, call the newsroom at 845-3315. Commission plans to award racing dates to horse tracks AUSTIN (AP) — Under pressure to get parimutuel lacing out of the gate, the Texas Racing Commission plans a July 16 meeting to begin awarding racing dates to horse tracks. Commission Chairman Hilary Doran said the un usual timing of the 8 a.m. Sunday meeting is the “first reasonable date” available for the date-setting session. “The bottom line on racing is, ‘move it,’ so let’s get it Fhe bottom line on racing is, ‘move it,’ so let’s get going.” — Demarious Frey, racing commissioner track will have 46 days of parimutuel racing this year Commissioners refused, however, to award die trad dates before thejuly 16 meeting. Texas voters approved parimutuel wagering horse and dog racing in November 1987. To dale, no races have been run, although eight horse tracks hart been granted Class 2 wagering licenses. One obstacle to early racing is a provision in the stall law that requires racing stewards to be peace officer A bill which would have removed that requiremem and allowed the commission to pass the cost of stewards on to tracks failed in the Legislature last month going,” Commissioner Demarious Frey said. On Monday, Ed Carrithers, operations director for G. Rollie White Downs at Brady, asked the commission to set racing dates at his track beginning in September. Officials said Heart of Texas Racing Inc., which has leased the Brady track, has a commitment for an eco nomic development loan that hinges on whether the The commission staff predicted difficulty in findiiij enough stewards who qualify under the current lawn conduct racing. Lack of funds to pay travel expenses for steward' who don’t live near the tracks compounds the problem they said. “1 am very, very adamant that we start racing thisfai with the best stewards available and not have to hireai inferior person just because we don’t have travel monei to get better qualified people to_lhe track,” Comtnis sioner Hugh Fitzsimons said. AggieHostel But Cooke said he had no recol lection of details that occurred 10 years earlier when he was a member of the council. He did recall he or dered a November meeting with HL&P officials on the subject. Cooke said it wasn’t until that meeting that council members learned project en gineer Biown & Root was “funda mentally incapable” of handling nu clear engineering. “I don’t recall being told (by HL&P) that we had a fatal flaw like that in the project,” Cooke testified. Austin’s attorney John Hill said later Minton and other HL&P attor neys “took a few things out of con text that make it appear R.L. (Han cock) had not fully reported problems on the job,” Hill said. “We take sharp issue with that, but that’s not the point. When our people went eyeball to eyeball with Houston . . . what was not being reported to anybody was the absolute destitute condition that the engineering itself was in.” Austin attorneys have argued throughout the case that if the city had known about some of the prob lems earlier, it would have taken steps to correct them, or perhaps not joined the nuclear project. (Continued from page 1) It covers every meal, special event and course. Everything is just laid out for them.” George Sumner, Class of ’42, said the one thing he’s been most over whelmed by during the week is all the changes the University has un dergone since he was a student. “The school and the campus really have changed,” Sumner said. “The rooms now are very nice. I used to live in Hart Hall, and now everything is so much better because it’s broadened so much. It has to be considered a positive change.” Irwin C. Mark, Class of ’41, said he came to AggieHostel because his two grandsons are students at A&M. The week’s events have been he ex pected and more, he said. His wife, Cecil Mark, said she had a friend who is here for this year’s AggieHostel and that she was shocked at how much the University has grown because College Station was nothing more than a “cow town” when he attended A&M College. Milton Rhea, Class of ’39, said he and his wife decided to come to Ag gieHostel because their three sons, one of whom graduated from A&M in 1980, pitched in and paid for it as their Christmas present last year. “The school is about 20 times as big,” Rhea said. “It’s so large. But it still feels like the same place. A&M has kept its flavor pretty good over the years.” After being away for so long, an alumnus can lose touch with the school, Garner said, and that’s why AggieHostel has been successful. “We’ll probably want to come back 30 or 40 years after we’ve gradua ted,” said Garner, who graduated from A&M in 1979. “I know when you graduate from school, the last thing you want to do is come back. But because there’s no tests or homework — it’s not a true school atmosphere — it’s more fun. I guess they come back because of what A&M’s all about.” Gayle Schmidt, a professor who teaches Healthy Aging for Aggie Hostel this week and serves on the program’s planning committee, said being a part of AggieHostel gives her a chance to watch how former students get along with each other and with A&M students now. “The ones that were here last year are kind of like old timers now and are showing the other ones around,” Schmidt said. “They’re making friends with each other. ” Day-care center faces allegations of child abuse A& pla; Texas coach Mi released have sigr tent with Four transfers cinto Jur gram ai Chad B pound j right-hai a 6-1, 1 Sweeney; Robertso nior froi Dan Rob junior fn Other fielder S 175-poui Toro Hi Calif.; ca 180-poui cana; Bi hand pil junior tr Institutt The pa lay he’s a The Mint Mahorn ii iraft. Is it fail deep not i Mahorn h there’s no kind of m is a busint But Mi make too first few y expansioi will have; next 15 tc The Oi Timberwi same prol players th th AUSTIN (AP) — A three- member Senate subcommiltet has been appointed to investigate allegations of child abuse at Saul' 1 Nino Day Care Center in Laredo, I according to a statement lroin|| Sen. Judith Zaffii ini’s office. Zaffirini w'as appointed chaii of the subcommittee by Sen. Chet Brooks, chairman of the Senate Committee on Health and Hu man Services. Brooks, D-Pasadena, also "ill serve on the committee with Sen Frank Tejeda, D-San Antonio. Zaffirini said the subcommittee would invite District Attorney Joe Rubio and members of theWebli County Grand Jury, “who ha'f done a good job of searching fot solutions,” to testify. “We know the regulatory sys tem failed the children at that da) care center,” she said. “We rmiu ensure that such tragedies do i recur.” $: adVANCE I R O P -CLINIC- 3743 S. Texas Avenue Bryan, Texas 77802 409-846-0525 Dr. Richard Vance CHIROPRACTOR MAGNIFICENT CHINESE BUFFETS Over 20 Selections of Salads & Entrees, Iced Tea, Desserts iL -i ijr A&M STEAK HOUSE Delivers 846-5273 PEKING EXPRESS !M ALL YOU CAN EAT For Only w coupon $6.49 SZ Dine-ln Only Reg. $3.89 & $4.19 11:00-2:30. 4:30-8:30 Mon-Fri. 11:30a.m.-8:30p.m. Sat. & Sun. One coupon per person per visit. Valid June 21-June 28,1989 Not good with any other offer. ZMi ■:75--75)fcr j vv 606 Tarrow 764-8960 *? IS BUN mem (1.44 DOS Soft! BUN ory, j 30Mt 8513 and 1 bun ory,; 60M1 8513 and 1 Prices It happens when you Advertise In The Battalion Call 845-2697 the FI not avai Texas 4 Corpora I Microso Cfi