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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 3, 1999)
igging for treasure | H uUclbclJDO ea market provides opportunity to find rarities BY BOBBIE EFTEKHAR The Battalion or almost six years it has remained a secret. Un knowingly many students pass by it on their way home to Houston. Although a majority of s customers may not include students, the Jockey otjFlea Market has been open and thriving. ®pened in spring of ‘93 by an Aggie, it is now wned by a corporation from South Carolina. The orporation rents out spaces to merchants and each lerchant sells anything from tires, tables and pens p clothes, cookies and birds. 1 Boyde Nash, an employee of the flea market, said le [flea market has items to cater to all needs. ■The flea market carries anything from beanie ba tes to fine jewelry, imported leather goods to mu- tic, cosmetics to a jewelry repair store,” Nash said, ■lash said there is a variety of items being sold, s well as a variety of people selling them. The mer- hants who sell items vary from organizations to ne-weekend sellers. Bryan-College Station Chapter 20( of the Disabled American Veterans, Inc, is one |f ire organizations selling goods at the market, floyd Wells, commander of the local chapter of the )AV, said many of the items for sale are great for dec- Charlse Smith, merchant at the Jockey Flea Market, watches his goods. irating. “We sell pictures and tapestries for good prices,’ ie said. “These pictures start out for $5, and it’s pret- |Bard to go anywhere and buy a nice picture for r H? -5.” ^^^■ven the neighborhood Avon lady can be found |t tie Jockey Lot Flea Market. Angela Reed has been Avon products for the past five and a half ■ears. Reed said she has been there since two weeks «oto courtb>? f te , ^0 fi ea market first opened, of Aggies a |i have specials all the time, said Reed. “Some- *> ^ws I have one-dollar lipsticks or two-dollar eye hadows. It’s whatever I feel like that day.” 11 ^ r( \ II jewelry repair is on your to-do list, the Jockey ^‘ inie ’ ,ot Flea Market can accommodate. Ernest Zaragoza, ! ! iwier of a jewelry repair booth, said he does all jew- W repairs as well as special orders. Zaragoza said develop a! ie i^s a shop in Navasota and serves a wide variety Iking to as if leople from Waco to Bryan, but he also has a •roadened tooth in the flea market to get more of a student >opi lation. ie Black Ad for the knife collectors and pellet gun fans, Peg- lection tovIY Montain has an interesting collection, including other mini'hipese stars, swords and machetes. Montain has teei a merchant at the Jockey Lot Flea Market for , M hrae years, and prior to that she owned a store in ' 10 , 0,n Trykn. She said there is a large flow of people at the ue,he t rS STmarket. : first he spending a long day at the flea market, le’s an ex® iMng furniture, lamps, clothes and, of course. beanie babies, one might get a little hungry. There is a food area with three separate booths where hot dogs, popcorn and sandwiches can be found. Irene Sienko, a booth worker, said she enjoys the food as well as the atmosphere. She reminds all the customers to stop for a bite to eat. “Don’t forget to have a little snack,” Sienko said. “The food’s pretty good.” As for her love of the flea market, she said there is something for everyone. “You never leave a place like this without buying something,” Sienko said. Wells said they try to bring items customers want. He hopes to bring more Texas A&M students to the booth and is open to any suggestions on items stu dents, as well as customers, would like to buy. Nash said among the customers of the flea mar ket, about 100 students visit per weekend. The num ber increases during special events, such as Parent’s Weekend, when many students and their families fill the flea market. “You’d think among the 40,000 students at A&M, more would come,” Nash said. He said he compares the flea market to a treasure hunt and many antique dealers are determined to find the treasure. “There are some pretty good deals out there; you just have to know where to look,” he said. “No body’s found a million dollar chunk of gold or the original Declaration of Independence, but occasion ally people have found a nice size diamond, quality gold and silver or an antique they may have paid a dollar for and later find out it is worth $100.” McDonald i| cultural divif A Real-World Medical School Meeting the Challenge of Beal lifek Needs. der and sec McDonald’s factor in undaries 5 and \vhatll ,, i found tM of universit)' npaign cioii 1 " 1 lent. ie traditions^ McDonald F 'on realize F ended fa« > remains DF e network 01 ; at this Uni* A Pg ie fan# al Posit* 011 .in# : inipi>rB nt , Al Olivers# VebeenlooWj autodde^rj (venturous p' s . 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