The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 18, 1978, Image 4
Page 4 THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1978 School tab may The Battalion Classified hit $1.2 billion United Press International HELP WANTED HELP WANTED FOR SALE JOB OPPORTUNITIES SPECIAL NOTICE — — — — OVERSEAS OPPORTUNITY IN COST SLASH SCHEDULING Foreign Earning Potential RNR To Europe Or Orient With Pay Every Four Months A Fluor recruiter will be on campus October 25, 1978 and will interview for December graduates in all Engi neering disciplines and Building Construction. Posi tions are for a minimum 1 year contract assignment, single status in Saudi Arabia. Film and slide presentation: OCTOBER 24, 1978 RUDDER TOWER ROOM 305 A&B 7-9 p.m. An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F 34t5 1974 Pontiac LeMans Sport Coupe. Power, air, buckets, 350 four bbl. Call 825-6478 in Navasota. 33t5 SABRE, Sam brown belt, cap. $150. Call 846-8233 after 6:00. 32t5 Electric portable typewriter, good condition. 845-1217, Diane. 34t3 Small couch $75. 693-1041. '76 Suzuki TS400. Under 700 miles. Excellent condition, $995. 693-8392. 30t5 Registered male Golden Retriever pup. Shots, wormed. Call after 6 p.m. 693-0536. 34t3 1977 Yamaha Enduro (on-off road). Excellent condition. $795 with helmet. 846-8976. 34t5 CAMPUS AUDIO iFor a 20-50% discount on most! Imakes of stereo equipment. Plus" |high end audio t.v., p.a. equip.,* |etc. All equipment brand new in ■ (factory sealed cartons with full I ■warranties. Call Jimmy Spalten at I |693-5388. 23ti4| “SKI STEAMBOAT SPRINGS, January 2-7/7-12. $150. Lifts, lodging, breakfast 5 days, 5 nights. Stu dents and faculty. Space limited; Going fast. Write Rainbow Ski, 421 N. Post Oak Lane, Houston, Tx. 77024 or Phone 713-681-2741 . 28110 If you have two years and a desire to help, Peace Corps has a job for you. All graduates may qualify for skill training. Degrees or interest in agriculture are especially needed. Over 6,000 volunteers now serv ing in 63 countries. PEACE CORPS TAMU Office in Room 239 Soil & Crop Sciences & Entomology Bldg. 845-7110 PERSONALS ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ t KEN MARTIN’S $ t STEAKHOUSE Now accepting applications for cashier and cooks. Day and night shift M available. Apply in person 1803 South "K Texas. 34t5 * * * AGGIES Let us introduce you to Aggies of the opposite sex by match ing personality profiles. Reasonable rates. All ages. For details call Aggieland Dat ing Service at 846-4417 after 5 p.m., or write c/o P.O. Box 3293, College Station, Texas 88840. 3315 Before you buy or rent furni ture or appliances, see Wood’s Furniture Center, house of quality merchandise. Interior designer available. Wood’s Furniture Center Phone: 823-0947 Next door to Wyatt’s Cafeteria 800 Texas Avenue 7o For employment information at Texas A&M University dial S45-4444 24 hours a day. Equal'Employment Opportunity through Affirmative Ac tion. Texas A&M University SERVICES OFFICIAL NOTICE ENGLISH STYLIST: RESEARCH WRIT ING. All fields, lengths. Confidential. Dr. Brown, Portfolios Limited, Box 901-M, Alpine, Calif. 92001. (714) 445-5944. 4115 * AUSTIN, Texas — Associate ► Education Commissioner Raymon Bynum says state legislators could be facing a $1.2 billion bill for additional aid to schools in January and urban schools could be stuck with big tax increases. To limit to 25 percent the amount local districts are required to raise taxes would cost the state $600 mil lion, Bynum said Monday. To alleviate tax increases in urban schools, legislators will need to spend $400 million and even then school districts such as Houston would face a $2.2 million increase in the amount of revenue they are ex pected to raise locally, he said. “They’re going to have to raise a hunch of money or there’s going to he a lot of districts that have to raise taxes or cut programs or teachers’ salaries, he said. Bynum said that $400 million out lay to cover intangibles would be in addition to the cost of any teacher pay raise and the $400 million legis lators already are considering al locating to offset local districts’ rev enue losses from special tax breaks for homeowners and farmers and ranchers. Legislators could easily be facing a $1.2 billion bill for additional aid to schools in January, the education finance expert predicted. Bynum and the associate director of the School Tax Assessment Prac tices Board, Kenneth Graeber, re ported to the Legislative Commis sion on School Linance about the impact of a new study for the first time calculating the value of intan gible property holdings in the state. Graeber said 40 percent of the NEEDED Waitresses, barback, hostess. Top pay. To in quire stop by Astraptes. 846-1 1 00. 2211n WANTED 10 part time, 5 full time, counter help, pizza makers. Must apply in person at Chanello’s, 301 Patricia, C.S. 3116 FOR RENT Apartments for rent; w/w-out kitchenettes: bills paid; $70-$105/mo. 822-3078. 3015 Furnished apartment. Male only. Good tor two, $ 100/mo. Call 846-5132. 9tin FULL OR PART TIME ^Flexible hours to fit your schedule Rapid advancement *Day shift ’' Night shift (til 10:00 p.m.) ^Weekends Minimum starting salary $2.75 per hour for inexperienced persons. Cashier experience helpful. c. ■’/ ‘ - •' Apply in person only: 9:30-11:00 a.m. (if possible) Whataburger Bryan 1101 Texas College Station 105 Dominik HOME CARE SERVICES is GROW-W-I- N-G HELP US CLEAN UP! $3/hr. plus bonuses 693-7844 Premium Pay for Home Makers Excellent opportunity to work 2, 3, or 4 hrs a day. Earn extra cash in the middle of the day while children are in school. Whataburger Bryan 1101 Texas C.S. 105 Dominik 188tfn UNIVEH5ITV AtiUky 1 1 APARTMENTS Located off Wellborn Road, 1 /2 mile past 2818 on FM 2154,. Man y 1 n e w, i m - provements. All bills paid except electricity. Rates' begin at $135.00. Get country atmosphere close to campus. 1 bedroom apts. now available. CALL TOM CLEMENTS at 846- 5796 or 846-6189 weekends and after 5 p.m. Joe Courtney, Inc. SENIOR RING ORDERING PROCEDURE FOR STUDENTS COMPLETING 92 HOURS AT THE END OF THE FALL ’78 SEMESTER TO BE ELIGIBLE TO ORDER THE TEXAS A&M SENIOR CLASS RING, AN UNDERGRADUATE STUDENT MUST HAVE AT LEAST NINETY-TWO (92) SEMESTER HOURS, WITH 30 HOURS AT A&M AND BE IN GOOD STANDING. TO ORDER AT MID-SEMESTER USING MID-SEMESTER GRADES TO FULFILL THE ABOVE REQUIREMENTS, PLEASE NOTE THE FOLLOWING IN STRUCTIONS: 1. LEAVE YOUR NAME, MAJOR AND I. D. NUMBER WITH THE RING CLERK, HEATON BUILD ING, PRIOR TO NOVEMBER 1ST IF POSSIBLE, OR AT LEAST ONE WEEK IN ADVANCE OF ORDERING. THIS MAY NOT BE DONE BY PHONE. 2. BRING MID-SEMESTER GRADE REPORTS ALONG WHEN READY TO ORDER TO VERIFY PASSING HOURS. 3. ANYONE HAVING FAILED TO LEAVE THEIR NAME IN ADVANCE AND FAIL TO BRING THEIR MID-SEMESTER GRADE REPORT ALONG WHEN READY TO ORDER WILL BE ASKED TO RETURN LATER TO ALLOW TIME FOR RECORDS TO BE CHECKED. 4. ALL RINGS MUST BE PAID FOR IN FULL WHEN THE ORDER IS PLACED. SENIOR RING LOANS ARE AVAILABLE THROUGH STUDENT FINANCIAL AID IN THE YMCA BUILDING. 5. MID-SEMESTER ORDERS WILL BE TAKEN ONLY FROM OCTOBER 30TH UNTIL DECEMBER 1ST, 1978. 6. STUDENTS WHO DO NOT PLACE THEIR ORDER DURING THIS PERIOD MAY ORDER AFTER FINAL GRADES ARE POSTED. THERE WILL ONLY BE A 2-3 WEEK DIFFERENCE IN DELIVERY TIME FOR THOSE STUDENTS ORDERING IN JANUARY. (WHENEVER 92 HOURS HAVE BEEN COMPLETED AND ARE ON RECORD, THERE IS NEVER A DEAD-LINE, EXCEPT A MONTHLY MAILING DATE ON WHICH WE SEND ORDERS TO THE FACTORY). 7. THE RING CLERK IS ON DUTY FROM 8 A.M. TO'5 P.M. EACH DAY, MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY. HOWEVER, IN ORDER FOR OTHER DUTIES TO BE CARRIED OUT, ABSOLUTELY NO ORDERS WILL BE TAKEN BETWEEN 11:30 A. M. - 1:00 P. M. OR BETWEEN 4:00 - 5:00 P. M. 8. ALL RINGS ORDERED, REGARDLESS OF WHETHER ON OCTOBER 30TH OR DECEMBER 1ST, WILL BE DELIVERED ON THE SAME DAY WHICH WILL BE APPROXIMATELY FEB RUARY 28, 1978. The % SOFT TOUCH ELEGANCE IN LINGERIE 707 TEXAS OFFICIAL NOTICE DISCOUNT TROPHY^ AND ENGRAVING 215 S. MAIN 822-5923 school districts in the state out of 1,080 — are contesting tj assessment of their property tions set by the study. Hearings on the appeals begin Oct. 23 and the board* submit final figures on the wealtt local school districts to the Legisj tore in January, Graeber said State aid to local schools is calt lated on the basis of each distrit wealth — so increases ip local rolls mean local districts areJ pected to pay a larger share of ej] cation costs. Bynum said even if the taxnl local school districts are expected! impose on property owners* halved, with the addition of intaii| hies to school finance formulas di tricts such as Houston would face massive $8 million increase inll amount they are required to rai toward education costs. Under current law which stipi lates taxes are to be collected on i| tangibles (a law almost uniformly nored until recent court suits)) state’s six largest school distrii would lose $21.6 million instates! Bynum said. Another 46 districts with 1C,I to 49,999 students in average da attendance would lose $33.8 mil in state aid, he said. “Even to those of us who stn this all the time it boggles tl mind,” Bynum said. “The two districts in the statetk are primarily the hardest hitai Bichardson and Midland on ap pupil basis,” he said. Bynum said it will cost thesta much more to protect local distrii from facing sharp increases in 1# revenue requirements if intangibli must be taxed, than it did to softi the impact of previous moves ton vamp public school finances. “The losers before were $30,1 to $40,000 in rural Texas,” Byni said. “The losers now are goingl be in the millions (of dollars) urban Texas.” Sen. Oscar Mauzy, D-Dallas,sa he does not believe urban legislato have the votes to insist on the sail protection against sharp increases local spending requirements fori city schools that rural lawmalte have won for their areas in previoi school finance battles. “We don’t have the numbers an we won’t have in the urban art until redistricting after the 191 census, Mauzy said. “The 19S Legislature will be the first Legisl ture in Texas which will be urbi dominated.” Mauzy said he does not beta the school finance debate nextyi will pit rural areas against urki areas, however. “The problem is not total rural-urban,” he said. “An awfiil of the rural districts are wealtlult clining.” NEW EFFICIENCIES $140 month. One bedroom from $175 month. All bills paid except electricity. No pets. Villa West Apartments, south of Villa Maria. Lorraine Peterson, manager. 822-7772. isitfn LOST WANTED 5 full time and 10 part time drivers for delivery. Must have own car. Apply in person at Chanello’s, 301 Patricia. Good pay, flexible hours. sue Part time. Week nights 10-3. Weekends 10-5. Starting $2.80/hr. Apply in person. Jack-in-the-Box 1604 Texas Avenue, College Station Sabline male collie, nine months old. Reward offered. Lost behind Skaggs area. 846- 7642. 33t3 SERVICES Low cost travel to Israel. Toll Free 800-223- 7676, 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. NY time. 31t8 Wanted Fast Food Personnel FREE FOOD PAID VACATIONS ROOM FOR ADVANCEMENT. EXCELLENT WORKING CONDITIONS. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. Part & full time positions available for the following shifts: 11 a.m.-2 p.m. 7 p.m.-2 a.m. 5 p.m.-2 a.m. Starting pay $2.90/hr. Apply in person at Der Wienerschnitzel 501 S. Texas Ave. Between 2-5 p.m. daily. 22t22 St. Joseph Hospital has openings for the following: RN’s and LVN’s on the 3-11 and 11-7 shifts. An experienced respiratory therapist for part-time relief on the 11-7 shift. A certified radiologic technologist. A part-time medical transcriptionist (includes week end work.) Apply direct to the per sonnel department Tues.-Fri. 9-11 or 12:30-2:00, 2801 Fran- siscan Drive, Bryan. 3314 WANTED Two non-student tickets needed for Baylor game. Call 846-2235. 32t3 Typing. 823-4579. College of Science English Proficiency Examination |ALL JUNIORS and SENIORS in curricula of the College of) Science must take the English Proficiency Examination onf WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1978, at 7:30 p.m. BIOLOGY Department Curricula — ROOM 113 BSBE CHEMISTRY Department Curricula — ROOM 100 CHEM MATH Department Curricula — ROOM 101 MILNER PHYSICS Department Curricula — ROOM 301 PHYS In order to qualify as a candidate for a degree in the Col-1 lege of Science, each student must demonstrate an ability to express himself (or herself) in acceptable English. This requirement may be satisfied by (1) passing an examina tion in English composition (EPE) taken not later than the spring semester of the junior year, or (2) completing! English 301 with a minimum grade of “C”. Any student who fails the written examination (EPE) must! [satisfy the English Proficiency Requirement by taking| English 301 and earning a minimum grade of “C”. jpor information and guidelines on the nature of the exami-| nation, check with the departmental secretary. Salmon battle set for court United Press International Typing. 846-7577. Wanted. Good home for Benji-type puppy. Call Melissa at 845-5973 after 10:00 p.m. 32t3 MANOR EAST MALL Texas at Villa Maria M-F 10-8:30 Sat. 10-6 779-6718 WASHINGTON - In ^ mid-1850s, Isaac I. Stevens unlef took to settle for all time the difftf ences between the white man the Indian in what is now WasH ton state. The latest upshot is that the St preme Court decided Mondayj intervene in a case which — w the exception of some desegregaW cases — has been marked by t# most concerted official and privtf efforts to frustrate a decree ofafei eral court witnessed in this ce> Wanted: 3 General Admission tickets to Baylor game. Name your price. 693-3816 after 5 p.m. 3413 OFFICIAL NOTICE Miranda’s needs a Dee Jay Thurs.-Sat. 8 p.m.-1 a.m. Apply 309 University next to Dixie Chicken Telephone secretary wanted by National Insurance Co. Male or female. Hours 6-9 p.m., Sun. thru Wed. Starting salary $3.00 per hour. This is not commission work, but guaranteed salary. For inter view contact manager 846- 8654. 33ts Wanted piano teacher or advanced music stu dent to teach adult pupil with 1 yrs. experi ence. In home lessons preferred. 779- 6323. 34t5 AVON HOW MUCH MONEY YOU EARN IS UP TO YOU Become an Avon Representa tive. The more you sell, the more money you earn. And you set your own hours, too. Call 822-1430. 10123 | For Opening for part time employment in drive-in grocery store. Telephone Mrs. Lee 846- 4141. 29t8 SPECIAL NOTICE Flight instructor, Brazos Aviation. Our no. is 696-8767. 30t7 Professional typing services. 846-9109. 6t33 Part time help wanted. GRAPEVINE PER SONALITY. Call 846-3411. 28tfn OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS INFORMA TION CALL 845-4455. 34t5 The College of Science Presents CAREER OPPORTUNITY INFORMATION BIOLOGY - Monday, October 16 MATH & ST AT - Tuesday, October 17 PHYSICS - Wednesday, October 18 CHEMISTRY - Thursday, October 19 7:00 p.m. each evening, Room 113 Heldenfels all student invited [Informal Programs - for undergraduate students interested) or involved in above majors featuring: Roundtable Discussions - with individuals involved in ca reers in these fields. |For further Information call 845-7361 2 /uptnamba m Eddie Dominguez '66 Joe Arciniega ’74 3-C BARBECUE Openings Available: Waitresses Busboys Waiters Lineworkers Apply in person at 810 South Main Between 2:00 and 5:00 p.m. RESUME SERVICE Sell yourself effectively. Have a professional resume prepared by BUSINESS & COMMUNICATION SERVICES Call 846-5794 for an appointment CASA CHAPULTEPEC 30 tin Service For All Chrysler Corp. Cars Body Work — Painting HALSELL MOTOR COMPANY INC. Dodge Sales and Service Since 1922 1411 Texas Ave. — 823-8111 FIESTA DINNER 2 ENCHILADAS Wd. CHEESE. CHILE SAUCE. SPANISH RICE. FRIED BEANS. 1 BEEF TACO. HOTS. TOSTADITAS. REG. $2.20. SPECIAL $1.59. AGGIE SPECIAL 3 ENCHILADA CHEESE. CHILE SAUCE. FRIED BEAN. SPANISH RICE. 1 CHILE CONQUESO. S 1 BEEF TACOS. HOT SAUCE. TOSTADITAS - ICE TEA. REG. $2.30. SPECIAL S $1 95 32 SOPAPIAS Wd. EVERY MEAL 1315 SO. COLLEGE AVE. CLOSE ON TUESDAYS PH.779-5116 BRYAN, TEX. CLOSE SATURDAY 14 ONLY OPEN 11:00 A.M. CLOSE 9:30 P.M. = ■■■■——Hfi| (If you want the real ’'thing, not frozen or canned . . . We call It “Mexican Food Supreme.” Dallas location: 3071 Northwest Hwy 352-8570 tury. Those quotes are from the^ti U.S. Circuit Court of Appea which last April upheld a decisiU by federal District Judge Georj Boldt that Indians living aloi Puget Sound and its watershed a# entitled to half of the salmon tain during the annual spawning run Boldt concluded this was t< quired under Indian treaties Isa* Stevens worked out during 1854-s when he was governor of what tit* was a territory. But the Washington state preme Court has defied Boldt, «#■ eluding his reasoning was all and ordering the state Fisheta Department to ignore his orders. Fish taken from the areahavea* estimated commercial value of million a year, and the state coni* concluded it is unconstitutional turn over half the take to India® who make up less than 1 percent* the population. The Supreme Court — whichl* been asked three times in thelasth years to rule on some phase of tl* case — will hear arguments term on the thorny issue, which l* stirred scattered incidents of vi* jlence, and decide it by written State fisheries director Gordo* Sandison and other officials w corned the high court’s interventio* to settle the matter. The Circuit Court, trying to the problem down, said the state,i* courts and non-Indians who fish f* a living “have never fully accept^ the principle that treaty rights ca< be claimed by a politically impcle® 1 minority.”