The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 03, 1979, Image 5

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    The Corp* of Cadet* gets Its news from
the Batt.
^ » y"* w w v '<* w
HELP WANTED
Classifiedi
15-2611
'OKI
I Time
art Tin*
helpful, ink
'P an ap£;
5. H
>per Plaz!
je Station
ullandpaiH|
Piz^a
'Hut.
Part Time Positions Open
We are in the "People” busi
ness and if you enjoy working
with and serving people, we
possibly have a position for
you as a cook, waiter, or wait
ress.
Excellent wages for those
employees who are product
ive and have a positive at
titude.
Other Benefits Include:
• Furnished Meals.
• Furbished Uniforms.
• Paid vacation for full and
part time employees.
• Pay raises for achievement.
• Advancement opportunities
within the corporation.
If you are dependable, well
groomed, and have a friendly
out going personality, come to
the Pizza Hut of Bryan and
make arrangements for an
interview.
Equal Opportunity Employw 141110
THE BATTALION
THURSDAY, MAY 3, 1979
Page 5 i
We Buy All Books!
WE NEED TWICE
AS MANY USED
BOOKS BECAUSE
OF OUR NEW STORE
IN CULPEPPER PLAZA!
Bring your out-of-date books,
with your new books & we’ll
make you an offer on all your
books (including paperbooks).
| UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
Now 2 Locations
NORTHGATE and CULPEPPER PLAZA
■lUIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIilllllllllllllllllUllUIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIillllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII^
New library still ‘taking shape’
A workman trowels concrete on a raised walkway between
the first and second floors of the old and new library. In the
recessed areas on either side of the walkway there will be the
new lounge and concessions area. Battalion photo by Clay Cockrill
BCLU plans art auction, raffle
ME
rour schedw
rienced pm
MANAGERS MGR TRAINEES
PIZZA HUT,
doesn't promise its
MANAGERS
the world . .
just a
SECURE,
REWARDING
part of it
by joining forces with
one of the world's
leaders in the rapidly
expanding restaurant
industry
So. if you are a career-
mmded High School grad
with the facility for figure
work/record keeping
possess the ability to from
and supervise others on a
day-by day and long
range basis, and have the
aptitude necessary for
quality control, we'd like
to talk with you about a
Management position in
one of our restaurants
EXCELLENT SALARY
A BENEFITS PACKAGE
PERFORMANCE BONUS
‘Hut.
Please apply at
Pizza Hut
of College Station
to arrange for an
appointment
An equal opportunity employer.
By DIANE BLAKE
Battalion Staff
Art lovers with champagne tastes
and a beer budget, rejoice. The
Brazos County Civil Liberties Union
is offering a crafts sale, art auction
and raffle Friday at 7 p.m.
For the song and dance fans, the
festivities will feature the King’s
English Band, an old-time string
band made up mostly of Texas A&M
University English profs, and a dis
co/rock and roll dance. But for once,
dancing all night won’t require pay
ing the fiddler. Admission is free.
The activities will be held at the
Unitarian Fellowship Hall, 305
Wellborn Road. There the civil
liberties union will sell books, arts
and crafts donated by local craftsmen
and BCLU members, in addition to
raffling off a water color by Joe
Donaldson, an artist and professor of
environmental design at Texas
A&M.
The painting, “Faces,” is a brown
and yellow abstract and would sell
for about $200, said Corinne Dale,
director of the auction. Raffle tickets
sell for $1.
Arts and crafts will be sold begin
ning at 7 p. m., the auction starts at 8
p.m. and the dance, which will have
recorded disco and rock and roll
music, will last from 9 p.m. to mid
night.
Auctioneers will be John Henry
Faulk, a Hee-Haw humorist who
won a court battle over blacklisting
in the 1950’s, and Dr. Manuel
Davenport, a Texas A&M philoso
phy professor.
All proceeds from the sale and auc
tion will go to the BCLU, an organi
zation whose goal is to secure the
rights of Americans according to the
Bill of Rights, said Dr. Merrill Whit
burn, head of the organization and
Texas A&M associate professor of
English.
“We try to represent everyone,
whether they’re conservative, radi
cal, or liberal,” Whitburn said. The
group’s primary interests this year
have been women’s rights, Brazos
County jail conditions, and freedom
of expression.
Friday night the eight-member
King’s English Band will feature two
fiddles, a guitar, banjo, washtub
base, washboard, limber jack and
penny whistle.
A limber jack is a percussion in
strument shaped like a wooden man
which is bounced on a flat stick. The
man’s feet dance when it is played.
A penny whistle is a small wood
wind that looks like a piccolo but is
played like a recorder. It is a simple
instrument which plays only seven
notes.
FREE DELIVERY
FRI.-SAT.-SUNDAY
6 till closing
PIZZA INN
$ 1 00 o«
any medium or large pizza
with this coupon
Valid thru 5-6-79
PIZZA INN
$ 1 50 off
any giant pizza with
this coupon
Valid thru 5-6^79
846-8749
Minimum Order $ 3 00
AMERICA’S FAVORITE PIZZA
w w w *
HELP WANTED
Radio waver may
be linked to cancer
FT
Interviewing Now
For Teaching Positions
Available in August. Degreed teacher in[
Early Childhood Development. Othen
[openings available for experience^
iteachers, aids, and child care. Experi-J
'once preferred. 779-1324. I42t:'
MIRANDA’S”"
1 Part time bartender, $3.00/hr.
Experienced, personable. Em
ploy now and summer.
Apply 309 University
Next To Dixie Chicken 13 7tfn
■ ■hi in ■
^ art „^ ne ‘ wanted. Grapevine Personal-
'ty- 69^3411. - 91tftl
AUTO INSURANCE
FOR AGGIES:
Call: George Webb
Farmers Insurance Group
J3400 S. College
DIXIE CHICKEN
1 Or 2 part time employees. $2.90
plus benefits. Will employ im
mediately.
Apply 307 University
■ 1 * 147t7
823-8051'
ime
Time
h Sumffl
ALLEN
Oldsmobile
Cadillac
Honda
SALES - SERVICE
Where satisfaction is
standard equipment”
2401 Texas Ave.
779-3516
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.
125tfn
United Press International
PORTLAND, Ore. — Is it possi
ble that Howard Cosell, Walter
Cronkite, or other broadcast per-"
sonalities may be hazardous to your
health?
Not in themselves, but via the
airways of radio and television they
use to talk to you.
Scientists at the University of
Oregon are trying to determine if
there is a correlation between
human exposure to radio waves and
the incidence of human cancer.
To help researchers answer the
question, the federal Environmental
Protection Agency has given $55,983
to the University of Oregon Health
Sciences Center (medical school) for
a two-year study in the Portland
metropolitan area.
The study is directed by Dr.
William Morton, professor and head
i of the division of environmental
medicine at the medical school. He
hopes to learn whether there is any
correlation between human expo-
I sure to non-ionizing radiation, such
as that emitted from radio towers,
and the incidence of and mortality
rate for cancer.
“Chances of our finding a specific
relationship right now are relatively
slim,” Morton said, “but they do
exist. It would be worth risking a
little capital to find out.”
Morton has been studying the dis
tribution of cancer in Oregon for the
past six years. He has also been in
volved in several studies that explore
the relationship of occupation, life
style and environment to cancer.
In one study, he discovered that
cancer of the endometrium (the body
of the uterus in women) seemed to
be concentrated in the West Hills
residential area near downtown Port
land. That area also happens to have
a high concentration of radio towers
atop the hilly terrain of that
neighborhood.
Other cancers that might be
radiation-related, he mentioned, are
leukemias, lymphomas and cancers
of the breast, pancreas and lung.
Permanent
Wave
Special
From
$10.00 off Regular Price
May 7th thru 26th
Call early for your appointment. 696-6933
WORK?
MSC
SHOP
r hour
>er week
1-May4
STOf
>ur cleric^j
on firms
ecrctari
tionls
Your
Ground-Level
Challenge Can be Found
at UTHSC, Houston.
One of the largest and most diverse health universities
now has openings of on entry level for those interested in a
career opportunity. The University of Texas Health Science
Center at Houston prepares qualified health professionals
to meet the medicol, dental, nursing, scientific, and allied
health needs of the State ofTexas.The salary is highlycom-
pefitive and the benefits package one of the best, so join
the professionals at UTHSC.
Openings are in the following categories:
RESEARCH
particularly biochemistry and microbiology
BUYERS
with Business Administration degree
FIRE AND SAFETY COORDINATOR
background in safety
MECHANICAL ENGINEER
B5ME required
DATA PROCESSING
Programmer/Analysts
ACCOUNTING
DBA with emphasis in accounting
NURSE-ANESTHETIST
For immediate consideration for one of
these career opportunities. CALL or send
your resume to:
Vicki Martin
713/79X-4990
The University of Texos Heolth Science Center
P. O. Box 20036, Houston. Texas 77025
An Allirmative Action Employer
ASTRAPTES & DIAMOND BROKERS
HAVE JOINED FORCES TO SAY:
THANKS STUDENTS
For Keeping Us
Number One in B-CS!
SO TONIGHT —
3-FOR-l DRINKS
'til 9 P.M.
2-FOR-l DRINKS
'til CLOSING
PLUS NO
COVER CHARGE!
AND DON'T MISS OUR
? ^cioussz 0
GIVEAWAY!
THIS WEEKEND
%
10 pt. Aggie Ring Diamond
Given Away Tonight
V2 Carat Emerald
Given Away Friday Night
$800 Aggie Ring Diamond
Given Away Saturday Night
813 Wellborn Road
696-1100
Diamond Importers & Wholesalers
209 University Drive East
(in the George Green Building)
693-1647