Page 4 THE BATTALION MONDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1980 Battalion Classifieds Longer life Preventive medicine is answer WANTED OFFICIAL NOTICE FOR RENT Typing. Experienced, fast, accurate. All kinds 822-0544... Itfti Typing. Full time. Symbols. Notary Public. 823-7723... 76tfn “SPRINGS awards”] SCHOLARSHIPS” CASH FOR OLD GOLD Class rings, wedding rings, worn out * gold jewelry, coins, etc.' ► The Diamond Room k Town & Country Shopping Canter | 3731 E. 29th St., Bryan j 846-4708 } — ^ — ^ — Deadline - March 1, 1980 Application forms for Spring Awards Program may be obtained from the Student Financial Aid Office, Room 310, YMCA Building. All applications must be filed with the Student Financial Aid Office not later than 5:00 PM, March 1,1980. Late applications will not be accepted. New! room for rent. $125.$$/month. Call 779- 9096. 105(5 Girl needed to sublease 2-bdrm, 2-bath apart ment. Call 845-8429. I05t5 Male grad student needs roommate for new 2-bdrm. duplex. $125 + Vi utilities. 693- 5010. 106t5 Two male roommates wanted. Three blocks south of Campus. $115/month plus Yt bills. Available immediately. 696-3932. 106t5 HELP WANTED Help wanted. Experience with cars. Good per sonality. Apply at Piper’s Gulf Station by the Ramada Inn at the corner of University and Texas. 102tl0 NowTaking Applications For Cashiers and Hostesses APPLY IN PERSON ONLY At Ken Martin's 1803 S. Texas next to Sears Cooperative Education in the Col lege of Liberal Arts has two available claims representative positions with the Social Security offices in Brenham and Houston for the sum mer and fall semesters. A minimum of sixty hours is required and sociol ogy or psychology majors are prefer red. Interested students may obtain further information by contacting Henry D. Pope or Susannah Clary at 107 Harrington or 845-7814. losts NEW EFFICIENCIES $159 month. One bedroom from $180 month. All bills paid except electricity. No pets. Villa West Apartments, south of Villa Maria. Lorraine Peterson, manager. 822- 7772. i77tfn TOWNHOUSE Want two girls to share furnished town- house IVz miles from campus. $115/ month each plus equal share of utilities. Washer and dryer. Phone Dee Dee Ramsey 696-4104. lostio DAY AND NIGHT PART-TIME HELP NEEDED Apply in person. PASTA’S PIZZA 807 Texas Avenue 10515 SHERWOOD HEALTH CARE INC. has full time and part time openings for LVN’s 6-2 and 2-10, RN 2-10. Excellent salary, benefits and work ing conditions. Contact E.P. Sulik, Admin. 822-7521 95118 Cooperative Education in the Col lege of Liberal Arts has several avail able management-trainee positions with Foley’s Department Store in Houston for the summer and fall semesters. Interested students may obtain further information by con tacting Henry D. Pope or Susannah Clary at 107 Harrington or 845-7814. 10815 TOWNHOUSE Have unfurnished 2-bdrm townhouse, 1500 sq. ft., large enough for 4 students, IVfe miles from campus. $350/month plus utilities. Phone DeeDee Ramsey 696-4104 108110 SERVICES Expert typing. Call Gloria 693-8286. 103110 WAITRESSES FULL AND PART TIME DAYS FRANK’S BAR & GRILL 913 Harvey Rd. College Station loets How to Make (A) on a Quiz written by an honors graduate of one of the nation’s great universities. Send $5 to LEARNING EXPER1- ENCE/Box 765/Tyler, TX 75710. 105(7 AVAILABLE NOW 2-bdrm 1 -bath Upstairs Duplex off Broadmoor $230.00/month qas paid. Call Jacob Beal Real Estate at 822-4518 M-Fonly. ioitio r WINCHELL’S Accepting applications All shifts A-B-C $3.10 to $4.00/hour. 846-9869 losts Chrysler Corp. Cars E Body Work — Painting HALSELL MOTOR ■ COMPANY INC. Dodge Sales and Service Since 192* &HIIIBIMl]^B| AVe 023 ‘ 8111 I PART-TIME/NOW FULL-TIME/SUMMER National Marketing Co. will appoint six local representatives to contact A&M Students. Above average pay, flexible hours, car necessary. For local interview call 800-821-5838 Jim Beasley. kmm YOU’LL FIND All Your Plumbing & Hardware Supplies at WHITE HOME & AUTO STORE Northgate Bike Repair— Dorm Refrigerators 10815 CLIP & SAVE Available June 1st Two furnished bedrooms in up stairs apartment - 5 minutes from campus. Private phone, T.V. cable, etc. $87.50 plus small per centage of utilities. Deposit re quired. Call 846-3824 Also available March 1 st Large furnished bedroom. All pri vileges - $100/month, Bills paid. Deposit. 108t1 JOB 'OPPORTUNITIES FOR SALE SWEnsen*S Accepting applications for dishwashers, cooks, fountaineers, and cashiers. Pick up applications at SWENSEN’S in Culpepper Plaza lost! HELP WANTED A&M Consolidated ISD is seeking applications for Secretary, Com munity Education Office. Must type 60-70 wpm, shorthand or speed writing desired, but not re quired. Must be able to work with public in person and by phone. Must be highly organized, self motivating and personable. Job requires flexi bility and some extra hours. Contact Personnel Office A&M Consolidated ISD 100 Anderson 696-8893 Equal Opportunity Affirmative ActionTitle IX Em- ployer 1Q713 MEN! WOMEN! JOBS! CRUISESHIPSI/SAILING EXPEDI- TIONSI/SAILING CAMPS. No ex perience. Good pay. Summer. Career. NATIONWIDE, WORL DWIDE! Send $4.95 for APPLICA- TION/INFO/REFERRALS to CRUISEWORLD 127 Box 60129, Sacramento, CA 95860. loan Schwinn Women’s Ten-Speed bicycle. Good condition. Light. $100.00. 846-7036. 10812 1973 Vega 2/drive, 4 cylinder, 65,000 miles. $795.00. 1969 Dodge Hardtop. $495.00. 693- 4132 or 846-2641. 10613 1978 Cougar XR-7 loaded. $4600 or best offer. 846-4543. loeo Senior Boots. Size HYz - 12. 693-3038. 10615 FOR SALE: Sanyo turntable — Excellent con dition— four months old. $100.00. Call Robert 696-3137. I05t5 GIVE YOUR SUMMER TO A SPECIAL KID. A summer job with meaning. Coun selor at camp near Dallas. Salary, room board, insurance. Make appoint for Camp Directors visit to campus, February 27 and 28th at The Placement Center. For more information: Camp Soroptimist, 7411 Hines Place, Suite 123, Dallas, TX 75235. (214)634-7500 I04t8 ’79 SUZUKI GS550E. Beautiful black, in su perb condition. $1650.00. 779-9121 after 4 pm. 103 r6 Buy one. Cordoba ’75 $2750.00. Catalina ’75 $2250.00. 779-9678. 102t7 ’,78 TRANS/AM 400-AUTOMATIC. Good Condition. $4950.00. 779-9121 after 4 pm. 103t6 VIVITAR 35 MM CAMERA . 2 lenses flash J tele-converter leather case I Still in warranty. Call Benjie at 693-5347. Leave message if not there. i ny HELP WANTED Applications are being accepted for part-time clerk typist. Re quired to have 50-60 wpm. Typ ing to include financial reports, charts, letters, and forms. Good filing skills desired. Ability to work full time during some peak work periods. Contact Personnel Office A&M Consolidated ISD 100 Anderson 696-8893 Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action Title IX Employer. 10713 LOST FOUND LOST: Female Pit Bulldog. 6 months old. Brin- dle colored. Call 845-6249. 107t3 Girl’s Class of ’80 ring. Polished style. Lost between Rudder and SLAB. $50 REWARD! 693-5123. io7t5 FOUND: Young Springer Spaniel on campus near Drill Field 3 weeks ago. Call 845-1187 or 713-828-4257 or 713-828-4465. I08t5 REWARD: Male yellow Lab puppy. South of Campus. Call Terry. 845-7816 or 693- 7303. 107t5 SPECIAL NOTICE LOST Black male kitten- six months old, wearing red collar. Lost near corner of Fairview and Jersey. Call 693-6719. io 8 t4 PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Free abortion counseling and referrals. Call (713) 779- 2258...62tfn PREGNANCY TESTING Counselling on all alternatives and birth control methods. Women’s Referral Center, 3910 Old College Road. 846-8437 WANTED FAST FOOD PERSONNEL 3.15/hr. *FREE FOOD *PAID VACATIONS •ROOM FOR ADVANCEMENT •GOOD WORKING ENVIRONMENT *NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY FULL OR PART TIME 11 a.m.-2p.m. 7 p.m.-2a.m. 5 p.m.-2 a.m. APPLY IN PERSON BETWEEN 9:30 a.m.-11:00 a.m. 501 S. TEXAS AVE. fG< sit United Press International ATLANTA — Federal health offi cials are developing a new national public health strategy based on the concept of preventing rather than curing disease with the aim of further increasing the life span of Amer- “We are developing a national strategy for prevention,” says Dr. William Foege, director of the na tional Center for Disease Control. “We have had lots of strategies be fore, but we are now coming to a consensus.” Foege said in the past 75 years, by some estimates, preventive medi cine added 11 years to the average life span. “In the next 75 years, it will be th H when you ctmuri&uk, || major factor in improving modern medicine and the quality of life.” The national effort to prevent dis ease has the whole-hearted coopera tion of Surgeon General Julius Rich mond, Foege, various federal health agencies and many state and private medical organizations. The expected life span of Amer icans, now 73.2 years, increased by 2.7 years in the past decade. During the previous decade, it increased by only one year. Medical authorities have given much of the credit for this increase in longevity to prevention. Nearly all the gains against the once-great kil lers — typhoid fever, smallpox, and plague — came as a result of im provements in sanitation, housing, nutrition and immunization. Some recent gains, particularly a decline in deaths due to heart dis ease, resulted from changes in lifes tyle — a new awareness of the dan gers of smoking, overuse of alcohol and lack of exercise. The big push to embrace preven tive medicine as a national strategy rather than pumping more billions of dollars into treatment programs and building more hospitals began two years ago. An advisory committee to the CDC, made up of health experts in and out of government, was formed at that time. = £ 2000 E. 29th ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★**** * * * SKYWAY TWIN * by MARK MEDOFF Feb. 23, 28, 29 822-3300 * * and March 1 Rudder Forum % * * ADMISSION IS JUST 1.50 PER PERSON * * * * * * Tickets: MSC Box Office or at the Door * -K * * EAST AND JUSTICE FOR ALL AND MIDNIGHT EXPRESS * * Theater Arts Section Department of English / Texas A&M University * * i* llrr* WEST THE ROBE AND A PERFECT COUPLE * * AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 3400 S. College 823-8051 ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Recommendations for a national disease prevention program were drawn up and presented to Rich mond and Foege. Based on those recommendations, Richmond issued a report last year titled “Healthy People,” along with model standards for community preventive health services. The principal message in those re commendations, Foege said, was the importance of educating and en couraging people to look after their own health. “What we re trying to do is iden tify people at high risk and then per sonalizing the message to them. We’re asking people to participate in their own health. It’s a series of day- to-day steps that people have to be come involved in.” Twentieth Century medicine, according to Foege, has added only six more years to the average Amer ican life span. But he said people practicing prevention increased their life span by 11 years. The four most important steps a person can take to promote his own health are to stop smoking, use alco hol in moderation, eat properly and exercise regularly, he said. "Smoking is our No. 1 public health problem. People have the feeling that cancer in general is in creasing. But what’s rising is tobac co-related cancer.” Smoking has been linked to can cer, heart attacks and other diseases. An estimated 35 million Americans still smoke cigarettes, particularly teenagers and women, although the percentage of smokers to the total population is decreasing. Excessive use of alcohol causes cir rhosis of the liver and accidents, said Foege, while the worst dietary habit of Americans is the consumption of too much fat. The use of seat belts in cars and getting regular checks for high blood pressure also were included in Foege’s preventive medicine list. Billed by some medical authorities as “the second public health revolu tion in the history of the United States, the new emphasis on pre vention concentrates on the de generative diseases of the heart and circulatory system, certain cancers and other health problems such as alcohol, contamination of drinking water, dental diseases, diseases caused by hazardous health expo sures in the workplace, infant mor tality, motor vehicle accidents, new ly recognized diseases and unex pected epidemics, hospital infec tions, smoking and its consequences, and vaccine-preventable diseases of children. Foege said the recaslitj) concept of how best thier America does not met of the present medical cars “The medical care system iii factor in the quality of life. Ii;| tial. It is not a case ofeilfc both.” Underscoring the tre® advances in medicine, preventive medicine, w#i] statistics: If mortality rates for cei eases prevailed today as the turn of the century, 400,000 Americans would their lives in 1979 to tufe; Almost 300,000 would kvt gastroenteritis, 80,000 won?! died of diphtheria and 55,1) would have been claimedk. Instead, the toll fromaii). eases last year was lessthaili Foege cited some ai ments of preventive medicis] Water fluoridation, wl vents tooth decay, saves million in health care costs Some 105 million A mens use fluoridated water. Infectious disease is now health problem in Third \li tions. But by the year effects of smoking will be health problem. A 16 percent reductii:j achieved from 1975 to 19'8u! al surgical wound infections tions acquired by patients als still costs the nation $l.i annually. In 1978, the numberof vaccine-preventable disi clined in all seven catei measles, polio, rubella, cough, tetanus, mumps, In 1979, all declined exctf Four set all-time low recoiif! In 1979, less than one the 3,000 counties in the States reported cases of me: given week. A 90 percent immum has been achieved nationwi inoculation of children agaiw hood diseases. Unit* WASH tion’s go 1 annual wi looking fo dump da: nuclear w states war The gov gressional that wot cleanup o an equitah to put the facilities. Presid appointee Waste M: during th Associatit with Ene WASHH change in raj try is makinj sexual assau women — tc ers, accordin the offense. In the las have amendt trict evident Once it was believed cholesterol in the blood Now it has been found there chloresterol that helps free of fatty deposits leadingl attacks. The organism that causesl naire’s Disease was diset t along with other bacteria sir k it, putting scientist on the! 4 finding and successfullyli it many previously uneip! ic pneumonia-like illnesses, f previous se. have “neutei bring charg raped. “We are concept tha female and says Jean V Center for tl trol of Rape “This has; ticularly for been raped. Mary Ann an Arlington organizatio: offender sta changes in t suit of an e: nized lobby women’s me A report ference of ! most states codes that se mechanism, form of assai standards in felonies. During tJ FBI says fon TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC DEPARTMENT RESIDENT ADVISOR POSITIONS AVAILABLE QUALIFICATIONS: Resident advisor candidates must be senior or graduate student classification with overall 2.25 CPA and some residence hall experience preferred but not necessary. DUTIES: Live with the student athletes in Cain Hall, serve as coun selor to the athletes, and act as liason between Resident Manager and Athletic Department administrators. STIPEND: Room and Board In-state tuition waiver APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE: Cain Hall (campus) or Leroy Sutherland 845- 4692