The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 07, 1980, Image 4
Page 4 THE BATTALION * TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1980 Battalion Classifieds HELP WANTED HELP WANTED PSYCHOLOGY/COUNSELING OPENING Primaty work will be tutoring two 8 year old boys. Successful applicant should therapeutically oriented, stable, and able to work 3:30-5:30 daily. Prefer male graduate student, but would consider dynamic under graduate. Call 846-5733. 25t3 FULL OR PART TIME *Day Shift ‘Night shift (til 10pm.) ‘Weekends ‘Flexible hours to fit your schedule ‘Rapid advancement ‘Cashier experience helpful Starting Salary $3.50/hour Apply in person only. 9:30-11:30am. (if possible) WHATABURGER Bryan College Station 1101 Texas 105 Dominik 6«n IHOP is now accepting applications for all shifts. Apply in person. 103 S. College. 3tfn BOY NEEDED TO CLEAN AND SCRUB NURSERY SCHOOL DAILY, 4-6-.m. 846- 5571. 260 EARN UP TO $3.80/HR. TEAM CLEANING homes and offices during flexible daytime hours. HOME CARE SERVICES. 846- 1905. 26tfn PARTTIME SITTER. 2/hrs, 3 days a week. Hours flexible. 5/mo. old baby. TLC. 693- 4234. 26t5 WISH TO HIRE RESPONSIBLE MOTHER’S HELPER with own car to care and transport children ages 4 and 7 from approximately 3:45 to 7:00 p.m. Monday- Friday. Call Mary Bryan, 693-9858/846- 5701. 26t5 OVERSEAS JOBS-Summer/year round. Europe, S.Amer., Australia, Asia. All Fields $500-$1200 monthly. Expenses paid. Sightsee ing. Free Info. Write: IJC Box 52-TX4. Corona Del Mar, CA 92625 2317 0) o 5< S N ON O CL Now hiring Delivery Personnel Must have own car and insurance. $3.50/hour plus commission and tips. Apply Domino's Pizza 1504 Holleman or 4407 Texas Ave. after 4:30 p.m. PART-TIME HELP WANTED. GRAPEVINE PERSONALITY. 696-3411. Itfn PIZZA INN Part-time and full-time cooks and waitresses needed. Apply in person. 413 S. Texas Ave. College Station BRYAN HOSPITAL has parttime house keeping position open. Weekend work (8-4:40) plus 4 hours during week. Duties include buffing and stripping floors, shampooing rugs and use of a large vacuum cleaner. Contact Sharon Robin son, 822-1347. 2615 needs full or part-time male or female help. Day or night. Apply in person. 201 Dominik stfn BRYAN HOSPITAL has a full time Security Guard position open. Hours will be 8 p.m. to 7 a.m. Alternating 4 nights one week and 3 nights next. Experience in Security work preferred. Ideal for the student and can work around school sched ule. Contact Sharon Robinson, 822- 1347. 2615 FISH RICHARDS HALF CENTURY HOUSE needs Wait Person 11 am-3pm Cocktail Waitress 5:30-11pm — 696-4118 Now Accepting Applications for day and evening employment. Apply in person only. SCHLOTZSKY’S 100 S. Texas Ave. between 2-5 p.m. 1215 ELECTRIC PARTS COUNTER SALES PERSON for part time and full time. Call 822-4862. 22ti NOW HIRING DELIVERY PEOPLE NEEDED FLEXIBLE HOURS 3.50/hr. plus 6% commission plus tips. Must have own car and insurance. Apply between 3:30 and 7 M-F at 319 Patricia 846-7785 r DOC-IZ X»d.. MK nw m 3C BARBECUE #3 H CULPEPPER PLAZA * We need people with energy and personality. Limited positions open [J Full or Part Time L Apply between 10-11 and 2-4 GRIMES MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Navasota, Texas has immediate openings for full time Registered Staff X-Ray Technicians, Staff RN’s and LVN’s for floor and ICU positions with shift and ICU differentials. Excellent pay and good fringe benefits. For information contact Burna Erwin, Personnel Sam to 4:30 p.m. 713-825-6585. 187t27 ‘Good working conditions ‘Friendly atmosphere CHICKEN OIL COMPANY and TEXAS MOON TAVERN ‘Flexible hours ‘No exp. necessary Part time and full time shifts for: Cooks, waitpersons, and kitchen help. Days — Nights — Weekends Call 846-2322 Come by Dixie Chicken Office 10-11am or 12-3pm Monday through Friday HELP WANTED A truck driver s heroic deeLo triggers trouble with Klan SERVICES DOMINO’S PIZZA Now hiring phone and counter help. Apply Domino’s 1504 Holleman. i9ittn TYPING. Experienced. Reports, Theses- Medical and Legal. 693-2857 after 6 pm. 23t6 HELP WANTED Full time receptionist. Call That Place for Opal. 693-0607. 2 Typing, symbols, Notary Public. 823-7723. ISOtfn Typing!! Reports, dissertations, etc. ON THE DOUBLE. 331 University. 846-3755. 178tfn Expert Typing. Gloria. 693-8286. I CRUISESHIPS CLUB MEDITERRANEAN, SAILING EXPE DITIONS! Needed: Sports Instructors, Office Personnel, Counselors. Europe, Carribean, Worldwide! Summer. Career. Send $5.95+ .75 handling for APPLICATION, OPENINGS, GUIDE to CRUISEWORLD 127, 60129, Sac ramento, Ca. 95860. 2318 5® ^Svice Chrysler Corp. Cars ■ Body Work — Painting ■ HALSELL MOTOR ■ COMPANY IN“ Dodge Sales and Service 1411 Tex^Ava /ante< 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.-5 p.m. 7 p.m.-2 a.m. 5 o.m.-2 a.m. Starting pay $3.25/hr. Apply in person between 9:30 a.m.-11:00 a.m. Der Wienerschnitzel 501 S. Texas Ave. ittn UNEXPECTED PREGNANCY? Services through the 20th week. Awake or Asleep. Women’s Health Services of Houston and Dallas, Texas. Off Metroplex Gyn. Group Toll Free 1-800-442-4076i8tioi TYPING. All kinds. Let us type your propos als, dissertations or theses on our WORD PROCESSOR. Fast service. Reasonable rates. B/CS 209 University East 846-5794 I65tfn Professional Typing. 779-2683. 27t20 FOR RENT JOB OPPORTUNITIES: Female telephone receptionist wanted. Pleas ant voice needed. Call 845-3457. 27t3 LOST LOST A 3-WAY FOLDING LEATHER WALLET. If found, call Bob. 696-2253. Re ward. 24t5 REWARD! Mens black Schwinn lost in front Academic Building. 693-2485. 26t5 LOST DASCHUND MIX. South College Sta tion. Brown. Answers to Frida. 693-8708. 26t3 * * sK * * * * * * * * * * LOST SHELTIE ”$£■ Seen last at 11:00 am. * * Friday. * REWARD * * 696-1352 * Dog means a lot to ownertio * :{: * *: sic 5*i * 5k 5k 5k 5k 5k * 5k 5k ik FOR SALE Make fun of AGGIE JOk£ TELLERS with Aggie Rebuttal Cards! 6 different Business- Card size - $1.25. 3 different Post - Card size - $1.00. CELCO, Box 1597-A, Richardson, Tex. 75080. 23t5 ’75 AMC Matador. Original owner. 59,000 miles. AM/FM Stereo New tires. Asking $1000. 696-3295. Robert. 27t4 Furnished apartment for boys only. $100. Call 846-5132 after 7pm. lltfn WANTED NEED FOUR GOOD NON-STUDENT TIC KETS to Baylor game. Will pay. Guy. 779- 9468. 24t5 CASH FOR OLD GOLD Class rings, wedding rings, worn out gold jewelry, coins, etc. The Diamond room Town & Country Shopping Center 3731 E. 29th St., Bryan 846-4708 ROOMMATE WANTED OWN ROOM. House. Five minutes from Northgate. 846-2884 evenings. 24t5 ROOMMATES WANTED to rent 3-bdrm house in Spring. Will be furnished. Washer- /Dryer. 775-1984 after 4 pm. 20tl0 9 OUT OF 10 PUPPIES PREFER THE BATTALION SANYO AM/FM CAR STEREO and two 6x9 speakers. $80.00 Graduate Ticket Book $40.00 or best offer. 775-2982. 24t5 1951 Ford Pickup. V-8 flathead. $700. 823- 0665. 19tl2 GOOD GAS RANGE. $65.00. 693-2440. OFFICIAL NOTICE FOR SALE $100.00 down, 5 acres, College Station area. COUNTRY LAND CO. 713/468-8501 26t23 COOP OPPORTUNITIES IN MEDICAL RESEARCH Representatives of the Stehlin Foundation for Cancer Re search will be on campus oct. 8- 9 to interview prospective coop students for work in the Spring of 1981. If you are in the Col lege of Science and are inter ested, contact Dr. O. C. Jenkins BSB 317; 845-7361. 2019 SPECIAL NOTICE WEIGHT WATCHERS wishes you a skinny new year and would like to show you how you can dine excitingly while you lose weight. College Station class meets Thursdays, 5:15, Lutheran Stu dent Center, 315 N. College Main. Fofj further information call 822-7303. I * I I DRIVING | RANGE i r Hrs: Mon-Sat 12-9 p.m. Sunday 1 p.m.-8 p.m. 696-1220 East Bypass and Hwy. 30. Service Road Going South - 'A mile?- i35ttn COOP OPPORTUNITIES in the COLLEGE OF SCIENCE There are Cooperative Educa tion positions available for the Spring term, 1981 for students in: Chemistry Biology (Pre-med and others) Applied Math Physics If you are a sophomore or junior and would like research or industrial experience in your field, Contact: Dr. O. C. Jenkins BSB 317/845- 7361. 20110 United Press International DALLAS — Truck driver Dick Cockrell, who res cued a woman from three men trying to rape her at a roadside park, has found being a hero is less fun than one might expect. , .. “I’m proud of what I did, Cockrell said. I d do it again in a minute.” , But the 33-year-old ex-Marine has worried 40 pounds off his 5-foot-ll-inch, 245-pound frame been threatened by the Ku Klux Klan, had his car vandalized, lost $1,500, moved three times and had several more fights- i-ii i Cockrell is white. The woman he saved is black. „ “I’m not supposed to be packing a gun, but I do, Cockrell said. “I got a brand new Riviera taken apart piece by piece. They painted ‘white trash’ on the side.” He said he met one Ku Klux Klan member to try to end harassment and threats that went from heating up to killing. ” “Him and I got into it that night,” Cockrell said. 1 figured they’d back off after that. But then the phone calls started, the harassment. There’s no use in going to the cops about it. There’s no law against it. “I moved for the third time last month, since January. So far no one’s found me. ” He has had several fights since the January rescue in which he broke the jaw of one attacker, broke a second assailant's arm, disabled a third who stabbedCi the leg and left almost before the woman him. The woman went to police and the media on the story, making Cockrell famous and a “I hadn’t had a fight in six years,” CockreU had six fights (since the rescue.) “I’ve lost six teeth now. One guy knocked^ one side. I walk away from most of these peep finds me, it finds me. I don’t like being pusba) and 1 don’t like people I’m with to be pustiedi Among new acquaintances he has made wan said conned $ 1,500 from him. Cockrell had sel AGRIC to help needy persons. But Cockrell also has received 9,000 letters a Some of them come from women and some® than praise. ii “They send me pictures, no clothes on, hal telling me what they’re going to do,” Coc ^dl* M(;r , was married, I would have been divorced an : times by now.” He said he had accepted a few of the women Cockrell said his employer, Kroger Co understanding and helpf ul in screening some His bosses also gave him $1,000, which he widow of another trucker. He has been hoi Marine Corps, the Veterans of Foreign W* couple of city and county organizations. 108 AGROl Scie ENGD in 2< Survey: doubts, low morale Soldiers down in the dump United Press International HOUSTON — A University of Houston sociologist’s survey of American volunteer soldiers has dis closed low morale and doubts about the Army’s capacity to field a strong fighting force. “They didn’t feel very confident to wage war and were less confident of the people around them,” Dr. David Gottlieb said of 115 volunteer enlis tees he questioned at Fort Sill, Okla. Gottlieb’s survey was funded by the Army Research Institute. He emphasized it might not represent opinion throughout the Army, but said he built a survey model in tended to reflect the Army’s makeup. Gottlieb said he found low morale, boredom and a belief training was inadequate. He said the common feeling seemed to be, “We re at the bottom of the barrel. No one gives a damn about us.” The researcher said the volunteer Army can work, but the incentives, pay and benefits must be increased. He said that since the concept was launched eight years ago the benefits have not kept pace. “If we need a highly competent, skilled, professional force, you’ve got to have a core of professionals, ” Got tlieb said. “If you want to have pro fessionals, you’re going to have to pay the price.” Gottlieb said he found enlisted women happier and more motivated than the men. The young women tend to be old er, better educated and more stable,” he said. It s tougher for women to join the service. They have to withstand a lot of social pressure. “Many of the young I really looking for some ItiiKjl trolled environment,”! "They were looking for a haw them off the streets.’’ But Gottlieb said manyo(N became disillusioned afteij the Army and feel they' given the straight informal the recruiting officer.” | Gottlieb said the Army, the only institution wheretk hired for the lower-ranldaj erage more education ability than the whites. But, he said, blacks end up in the more phy mental, combat-type jobs T don’t know if it is the discrimination or just soim nance of the old tradition Union: Clements has distorted view of teacher needs, concerns United Press International AUSTIN — The president of the Texas Federation of Teachers ac cused Gov. William Clements Mon day of a “viciously distorted charac terization of Texas’ teachers” be cause of the governor’s suggestion that teachers stop thinking about their paychecks and think more ab out quality education. Governor Clements continues to hide his head in the sand rather than searching honestly for answers and trying to listen to the concerns of teachers,” said Ron Wilcox. “Why shouldn’t teachers be con cerned about salaries?” asked Wil cox, who noted Texas ranks 35th among the 50 states in teacher pay. Better salaries will buy better teachers and improve morale. Teachers need to eat, buy clothes, pay for housing and support families just as other workers do.” Wilcox said his union will support legislation next year to increase funding for bilingual education, pro vide more equalization aid to school districts, provide more assistance for vocational education, reform s certification requirement: establish limits on the sizeofo ^ “The charge of not beini cerned with quality ecW another cheap political trick, cox said. “The governor lives inaf' 1 thal world in terms of educattj said. “Education needs minds available in the classfl won’t get that as longas thej< displays a plantation menl ward teachers.” TEXAS Mill HILLE in th SOCIE Zach PROFI DAY EUROl Stati SOCIO RUSSD STUDE ringt PRE-VI CATHC teevi the f Stud "WOOI Jimi 7:30 BONFL Husl TAMU! AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group I 3400 S. College 823-8051 Oldsmobile Cadillac Honda SALES - SERVICE U here satisfaction is standard equipment" 2401 Texas Ave. 779-3516 Halfway houses backed by pardons and paroles cci und< surv A lTC^T n xT ed P ^1 SS International AUS3 IN — The Board of Pardons and Paroles agreed Monday to sup port legislation in 1981 establishing a statewide system of halfivay houses to help prison parolees re-enter free society. The legislation also is designed to improve accountability, efficiency and responsibility in the administra tion of the Pardons and Paroles agency. ,. Departm Under the proposal," m al Planning introduced when the b-j pervision o convenes in January, d’ 1 nerandinc houses would be certify ffege Statioi Board of Pardons and P ar0 will conduc U„derterm S ofthert»* e ™?f tive director would be bin , on nister the agency, and '"y • commissioners would 1 i rather than appointed b) i9 80 P censu cials - ^ the Col bcurred in 1 Surveyor ?tent comp OFFICIAL NOTICE 17. t POWERED HANG I I GLIDER LESSONS | t t t t t t As Seen in the Battalion Now ANYONE Can Afford TO FLY Call Paul Shaffer 822-2926/775-1510. I 1 i l \ Ui OFFICIAL NOTICE COLLEGE OF SCIENCE English Proficiency Examination ALL JUNIORS and SENIORS in curricula of the College of Science must take the English Proficiency Examination on Wednesday, October 22, 1980, at 7:30 p.m. BIOLOGY Department Curricula.... Room 113 BSBE 9 CHEMISTRY Department Curricula Room 231 CHEM 3 MATH Department Curricula Room 101 Milner 01 PHYSICS Department Curricula.... Room 301 PHYS In order to qualify as a candidate for a degree in the College of Science, each student must demonstrate an ability to express himself (or herself) in accept able 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 EXAMINA TION (EPE) MUST SATISFY THE ENGLISH PROFICIEN CY Requirement by taking English 301 and EARNING A MINIMUM GRADE OF “C”. For information and guidelines on the nature of the examination, check with the departmental secretary. We, the students of The University of t ink the Aggie Blood Drive is anemic. • We think the Aggie Blood Drive is an insdl" 1 I a real blood drive (such as ours) and | challenge the students of Texas A&M to donai 8 as much blood as we will in our blood drive e w ' nn cr will be determined by the hig^p percentage of the students donating blood. • are confident there’s no way the Aggies can ^ AGGIES! Meet the Challenge! Aggie Blood Drive Oct. 14,15,16 MSC Rooms 212-224