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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 6, 1981)
Page 4 THE BATTALION THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1981 Battalion Classifieds HELP WANTED HELP WANTED Immediate opening: Ranch Co-manager position. Registered Hereford Ranch Cen tral Texas. Top salary and benefit package. Only hard workers need apply. Call 817- 385-6487. 180tl0 HELP WANTED FOR SALE Electric Cowboy Now hiring. Job openings for waitresses, bartenders and barbacks. come by club in person. 183tfn PART-TIME HELP WANTED. Grapevine personality. 696- 3411. E.O.E. 183tfn WANTED: Part-time Stocker and delivery man. Morning shift. Apply in person at J.J.’s Liquor Store 1219 N. Texas Ave., Bryan. 183tfn Part time/full time Now and this fall team cleaning homes Starting salary $3.60 Travel allowance Domestic Services 693-1954 NOW HIRING ! DELIVERY PEOPLE NEEDED FLEXIBLE HOURS $3a75/hPa plus 6% commission plus tips. Apply between 3:30 and 7 M-F at 319 Patricia 846-7785 3-C BAR-B-Q Part-time or Full time bus boys, dishwashers, serving-line workers, cashiers and hostesses. Apply between 9-11 or 2-4. Culpepper Plaza. PART TIME DELIVERY KsyboARd Center Inc MANOR EAST MALL Bryan, Texas 77801 this position is for a mature and responsible person who will deliv er pianos and organs in their truck. Average 7.50 hourly plus mileage and the hours are flex ible. Some weeks are busier than others and we are busy closer to Christmas. Telephone 779- 7080. lane Earn $240 a month just by working two nights (5pm- 2am) a week, (more hours available) at Der Wien er schnitzel. Apply in Person 501 S. Texas Ave. Bryan between 9:30am-11am weekdays. 163tfn MORE FOR YOU IN THE MORNING ROUTE CARRIERS We need several students who are interested in supplementing their income by working only 1 to 4 hours per day. You can earn $200 to $800 a month working these early morning hours and it won’t interfere with your planned activities for the rest of the day! Not only do we have several motor routes available, but we have numerous routes open that can be delivered on foot and are located close to the university. We offer short hours, an excellent profit and a gas allowance if you have a motor route. Call Elna Johnson today at 779-2345 if you’re interested in these super opportunities. TEMPORARY PART-TIME HELP WANTED We need 8 dependable individuals to work part-time for approximately three weeks. Starting August 10 and going through August 14, we need you to work from 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. and from August 15 to August 31, we need you to work from 4:00 a.m. to 8:00 a.m. We need individuals who are willing to work seven days a week and who can use their own economical vehicle. We guarantee 4 hours pay per day at $5.00 per hour plus we reimburse you for mileage. If you’re interested in earning some extra cash, call Elna Johnson between 10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. at 779-2345. Married couple to live with elderly man. Free room & board. You will earn some money. Please call 589-2571. 185t3 A&M Students interested in learning Tax idermy work. Call 846-0141 — Palermo Taxidermy. 183t9 Wanted student to work on Tuesdays as parking lot attendant. Call or come by Ex ercise Physiology Lab at Health and Physi cal Education Department. 183t3 Person to format and record mus ic for a local club. Reel to reel cassette deck & access to albums required. Phone 846-3030 or 696-8826. 18313 PART-TIME & FULL-TIME HELP. Wanted immediately. Apply in person. loupot’S BOOKSTORE. THE HOUSTON POST is now filling student routes for the fall semester. Early morning hours. $250-800/month. No hand rolling. Men, women or couples. 846-0396 or 846-2911. 181t8 HOUSTON CHRONICLE is currently taking applications for fall semester newspaper route. In come depends on size of route but ranges from $450-$750/month, plus a liberal transportation allow ance. Please call Julian McMuurey at 693 : 2323. issttni '78 Yamaha XS500E. Great con dition with 8,500 miles. Black with gold penstripes, backrest with lug gage rack. New Battery, tuneup and rear tire $1100, call 846-5141. GOOD WITH CHILDREN? Baby sit our 3 year old in our home. MTWTHF 12:30-5:00p.m. Fall Semester. (Prefer Academic Year) 696-0570 after 5p.m. SALESPERSON Part-time job with flexible hours on evenings and weekends soliciting newspaper subscription for THE HOUSTON POST. Personal transpor tation and sales background desirable but not required. Training program with pay plus commission on sales. Call 846-2911 or 846-0396, 7:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. 18516 TRANSPORTATION ENTERPRISES is accepting applications for shut tle bus drivers. Qualified appli cants must be 21 years of age with good driving record. For above av erage starting wage. Apply at 1701 Groesbeck in Bryan. For more information call 779-0812. 18514 SERVICES Call Cathy for all your typing or word processing needs. 696-9550. 131tfh Typing fast, accurate, dependable, Bernice 779-0435. 184t8 GAYLINE 846-8022, Picnic Sunday, 5pm. Oaks Park BYOB. 183t3 Dump Truck for hire trash hauled 846- 2919. 182t8 Typing on word processing equipment. Ex perienced. We understand form and style. Automated Clerical Services, 693-1070. 162t27 PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Free abortion counseling and referrals. Call (713) 779-'- 2258, Bryan. 156t36 Typing!! Reports, dissertations, etc. ON THE DOUBLE. 331 University. 846'-- 3755. 178tfn Typing experienced fast, accurate, all kinds 822-0544. 155tfh Lawn service, edging, trimming, etc. 696- 0562. 183t6 Typing. 15 yrs. experience, 846-3219.164128 HOME CARE SERVICES "CARES" about employees: paid vacations, paid travel time, flexible hours, $3.60 to $4.30/hr. Candidates with maturity, job refer ences, transportation, phone and a concern for cleaning excellence call 846-1905. 18019 IAII kinds. Let us type your propos als, dissertations, reports, essays on our WORD PROCESSOR. Fast service. Reasonable rates, -j Business Communication Services 4013 Texas Ave. S. 846-5794 issthu !■ .t, WANTED PRODUCTION SPECIALIST I WANTED: Person who enjoys working with people, capable of performing varied typing assignments and able to exercise independent judgment. Word processing experience preferred but not necessary. CONTACT: Mrs. Gertrude Perry Texas A&M Research Foundation 846-7731. EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER 1821! 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 itfn — -^JL ROOMMATE WANTED Male roommate, own room. Plantation oaks Apt, $200.00/mo. includes utilities, (713) 538-1587. 183tl4 FOR RENT HELP WANTED AT FARMER’S MARKET BAKERY & DELI *2 Part-time positions 5 p.m.-10 p.m. — any days *1 full-time position 11 a.m.-5 p.m. — Monday-Saturday Start $3.40 per hour. Fast food experience desired. 2700 Texas Ave., Bryan, 779- 6428. PULL Oft PART TIME "Day Snift < ‘Night shift (til 10pm.) ‘Weekends ‘Flexible hours to fit your schedule ‘Rapid advancement ‘Cashier experience helpful Starting Salary $3.50/hour Apply ih person only. 9:30-11:30am. (if possible) x WHATABURGER s Bryan College Station J01 Texas 105 Dominik ' • - - sttn V Apartment partially furnished, $125.00 per month. Boys Only!! Call 846-2154 between 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. 141tih DUPLEX—2 bedroom 1 bath all built-ins. No pets. $425/mo., 1 year, 696-8951 after 5p.m. 184t5 Duplex for rent $375/month, two bedroom on shuttle, 1613 Southwest Parkway/call 696-0203. I84t5 Preleasing For Fall in College Station New 3 bedroom 2 bath 4plexes 775-5757. State Panhandle home for exotics Ostrich guards refugi 10 speed bike Nishiki 21" excellent condi tion, $55, desk $15, 696-0794. 184t2 Barrel dining set—four chairs, 48 inch table, all white oak, asking $300, will bar gain, call 696-3327. 184t5 Couch, chairs, cinder blocks, cheap, 696- 3597 after 1:00 p.m. 184t2 1972 Gremlin 60,000, standard, good de pendable transportation, $600.00. 693- 5058. 184t5 15 yrs. National Geographic magazines 1962-1977. Make offer. Call 1-828-3903 — also tape recorder Ambassador $50. Please call after 6pm. 183t3 Refrigerator for sale — Gold Catalina $200 frost-free. Call 696-3041 after 4pm. 181t5 1973 Chevy truck for sale. Call 260-6867. 181t5 ’74 Capri — Deluxe Sports Package — 4- speed, air, excellent condition, 25 mpg, $1895.00 Phone 846-7301 after 5pm on weekdays. 181t5 1973 12x60 2 bedroom, partially furnished, 2Vfe miles from A&M, excellent condition. 779-3192. 181t5 1975 Honda 550 best offer 696-3361 after 5pm. 179t7 1972 Kawasaki 350 three cylinder. Recent top end job. Reliable college transporta tion. Asking $325. 693-6422. 177t9 United Press International CLARENDON — Tall, peacdul cottonwoods and pines first attracted rancher John Lee Bell to a sec tion of land in the Panhandle. He bought the land in 1969 with the idea of a wildlife refuge in the back of his mind. A decade later, however, the idea has become a sprawling preserve, protected by a vicious ostrich and a huge buffalo bull named “Big Red. " The pre serve is the Bell family’s private domain, open only to private tours mainly by students from nearby high schools and colleges. The preserve’s primary pur pose, he said, is for the enjoyment of his family. “It’s just a hobby,” said Bell, who is legally blind. The preserve is as much a refuge for Bell as it is for the animals. The outer area is not inviting, surrounded by trees, a 10-foot fence, six feet of picket and four feet of barbed wire. Inside, the animals graze among the high trees, native grasses, pastures and a cool pond. A well-cared-for mobile home looks over the pas tures and the emerald pool with its spray of water fountains. Bell’s wife Anita christened the preserve the “Horn B Ranch" — “Horn for the animals; B for Bell,” she said. Bell, clenching a large, never-lighted cigar be tween his teeth, looks across the ranch with blue eyes distorted by thick glasses. His blindness has forced him to hire two drivers, though he appears otherwise unhampered by his disability. Bell said his first step in stocking the preserve was in 1970 when he and his family stopped at a deer farm in Flagstaff, Ariz., while on their way to California for a vacation at Disneyland. The idea crystallized at the deer farm, and by October he hadpurckn and 10 sheep from the deer farm's additions arrived from numerous zoos id: ranches in south Texas. Most of the Horn B animals arebrowstn that nibble leaves from the lower brand» Bell said. These include antelope, deetj sheep. The majestic European Red Dt{ Fallow deer of England, both oncehuntd! ty, and the Corsican Mouflon sheep wet animals Bell bought. Camels and a zebra once roamed tki were removed when their temperamentsi ranch hands and other animals. Elk, alsot gan to crossbreed with the Red Deer, ad he sold the two elk. "I wanted to keepi pure," he said. A sign at the gate reads; “Warning. Hu! guarded by trained attack ostrich. ”1 strictly humorous, the ostrich is treated with respect. One visitor, igi bird’s front kick, suffered a gash which stitches to close. Other animals include an. pounds the world’s largest antelope; a 1 Deer buck; the elusive Audad sheep i the Mediterranean; Catalina goats, ab animal with an unpleasant smell, and tin low deer, sporting moose-type horns. Cohahitating with these animals aretk Sike deer, the tiny Sicilian donkey; tbefo: ican llama, and the Axis deer of India. Nak include a small herd of American bisoni longhorn, squirrels, wild turkeys andqa Request to ease prison overcrowding refused United Press International AUSTIN — Texas officials are pleased that while a challenge to cramped prison conditions travels through federal courts, the state will be allowed to put two to three inmates in cells designed for one. Supreme Court Justice Lewis Powell refused Tuesday to block an order that temporarily permits the Texas penitentiaries to continue double- and triple-celling. Without comment, Powell rejected a request by attorneys for a group of prisoners to dissolve a 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals order that allows the overcrowding while the case is reviewed by that court. The attorneys said no one contended that inmates deserved a single room but rather there was insuffi cient space per prisoner. Last year, U.S. District Judge William Wayne Justice of Tyler, concluding the situation in Texas prisons had reached “crisis proportions,” ordered the state to reduce overcrowding and improve over all prison conditions. But the appeals court blocked the order to end overcrowding until it could hear an appeal of the case. Attorney General Mark White said Tuesday he was encouraged by Powell’s refusal to dissolve the order. He said the decision allows Texas to continue with many parts of Justice’s ruling but not with those the 5th Circuit Court deemed “highly unlikely to succeed.” Last June, the Supreme Court issued a landmark decision on prisoners’ rights, ruling in an Ohio case that if general penitentiary conditions are adequate, states can house two inmates in a cell designed for one. Attorneys for Texas prison inmates argued the Ohio case did not apply because different conditions were present. Texas Department of Corrections spots Hartley said Powell’s decision supported! ruling in the Ohio ease. “The department is pleased with (Tuesk sion by Justice Powell,” he said. “WeH decision certainly supports the earlier decs court in the Chapman vs. Rhodes caseandi tive of the state order issued by the U.S it Court of Appeals. ” Lawyers for the Texas prisoners argiis prison conditions in Texas are far worse § approved by the justices in Ohio’s Lucayi At Lucasville, there was only double# the cells provided approximately 63 sp living space — about one-third more fc In addition, the high court found Luwa superior recreational and educational be The inmates’ lawyers charged, Ten!a rife with constitutional problems reWB| crowding ... (they) house over 200 peraft original design capacity and are gnu 5 crowded, not simply double-celled.” They also said state corrections ofc effort to reduce triple-celling — puttinji mates in one cell — have converted!®’ ; “precious few indoor recreational areas':' * units. “The requirement that Texas gradual#* its practice of confining more than one pa" mostly 45 square foot cells is only onejl comprehensive district court order,’by prisoners had told Powell. “Yet it (the order) is of paramount imy one contends that prisoners have a* right to a private room,” they added. *! 1 in Texas is much more fundamental: # enough space per prisoner.” AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 3400 S. College 823-8051 ALLEN Oldsmobile Cadillac Honda SALES - SERVICE “Where satisfaction is standard equipment” 2401 Texas Ave. 779-3516 SPECIAL NOTICE HORSE STALLS FOR RENT (20x60) large riding and roping arena and round pen. We feed mornings. Call Mike 696-1450 or Joan 693-4847. Coggins Test re quired $30 and $40. 179119 ■pm - \ TWIN ♦ CITY I GOLF t DRIVING » RANGE I ■ V Bartender needed no experience necessary begin immediately. Call 846-2096 after 4. 184t5 Professional dog training obedience and boarding K-9 Country Kennels and Cattery 846-9412 after 6 p.m., 696-2745. 173tl6 FOR SALE ’74 Cutlass Supreme, fully loaded, $1650, 693-7310. 18512 FOUND FOUND: Laundry basket bag and contents to identify, call 693-6415. I84t2 Hrs: Mon-Sat 12-9 p.m. Sunday 1 p.m.-8 p.m. ^96-1220 East Bypass and Hwy. 30. ’71 Duster, good body condition, needs engine work. $300 or best offer, call 693- 7310. 185t2 For sale 1974 Mustang II. Good condition. $1600. Call Mary 693-9707 or Tony 846- 3888. I84t5 1981 Honda XL185S, 6 weeks old! Save $350.00! 693-5058. i84t5 • Service Road Going South - V* k miles. ~ * ^ - ~ ' - 180t ? | Life-saving would like to be figure for today s yout United Press International HOUSTON — A 25-year-old salesman, dubbed Super# the woman he rescued from a knife-wielding abductor, ^ mind being a hero figure for today’s kids. In fact, Jim Dickson said he would like to get into acting** his trip to Hollywood next week for an appearance on theC! program “Hour Magazine” will open some doors for him “Good Morning, America,” the ABC program, alsohastf him about an interview about his heroic rescue. He already featured in the local news media and national publications Dickson was credited in July with saving Kim Carnes, HT attack by a man who abducted her at knifepoint from ashoppW parking lot. At the urging of fiancee Kim Bums, 18, Dickson hopW motorcycle, chased the man and his terrified victim, andjui# his moving cycle onto the roof of the fleeing car. He reached through an open sunroof and grabbed them® the neck, forcing his surrender. Police arrived moments i* arrested the man. Carnes told reporters Dickson’s actions earned him thetillt man HI.” A bit self-conscious, the clean-cut blond admitted he # mind filling today’s gap for the American hero. “I think American kids need a hero figure. I wouldn’t minJ', because I would set a good example for them,” said the 6-fool; 200-pound Dickson. “I don’t drink or smoke and I exerciseafci manners and go to church.” Dickson said if he had to risk his life again for a stranger,! 1 “do it in a second.” “I don’t like risking my life, but if someone needed help aoJ do it, I wouldn’t be able to sleep at night,” he said. Last month’s episode was Dickson’s second major act ofb' the age of 10, he rescued his mother from their blazing apart pulling the unconscious woman from her burning bed. Ski* smoking in bed, Dickson said. Dickson said his parents were proud of last month’s rescs; father had a T-shirt made with the Superman emblem andth numeral III underneath. “I’m proud of what I’ve done. I hope it sets an example! people,” he said. Dickson, a salesman for the fund-raising organization CF1 prises, said he has received letters of commendation from*! 5 country. Focus, The Battalion Thursday, August 6, 1981