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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 2, 1981)
ge 8 THE BATTALION MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1981 Battalion Classifieds State / National HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED FOR SALE FOR RENT Games Galore ;ds honest, dependable, part-time help, erview Thursday, November 5 2-4, Cul- >per Plaza. 44t3 Full-time delivery help wanted for flower shop. Apply in person 1105 Texas Ave., Bryan. 44t5 Wanted part-time student help. Monday- Friday, 8:30 to 1:30. Apply 3700 South College, Tasco Tire. 42tfn Needed RN’S, LVN’S, Housekeepers, live in company for private duty. Call 775- 8184. 4ltl0 »**• Is now hiring COOKS, DISHWASHERS, PREP and BUSBOYS, WAIT PERSONS, BARTENDER. Day shift only. Apply in person before 10 a.m. or between 2-4 p.m. 404 E. University Dr. 32tfn REPAIR TECHNICIAN needed, background in electrician and stringed instruments preferrable, equip ment provided, salary negotiable, full or part-time, come by & talk to Craig, LANGE MUSIC COMPANY, 1410 Texas ! Ave., Bryan. 43t6 Part-time position available at Farmer’s Market Bakery & Deli. Restaurant experi ence desired. Hours 5p.m.-10p.m. 3 days a week no Sundays. Start $3.65/hour, 2700 Texas Avenue, Bryan, 779-6428. 41tfn OVERSEAS JOB. Summer/year round. Europe South America, Australia, Asia. All fields. $500-$ 1200 monthly. Sightseeing. Free information. Write IJC Box 52-TX-4 Corona Del Mar, CA 92625. 26tl9 THE GREENERY is hiring trainees for their landscape maintenance teams. Full or part time. (Full morning or afternoon availability required.) STARTING AT $4.00 PER HOUR. Apply at 4304 Texas Ave. (Next to Luby's Cafeteria.) 9tfn Wanted babysitter for 16 month girl, after noons. Must have own car. 775-3531 after 5 p. m. 40t5 Professor needs COED to help in after noons with school age children activities and prepare evening meal. 3-4 afternoons a week. $4.95/hour 845-1418. 40t5 Part-time employee in doctor’s office, Monday-Thursday, 3-8 p.m. Typing re quired. Will train, excellent pay. Apply at 1775 Briarcrest at E. 29th St. 42tfh ZHtC zyttc ZMhC otic 3«IC aoc 3C BARBECUE #3 CULPEPPER PLAZA Day care center needs morn ing help, 7:30-12, Monday - Friday. 779-8900, $3.35/hour. GUY AND GIRLS team clean homes & offices. Days, nights & weekends. Flexible part or full-time hours, weekly pay above minimum, paid travel and paid vacation. Must have car & phone, 846-1905. 22tfn CENARE, An Italian Restaurant, positions available for BARTENDERS, COOKS, WAIT PERSONS, HOSTESSES, CASHIERS & DISHWASHERS. Call 696- 7311 or come by 404 University Dr. 39tl5 PARKWAY APARTMENTS 1,2, & 3 bedrooms, 2 swim ming pools, shuttle bus, laun dry facilities, security guard. 1600 Southwest Parkway, 693-6540. Stones wow fans despite storm SERVICES We need people with energy and personality. Cooks, Dishwashers, Serving Line Workers Full or Part Time DEPENDABLE MEN, WOMEN OR COUPLES for present and future Houston post routes. Early morning hours. Papers rolled by machine. $200-$750/month. f : 846-2911 696-8032 SWENSENTS Interviewing now for WAITPERSONS, FOUN- TAINERS, CASHIERS. COOKS, DISH WASHERS, AND ICE CREAM MAKER. Pick up an application at Culpepper Plaza College Station 34tfn r TYPING. 1AII kinds. Let us type your propos als, dissertations, reports, essays on our WORD PROCESSOR. Fast service. Reasonable rates. Business Communication Services .4013 Texas Ave. S. 846-5794 issttnt L Apply between 10-11 and 2-4 NOW HIRING DELIVERY PEOPLE NEEDED FLEXIBLE HOURS plus 6% commission plus tips. Apply between 3:30 and 7 M-F at 319 Patricia 846-7785 SCRAPPLE Local Jazz band has im mediate opening for BASS GUITARIST. Must read or have good knowledge of Jazz. Steady work. Call Chris at 693-3617. DALLAS Hiring WAITRESSES. 693-2818 experience pre ferred but not necessary. 42tfn ^Service For AJI Chrvster Coro Cj ars (ieF^orp ^Dodge Fast, Accurate typing. Call 693-7515. 44tl0 TOLL 6R _ PART TIME "Day fc>nift •Night shift (til 10pm.) •Weekends •Flexible hours to fit your schedule •Rapid advancement •Cashier experience helpful Starting Salary $3.65/hour Apply in person only. 9:30-11:30am.' (if possible) WHATABURGER v Bryan College Station 1101 Texas 105 Dominik Electric Cowboy Now hiring WAITRESS AND HOSTESS. Full and part-time. Apply in person. ettn: TYPING. FAST, ACCURATE. 90«/page. 24 hour return on less than 30 pages. 845- 7351 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Alyson. 44(10 Call Cathy for all your typing or word processing needs. 696-9550. 131tfn WORD PROCESSING dissertations, pro posals, papers, resumes, etc. Fast, accu rate, reasonable. 846-6200. 30t2O United Press International DALLAS — The Rolling Stones ignored drenching rains and per formed to a sellout crowd in the Cotton Bowl Saturday in the last outdoor stop of their 42-city U.S. tour. The front three — singer Mick Jagger and guitarists Keith Richards and Ron Wood — wowed roadies and promoters alike by stepping out from under overhanging tarps to play to the crowd of 80,000, most of whom stayed for the whole show. “We were just blown away by how professional they were,” said one member of the Stones entour age. “A lot of bands left the stage. But they were real troupers, and they got soaked.” This was no ordinary rainstorm, either, but an honest-to-goodness Texas gullywasher that deluged north Texas, sending hundreds from their homes, washing build ings clean away, and doing dam age totaling well into six figures. Security was tight, with the T- shirted crew hired by promoters beefing up a Dallas police contin gent of 100 officers, including sev eral who volunteered to work the concert offduty. “It wasn’t just the music or any thing,” police Sgt. John Corum said before the show. “It’s just that Unlike the Stones’ Houstoa concert last Wednesday — ii which a fan was fatally stabbed- the Dallas appearence was uninar' red by violence, with police re porting fewer than a dozen arrests for routine rowdiness. And spokesmen for the bajii said they were impressed that the crowd stuck it out. The biggest problem was (lie “There were things goingonon stage — people were trimmingit for weather, putting burlap on tke wires, spreading sawdust," sue tour publicist Paul Wasserma “Some people were nervous that someone would get electrocuted It was a strange concert.” And there were a lot of wires.,! spokesman for Showco, the Id general contractor for the concert said the Stones’ 100,GOO-watt sound system was the biggest they’d ever handled, and that in cludes The Who, Led Zepplin, Jackson Brown and Paul McCartney. PART-TIME HELP WANTED. Grapevine personality. 696- 3411. E.O.E. 183tfn Typing!!' Reports, dissertations, etc. ON' THE DOUBLE. 331 University. 846- 3755. VTOtfn this is an event. It beats run-of- the-mill stuff.” Wasserman said the Dallas stop Saturday and Sunday would he the last outdoor performances o( the tour, and the Sunday conceit would go on come hell or hip water. “The weather report doeset look too promising,” he said.“Be: if it rains, the show goes on.” Typing experienced-fast, accurate, all fonch 822-0544. •_ niiuuymous, 779-2736. 4At71 Columbia readie PERSONALS Typing on word processing equipmentT Ex? perienced. We understand form and style. Automated Clerical Services, 693-1070. 10t35 Typing 15 years experience 775-7017.26tl9 for second flight K.L.S. V.V. L.E.B. Happy 21st. Luv Ya D.D. 44tl Typing. Wake up service, 823-7723. 6tfh YOUNG ENGINEERS DO YOU WANT TO BE INVOLVED IN ALL PHASES OF POWER PLANT DESIGN? ELECTRICALS MECHANICALS TIPPETT & GEE, INC. CONSULTING ENGINEERS FOR THE POWER INDUSTRY INTERVIEWING MAY/SUMMER GRADUATES WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, PLACEMENT OFFICE Design Engineers for power plants throughout the United States and Alaska, including the nearby Gibbons Creek Plant. Our offices are located in the West Texas city of Abilene Formed in 1954 67% Average annual growth rate for the past 4 years. GROW IN A PROFESSIONAL ATMOSPHERE TIPPETT & GEE, INC. 502 N. WILLIS STREET ABILENE, TEXAS 79603 915-673-8291 EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER NEED! 4 non-student tickets to Arkansas or Texas game. 20 yard line or better. Call 693-6382 ask for Cliff. 4213 RADIO SHACK has immediate openings for full or part- time salesperson. Career opportunities available. Apply at 1125 Villa Maria, Bryan or Culpepper Plaza, C.S. E.O.E. 21»fn FOR SALE ART SALVADOR DALI “Chevalier Sur- realiste’’ Lithographs signed and num bered. Excellent investment price. Call Hall 696-3499 after six. 44t5 LOST 1979 Kawasaki 400/LTD, black and gold showroom condition. Low miles $1200, 696-1260 evenings, 696-9673 days. 44t5 REWARD. White spayed female samoyed w/out collar. Lost near Jewel T. Very special to me. 845- 4951 or 846-2064. 4413 Equalizer- 5 brand audio control- 520B. Brand new! $100.00, 846-2720. 4412 Vivitar lens, 75-205mm/f 3.8, close focus, case, filters. Excellent condition. Pentax mount. $200.00, 846-2720. 44t2 Reward for return of tan and white collie, female lost on College Main, October 26th. If you have seen her or know of her where abouts, please call 846-3972. 42t5 1979 Yamaha 750 special $2100, 845- 5369. 42t5 LOST: Ladies tweed jacket between 1:00 & 2:00 p.m. October 26th, 3rd floor Zachry lounge. If found, please call 693-0891. 42t5 Senior boots, Holick’s 10V4C, U. S. Cavalry spurs, covers, hooks, 822-0719, eve nings. 39t20 WANTED 1968 Buick Wildcat, mechanically sound; maroon, white, $825, 260-5876. 4315 Guitar for sale! Gibson J-40 acoustial. Ex cellent condition, $600. Call 846-1363 after 5p.m. 4U5 2-Horse Felps trailer, excellent condition, good price. Call John 775-0587. 42t4 ’78 Suzuki GS1000F, header, oil, cooler, excellent condition. 696-1279 or 696- 1259. ’ 40t5 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 M Bryan 846-4708 i«n SPECIAL NOTICE Osborne 1 computer with auxiliary monitor. Call 845-4895. 37t8 Pot plants 500, $1.00 up large $12.50, 589- 2781. 42t5 Puch moped, excellent condition, two hel mets; 40 channel CB with antenna. 693- 9531 after 5 p.m. 42t5 EXTRATERRESTRAIL SALE! of Packrat behavioral can be yours! Furniture, Antique, Primitives, Collectibles, Fine Junque & GLORIOUS TERIVIA. Fri.-Sat.-Mon. 9-5, 608 South Bryan at West 32nd Street in Bryan. ! 4312 DIRECTORY REFUND POLICY Directory Fees are refundable in foil during the semester in which payment is made. [Thereafter no refunds will be made on cancel led orders. Directories must be picked up dur ing the academic year in which they are pub lished... ' , 30446 United Press International CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Countdown for the historic second launching of the space shuttle Col umbia began Saturday with space officials reporting no problems, and the only uncertainty being the weather. At midnight the clock began for 73 hours of preflight preparations leading to a 6:30 a.m. Wednesday launch of the Columbia— the first time a spaceship has returned to space. “Right now we have zero prob lems,” test conductor Norman Carlson said eight hours into the countdown. Astronauts Joe H. Engle and Richard H. Truly were at their homes in Houston preparing for their first flight into space. They were reviewing a detailed flight plan for the 83-orbit flight before heading to the Cape Monday to practice emergency landings. Success of the five-day journey designed to expand and test more of the rocket’s capabilities would show the shuttle can be reused over and over. The first Columbia flight, April 12 through 14, proved the United States could launch a winged spacecraft and return it an airport landing. Loaded aboard the Columbia is the space freighter’s first working cargo — 4,725 pounds of Earth observation instru ments — and a new 50-foot bionic arm developed by Canada for 51(10 million and donated to the United States. The arm serves as crane that will unload satellites o» later missions. With everything working smoothly, the main concerns over the weather Wednesday morning. The shuttle will not be launched Wednesday if tbe weather is bad at Cape Canaveral The weather forecast fbi Wednesday at Kennedy Spaa Center was good, Carlson said, with winds expected up to 17 miles an hour, temperatures ab out 68 degrees and a chance of isolated rain. The forecast at the shuttle land ing site, Edwards Air Force in California, also was good. The weather Saturday did not keep the Air Force from launching a Titan 3C rocket from a pad al four miles away from where Columbia stood. The rocket, the largest in the military inventory took off at 4:22 a.m. carryings secret unmanned military lite. resources The most critical part of the countdown begins at 1:10 Wednesday when a half million gallons of frigid liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen start flowing into the Columbia’s external liiel tank. ACC IE LAND REFUND POLICY "Yearbook fees are refundable in foil during the semester In which payment is made. Thereafter no refunds will be made on cancel fed orders. Yearbooks must be picked up dur ing the academic year in which they are pub lished. “Students who will not be on campus when the yearbooks are published, usually in Sep tember, must pay a mailing and handling fee. Yearbooks will not be held, nor will they bt mailed without tbe necessary fees having been paid.“ Health care cosh increase sharply ROOMMATE WANTED 'v'JiV v ■ .*:'•/ • ‘ Breaking into a new career can be difficult, especially if you’re just completing college. If you’re an Electrical, Industrial, or Me chanical Engineering senior, and are look ing to break away from the conventional career path, enter the door marked “Security Systems and Services Industry”. There is a world of opportunity open to you. We should know. We’re Network Security Corporation, a leader in the field. Study person to share furnished one bed room, close to TAMU, your share $80.00/month. Call evenings 846-2527.4315 Female needed immediately to share 2 bdr. 2 bath. Cripple Creek apartment. Call Barbara 693-4085. 41t5 FOUND Found diamond ring, call and identify, 696- 3591. 43*4 Twin City Golf i Ri Driving Range Sunday 1-8 Monday thru Saturday 12-9 696-1220 East Bypass & Hwy. 30 Service Rd. going South Vi mile. 1W?1 Based in Dallas, Texas, we’re a growing, national firm involved in security systems for both residential and commercial cus tomers. We can offer you the opportunity to develop your talents in an area that’s growing with the demand for sophisticated protection solutions. mM At Network Security, “Breaking and Enter ing” is not a federal offense, but rather an invitation to advance your career. Please write: A.^5?ljD©&®®co;L'a Director of Personnel Network Security Corporation 16901 Dallas North Parkway Suite 255 Dallas, Texas 75248 > GREENLEAF HOSPITAL I I Invites interested Registered nurses to dinner and open house Thursday, November 12 at 6:30 PM in the cafeteria. Staff will describe current programs and facil ities. A question and answer period will follow. Come and learn about the mental health facility in your area. RSVP by Monday, noon, November 9. Call 822-7326 between 8 AM and NOON and ask for Donna Cole. I United Press International WASHINGTON — Nearly $1 of every $10 spent by Americans in 1980 went for health care, gov ernment figures show, as medical costs took their biggest jump in 15 years. The Health Care Financing Administration said Friday health care costs accounted for 9.4 per cent of the gross national product, up from 8.9 percent the year be fore. America’s total 1980 medical bill was $247 billion, an increase of 15.2 percent over 1979 and the biggest rise in 15 years, the financ ing administration said. In 1979, health care costs rose 13.4 per cent. Other recently published fi gures show this year s health care bill will not be any less painful. Social Security Administration trustees, blaming inflation, re cently predicted hospital costs will rise 15.5 percent this year, up from their earlier estimate of 13.3 percent. Their predictions are used in estimating Medicare’s budget. Health costs grew far faster I FOR RENT I New fourplexes 2 bedroom bath, extra nice w/d included, lease negotiable 846- 1757, 846-5225, evenings, 696-2265. 38415 than the rest of the economy; tlif gross national product increased only 8.8 percent last year. About two-thirds of the 19® increase was blamed on inflation the rest on population growth anc on greater use of medical services such as more visits to doctors anc 2.8 percent more surgery. Costs went up across the board. Americans last year spent about $99.6 billion on hospitals, $466 billion on doctors, $20.7 billion on nursing homes, and about $79bil lion on other services such as de ntists, and drugs and medical sup plies. The nation's health care bill amounted to an expenditure of $1,067 per American, with feder al, state and local governments spending $450 — or 42 percent^ of the total. In all, two-thirds was paid by the government or insur ance, the figures show. The figures on Medicare and Medicaid could spell trouble for the administration, which is look ing at the two federally funded health programs as one area to make more budget cuts. The new statistics, published in the fall issue of the journal Health Care Financing Review, sho» Medicare and Medicaid programs cost $61 billion last year, a 214 percent increase. The biggest far tor to blame was higher hospital bills. L I Nice 2 bedroom, life bath, 2 story apartment for lease. $400. Walking distance to cam pus, 696-6114 after 5p.m. 41t5 Sublease large efficiency $250.00 + elec tricity until January 1st. 693-9452. 3648 N FA A& OB AG TE CA F0 LV CA A& RI< DE AL 1 1 TA1 ME c 0C e si S£ l WAS cents t now, d years -a For the Pos for mos cost of cents a: 13 cent rates ■ change Pos Bolger class le for abo D b U: AMA nun wh strangle conyent stalked Sunday The was foi Saturda ing mas ing the causes, orderec vestigat Lat< dis^ove munity moned a n auto in