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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 16, 1981)
I ! 1,1 i ige 8 THE BATTALION MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1981 Battalion Classifieds HELP WANTED HELP WANTED imen who look good in swimsuits ■ded for local advertising promotion. To I/hour. Part-time 21-/692-1440. 52tlO EXTRA XMAS money direct sales com pany natural products really work for prob lem skin and acne call for interview 696- 3307 50t7 Electric Cowboy Now hiring WAITRESS AND HOSTESS. =uil and part-time. Apply in jerson. cations (or newspaper route carriers. We have one immediate opening and will also have several open ings (or the spring semester. Routes take zVzto 3 hours per day, with salary from 400 to 800 per month. Ail routes receive a gas allowance also we need soficlters for the spring semester. If Interested please call Julian McMurrey 693-2323. SOtfn ENGINEERING INDUSTRIAL DISTRIBUTION CAMPBELL INDUSTRIAL SALES, INC., a Machine Tool Distributor, is interviewing Tuesday, November 24, for a PRODUCT SPECIALIST. This is a two-to-four year program, including (1) CNC Lathes and mills, (2) fabrication equipment, (3) tooling, and (4) train ing/service, leading to permanent assignment as (A) Product Sales Manager, or (B) Territory Salesman. Outstanding earn ing opportunity. Our Company Profile is in the Placement Office. 33112 Earn $290 a month just by working two nights (5 pm-2 am) a week, (more hours available) at Der Wien- erschnitzel. Apply in Person 501 S. Texas Ave. Bryan between 9:30am-11am weekdays. NOW HIRING DELIVERY PEOPLE NEEDED FLEXIBLE HOURS $3.75/hr. plus 6% commission plus tips. Apply between 3:30 and 7 M-F at 319 Patricia 846-7785 THE COWBOY is now accepting applications for waitresses & hostesses. Apply in person after 4:30 p.m. only: THE COWBOY 2820 Pinfeather Rd. POLICE OFFICER The CITY OF BRYAN is accepting applica tions for career Police Officers. Entrance examination scheduled: MONDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1981 9:00 a.m. (written) 2:00 p.m. (physical agility) Applications accepted until: Thursday, December 17, 1981 Salary: $1301 at appointment with in crease to $1366 after six months. 15 days vacation, 15 days sick leave, 7 holidays ex cellent paid health and life in surance program and par- ticiapting retirement plan. Send inquiries to: City of Bryan Director of Personnel & Civil Service P. O. Box 1000 Bryan, Texas 77801 AA-EE0 - M/F h HELP WANTED m Male dancers needed for inter view, call 693-2818 or 696-0004. 46 tin DEPENDABLE MEN, WOMEN OR COUPLES for present and future Houston post routes. Early morning hours. Papers rolled by machine. $200-$750/month. 846-2911 696-8032 24tfn SCHLOTZSKY’S Now excepting applications for Part-time weekend and evening shift. Apply in per son only. 100 South Texas Ave. 52tfn PIZZA EXPRESS Now Hiring COUNTER & PHONE PER SONNEL. Flexible hours: $3.50/hour. Apply 319 Patricia Monday-Friday 4pm-7pm. Full or PART TIME 'Day Snift *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-T1:30am. (if possible) WHATABURGER Bryan College Station 1101 Texas 105 Dominik .190tlCL 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. 32tin PART TIME HELP WANTED Cooks and counter help. Daytime and nighttime. Call between 2-5 or 7-9 We will work around your schedule. Applications taken now. 693-1669 Clara Gilbert, Manager HIRING WAITRESSES. 693-2818 experience preferred but not necessary. 42(fn PART-TIME HELP WANTED. Grapevine personality. 696- 3411. E.O.E. 183tfn Wanted part-time announcer and news re porter for Radio Station must have experi ence in Journalism 779-1587 for more infor mation. 51t5 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. 22tf n Landscape Company needs full-time & part-time workers $4.00/hour. Call 846- 0808 between 9:00 & 5:00 for informa tion. 51t5 HELP WANTED 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 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. 42tfn Weekend help wanted. Apply at Piper’s Gulf Service, Texas A&M University. 45tl0 FOR SALE Wanted part-time student help. Monday- Friday, 8:30 to 1:30. Apply 3700 South College, Tasco Tire. 42tfn Black Lab cross puppies 5 weeks $10. Call Terry 845-7816, 775-4607. 5115 8 X 35 Vagabond travel trailer 3 miles from campus, tied down and skirted for more information 779-2729. 53t6 Buick LeSaber 1971 in good condition, air condition, radio, $995 or best offer, Ph. 693-0730, Ph. 775-7477. 53t2 Senior boots, Holick’s lOViC, U.S. Cavalry spurs, covers, hooks, 822-0719, eve nings. 39120 Vega 1976 excellent engine condition, 5 speed, A/C, 8-track, $1100. Call Jack 260- 0337. 54t5 American Coin Collection, $200.00; Model Railroad Paraphernalia $125.00; S-string Banjo $145.00 845-5815 ext. 40; Eric. 5411 Yamaha 400 RS 1978 10,000 miles-good shape, must sell because of trid. Call or come by after 6 p.m. 200 Ave. A Apt. #8G (Married students Apt.) phone 846-7162. Price $900.00 52t5 FOR SALE: Bang and Olufsen 1900 receiv er, EPI lOOw speakers, Pioneer PL-A450 turntable call 693-2646 after 6. 51t5 Honda ’74 250 Elsinare good condition, 775-3018. 51(5 Suzuki GS-750, 1979 under 2000 miles in mint condition, best offer, call Dave 5 p.m.-9 p.m., 696-6474 after 9 p.m. 693- 8276 5015 FOR RENT New fourplexes 2 bedroom 144 bath, extra nice w/d included, lease negotiable 846- 1757, 846-5225, evenings, 696-2265. 38tl5 Sublease one bedroom apt. furnished, all bills paid. $300 for spring. 54t5 Fully furnished custom built house. 3 bed room, 2 bath, sunken living room, fire place, close to A&M 693-2898. 53t5 1 bedroom apartment in Bryan, $150.00, 779-3550, 693-2853. ' 53110 U-LOCK-IT Highway 6 South 10x10 & 10x20, 693-2334. PARKWAY APARTMENTS 1, 2, & 3 bedrooms, 2 swim ming pools, shuttle bus, laun dry facilities, security guard. 1600 Southwest Parkway, 693-6540. WANTED 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 ittn Tickets/Ticket books needed for T.U. game, call Dana 779-6497. 53t2 OFFICIAL NOTICE ATTENTION SOCIOLOGY AND PSYCHOLOGY MAJORS: Three CO-OP positions as an As sistant Probation Officer are avail able for this spring. These are lo cal half-time positions. Act now by calling Jamie Freeman or Henry Pope at 845-7814 or come by Room 420 Harrington Tower. 54ts 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 SERVICES Overeaters Anonymous, 779-2736. 4At73 Typing!! Reports, dissertations, etc. ON THE DOUBLE. 331 University. 846- 3755. 178tfii 1 Call Cathy or Betsy for all your typing or word processing needs. 696-9550. 131tfh Fast, Accurate typing. Call 693-7515. 44tl0 _.Service,For AJI Chrvsler Corp Cars KeTlmM Dodge TYPING. ’All kinds. Let us type your propos-i als, dissertations, reports, essays on our WORD PROCESSOR. Fast service. Reasonable rates, -j Business Communication Services 4013 Texas Ave. S. 846-5794 isstfnt Typing experienced-fest, accurate, all kinds 822-0544. 155tfn Typing on word processing equipment^ Ex^ perienced. We understand form and style. Automated Clerical Services, 693-1070. 10t35 Professional tying, call 693-4084. 52tU TYPING. FAST. ACCURATE. 900/page. 24 hour return on less than 30 pages. 845- 7351 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Alyson. 44tl0 Gay/Lesbian Hotline 846-8022. Typing. Wake up service, 823-7723. 6tfn Round up Sounds Great Music quality sound D.V. & system 4/hour $125, 260- 7405. 54t5 WORD PROCESSING—Dissertations, papers, reports, resumes, etc. Fast, Accu rate, reasonable. 846-6200. 54(21 LOST Hand-made gold necklace with pearls lost Thursday morning between A&A and MSC. Reward. Call 846-5985. 5414 SPECIAL NOTICE u AGGIE LAND REFUND POLICY “Yearbook fees are refundable in fell during the semester In which payment is made Thereafter no refunds will be made on cancel led 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 the necessary fees having been paid." 30146 DIRECTORY REFUND POLICY Directory Fees are refendable in fell 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. .. 30146 ■' 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 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1981 at 7:00 p.m. BIOLOGY Department Curricula... Room 113 BSBE CHEMISTRY Department Curricula Room 231 CHEM MATH Department Curricula Room 101 Milner PHYSICS Department Curricula... Room 118 HELD 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 *‘0”. For information and guidelines on the nature of the examination, check with the departmental secretary. 51(5 National Artificial hearts PERSONALS HELP WANTED 3C BARBECUE #3 CULPEPPER PLAZA Full-time COOKS on DAY SHIFT, experienced preferred but not re quired. Other positions are availa ble. Apply between 10-11 and 2-4. Need 4 non-student tickets A&M-Texas game will pay good, call Gabriel 696- 9356. 5413 HAPPY 19th SUSAN EPPES! From the Hun Clan. 54t1 may sustain lives in future surgery a United Press International PHILADELPHIA — A Temple University Hospital surgeon hopes to obtain government approval to implant artificial hearts into living patients. Dr. Jacob Kolff, chief of cardio- thoracic surgery at Temple Uni versity Hospital, has implanted artificial hearts in brain-dead pa tients and maintained their body. Kolff said he is close to receiv ing permission from Temple s Re search Review Committee to use the device on living patients. Once university permission is re ceived, Kolff must get approval from the Food and Drug Adminis tration. “I think we’re nearly through with our own investigative review hoard,” said Kolff. “After that, it’s a matter of getting the papers and submitting them to the FDA.” Kolff said he and a Temple sur gical team want to implant as many as six more artificial hearts in neurologically-dead people “before we consider ourselves ready” to work with living pa tients. He said he was unsure how long it would take to obtain the go-ahead from the FDA. However, the doctor added, it would still “be a couple of decades down the road” before surgeons reach the point where they can implant artificial hearts in people to extend their lives for any appre ciable amount of time. The experi ments he is seeking on living peo ple would only be to obtain more test information. During a five-hour operation Nov. 7 Kolff and his teamt- planted an artificial heart a pneumatically driven pump called the Jarvik 7, in the body of a 28- year-old man who had been de clared legally dead. The pump maintained car diovascular circulation and the functions of the kidneys and liver for 10 hours before fluid in the lungs forced the team to end the experiment, Kolff said. 0 C tamu trip 1 liber. It was the second time that the heart had been successfully im planted by Kolff. On May 3, a Jar vik pump was implanted for the first time ever in a human. A woman declared neurological!) dead was kept on the device for two hours. Kolff said in the second case the patient was taken out of the operating room to the hospital’s intensive care unit. “We have to take small steps and just try to extend the experi ment further and further until we’re completely satisfied we can have patients leave the intensive care area or even leave the hospit al,” he said. Kolff is the only surgeon to have implanted the Jarvik heart into brain-dead humans and main tained body functions. Dr. De nton Cooley of the Texas Heart Institute has implanted other arti ficial devices into living humans who were awaiting heart trans plants, hut the patients died after transplant surgery. Balloon revives WWII memories United Press International BLY, Ore. — The successful flight of the first manned balloon to cross the Pacific Ocean recalled grim memories for the postmaster of the tiny southeast Oregon town of Bly. Late in World War II, an un manned Japanese balloon bomb landed and exploded at a Sunday school picnic near Bly, killing five children and a pregnant woman. They were the only known World War II casualties from enemy ac tion on the U.S. mainland. Vernetia Hadley recalled memories of the balloon bomb af ter hearing about this week’s man ned balloon flight. Hadley has been postmaster in Bly for 23 years. The pastor of the Christian Mis sionary Alliance took a group of children on a picnic. “It was just a terrible thing,” she said. “Our pastor from the church, Archie Mitchell, had taken a bunch of kids out there on a picnic. We were just lucky be cause we didn’t take our two chil dren to the picnic because the weather was bad.” The pastor’s wife, Elsye Mitch ell, was one of those killed when the bomb exploded. The bomb was one of many the Japanese sent over in desperation moves toward the end of the war. The Japanese Imperial Army sent thousands of unmanned bomb-carrying balloons across Pacific late in the war. Most harmlessly into the ocean, but a few made it to land, including the one which killed the five children and Mrs. Mitchell. The five children killed were Jay Bifford, 13; Edward Engen, 13; Sherman Shoemaker, 11; and Joan Patzke, 13; and her brother, Dick, 14. In May of this year, a group of Japanese scientists had planned— although it didn’t work out —- to send a balloon crew carrying flow ers across the Pacific in memory o the six killed in World War II Hidenasa Kimura, who headed the Japanese group of scientists, said, “We plan to carry flowers for children killed by the bomb- carrying balloons during the war. He said, “Unlike other balloon projects, our experiment is for peaceful and scientific use of high- altitude balloons in the future. Kimura said in May he was aware of plans for this week s bal loon flight by Japanese business man Rocky Aoka and his American associates. _ , “The biggest difference is that Aoki’s is for adventurism while ours is to promote peace and lor scientific experiment, he said. ing a Towe BETA/ der 1 ancei with I'NIVE at 81 CLASS throe LIBER Meel LIBER ses n infer 3:30 TAMP AGGIE from BETW hot'! COLEI 5101 DEPA1 DOW 5p.i ATH ;.:)() Mar' BETW p.m 853: cm a to- ! ait AMEf L0 a. in AMEI Gl? disc 203 Ml LI >05 nwi be, MSC feu Bill ();3l TAM Kh SADI spi lYTE mg ENG Git PRE- A6 Malpractice suit appeal is upheld United Press International SAN FRANCISCO — The Cali fornia state Court of Appeals up held a $2 million fraud and mal practice award to a woman who lost both breasts and parts of her shoulders and thighs after breast enlargement injections. Friday the court said the ruling against Dr. Frank L. Gaunt of San Jose, Calif, was justified and reasonable as punishment for the injuries to Mary L. Nelson in 1968. The court opinion said Gaunt injected silicone into Mrs. Nelson on May 28, 1968, the same day she came to his office to inquire about the procedure. Gaunt told her the injections had “absolutely no side effects,” the court said. Five months later Mrs. Nelson noticed several lumps in her left breast. By 1971 doctors decided her health was endangered by the silicone, which had spread to thighs and shoulders and w the surrounding tissue. > The court rejected Gaunt argument that Mrs. ^ eSO it lawyer prejudiced the case by c ing him a “monster” and a V animal” and referred to him “Dr. Malpractice” in his closi & statement at the trial. , The plaintiffs attorneys Gaunt knew the silicone pr dure could only be performe licensed doctors since the WJ tions were experimental ana had been arrested three r before on misdemeanor chaI ®, t performing the injections wi a license. , The court upheld the ver of negligence, malpractice i tentional infliction of eI ? 0 r y s stress because, as a resu arrest, Gaunt must have the procedure was unlawiu • 7:8 Cr ML fte cn new hi time. Jam petwil Becaus i in Elv place farm s r We’re tooting our own horn • • Battalion Classifieds Call 845-2611 L