The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 16, 1982, Image 8

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    Battalion Classifieds
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
CENARE ITALIAN RESTAURANT now
hiring WAIT PERSONS, HOSTESSES &
CASHIERS. Apply between 2-S p.m. 404
University East. tXitfn
CHARLES Needs full-time help-
references and experience preferred-career
opportunity. Please call for appointment
with Charli 696-9626. 93tfn
Part-time carpenter helpers needed. Flex
ible hours. Pay accordings to ability. Call
Dan after 6:00, 846-4459. 96t4
Dental Assistant: No experience necessary,
846-9148. 9417
SCHLOTZSKY’S
Now accepting applications
for Full time positions. Ap
ply in person only. 100
South Texas Ave.
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,
Home Care - 846-7759. 22tfn
Part-time Hostess and Waitress wanted.
Apply in person T.J.’s Restaurant 707
South Texas. 94tfn
JOB INTERVIEWS: For
monthly or flat fee communi
cation specialist will prep you
for each of your interviews.
Call WORDSMITH, 696-8639
after 6:00 p.m.
9315
Part-time and full-time positions available.
Renting & selling America’s finest quality
formal wear. Contact Mr. Sanchez, AL’S
FORMAL WEAR, 1609 Texas Ave., Cul
pepper Plaza, C.S., 693-0947. 97tfn
THE POST OAK MALL
THE SHOE STATION
women’s shoe store is
seeking energetic,
enthusiastic self-starters for
Part-Time Sales positions.
We also need an
Assistant Manager.
Please call 764-0077 for and
interview. Good benefits and
lots of fun! Ask for Manager
Kass Prince. The salary is
based on commission versus
draw. sets
OVERSEAS JOBS
Summer/year round. Europe, S.
Amer., Australia, Asia. All fields.
$500-$1200 monthly. Sightse
eing. Free info. Write IJC Box 52-
TX-4, Corona Del Mar, CA 92625.
89t20
SALES $100-$200 week.
If you have car & can work
20 hours weekly. Training.
Call collect for local inter
view. (713) 367-1833.
FOR RENT
The HOUSTON CHRONICLE is currently taking appli
cations for newspaper route carriers. We have one
immediate opening and will also have several open
ings for the spring semester. Routes take 2V2to 3 hours
per day, with salary from 400 to 800 per month. All
routes receive a gas allowance also we need soliciters
for the spring semester. If interested please call Julian
McMurrey 693-2323.
50tfn
New 4-plex 2 bedroom IV2 bath. Appliances.
Washer & dryer connections. Call Jane at
696-4203. (Joe Courtney, Inc.) 86tfn
Below Market! 3 hr. $335.00. 2 hr. $285.00
779-3550, 696-2038. 91tl0
University Acres Apartments- country liv
ing at reasonable prices. Call Jane at 696-
4203 (Joe Courtney, Inc.). 80tfn
SUMMER JOB
CAMP
COUNSELOR
Working with physically and men
tally handicapped at CAMP
SOROPTIMIST near Dallas. Rep
resentatives on campus February
22nd. Contact Suzanne Schmidt
at Career Planning and Place
ment Center for interview. 845-
5139.* 9714
Male dancers needed for inter
view, call 693-2818 or 696-0004.
46tfn
Close to campus, 2 bedroom V/i bath 4-plex.
All appliances including washer and dryer,
walk-in closets, drapes, large wooden deck,
$425/month, 693-8685. 76tfn
16 Full-Time
22 Part-Time
Delivery Personnel Needed.
Must have own car. Our Driv
ers average over $7.00 per
hour. Apply in person after 4
p.m.
CHANELL0S
PIZZA
301 Patricia
Next to UToteM
Behind Duddley’s Draw
FULL OR
PART TIME
'Day Shift
'Night shift (til 10 p.m.)
'Weekends
'Flexible hours to fit your schedule
'Rapid advancement
'Cashier experience helpful
Starting Salary
$3.R5/hour
Apply in person only.
9:30-11:30 a.m. (if possible)
WHATABURGER
Bryan College Station
1101 Texas 105 Dominik
190tfn
PARKWAY
APARTMENTS
1, 2, & 3 bedrooms, 2 swim
ming pools, shuttle bus, laun
dry facilities, security guard.
1600 Southwest Parkway,
693-6540.
39tfn
FOR SALE
81 Monte Carlo 8700 miles, loaded, $8000.
96t5
Electric Cowboy
Now hiring
WAITRESS AND
HOSTESS.
person.
Pioneer stereo turntable PL-630 and cas
sette tape deck CT-F900. Two ultralinear
4-way demo speakers. All in good condi
tion. Call 696-6369. 96t5
1980 Turbo Formula auto, air, PS/PB,
17,000 miles, 260-5850. 94t5
Like new 1980 Corvette, $15,000 (512) 446-
6259. 89tl0
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
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
FOR THE COLLEGE STATION
MCDONALD’S
Hours I I -2.
STARTING
SALARY
Apply 80! University Drive
Nobody can do it
like McDonald’s can!
McDonald’s
Riekenbacker TR25 40-watt amplifier. Ex
cellent working condition. Call Greg, 693-
8373. 97tl
PIRSONALS
NOW HIRING
1
DELIVERY PEOPLE NEEDED
FLEXIBLE HOURS
$3a75/HrB plus 6% commission plus tips.
Apply between 3:30 and 7 M-F
at 319 Patricia
846-7785
ONE MILLON PEOPLE
send $1 eacf Will send re
sults of thii ad. Buddy
Crognaglius, >03 Dexter,
College Staton, Texas
77840.
94t7
PETS
ROOMMATE WANED
To share 3 bedroom house 2 nv s from
campus, call 779-8883. 9614
national
Battalion/Page I
February 16,1
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
The
Battalion
Number One
in
Aggleland
SERVICES
Professional editing and typing, 696-
8352. 95tl0
For your next party call: Rainbow Sound.
Mobile music system. Rock, C&W & Dis
co. Information 693-5328. 94tl2
J ATTENTION
AGGIES
4 Drwr Chests
44.95
5 Drwr Chests
54.95
Student Desks
79.95
5 PC. Dining Set
79.95
Sola Sleeper
235.00
Sola & Chair Sets
149.95
Rediners
99.95
3 PC. Cofiee/end
Table
69.95
Twin Mat Sets
79.95
Full Mat Sets
89.95
Bed Frames
15.00
TEXAS FURNITURE
k OUTLET
712 Villa Maria 822-5929
95tfn
'79 MGB convertible, blue, 846-5514 after
5 p.m. 97t5
Professional typing. Call 693-4084 9 a.m.-9
p.m. 86t20
Typing!! Reports, dissertations, etc. ON
THE DOUBLE. 331 University. 846-
3755. 178tfn
Typing experienced fast, accurate, all kinds
822-0544.
Call Cathy or Betsy for all your typing or
word processing needs. 696-9550. 131tfn
Typing on word processing equipment. Ex
perienced. We understand form and style.
Automated Clerical Services, 693-1070.
84t40
Lesbian/Gayline 846-8022.
90tl6
Service For All
Chrysler Corp. Cars
Body Work — Painting
I HALSELL MOTOR
COMPANY INC.
| Dodge Sales and Service Since 1922 ■
1411 Texas Ave. 823-8111 UfnJ
TYPING.
'All 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 I65tfn;
Pontiac Firebird Formula 1978, A/C, P/S,
P/B, new paint, tires, mags, carpet, stereo,
Slack/gold, 696-2767, Mark. 97t5
980 Yamaha 50XS motorcycle, excellent
ondition, low mileage call 775-6717 after
5)0 p.m. ask for Bobby. 97t5
Fqder Rhodes Electric piano with built-in
am ( $600, 696-6472. 97t3
73 lodge Dart, good condition, $800, 846-
0516 gstio
VW-labbit 1977 4 dr., automatic; air con
dition.A/FM, 39000 miles, excellent con
dition :845-9730, 696-2519, 846-4877, Kis-
lev. 90tl0
1981 Hqda motorcycle CB-400-T Hawk,
$1500, exellent condition, 696-0359. 93t8
LOST
LOST: 3!/2 month Id female brown labrador
retriever puppy. $100. REWARD. Call
693-2261. 90tll
LOST: 1982 senior ring, Fred Caldwell.
REWARD; 260-7492. 93t5
82 Aggie Senior ring-week of November
30th. Call Steve 260-6688-REWARD.
9615
Engagement ring with gold band. LOST
oossible along aerobics track. REWARD.
Sail Shawn at 779-2355/696-0162 or Aurora
at 260-3369. 96t5
FOR LEASE
One bedroom apt. for sublease-Arbor
Square 693-6172, $305. 94t5
WANTED
1978 Metury Monarch 2 door A/C,
AM/FM steeo, $2300, 260-7492. 93t5
1981 NC-5(.Honda Express $350.00 693-
9851. Ask fo Mike. 93t5
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
GIRLFRIENDiOUGHT! Young bachelor
seeks cute, brigt, humorous girl for com
panion/girlfriend Call Gerry at 846-3829,
8-9 p.m. 94t4
OFFICIAL NOTICE
Great looking pups will m’ce good bird-
dogs. Pointer-Springer cros.sUall 693-1237
after 5 p.m. 96t5
APPLICATION DEADLINE
FOR BASIC GRANTS
RAPIDLY APPROACHING
All undergraduate students are re
minded that March 15, 1982, is
the official deadline published by
the Department of Education as
the last date a Basic Educational
Opportunity Grant application will
be accepted for processing for the
1981-82 academic year. The ap
plication must arrive at the Basic
Grant Office, P.O. Box 92781, Los
Angeles, CA 90009 on or before
March 15, 1982, to be processed
for the 1981 -82 academic year.
9714
Tom Sawyer ventures
into Soviet television
United Press International
MOSCOW — Soviet filmmak
ers have turned the Dnieper
River into the Mississippi for a
TV version of “The Adventures
of Tom Sawyer,” Russian style.
“We relate to Mark Twain
like we do to Tolstoy or to any of
our own classics,” Director Sta
nislav Govorukhin said in an in
terview. “We value every letter.”
The three-hour production
sticks closely to the plot of
Twain’s original, but Gov
orukhin said he would have
needed six hours to Fit it all in.
Still, the end result seems so
familiar that one American
viewer said the Soviets could
have saved themselves some
trouble by buying an American
Film and dubbing in a Russian
sound track.
The Soviet version starts with
Aunt Polly Finding Tom raiding
the jam jar and sending him off
to whitewash the fence. Some
how his friends end up doing all
the work.
Then there’s a visit to the
graveyard with a dead cat at
midnight, the doctor’s murder,
the escape of Injun Joe, Tom’s
premature funeral, wandering
in the cave with Becky Thatcher
and Huck’s uneasy domestica
tion at the hands of the widow
Douglas — all in Russian —
which makes Huck’s name
sound like “Gyekleberry.”
But the signs in camera range
are in English, reflecting
months of research by designer
Valentin Godulyanov, who
could not visit the United States
to look for inspiration.
Except for some misspellings
— “sigars” for “cigars” — the re
sult is a convincing mock-up of a
19th-century U.S. small town.
There is even a rearwheel pad
dle “steamer,” built onto a float
ing pier and pushed by a tugboat
out of camera range. For some
reason the steamboat is named
“Great Missouri.”
Moscow’s Patrice Lumumba
Institute supplied African stu
dents to play the roles of slaves.
r
Warp(
RULES FQJ
#2 ' It IS
VOU GET 1
BEFORE A
Tom Sawyer is a great
favorite among Soviets,
many of whom say they
remember it as the first
book they read.
Some are shown singing and
dancing, but others wait glumly
in chains to be sold at a river
front market.
“We tried very hard to
achieve an authentic setting,”
producer Galina Bovjuchenko
of the Odessa Film Studios said.
“We looked for locations
along the river and built an en
tire town to look just like it
would have in that far-away
country long ago,” he said.
The authenticity included
the boys’ straw hats, tattered
overalls and no shoes.
“Going barefoot hurt at first,
but they got used to it,” said
Larissa Stukova, whose son,
Fedya, 9, plays Tom. “It wasn’t
that easy for me to watch them,”
she added with an expression of
mock horror.
The boys and girls who play
Tom, Huck (or “Gyek)
Becky are Moscow stfe
dren chosen at auditions
the sixth role for FedyaSi
whose curly, copper-o
hair is neater now thatki
in school.
“I liked doing them
lot,” he said. He read tit
after Filming startedandi
found it good.
“They had a
opportunity to live on
fantastic adventures,
mother said.
Tom Sawyer is agra:
rite among Soviets, m
whom say they rememkt
the First book they read
It took a year of prei
and 5‘A months to I
series, which will be
three parts on national'll
time this spring. A
sion may be distributed!:
houses.
“The total
664,000 rubles (the etpj
of $930,000), which is
your standards,” Boyjnc
United
ST. JOI
■ Searcl
Monday tf
survivors
drilling cr<
^storm-toss
sperate atl
told an American visitoi tering off;
here this covers everytli;
As to the chances fori
that would follow Hucin story-high
the runaway slave, downii
er, Govorukhin doesnoi
it’s in the cards.
For one thing, helm ^lifeboats t
mitment to Film Jules
“20,000 Leagues Under!
and another book be!
could get back to Mark
By the time he
screenplay and the preps Susan She
are out of the way fon
“Huckleberry Finn,” hi Ranger ri
would have grown out
roles.
Partnership new look
for U.S.
Mob
Seven
lapse of
in the oi
Coast Gu
they had
mg seas.
“There
in the wati
cation at t
any survi
She acl
secretaries
degree lisi
16 suppo
slightly o
water in
know wb
gone a sa
A fleet
vessels a
Gadus A
angry sea
the prom
170 miles
condition
United Press International
NEW YORK — The “perfect
secretary” is in the eye of the
beholder, but an overwhelming
majority of executives agree that
beauty, diction and social com
panionship rate low on the list of
qualities they consider impor
tant.
Adia Temporary Services,
surveying its international
clients, found the word “secret
ary” creates a different picture
in each employer’s mind. The
differences are most varied be
tween U.S. and European ex
ecutives, but in very few cases
does the picture include the old-
fashioned stereotype of a “Miss
Universe” sitting on the boss’s
knee.
“U.S. executives look on their
secretaries as more of a part
ner,” Walter McCauley, presi
dent of Adia, said. “This wasn’t
so 10 years ago when most em
ployers had a ‘my girl’ men
tality.”
U.S. executives who
answered the survey were gen
erally younger (24-40 years old)
than their European counter
parts, more were single or di
vorced and more were female.
McCauley said the input from
women didn’t greatly change
the Findings since many were
personnel executives and their
views reflect those of their com
panies.
The survey found secretaries
in the United States have it
much better than in other coun
tries in most respects —
although more than half of U.S.
executives said the ideal Amer
ican secretary is underpaid.
More than 65 percent of U.S.
executives said tney would con
sider promoting their secretary
to executive level compared to
41 percent in the United King
dom, 43 percent in Germany, 28
percent in Switzerland and 24
percent in Belgium.
Forty-seven percent of U.S.
employers recorded no age pre
ference for a secretary and 96
percent said they would be hap
py to hire a secretary over the
age of 40.
British, Belgian and Swiss em
ployers also didn’t care much ab
out age if other qualiFications
were high. French and Dutch
bosses preferred a secretary
under 30, and Danes and Ger
mans emphatically preferred a
secretary over 30 years old.
Eighty-one percent of Amer
ican bosses said they didn’t care
about their secretary’s marital
status, and the same percentage
said they would hire a qualiFied
man, although many expressed
concern about what outsiders
would think if a man were at the
typewriter.
In the United States reliability
was the most valued characteris
tic for a secretary — 88 percent
listed this as the top require
ment; 76 percent said intelli
gence was important and 54 per
cent valued conscientiousness.
U.S. bosses ranked discretion
low on their list of impom
retarial virtues althoujk
ranked in the top three in
one of the European com 27 jgg(
Seventy-six percent
bosses require strong p
tical skills of their seat
and 61 percent, the hi[
any country, valued theal
deal with people
American bosses over;
more open-minded than
peans and McCauley a
thinks this may be are!
that anti-discrimination
have really worked. Slid
which are not found in
countries, have corf
U.S. bosses to think inan
minded way and theysaili
clearly, he said.
Only 22 percent of Am
bosses said they preferrd
secretary to have a 0
gree, but there was someit
tion that advanced IK
would help those sectf
who want to be promoted
“If, as employers hail 1
cated, we expect secret
work with us and notfo
will have to push more an*
port expanded training®
processing and compute
ing in business schools a®
leges,” he said.
“The successful secret/
not have to know how®
shorthand, but she has®
how to operate officeeqt
and it’s a plus if she kno*
processing
coast guai
Alford sa
“My pe
would be
any survi
It was i
disasters
when an
in the Nc
men wen
tied into
'lov. 25,
Mobil
was ord<
Ocean E
when the
dangeroi
50 foot
mph win
The s
with thr
and a dc
coast gu;
Labor leader says Reagan,
New Federalism anti-union
United Press International
BAL HARBOUR, Fla. — The
newest member of the AFL-CIO
Executive Council branded
President Reagan “anti-union”
Monday as labor leaders opened
their annual mid-winter meet
ing that is expected to include a
weeklong attack on administra
tion policies.
The 35-member council
planned to consider a series of
formal statements on the eco
nomy, including Reagan’s 1983
budget proposals and unem
ployment, and may withhold a
blanket endorsement of military
spending because of the admi
nistration’s curtailment of social
programs.
At a news brieFing with labor
reporters, Gerald McEntee,
head of the 1-million-member
American Federation of State,
County and Municipal Workers
union, challenged Reagan’s
New Federalism proposal to
switch federal programs to
states. He indicated his union
would Fight new budget prop
osals.
“I think they’re anti-union,”
McEntee said under question
ing. “They’ve proved that time
and time again.
“I think maybe he (Reagan)
allows them (unions) to exist in
society, but on his terms.”
McEntee, who succeeded the
late Jerry Wurf as head of the
public workers union, was sche
duled to be seated on the council
immediately after the ini
sion is convened.
Despite a hostile relaW
between labor leaders
White House, two higl
administration officials
President George Bush a®
retary of State Alexandet
— were scheduled to
trip to this resort town H
with the union leaders.
Bush is scheduled for
with Haig on Friday’s ag
Labor Secretary Ra
Donovan, under invest®
by a special prosecutor on
corruption allegations a®
tually ignored by the Afk
did not receive the usut
tion to address the Bal
meeting.
in
ual