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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 22, 1982)
■j\W\‘<V\WXC Battalion Classifieds HELP WANTED i’lioiu' salt’s work. 3 shirts. $3.50 up. ('all 775-9400. nan Permanent receptionist neetietl. Apply in person. THAT PLACE II (.'ulpepper Plazti. 093-0607 I02tiii KENT MOORE CABINETS is currently taking applications for permanent and part- time prtKluction workers. Immediate open ings in our day and evening shifts. E.O.E. 3206 Longmire Drive, College Station. 10800 GRAHAM CENTRAL STATION Door Cashier well-groomed or attractive, outgoing. Pay $4.00/hour. Apply in person T600-B S. College Ave. See Jeff. 107tfn Help wanted in local firm. Must have some background in Hour plan drawings, bluep rints, etc. Full or part-time. Call 779-239S. ^.Ask for John. 11614 PART-TIME HELP WANTED. Grapevine personality. 696- 3411. E.O.E. Lincoln ‘Tlace PATIO HOMES 700 Lincoln College Station, Texas • 5 Blocks from campus • 2 & 3 Bedrooms • Fireplace • Ceiling fans • Vaulted ceiling • W/D connections BELOW MARKET FINANCING Call Dick Gilby 696-7213 1977 Yamaha XS 500D w/faring and book rack two helmets and service manuals, $1500, 846-7374. U2t5 Ul£<_ NASH PHILLIPS/COPUS 116111 TEACH OVERSEAS! Graduating seniors are en couraged to apply. For details, please send a self-addressed, stamp, lortg envelope to FRIENDS OF WORLD TEACH ING, Box 1049, San Diego, CA. 92112-1049. nets 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 2teto 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. 50tfr Senior boots bass for sale. $12.50/pr. 260- 2769, 260-6069, 260-2803. Made by Mid- County A&M Mother’s Club. H4t5 Schwinn Collegiate men’s 3-speed. $70. O.B.O., purchased at $120. Good condi tion. 846-6129, Jim, evenings. U3t5 For Sale: Wedding set with three diamonds and four sapphires. Almost brand new call 260-6393 after 5:<X> p. m. 113to Suzuki 1980 Model GSL550, extra clean 1320 miles, 779-8045. $1,850.00 or best offer. 112t5 HELP WANTED ►-’V FULL OR PART TIME ‘Day Shift 'Night shift (til 10 p.m.) 'Weekends 'Flexible hours fo fit your schedule ‘Rapid advancement 'Cashier experience helpful Starting Salary $3.65/hour Apply in person only. 9:30-11:30 a.m. (if possible) WHATABURGER Bryan College Station 1101 Texas 105 Dominik 190tfn i£>outf)tooob DUPLEXES FOR SALE • 2 & 3 bedrooms • Wooded lots • Carports • All electric Special Financing Available Ready for occupancy February 1, 1982 4103 South Texas Ave. Suite 201 Bryan, Texas Call Dick Gilby- 713-696-7213 Male dancers needed for inter view, call 693-2818 or 696-0004. 46tfn Checkers full and part-time. Alsu Stockers. See Walter or Mark. FARM PATCH. 11414 Now hiring busboys. Apply between 2 p.m.-5 p.m. at 404 University Drive East. 114tfn GUY AND GIRLS team clean homes & offices. Days, nights & weekends. Flexible part or fuii- fime hours, weekly pay above minimum, paid travel and paid vacation. Must have car & phone. Home Care - 846-7759. 22tfn NASH PHILLIPS/C OPUS 116111 PERSONALS Profitable, exciting summer/sparetime jobs. Beat Reaganomics! Don’t wait! Write: Lincraft, W279N2907, Pewaukee, Wiscon sin 53072. U2t5 TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC DEPARTMENT RESIDENT ADVISOR POSITIONS AVAILABLE QUALIFICATIONS: Resident advisor candidates must be senior or graduate student classification with overall 2.25 GPA and some residence hall experience pre ferred but not necessary. DUTIES: Live with the student athletes in Cain hall, serve as coun selor to the athletes, and act as liason between Resident Manager and Athletic Department administrators. STIPEND: Room and Board In-state tuition waiver APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE: Cain Hall (campus) or Leroy Suther land 845-4692. 11416 ATTENTION FEMALES Aggie Engineer ’80 estab lished, handsome and lonely for Aggie women wishes to meet and date. Do you like quiet dinners, Moet & Chan- don, and weekends at the lake. Write: 6043 Westridge Lane #418, Fort Worth, Texas 76116. FOR RENT 3-C BAR-B-Q Culpepper Plaza Now Hiring DISHWASHERS, CASHIERS, HOSTESSES, SERVING-LINE WORKERS. Apply between 9-11 and 2-4. NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE. HELP WANTED WAITRESSES Apply in person and ask for Mr. Marshall. 413 Texas Avenue, College Station. 108«n PARKWAY APARTMENTS 1, 2, & 3 bedrooms, 2 swim ming pools, shuttle bus, laun dry facilities, security guard. 1600 Southwest Parkway, 693-6540 TetT Free puppies for good homes after 5 p.m., 693-6833 ask for Phil. 114(5 Part-time telephone surveying. Great for students or retired. Not sales or collec tions. Weekday evenings, Saturdavs 4c Sundays. $4/honr. phone 260-9063 10 a. m. to 6.-00 p.m. 112(5 OFFICIAL NOTICE SCHLOTZSKYS low accepting applications 3r Full time positions. Ap- ly in person only. 100 >outh Texas Ave. Electric Cowboy Now hiring WAITRESS AND HOSTESS. Full and part-time. Apply in person. DEPENDABLE MEN. WOMEN OR COUPLES for present and future Houston post routes Early morning hours. Papers rolled by machine S20O-$750 month. 846-2911 696-8032 m 0 (EPE) MUST SATISFY THE ENGLISH PrORCIENCY Re- J jj QUIREMENT DESIGNATED BY HIS'HER RESPECTIVE DE- 0 J PARTMENT. No maka-up exam will ba given ttil« aamaatar. ^ 0 For nkxmation and guidefcnes on the nature of the e*a. "vnatron. check with m ^ the departmental secretary loatto -E 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, March 24, 1982 at 7:00 p.m. BIOLOGY Department Curricula.. CHEMISTRY Department Curricula MATH Department Curricula PHYSICS Department Curricula... Room 113 BSBE Room 228 CHEM Room 101 Milner Room 301 PHYS In order to quality as a candidate for a degree m 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 (continued from page 1) Planning and Building Com mittee members learned Sunday that bids for the horticulture/ forest science building exceed the money available for the pro ject by about $1 million. The low bid on the project, from B-F-W Construction Co. Inc. of Temple, was $12.22 mil lion. About $11.28 million is available for the building’s con struction. System Chancellor Frank W.R. Hubert made two alter nate proposals to solve the prob lem. He said the regents could either revise the building plans — omitting enough items to bring it within its budget - they could completely redesign it and reopen bidding. Wesley E. Peel, System vice chancellor for facilities planning and construction, said the second proposal would delay consideration of the bids until the board’s September meeting. He said he had found several features in the present plans which, if eliminated, could bring the building’s cost down to the budgeted amount. Regent H.C. “Dulie” Bell Jr. of Austin, planning and build ing committee chairman, agreed that the plans could be changed. “The architect put too many Cadillac items in the plans when a Chevrolet would have done just as well,” Bell said. “I think we can cut a lot of the Cadillac items out.” The committee recom mended that the chancellor negotiate the changes in the plans with the low bidder. They also voted to check with the slate Attorney General to ensure ihai the negotiations are legal. In other action, thecommii tee recommended approval of several bids for construction and repair at Texas A&M and Prairie View A&M University. The full Board of Regvnti| will meet at 8:30 a.m. Tuesdays take action on the committeenjl ports submitted today. Todartl committee meeting and Tuftl day’s meeting are open to the| public. Congress, lobbyists battle over regulation of guns United Press International WASHINGTON — The Sen ate Judiciary Committee, faced with flaring national interest in gun control is wrangling over how to keep the government off the backs of gun dealers and col lectors. The latest debate pivots on a measure proposed by Sen. James McClure, R-Idaho, and University Acres Apartments- country liv- inc at reasonable prices. Call Jane at 696- 4203 (Joe Courtney. Inc.). SOtlii 4-plex apartments for rent Souttiwood Val ley, 2-bdrm, $350-$450/month, 696- 5549. 103(21 Southwest Village Apartments. Now leas ing one and two bedroom fnnnished or unfurnished for summer and scar round leases. 693-0804, 1101 SW Parkway. 105(48 Close to campus, 2 bedroom 1 Vz bath 4-plr\. All appliances including washer and dner. walk-in closets, drapes, large wooden deck. $425/month. 693-8685. Tfitfi, Arbor Square Apartments now leasing one and two bedroom furnished lor summer and year round leases. 693-3701. 1700 SW Parkway. 105(48 Casa del Sol now leasing one and two bed- mom, furnished and unfurnished lor sum mer and year round. 401 Stasney. 696- 3455. 105(48 Barcelona Apartments now leasing one and two bedroom furnished and unfurnished for summer and year round. 700 Dominik. 693-0261. 105(48 “different spokes for different folks” 403 University (Northgate) Open 10-7 Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. 846-BIKE Rep. Harold Volkmer, D-Mo., to restrict enforcement power of the Treasury Department’s Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. Pressure on the gun-control agency has been building for years, amid charges of alleged abuses of its power, and the Reagan administration is in the midst of efforts to dismantle the bureau. But while that move drew' ini tial favorable reaction from the powerful National Rifle Associa tion, the gun enthusiasts’ lob bying group has balked at the prospect of turning gun en- forcement over to the Secret Service. As that battle continues, the administration has endorsed the McClure-V’olkmer proposal, as has the Judiciary Committee’s Republican leadership. But the committee effort bogged dow'n last week when Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., sought to restrict the bill to long guns, leaving control of so- called “snubbies” and “Saturday Night Specials” under present harsh enforcement. The com mittee decided to get the Justice Department’s views on how the differing proposals would affect enforcement and try to decide the matter Tuesday. NR A spokesman John Adkins said the group is prim ing its 2.2 million members to boost the McGlure-Volmer mea sure. Although primarily an orga nization for sportsmen, Adkins said many persons who are not gun enthusiasts are joining the NRA because they want an un fettered right to arm themselves for protection against criminals. While the NRA is cheering McClure and Volkmer, Ken nedy is supported by Handgun I § I ALLEN Oldsmobile Cadillac Honda SALES - SERVICE "Where satisfaction is standard equipment’ ’ .2401 Texas Ave. 779-3516 AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 3400 S. College 823-8051 MSC Council now has applications for Cubicles in the Student Programs Office for the school year of 1982-83. Applications are availa ble at the Secretaries’ desk in Room 216 MSC. Applications will be available from March 22-29. Deadline for applications is March 29th. 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 1 «" SERVICES Research, writing. From $4/page. Catalog $1. Author’s Research, #60()-C 407 S. Dearborn, Chicago, 1L 60665. K)6t8 Typing on word processing equipment. Ex perienced. VVe understand form and style. Automated Clerical Services, 693-1070. 84(40 Typing 775-7017. 100(24 Typing 823-7723. Quality typing. 693-4264. 109t42 Call Cathy or Betsy for all your typing or iword processing needs. 696-9550. 131tfn Typing experienced fast, accurate, all kinds 822-0544 ISStfn COUPON m The Best Pizza In Town! Honest. INTRODUCES OUR BUY ONE, GET ONE JUST LIKE IT AT 1 / 2 PRICE PIZZA SPECIAL! AT THE PIZZA MAT ONLY Please Present Coupon 846-3412 COUPON Word processing papers, theses, disserta tions. letter-perfect printing. 696-8910. 109(20 Lcsbian/Gavline 846-8022 107(17 Typing!! Reports, dissertations, etc. ON THE DOUBLE. 331 University. 846- 3755. 178(fn TYPING. 'All kinds. Let us type your propos als, dissertations, reports, essays on our WORD PROCESSOR. Fast service. Reasonable rates. Basinets Communication Services 4013 Texas Ave. S. 846-5794 isstfn Service For All Chrysler Corp. Cars Body Work — Painting HALSELL MOTOR COMPANY INC. Ooog* SMs and Service Since 1922 1411 Texas Ave 823-6111 1«n ROOMMATE WANTED Roommate needed 2 bedrooms 2 Itaths. furnished. Shuttle bus. StOO deposit. Sl-Wmonth plus utilities. Jim 846-0170 or 845-2581. 114*5 1 LOST High lehonl senior ring brtwxcn dorm 3 and Spence Park, blue stone. Audrey, H.S.. Reward. 260-6395 114.7 SOPHOMORES, JUNIORS, SENIORS, EARN OVER $1000 A MONTH JUST TO FINISH COLLEGE! IF YOU’RE MAJORING IN MATH, PHYSICS OR ENGINEERING, THE NAVY HAS A PROGRAM YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT. It’s called the Nuclear Propulsion Officer Candidate Program (NUPOC for short) and if you qualify, you can earn as much as $1000 a month right through your senior year. Then after 16 weeks of Officer Candi date School, you’ll receive an additional year of advanced technical education. This could cost you thousands of $$$ in a civilian school, but in the Navy, we pay you. During that year of training, you’ll receive a $27,000 salary. It isn’t easy There are fewer than 400 openings and onty one of every six applicants will be selected. But if you make it, you’ll have qualified for an elite engineering training job program with unequalled hands-on responsibility, a $40,000 salary in four years, and gilt-edged qualifica tion for jobs in private industry should you deckle to leave the Navy later (But we don't think you’ll want to). WE’LL BE INTERVIEWING ON CAMPUS ON 23 & 24 MARCH Contact: Navy Nuclear Programs (N-154) 1121 Walker St Houston, Texas 77002 (713) 226-2445 (call colled) Control Inc., a group thatseebl to end street crime by abolish^I gun ownership. Both organizations haul chosen sides as politicians ivres-l tied with the issue at lowerleekl of government. Campaigns fotl tough gun laws are being wagi in such states as Florida, Mas-I sachusetts, California, Maryland! and Ohio. The NRA applauded tht publicized vote of the Kenw saw, Ga., council to required ery home to have a gun for self protection. The Kennesaw vijit was a direct a reaction to a volt last June in Morton Grove, III to ban gun ownership and gin B® sales entirely. Handgun Control’s execute vice president, Charles Orasin, I deplored the Kennesaw action I “T he irony of the Georgh I thing is, they talk about liij I brother’ dictating what to don ■ the home and this requires then I to keep a ‘time bomb’ in yon house,” he said. More to Orasin 7 s liking m the effort of (Chicago Mai# Jane Byrne to severely reslrid handgun ownership. The Chi cago council voted Friday n adopted a modified version o the Byrne plan to forbid tin licensing of any new guns inthi city. Donations ‘shore up’ SS system United Press International WASHINGTON — h wod make a dent in Social Securin money woes, but each year it retirement system gets abm $40,000 in gifts from peop gratef ul for its benefits or wo ried about its future. A woman who donatt $13.11 — computed by appb the employee tax rate to her nefit amount — said she ho| the money would “shore up sagging, dwindling Social Seal ity fund.” Not counting 1974, the year bequests and gifts ’ allowed, the retirement svsii has received an average $39,847 a year, the magazi said. Some donors are conce about Social Security’s publicized funding trou The administration savs the tern will he S1.6 trillion she the next 75 years, ahh< Democrats dispute the figun Other givers are grateful Social Security’s help. ( woman said her father, « paid less than $500 in Sc Security payroll taxes, drew nefits for 29 years. She donal her $9,000 share of his esta the trust funds. Gifts must he unconditio although they can be earmar for one of Social Security’s t funds — retirement. Medic disability or Suppletnenn Medical Insurance. The stingiest vear for s donations was 1977, whenc $10,274.73 was receiw according to the report, most generous was 1979 $91,949.88 enriched the tern’s coffers, including $25.000 gift that was ihelar ever from a living donor. W.H.O. VETERINARY OR MEDICAL SCHOOLS MEXICO-PHILIPPINES ENGLISH CURRICULUM j LOW TUITION LIVE IN THE U S A. 2 YEAR PROGRAM PhD.. D.C.. D.P.M -M.D. PROVEN STUDENT SERVICE 100 LaSalle St.. NY. NY 10027 (212) 864-3933