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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1982)
' ',V Battalion Classifieds ndtiondl Battalion/Page 12 HELP WANTED FOR RENT HUSTON POST are accepting applica- iins for fall semester. Apply early. 846- 96,846-2911. 160tfn jAlTRESSES, HOSTESSES. Must apply person. In Skaggs Center, 846-2277. 22110 14TERURBAN EATING HOUSE is now [ ring part-time DISH/BUS for the day- • me. Apply in person between 2&4 p.m. 18tfn BARCELONA One and two bedroom apartments available for immediate occupan cy. Call 693-0261 or come by 700 Dominik in College Station. 29tfn The HOUSTON CHRONICLE is cur-' j rently taking applications for newspap er route carriers for summer & fall I semesters. Routes take 2 , /2 to 3 hours per day, with salary from 400 to 800 per month. All routes receive a gas (allowance also we need soliciters for ^he summer & fall semester. If interest ed please call Julian McMurrey 693- [2323.sotfnl PIZZA EXPRESS Now Hiring COUNTER & PREP PER SON & PHONE PER- SONEL. Flexible hours: $3.50/hour. NEW MINI WAREHOUSES 5x5 — $25 mo. 5x7 — $30 mo. 5x10 — $32 mo. 5x12 — $35 mo. 10x10— $45 mo. 10x15— $55 mo. 10x20— $62 mo. 10x25— $68 mo. 10x30— $80 mo. THE STORAGE CENTER 3007 Longmire College Station (near Ponderosa Motel and Brazos Valley Lumber) 764-8238 or 696-4203 istfn pelican*/ wharf 2500 Toxas Ave. 693-5113. Bus Personnel Needed. 18-20 hours per week. Average $5-$6 per hour. Would be in line to be waiter in the future. Apply in person between 8 & 11:30 a.m. and 5-7 p.m. 7 days a week. E.E.O.C. 29t5 RENT SLASHED Spacious two bedroom 1V2 bath four-plex with washer and dryer, close to campus. Large kitchen, walk-in closets, large deck in rear. 693-8685. aottn DEPENDABLE MEN, WOMEN OR COUPLES for present and fu ture Houston post routes. Early morning hours. Papers rolled by machine. $200-$750/month. 846-2911 846-0396 24tfn ARBOR SQUARE APARTMENTS now has a two-bdrm, two bath Furnished apartment available (or rent. ARBOR SQUARE will also have several one and two bedroom furnished apartments available (or rent in two weeks. Inquire by phone at 693-3701 or come by the office at 1700 Southwest Parkway. 2517 UNIVERSITY NATIONAL BANK has immediately available positions for pay-receiving tellers. Experience is preferred but trainee will be con sidered. Salary is commensurate with experience. Benefits are competitive. Please call our personnel department at 846-8751 to arrange an interview. 3115 ARBOR SQUARE One and two bedroom furnished apartments available for im mediate occupancy. Call 693- 3701 or come by 1700 Southwest Parkway. 29ttn UNIVERSITY NATIONAL BANK has a vary of part-time afternoon posi tions available. Hours from 2-6 p.m. Previous experience is preferred but not required. Please call our personnel department at 846-8751 to arrange an interview. 3115 CASA DEL SOL One and two bedroom apartment available for immediate occupan cy. Call 696-3455 or come by 401 Stasney in College Station. NOW HIRING DELIVERY PEOPLE NEEDED FLEXIBLE HOURS $3.75/hr. plus 6% commission plus tips merit raise after 2 weeks up to $4.50/hr. Apply between 3:30 and 7 M-F 319 Patricia or 2314 S. Texas (across from the Dairy Queen) 29t3 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 $3.65/hour Apply in person only. 9:30-11:30 a.m. (if possible) WHATABURGER Bryan College Station 1101 Texas 105 Dominik 190tfn PERSONALS FOR SALE UNUSUAL TALENT, HOBBY SKILLS? If you would like to be fea tured in the 1983 Aggieland yearbook, please fill out an application at room 216 Reed McDonald. Overseas appliances, brand new, never used. Wholesale prices. 779-6105 after 31 SERVICES 67" Connelly Mode water ski with ease. Like new, Randy, 764-8671. 3U2 65 Mustang, excellent condition, 696- 5601. 30(5 Diamonds for Aggie rings. Choose your own diamond and style you want mounted. “Wholesale Prices.” Call Lane Lynch class of 77 in Houston, Texas (713) 463-3812.2814 For the Cadillac in typing, Word Process ing is it. Check our prices AND our quali ty. 775-3523. 1981 Yamaha XT250, good condition, low miles, 260-5193 . 27t7 Private POTTERY lessons. Call Yvonne after 5:00, 696-2813. 31t4 TYPING, 823-7723. 72 BMW 2002, new paint, rebuilt engine, .VC, 260-4093. 27t7 AKC black labradors, champion bloodline, shots and wormed, 8 weeks old, 693- 5939. 27t5 Starcraft pop-up camper, sleeps 6, excel lent condition, nevy tires, $900, 260- 6306. 28(5 1982 Yamaha Seca 400, 2,000 miles. Must sell. Will let go for $1,700 or best offer. 693-8856. 28t4 Sansui 4 ch. 120 watts/ch. Call Forrest 693- 4795. 2914 Batteries $21.95 + exchange guaranteed, 822-1719. 29130 PREGNANCY TERMINATION Houston Gynecological Group 1 -800-392-8676 We Take the Time to Care. Word Processing: Papers, reports, disserta tions. Fast, accurate. EastMark Executive Suites. 693-5895. 31(3 31126 FOR RENT SOUTHWEST VILLAGE One and two bedrooms available for immediate occupancy. Call 693-0804 or come by the office at 1101 Southwest Parkway. 29tfn Attractive 2 bedroom 2 bath duplex. Kitch en appliances and drapes furnished new washer/dryer can be furnished upon re quest. Near TAMU and shopping centers, $425/mo., 693-0982, 696-7714. 29tfn Call Sue for all your typing or word processing needs. 696-9550. 131tfn Karen’s typing service, 775-6126. “Problem Pregnancy? Free pregnancy test ing and referrals. (713) 524-0548.” 188tfn SERVICES TYPINGAVORD PROCESSING. Reason able rates. Call SLS Transcription Services, 260-9137. 17158 Typing experienced, fast, accurate, all kinds, 822-0544, 846-9707. 184tfn TYPING, All kinds, 846-0132. Mary Kay complimentary facial. McCleary, 693-0104. Diane 27117 ‘CCS loves B-CS.” 27130 Typing service: Fast, accurate, experi enced, reliable. Will take rush jobs, 693- 6-411. 3015 WORD PROCESSING-papers, reports, dissertations, etc.-Fast, accurate, reason able, 846-6200. 29tl5 TYPING, 823-4569. 25139 Gay/Lesbian line 846-8022. TYPING, 775-7017. 19(21 Typing!! Reports, dissertations, etc. ON THE DOUBLE. 331 University. 846- 178tfh 3755. MISC. TRS80 Microcomputer Model 1, 2 drives, NEWDOS2.0, CP/M, excellent, $1195, Syd, 693-2835. 2715 BELLYDANCING SION, 696-1250. FOR ANY OCCA- 12130 LOST 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 TICKETS NEEDED for Baylor game (Non-student). Call Craig at 696-7267 after 6 p.m. 3113 ROOMMATE WANTED ROOMMATE NEEDED Sevilla Apart ments very nice, two bedrooms two bath, 696-9454. ' 2915 OFFICIAL NOTICE DIRECTORY REFUND POLICY Directory Fees »re refundable in full 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. 8167 AGGIELAND REFUND POLICY “Yearbook fees are refundable in full during the semester In which payment is made Thereafter no refunds will be made on canoe) 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 b< mailed without the necessary fees having been paid." 8167, SPECIAL NOTICE Due to rain, the Flag football play off schedules will not be posted until Friday, Oct. 15th after 2 P.M. For further information, contact Im-Rec Sports Office, 845-7826. 3111 If the proper source of values is what the majority says, then how can we achieve social justice? CDF is coming. 3111 DON’T FORGET to go by Yearbook As sociates (On Puryear behind Culpepper Plaza) to have your Aggieland ’83 picture taken. 23111 Due to rain field goal kicking con test is/scheduled for Wednesday, October 13, 7 p.m. on Kyle field. Entries will be accepted at the event sight until 7 p.m. Remember to bring your own tee. See you there! 3012 HEBREW CLASSES Call 696-7313. Jewish Student Center. October 13, 1982 High-tech studies planned Engineers to be updated LOST: Small mixed breed beagle fox ter rier female. White with brown and black spots. Reward offered. Call 696-9713. 3015 United Press International Keeping engineers up-to-date is one way of making sure Amer ica’s bridges don’t fall down simultaneously, telephones don’t all go dead at once, satel lites won’t zig when they should zag and widgets won’t stop doing — well, whatever widgets do to keep things working. But keeping engineers up with rapid developments in this high tech world — lasers, com puters, microprocessors, tran sistors — turns out to be a prob lem that authorities claim almost defies solution. That’s why a brain trust of educators and executives has been studying how America can keep cobwebs from draping the high tech workforce — includ ing engineers and computer sci entists. LOST. Seiko Quartz analog watch. No wrist band. Reward will be offered, 693- 5542. 3115 LOST: Seiko watch men’s quartz, 260- 1284. REWARD. 2815 The way to do that, says a brand new landmark report from four Massachusetts Insti tute of Technology professors, is this: •Team up high tech indus tries with schools where high tech education is dispensed. •Then, link up workplace and classroom, using some of the high tech products such as state-of-the-art computers and video systems. Presto: the latest in college courses on majodevelopments can be beamed to offices of en gineers and computer scientists. Result: the high tech workers are up-to-date. The report, “Lifetime Cooperative Education,” was del ivered at a symposium marking the 100th anniversary of the MIT Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sci ence in Cambridge, Mass., two weeks ago. Authors include Profs. Robert M. Fano, Louis D. Smullin, James D. Bruce and William M. Siebert. Fano, head of the depart ment, said the proposal is just that — at this point. To get it off the drawing board, the MIT pro fessors suggest that a council he formed and charged with devis ing a modus operandi for the plan. They recommend that the council be composed of chief ex ecutive officers of high tech com panies and heads of engineering schools, plus leaders of profes sional groups — engineering societies, for example. The MIT professors said “life time” learning must come on line for electrical engineers and com puter scientists, especially if the United States is to maintain its technological health and its abil ity to compete in the world mar ketplace. Without it, they warned, many engineers and computer scien tists will be left f ar behind as new inventions pop up in multiples. “Every four or five years there are developments that make a great difference,” Fano said. “Transistors, computers, mic roprocessors, the laser are in that category. “Every four or five years, as^ result, life is different in silicone and computer valley. “Unless an electrical engineei or computer scientist keeps upj, by the time he or she is 40, he or she is not so hot — maybe just second best.” Smullin said second best isn^i way to survive. “The need is for ‘first best,'’ he said. How swift is the How of new information? Fano said it is sd fast that by the time an elt^irical engineering student graduates) he or she already is somewhat out of date with the latest develop ments — compared w ith students behind them, learning the newest as a matter of revise! basic courses. Fano invented the sequential de-coding system used to send pictures from spacecraf t toeartlj Smullin is down in history lot bouncing a laser beam off the moon. Derailment victims home United Press International LIVINGSTON, La. — The first of 2,500 people Tuesday re turned to homes they lied two weeks ago when a chemical laden train tore from railroad tracks and turned their city into a time bomb. State police removed barri cades from roads into the south east Louisiana town at 8 a.m. and residents headed for homes and pets unseen for 14 days. “I’m very, very glad the peo ple are going home,” Mayor A.L. Hunt said. “I’m glad I’m going home.” The evacuees were given “housekeeping” information sheets as they passed through the barriers. “They say don’t eat food that’s been left out, suggest the people vacuum their houses completely, vacuum furniture, wash any clothes that were left out —just common sense stuff, mostly,” state police Sgt. Steve Campbell said. Many families did not know what they would find, since four explosions among the derailed cars damaged at least 20 homes. But several would find only charred rubble where their homes once stood. “Three or four will come home and find houses damaged so that they can’t live in them,’’ Campbell said. “It probably will be a shock because they haven't been able to see it themselves. But they have had people give them information on it.” Security Amtrak is OK, claims United Press International RALEIGH, N.C. — Amtrak said Tuesday its security precau tions are adequate and will not be changed despite a gunman’s three-day standoff in a sleeping SPECIAL NOTICE ♦ I BRAZOS I VALLEY • GOLF t DRIVING I RANGE I Hrs: Mon-Sat 3-9 p.m. Sunday 1 p.m.-8 p.m. 696-1220 East Bypass and Hwy. 30. car that left his sister and her baby son dead. The gunman, Mario Evange lista Villabona Navas, 29, of Col ombia, was charged with two counts of murder and one count of kidnapping. He surrendered quietly Monday morning several hours after he released the re maining child through a window. Police found the bodies of Maria Ramirez, 30, and her son Joan, 9 months old, inside the sweltering 6-by-10 foot com partment. Ramirez’ daughter, Zuli, 4, was hospitalized in “fair to good condition.” The mother had been shot and the baby died of dehydra tion during the siege, police said. Authorities said Navas boarded Amtrak’s Florida-to- New York Silver Star at Jackson ville, Fla., Thursday armed with a fully automatic pistol and another semi-automatic CPA^H REVIEW FOR YOUR INVITATION TO THE FIRST CLASSES CALL: Houston, OakCreek,Westside 713 692-7186 OUR PASSING RATE IS 70% VAKf^Go/lR coSSIes 65,000 BECKER CPA ALUMNI HAVE PASSED THE LAST PART OF THE CPA EXAM SINCE 1957 CLASSES BEGIN WEEK OF DEC. 4 inn Service Road Going South - V* miles. | 8120 | K.C. LABS Introducing a fantastic new prod uct in the College Station area. You will have to see this to believe it. New in the health field with years of research to back it. For your own health and wealth, check this out. Money potential unbelievable but this me tell you anyway. Come to the Holiday Inn, C.S., at 7 p.m. sharp, Wednesday, October 13. Ask for Sylvia or Bill at the desk. See you Wed. 30t2 weapon. Cliff Black, an Amtrak spokesman in Washington, said there have been five incidents involving guns in Amtrak’s 11- year history. “Amtrak feels there is no pre cedent for installing any kind of frisking or electronic surveill ance at stations,” he said. “At this time, we have no plans to impose any major security changes.” Police also defended their de cision not to rush the sleeping compartment during the gun man’s standoff. Make the World Go Away Take a Break at UNDERGROUND RAILROAD SNACK BAR Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Basement of Sbisa ‘SPECIAL* Good for 4 p.m. to 10 p.m. Only Buy a Hamburger or Cheeseburger & Fries Putter over to the Pooh’s Park Amusement Center, across from the Water Tower, on Thursday, October 14th at 6 p.m. for the Putt- Putt Golf tournament. All equipment will be available at Pooh’s Park, A $2.00 green tee will be collected at registration & entries will be excepted at the event sight until 6 p.m. Remember your student or recreational I.D. 30t3 Now you know Get a Large Coke Free Play a game while you wait. (Offer good through Oct. 31, 1982) “QUALITY FIRST” niiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii FOR LEASE Service For All Chrysler Corp. Cars Body Work — Painting HALSELL MOTOR COMPANY INC. ] Dodge Sales and Service Since 1922 1411 Texas Ave. 823-8111 1tfr\J| tyarKtoay APARTMENTS 1, 2 & 3 bedrooms, 2 swimming pools, shuttle bus, laundry facilities, security guard. 1600 Southwest Park way, 693-6540. 1 astfn United Press International WASHINGTON — The av erage American housewife’s homemaking services are worth $8,500 a year, a new survey shows. The study indicates it would cost a husband that much in wages on the average for a live- in housekeeper, or $8,900 for one who lives out. The research was done for the American Council of Life Insurance, using data from more than 50 private employ ment agencies and state employ ment departments. The figures are based on 1981-82 salary levels for a full time housekeeper. An article in the council’s newsletter, The Family Eco nomist, says replacement cost for the housewife’s housekeep ing duties would be more in a big city but less in a rural area. The figures are based on a five day, 40 hour week for a family of four, with two small children, one of them in school. DIETING? Even though we do not prescribe diets, we make it possible for many to enjoy a nutritious meal while they follow their doctor's orders. You will be delighted with the wide selection of low calorie, sugar free and fat free foods in the Souper Salad Area, Sbisa Dining Center Basement. OPEN Monday through Friday 10:45 AM-1:45 PM QUALITY FIRST n E si Unit NEW Jones moved stayed a the st( Stain pe fit-takit The average points ? high, w at 11 ; close v\ 1,016.9 Ad issues b Inve when Trust o tng to i easier ( prime ft cent fr lowest 1 years. But amid in that no lowed fi The change A- in reme plea pany over of its ilizec tices the foi- la w tior Sk Sh as ni Ai lo m 19