The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 23, 1984, Image 12

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    Battalion
Classifieds
Page 12/The Battalion/Monday, January 23, 1984
FOR RENT
Fans celebrate victory,
want their team back
(-
PEPPER TREE
APARTMENTS
Landmark Properties, Inc.
'Shuttle bus
•Free cable tv
•Security guard
•Partyroom
•Swimming pool
•Laundry facilities
*1-2-3 bedrooms
•6 different floor plans
•Lots of closet space
•Excellent maintenance crew
•Convenient to shopping areas
FREE
Tutoring Service
Aerobic classes
693-5731
Scuba Diving classes
Martial Arts classes
Hours: 9 to 6
Mon.-Fri.
Sat. 10-4
2701 Longmire
Drive
College Station
United Press International
OAKLAND, Calif. — More
than 300 former Oakland Raid-
ers fans celebrated “their
team’s” Super Bowl victory over
the Washington Redskins at a
game party in a downtown hotel
Sunday.
The celebration, arranged by
the Chamber of Commerce, was
complete with performances by
the former Raiderettes every
time the Raiders, now based in
Los Angeles, scored a touch
down in their 38-9 rout of the
Redskins.
A huge television screen was
placed in the hotel ballroom,
and the crowd came early to
watch some of the pre-game
activities.
By the time the two teams
squared off in Tampa, Fla., the
noise level had picked up con
siderably, and by game’s end,
more than three hours of
SOUTHWEST VILLAGE APARTMENTS
Best Atmosphere In Town. Like
Living In A Park.
WE FEATURE
Interior Green Space with Creek &
Trees-Swimming Pool-Club Room-
-Jacuzzi-Sauna-Tennis Court-
s-Shuttle Bus Service- 4 Distinctive
Styles of Apt.
NO DEPOSIT REQUIRED
Children & Pets Welcome
1101 Southwest Parkway
College Station, Texas 77840
409-693-0804
74U3.
NEW
MINI WARE
HOUSES
Sizes available 5x5 to 10x30
THE STORAGE CENTER
3007 Longmire
College Station
(near Ponderosa Motel and
Brazos Valley Lumber)
764-8238 or 696-4203
696-5487
7 5tfn
CASA DEL SOL
TWO BLOCKS
TO CAMPUS
Pool, Jacuzzi, basketball
goals, on premises security
guard, 1st class mainte
nance.
401 Stasney, C.S.
(409) 696-3455
74t6
HELP WANTED
Waitresses wanted. Silver Dollar, 846-4691 or 775-
7919. 75t20
try Cook $4.50 per hour, dinner shill. Apply in
person between 2-4 p.m.. Hill's Restaurant E. 29th
Street at Carter Creek. 74tf>
TmmeSfiat^openings: Part-
time evening telephone sales
positions. Work from home or
office. Excellent commission
with guaranteed hourly wage
for IN-Office training. Call
Mark, 846-7592 or 846-8315
between 1-4 p.m. 74t10
Looking for Sophomore or
Junior Business or C.S. ma
jors. Part time computer opera
tions work. Early mornings and
weekends. Send resume to
Frank Pierce, P.O. Box 6500,
Bryan, Texas 77805. 78t3
IMMEDIATE:
Have 20 positions available for tele
phone office work. Good salary plus
company benefits AM & PM hours. Col
lege students and homemakers wel
come. We will train you. Apply 9 to 5 at
1701 Southwest Parkway, Professional
Bldg., Suite 204, C.S. 79t6
Deluxe 2 bedroom 1 1 / 2 bath 4-
plexes with washers and
dryers. Some with fireplaces,
fenced yards, cathedral ceil-
1 ings. Large walk-in closets, lots
of cabinets. 693-8685, 775-f
1 1600:696-1660. 74ti4
A 2 or 3 bedroom, 2 bath
near TAMU, washer/dryer
available from $350/mo.
696-7714 or 693-0982 after
6p.m. 696-4384.
75tfn
A Bargain! 2 bedroom unfurnished
apartment in modern, wooded 4-
plex. 1.7 miles from campus. Near
I shuttle. Washer and dryer connec-
] tions. Low rent! 693-7761.
7416
Free cable-Bills pd! Pr ' v ^ 9 '^ 7 & 8 22-4811 even-
frig. . desk, pool, deposit. 779-906 . o* 77t5
A. big reducation, 3 bedroom, 2 bath in 4-plex, $375
near TAMU, 693-5286. 74t6
Two bedroom 1 1/2 bath apartment. 1/2 mile from
TAMU. $395/mo. Call Country Place,
*46-0515. 76t5
Available Now. 3 bdrm. 2 batb 4-plex, w/ washer
ind dryer. C.S. $370. 272-8422, 1-567-4974. 77t5
Woodstock Condominium, 2 bedroom, 1-1/2 bath,
w/d, fireplace, patio and shuttle bus. $450/mo. 713-
391-8047. 79t3
FOR SALE
Wedding dress size8. Never worn. Asking $150.00,
worth $350.00, 260-0894. 79t5
1981 Honda 250XL with tarp, new tires & muffler.
Runs great. Call 696-1059. Ask for Ken. 80t5
Traffic lights two types, $70 each or best offer, 846-
•1259- 80t5
1980 Turbo Trans AM. Limited Edition. Indianapo
lis Pace Car. White and Charcoal Metallic. T-Top
fully loaded 42,00 mi. 409-535-4821 or 535-
4162 77t5
Woodstock Condominium, excellent write-off, 2
bedroom, 1-1/2 bath, 2 years old, w/d, fireplace,
patio and shuttle. $54,500. 713-391-8047. 79t3
1981 Camaro excellent condition, power windows,
loaded, asking $5200. 775-4940. 76t6
Monte Carlo excellent condition. Call Louise Swink
779-8408 or 779-1355. 77t7
NEW LOW COST FURNITURE FOR SALE
Beds, Dinettes, couch and chair set. 779-8222.76t5
79 Ford Futura Sport Coupe $2995.00 &c ’76 Buick
Century, $1250.00, 693-1872. 80tl0
APARTMENT BEATER 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Pay
ments under $180.00 month. Call for details. 779-
8222. 76t5
19 inch 1981 color sharp T V. $225 call 693-
6070. 76t5
SERVICES
CRUISESHIPS ARE HIRING!
$16-$30,000! Carribean,
Hawaii, World. Call for Guide,
Directory, Newsletter 1-(916)
944-4440 Ext. TEXASA&M-
CRUISE. 74t13
AIRLINES ARE HIRING! Flight
Attendants Reservations! $14-
$39,000. Worldwide! Call for
Directory, Guide, Newsletter.
(916) 944-4440 Ext. TEXASA-
&MAIR. 74t1^
10 Full-time 30 Part-time Deliv
ery men needed. PD.nightly-
flexible hours. Apply in person
CHANELLO’S PIZZA, 2404 S.
Texas Ave., Pkwy Center or
301 Patricia St. 79110
"&£kULMAIi
THEATRES
Mon-Fmly Nlte-Sch 6 ■
TiM-Fmly Nite-MEIII j
SCHULMAN 6
2002
775-2463 /75-2468
7:20 9:45
SACRED GROUND
7:35 9:55
UNCOMMON VALOR!
7:20 9:40
RISKY BUSINESS
8:45
SCARFACE
7:15 9:40 1
THE BIG CHILL
STAYlfihfc ALIVE
9:50
FLASHDANCE~
MANOF E A ST III
Mano dal!
■L o c U (/
7:25 9:45
TWO OF A KIND
7:20-9:40
NEVER CRY WOLF
7:15 9:35
ANGEL
Guitar Instructor needed. LANGE MUSIC, 1410
Texas Ave., Bryan, 822-2334. 80t5
HELP WANTED
PIZZA EXPRESS
Now Hiring Delivery People
$3.75 Per Hour — Base Pay
6% Commission on all deliveries
TIPS
Apply 2314 Texas Avenue
319 Patricia (after 5:00p.m.)
Monday thru Sunday!
696-7785 846-7785
Counter help positions also available.
$6.00/hr. part-time help needed. Appt. secretary.
Must have fantastic personality. Tommy 846-
4751. SO* 3
Delivery work. No lifting. Temporary. Female or)
male. Must have own car. Call 693-5530. 75tloi
Telephone sales. Temporary. Day or evening hours
available, full or part time. Earn extra spending
~ " 75tl5
money. Call 693-5530.
WANTED:
CEDAR OR TREE ALLER
GIC INDIVIDUALS FOR
ANTIHISTAMINE STUDY
Must meet the following re
quirements:
Male over 12 years of age
History of allergy symptoms
Willing to be skin tested for
tree allergies Would like to
earn $100
Call between 6 p.m. and 10
p.m. 775-0425
7 St10
DELIVERY DRIVERS
Have 15 positions needed for light
local deliveries. Must have econo
mical car AM/PM hours available.
Earn $25 p/day and up. Apply 9-5
at 1701 Southwest Parkway, Pro
fessional Building, Suite 204, C.S.
Apartment maintenance and material handler.
Must have plumbing experience, 260-9738.
70tl0
ROOMMATE WANTED
Female roommate, walking distance, $100.00/mo.
total. Call Floren 846-7182. 77t5
PERSONALS
SKI VAIL BEAVER CREEK Call TOLL FREE
1-800-222-4840 for discounts. Condos & equip.
77tl6
ON THE DOUBLE
All kinds of typing at reasonable
rates. Dissertations, theses, term
papers, resumes. Typing and
copying at one stop ON THE DOU
BLE 331, University Drive. 846-
3755.. 7819
SWENSEN“S
Now interviewing for full time or part
time
COOKS, DISHWASHERS & FOUN-
TAINEERS. Flexible hours, competitive
wages. Apply in person at Culpepper
Plaza, College Station.
IN THI
ymm?
screaming left many with hoarse
voices.
The celebrating actually be
gan last Thursday when a huge
streamer was hung from the
Oakland city hall, and mayor
Lionel Wilson declared “we have
not given up, and we have high
hopes of bringing our team back
home.”
Wilson was referring to the
ciy’s eminent domain suit which
the court of appeals has ordered
a Monterey superior court judge
to rehear. The judge, Nat
Agliano, ruled against the city in
the original suit, but the appeals
court said he had erred and told
him to schedule a new trial.
During the weekend, Los
Angeles mayor Tom Bradley
wrote NFL commissioner Pete
Rozelle, asking him to award an
expansion franchise to Oakland
so that the Raiders could remain
in Los Angeles, where their
owner, Al Davis, took them two
years ago.
Wilson, a former superior
court judge, called Bradley’s
suggestion “stupid.”
“The Los Angeles Raiders are
our team,” Bradley wrote Rozel
le. “They are here (in Los
Angeles), and we intend that
they shall stay.”
Wilson countered, “Tom
Bradley is a lawyer. At least he
has a license to practice law.
And, as a lawyer, he ought to
know that Pete Rozelle has no
jurisdiction or control of emi
nent domain action.
“Maybe they didn’t teach emi
nent domain law when he went
to school. That means we buy
the team,” he said.
“As a lawyer, he has to recog
nize that it is very clear we are
going to win the eminent do
main case and thereby bring the
Raiders back to Oakland.”
Employee benefits
may be changing
United Press International
NEW YORK — The tradi
tional package of employee be
nefits is getting increasingly ex
pensive for the employer and,
some critics claim, increasingly
useless to many employees.
“If you came here from Mars
and looked at a tradtional be
nefit program, it would not
make sense,’’ argued Lance
Tane of the Wyatt Co., an em
ployee benefits consulting firm.
Single people with no depen
dents wind up with extensive life
insurance coverage, he said, and
workers who are covered by
their spouses’ health care be
nefits get duplicate protection
from their own employers.
Tane is one of Wyatt’s ex
perts on flexible benefit plans,
which allow employees options
in designing a benefit package.
The most ambitious provide a
wide range of choices, and the
chance for workers to buy extra
coverage with pre-tax dollars.
“The workforce has changed
dramatically,” Tane said.
“Needs vary. If you’re single you
don’t need two-times-pay life in
surance.”
Tane claims traditional be
nefit programs have several dis
advantages for the employer.
Workers don’t appreciate the
value of what they’re getting, he
said, and costs are not controll
able.
“The traditional program is
like a blank check, denominated
in goods and services rather
than money,” he said. “It costs
the company money, but if peo
ple had the right to choose, they
wouldn’t spend the money that
way. Employers don’t know the
value of this.”
In a program Wyatt designed
for Comerica, a Michigan bank
holding company, employees
receive a workbook each year,
which tells them how much they
have to “spend” for benefits.
While each employee must
have health care, disability and
life insurance, there are diffe
rent levels of coverage available.
Employees, for instance, can
choose catastrophic health cov
erage only, a health mainte
nance organization, or tradi
tional coverage from “high” to
“low.”
They can “buy” additional
days off or “sell” part of their
regular vacations back to the
company; obtain life insurance
coverage for their dependents
or take part in a savings plan
similar to an Individual Retire
ment Account.
The program also includes
two reimbursement accounts, in
which employees are able to pay
for child care or noncovered
health costs with pretax dollars.
At Comerica 47 percent of
the workers decided to buy addi
tional benefits with salary de
ductions. About 27 percent
chose to take less than their
budget allowed, converting the
rest into regular pay.
Only about 6 percent bought
the old benefit package — a
typical response, Tane said.
Unions have been generally
unenthusiastic about the flexible
benefits concept, in part because
they suspect employers are us
ing it as a backdoor method of
cutting their contributions.
“It’s difficult to show that a
combination of flexible benefits
provides the same degree of
protection,” said Bert Seidman,
health benefits expert for the
AFL-CIO.
The unions, Seidman said,
also are worried about what hap
pens to the cost of types of cover
age that are selected only by peo
ple who are likely to use them
h.
leavily.
HEWLETT PACKARD
CALCULATORS
CX ... SS49.9S
GV 99.99
C 91 AA.99
HP 1 6C $88.99
HP 15C $88.99
HP 1 20 $88.99
HP 1 1 C $69.99
HP 10C $51 .99
HP 75C $749.99
CAIN/IRUS REPS
NEEDED
We need Sales Representatives
on yourcampustosell Hewlett
Packard Calculators and other
computer products. You’ll make
generous commissions selling
only the finest quality name
brands on the market. Call today
to see if you qualify fora Campus
Representative Kit. No invest
ment is required.
east:
800-233-8 5 50
west:
800-648-331 1
In PA call (717)327-9575, Dept. 0134
Order Status Number: 327-9576
Customer Service Number: 327-1450
477 E. Third St., Williamsport, PA 17701
In NV call (702)588-5654, Dept. 0134
Order Status Number: 588-5654
P.O. Box 6689
Stateline, NV 89449
Around town
Law scholarship available
Applications for the Joseph Milton Nance Tuition Fret
Scholarships in Law now are available. The scholarships are !
awarded to Texas A&rM students planning to attend Baylor |
University School of Law.
This year the number of scholarships awarded has been
increased from two to three. Deadline for applications is Feb. |
8. Students interested should contact Hilary Jessup, Acade
mic Counseling Office; or Dr. J.M. Nance, Department of
History.
Parks and Recreation interviewing
The College Station Parks and Recreation Department is
now interviewing instructors for Spring Classes and Recrea
tion Supervisors for Kids Summer Day Camp. Apply at City
Hall, in the personnel office, on Texas Avenue. For more
information call 764-3773.
Mills committee to award fellowships
i p . . J
accepting applications for the W.G. Mills Fellowship in Hyd-
- - -- .. ‘P’ _
rology for the Spring semester. Deadline for application is
Jan. 27.
The Fellowships provide finacial support to four or more
highly qualified graduate students in hydrology. Appropri
ate areas of study include engineering hydrology, stochastic
hydrology, hydrometeorology, geohydrology, watershed
management and hydrologic techniques in water resources
planning.
Order graduation announcements
May and DVM Graduates must order their graduation
announcements before Feb. 8. Announcements can be
ordered in the MSC Student Finance Center, room 217,
from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday.
Volunteers sought for RSVP project
The Retired Senior Volunteer Program of the Brazos
County Community Council is looking for volunteers lobe
trained as mental health paraprofessjonals to do counseling
in local nursing homes.
To help meet the need for mental health services forolder
persons, the Texas A&M Department of Educational Psycol-
ogy, the Texas Agriculture Extension Service and the Re
tired Senior Volunteer Program have joined to recruit, train
and supervise the mental health paraprofessionals who par
ticipate in the project.
The first meeting for those interested in the project is
Wednesday from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. at the First Presbyte-
rain Church of Bryan, 1100 Carter Creek Parkway.
To submit an item for this column, come by The Battalion
office in 216 Reed McDonald.
Most-costly wel
turns out dry
iei
fte
and
and
fan
United Press International led, assumed the field
CLEVELAND — Standard contain oil reserves of at least l-:an
Oil Co. (Ohio) Friday billion barrels when it bid onitdeff
announced it is abandoning its lease for the tract. m C
$1.5 billion Mulkuk well In Houston, Sohio’s produi'
offshore Alaska — the most ex- tion subsidiary said tests fro: gam
pensive ever drilled — because four zones in the Mukluk wdby
final tests confirmed it is a dry yielded salt water and onftn
hole. traces of oil. One zone produ«|van
Sohio and 10 other com- 27,000 cubic feet of naturalga: shot
panics spent $1.5 billion to pur- day with the water flow from! half,
chase leases in the Mukluk area, well. BT
which some oil analysts had pre
dicted would prove to be the
largest oil field discovered in
North America since the lucra
tive Prudhoe Bay field was
found in the 1960s.
The first Mukluk exploratory
well is located 65 miles north
west of Prudhoe Bay in the
Beaufort Sea.
Sohio, which said the Mukluk
well was the most costly ever dril-
The Sohio announceme^
confirmed preliminary datasF
leased by the company on Dec
indicating the Mukluk wellco(|
tained water.
The Cleveland-based con|
pany had invested $430
in the 9,860-foot well that* 5 !
drilled in 50-foot-deep waKL,
Sohio has the largest stake j
31.4 percent in the well 11
/r
WANTED: Roommate share in townhouse by 2818,
$ 130/mo/. 1/3 of bills. Call Jim 693-3962. 77t5
MSC LEADERSHIP OPENINGS
%
MSC Committee Chairman
and
MSC Council Positions
General Information Meeting
Tuesday, January 24
5:30 Rm 216T
Sohio said it will take a
million after-tax writeoff fortk |
well against its 1983 earninf
The well will be plugged.
“We didn’t write off the wl* 1 !
investment because we may^
cide to do additional drilling 1
parts of the Mukluk area,’
Richard Nash, director of SoM
investor relations.
“Obviously the company I
disappointed,” he said. “Ini's
oil business, you drill a lol 1
holes and more are this waytk 1
successful. It is the natureoN L
beast.” L .
Eugene L. Nowak, end l c
group director for Dean Win 1 pg/
Reynolds Inc. in New York,%
the test results on the first Mnt
luk well will make oil companf ^
“take a second and third look
the Beaufort Sea area.
Other companies with 1
terests in the well are Mc i
Corp., Shell Oil Co., Tetfjj
Inc., Diamond Shamrock,
ish Petroleum Ltd., PM 1
Amerada Hess, Gulf Oil Cotj ^
Koch and Elf Aquataine.