The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 29, 1984, Image 10
Battalion Classified Page 10/The Battalion/Wednesday, February 29, 1984 HELP WANTED Weather improving in the state THE GREENERY is interviewing for positions on: ‘LANDSCAPE MAINTE NANCE CREWS ‘LANDSCAPE INSTALLA TION CREWS (Starting Pay $4.00 per hour) The Greenery is located at 1512 Cavitt (Near Ron Yokem Toyota) 823-7551. lOltlO United Press International Snow, which combined with power lines throughout the ek, ice and high winds to snap Pat mage’s Is now accepting applications for full & part-time SALES with an opportunity to advance to a MANAGEMENT position. Retail experience perferred. Please ap ply in person. Pat Magee's Post Oak Mall,iQ7t3 SWENSEN’S: Now interviewing for PART-TIME COOKS AND WAIT PERSONS. Flexible hours, competitive wages. Apply in person at Cul pepper Plaza, College Station. 107tfn ASSISTANT MANAGER TRAINEE- wanted at FARMER’S MARKET BAKERY AND DELl.Minimum 35-40 hours/week. Restaurant ex perience required. Apply in per son, 2700 Texas Avenue, Bryan. 99t10 Aulo Mechanic and attendam needed. Refer ences needed. Apply in person only, 815 Texas. College Stalion. 107t8 Part-time help wanted, evenings and weekends. Apply in person at 3-C Bar-B-Q, C.S. 107t3 Needed: Dental receptionist-assistant. Will train. 75-1838. 94tH Female afternoon bartender. Waitresses, bar tender. Call For Appointment, 846-4691 or 775- 7919. 104tU AIRLINES 111 RING!!! STERWARDESS, Res- ervations! $14-39,000 Worldwide! Call for di rectory, guide newsletter. 1-(916)944-4440 TEXAS A&M AIR 87tl0 OFFICIAL NOTICE ATTENTION LIBERAL ARTS STUDENTS CO-OP positions for summer and fall are being filled at this time. Contact 845-7814 or come by 420 Harrington Tower for more infor mation. 10315 ATTENTION LIBERAL ARTS CO-OP STUDENTS If you have not checked in with our of fice within the last month, please con tact us as soon as posible. Summer and Fall positions are being filled at this time. We can be reached at 845- 7 » 14 PERSONALS WANTED: Info, leading to the whereabouts of the LOWLIFE that backed into a Maroon 1980 Mustang in front of the A&A bldg, late last week. Call 846-6179. 107t2 NEED A VACATION? If the only thing keeping you in town over Spring Break is finding a replacement for yourself at work, call Jim, 696-7111. I’m looking for work over spring break. 107t5 ,SKI VAIL/Beaver creek call TOLL FREE 1-800- 222-4840 for discounts, Condos 6c equipment. 95t20 FOR SALE All wood 36x19 desk. 2 love seats sofa. Call 696- 8615. 105t5 COMPUTER OWNERS If you would like to sell your Computer, we will buy it. (we need Mcln- tosh s) 214-722-4489. lOltlO Mustang Special option TRX aluminium rims 1982-84 $200.00, 696-5548, Ron. 105t5 Black Lab puppies, really cute. Six weeks old. $10, 822-7812. 106(5 1973 Plymouth Valient. Excellent condition, in side and out. Radial tires; re-built engine; new oil and water pumps. $900. Call 693-5788 105t5 Skiers, Rossignol CM, Hanson Slolom, Scott Poles, 693-1264 evenings, Phillip. 106(6 1981 YAMAHA XJ200H good condition ap prox. 5000 miles. Must sell. Call Jim 696-7111 $600 o.n.o. 107t5 1975 Yamaha 650, low miles, good condition. 693- 7059 after five. 103t5 1982 Yamaha Towny 50cc motorbike, low mileage, $350 includes 2 helmets, 846-7546. 103t5 FOR RENT 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 75tfr> Room, large furnished, bath, 1 block TAMU, pri vate entrance; $150.00. Work lower rent, 693- 5286. 105t5 LOST Wedding ring lost on campus: Ladies white gold, checked pattern, reward, 846-1286 103t5 LOST: High school class ring during Dead Week. REWARD. Call 693-8025. 105t4 LOST: Texas-Texas A&M Football game. Heavy gold bracelet. REWARD. Please call (713)461- 4093.10019 Lost Ladies gold Holex watch with diamonds. Pos sibly in or around Rudder Center Friday evening. Reward, 779 7150 101t7 FOR RENT 3 bdrm., 2 bath in 4-plex near TAMU $350.00. Work, lower rent. 693-5286. 105t5 A 3 bedroom, 2 bath near TAMU, washer/dryer in cluded. $495/mo. 696-7714 or 693-0982 after 6p.m. 696-4384 75^ CLOSE TO TAMU 4-plex 1 bedroom 1 bath, un furnished, all electric ap pliances, water paid, w/d con nections $270/mo. 779- 1613.94114 ROOMMATE WANTED Female roommate needed to share furnished house with other female sudents. South of campus, walking distance, quiet neighbor hood. Non-smoker, non-drinker $158.00 rnonthly. Bills paid. Free laundry facilities, 696-5286. losts SERVICES TYPING Reports, dissertations, term papers, re sumes WORD PROCESSING Rea sonable rates. Executive Secretarial Services at Main entrance to A&M on Texas Avenue, 121 Walton, 696-3785. 107118 TYPING. Reports, Research papers, etc. Fast serv ice, near campus 696-0914. 102t5 WORD PROG'ESSING: Dissertations, theses, manuscripts, transcriptions, reports, term papers, 779-7868. 91t25 Fastest tvping in town. 20 years experience. Reli able. 693-8537. 693-6483. 92130 K’s Typing/wordprocessing service. Dissertations, Thesis, Reports, etc. 775-7710 or 822-5027. lOOtlO TYPING All kinds. Let us type your proposals, dissertations reports, essays on our WORD PROCESSOR. Fast service. Reasonable rates. BUSINESS & COMMUNICATION SERVICES 100 W. Brookside 846-5794 92158 BOARDING KENNELS 24 hour Supervision with lots of T.L.C. Weekly and monthly rates make reservations early. DURR’S DOSES 696-0099. 10714 TYPING We understand form and style. AUTOMATED CLERICAL SERVICES 110 Lincoln 693-1070 90136 ON THE DOUBLE All kinds of typing at reasonable rates. Dissertations, theses, term papers, resumes. Typing and copying at one stop ON THE DOUBLE 331 University Drive. 846-3755. 9itfn SPECIAL NOTICE EUROPE! Roundtrip air Dallas $559/Houston $569 2mo. EURAILPASS $370, Hotels, Groups. Rain bow Tours. (713) 524-2727 collect. 95t5 PETS Free black kitten with shots. Call 846-6559. 107t5 WANTED •CASH# BEFORE YOU SELL your old gold, silver, and rare coins to just anyone, let the profession als at Texas Coin Exchange make you our high cash offer! Texas Coin Exchange has been in business in Bryan for over 25 years, with a large selection of rare coins and gold coin jewelry. We also stock: •Black Hills gold jewelry •Cold chains by weight TEXAS COIN EXCHANGE 404 University Dr., C.S. 846-8916 3202A Texas Ave., Bryan 779-7662 82142 Panhandle this week, had al most melted away Tuesday as temperatures warmed. The Department of Public Safety reported highways in Lubbock and Amarillo were normal. Afternoon readings Tuesday remained mostly in the 30s and 40s, but sunshine was reported statewide. Winds were a rela tively calm 10 to 25 mph and a warming trend was forecast for Wednesday. During the height of the storm Sunday night, wind gusts of 60 mph combined with the weight of wet snow and ice, snapped power lines across the region. Southwestern Public Service EARLY BIRD SPECIAL Sign a summer or fall lease on a one, two or three bedroom apart ment at BRIARWOOD APART MENTS before March 1st and be entitiled to our “Early Bird” rates. Apartments start as low as $190 per month. 10315 SCHULM Afi THEATRES I OFF ADULT TICKETS 1st SHOW SAT .-SUM. STUDENT DISC. MON.-WED S 2 WITH I.D. spokesman Bill Crenshaw of Amarillo called numerous out ages across the Panhandle “the most intense problem SPS has had for several years.” “We have had outage prob lems over a wide geographic area,” he said, adding the area included Pampa, Borger, Am arillo, Olton, Denver City, Lo renzo and Lubbock. SPS spokesmen in Lubbock said power was expected to be restored to most Lubbock resi dents by Tuesday afternoon. Alton Higginbotham, manager of Lighthouse Electric Co-op in Floydada, said some rural cus tomers might have to wait until Thursday to get their power re stored. The winds, which fanned grass fires all over the state last weekend, also created problems on the coast, where three days of gales up to 60 mph blew so much water out of Corpus Christi Bay that the Texas Highway Department Tuesday turned away loaded trucks wanting to cross over to Mus tang Island on the Port Aransas ferry. Highway Department spokesman Ed O’Donald said, “The only thing we’ve been able to get on (the ferries) is cars. We can’t lower the thing (ferry ramps) down enough where trucks can be off-loaded. “The winds have tjuit now and the water’s draining back in. It flat blew it (water) out of the bay. It’s a rarity this ever happens. The wind blows the water out of the bay and no more openings than we have in the island, it takes awhile to drain back in.” He said highway department officials hoped to be able to start carrying loaded trucks on the five ferries that operate across the bay by Tuesday eve ning. But not all the news was had with the wind. SCHULMAN 6 2002 E. 29th 775-2463 775-2468 RLITT TMCATM*! r *2.25 7:35 9:55 RECKLESS 7:25 9:45 FOOTLOOSE 7:20 9:40 LASSITER 7:30 9:50 UNCOMMON VALOR 7:15 9:35 WEEKEND PASS 7:35 9:55 RISKY BUSINESS MANOR EAST III Manor East Mall 823-8300 7:10 9:35 YENTL 7:20 9:40 NEVER CRY WOLF 7:25 9:43 BROADWAY DANNY ROSE Mon. tr rl ♦*! S p.nv 30 m*m**«* o* the «st f».‘* r r.re -••** ’he dey Saturday A Sunday Senior C‘l*ze. *{€': * *sver) Anvtin*e Students ail day FrkJev. AH Seats Tuesday 5:00-7:30-10:00 11-Academy Nominations • TERMS OF ENDEARMENT” (PQ) 5:30-7:40-9:40 ‘UNFAITHFULLY YOURS” (PG) 5:15-7:45-9:55 “STAR M” (R) ENDS THURSDAY CINEMA 3 3'S COLLEGE NORTH 846-6/14 8:90 Only (No Disc.) 8 Academy Nominations “THE RIGHT STUFF’Vg) 5:15-7:30-10:00 Actlpmy Nominated StraapSCItm In •SILKWOOD” (R) 5:45-7:45-9:45 BLAME IT ON RIO” (R) ads get ‘Piggies’ -J*- Serving Luncheon Buffet Sandwich and Soup Bar Mezzanine Floor Sunday through Friday 11 a.m. to i :30 p.m. United Press International NEW YORK — A feminist group Tuesday singled out na tional advertising that showed a woman cop in hot pants, heavily made-up girls in provocative poses and a naked woman put ting on her underwear as sexist and degrading. Women Against Pornogra phy, a Manhattan feminist group, awarded nine national advertisers plastic “Piggies.” WAP said the ads portrayed women as “eternally young, thin, white, passive, wealthy and heteroxexual, as self-hating and asking for abuse, as mere bodies and body parts.” Jordache jeans was cited for the “ultimate in advertising mis ogyny” — an ad that “portrays women as whores.” Joan Kennedy of Jordache’s in-house advertising depart ment said that the women at Jordache and its customers weren’t offended. In the print category. Pigs went to: — Harper’s Bazaar and An drea Carrano for ads featuring heavily made-up little girls bar ing their bodies and striking provocative poses; — Gillette for its Daisy razor ad that showed a policewoman dancing out of her precinct sta tion dressed in hot pants; In the video category, Pigs were presented to: — Poochie Glamour Nails for an ad showing little girls as “simple-minded and obsessed with their looks;” Delicious Food | Beautiful View y* Open to the Public — Hanes for its ad about a woman who, after winning ad mittance to an all-male club, is ogled by the club members; — Berlei for its cable com mercial showing a nude woman putting on her underwear. -€*• “Quality First” ^ WAP also found some ads it liked, among them one for Crest for a TV commercial showing a little girl who doesn’t like coming in second and a fa ther who is proud of his daugh ter. LEAP INTO.. Student Government RHA, OCA, Class Councils Yell leaders If you are interested in elective offices in these organizations!groups, attend an INFO SESSION Wednesday, February 29th (Leap Day) Room 226 MSC 8:00 p.m. sponsored by Student Government Election Commission Around to\ Engineers to conduct Dean’sl The Student Engineers Council and the Student Si is sponsoring a spring Dean’s Forum Thursday from j to 1:45 p.m. in 102 Zachry for all students in iheG Engineering. The Dean’s Forum is an informalnw tween students and administrators which givesbotbl a chance to discuss problems and opportunities(#| provement in the College of Engineering. The them the meeting is Student/Faculty Relations. Deansrl pai tmenl beads w ill answei (piestiousconcerningtheiJ Kite flying contest to be Sam The College Station Parks and Recreation Dep will host the Sixth Annnual Kite Flying Contest Si at Anderson Park. Pre-registration begins and I and the contest will begin at 2 pan. The contest is hee .uni is open to all ages.TheWil quirement for entering is that the kite musilxluml and must tl\. 1 shuts will he aw.ti (led to first places* in events mu h as l>est decorated Wit. most activetatl original kite, largest kit, smallest kite, highest tltinji oldest kite flyer and highest kite flyer. Science students musttakeexQ Any juniors or seniors in the College of Science whol not previously taken the English Proficiency Examt: plan to take the test this semester unless they bn pleted English 301 with a minimum grade of C.Studa the College of Science are required to passeitherEiy 301 or the test in order to qualify as a degreecandids the College of Science. The English Department will administer ihecxair! dents in the Biology, Chemistry, Mathematics and Pbi| Departments should register for the exam in 151( Blocker before March 2. I Dorm rooms still available forspi The deadline for students to move to campusfej Spring semester and be eligible to reserve a room lot j fall is March I -n 5 />./n. For more informationoai^ Housing Office, 101 YMCA Building or call 845 Tft Alpha Lambda Delta tohosfteo Alpha Lambda Delta, the Freshmen honor socitf having a Pledge Tea March 1 at 7 p.m. in 302 R® Freshmen with 12 hours or more with a grade pointiffl 3.5 or better are invited to attend the tea and join: group. Jeff Croflon, head yell leader, will be the|s speaker. Dues are $15. Those students whocannoiaiK tne tea must turn in their dues to Charlotte Taylor,sets floor of the Pavilion by March 1. Bi pc >ec League to organize for spring Registration for the College Station Little Leap continue through March 1 at the South Knoll C® from 6 to 8 p.m. All College Station children betwceoil ages of six and 18 are eligible to play. The season April 28. Fees will be $17 per individual or S27 per d Late registration is $22 and $37, respectively. Run for Arts entry forms available Entry forms for the Second Annual Runforthi available in the Memorial Student Center from 10 Br p.m. through March 2. The 5K and 10K races areIxt*’-- ” sponsored by MSC OPAS in conjuction with theT.tf || ed Roadrunners Club. ghi m To submit an item for this column, come by TheBa! office in 216 Reed McDonald. Police Beat The following incidents were reported to the University Po lice Department through Tues day. MISDEMEANOR THEFT: •A student’s purse con taining her driver’s license, stu dent I.D. card, $35 in cash and several credit cards was stolen from a study carrel on the fourth floor of Sterling C. Evans Library. • A blue Schwinn Letour 10- speed bicycle was stolen fro- moutside Sterling C. Evans Li brary. hen tie i • A blueSchwinn Silt' cati 10-speed bicycle was ■ Vance from the Davis-Garybiktfi Ived • A blue and silver Igop ten-speed bicycle was >' Some f rom the Astin Hall biker: en t r CRIMINAL MISCHlff titer, • An entrance gateau s h ac Parking Annex 19 wasbri ces ev BURGLARY: embei led a lining An Apple 11 puter, an Apple II DisLj^ Cur l | and a Sony TV monitoi® 11 ^ stolen from 104E Physii L^ ei Building E. MSC Cepheid Variable presents “An old fashioned rock and roll horrot m liie; movie with solid humor and enough jolt® 0 oi to keep you bolted to your seats. 'V More than anything it’s a lot of fun!’ ®* AN AMERICAN WEREWOLf IN LONDON THE MONSTER MOVIE 7:30 9:45 Rudder Theatre $1.50 Thursday, March 1 R RESTRICTED UNDER 17 REQUIRES ACCOMPANYING PARENT OR ADULT GUARDIAN