The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 30, 1984, Image 8

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    Battalion Classified
HELP WANTED
JOBS! JOBS! JOBS!
TEACH IN BEAUTIFUL BROWNSVILLE!!!
-On The Border-By The Sea-
For a rewarding job with a competitie salary
consider employment with the
BROWNSVILLE INDEPENDENT SCHOOL D^tRICT
where growth and quality education go hand in han
Here are just some of the benefits you can look toward to:
[7) Salary Range:
$17,800-$26,640.00
[3 $1.000 Bonus for
Special Education Teachers
[3 $500 - $1,000 Bonus
for Bilingually Certified Teachers
[3 Perfect Attendance Bonus
(3 Free Group - Health Insurance
(3 Up to 60 days accum^ted
sick leave - 20 days rei^sed
upon official retirement
(3 $15,000 Life Insurance
$30,000 Accidental Death
[3 Free Professional
Liability Insurance
[3 'Old Mexico’ across the border
within walking distance
(3 Sick Leave: 5 days state -
5 days local
[3 $48 million worth of building
improvements and expansion
underway
0 Tropical climate- beach and
resort areas only minutes away
For more information call Mr. Oscar Barbour, Asst. Supt. for Personnel,
1050 East Madison, Brownsville, Tx 78520
(512) 546-3101, Ext. 255
The Brownsville Independent School District is an Affirmative Action, Equal
Opportunity Employer, M/F/H. Dr. Ronald Schraer, 504 Coordinator. 4215
PART-TIME HELP.
FLEXIBLE HOURS.
APPLY 2-4 P.M.
201 DOMINIK
41t5
Part-Time
Night Managers
693-6119
Apply 2-4 p.m.
MODELS: Ad agency building
model file. Need models, all
ages. Please send current photo
(non-returnable), personal info
and phone number to:
P.O. BOX 2755, BRYAN, TX 77805
Part-time maintenance position. Experience preferred.
Must have transportation and tools. Approximately 20
nd Saturday. Beal Realty, 823-5469IOt 10
hours a week and Saturday. Beal
Student workers wanted starting immediately.
S4/hour Two shifts: 6-9 p.m.; 5:30-8:30 p.m. For more
info, call 846-5923 after 6 p. m. 39t4
MR. GATTI’S is now hiring part-time DRIVERS for
delivery. Wages are $3.75/hr. + 6% commission. Must
have own car and insurance. Come by weekdays be
tween 2:30-5:00 or call 846-4809 for appointment. 39tl0
Need person able to lift heavy boxes to work in ware
house. Prefer someone to work morning hours. 15-20
hours per week. $3.75 per hour. Contact Kathy
Shearer, 779-1762. 41t5
Female afternoon bartender, waitresses ami D.J. Silver
Dollar. 775-7919 or 846-4691. 28(16
PIANO DEMONSTRATING POSITION. Part-time
requires strong outgoing personality. Perfect for stu
dent or student's spouse. KEYBOARD CENTER,
POST OAK MALL, 764-0006 for appt. 42t30
DOMINO'S PIZZA needs DELIVERY PERSONNEL.
Earn $5 to $8 dollars hour. Apply after 4 p.m. Towns-
hire Shopping Center or call 822-7373. 42t2
OFFICIAL NOTICE
AGGIELAND REFUND POLICY
Yearbook fees are refundable in full during
the semester in which payment is made.
Thereafter no refunds will be made on
cancelled orders. Yearbooks must be picked
up during the academic year in which they
are published.
Students who will not be on campus
when the yearbooks are published, usually
in September, must pay a mailing and hand
ling fee. Yearbooks will not be held, nor will
they be mailed without the necessary fees
having been paid. 3^41
DIRECTORY REFUND POLICY
Directory fees are refundable in full during
the semester in which payment is made.
Thereafter no refunds will be made on
cancelled orders. Directories must be picked
up during the academic year in which they
are published. 31t41
PERSONALS
New credit card! No one refused! Also, information on
receiving VISA, MASTERCARD with no credit check.
Free brochure. Call 602-951 -1266 ext. 505 42t3
referrals-Free pregnancy testing.
713/524-0548.
n pr
Houston, Texas
I0t64
FOR RENT
TIMBER RIDGE APTS.
1 & 2 Bedroom Flats
2-1V2 Town houses
Now preleasing for Dec. 3 blocks
from campus. Laundry & Pool.
503 Cherry St., 846-2173. 32f2C
Mini Warehouse
Sizes of 5x5 to 10x30
The Storage Center
764-8238 or 696-5487.
In the country, but close to
TAMU! University Acres is the
place to be. 2 bdrm. 1 bath from a
low $225 with some bills paid.
Pets welcome. Call Apartments &
More, 696-5487 16t30
ALL SIZES ARE AVAILABLE NOW! Bryan Mini
Storages, 3213 Highway 21 West, Bryan, Texas 77803,
775-4127. 40t30
FOR RENT; Two bed apts., furn/unfurn. $250-1285,
4l5Co!lege Main, Northgate, 775-0349. 15t30
FOR RENT
Walk to Class from...Your Own 1
bdrm. 1 bath apartment. Study with
out pets or children making noise
around you. Laundry facilities on sight
and a convenience store next door.
What more could an Aggie ask for?
Call Apartments & More, 696-5487.letio
* Professional Typing on the Word
Processor - DEPENDABLE, ACCURATE
<S FAST Open Rate: $1.48/page - Double
Space/48 hour.
* Creative Resumes that help you get the
jobs you want - includes editing, typeset
ting & disc storage.
* International Translation - 7 major languages.
42110
TYPING
Personalized Services. We care. We
understand form and style. Beginning
our fifth year.
AUTOMATED CLERICAL SERVICES
110 Lincoln. C.S.
693-1070
TYPING
All kinds. Let us type your proposals,
dissertations, reports, essays on our
WORD PROCESSOR. Fast service.
Reasonable rates.
BUSINESS & COMMUNICATION
SERVICES, INC.
100 W. Brookside 846-5794 i2t29
ON THE DOUBLE
All kinds of typing at reasonable rates.
resumes. Typing and copying at one
stop. ON THE DOUBLE 331 University
Drive. 846-3755.
91tfn
Professional wordproccssing. Satisfaction guaranteed.
Reasonable rates. 775-5202 after 6 p.m. 42t5
TYPING-EDITING. 846-32I1. Yes that’s 846-3211
for fast, accurate, reasonable word processing. 33t 10
PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Term papers, thesis, let
ters, labs. Experienced, dependable, reasonable. 693-
8537 SStSI
Let Suzy Type It! Accuracy quaranteed. Second Paper
. ( -
absolutely free! Details, 775-8476.
GAYLIN E 775-1797, information. referrals, peer
counseling, 5:30-10:30p.m. Sunday-Friday. 39t20
, word processing. All work error free.
- 31t35
Expert typing, word process
PERFECT PRINT. 822-1430
PRIVATE MODELING LESSONS (Male & Female)
Learn professional techniques in runway, make-up,
and photography. 260-0069. 4H2
FOR SALE
1983 Honda Nighthawk 550, low mileage, ferring and
Fitted cover included. $1800. 696-07
859-7882 (anyone).
(Dave), (713)
42t8
USED STEREOS - BEST PRICES. Fully serviced and
warranty. BARGAIN SOUNDS 846-4607
1983 Yamaha Heritage, low mileage, 650CC, 845-
5803,775-9474. 31tl0
"1980 Corvette, 4-speed, Brown, low mileage, loaded.
846-9134 after 5." 27t20
1975 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme. Runs good. A.C.
New tires. Must sell! $350.00, call 260-0463. 38t5
Mobile Home - 64'xl4' - 2 B.R. 2 BA. - 2 yrs. old-
washer & dryer-Clear Title-$ 13,500. George 822-6809.
36tl 5
WANTED
CASH
for gold, silver,
old coins, diamonds
Full Jeweiery Repair
Large Stock of
Diamonds
Gold Chains
TEXAS COIN
EXCHANGE
404 University Dr.
846-8916
3202-A Texas Ave.
(across from El Chico, Bryan)
779-7662 191
Page 8AThe BattalionATuesday, October 30, 1984
I
Dissertations, theses, term papers, |
cm
m:
50 followers
in hospital oil |
gypsy dies | 4
United Press International
MIAMI — Gypsy leader Fn-J
Mitchell died Monday while his(J
lowers jammed a hospital corridoij
honor their leader, despite oy
lions to their numbers and tlieirJ
ported use of wine and candfe;
bedside ceremonies.
A spokeswoman at Baptist Hi*;,I
tal said Mitchell, 61, died froi
varied ailments about 5 p.m,
day.
Seven cousins and other relatiJ
were lined up waiting to geirl
Mitchell’s room Monday.AsmamJ
50 have converged on the hospujjj
once since Mitchell, leader oiti
clan, was admitted Oct. 16,ofli
said.
On
(Hallow
(the Di
llast nig
victory
jits owi
Inals ol
| Brazos
“Wb
youldr
’His
de came from all (
> peopl m
the United States. This hasbmuj
tradition for a thousand ra
When one of us is sick, the
family is one,” Robert Mitche
in Ins thick Romanian accent.
Hospital spokeswoman Jo I
said rules limit the numberofn
tors to four in the critical are t
where Mitchell wasbeingtre
blood poisoning, kidney
stroke, a perforated intestine i
difficulty breathing.
“We have to try to accommakl
otlui patients and familiesil
said Baxter. “I have seen upwardsi I
50 family members in the hi
one time. We feel like we havein
c >\ er backward to try and accocE I
date Mr. Mitchell's family. 1 '
Among the concessions ms if |
< ision to allow the family toliy |
'Vine lo Mitchell’s bedside fork
sip.
Hospital employees saidtheb
ily —- as is the gypsy tradition-s
tried to bring lighted andlei
Miu hell s Itedside. Oxygenunhi
•" < <l ""I' a lew feet away.Fa
members denied thechartt.!#
ever.
Photo by DONN FRIEDMAN
March for decency
Beth King holds her s*, Aaron at the Citi
zens for Decency marc, against the Adult
Video bookstore Friday.'i n g, who is not a
member of the group, sai s he heard about
the march and decided to join in. Members
of the group marched on 7-11 stores last
weekend calling the Southland Corp. the
biggest purveyors of smut in the country.
1 hey have allowed us to pud |
c t oss by his bed,” said cousuji
A l> Mitchell. “We have not In
candles. We have enough*®
know that they have gas in thtrt
v 'oine lamily members sia)«ii
ti.dly at hospital-owned faciici |
relatives of ailing patients.
Me had lodging renltdhi
week and they threw us on .
there,” said Irene Mitchell,thta I
in.m's daughter, “l admit well L
bit ol a nuisance, thereweresoa I
of us.
Baby Fae upgraded to serious
United Press International
LOMA LINDA, Calif. — Baby
Fae, the 16-day-old infant with the
baboon heart transplant, was taken
off a respirator Monday and up
graded from critical to serious con
dition, a hospital spokeswoman said.
“All vital signs are stable,” Jayne
McGill said. “She’s been taken off
the ventilator and is breathing easily
on her own.
fif 1 person, known to receive a pri-
matg heart. The four adults all
died^ortly after surgery.
D°ors said the infant faced cer
tain di t h without the transplant be
cause s= was born with an underde-
velopecLft side of the heart.
Times, but because they are a differ
ent team they were unaware that
there was a need for a heart.
live option.
“Her heart is working well. The
IV (intravenous) tubes have been re
moved and she is passing urine well.
They expect her to start oral feeding
later today.”
But soi» researchers were critical
of Dr. Lv na rd Bailey, who per
formed thiQperation, saying a hu
man heart v s available in Southern
California aj should have been
used instead.
“I think that they did not make
any effort to get a human infant
heart because they were set on doing
a baboon.”
I hat would have been ij
month-old heart being putini[<
mature chest. The heal 4
probably lie too big. Thisdonoj
lx>on was screened for size."
Hospital spokewoman Carolyn
Hamilton said earlier the baby’s
mother had been playing gently with
her daughter and “loving her.”
“She’s doing really well today,”
she said. “She’s a healthier baby and
more alert than before surgery.”
Baby Fae is the first infant, and
Dr. Paul Teiqaki, a UCLA Medi
cal School prof sor who heads the
California Regio^i Organ Procure
ment Agency, sai t h e heart of a 2-
month-old girl w-) h ac j died was
available for transp n t the same day
Baby Fae received le heart of a 7-
month-old baboon.
Dr. Jack Provonsha, director of
Loma Linda's Center for Christian
Bioethics, admitted that Bailey did
not call the agency, but insisted the
seriousness of Baby Fae’s condition
warranted the fastest possible action.
Di. Richard Stiehm, dirtwj
l (-LA’s division of pediatritiaj
nology and allergy and a (nfj
consultant on transplant
disagreed.
“Dr. Bailey might be faulted in a
Monday-morning quarterbacking
sense for not having called over
there to see if they had a heart the
right size,” Provonsha said.
“A 2-month-old heartisni
necessarily,” he said. “Thesii
lers a lot, and it could havel*
possibility.”
“Our coordinator ca^d t h e Loma
Linda kidney transpl, t people,”
Terasaki told the L\
Angeles
“But when you put that iu the per
spective of a patient who’s in dire cir
cumstances, and you face picking a
new donor with no tissue typing, at
the time it doesn’t look like a very
Stiehm also was notasoptis
as Bailey that the baby’s in® 1
immune system will accept!^
“It’s going to reject sootf
later, that’s for sure," he said'! 1
human heart transplant^
that, too.”
12 OPEC members to cut production
United Press International
GENEVA — Twelve of OPEC’s
13 oil ministers meeting in an emer
gency session Monday agreed to
curb their oil output to maintain the
cartel’s $29-a-barrel base price, but
maverick Nigeria balked at agreeing
to production cuts.
“We are moving,” Saudi Arabian
Oil Minister Sheik Ahmed Zaki Ya-
mani said after the first formal
round of crisis talks at the Organiza
tion of Petroleum Exporting Coun
tries’ summit.
“All countries have agreed to re
duce production except Nigeria.”
OPEC’s crisis erupted when non
members Norway and Britain
jed the price of thei, light
North Sea crude to retain cusU ners .
Nigeria, one of the poorest <PEC
members, responded by unilatt-diy
slashing its similar quality oil by ? a
barrel.
Representatives of all 13 OPky
members — Algeria, Ecuador, G.
bon, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait
Libya, Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi Arabia,
United Arab Emirates and Venezu
ela — are in Switzerland for the
face of weak demand and outside
summit.
Yamani said the ministers were
trying to work out a plan to lower
OPEC’s current production ceiling
by 1.5 million barrels to 16 million
barrels a day to bolster prices in the
competition.
A senior Persian Cull delegate
said OPEC planned to curtail output
for the next five to six weeks until oil
demand picks up in the peak winter
season.
The delegate said the atmosphere
at the summit was “very tense” with
ministers divided over how the pro
duction cutback should be shared
among the 13 OPEC nations.
told reporters t
on three pro
OPEC’s $29 bz
and strengtheni
OPEC and agrei
entials.
All the ministers agr<
the summit opened at l
guarded Intercominental H p::
focus on cutting productiot
than its $29 base price.
The ministers also were split on
G issue of price differentials, or
h'v much members chn charge lor
va bus grades of crude oil, he said,
fdonesian Oil Minister Subroto
But industry experts
long and difficult bargaining
Ik- needed to get OPECG
with large populations anil s
debts to agree to production 08
LOST PUPPY! Female black lab. Last seen near East
Gate. 2 months old. If found please call 696-4060 or
693-7278 answer to the name of “Asia”. 42t5
UAW, Mack Truck reach tentative agreeme
We buy and sell used stereos. Call for details. 846-4607.
23t30
United Press International
SERVICES
TYPING
Reports, dissertations, term papers,
resumes, word processing.
Reasonable rates.
EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAL SERVICES
at Main entrance to A&M on Texas
Avenue, 121 Walton, 696-3785.
10123
ALLENTOWN — Negotiators
for Mack Trucks Inc. and 9,200
United Auto Workers reached a ten
tative contract agreement Monday,
ending a 9-day strike that closed the
No. 2 heavy truck manufacturer’s
plants in three states.
The three-year tentative pact was
reached following extensive negotia
tions conducted under a news black
out imposed by agreement with both
sides, UAW Vice President Bill
Casstevens and Mack Vice President
William Walker Sr. said in a joint an
nouncement.
The strike, which began Oct. 21
when the union’s two-year contract
expired, was the first by the UAW
against Mack since 1964.
As a condition of the tentative set
tlement, the union agreed to halt its
strike pending a ratification vote by
union members, the statement said.
No date'or the vote was set, but a
union spe eswoman said it could be
held “shofy.”
Terms c the contract were not
announced.
“We have^chieved our goals of
winning impwed job security and
greater econotic fairness for our
members at Mift,” Casstevens said.
Workers wer expected to return
to their jobs oi the first morning
shifttoday, a co*p a ny spokesman
said.
The walkout dosed r
Pennsylvania, New Jct i( '
Maryland and resulted in It 1 ’
440 workers lit an assemUfr
Oakville, Ontario.
The union set as its
job security and reinsti#
contract provision tyi
creases to productivity
union said it gave upthtf
when Mack was losingmonf