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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 18, 1985)
Battalion Classifieds Page 6AThe Battalion/Friday, October 18, 1985 Tutors FOR RENT B. Y. 0. B. Be Your Own Boss Monthly Parties • $50 reduction in rent for referrals Come Make Your Mark at Eastmark Luxury four-plex apartment. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, washer/dryer included. Large deck. Call 846-1633 or BrazosLand 846-0606. 32t10/21 Itar^iin! 2 1 .' UK. '2 Uuili. I blocks norih oi campiis. moiiiii. sib-uTTU. (7l:t) l in-o'jbi. 27i i i '» An excellent location. 2 bedroom studio apt. close to campus, on shuttle route. 693-9878. 21110/21 Intn-plcx one IH‘<lr<hnil tmlin iiishi'd. uaslici di\ei. Call 779-7:»7Haliei :i:00. ‘JallO IS OFFICIAL NOTICE ATTTENTION GRADUATING SENIORS If you have ordered a 1986 Aggieland and will not be attending A&M next fall and wish to have it mailed to you, please stop by the En glish Annex and pay a $3.50 mailing fee along with your forwarding ad dress so your Aggieland can be mailed to you next fall when they ar rive. 33112/18 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 within 90 days from time of arrival as an nounced in The Battalion Students who will not be on campus when the yearbooks are published, usually in September, must pay a mailing and handel- ing fee. Yearbooks"Witl not be held, nor will the be mailed without the necessary fees having been paid.33112/18 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 aca demic year in which they are pub- SERVICES 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. TvpiiiK l<»i ihtsts. dissertations, term pa|>crs. Will transt ril>e dic tation, reasonable rates. 693-1598.3111 1/4 Expert Typing, Word Processing, Resumes. AH work error free. PERFECT PRINT. 822-1430. 10tl2/6 Crniseship jobs. Phone 707-78-1066 for information. 30t 10/25 New Credit Card! No one refused! Also information on receiving Visa. MasterCard with no credit check. For details call: 602-947-3561 extension 505. 3 It 10/22 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY $10. - $.360. weekly/up mailing circulars! No quotas! Sincerely interested rush self-addressed envelope: Suc cess, P.6. Box 470CEG, Woodstock, 11. 60098. 21tll/8 HELP WAITED Wanted daytime drivers needed Earn S5-$8 an hour from salary, tips, and commission Daytime Hours Available Apply in person between 1:00 p.m. and 5:00 p.m. 1504 Holleman Dr. 693-2335 4407 Texas Ave. 260-9020 Townshire Shopping Center 822-7373 □ PIZZA ^ *’1980 Domino’s Pizza, Inc 32t10/18 Restaurant Opportunities LOOKING FOR A GOOD JOB IN FOOD SERVICE? Red Lobster is now hiring for the following positions: • Day Waiter • Day Kitchen • Day/Night Host • Day Waitress • Day/Night Hostess If you want a good job with TOP PAY and GOOD BENEFITS, apply in person from 9-11 a.m. or 2-4 p.m. at: • 813 Texas Avenue, College Station RED LOBSTER An Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action Employer 30t10/18 START YOUR CAREER NOW. Earn money and work on Fortune 500 Companies' marketing programs on campus. Part-time (flexible) hours each week. We give references. Call 1-800-243-6679. 34U0/21 GUYS, GALS, STUDENTS! Flarn extra Christmas money part time, full time positions. Apply at 1701 Southwest Pkwy. Suite 112. Apply between 10-1 and 4- 7. 30t 10/18 Uncle Charlie’s nightclub now hiring all positions. 1401B F'M 2818. Apply in person. S0tl0/25 Delivery personnel needed. Own transportation. Base- pay plus commission. Earn $4.-$8./hr. 268-3260. 33t 10/22 FOR SALE Software, Symphony. Lotus 1*2*3, Data Base, brand new, below T.A.M.U. prices. Call 268-2793. 32U0/22 Macintosh 128k carrying case, additional software, ca bles. $ 1275.845-0808 davs, 696-5056 evenings. 28110/16 77 TK7, excellent condition inside AND out. 55k. a/c. Call 260-4959. 28t 10/24 Graduating! Grand I’rix '77. $1950. Gall alter 4:00. 846-4260 28t5 81 Yamaha. 150 miles. 775-5369, leave number. 30t 10/18 Panasonic stereo reciever, two bookshelf speakers $60.00. stereo console with Garrard turntable $50.00. 846-6747. 33t 10/23 New Technics Receiver. 35 watts, fully digital. $110.00, Dave, 696-2879. 3St 10/23 CHIMNEY HILL BOWLING CENTER ~~ 40 LANES ' League & Open Bowling Family Entertainment Bar & Snack Bar 701 University Dr E 260-9184 Affordable French Degance From $175.00 With X French Accent”. ( A-1QCK& CYCLE Parts«accessories Repars all makes 10% Dscount on all Bicyclei& Unicycles We elso carry skateboard & skateboard parts 3811 E 29th Bryan Town & Cojntry Center 260-3810 STRETCH Your Dollars! WATCH FOR BARGAIIIS IN THE BATTALION!! LOSTAND FOUND Lost: Diamond stud carring between Beutcl Health Center and l cgclt Hall. Vcrv. \cr\ sentimental value!!! Reward if found. Call 260-0649. 3 It 10/18 SPECIAL NOTICE Defensive driving. Insurance discount, ticket deferral, call: 8a.in.- 5p.m. Mon-Fri. 693-1322. 13t 12/18 WANTED Wanted, childcare person. Some evenings, some days. Hours/fees negotiable. Gail 268-4168. 34tl0/24 Blondes. Brunettes, and Red heads for hair coloring show! 10-21-85. Phone Armstrong McCall 846-9711. 30t 10/18 Schlotzsky’s is now accepting applications for part time evening and weekend shifts. Apply in person only be tween 2:00 and 5:00 p.m. 33tlO/31 Wanted: We need drivers so we can deliver our pizza within 30 minutes. If you are 18 years or older and own a car, come by Chanello’s. Cash paid nightly. 20% com mission guaranteed at least $3.75/hr. Good drivers can earn $8.-$9./hr. Apply in person. 33tl0/25 ROOMMATE WANTED Grad student seeks roommate share 2br house, $160/mo., no bills, 2 blocks from campus. 693-3864. 34110/24 FOR SALE Sofa $80.. Ralicgh Bicvcle $75. Gall Mars West: 775- 5425/845-5841. 3 1110/21 1980 Yamaha 250. Must sell. Call Robert anytime: 693- 7037. 29t 10/18 1 845-2611 | $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 Asthmatic males or females to partici pate in a 10 day trial of a safe and effec tive over-the-counter asthma prepera- tion. $100. incentive. Call 776-0411. $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 24tufn Students and faculty offering help services By KATHERINE GOLLEY Reporter Midterm grades for Texas A&M students are due in the registrar’s of fice Monday. And for those students who aren’t going to be happy with the grades they get, there is help available. Two freshmen honor societies, Alpha Lambda Delta and Phi Eta Sigma, have combined efforts to of fer free tutoring. “We have been here for years, and only a handful of people has ever heard about us,” says Cathy Chicker- ing, president of Phi Eta Sigma. “We would like more people to know about our program and take advan tage of it.” Tera Hulse, the society’s adviser, says about 75 to 100 of the group’s 300 members participate in the tuto rial program. “Many of our tutors have not even been called for help once, which shows that our system can accommo date many more requests than it is receiving," Chickering says. A majority of classes tutored are freshman or first-level classes, such as chemistry and math. “Because it is sophomores who are doing the tutoring, we usually tutor freshman-level classes although we are not limited to just that level,” Chickering says. “We have a grad uate student and some upper-level students who offer their help for the upper-division classes.” Information about tutoring is available in the Alpha Lambda Del ta/Phi Eta Sigma cubicle in the De partment of Student Activities on the second floor of the Pavilion. Files contain cards that list the course the student is willing to tutor, the professor who taught that course and the semester the course was taken. Chickering says it is best to copy several different phone numbers of students tutoring the same class, in case one isn’t available. “The tutors are students also, so they have their own tests and dead- Texas Indian tribes seek recognition Associated Press WASHINGTON —T he Interior Department balked Thursday at rec ognizing two Texas Indian tribes seeking federal aid because their bloodlines might have “petered out” through intermarriage. Texas Reps. Ron Coleman, D-EI Paso, and Charles Wilson, D-Lufkin, are seeking to have the tribes — the Tiguas of El Paso and the Alabama- Coushattas of East Texas — offi cially recognized for purposes of re ceiving federal aid. State support of the tribes was jeopardized in 1983 when Attorney General Jim Mattox said Texas could not legally maintain the relationship, Coleman testified be fore a House Interior Committee hearing. Members of both tribes also ap peared before the committee. “Our request, in essence, is that you help our people survive as Indi ans and as a pueblo,” said Raymond Apodaca, tribal spokesman for the Tiguas, “and that you help us pre serve and protect for ourselves, our elders and our children, our birth right.” Hazel Elbert, acting deputy assis tant secretary for Indian affairs, said the Interior Department wants ac tion on Wilson and Coleman’s bill “deferred” so the department can spend up to two years investigating the tribes to see if they meet federal criteria for recognition. “If the bloodlines have, more or less, what I would call, petered out, then you’re talking about a group of people who aren’t really Indians at all,” Elbert said. Interior Department staff mem ber Michael Lawson said there was “concern” about possible intermar riage between Indians, Mexican- Americans and Anglos diluting the tribes. lines to worry about too,” Chickering says. The Texas A&M Mentor pro gram also offers help to students, both academically and socially. Kevin Carreatners, the student ac tivities adviser and a mentor, says more than 350 faculty and staff who are involved in the voluntary mentor program are willing to help stu dents. Carreathers says he gets about four calls a day from students asking him questions such as “Should I change my major?” to “How do 1 get a summer job? 5 ’ Mentors in each academic depart ment can be identified by the men tor shingle pasted to the door, or they can he found in a book listing the mentors by department. Mentors are willing to help the student either with a problem in a particular subject or with something personal, Carreathers says. “I would like to encourage stu dents to identify the mentors in their areas of studies and use them,” he says. “Everyone involved in the pro gram has volunteered to help, and they welcome the students’ ques tions.” In addition to these general tuto rial or help services, each depart ment has its own program. Departments in the engineering college have help desks or teaching assistants available in the specific subjects. John Rigas, a senior petrol engineering major, says aliki die petroleum engineering de| ment does not have an official! desk, the Society of Petroleum! neers has a room with plentyol vious class material and people are always willing to answeraij lion. 1 he College of Science also! similar program with eachdt| ment offei ing help in its area. Dr. Yi-Noo Tang, principalo dinator for the freshman cneni program, says lps departmentd five programs to help studenisi are having trouble. l ang stresses the one-on-one grams that are offered to tit dents. “We h ave a professor-tutorial® gram in which instructorsarei able most of the weekday hem answei students’ questionsandi < long assistant-tutorial prog® which laboratory assistants ait available most of the wei hours,” fang says. In addition to these prop many review sessions andspeoi lor e-test reviews also are offertd "Some students feel died more it they pay lor a tutors also have a list of tutors witlj rates and the classes they would to tutor posted on bulletinboml the c hemistry building,"Tangs I be College of Businessak let s help desks and review ski through die specific depanmens Shelli Shivers, a BusinessStii Council representative, says,1 course offers its own hdpi which is set up by the coordinau the course. It is besttogotk the course department in wind need help eidier for a tutoriali for a schedule of help sessions' Around town Yell practice to be In Waco Midnight veil practice will be held tonight at the Waco (ionsa non Center. T he Center is on Washington Avenue near the Hilior Baylor hosting reception for Aggies Baylor University is sponsoring an afternoon reception Satina preceding the Buylor-Texas A&M football game. The reception* be held in the Barfield Drawing Room of the Bill Daniel Stmls Center f rom 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. All students and alumni are invited Science students must take exam Any junior or senior in the College of Science who has not p vtousiy taken the English Proficiency Examination should pfait take the test on one of the following dates: Oct. 22, Oa.29, Noi.i Nov. 12 or Nov. 14. Students must take the proficiency exammiaii unless they have completed English 301 with a minimum grade',. Students entering the College of Science under catalog #107o:te must complete English 301 as required in their degree prop They are not required to take this exam. The English Pronoe 1 Exam will be administered by the English Department. Studensi the biology, chemistry, mathematics and physics departmenUstei register for the exam in 151 or 152 Blocker no less than three a prior to the exam date. AH exams begin at ti:45 p.m. and ends p.m. Charity bazaar to be held this weekend Post Oak Mall will hold its Fourth Ann-ial CommunityCte Bazaar on Friday, Saturday and Sunday during regular mailte Twenty-eight non-profit clubs and organizations from tkiti! Valley will have booths throughout the mall selling home® baked goods and handmade craft items. Profits from the baza*! directly to the individual organization making the sales. NOW sponsors talent show on Mondo) The Brazos Valley Chapter of NOW, the National Organ® of Women, is sponsoring a talent show Monday at 7 p m. at diet' lege Station Community Center, 1300 jersey St. The show fea® 15 talent, acts, including singing, recitations and an all-femalefi band. Admission is $3 at the door. TAMU Sports Car Club presents the Night Rallye October 19 7 p.m. Zachry Parking Lqt Drivers bring: navigator, pen, calculator, & flashlight, Entry fee: $5 member $8 non-member