Battalion Classifieds FOR RENT ^■T.srsiy.is^sag^ One and V2 blocks from campus 2 BDRM/1 BATH 3 BDRM/2 BATH Limited Time Special Rates $399. $575. •Fully Furnished •Washer/Dryer •Covered Parking 402 Nagle at Northgate (Off University Drive Behind Skaggs) 846-8960 2 bedroom apartment, $2tM./nio. No bugs and super location, pool. Redstone Apartments. Take over Spring lease. On bus route. 693-2131. 75tl2/18 2 bdrm. for lease spring semester. Fireplace, w/d hook ups, 693-2735. 74t 12/18 2 8c 3 bdrm. house. Some near campus. $300. - $450. Suzetteat696-1414. 74tl/15 Condo for sale or rent. 1 Bdrm., 1 kfc bath, studio type. Good location. Woodbrook Condos. 764-1951. 71tl/8 Carbomedics, Inc. State-Of-The-Art-Manufacturing. CarboMedics, an internationally respected manufac turer of sophisticated components for medical implant devices, has an opening for the following position: Pro totype Engineer. Assists Prototype Manager in devel opment of prototypes, including materials selection, tooling and fixtures. Rcauires Mechanical/-Material Engineering degree and background in machining- /tooling of close tolerance parts. (Preferred R&D inter est rather than production.) CarboMedics is located in the b' tutiful Texas hill country and can offer a com petitive salary, extensive Ircnefit package and reloca tion expenses. Please forward resumes to our person nel department or tall collect: Carol Vaughn, CARBOMEDICS, INC., 1300-B East Anderson Lane. Austin, Texas 78752. (512) 837-1741. 69t 12/18 2 bedroom, 2V7 bath Woodbrook Condominium for rent. On shuttle, fully furnished including microwave, w/d, dishes, fireplace, etc. 4 beds. Call Julie, 260-4069 or (214)348-6462. 7D12/18 One bedroom apartment. $325./mo. All hills paid. Pool, sauna, laundry facilities. Must see to appreciate Call Sara, 693-6716. 54U/24 3 bedroom, 2 bath home near campus. All appliances, fenced. $495./mo. 696-0700, 776-0738. 7 U12/18 Bargain at $250. Attractive 2 bedroom apt, in 4-plex. 1.7 miles from campus. Washer/dryer connection, dishwasher, disposal. Call 693-7761 or 775-5270. 70U2/18 AAA Apt. 3 bedroom. 2 hath $375. 2 bedroom fenced. house $350. Near ANM. December liec. 093-5286. 65tfn Cripple Creek #3 up for sublease (Jan. - May). No de posit required. 696-9696 or 693-4684, Alan. 73t 12/18 El RS I' MON TH FREE REN 1 or $265. for 5 month lease, furnished, 1 bdrm., 1 bath, mile from campus. 696-3512. 73U2/18 Vet students: two bedroom, one bath fourplexes near vet school. W/D connections, water, sewage (laid. Call 776-0255 .64112/18 Wellesley Court two bedroom Hollywood 1 1/2 bath. Approx. 1000 sq. ft. Upstairs washer 8: dryer, deck, near shuttle, $395,693-4750,696-1660. 64U2/18 Shady, fenced. Lot 12, Oak Forest, 14X56, 2 bedroom, new, 1 bath and kitchen, central air/heat, storage build ing, appliances with washer Sc dryer, $8900, finance. 693-5206 or collect 806-793-9491. 64t 1/20 FREE RENT UNTIL JANUARY. $300 cash drawing. Large, clean, 2-bedroom apartments. 4 blocks from campus. Rent $300. 846-7506. Spuce & Boyett69tl2/18 Must lease my 2 bedroom for spring semester. Bill paid. $479 , $431. through August. Near tennis court and pool. Call Nancy, 693-6716. 69tl2/l8 HELP WANTED COLUGCTOURJ- FREE TRIP TO MAZATLAN, MEXICO DURING SPRING BREAK Last year we took over 10,000 students from over 200 college campuses to the sunny beaches of Mazatlan. We are looking for reps on your campus to work promoting this trip in their spare time in return for a free trip. The trip for Texas A&M is March 15-22. For more information call Jeanette or Debbi on our toll free watts line (1-800-528-6025). SEE YOU IN MAZATLAN!! “STUDENTS” EARN EXTRA MONEY selling Eagle subscriptions door to door. Work on your own time. Positions available for January. Good commission rates. Call Charlie, 776-4444 #366. 69t12/9 Part-time Position Open Austin office of national student travel/edu cational exchange organization is looking for highly motivated student with Interna tionalist outlook to handle marketing of prod ucts and programs on TAMU campus. Good experience, interesting spot for the right in dividual. Salary open, some possible travel benefits. Send letter and resume to: Personnel Department Council Travel/CIEE 1904 Guadalupe #6 Austin, TX 78705 72112/1C Houston Chronicle looking for early morning paper delivery route people. $400-$700 monthly. Call Julian at 693-2323 or Andy at 693-7815. 65tfr Accounting grad, student for busy doctor's office pa time position. Apply, 1775 Briarcrest Dr. at E. 29th S 68 rt- t. fn Warm and loving woman needed 10 care for three small children of professional couple in Nashua, N.H. (45 miles north of Boston). One year commitment. Ref erences required. T ransportation to New Hampshire provided. Call (603)882-1244. 73tl2/18 Student worker positions open for Battalion Distribu tion. Apply at 230 Reed McDonald, 845-2611. 7U12/I8 Part time help. Grapevine personality. Call 696- ■3411. 66tfn Male student aide needed to clean nursery school daily, 846-5571. 72tfn NEED A HOLIDAY JOB? Work your hours in your hometown or here in town. Call 693-6025 or 693-5958 to make appointment. 73112/18 SERVICES CASH for gold, silver, old coins, diamonds Full Jewelry Repair Large Stock of Diamonds Gold Chains PERSONALS ADOPTION Happily married, well educated couple with one adopted child wish to adopt infant. Confidential. Expenses paid. Call collect: (201)545-9047. 73t1/20 horticulturist THE GRASS IS GREENER AND THE FUTURE IS BRIGHTER ATCHEMLAWN f Our horticulturists enjoy the best of both worlds - challenging outside work, fresh air, sunshine, and independence - AND exciting career development through company-pro vided off-season training. You'll start by fertilizing and controlling in sects for commercial and residential trees and shrubs. You will sell our service and manage your own route. Our firm promote- from-within policy provides excellent ad vancement prospects. We can offer qualified individuals year-round employment which includes an excellent salary/benefits package, good salary pro gression potential, and opportunity to earn incentive compensation. Look into a greener, brighter future with ChemLawn. A degree in horticulture is preferred. Candi dates with landscape, nursery or related ex perience will also be considered. For more details, send your resume today to: ChemLawn Services Corporation 14150 Westfair East JL Houston, TX 77041 (713)694-1986 /WljinR An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F CKMUWN & ORDER NOW! for Christmas & Cotton Bowl Game Official AGGIE FLAG J’x5’ Nylon Flag AImo Available 6’ Flag Pole Kit with Mounting Bracket ^LaGGIE Flag @ $39.50ea.... ^ (Includes Tax) Flag Pole Kit @ $7.90 ea (Includes Tax) Shipping and Handling $ 2.50 TOTAL Enclose check or money order and mail to: A&M FLAGS, 816 S. 31st, Temple, TX 76501. (817)771-1491. Name Address V City State Zip Allow approximately one week for delivery Page 4/The Battalion/Tuesday, December 17,1985 ‘Studying abroad can impress future bosses’ By MOLLY PEPPER Reporter The study abroad program is a big plus to have on your resume. Be cause while having a degree is the norm, having studied abroad shows a desire to experience different envi ronments, Cathy Schutt, academic services secretary, says. Schutt added that employers real ize students who have gone overseas have better interpersonal skills than those who haven’t. Dealing with peo ple from different cultures makes you a better communicator, she said. Mona Rizk-Finne, study abroad coordinator at Texas A&M, said studying abroad makes a resume stand-out. Last summer the Study Abroad Office sent more than 200 students on programs to study overseas. Schutt said she expected approxi mately the same number of students to go this year. Not all of the programs that the Study Abroad Office sponsors are for study. Students can also choose summer tours which are not for col lege credit. Although Schutt was afraid some students might take the tours just for the prestige of studying abroad, she said she’s been surprised at the en thusiasm of students who have come into the Study Abroad Office. “They seem to have something built-up inside them that stimulates them to want to go overseas,” she said. “They’re not intimidated by it. The culture shock doesn’t frighten them off. They have an T don’t care, I just want to go’ attitude.” Schutt said about 10 percent of the students who come into the of fice don’t even worry about getting college credit. Most of the students are graduating seniors who want the “They’re not intimidated by it. They have an ‘I don’t care, I just want to go’ attitude.” — Cathy Schutt,academic services secretary chance to go overseas before they graduate, she said. But some students study overseas without going through the Study Abroad Office. Some students would rather spend time overseas studying at for eign universities, Schutt said. She advises students to get an address and write to the university overseas for a complete course description. And if a student wants to receive academic credit at A&M for these courses, they should see an adviser before they leave, she said. “A&M is very thorough on credits and they only want the best,” Schutt said. “There’s a lot of information out there and a lot of institutions, but they’re not always going to be transfered back to A&M ” Manal Fares, a junior psychology major, studied in Italy during the “A&M is very thorough on credits and they only want the best. There’s a lot of information out there and a lot of institu tions, but they’re not al ways going to be trans fered back to A&M. ” — Cathy Schutt summer with one of the liberal arts programs. She said she saw more while on the program than she would have if she had she been trav eling independently. Jeff Cordes, a junior biology and Spanish major, went to Spain last summer on a liberal arts program. He said studying abroad had a pro found effect on his life. “I’m not so narrow-minded,” Cordes said, “I can see the perspec tives of other people and I can see how they arrive at opinions.” Cordes said the learning envirno- ment in Spain could not be repro duced in a classroom at A&M. “You would have to recreate the last 1,000 or 2,000 years of history," he said. “The thing that is different is not just physical — it’s the way of thinking and it’s passed on through generations.” Julie Bachman, a graduate stu dent in business administration, studied in Italy as an undergrad uate. Now she’s trying to do the same thing as a graduate. She’s working through the Coun cil of International Education Ex change, which provides information on graduate schools, study programs and tours abroad. “I’m looking at trying to get an MBA abroad or do some kind of ex change like I did with my under graduate work,” she said. “I think it was a really broadening experience.” Michael Tagaras, a sophomore aerospace engineering major, said he also hopes to work abroad, but he doesn’t plan to study abroad. Taga ras has lived in Europe most of his life. His father is in the military. He said he travels abroad to learn about a different way of life. “I see opportunities to learnaffi ferent system than what’s in Ameri ca,” he said. “I’m not going ovet there lor the money and I’m noi going over there to see the sights,be cause I’ve already seen them. I’ll going because I want to see a ne* way of interacting with people." Rizk-Finne said students gain per sonal, academic and professional re wards from studying abroad. On the personal level, she said, students see ways of thought that are different from their own. On the academic level, she said, students experience what they learn instead of reading about it in a text book. On the professional level, she said, students learn about the busi ness and educational systems in for eign countries by interacting with students from foreign countries. But despite the value Schutt said the cost of studying abroad frightens many students. "Money often frightens people away because of the price of a pro gram," she said. But Schutt says if you compare the cost of going to summer school away from home to the cost of study ing abroad, you’ll find studying abroad is comparable in cost but not in value. Schutt says scholarships to study abroad are not available at A&M. Rotary Clubs often have schol arships for study abroad, she said Students can apply for these through their hometown Rotan Club. The MSC Travel Committee has an overseas loan fund for which stu- “I see opportunities to learn a different system than what’s in America. Tm not going over there for the money and I’m not going over there to see the sights. Tm going becausel want to see a new wayoi interacting with people." — Michael Tagaras, aero space engineering major dents can apply. Committee member Kathy Barclay said that last year the committee provided eleven $51 loans. Students can apply during the fal or spring semester, she said. The next application time will be Jan. 21 to Feb. 14. Students will submit ap plications and be interviewed by committee members, Barclay said, Proposed no smoking rules make cigarette lovers fume OFFICIAL NOTICE ATTENTION 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 I 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 will 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 lished; 33112/18 LOSTAND FOUND Lost senior ring Dec. 2, north campus area. Call Cris, 696-1199. ' 74tl2/18 Diamond necklace. Lost Monday, 12/9. Sentimental va lue. Reward offered, call 260-5453. 72tl2/18 WANTED Count! Bowl tickets Wtttued. Southwest Conference I'lavolf. NC AA Final 4. Buy. Sell. (713)783-6558. 67U2/18 TEXAS COIN EXCHANGE 404 University Dr. 846-8916 3202-A Texas Ave. (across from El Chico,Bryan) 779-7662 “ ON THE DOUBLE All kinds of typing at reasonable ratwS. Dissertations, theses, term papers, resumes. Typing and copying at one stop. ON THE. DOUBLE 331 University Drive. T YPING, WORD PROCESSING. Resumes, reports, dissertations, thesis. Executive Services. 696-3785. 72tl2/18 Defensive driving. Insurance discount, ticket deferral, call: 8a.m.- 5p.m. Mon-Fri. 693-1322. 13x12/18 If you are paying out of state tuition, and want to pay in state 8c make some money, call 779-1532 8c leave name, number. 73tI2/18 FOR SALE 2 twin beds, mattress, box springs, 8c frames. $75. per set. Sofa, $100. Chair, $50. Negotiable. 764-1951. 7 It 1/8 Cotton Bowl tickets for sale. Best offer. (214)227-2704. 74tl2/18 14 x 72 mobile home. 3 bdrm./2 ba. In quiet Bryan park, 3 miles from campus. (713)472-6750. 74tl2/18 HAZELTINE 1420 computer terminal. Commercial quality/features. Perfect condition, asking $375.00 846- 9512. 7U12/17 Manual typewriter, bicycle, student desk and chair, twin box springs and mattress. 846-3954. 72tl2/18 Schwinn Supersport, 23” frame. Outstanding condi tion, asking fl 40.00. 846-9512. 71112/17 Emerald rings, 0.2 and 0.3 karats. 18k gold certified. Call 696-1067 or 696-0617. 72tl2/18 1980 Bonneville, 1982 Reliant-K Station Wagon. Both very clean, excellent condition. Your choice $3450. 775-4940,845-3385. 73tl/15 ROOMMATE WANTED Female; non-smoker; own bedroom, bath; washer- /dryer; on shuttle route; $ 175. and bills; 693-5181. 74tl2/18 Roommate needed: share room in apartment, $99. month. Neva, 693-2184. 73tI2/18 Male roommate wanted for 2 bedroom condominium. $225./mo., no utilities. Cripple Creek. Jim or Mike, 696-0491. 73U2/18 Roommate needed. Own room &• hath. Call Ricky, 696- 5463 or (512)895-2141. 73t 12/18 Female roommate for spring semester. 2 bdrm., 2 hath, shuttle bus. $217.50. 764-7243. 73U2/18 Roomatc needed in an excellent situation - cheap, Scott. 696-1658. 67tl2/I8 Associated Press AUSTIN — City officials are pon dering an ordinance that would limit smoking in public buildings and pri vate workplaces, rules a councilwo- man says are proposed on the prem ise that everyone has the right to breathe clean air. Supporters of the ordinance say passive exposure to tobacco smoke — such as breathing smoke from someone else’s cigarette — is a haz ard to nonsmokers. Limiting smoking in offices, res taurants and other gathering places would follow action taken by Dallas and several other major cities, back ers say. “The ordinance operates under the basic premise that everyone has the right to breathe clean air,” said Councilwoman Sally Shipman, who proposed the ordinance along with Mayor Frank Cooksey. A public hearing has been sched uled for Thursday evening. The plan submitted by Shipman and Cooksey would forbid smoking in all public buildings and private workplaces, except in areas desig- - nated for smoking. The effort is supported by Friends of Austin Nonsmokers and other groups, including the local chapter of the American Lung Asso ciation. Dr. James F. Pohl, a spokesman for the local lung association, said the city council has the responsibility for making the city a safe place to live and work. “To eliminate a public danger or nuisance, regulations need to be en acted.. . . Concentration of tobacco smoke in the workplace is often vet) high, and innocent bystanders suffei the consequences,” said Pohl, a pul monary disease specialist. One group opposing a no-smok ing ordinance in private workplace is the Texas Association of Business Ronnie Volkening, spokesman fo the group, said it hasn’t studied th city council’s proposal, but that th group’s feelings “are pretty muc the same as when a similar law wa introduced in the last session of th Legislature.” The business group argued tha the state proposal, which neve reached the floor of the Texa House, was unnecessary. San Antonio, Brown & Root near $750 million settlement Associated Press SAN ANTONIO — A $750 mil lion out-of-court settlement with the former contractor of the South Texas Nuclear Project was on the City Public Service board’s agenda Monday. Bob McCullough, spokesman for the city-owned utility, said the board was scheduled to take up a resolu tion authorizing CPS General Man ager J.K. Spruce to sign the agreement. Such action would clear the way for CPS, one of four utilities that have joined forces to build the nu clear plant, to begin receiving set tlement payments. CPS’ share of the settlement is $210 million, which would be paid in quarterly installments of $7.5 mil lion each over a seven-year period. The CPS board is the first to for mally consider ratifying the agreement with Brown & Root, the original contractor for the $5.5 bil lion nuclear plant near Baytown. » The settlement was reached after the four utilities filed suit in 1981. Houston Lighting & Power Co. and Central Power & Light Co. of Corpus Christi, two other partners in the project, initially asked for a Why Settle For Less? Oi’ Lou Pays More For Used Books. loupot’s BOOKSTORE FREE PARKING IN REAR FOR CUSTOMERS Public Utility Commission review of the settlement. “We could have started takiif payments Oct. 1,” McCullough said “but we wanted to wait until the Pi/ decision was worked out. “If we had gone ahead and settled by ourselves, the PUC could hate gone ahead and said the settlemen 1 wasn’t alright and HL&P andCPUl should go back to court,” he said. Since then, HL&P and CPkl have dropped their request for* PUC review. The fourth partner, the City of Austin, has not taken formal actio* on the agreement. ALL: The Battalion 845-2611 Warp Wale SHOI SOME LCOKE here GEORC father fac has killed by attachii of his vehi ficials say. The bo and his t Brandon on the fre lated spo about eig town. Deputy said the shoved th side of th( Oiln ball/ sily trying project th fte Bible t Stephei Balias ho Cadillac, doors a c derricks a Removi Stephens from who ttillion to “I belit