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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 11, 1988)
Page 4/The Battalion/Friday, March 11,1988 & w* SB^VICES STUDENT LOANS AVAILABLE GSL, SLS, and PLUS Loans (still making loans for this semester) In Addition To Making Loans, We Offer: •3 to 4 week processing time in most cases •No credit check for SLS loans if a full-time student •Loan consolidation •Graduated repayment •Debt management •Scholarship search service For More Information Call 696-6601 First Venture Group 7607 Eastmark Dr. College Station, Tx. 77840 75ti/l 9 TERRI G I’m Yours Always and Forever S.S. 114t3/11 * HOUCE LAWN BUSTERS COMPLETE LAWN CARE SERV ICES, Qualily Work, Reasonable Rates. 696-0318. 112tS/30 VERSATILE WORD PROCESSING - BEST PRICES. ,EREE CORRECTIONS. RESUMES, THESES, PA PERS, GRAPHICS, EQUATIONS, ETC. LASER ‘QUALITY. 696-2052. 163tfn Professional Typing, Word Processing, Resumes. Guaranteed error free. PERFECT PRINT 822-1430. 8115/4 CAL’S BODY SHOP. 10% discount to students on la bor. Precise color matching. Foreign & Domestics. 30 years experience. 823-2610. Ill tfn TOESL Test preparations $500. for 9 mo. program. I- .... ....... _ - g6 _ p 20 Study Visas available. Kaplan Center 696-PREP. 11lt3/8 TYPING: Accurate, 95 WPM, Reliable. Word Proc essor. 7 days a week. 776-4013. 85t2/30 Experienced librarian will do library research for you. Call 272-3348. 106t3/31 WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu scripts, reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614. 106t4/5 m $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 HEADACHES We would like to treat your tension headache with Tyle nol or Advil and pay you $40. CALL PAULL RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL 776-6236 23t10/2 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 COLD STUDY 18 & Older If you have recent onset of cold symptoms you can earn $75 by participating in a short at home study using over-the-counter cold medications. Call Pauli Research International 776-6236 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 COLD-FLU-FEVER Individuals with fever of 101° or higher to participate in an at home study. We will come to your home to start you in study. $100 incentive for those chosen to participate. Call Pauli Research International 776-6236 110tf $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 * 'mm HELFWAmST •iH lli : LIFEGUARDS First Colony and S.W. Area Interviewing March 12; 12-5pm Austin Parkway Aquatic Center, First Colony 4350 Austin Parkway, Sugarland, Tx. (713) 859-0425 11213/11 Would you like FREE Color Analysis & image consulta tion. Call 774-4057. 110t3/l 1 Defensive DRIVING, TICKET DISMISS, Insurance DISCOUNT, FUN CLASS! Call 693-1322. 95t5/13 Hi Needed part-time delivery person. CTWP 693-8080, Sharon. 110t3/ll *. AmOONCEMEKT FREE Free black, silver & tan kitten to go the supplier. Please call 693-5484.. Across From A&M Walk to Campus •Quiet •New Paint •New Carpet •Large 1,2 & 3 Bedrooms Now leasing & Preleasing University Terrace 1700 Jersey #101 693-1930 WAKE UP AGGIES! Luxury 4-plex 1,000 sq. ft. 2 bedroom, Hollywood baths washer/dryer shuttle bus Call WYNDHAM MGMT 846-4384 ALL BILLS PAID!! 1 & 2 Bdrm units Deluxe Apartments Newly Decorated 1 Bdrm as low as $292 2 Bdrm as low as $402 Call 693-6716 (8am-5pm) 114tfn Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx. 1 Bdrm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $248 Rental assistance available! Cali 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5pm. 4tf Bryan location 2 Bdrm - 1 1 /2 Bath Townhome with deck and enclosed garage. Must see to appreciate. 823- 8153 or 779-2326. 112t3/22 Pre-leasing 3 BR/2 BA Dpplex near .Hilton. 846- 2471/776-6856 63t/indef. 2 Bdrm, 1 bath large windows & tall trees. Normandy Square Apts, in Northgate 846-4206. 99tfn A Luxury 2 Bdrtn/1 Vi Bath 4-plex. Washer & Dryer. All Appliances. $325/$250. Manual Dr. 693-0551, 696- ’86 Cavalier Z-24. 2.8 FI, loaded, nice, automatic only. $6750. 823-8444, 776-0778. 108t3/25 NEW ENGLAND BROTHER/SISTER CAMPS - (Mass). Mah-Kee-Nac for Boys/Danbee for Girls. Counselor positions for Program Specialists: All Team Sports, especially Baseball, Basketball, Field Hockey, Soccer, and Volleyball; 25 Tennis openings; also. Ar chery, Riflery and Biking; other openings include Per forming Arts, Fine Arts, Yearbook, Photography, Vi deo, Cooking, Sewing, Rollerskating, Rocketry, Ropes, and Camp Craft; All Waterfront activities ( Swimming, Skiing, Small Craft). Inquire Action Camping (Boys) 190 Linden Ave., Glen Ridge, NJ 07028; (Girls) 44 Center Grove Road, H-21, Randolph, NJ 07869. Phone (Boys) 201-429-8522; (Girls) 201-328-2727. 11013/25 Need Cash for Spring Break? We pay cash for gold, silver, old coins, diamonds Full Jewelry Repair Large Stock of Diamonds Gold Chains TEXAS COIN EXCHANGE 404 University Dr. 846-8916 Seeking individual to teach Color Analysis & image consultation. Call 774-4057. 110t3/l 1 Students needed to conduct brief telephone interviews, Monday through Thursday. 5:30pm-8:30pm. March through April. Transportation needed. Contact De partment of Rural Sociology. 845-5332. 11 U3/11 NATIONAL CAMP ASSOCIATION; Summer Camp job clearing house - HIGHEST salaries paid - QLIICK and efficient job placement - a FREE service - Call us for an interview 1-800-752-CAMP. 113t3/23 TAMU VOLLEYBALL- Any female (freshman or sophmore) 6’0” or taller & interested in trying out for varsity women’s volleyball team contact Coach A1 Givens 206 GRW or call 845-3266. 113t3/21 CLASSIFIED ADS „ - Look at the Ads in the I have all 110t3/l 1 ^ ' 7 ‘ * • Jewelry work with wholesaler. Call for prices. 693-6645 after 5. Illt3/ll Mobile home for SALE. 12’x60’, quiet convenient loca tion close to shuttle & University. 846-3728. 109t3/24 ’85 Alliance Convertible. 1.7 L, 1 owner, 25,000 miles. $5195.822-9013/774-4953. 108r3/25 Friday LATTER-DAY SAINTS STUDENT ASSOCIATION: Institute Director Edgar Woiferts will speak during the sandwich seminar at noon at the Institute Build ing. There also will be a LDSSA Council meeting at 3 p.m. in the same building. Saturday WESLEY FOUNDATION: will leave for the mission trip to Reynosa, Mexico at 7 a.m. from the foundation. Sunday BRAZOS VALLEY ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE FAMILY SUPPORT GROUP: Betty Jackson, social activities director for the Brazos Valley Geriatric Center, will speak on “How to Better Manage the Person with Alzheimer’s Disease” at 3 p.m. in 164 Medical Sciences. Items for What’s Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald, no later than three business days before the desired run date. We only publish the name and phone number of the contact if you ask us to do so. What’s Up is a Battalion service that lists non-profit events and activities. Submissions are run on a first-come, first-served basis. There is no guarantee an entry will run. if you have questions, call the newsroom at 845-3315. A&M official urges departing students to be safe on break By Taani Baier Reporter Many Texas A&M students soon will be leaving College Station for a week of fun and sun, and even though they may not even want to think while on break, they should be aware that safety is important. Dr. Jim McCloy, acting vice presi dent of academic affairs for Texas A&M at Galveston, said people hear speeches about safety time and time again, but accidents still happen. Making students aware of the dan gers they may encounter while on break can help to keep those acci dents to a minimum, he said. “With that many people you’re going to see some accidents,” he said. “Of course we’re concerned, but we can’t do much before the fact. All we can do get the information to the students and hope they listen.” Don Schattel, executive director of the Park Board of Trustees in Galveston, said that they expect be tween 20,000 and 25,000 students. Two favorite spring break activ- ies, drinking and swimming, can lead to problems, but the two to gether can lead to fatalities. The biggest concern is that stu dents are going to drink and then try to swim, McCloy said. McCloy said the third-largest age group of drowning victims are those between 19 and 24 years old, out numbered by only teenagers and young children. College-aged peo ple make up 15 percent of all drow- ing victims, he said. Bushnell said everyone knows that excessive exposure to the sun can be harmful. However, some peo ple might not realize that the reflec tion from the white sand almost dou bles the intensity of the sun. “We just want to reinforce wear ing plenty of sunscreen,” he said. Because of the subtropical climate of South Padre, dehydration tends to cause a few problems, Bushnell said. Students need to be aware that alcohol increases the dehydration rate, he said. McCloy said that other factors that present safety problems are rip currents, falsely called “undertow,” and sand bars and troughs, “Rip currents can sweep a person into deep water very quickly,” Mc Cloy said. “Knowing: what to do can KAYPRO 4, Protable CPM Computer complete with TTX letter quality printer, with programs MSBasic, WordStar, Perfect Writer/Speller, Perfect CALC, dust cover, cables and spare ribbon. $750. Phone 693-6376. 1ID3/21 He said one of the biggest reasons for the high percentage is that there are so many more people in that age group at the beaches. Aggies, along with thousands of other students from around the country, will flood Texas beaches. Dick Bushnell, communications director for the South Padre Visitor and Convention Bureau, said that between March 12 and March 19, they expect to have 75,000 college students visiting the city. During the spring break season, late February to late March, they expect to have a to tal of about 250,000 students. Cloy said. “Knowing actually save your life. If you do get caught in one, swim parallel to the shore until you’re out of the current, then swim ashore. Most of these cur rents are found near rock groins and piers. “Hidden deep spots in the surf are hazardous. Just be aware that they’re out there and be careful.” McCloy’s last tip for beachgoers is to he sensible. “If you’re going to drink, remem ber that alcohol and water don’t mix,” he said. “With a lot of drown ing victims, alcohol plays a major part.” HONDA ELITE Scooter, won in contest. You can drive it home from the dealer, save $$$. 693-1163, 696- 6730 for details. 11113/21 PC/AT 286 CLEARANCE! 1,2MB drive, 512KB RAM, 10MHZ turbo, keyboard, monitor - $795. 693-7599. 113tfn Clements: Proposal to fight AIDS spread may be illegal AUSTIN (AP) — Gov. Bill Clem ents says a proposal to instruct drug users in cleaning shared needles and engaging in safe sex is under review and may not be legal. “The whole idea is under dis cussion,” Clements said Wednesday. “My general counsel is looking into it. We’re looking at the legal aspects of it. Apparently, in their charter, they’re not legally allowed to do this.” Clements was referring to a pro posed pilot project by the Texas Commission on Alcohol and Drug Abuse designed to help combat the spread of AIDS. Last week, commission officials said that under the program, intra venous drug users would be given bleach and instructed on cleaning shared needles. They also would be educated about safe sex practices and given condoms. Bob Dickson, executive director of the commission, voiced disappro val that news reports had focused on the proposal, saying it was only one aspect of the fight against acquired immune deficiency syndrome. “The drug-using population . . . the main avenue for the spread of AIDS to the heterosexual popula tion,” he said. “That’s what needs to be remembered.” OFF LIMITS («> Sat & Sun 2:10 4:35 7:05 9:25 Post Oak III Moonstruck ^ Sat & Sun 2:00 4:00 7:00 9:00 Cinema III Hope and Glory R Sat & Sun 2:00 4:30 7:00 9:20 Post Oak III MASQUERADE (R) Sat & Sun 2:10 4:10 7:10 9:10 Cinema III She’s Having A Baby Moving (PG-13) w/ Richard Pryor Sat & Sun 2:05 4:20 7:20 9:30 Sat & Sun 2:05 4:05 7:05 9:05 Post Oak III Cinema III Salutes Faculty/Staff On tl attain tier t lormer Jfurra) Tirooks Dr. John A. Adams of the center for International Business Studies has bees named the Nation's Exporter of the Year. Dr. Larry Johnson, a life sciences researcher in Texas A&M’s veterinary pit gram, has been named the 1988 winner of the Young Andrologist of the Vea Award. Dr. Marcetta Y. Darenbourg, a chemistry professor, has been voted chairme elect of the Inorganic Division of the American Chemical Society. The Texas A&M University System Board of Regents Monday confirmed promotion of 81 faculty members and granted tenure to 47, effective Sept. The following faculty members have received tenure: College of Agriculture: J. Tom Cothren, associate professor of soil crop sciences, and Jeremy F. Taylor, associate professor of animal science College of Engineering: M. Driels, professor of mechanical engineering l Koppa, associate professor of industrial engineering; C. Lessard, associate^ fessor of industrial engineering, and R. Startzman, professor of petroleumeiu | oim £ peering. College of Geosciences: Wilford D. Gardner, associate professorofocerli'il! s ography. College of Liberal Arts: Alex Mintz, associate professor of politicalsciencf College of Science: K. Van Winkle-Swift, associate professor of biology College of Veterinary Medicine: D.G. Schimitz, associate professoi large-animal medicine and surgery, and L.C. Skow, associate professor of v* inary anatomy. The following faculty have received promotions and tenure: College of Agriculture: Steven R. Archer, assistant professor of range ence, to associate professor; Harold L. Goodwin, assistant professor of agiiai tural economics, to associate professor; Charles M. Kenerley, assistant sor of plant pathology and microbiology, to associate professor; Karen i| Kubena, assistant professor of animal science, to associate professor; Robert;ilo po Maggio, assistant professor of forest science, to associate professor; Stepfe t() coni B. Smith, associate professor of animal science, to professor, and Thomas’ii n w ^ ia Welsh, assistant professor of animal science, to associate professor. College of Architecture and Environmental Design: Joseph L. Mar 0 burn, assistant professor of architecture, to associate professor. College of Business Administration: Robert A. Davis, assistant of business analysis and research, to associate professor. „ College of Education: Viola E. Florez-Tighe, assistant professor of edu« f iew " tional curriculum and instruction, to associate professor. College of Engineering P. Cantrell, assistant professor of electrical wj neering, to associate professor; K. Chang, associate professor of electricalnj neering, to professor; J. Congleton, assistant professor of industrial enginaemj to associate professor; S. Lau, assistant professor of mechanical engineehnc| associate professor; D. O'Neal, assistant professor of mechanical enginer;! to associate professor; G. Peterson, assistant professor of mechanical neering, to associate professor, and M. Weichold, assistant professor of eterl cal engineering, to associate professor. College of Geosciences: E. Grossman, assistant professor of geolog) i associate professor, and A. Raymond, assistant professor of geology, to» ciate professor. »ram ^uces. The ems | a 1 a g lurray room /ell-p ized. I u P e ■hey an How< College of Liberal Arts: Michael R. Baye, assistant professor of econoncf to associate professor; Albert S. Broussard, assistant professor of history, sociate professor; Margaret Ezell, assistant professor of English, to assoc5| professor; Jennifer R. Goodman, assistant professor of English, to professor; Craig W. Kallendorf, assistant professor of English, to associate:: fessor; Jonathan Kvanvig, assistant professor of philosophy and humanities associate professor; Robert D. Newman, assistant professor of English,to ciate professor; William F. Owen, assistant professor of speech comm and theater arts, to associate professor, and Stephen R. Yarbrough, asssa professor of English, to associate professor. dp College of Medicine: Steven L. Peterson, assistant professor of meoo pharmacology and toxicology, to associate professor. College of Science: Carl A. Gagliard, assistant professor of physics.ic sociate professor; Jeffrey D. Hart, assistant professor of statistics, to assoc professor; Michael Pilant, assistant professor of mathematics, to associate: fessor; Terry Thomas, assistant professor of biology, to associate professr Mary Wicksten, assistant professor of biology, to associate professor, and Yasskin, assistant professor of mathematics, to associate professor. College of Veterinary Medicine: G.K. Carter, assistant professor of ia' animal medicine and surgery, to associate professor. The following faculty have received promotions: College of Agriculture: Roger W. Meola, associate professor of ento* logy, to professor, and Jefferey W. Saveli, associate professor of animalscieffi to professor. College of Business Administration: Frank P. Buffa, associate profesa of business analysis and research, to professor; O.C. Ferrell, associate prote; sor of marketing, to professor; Gary A. Giroux, associate professor of accoir( ing, to professor; Michael W. Pustay, associate professor of management: professor, and Richard W. Woodman, associate professor of managemr professor. College of Education: Carl P. Gabbard, associate professor of healtl’i physical education, to professor; Douglas J. Palmer, associate professorol« cational psychology, to professor; Linda H. Parrish, associate professorofS cational psychology, to professor, and Charles H. Shea, associate profess | health and physical education, to professor. College of Engineering: D. Allen, associate professor fo aerospaces neering, to professor; A. Gadalla, associate professor of chemical engim to professor; M. McLain, associate professor of mechanical engineering, ti fessor; G. Miller, associate professor of mechanical engineering, to pre' and D. Russell, associate professor of electrical engineering, to professor. College of Liberal Arts: Sara Alpern, assistant professor of history, ciate professor; Shirley J. Black, assistant professor of history, to associate fessor; Claude L. Gibson, assistant professor of English; to associate Robert Harmel, associate professor of political science, to professor; Ri Stadelmann, assistant professor of philosophy and humanities, to professor; J. Richard Steffy, associate professor of anthropology, to prol Victor H. Treat, assistant professor of history, to associate professor, and W. Wenck, assistant professor of speech communication and theater arts,lei sociate professor. College of Medicine: William R. Allen, associate professor of pediatric professor; Gary R. Elkins, assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral ence, to associate professor; Phalguni Mukhopadhyay, associate p internal medicine, to professor; Mark Osman, assistant professor of inle' medicine, to associate professor; Takeshi Wajima, assistant professor olii nal medicine, to associate professor. College of Science: G. Donald Allen, associate professor of mathemi to professor; John W. Sevan, associate professor of chemistry, to profess 1 ’ F. Greenbaum, associate professor of biology, to professor; Che-MingKo,as ciate professor of physics, to professor; Eckard Krotscheck, associate prates of physics, to professor; Norman W. Naugie, associate professor of matt# ics, to professor; Howard J. Newton, associate professor of statistics, to pie 1 *; sor; David W. Owens, associate professor of biology, to professor; Williamfi dell, associate professor of mathematics, to professor; Kirby Smith, asset professor of mathematics, to professor; Roger A. Smith, associate p physics, to professor, and Thomas E. Wehrly, associate professor of statisi to professor. The earn ( jfeatin) ’ay ai entei Salutes is a community service provided by The Battalion to list students, In- and staff who have received honors and awards (such as scholarships, if ment, etc.). Space is limited and is provided on a first-come, first-served^ There is no guarantee that your submission will run. Submissions mayte fused if they contain incomplete or incorrect information, if you haveanpi tions, please call The Battalion at 845-3315. TRANS Transmission Service 10% off transmission service with Aggie ID (TJFree Transmission Check [7]Standard & Automatic Trans# -8382 3002 Longmire Behind The Ponderosa Inn 693 ne an thi yo srr your business deserves some prime-time thesep S exposure. what’s happening on thei let them know what’s happening with) call 845-2611 to place advertisements in at^ be pn