Page8 The Battalion Monday, November?, 1988 Battalion Cronauer, actor share Classifieds ^ ew rea ^“^^ e similarititiAir . i imu r P’iii~iri > i • HELP WANTED ATTENTION DECEMBER GRADUATING SENIORS If you have ordered a 1989 Aggieland, please stop by English Annex between 8 and 5 and pay a $4.00 mail ing fee along with your for warding address so your Aggieland can be mailed to you next fall when they ar rive. THE HOUSTON CHRONICLE is taking applications for immedi ate route openings. Pay is based on per paper rate & gas allowance is provided. The route requires working 3 hours per day. Earn $500.-$700. per month. If interested call: James at 693-7815 or Julian at 693-2323 for an appt. 49111/071 DO YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS ABOUT YOUR LONG DISTANCE SERVICE? INTERESTED IN LEARNING ABOUT CALLING PLANS AND SPECIAL PRODUCTS THAT MAY SAVE YOU MONEY? Contact Pam Vela, your AT&T Student Campus Manager here at Texas A&M. Call:696-1151 Between 9:30-11:30 M-W-F 8-10p.m. T-R 51111/07 BURGER KING Now Hiring Shifts available during the following times: 5a.m.-11a.m. 11:00a.m.-4:30p.m. 4:30p.m.-8:30p.m. 8:30p.m.-4:00a.m. Apply in person between 2:30p.m.-4:30p.m. 1719Texas Ave. Culpepper Plaza Wren’s Wheel Alignment 500 W.J. Bryan Pkwy.(25th), Bryan 822-7884 Front End Alignment $17.95 Cars Only •Brakes*Shocks*Struts* Brasswind Recording Studio is looking for a part-time recording engineer with previous experience. Please bring resume by 2551 S. Tx. Avenue, Suite F, College Station. 48t 11/08 Drivers Wanted. 'l ake All Your Money Home Nightly. Apply In Person. Gumby’s Piz/.a. 1702 S. Kyle Suite 101. 48tl 1/08 WOMEN NEEDED FOR A NEW LOW-DOSE ORAL CONTRA CEPTIVE PILL STUDY. ELIGIBLEWOMEN PARTICIPATING IN THE 6 MONTH STUDY WILL RECEIVE THE FOLLOWING FREE: •oral contraceptives for 6 months •complete physical •blood work •pap smear •close medical supervision Volunteers will be compensated. For more information call: 846-5933 G & S studies, inc. (close to campus) Western Sizzlin Steak House is accepting applications for part-time week-ends 8c nights. For wait people 8c line service. 1701 S. Texas Ave. Bryan, Texas. 49tl 1/07 Make hundreds in your spare time placing posters. No selling. Call (918)-33MONEY. 49tl 1/09 • roiutmr SKIN INFECTION STUDY G&S studies, inc. is participatingin a study on acute skin infections. If you have one of the following con ditions call G&S studies. Eligible- volunteers will be compensated. * infected blisters * infected burns * infected boils * infected cuts * infected insect bites * infected scrapes ("road rash”) G&S STUDIES, INC. 846-5933 Yearbook fee’s 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 dur ing the academic year in which they are published. Students who will not be on cam pus when the yearbooks are pub lished, usually in October, must pay a mailing and handling fee. Yearbooks will not be held, nor will they be mailed without necessary fees having been paid. STUDENT DIRECTORIES ARE NOW AVAILABLE!!! Bring your Fall ‘88 fee slip to Rm. 230 in the Reed McDonald Bldg, between 8-5 49ttfn TANGLEWOOD SOUTH APTS. All utilities paid, 1,2,& 3 Bdrms. 2 pools, exercise room, party room, & 2 laundry rooms. Shuttle bus. Pre-listing for spring semester 1/2month rent off in Dec. 411 Harvey Rd. College Station, Texas. All Bills Paid! •2 Bedroom 1V2 Bath • On Shuttle • Tennis • Pool • On-site Maintenance • Close to campus Rent Starts at $409 SCANDIA 693-6505 401 Anderson 1 Blk. off Jersey - W. of Texas Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx. 1 Bdrm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $248 Rental assistance available! Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5pm. 4tfn GRAD. STUDENT NEEDS ROOMMATE. PRIVATE BEDR/BTH/; CENTRAL AIR/HEAT; CABLE; MI CROWAVE; GRAND PIANO; SHUTTLE. $225/mo. 696-1227 early/late or 845-3018 message. 5 111 1/11 Lg. Rm., bath, private entrance, 1 block from campus, util, pd., no kit. priviledges, $170./mo. 764-7363 or 693-5286. 50tll/10 Fourplex in Bryan. 2 bdrm/1 bath, extra storage, new carpet throughout. Wyndham Mgmt. 846-4384. 5tfn Duplex in Bryan. 2 bdrm/1 bath, fireplace, ceiling fan, new carpet throughout. Wyndham Mgmt. 846-4384. 5tfn DEFENSIVE DRIVING, GOT A TRAFFIC TICKET? GET YOUR TICKET DISMISSED?! 693-1322. 909 S.W.Parkway. 26t 12/09 PROFESSORS or CONSULTANTS; 150 sq.ft, suites, two blocks from TAMU; Lisa 693-8661 after 1:00p.m. 48t 11/08 Lx cry t> u/ANTIsrk Ts*yur w/vmcjj M b 5< S N ON O Q. Now Hiring Delivery Personnel Must be 18 and have own car and insurance Earn $6-$8 per hour Wage, Mileage, and tips Apply between 2p.m. and 5p.m. 1504 Holleman College Station 693-2335 4407 Texas Bryan 260-9020 $200 $200 $200 $200 URINARY TRACT INFECTION STUDY Do you experience frequent urina tion, burning, stinging or back pain when you urinate? Pauli Research will perform FREE Urinary Tract In fection Testing for those willing to participate in a 2 week study. $200 incentive for those who qualify. , Call r'aull Research International 776-0400 $2 0 0 $ 2 00 $200 $200 Part-time coed needed for domestic work. 6-8hrs. per week. 696-7414. 51tll/10 TACO CABANA 24-hour patio cafe now hiring cash iers, cooks, line servers, 8c utility people. Apply in per son Friday Nov. 4th through Sunday Nov. 11th from 3- 7p.m. 701 Texas Ave. S. 51tll/ll $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 SORE THROAT STUDY Wanted: Individuals, 18-70 years old, with sore throat pain, for 90 minute study to compare over-the-counter pain relief medication (no blood drawn). $40. incentive for those chosen to participate. CALL PAULL RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL 776-0400 43ttfn $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 WORD PROCESSING. Write a great paper-we ll see that it lookslike one! 268-0191 51tll/l 1 Sophomore or Junior with electronics background for part-time sales/stock work with local distributor. 779- 0204 for information. 49tl 1/09 WORD PROCESSING-Papers, resumes, theises, dis sertations. Rush, services. Call Becky. 822-2118. 51tll/07 • SERVICES STUDENT TYPING— 20 years experience. Fast, accu rate. reasonable, guaranteed. 693-8537. 50t01/17 TAXIDERMY- Quality work competetive prices quick return. 693-4189 48tll/08 Permanently disabled man has computer & printer, & will do your typing & have it ready on time. Bill 846- 2678. ' 48U1/08 Typing: Accurate, 95wpm, reliable. Word Processor. 7days a week. 776-4013. 27t 12/07 Experienced librarian will do library research for you. Call 272-3348. 48tll/29 ON THE DOUBLE Professional Word Processing, laser jet printing. Papers, resume, merge letters. Rush services. 846-3755. 181tfn Cal’s Body Shop-We do it right the first time! 823- 2610. 32ttfn TYPING—WORD PROCESSING—REASONABLE RATES—BEST SERVICE IN TOWN. 764-2931 33t 12/07 ♦ FOR SALE 1981 grey mazda GLC, 4-door, $2500. O.B.O. Great condition. Call 696-4217. 46tl 1/11 1987 Suzuki SP125 $ 1000. OBO 2 Helmets. 260-1759. 48t 11/08 For Sale Honda CB-125S. Best offer. Call 764-8045 af ter 5:00. 49t 11/08 Piano For Sale. Wanted: Responsible party to take on small monthly payments on piano. See locally. Call manager at (618)234-1306 anytime. 48t 11/10 Must sell 14x60 2 Bedrooms 1 Bathroom central air- /heat furnished. Best offer. Lynn 845-9184 or 779- 0593. 49tl 1/16 • TRAVEL SPRING BREAK '89 Trips Available Now [WAS HI NOT airliner acciden films about idle Bsed concerns that pilots may r business when tl ■ Federal invei Ti nsportation : examining the ■nutes in the c Flight 1141 last ittg 727 crashei kjlling 14 of the n More than ha lepigthy taxi pei Mirth Worth Ii Assc ■ George Bush both laid claim : South Padre Island, TX Steamboat, CO Daytona Beach, FL Mustang Island, TX Hilton Head Island, SC Don’t Wait Until It’s Too Late! Call Sunchase Beach & Ski Breaks 1-800-321-5911 Photo by Kathy Havr Adrian Cronauer By Kelly S. Brown Staff Writer • PERSONALS W ADOPT A BABY IS OUR DREAM! Happily married, financially successful couple hope you’ll call collect. Legal. Expenses paid. Call Lynn & Martin collect. (212)362-6884. 51111/11 ti COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS If you vole independently in the JUDGESHIP RACES, you should know that after their senior editorial boards Investigated the background, philosophy and ability of the candidates, CHUCK MILLER was publicly and enthusiastically ENDORSED for STATE WIDE RE-ELECTION by the ABILENE Reporter-News AMARILLO News ft Globe-Times AUSTIN American^Statesman BEAUMONT Enterprise CORPUS CHRIST! Caller-Times DALL AS Morning News DALLAS Times Herald EL PASO Times FORT WORTH Star-Telegram HOUSTON Chronicle HOUSTON Post LONGVIEW News-Journal MIDLAND Reporter-Telegram SAN ANGELO Standard-Times SAN ANTONIO Light VICTORIA Advocate WACO Tribune-Herald WICHITA FALLS T1mes41ecord-News And many , many other fine Texas papers DEMOCRAT Pol.Adv.Judge Chuck MLUor C.C- .1705 Witd B.»in Ledoe- Aux.ir The Adrian Cronauer in the movie “Good Morning Vietnam” and the real- life Cronauer are different entities. Both were disc jockeys in Saigon during the Vietnam War and both brought laughter to the troops by breathing comic relief into the tragedy of war. But, Cronauer said, that’s where the similarities ended. “The movie has a fictional character named Adrian Cronauer, and it so hap pens that we both have shared some of the same experiences — 45 percent of the movie is factual, while the rest is Hollywood exaggeration and imagina tion,” Cronauer said Sunday in a pro gram brought to A&M by MCS Great Is sues. The story idea was based on the time Cronauer spent during his one-year tour of duty with the Air Force. But most of the antics and spontaneity in the movie were added by comedian Robin Williams, who portrayed Cro nauer, he said. “Williams brought his own personality into the film —- he is an ad-lib genius,” Cronauer said. “When people come to hear me speak, they expect to see the schitzo guy from the movie, but 1 have to tell them the movie was never intended to be a biogra phy about my life,” he said. “The first thing I have to distinguish for my listeners is what is real and what is not in the movie.” Cronauer went to Vietnam after serv ing on the Greek isle of Crete. At that time the United States was serving in an advisory capacity, so he thought it would be safe. Cronauer went into the fields talking and listening to soldiers. He witnessed censorship from the Office of Informa tion daily, but couldn’t do anything about it. What was and was not going to be on the air was censored over the phone. Cronauer said the twins that play the cen sors in the movie were Hollywood cre ations. “All the characters in the movie are fictional stereotypes — I didn’t fall in love with a Vietnamese woman, and I didn’t take her family to see a movie called “Beach Blanket Bingo,” Cronauer said. “And I was never thrown out of the Air Force.” He was given an honorable discharge after serving four years in the Air Force — the final 1 1 months were spent in Sai gon. Cronauer said he did teach English to the Vietnamese, but not with the vivid language that Williams used in the movie. Williams borrowed the salutation — good morning Vietnam — from Cro- nauers show. It became a signature for Air Force radio long after Cronauer in troduced it. It origionally began when Cronauer was in Crete. He would start the morn ings with “Goooood Moooming Herak- lion” (which was the Air Force base where he was stationed). He continued its use when he went to Vietnam and soon it was his trademark. “I’d say, ‘I’m Adrian Cronauer’, and a soldier would say, ‘Who?’. Then 1 would say “goooood morning Vietnam” and they’d ask me to play a record,” Cro nauer said. Cronauer said he wanted the station to be like a station in the states — he wanted to bring a part of America to the soldiers. “I had to consider who my listeners were,” he said. “They were guys out in the miserable heat — shooting, fighting and being killed. Did they want to hear me say ‘good morning Vietnam’, every day? I came to the conclusion they did.” Sometimes, Cronauer said, they would tell him they loved it, but he knew of one G.I. who blew away his radio with his Ml after hearing the greeting. Cronauer’s stories had the crowd of approximately 400 people laughing, but when he turned to his serious side, the smiles would fade and everyones atten tion focused solely on his words. “There was always something in Viet nam to remind you of how danger?, situation was,” Cronauer said, i adapted a fatalistic attitude — ifi| nadc or bullet has my nameonit.tliel nothing I can do about it. Ifildif have my name on it — I am ii ne.Cronauer said every one came? from Vietnam with scars — some• and some invisible. “But too many of the scars came- the soldiers arrived home toacoii who shunned them, and thai: wrong,” he said. Many of the veterans Cronaur talked to said they like the more cause it shows another side ofthel other than just combat. Cronauer said his happiest exper/ in Vietnam was when he left. Returning to the states, he world station manager for radio and tefoij stations, and created his own adveita agency. In the late 1970’s he co-m| sitcom about Vietnam — and it wssj story idea that eventually found ilsl to the big screen, and became "(i Morning Vietnam”. Before ever entering the AirFi specializing in radio and television!!’ being transferred oversees, Crorf’ was in school — 11 credit hours ski graduating with an undergraduateJ(| in communications when someoneitf registrar’s office contacted the I board and told of his part-time stii status. Shortly after that he was Mitt he had to enlist within 30 days i| drafted. He enlisted. He eventually returned to fttiSl undergraduate work, get hismastenl grec and is now working toward if degree. Cronauer said he has yet to why anyone would want his autograp!; “I was asked to sign autographs! video store when a 13 year old girl to me and said her neighbor was in Ii nam when I was,” Cronauer said, L said ‘he never talks about it. Heal mipute moment tilarathon, the 1 thr tide was “n and the combati was “rocking an Ilset Tuesday. I The political exchange occurr the Republicans ■llions of dolla leaning hours of candidates boug commercials on for election eve c ■ Although nati petory by GOl candidates battle Exhaustion in a f Bded voters an- deucy. ■ NBC News s, by five percentag every five vote might switch alle ■ “There ain't 1 less we stop our dent said at a bre Brings, Colo. ■ “Wc can’t tur to the people whi but who left the Bush said. ■ Countered Dul day in Coloradi ■ding, we’re ro me to tell you thanks’....And thatitt|| me. It’s moments like that than all worth it.” MiMiMfr ^ ^ ~ ‘ 1 Wltq B *» in COURT OP' CRIMINAL APPEALS at ease the place to see and be seen to advertise call 845-2611 ‘Suprising Switzerland’ explores Swiss country By Chuck Lovejoy Entertainment Writer About 50 people visited Switzer land Sunday afternoon at the College Station Hilton at the showing of “Sur prising Switzerland,” a film explor ing the country. Frank Nichols, creator of the trav elogue, attended and personally nar rated the film. Presented by the Texas Arts Ex change, the film was part of an ong oing series of travelogues making up their “Bringing the World to Texas” program, which travels to 12 Texas cities. The presentation was the 194th showing of a travelogue since the program’s creation. Before the show began, Nichols gave a brief history of Switzerland and described what would be shown. “When we think of Switzerland we have to think very small — tiny,” he said. “You could fit 17 Switzerlands in the state of Texas with room left over for a few cowbells and some Swiss cheese.” Throughout the show Nichols was candid and warm, often creating hu morous anecdotes out of portions of the film, which contained only a background score and no dialogue. The picture itself was beautifully photographed. Nichols took filmmak ing courses at the University of Colo rado, and his talent was clear in the film’s high quality. The film was also a well-rounded portrayal of the country. Often, documentaries show only the scenery of a country. This film contained shots of famous sites, and also managed to allow viewers to glimpse into the lives of the Swiss people. For example, the film showed Swiss army reserve training outside the city of Lugano. All Swiss males must actively serve four months in the army once they reach the age of 20. After that, they are members of the Swiss re serve army until they reach the age of 50. Also covered was the Swiss stock exchange in Zurich, Switzerland’s capital. Although the exchange’s pro cedure differs from that of the United States, the tension displayed by the brokers is the same. Nichols captuii! a few examples of this on film. In addition to scenes of everyda) life, less frequent Swiss happening J and customs were also explored. Nichols took viewers to the Alp®’ , city of Interlaken to see the dramaofg “William ’ Tell,” a play similar it spirit to the “Passion Plays,” whicl tell the story of Christ. The play tells the legendary stoi)1 of Tell, whose wrongful convictioi and cruel punishment (to shoot a«| apple off his son’s head) led tk Swiss people to rise in revolt againtt | the Austrian government to gain the independence. Also covered in the film were! accordion festival in the city ofZat and a yodeling festival and competi tion in Langnau. Sites such as the infamous Mattel I horn and the Rhine Falls at Schal | fhausen dominated the screen. The purpose of the travelogue is I*I allow people to visit a different coun try by film. The only problem is that | after seeing a beautiful film like ‘‘Sur prising Switzerland,” it makes want to go there even more. We