Battalion Classifieds • HELP WANTED HELP WANTED NEED STUDENTS TO WORK A BROADWAY SHOW ON DECEMBER 7th. IF INTERESTED CONTACT RUDDER THEATRE COMPLEX AT 845-8903 OR COME BY ROOM 107 OF RUDDER 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. 1719 Texas Ave. Culpepper Plaza PHARMACOLOGIST Pharmacologist for phamo— ceutical research firm spec ializing in bioavailability, bioequivalency and pharmakin— etics studies. Call Pauli Research International. 776-0400 STUDENT DIRECTORIES ARE NOW AVAILABLE!!! Bring your Fall ‘88 fee slip to Rm. 230 in the Reed McDonald Bldg, between 8-5 49ttfn WORLD ENTERTAINMENT NETWORK! Needs Sales Manager/Producer to conduct local promotions for na tionally televised productions. Call (214)241-2375. 65t12/01 ♦ WANTED CAR POOL: Daily, Katy, TX. to College Station 8c re turn. Student desires participants. Begin Spring 1989. (713)578-5032. Sandy. 64t01/l 1 CRUISESHIPS NOW HIRING FOR CHRISTMAS, next spring and summer breaks. Many positions. Call (805)682-7555 Ext. S-1026. 52t 12/02 • SERVICES Waitresses, needed immediately at Yesterdays. Apply 1 l:30-2:00p.m. 4421 S. Texas Ave. Will Train.GOtl 1/29 Teacher’s Aid for Montessori pre-school kindergarten w/ability to speak 8c teach Spanish or French. Part-time. 779-0290. 63t 12/09 Part-time Accountant needed for Real Estate Firm. Prefer older student or graduate student. Hours flexi ble. Need to be in College Station area at least two more years. Send Resume to P.O. Box 4453 Bryan, TX 77805. 58ttfn $40 $40 $40 $40$40 $40 $40 $40 Are you suffering from a TENSION HEADACHE?? Call To see if you qualify for a medication survey. $40 financial incentive for those chosen to participate. CALL PAULL RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL 776-0400 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 * NOTICE 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) $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 internatloiial 776-0400 $200 $200 $200 $200 TEXSERV TEACHER PLACEMENT SERVICE-6801 Sanger Avenue, #108 Waco, TX 76710. 817-776-6175. 59112/02 PHENOMENAL SAVINGS!!!! ★The Federal Music & Video Club Inc. has a fantastic offer for all you music lovers. ★Top Hit Records, Cassettes, and Compact Discs for only $0.50 each. That’s right 50 cents!! Buy one at already low price and receive second one for $0.50 (COUPONS). ★Potential savings of $200. or more per booklet of 20 coupons with Hot Hits Cata log. -Records and Tapes 2 for $9.98. -Compact Discs 2 for $22.96. -Shipping & Handling $3. for TWO coupons. ★If a selection is sold in any record store, we have it too. If there is a selection you want, all you have to do is ask. ★There is no time limit to redeem your coupons. ★Satisfaction guaranteed. WHAT ARE YOU WAITING FOR !!! To receive your 20 coupon booklets send only $10.50 plus $1.50 Shipping/ Handling each to: AK&M P.O.Box 447 College Station, Texas 77841 Fund Raising information available.65111/29 SORE THROAT 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 54^ $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 Duck, goose 8c pheasant day hunts. Katy area. Call Butch (713)391-4381 or Randy (713)391-9332. 56t01/02 PRIVATE VOICE INSTRUCTION Master of Arts Degree. For Information 589-2793. 56tl 1/29 TYPING- 589-2793 $1.50 page double-spaced $2. 24- hr. deadline ten pgs.or less. 56tl 1/29 Cal’s Body Shop-We do it right the First time! 823- 2610. 32ttfn STUDENT T YPING— 20 years experience. Fast, accu rate, reasonable, guaranteed, 693-8537. 50t01/17 ON THE DOUBLE Professional Word Processing, laser jet printing. Papers, resume, merge letters. Rush services. 846-3755. 181tfn Experienced librarian will do library research for you. Call 272-3348. 48t 11/29 Typing—589-2793 $1.50 per page double-spaced $2.00 rush jobs. 64t 12/08 * fSORREMT All Bills Paid! •2 Bedroom 1 1 / 2 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. 4tf 2 Bdrm studio. Ceiling fan, appliances, pool, shuttle. $360-J385/mo. Glade East. 696-9669. 58tl2/07 In Bryan- Four Plex 2 Bdrm 1 Bath extra storage/fire place, ceiling fan, new carpet. Also adorable 1 Bdrm ef ficiency. Wyndham Mgmt. 846-4384. 571tin Spring Term. Large one Bedroom Apartment. $295. month. Call 764-6902. 64U2/02 HELP ME GET OUT OK MY LEASE! FREE $200. DEPOSIT! 2 Bdrm/1 Bath $210. a month. Mike 823- 2666. 64t 12/02 DEFENSIVE DRIVING, GOT A TRAFFIC TICKET? GET YOUR TICKET DISMISSED?! 693-1322. 909 S.W.Parkway. 26t 12/09 ♦ ROOMMATE WANTED wmmmmt Visiting female artist seeks apartment in B/CS to share during Spring Semester. 845-0206. 8-5 daytime. 65t 12/05 • FOR SALE Airplane Ticket Nashville to Houston. Dec. 15 thru Dec. 19. Call Nancy (615)758-5004 for information. 65t 12/05 Apple He computer, Epson printer, disk drive, $600. " • ell. r ' Senior- must sell. 268-5896. 1986 Honda Elite moped, 1500 miles. $650. Runs like new! Senior- must sell. 268-5896. 61111 /30 Takamine 12 string accoustic w/pickup $325. Applause 6 string strat $275. Fender squire amp $50. Stereo $250. Call after 4p.m. 846-9313. 61 tl 1/29 Honda Express SR Moped $200. 9174. After 5:00p.m. best offer. 693- 64t 12/01 83 Honda NightHawk 450, looks good, runs good, new seat $950. Robert 846-9366. 64t 12/02 • PERSONALS 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. 64112/09 Call 845-2611 and put your business in At Ease Advertising pays. A&M Steakhousel Delivers 846-5273 Paged The Battalion Tuesday, November29, CHIMNEY HILL BOWLING CENTER “A FAMILY RECREATION CENTER" 40 LANES-AUTOMATIC SCORING OPEN BOWLING EVERY DAY HAPPY HOUR ALL THE TIME PITCHER OR BEER $3.00 PITCHER FROZEN MARGARITA $8.00 WINE COOLER $1.50 DRAFT WINE COOLER $1.00 WITH THIS COUPON BOWL 2 GAMES AT 1.85 EACH AND GET 3RD FREE. TAX NOT INCLUDED, SHOES EXTRA. OPEN EVERY DAY FROM 10 A.M. TO MIDNIGHT BAR-SNACK BAR-POOL TABLES- VIDEO GAMES-TV 701 UNIVERSITY DR. E. 260-9185 FREE WINDSHIELD REPLACEMENT Bring yuor Insurance claims to us and we will pay your deductible up to $50.00. AAA AUTO GLASS 2111 S. College Bryan Paint & Glass 779-1011 TYPING—WORD PROCESSING—REASONABLE RATES—BEST SERVICE IN TOWN. 764-2931 33t 12/07 Typing: Accurate, 95wpm, reliable. Word Processor. 7days a week. 776-4013. 27tl2/07 The Bridal Boutique Formats and Evening wear Sate Formats Starting at 49” Shorts and Tea-lengths The Bridal Boutique 2501 S. Texas Ave College Station Next door to the Edge Problem Pregnancy? •We fasten, We core, We fieCp •Free Pregnancy Tests •Concerned Counselor;; Brazos Valley Crisis Pregnancy Seiviee We’re Local! 3620 E. 29th Street (next to Medley's Gifts) 24 fir. Hotline 623-CARE TIME FOR A RESUME Kinko’s can help you prepare for your future. We have a wide range of papers and envelopes to give your resume the professional look it deserves. kinko's* Great copies. Great people. 201 College Main 846-3721 HAVE YOU BEEN., HAD?? Sexually -Harrassed -Assaulted -Date raped If you have, REPORT IT NOW!!! Tuxedo rentals Starting at 39.95 COIOGERO’S Formal Wear & Costume Rentals 2510 S. Texas Ave. College Station Next to Winn-Dixie What’s Up Sp Tuesday OFF CAMPUS AGGIES: will have an off-campus roommate session at5p.im| the Off-Campus Center in Puryear Hall. MSC HOSPITALITY: will have the “Lighting of the Tree” at 12:30 p.m. intil MSC. TAMU SCUBA CLUB: will have its last meeting of the semester at 7 p.m.in Rudder. SPEECH COMMUNICATION PROJECT: will have a safety awareness boc | from 11 a.m.-4 p.m. in the MSC. PRE-MED/PRE-DENT SOCIETY: Dr. David Jones from the UTSA mefc| school will speak at 7:30 p.m. in 203 Harrington. PHI BETA LAMBDA: will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 131 Blocker. CLASS OF ‘89: is accepting pictures or negatives in the Student Programsff l fice for the senior banquet slide show. AGGIES FOR DIABETES AWARENESS: Dr. Luther Travis will speak ate. | current diabetes research at 7:30 p.m. in 204 Sterling C. Evans. r< ;op< Player Jol Wednesday ALL-MAJORS PHILOSOPHY CLUB: will present "God s Question: Arette| really humans?” at 7 p.m. in 131 Blocker. GREEN EARTH SOCIETY: will show Dr. Seuss’ “The Lorax" and a filmoim;| rain at 8:30 p.m. in 510 Rudder. AGGIE PARTNERS FOR SPECIAL OLYMPICS: will meet at 7 p.m. in 200He | denfels. AGGIE DEMOCRATS: will meet at 8:30 p.m. in 404 Rudder. STUDENT GOVERNMENT: will sponsor a "Hurricane Bowl” dance forall*| dents at 9 p.m. at the Hall of Fame. SNOW SKI CLUB: will have a mandatory meeting for members going on thest| trip at 7:30 p.m. at Zachry and then will go to the Flying Tomato. CATHOLIC STUDENT ASSOCIATION: will have rosary recitings at 9p.m,alS' l Mary’s Church. CATHOLIC STUDENT ASSOCIATION/NEWMAN: will have a mid-week site) break at 7:30 p.m. at the student center. CATHOLICS ON THE QUAD: will discuss how to prepare for Christmasspirity | ally at 9 p.m. in Lounge B on the quad. UNITED CAMPUS MINISTRIES: will have an Aggie supper at 6 p.m at ASP | Presbyterian Church. STUDY ABROAD OFFICE: will have a financial aid meeting at 2 p.m. ini Rudder. MSC VISUAL ARTS: will meet at 7 p.m. in 145 MSC. SWAP: will take its Aggieland picture at 8:45 p.m. in the Zachry lobby. MSC HOSPITALITY: will have “Santa Shop” for students to buy Christmasprfr | sents from 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. through Thursday in Rudder Exhibit Hall. By D< Assista John Roper I much he hates l He never p [doesn’t remerr He enjoys hi [above all else. Roper may [feelings in ligh ition to Texas over the Texas | night. His 48-yard i blocked field g quarter provid the Aggies be | straight time. The blocked 10 lead and pro tion of the talei ers” (Roper a | Aaron Wallace Wallace brol iof the Texas kick. Roper sc lumbered dow Items for What's Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonz: I no later than three business days before the desired run date. We only pubi-A the name and phone number of the contact if you ask us to do so. What's Up< I a Battalion service that lists non-profit events and activities. Submissions are v on a first-come, first-served basis. There is no guarantee an entry will run. lip. | have questions, call the newsroom at 845-3315. Planned prison cause for party in Tyler Count WOODVILLE (AP) —With a high school band playing and an Air Force jet flyover piercing the still of the East Texas autumn, Tyler County officials broke ground Mon day for a new Texas prison to be named after House Speaker Gib Le wis. The new Lewis Unit will house 1,000 inmates and serve as a pre-re lease center for inmates nearing the end of their sentences. It is the last of 10 new facilities being built to ease continuous crowding problems at Texas prisons. “It is kind of an honor,” Lewis said of the prison to carry his name. “I don’t want to be a permanent resi dent but I do look forward to visiting time after time again.” Similar units, known as re-inte gration centers, also being built at Snyder, Marlin and Dayton, are part of a $275 million prison expansion program that includes two maxi mum security prisons and four units to be operated by a private correc tions company. Woodville, a community of about 2,800 some 100 miles northeast of Houston, donated a 360-acre site for the prison just northeast of town. The city also passed a $2 million bond issue that will provide the unit with water, sewer and gas lines. The ceremonies were held on a balcony of the Tyler County Court house in downtown Woodville, where police blocked off traffic so several people could watch from the courthouse grounds and from side walks across the street. The prison will provide 21 time jobs in an area that has S jloyment of, 10.4 percent,: 5500,000 monthly payroll wil it the largest in the county, Mi Tom Knapp said. “You can see the importance el to a community of this size,”hess: Robert Mann, a member T exas Board of Corrections,! a great accomplishment and a jii economic asset. Lewis said the crowding proble in Texas prisons likely would ref even more money for more pnw “But we hope very few,” he “This takes a giant step.” “For Woodville, Texas, ourd: thanksgiving is today,” Knapp “It will change our community ever. Many of our young people not have to leave to find good ployment.” Prison Director James Lyn< said corrections officials fell community really wanted aprisoi “TDC intends and will be a neighbor,” he said. “The prison system has con* long way to the point wherein professional business,” Lewis add “It is a safe environment.” The two maximum-securilyf ons, each housing more than2'! inmates, are being built at An® and Catesville. Ground also hash* broken for the privately operated: cilities. Construction of the Lewis L northeast of Woodville, is expett to be complete by next November December. Hispanic vote shift toward GOP slows AUSTIN (AP) — Newly released poll results indicate that the shift of Texas Hispanic votes toward GOP presidential candidates has slowed, and there is unity in their opposition to the push to designate English as the official language. The Election Day survey of 2,654 voters in Texas also found women making up the majority of Mexican- American voters in the state, said the San Antonio-based Southwest Voter Research Institute. In Texas, the Nov. 8 poll found eight of 10 Hispanic voters support ing Democratic presidential candi date Michael Dukakis over Republi can George Bush. Andrew Hernandez, instil 1 president, said the poll indie'* that Hispanic voters in the $ aren’t tied to a single political phi; ophy but shift from one issue tod next. “This Hispanic vote is not ante’ lithic liberal or conservative v# Hernandez said. “It’s conservativ some areas and progressive oil eral in other areas.” score. “I was tired surprised at fi breath and ran As he nea Roper stiff-am lunged over t score. Roper said, 1 for the way he A&M held yards rushing night and cauj losses total lir ended the gam unassisted), or and one quart' yard loss. He for a loss of tw pass. Roper’s tou may lead to a i their lead to 28 second quarte mounted their tance of Roper Texas cash; overs deep in closer late in tf A&M Head praised Roper for their attituc This halted a drift of Hispanics to ward GOP presidential candidates, said Robert Brischetto, institute ex ecutive director. “This realignment that seems to be taking place among the white vot ers in Texas in presidential elections ... is not occurring among Hispanic voters,” he said. For example, while the percent support for a natt® health insurance program, an if ( advocated by Dukakis, it also W 64 percent favoring the death f ally for murderers, something^ kakis opposed. “There’s been much discuss about whether or not Hispanics going to be voting less Democrj and more Republican,” Hernat>*| said. “There was some evident indicate that was the case goingb; to 1980 and 1984. More and® 1 * Hispanics were voting Republia 1 the national level.