The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 01, 1988, Image 8

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    Battalion
Classifieds
■ MM- - i.,.., | III. !■,!
Page 8 The Battalion Thursday, December 1,1988
Workers stand in line
for amnesty benefits
*;H£LP
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. „
CRUISESHIPS NOW HIRING
FOR CHRISTMAS, next
spring and summer breaks.
Many positions.
Call (805)682-7555
Ext.S-1026. 52112/02
Sublease 2 Bdrm./l V2 Bath. With enclosed patio 8c stor
age rm., electric appliances, fireplace, pool. Across
from Tx Hall of Fame. $365./mo. 823-0194. 67t 12//7
College Station duplex - 2 Bdrm./lBath, washer-
/dryer, $375./mo. 8c utilities, shuttle bus.* 846-4118 any
time. 67t01/ll
National Marketing Firm seeks ambitious junior, se
nior, or graduate student to manage on-campus pro
motions for top national companies. Flexible hours
with earnings potential at $2500. Call Lisanne or Myra
at 1-800-592-2121. 67tl2/01
2BR/1BA Duplex, Fenced, Pets Okay, Bryan,
$310./mo., 846-4465, weekends: 1-279-2967. 66t01/17
1 & 2 BR Fourplex (Northgate), semester leases okay.
846-4465. Weekends: 1-279-2967. 66t01/17
Needed: Two part-time workers, bilingual preferred,
with some accounting experience. Starts Jan. 15th
through tax season. Contact Willie Ramirez, 775-8980.
67t 12/09
1, 2 8c 3 Bedroom Duplexes Month To Month Lease.
Walking Distance To Campus. From $157.50 To
$247.50. $200. deposit. 779-3003. 66t 12/09
Waitresses, needed immediately at Yesterday’s. Apply
11:30 - 2 p.m. 4421 S. Texas Ave. Will train. 67t 12/02
Part-Time Jewelry Sales. Must be able to work until De
cember 24. Experience preferred but not necessary.
Speak to Dorothy or Randy. Texas Coin Exchange 404
University. College Station. 66112/02
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
vears. Send Resume to P.O. Box 4453 Bryan, TX
77805. 58ttfn
Teacher’s Aid for Montessori pre-school kindergarten
w/ability to speak & teach Spanish or French. Part-time.
779-0290. 63t 12/09
• 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.
WORLD ENTERTAINMENT
NETWORK!
Needs Sales Manager/Producer
to conduct local promotions for na
tionally televised productions. Call
(214)241-2375. fiRt12/01
STUDENT DIRECTORIES ARE
NOW AVAILABLE!!!
Bring your Fall ‘88 fee slip to
Rm. 230 in the Reed McDonald
Bldg, between 8-5 ,
3 49ttfn
DEFENSIVE DRIVING, GOT A TRAFFIC TICKET?
GET YOUR TICKET DISMISSED?! 69S-1322. 909
S.W.Parkway. 26t 12/09
« ; fOURENT
2 Bedroom 4-plex 5 min. From A&M. $150. deposit,
$250. Rent 779-3003. 66t 12/09
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. 57ttfn
Spring Term. Large one Bedroom Apartment. $295.
month. Call 764-6902. 64U2/02
2 Bdrm studio. Ceiling fan, appliances, pool, shuttle.
$360-$385/mo. Glade East. 696-9669. 58t 12/07
*
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED - Spring 8c Summer.
Great Condo! Private bedroom, fireplace, w/d, pool,
shuttle & more! $21 1 ./mo. plus bills. 696-6600, Brad.
67t 12/07
Visiting female artist seeks apartment in B/CS to share
during Spring Semester. 845-0206. 8-5 daytime.
65t 12/05
# FOR LEASE
rnrnimmmmmmmmmsKmmmmmmmmmmmmmimwn ■mrimrii
1 Bdrm. apt., Lincoln Square, $290. Sublease for
Spring Semester. 764-7427. 67t 12/07
$45. off regular monthly rent: Very nice one bedroom
studio, washer-dryer connections, frost-free refrigera
tor, walk-in closets, more. Will sublease for $300. Eve
nings: 846-4629. 67t 12/07
Female needed to sublease-no deposit, spring 8c sum
mer 1989. 693-2656 Kathie. 66t 12/02
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
• ANNOUNCEMENT
DOLLARS FOR COLLEGE: Grants, loans, schol
arships. deadlines approaching. Applications invited,
details FREE. P.O. Box 4466. Dept. 2377 Charlottes
ville. VA. 22905. (804)971-7633 ext. 2377 24 hours a
day. 66t01/1 I
* ■
CAR POOL: Daily, Katy, TX. to College Station 8c re
turn. Student desires participants. Begin Spring 1989.
(713)578-5032. Sandy. 64t01/ll
All Bills Paid!
•2 Bedroom 1V 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
166tfn
Cotton Village Apts.,
Snook, Tx.
1 Bdrm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $248
Rental assistance available!
Cali 846-8878 or 774-0773
after 5pm.
♦ FOR SALE
CHOOSE THE FRIGE OF YOUR BOOKS INSTEAD
OK PAYING HIGH BOOKS FORE PRICES! FOR
MORE INFO CALL. THE STUDENT BOOK EX
CHANGE AT NOTE 'N QUOTES, 846-2255.
66t 12/06
1979 CAMARO LOADED LOW MILEAGE. S2500.
ARCHIE 260-2875. EXCELLENT CONDITION.
66t12/06
Apple lie computer. All accessories, printer, modern,
monitor, disks. Must sell. 693-0830. 67tl2/07
Honda Express SR Moped $200. or best offer. 693-
9174. After 5:00p.m. 64U2/01
83 Honda Nighlilawk 450, looks good, runs good, new
seat $950. Robert 846-9366. 64t 12/02
Airplane Ticket Nashville to Houston. Dec. 15 thru
Dec. 19. Call Nancy (615)758-5004 for information.
65t 12/05
• SERVICES
$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 .'aull Research Internatloiia*
776-0400
$200 $200 $200 $200
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 54ttfn
$40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40
$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
ESSAYS & REPORTS
16^278 to choose from—all subjects
Order Catalog Today with Visa/MC or COD
WRMm 800-351-0222
in Calif. (213) 477-8226
Or, rush $2.00 to: Essays & Reports
11322 Idaho Ave. #206-SN, Los Angeles, CA 90025
Custom research also available—all levels
WORD PROCESSING — papers, resumes, thesis, dis
sertations. Rush services. Call 822-2118. 67tI2/01
Motorcycle and scooter storage for Christmas. Call
University Cycle. 696-8222. 67t 12/08
Typing, Research papers, Reports, Education Units,
etc. Near campus. 696-0914. 67U2/07
Experienced librarian will do library research for you.
Call 823-3348. 67t01/31
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
Typing: Accurate, 95wpm,
7days a week. 776-4013.
reliable. Word Processor.
27tl2/07
Duck, goose & pheasant day hunts. Katy area. Call
Butch (713)391-4381 or Randy (713)391-9332.
56t01/02
TEXSERV TEACHER PLACEMENT SERVICE-6801
Sanger Avenue. # 108 Waco, TX 76710. 817-776-6175.
59t 12/02
Typing--589-2793 $1.50 per page double-spaced $2.00
rush jobs. . 64t 12/08
ON THE DOUBLE Professional Word Processing,
laser jet printing. Papers, resume, merge letters. Rush
services. 846-3755. 181tfn
STUDEN T TYPING— 20 years experience. Fast, accu
rate, reasonable, guaranteed, 693-8537. 50t01/17
• GARAGE SALE
Multi-family, Sat. Dec. 3rd, 8:30-noon, Married Stu
dent Apartments Council Room, beside garage.
67t 12/02
AUSTIN (AP) — Texas agricultu
ral workers seeking amnesty under
the landmark immigration reform
act on Wednesday were lining up
outside processing centers in num
bers surpassing some projections,
with a midnight deadline looming.
Immigration and Naturalization
Service centers were working
around the clock with beefed-up
staffing and extra shifts.
Though the farm workers’ appli
cation process was not as hectic as
during the general amnesty pro
gram that ended May 4, Immigra
tion and Naturalization Service offi
cials said the pace has been
increasing since last week.
“We’ve been increasing from
around 400 last Wednesday to a
peak of about 1,200 in line at one
time yesterday,” Richard Rios, direc
tor of the Houston INS legalization
center, said Wednesday. “It looped
all the way around a square block.
The tail met the beginning of the
line.”
Rios said that, by midnight, about
1,500 people should have visited the
Houston center within 24 hours.
At the Arlington INS office, the
crush of illegal immigrants was so
large that those arriving at 5 a.m.
Tuesday had to wait until noon
merely to turn in their application
and pay their filing fee, a process of
less than three minutes per applica
tion.
“It’s been a steady increase (in ap
plications),” said Paul Reece, INS
deputy chief legalization officer, act
ing as the center’s director. “There’s
been no big jump in the numbers,
(but) as the time draws nearer, it’s in
creasing.”
The center has been the busiest of
Texas’ nine amnesty offices, with
more than 25,000 applications of
110,000 statewide from immigrants
who claim to have experience in ag
riculture, Reece said.
Officials said “special agricultural
worker” program standards are
more lenient than the general am
nesty program. Both plans are one
time offers that allow immigrants to
gain legal residency, now a require
ment for holding a job in the U.S.
In San Antonio, some farmers
who are bringing their workers to
the legalization center said the am
nesty program will help deplete the
migrant labor force.
“These kinds of permits are not
doing us a damn bit of good,” Mar-
garito Rodriguez said.
Rodriguez, who raises peanuts
and cattle near Charlotte, said the
program is damaging because work
ers who are granted amnesty will not
have to continue working in the
fields. Instead, they will leave the
farms with their work authorizations
in hand and seek higher paying)
elsewhere.
He said they will be forced lot
illegal aliens because theycannoi
ford to pay as much asotherlafe
intensive industries, such as a
struction.
About 350 people applied aij
El Paso legalization center bymM,
ternoon Wednesday. “1 do bef-
we will go over 400,” legalize
center director Henry McGel
said .
Supreme Couri
rules for HLP
in accident case
AUSTIN (AP) — The Texas
Supreme Court on Wednesday
ruled that Houston Lighting &
Power was not liable in an inci
dent in which a youth lost both
legs and his right arm after
touching an electrical power line
with a tent pole.
The 5-4 decision reversed ear
lier trial court and appeals court
decisions, which ordered HL&P
to pay Carl David Reynolds $3.7
million for injuries he received.
The ruling was praised by
HL&P, but blasted by Reynolds’
attorney, Geep Hardy III, who
said the court has shown it is
more interested in protecting
business rather than the public.
“If the utility company does
not have the duty to warn or edu
cate the public of the danger of
their installations who does have
that duty?” Hardy asked.
But a spokeswoman for HL&P
said the utility does warn the pub
lic about the danger of the lines.
“We have a safety program
dealing with power lines as well as
nthfr electrical safety issues that
is probably the most extensiveir,
the United States,” said GeriKo-
nigsberg.
“Of course we sympathize will
the young man’s plight and his in
jury,” she said. “But wedon'tfed
that HL&P, or its ratepayers I
should bear the responsibilityfoi
what resulted from his act.”
On July 26, 1980, Reynolds,
who was 16 at the lime, coupled
eight 3-foot aluminum tent poles
together and touched a high ten
sion line that ran above his neigl
hors’ backyard.
The line carried 35,000 voltsof
electricity.
He was knocked unconsdous
and his clothing caught fire burn
ing him over most of his bodv.
Doctors said he was lucky to have
survived.
Writing for the majority,Jus
tice Eugene Cook said HL&Pdid
not have a duty to warn aboutthe
danger of contacting a power
line, because the utility had con
structed the line in accordance
with national standards.
Bentsen says supercollider
will be difficult to pay for
WASHINGTON (AP) — Round
ing up the money in Congress to pay
for the super collider will be exceed
ingly difficult, especially now that
only Texas is leading the fight for
the $4.4 billion atom smasher, Sen.
Lloyd Bentsen said Wednesday.
“It’s going to be uphill and tough,
and particularly now because it’s just
one state, whereas we had seven
states working on it before,” Bent
sen, chairman of the influential Sen
ate Finance Committee, told a group
of Texas reporters in Washington.
Even when seven states were can
didates for the potentially lucrative
physics project, Congress was ad
amant about financing the super col
lider, voting earlier this year to give
it $100 million — less than one-third
of President Reagan’s request for
$363 million — and decreeing none
of the money could be spent on con
struction.
And now that a site in Ellis County
has been chosen by the Energy De-
E artment for the super collider, at
:ast one member of Congress from
a state that lost its bid to host the
project is questioning the feasibility
of finding enough construction
money. It is expected to cost $4.4 bil
lion, and to create thousands of con
struction and scientificjobs.
Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., said
last week that the superconducting
super collider was in trouble and
would likely be doomed by budget
constraints and opposition from oth
ers in the scientific community.
“And quite honestly, the way the
“Funds are going to be\
hard to come by. We may
not get full funding for
the super collider the First
year . . . but we can move
it forward in some accep
table manner. ”
—Jake Pickle
program has been set up, the conse
quences are that there’s really very
limited support outside of one par
ticular state,” Dingell, chairman of
the House Energy and Commerce
Committee, said. “I haven’t said it’s
going to go down the drain, but it’s
in serious difficulty.”
He said it stood a chance of one or
two in 10 of ever being built.
Dingell and four other Michigan
congressmen asked the General Ac
counting Office on Monday to inves
tigate the fairness of the Energy De
partment’s choice to locate the
project on farmland south onfii
liachie.
Senators from Michiganandsd
of the other losing states havtil
asked President Reagan toappofl
special commission to investigate!
Energy Department’s choice!
Texas over sites in Michigan,!
nois, Arizona, Colorado, NorthC
olina and Tennessee.
Rep. Jake Pickle, an AustinDfi
crat and a member of the Ha I
Ways and Means Committee,aji
with Bentsen that Texas willta
fight on its hands nailing dow!
super collider funds.
e going to be hard to comeW
may not get full funding fortlid
per collider the first year..,l)»l
can move it forward in some a®
table manner,” Pickle saidTidi 1
Pickle told the Austin Chamto
Commerce that a crucial ingreii
for success will be support («
President-elect George Bush,
“Bush has got to support in
push it. They (the Reagan adtf
traton) are the ones that created
They’ve got to say it's a pri®
They’ve got to depend on did
publicans (in Congress) to
them. We in Texas, we’ve $
strong-arm some other votes,”h'
said.
G*I*F*T*S
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L
268-4001
3737 East 29th Street,
Bryan, Texas 77802
693-2409
315B Dominik Drive,
College Station, Texas 77840
L.S.
Emerging Leaders Seminar
"The Freshman Advantage
Applications available in the
Student Activities Office.
208 Pavilion, 845-1133
Deadline: December 12,19® 8
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