Classifieds ♦ HELP WANTED 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 Notes-N-Quotes looking for note takers M-W-Fmorn- ing classes. For more information 846-2255. 82t01/26 OVERSEAS JOBS. $900. - 2000. month. Summer, Year round, all countries, all Fields. Free info. Write: IJC, P.O. Box 52 - TX 04, Corona Del Mar, CA. 92625. 74t02/13 Now Hiring delivery people. Must have transportation and proof of insurance. A&M Steakhouse Northgate 846-5273. 78t01/24 Counter Help 18 and over. Friendly, courteous. Part- time. Apply in person before 1 1a.m. Ginas Taqueria 304 N Bryan. 78t01/24 Help Wanted all positions. Cashiers, cooks, drivers. FatBurger 846-4234. 78t01/25 P/T Maintenance Man Experience necessary 20 + hrs/wk tools & transportation a must. 823-5469. 78t01/27 AIRLINE JOBS $19,000 to $29,000 yr. 812-376-7563 Ext. A-2. ‘ 78t01/25 BAE Computer needs responsible student to represent our computer. Incentive bonus plan. Interested per sons please send resume to 3563 Ryder Street Santa Clara, Ca 95051. 78t01/24 Waitresses need immediately at Yesterday’s. 4421 S. Texas Ave. Apply 11:30-2:00p.m. No experience nec essary. 81t01/27 CRUISESHIPS NOW HIRING FOR CHRISTMAS, next spring, and summer breaks. Many positions. Call (805) 682-7555 ext. S-1026. 70t02/01 SERVICES URINARY TRACT INFECTION STUDY If you PRESENTLY have the following signs and symptoms call to see if you are el igible to participate in a new Urinary Tract Infection Study. Eligible volunteers will be compensated. • PAINFUL URINATION • FREQUENT URINATION • LOW BACK PAIN G&S studies, inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 I7t10/31 “STREP THROAT STUDY” Volunteers needed for streptococcal tonsillitis/pharyngitis study * Fever (100.4 or more) * Pharyngeal pain (Sore Throat) * Difficulty swallowing Rapid strep test will be done to con firm. Volunteers will be compensated. G&S Studies, Inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 SKIN INFECTION STUDY G&S Studies, Inc. is participating in a study on acute skin infection. If you have one of the following conditions call G&S Studies. Eligible volunteers will be compensated. * infected blisters * infected cuts * infected boils * infected scrapes * infected insect bites (“road rash”) G&S Studies, Inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 76 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) PRIVATE PILOT GROUND SCHOOL Starts Wednesday Jan. 25 6:00p.m. Course Fee: $90. FAA written Exam Included Course Location: 800 Jersey (at Dexter) Contact Jeff Zimring CFI 822-1913 Cal’s Body Shop-We do it right the first time! 823- 2610. 32ttfn ON THE DOUBLE Professional Word Processing, laser jet printing. Papers, resume, merge letters. Rush services. 846-3755. 181 tfn MCAT test prep classes start 1/25. For information call Kaplan Center at 696-PREP. 80t01/26 * ROOMMATE WANTED 3Bdr./2Bih. house 2 miles from campus. $120./mo. Urge yard. 822-3235. 81t01/25 • FOR SALE Must sell Q-size waterbed in excellent condition. Call Susan 693-8625. 78t01 /24 Yamaha scooter 2300 miles. Good condition. $450. 693-3675. 78t01/24 1987 Ninja 600 2900/000, helmet 8c motorcycle cover included. 846-3076 after 5. 78t01/24 ♦ FOR SALE Couch, chair, T.V.’s, refrigerator. Good condition. Reasonable. 846-0827 after 6:00 p.m. 79t01/25 TRAVEL SOUTH PADRE SPRING BREAK 89 Nice rooms for a great price! Most have kitchens. From $109. to $169., on the beach or minutes from it! 5 or 7 days. Don’t spend all your money on a room-your never there anyway! (limited space) Call Dickson Productions 1 -800-782- 7653 ext. 186 80t01/31 • FOR RENT Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx. 1 Bdrm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $248 Rental assistance available! Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5pm. 4tt Earn $35.-$200. per pay selling newspapers to students & faculty! Call Jerry at 846-1253 or Steve at 846-6079. 75t01/26 At location near TAMU perfect for single or couple 2 bedroom 1 bath $275/mo. 11 1 Cooner. 846-7759 696- 0921. 80t01/26 Nicest barn in Brazos Countv. Stalls for rent. Call Hank Bird at 589-2564. 75t01/26 Please take Apt. off my hands. 1BR Pepper Tree. $320. No Deposit 693-0761. 78t01/24 ♦ PERSONALS Adoption: Lots of love and caring are waiting for the baby we hope to adopt. Call collect anytime. Ellen or Steven (215)884-3739. 80t01/26 NOTICE DO NOT CALL US IF YOU: ★Like the taste of chlorine, or ganic substances etc. in your drinking water, ice cubes, bever ages. ★ Don’t mind paying .700 to $1 ./gallon for ‘bottled water.’ ★Get weekly exercised by carry ing ‘bottled water’ from store. Our portable, maintenance-free water treatment systems provide Drinking water for .30/gallon. For one week free trial call: 696-9438 (after 2:00p.m.) 846- 4910 Part/Full time positions avail able. ★One gallon of water weighs 8.341b. 82t01/24 TAMU RODEO ASSOCIATION NEW ADVISER! NEW IDEAS! NEW OPPORTUNITIES! Meeting date: Jan 25, 1989 Time: 7:00p.m. Place: Kleberg 117 2 door prizes will be given. For more info. Call: 764-2820 78t01/25 MSC Town Hall is currently looking for Coffeehouse performers (musicians, poets, comedians, etc.). If in terested call Steven Wall at 845-1515. 82t01/25 REWARD LOST RING. Gold 8c Silver w/ Symbols Olympic Swimmers. Sentimental Valve. 260-5072 Ir- nie. 8 HO 1/27 don’t read our readers are curious people. tell them about yourself. advertise in The Battalion 845-2611 Paged The Battalion Tuesday, January 24,1989 SCS provides academic counseling By Sherri Roberts STAFF WRITER Program helps students dealing with break-ups USED BED, SINGLE, GOOD CONDITION. S50. 696-3743. 80t01/24 ZENITH-248 FOR SALE. 1BM-XT COMPATIBLE. 20MB HARD DRIVE. $1000. CALL 696-7909. 8 DO 1/24 14x56 home, 2/1, built-ins, set up in low rent park. Best offer. 846-3565, 690-0280. 77t02/01 Development of the “other educa tion,” that of social and extracurricu lar involvement, may come easy for most students, but the road to aca demic success usually is not so smooth. Through various academic and career programs, the Student Coun seling Services offers students the opportunity to sharpen study skills and explore career interests. Workshops offered throughout the semester include topics on test anxiety, conquering finals, power learning techniques, and a career in terest clinic. “Our goal is to help students suc ceed,” Mary Olona, SCS counseling psychologist, said. Olona said failing to meet aca demic performance expections can damage the self esteem of many stu dents. “A lot of students think they are what they get, but that’s not true,” she said. “A grade of ‘C’ does not mean you’re an average person, or an ‘F’ that you’ve failed life.” One of the SCS’s most popular workshops, she said, is the test-anxi ety workshop. Offered twice a semestef, the three-week workshop gives test tak ing strategies and relaxation tech niques to help students manage their anxiety before, during, and after tests. Although too much stress often causes one to freeze up, a certain amount helps one to perform, she said. Workshops try to help students develop the stress level needed to achieve optimum performance. Other workshops offered include a “Conquering Finals” workshop, By Andrea Warrenburg n REPORTER The Student Counseling Service is putting together a program to help students deal with the pain and reject ion caused by broken relationships. The title of the program is “Relationship Issues,” but the primary focus will be on overcoming rejection in ro mantic relationships. “Rejection is an inevitable part of life, especially for students who in college are experiencing their first powerful relationship,” said Dr. Ted Stachowiak, a counseling psychologist at SCS. “They are exploring relationships for the first time and breaking up can cause an intense sense of loss.” Stachowiak and Bea Garrett, a doctoral psychology intern at the counseling service, will be leading the small support group. “The actual rejection experience may cause people to feel like a failure or unlovable and may begin to affect all parts of their lives,” Stachowiak said. “We will help them through a five-stage recovery process that in volves members so they can get in touch with their emo tions and gain support from others.” The five stages most people go through while recoil ering from a breakup include: L • Manuevering — trying to figure out how to handlj MIAa it by blaming others. Hhose . • Concluding — forming beliefs about the situation tprcychst for example, the opposite sex isn’t trustworthy. ||olence • Letting go — taking a close look at how then; ch ar £ e( clinging and finally letting go. Bours atti • Objectifying — looking at the relationship objecti j Mean" vely and trying to understand how and why it han® ent ? C1 pened. Ivesttgai • Re-emergence — getting on with their lives anil [ty P ane trying new relationships. | ent com “We want them to recognize what stage they’re in» l cie ^.P° they can gain hope from know ing t here is an end todit '' 11 pain,” Stachowiak said. looked n The support group will be no larger than 10 mem | ountso hers, but if interest increases more groups may be set | ter P osl up. lurCler “Individuals who have never had group counseling Loza in may be hesitant,” Stachowiak said. “But if theycantol ft Clenn erate the initial anxiety they will realize how supportive |l anc " aI and caring others can be.” ■*§ on a 1 Interested individuals can call the counseling serviceB )wn " 1 for more information at 845-4427. Bloyd in jene ant lied the ered in l which deals with time budgeting and anxiety reduction techniques, and special topic workshops such as “In creasing Academic Motivation” and “Memory Improvement.” A career exploration workshop provides information to help stu dents explore possible career paths through self-assessment of interests, values and skills. In addition to workshops, SCS of fers an academic and career walk-in service to students who have pre viously used the academic or career services at SCS or who have issues needing immediate attention. The service requires no appoint ment and is available on a first-come, first-served basis Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday from 1-4 p.m. at the SCS on the third floor of the YMCA Building. The Career and Academic Re sources Library, also on the third floor of the YMCA building, con tains grade distribution books which list the names of professors and the grade distributions of their classes in previous semesters. The library also contains occupa tional information and projections of occupational demand both re gionally and nationally. Though these services are avail able to all individuals who havepaii thc'r student services fee, manydj not take advantage of them, said. “Many students are afraid theyl lose their social life, but that’s no:| true,” she said. “We try to team them ways to study effectively efficiently so they can have a socialtl fe.” To receive more informatio: about SCS services or to sign upfonl workshop, call 845-1651. WASH reme C lied a £ al equal ay the p Earmark inority- Voting ichmon Abstinence education bill draws support stitutiona Hikes in tty builc east 30 t AUSTIN (AP) — A bill that would require school districts that teach sex education to include information on abstinence as the only 100 percent effective method of preventing sex ually transmitted diseases and un wanted pregnancies drew support from several groups Monday. Sen. Kenneth Armbrister, the fa ther of two teen-agers, said studies indicate sex education courses that teach various forms of birth control — but do not make abstinence the goal — “may actually be a factor in increasing sexual activity ol teen-ag ers.” Armbrister, D-Victoria, said cur rent sex education courses reflect the attitude of‘“Well, you know how it was when you were that age,’ or, ‘Kids are going to do it anyway.”’ “We’re here to tell you that Texas youngsters don’t always feel that that’s true, that not all kids are en gaged in premarital sex, not all youngsters think that it’s the right thing to do to be engaged in that — that it’s not a shield that they can hang up as an award,” Armbrister told a news conference. “It should be the other way.” He said he had been asked if the bill was an attempt to impose morals on young people, and he said his an swer was, “Probably absolutely, yeah, we are. We think it’s important that this be taught.” Armbrister said sex education courses including abstinence already are in place in $even school districts. ■reject tc ■ority ow Appearing in support of the Anri blister bill were representatives «:■ j us ti ce Project Sex Respect; Texans forBf;| Wr j t j n g f ter Health; Concerned Women fom at; was America; Citizens for Excellence :|(; ()n f ec ] e , Education in San Antonio; andStsLj |,i ac k s Board of Education member JoklG on “j Shields, also of San Antonio. Bjustify B“None “Kids need to know the truth,ffiRy the ci that truth includes that saving soB for marriage is the healthiest choisj they can make,” Ann Newman ofik San Antonio organization, said. SIGN UP TO PMV! - ^ JJ £/= PRESENTED BY GENERAL MOTORS & GMAC FINANCIAL SERVICES IN ASSOCIATION WITH TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY IM-REC SPORTS DEPARTMENT SPORT OR ACTIVITY: Basketball SPORT OR ACTIVITY: Wallyball DIVISION(S): SIGN-UP DATE(S): TIME: PLACE: Co-Rec B Entries Close January 24, 1989 5:30 p.m. Rec Sports Office, 159 Read Bldg. DIVISION(S): SIGN-UP DATE(S): Co-Rec B Entries Open January 30, 1989 Entries Close February 7, 1989 TIME: PLACE: 8:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Rec Sports Office, 159 Read Bldg. SPORT OR ACTIVITY: Team Bowling SPORT OR ACTIVITTY: Archery Doubles DIVISION(S): SIGN-UP DATE(S): TIME: PLACE: Co-Rec B Entries Close January 31, 1989 5:30 p.m. Rec Sports Office, 159 Read Bldg. DIVISION(S): SIGN-UP DATE(S): Co-Rec B Entries Open January 30, 1989 Entries Close February 14, 1989 TIME: 8:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. PLACE: Rec Sports Office, 159 Read Bldg. General Motors and GMAC Financial Services are proud to be associated with your campus intramural-recreational sports and activities. Stop by your Intramural or Recreational Sports Department today so you can sign up to play! GM FQM t KFmB aKWKHLET*raiiiiic*eum»iyg ttHICK * CAPiUm* fiilC flllCl GMAC FINANCIAL SERVICES ©1988 General Motors..'.’sharing your future” L ir w $- se ei 3 F e