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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 7, 1989)
Battalion Classifieds HELP WAITED HELP! Rudder Theatre Complex Needs student workers For stagehand and spotlight work To Apply Come To: Rudder Auditorium Wed. Sept 13 7:00pm COME SIGN UP!! AVOID THE NOID Join the World's Largest Pizza Delivery Chain. Domino's Pizza is hiring just a few more drivers who want to earn $6-$8 an hour. Must be enthusiastic, have own car w/insurance and an excellent driving record. Apply at any B/CS location 89t09/01 The Psychology Dept at TAMU is conducting research on group dynamics and we need participants. We will pay you $30. for 6 hrs. over a 6 weeks period. There will be an information meet ing Wed. Sept. 13 at 4:00. Rm. 106. If unable to attend please call T- Th 845-4992 and ask for Dawna. A FREE GIFT JUST FOR CALLING PLUS, RAISE UP TO $1,700: IN ONLY TEN DAYS!!! Student groups, fraternities and soroities needed for marketing project on campus. For details plus a FREE GIFT, group officers call 1-800-950- 8472, ext. 10. The Houston Chronicle is taking applications for immedi ate route openings and fall routes. Pay is based on per paper rate and gas allowance is provided. The route requires working early morning hours 7 days a week and earns $500. - $700. per month. If interested call James at 693- 7815 or Julian at 693-2323 for an appointment. THE GREENERY Landscape Maintenance Team member Full-time or Part-time Interview Mon-Thurs from Sam - 9am 823-7551 1512 Cavitt, Bryan Earn $2,000-$4,000 Searching for employment that permits working your own hours, but still challenging enough for your entrepreneurial skills? Manage programs for Fortune 500 compa- Earn $2,000to $4,000. Call 1 -800-932-0528, ext. 11. Sunchase Tours is currently recruiting Campus Rep resentatives to promote our Collegiate Winter Ski Trips & Spring Break Ski Sc Beach Trips. Earn top commissions and free trips! Call 1-800-321-5911 for additional information. Campus organizations wel come! 05t09/l 1 Full Sc part-time positions. Computer operations and commercial data processing production. Contact Gail at 260-9665. 05t09/13 Dependable People — M' l l~n~~ rrrn Morning $200.- for Houston Post Routes Early 50. Per Month 846-2911 846-1253 02t09/15 Pianist 1L- other nuiski.in bv Frank's Bat it Grill. 5 Frank 846-5388. Jazz Blues onh Call Come 5 E. I trivetsitv Dr. Mike or 03ttl9 18 Aerobics teacher with dance background. Dame Arts wrcietv at AA.-M needs instructor for night classes, (all Katrina 846-3979 or Ginger 764-8643. 03tO9 11 A GOOD TALKER NEEDED-PHONE SALES. DAY K- EVENING SH1F1 -823-5079. 04i09/12 Schlotzky's is now accepting applications for full ume Sc pan ume shifts. Apply in person onlv between 2-5'p.m. 187t09/07 • FOR RENT rnm TAKE MY DEPOSIT if you take my apt.! 2/2, w/d conn, shuttle, on-site mgr., more! $329. 846-3028. 05t09/15 C.ASA BLANCA APAR I MENTS: 2 Ixlrm, fum. Sc un- fum units. SPECIAL PRIVATE BEDROOM DORM PLAN. 4110 College Main. 846-1413.846-9196. 180tlfn * FOR RENT shouldn’t New carpet in selected units. $100. off 1 months rent. 6 Unique Floorplans from $225. All Bills Paid (except electricity) No Utility Deposit 2 Pools* Volleyball Court • Hot Tub • Basketball Courts • Lighted Tennis Courts •Across From Post Oak Mall FUNTST10N OAKS Apartments 693-1110 18*108/31 Mon.-Frl. 8-6 Sat 10-5 Sun 1-5 Cotton Village Apts. Snook, TX. 1 Bdrm. $200., 2 Bdrm. $248. Rental assistance available! Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5pm. i 4 7ttfr Crowded up don’t like roommate, getting out of the corps. Have 3 apts. left. Academic Village Apts. 846- 9196. 04t09/12 WE BUY-sell good used furniture. Three drawer desk, 30x45, $25. Bargain Place. Across from Chicken Oil. 846-2429. 184t08/31 atudents, why pay rent? Nice two-bedroom mobile home with one and three quarter baths and extras. Only $4,140. See at 920 Clearleaf #147. Inquire at of fice or call (915)944-6218, nights (915)949-5011.' 189t09/07 FURNITURE, 8 pieces will make sofa + loveseat. $200. Call 693-2515. 02t09/08 • NOTICE PROTECT YOURSELF against burglary and intruders with a home & apartment security system. No installation necessary. Call for free demonstration. 846-0144. Sales opportunities available. FREE TRIP TO HAWAII Get the Hottest Hawaiian T-shirts, shorts. Send $3. for catalog and free entry in formation to: Club Hawaii P.O. Box 11661 Honolulu, HI 96828 04ttfr Motorcycle Honda 175. avoid the parking hassle, elec tric starter, 100^ reliable. $400. 845-4707/846-8852. 04t09/08 AT COMPATIBLE COMPUTER WITH PRINTER. 20MHD. MODEM. $1,800.- Don 696-0389 04t09/12 Yamaha Virago 1985 700cc. 5500 Miles. Maroon with helmet, mint condition. $1,800. Brad. 693-08904t09/15 • FOR SALE Organist and choir director. A&M Presbyterian Church. Part-time. Begin September. Resume, refer ences requested. Call M-F. 8-3p.m. for interview . 846- 5631. 04t09/12 SCOOTER-HONDA ELITE LX. NEED TO SELL BY FRIDAY. BEST OFFER. CALL STEVE 846-7314 05t09/07 FEMALE CHRISTIAN WANTED-SHARE ROOM $98.75/mo.. MANY BENEFITS ACROSS FROM HI ETON. 693-2288. 02t09/08 HONDA NIGHTHAWK 450: CLEAN. 9.000 Miles. $ 1.200. 847-1767. 194t09/07 (Zoinniodorc 64 computer, printer, disk drive ami ■uaniiels for $350. Call 696-0267. 03019 I 1 FEMALE COUGAR. 8 weeks old. $1,200. Call Mark 693-8573. 194t09/07 tMnwwi. U !rTrrrr-T j • 3fIluHUiJr Needed Immediately! Driver and cooks. Apply within FATBURGERS 725 University 846-4234 PART TIME Help Wanted. Apply in person. Piper’s Chevron, corner of Texas and University. 190t09/08 RETIRE RICH upon graduation (or sooner!) Students nationwide accumulating wealth in unique program. Pleasant work, won’t interfere with studies or social ac tivities. Write to: Wealthbuilder #1, Dallas, Texas 75376-3700. 190t09/08 Music Director and Pianist needed at local church. Phone 693-7021,696-3987. 192t09/12 * LOST AND FOUND LOST MAN’S GOLD BAND wedding ring. Possibly at Kyle Field. Please call 822-4799. 04t09/07 ROOMMATE WANTED » MISCELLANEOUS * SEimcESf 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 7f ESSAYS & REPORTS 19,278 to choose from — all subjects Order Catalog Today with Visa/MC or COD mmm 800-351-0222 ■■MBTlIIier 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 Typing and resume services available at reasonable prices. Rush jobs excepted. Call N'otes-N'-Quotes. 846- 2255. 03t(19/19 Experienced librarian will do library research for you. Calif Call 272-3348. ,'N THE DOUBLE Professional Y\ J ord Processing, laser jet printing. Papers, resume, merge letters. Rush services. 846-3755. / 181tfn PROFESSIONAL WORD processing by experienced typist. Carla, 690-0305. 190t09/22 TEXAS FEATHER FAIR TRADE DAY Sun-Sept. 10,-Brazos Co. Pavilion Buy-Sell-Trade-Exotic Birds Poultry-Waterfowl-Sm. Animals Booths-$10.00-Gen. Public $1. 778-3484 778-1309 04to9/08 apart ments from $225/mo. APARTMENT LIVING CEN TER, 3914 Old College Road, 846-9196, open 10-6. ISOttfn Dallas Times Herald Student Faculty Special For Fall Semester $12.00 Ask About The Ft Worth Star Telegram 846-1253 846-2911 For Sale German Short-haired Pointer Puppies AKC registered wormed, shots, tails bobbed. Call 846-5984 04t09/15 All the functions you need plus the quality you deserve. HP-10B Business Calculator Another member of HP's proud NEW family of quality calculators. Try it today. L * st Hewlett Sale $36.95 PACKARD UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORES Northgate Culpepper Village Shopping Center Plaza Shopping Center Call Battalion COUCH for sale in good condition. $80. Call 764- 6929. 194t09/07 Classified 845-2611 Page 12 The Battalion Thursday, September?, [he WSRED © 1989 by Scott McCullar Cashier needed. Requires different job duties. Call Smetana Grocery, 775-9337 for information. 194t09/07 WALDO By KEVIN THOMAS Female Christian 4-Plex 2/2. $ 187.50/mo. + utilities. Deborah 823-4665, 845-1824 03t09/l 1 Compact disc’s new. $5.55 to $7.55. Call Billy 690- 0273. Sam-10pm. 194t09/07 Adventures In Cartooning by Don Atkinson Jr. iiiiiiiiiiM NEXT ON "UMSOLVrD MV^T£fti£5 “ WEIL trlk to a student WHO CLAIMS TO WOVE ACTUALLY SCEN AM EMPTY PORK- JNG SPACE! XT WAS ndb AWD X HOD 8EEM DRMW6 AROUND FOR. HOURS TRUING TO FIND AN EMPTY SPACE. THEN SUDDENLY X SflUl ONE! IT WAS THERE FOR ONLY A SECOND BEFORE IT VANISHED! I’M SURE tuftt x Really said it. im RasmvE.' AS A MATTER OF FACT, x took a picture: OF rr JUST BEFORE IT VANISHED. THE PICTURES NOT VERY 6000 , KtHDA BLURRY AND ALL, BUT X SMEAR TO THAT THIS IS A PHOTOGRAPH OF FIN EMPTY PARKING SPACE/ AN EMPTY PARKING SPACE... OR TOST MO THER BLURRY Pola roid? YOU DECIDE. UNSOLVED MYSTERIES (DILL RETURN AFTER A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSOR. “ SPflOe Phillips, Pi. SR4DE / where's Palf and dolf H)0iua(sl/ii THE TRU/WT OFFICER CAME YESTERPAY... HE SAtD f-T HEW Sons WERE Poit46 ExfiFRiM&zrS ON MY NEifeH&oRS' PETS... THATS GTEAfj Wow they’PE OUT oF YouR. rfA«R. VRoi4 6(5, THEY'RE AMO j->t f^sPowMBLE. THEY W£FE (YHSEO in A GeRavW M1LIT/3EY School . vvHo Knows wmr THEY'll Do /pfiAAOE, U4 AN AK£RilAN PUBLIC. RELAX- FiKST X VILL 1 DEKoNSTtMTE OlH RAiPt/TlN BoNE- CKuSHEF MAMEOVEK CA CiNPYjW? anxi( pnd ; ent ti Mon and Texas oil recovery research) enhanced by $16 million fund ByC Off/ AUSTIN (AP) — Oil recovery re search by Texas A&M and other state universities was enhanced by $16 million Wednesday, a move that could boost domestic production and increase royalty payments to the state’s public school fund, Gov. Bill Clements said. The money — $8 million in oil overcharge funds and $8 million in state, federal and private sector funds — will go toward research on ways to increase the amount of oil extracted from known reservoirs, Clements said in a prepared news re lease. “This type of research is vital to our energy future,” Clements said. “Enhanced recovery will give do mestic producers a welcome boost. It will allow our state and nation to in crease our oil- and gas-producing ca pabilities.” Clements has called for a national energy policy establishing a price floor on oil to help prop up dwin dling domestic production and re duce the United States’ dependence on foreign oil. A consortium consisting ofTexas A&M University, University of Texas at Austin, the University of Houston and Texas Tech University will conduct the four-year study pro gram. “The consortium is committed to putting these research funds to the best possible use,” William Fisher, director of the Bureau of Economic Geology at UT said. “We fully expect to be able to show how recoveries of oil and natu ral gas on state lands can be i| Ti creased through combined study 1 non/ reservoirs by teams of geologists,t: Work gineers and geophysicists,” Fisbl So said. Imer In addition to the funds, a n(| Le state law gives Texas oil producenl an d : 50 percent tax break on some eil diml hanced recovery projects. : J tr ut Tear , shots Under the consortium proposal f phoj, State Lands Energy Resource Off take mization Center will be establisfrj at the Bureau of Economic Geokf The bureau, located at Balconesfr search Center in Austin, will senc ! prime contractor, providing the^ research program and coordinai the overall project. Texas death row inmates start paper to tell stories of prison life to outsiders HUNTSVILLE (AP) — With his arms and hands covered by tattoos, his shoulder-length hair and rumpled white clothing emblazoned with an identifica tion number, Robert West is an unlikely-looking news paper editor. Given the fact he lives in a 5-by-9-foot cage, is hand cuffed whenever he is out of that cage, gets his meals slid through a hole in a door and has only an eighth- grade education, his new w'ork is even more improba ble. West is executive editor of a tabloid called Endeavor, a first-ever newspaper written by and for Texas death row inmates and also circulated to people sympathetic to the plight of condemned inmates. “I always had the idea but never had the way to artic ulate,” he said. “When you say ‘death row’ people think of big, dumb, stupid baby-rapers. It’s not like that. It’s just people who have fallen down in society.” West, 27, was sent to death row in 1983 when he was convicted of killing a Houston woman the previous year. “This has been a demoralized community far too long,” West said of his more than 300 colleagues on the Texas death row. Beneath the masthead of Endeavor is proclaimed: “Live Voices From Death Row.” A box at the top of the page contains the names of the 31 Texas inmates exe cuted since the state resumed executions in 1982. “Who is better qualified to tell our story than us?” the editors wrote in a front-page essay. “Certainly not the P tently been used to fuel a fear and anger machine' signed to encourage the public to pour yet more their hard-earned tax dollars into a worse-than-usel' prison system. . . “On the other hand, we are qualified to preseni unbridled account of what goes on behind these *'• with a touch of realism and poignancy only wecan [1 press.” It took a month for West and about a dozen other mates to assemble the material — primarily column-l li stories and poems written by prisoners, plus acoupl f inmate-made drawings and a photograph of the ^ of convicted killer Ted Bundy after his execution^ Her this year in Florida. West’s wife, November Belford-West of New Yo received the prepared copy in the mail and had 3 ' copies printed and mailed. She picked up the $65' costs, while West contributed $150 from his in® 1 trust fund. Other inmates also contributed money, West Y and the paper includes a plea for subscriptions (S?-* year) and donations. Texas prison officials, who scrutinize inmate ^ originally blocked its distribution on death ^ prompting a hunger strike among some prison^ However, after winning approval of prison adminiy tors in mid-August, the first eight-page edition was J livered.