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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 12, 1989)
Page 6 The Battalion Tuesday, Septembers, Battalion Classifieds [he • HELP WANTED ■: m LIVE AND WORK IN JAPAN! Have you ever wanted to experience an entirely new culture and way of life that goes beyond the limited view of a tourist? AEON makes this possible by bringing exceptional people to Japan to live and work as teachers of English as a second language...people who are committed to the development of better international understanding. We invite you to discover if you are one of these people. AEON will be interviewing in Houston for positions beginning in Japan in Nov, Dec. 1989 Jan. 1990. Positions are fully salaried with benefits and housing assistance. Minimum BA/BS degree (all majors considered); 1 year contract; Teaching experience and/or Japanese language helpful, but not required. To apply, send resume and one page essay, ‘Why I WANT TO LIVE & WORK In Japan’: AEON Intercultural Corporation P.O. Box 92191 Los Angeles, CA 90009-0009 (213)645-5561 Resume should be received in our office by 9/21/89. GOLD SPINNER RING WITH DIAMONDS. PRICE NEGOI I ABLE. CALL (593-21151. 08UK)/I8 Commodore 64 computer, printer, disk drive and manuels for S350. Call 696-0267. 03l09/l I ♦ -mnaimcmmm Happy 22nd Birthday MIKE ZIMMER I Love You! Ann NEED CREDIT'?' Visa and Mastercard "ith no credit check Also new credit card::: NO ONE REEL SEDi:: For details call 702-82:>-3730 E\t 505. OSttln • WANTED ■ : 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!! 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. 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 cal! James at 693- 7815 or Julian at 693-2323 for an appointment. ■i nn*r\a/-i c Full & part-time positions. Computer operations and commercial data processing production. Contact Gail at 260-9665. 05t09/13 • FOR RENT THE GREENERY Landscape Maintenance Team member Full-time or Part-time Interview Mon-Thurs from Sam - 9am 823-7551 1512 Cavitt, Bryan ALTERATIONS The Needle free estimates»reasonable prices close to campus*300 Amherst 764-9608 07109/15 Morning help needed. Grocery clerk and balloon ar ranging. experience helpful. Mike’s Grocerv 822-2516. 08t09/15 I’art-limc commercial artist needed to make banners. Gall Ron at Jack Hilliard Dist. (Budweiser) at 775-9047 between 3-5pm. l ues. & Wed. only. 08t(H)/13 SEC OND YEAR M B A OR MS MARKETING STU DENT N EEDED TO ASSIS T IN I HE DEVEL OPMENT OF A BUSINESS PLAN EOR A STARL- LP VENTURE. EQUITY OR MONETARY COM PENSATION. MIKE 764-2865 EVENINGS. 08t09/18 Part-time dishwasher. See Fred. No phone calls. Ce- nare Restaurant. 404 E. L'niversitv Dr. OSttfn Appointment clerk. Permanent, full time position (8-5) scheduling patients for 29 positions clinic. Must be able *’ ~ "" J :l - Bysj,- to handle large volume of telephone calls daib tvping skills necessary. Applv Scott & White Clinic. 1600 L'niversitv Dr. E.. College Station, between 8-5 M- F. 080)9/14 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 1 Hot Tub • Basketball Courts • Lighted Tennis Courts •Across From Post Oak Mall FUNT8TI0N DUS Apartments 693-1110 imtoe/31 Mon.-Frl. 8-6 Sat 10-5 Sun 1-6 Cotton Village Apts. Snook, TX. STORE MGMT. A WOMANS SPECIALTY COU TURE BOUTIQUE IN COLLEGE STATION IS LOOKING FOR INDIVIDUALS WHO WOULD BE INTERESTED IN FULL-TIME SALES & STORE MANAGEMENT. THIS IS AN EXCEPTIONAL OP PORTUNITY FOR SOMEONE WHO IS INTER ESTED IN WORKING WITH UP SCALE RETAIL AND WHO ENJOYS PERSONAL CLIENT CON SULTATION. PASS RETAIL EXPERIENCE RE QUIRED. BUYER OR MERCHANDISING EXPERI ENCE A PLUS. COMPETITVE SALARIES AND EXCELLENT BENEFITS. CALL 1-800-683-3K&89 15 1 Bdrm. $200., 2 Bdrm. $248. Rental assistance available! Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 ^^^^^aftei^pm^^^uTmr STALLS FOR RENT-LIGHTED ARENA, ROPING CALVES AND STEERS AVAILABLE. $75. MONTH. 778-7900 778-0677 06t09/I4 Music Director and Pianist needed at local church. Phone 693-7021. 696-3987. 192t09/12 AVAILABLE NOW & for fall: 1&2 bedroom apart ments from $225/mo. APARTMENT LIVING CEN TER. 3914 Old College Road. 846-9196, open 10-6. 180ttfn 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. 04109/12 CASA BLANCA APARTMENTS: 2 bdrm, turn. & un- furn. units. SPECIAL PRIVATE BEDROOM DORM PLAN 4110 College Main. 846-1413, 846-9196. 180tifn Part time electrical engineering student needed by lo cal electronics manufacturer. Stuffing, soldering and troubleshooting skills essential. Flexible hours. Texas Digital Systems, Inc. 693-9378 Monday thru Friday 8 to 5. 07t09/15 Crowded up don’t like roommate, getting out of the corps. Have 3 apis. left. Academic Village Apts. 846- 9196. 04109/12 Fred Brown Mazda BMW is now hiring for a morning greeter. We are seeking a mature, responsible, well dressed person who enjoys working with the public. If your schedule allows you to work 8-1:30 M-F and occa sional weekends please apply at 3100 Briarcrest off Hwy 6. No phone calls please. 07t09/J5 TAKE MY DEPOSIT if you take my apt.! 2/2. w/d conn, shuttle, on-site mgr., more! $329. 846-3028. 05t09/15 ROOMMATE WANTED Notes-N-Quotes now hiring note takers. Interested grad students please applv: For more information call Notes-N-Quotes. 846-2235. 03(09/06 female roommate toi 4 bedioom house. S. W Valles, non-smoker, pmate room. $200. mo. and share utili ties. 606-0134 08(09 18 • SERVICES ’ ~ - " • - 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 7E EARN $500. TO $1000. WEEKLY STUFFING EN VELOPES AT HOME NO EXPERIENCE. FOR FREE INFORMATION SEND SELF ADDRESSED STAMPED ENVELOPE TO: P.O. Box 85658 WEST- LAND, MICH 48185. 194ttfn Pianist & other musicians. Jazz/Blues only. Call/Come by Frank’s Bar & Grill, 505 E. L’niversitv Dr. Mike or Frank 846-5388. 03t09/18 Dependable People for Houston Post Routes Early Morning $200.-$850. Per Month 846-2911 846-1253 02t09/15 PATELLAR TENDONITIS (JUMPER’S KNEE) Patients needed with patellar ten donitis (pain at base of knee cap) to participate in a research study to evaluate a new topical (rub on) anti-inflammatory gel. Previous diagnoses welcome. Eligible volunteers will be com pensated. G & S Studies, Inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 iBottin A GOOD TALKER NEEDED-PHONE SALES, DAY & EVENING SHIFT-823-5079. 04t09/12 “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 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 FALL WEED ALLERGY STUDIES Individuals 16 years or older to participate in Fall weed allergy studies. Known weed allergic patients welcome. $100.-$400. incentive for those chosen to participate. $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 : In Advance Study Abroad to present info on finacial The Study Abroad Center is sponsoring an informational meeting to discuss the different types of study abroad programs offered through A&M and to tell students how to obtain financial aid for these programs. The meeting is scheduled for Wednesday in 504 Rudder frocf 2 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Cathy Schutt, staff assistanul the Study Abroad Office, saitl A&M faculty members will prej sent slides and photographs show students the options theJ have for study abroad program! | Memorial for Beijing massacre scheduled FRO Although June 4th is 100 days past, the Beijing Massacre is still vivid in the minds of many. A memorial service marking the anniversary of the massacre will be held tonight from 8 to 10 in 105 Harrington. The memorial service will make up the first part of the pro gram and will be directly followed by three key-note speakers who will address the situation in Bei j ing. I he speakers include an student who taught at the UniveiJ sity of Beijing at the timeoftltj massacre and another who wal directly involved in the rescueefl fort of hunger strikers in Tianacl men Square. The third speaker l a citizen of Hong Kong and wl speak about the effect of the mail sacre on Hong Kong. Southwestern Bell to present interviewing tips A corporate interview presen tation by Southwestern Bell rep resentatives will be held tonight from 5 to 6:15 in 701 Rudder. Representatives from their cor porate headquarters will provide helpf ul tips for successful inter viewing. The Texas A&M Cooperate| Education Office will videotapl the presentation for future rej view. College Board reports SAT scores lower in among women, minorities nRitiMMNHirtii 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 04tt»n PROTECT YOURSELF against burglary and intruders with a home & apartment security system No installation necessary. Call for free demonstration. 846-0144. Sales opportunities available. TWO HANK WILLI AMS JR. TICKET. HOUSTON. SEPT 23. MIKE 696-3269. 08t<)9/18 For Sale German Short-haired Pointer Puppies AKC registered wormed, shots, tails bobbed. Call 846-5984 04t09/15 Yamaha Virago 1985 700cc, 5500 Miles, Maroon with helmet, mint condition. $1,800. Brad, 693-08904t09/15 AT COMPATIBLE COMPUTER WITH PRINTER, 20MHD, MODEM. $1,800.- Don 696-0389 04t09/12 PROFESSIONAL WORD processing by experienced typist. Carla, 690-0305. 190t09/22 Typing: Accurate, Prompt, Professional. 15 Years Ex perience. Symbols. Near Campus. 696-5401. 06t09/29 Typing and resume services available at reasonable prices. Rush jobs excepted. Call Notes-N-Quotes. 846- 2255. 03l09/19 Experienced librarian will do library research for you. Call 272-3348. 194t09/29 ON THE DOUBLE Professional Vtford Processing, laser jet printing. Papers, resume, merge letters. Rush services. 846-3755. y 181tfn TYPING 7 DAYS PER WEEK. WORD PROCESSOR. EAST/ACCURATE. 776-4013. 07tl2/01 » FOR SALE 1985 RED HONDA SPREE, RUNS GREAT, VERY RELIABLE. $400. CALL CINDY 764-9285. LEAVE MESSAGE. 07t09/15 Amiga 1000 with software. $600. Negotiable After 4:00pm. 846-6260. 07t09/15 The Battalion Number One in Aggieland 1984 HONDA V-30 5,000 MILES EXCEL. COND. W/EXTRAS $ 1,500. RANDY 693-8345. 07ttfn NEW YORK (AP) — After almost a decade of steady gains, average Scholastic Aptitude Test scores among women and several minority groups slipped last year, The Col lege Board reported Monday. Overall, scores among the 1,088,223 high school students who took the SAT in 1989 showed little change for the fourth consecutive year. Average verbal scores dropped a point to 427 compared with 1988; math scores were unchanged at 476. Average composite scores on the ACT Assessment, the college en trance test that predominates in 28 states mostly in the Midwest and West, dipped 0.2 points in 1989 to 18.6. Averages on the four-part exam, assessing English, math, social studies and natural science skills, are scored on a scale of 1 to 35. Critics for years have accused both tests, especially the SAT, of be ing biased against women and mi norities, and the latest averages again displayed a wide race and gen der gap. White students gained two points on their combined SAT scores to 937 — averaging fully 200 points higher than blacks, whose math-ver bal scores were unchanged from the previous year at 737. Women’s combined scores dipped two points to 875; male test-takers averaged 934, one point higher than a year earlier. The SAT, sponsored by The Col lege Board and administered by the Educational Testing Service in Princeton, N.J., is the predominant college entrance exam in 22 states. The two-part, multiple-choice test is scored on a scale of 200 to 800, with a combined 1600 being a perfect score. The ACT, taken by 855,171 high school students last year, is adminis tered by American College Testing, headquartered in Iowa City, Iowa. The organization announced that, beginning October, students will re ceive 12 scores instead of the current five, including seven new subscores in specific content areas of English, math and reading. College Board President Don M. Stewart attributed the contim lag in SAT averages among woir. and minority students to inequi: in educational opportunities. He nonetheless noted thatscoi among most minority groups been gaining more rapidly among whites during the 1 least until this year. Average scoi among blacks, for example, gained 28 points on the math tion of the SAT and 21 points o verbal since 1979. Mother Teresa improves after heart treatment CALCUTTA, India (AP) Mother Teresa’s condition in E roved Sunday after the Not* lureate received a pacemaker: steady her heartbeat and heav doses of antibiotics to f fever, doctors said. A statement issued by Wood lands Nursing Home said the 7! year-old Roman Catholic nm known for her work with tk poor “responded well to the trea: ment” after a temporary pact maker was implanted late Sato: day. “Her temperature is norma! her heartbeat is steady, and she: cheerful,” one of Mother Teresa doctors said in a telephone inter view. He spoke on condition anonymity. Earlier in the day, hospital source said doctori feared Mother Teresa might k developoing pneumonia. Mother Teresa, whose devo tion to the destitute and earned her the 1979 Nobel Pea« Prize and the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest U S. o vilian award, became ill Sept. 3 OFFICE OF UNIVERSITY ART COLLECTIONS AND EXHIBITIONS PREHISTORIC TEXANS OF THE LOWER PECOS SEPTEMBER 14 OPENING LECTURE 7:30 PM RUDDER TOWER ROOM 701 “ART AND LIFEWAYS OF THE LOWER PECOS” BY DR. HARRY J. SHAFER, ANTHROPOLOGY DEPT, TAMU OPENING RECEPTION 8:30 PM RUDDER EXHIBIT HALL SEPTEMBER 14 THROUGH OCTOBER 31 RUDDER EXHIBIT HALL 8 AM TO 11 PM DAILY FOR MORE INFORMATION AND DOCENTTOURS CALL 845-8501 TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY THE TEXAS A&M PROGRAM IS MADE POSSIBLE IN PART BY A GRANT FROM THE TEXAS COMMITTEE FOR THE HUMANITIES. A STATE PROGRAM OF THE NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES. THE WITTE EXHIBITION WAS FUNDED BY A GENEROUS GRANT FROM THE AT&T FOUNDATION. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF JIMMY ZINTGRAFF. youi red l Iron next retit T him: erne been Ir whic frorr som< sufft critic W tenn Bi Ivan brid< has t B( Gen thret U.S.