Paged The Battalion Thursday, February 8, Battalion Classifieds (Continued from page 1) HELP WANTED SUMMER JOBS COUNSELORS - BOYS CAMP, W. MASS./GIRLS CAMP, MAINE TOP SALARY, RM/BD/LAUNDRY, TRAVEL ALLOWANCE. MUST LOVE KIDS AND HAVE SKILL IN ONE OF THE FOLLOWING ACTIVITIES: AR CHERY, ARTS & CRAFTS, BASE BALL, BASKETBALL, BICYCLING, CHEERLEADING, DANCE, DRAMA, DRUMS, FENCING, GOLF, GUITAR, GYMNASTICS, HOCKEY, HORSE BACK, KARATE, LACROSSSE, NA TURE, NURSES, PHOTOGRAPHY, PIANO, RADIO, ROCKETRY, ROPES, SAILBOARDING, SAILING, SCUBA, SOCCER, TENNIS, TRACK, WSI, WATERSKI, WEIGHTS, WOOD. MEN CALL OR WRITE: CAMP Wl- NADU, 5 GLEN ALNE, MAMARO- NECK, N.Y. 10543 (914)381-5983. WOMEN CALL OR WRITE: CAMP VEGA , P.O. BOX 1771, DUXBURY, MA. 02332 (617)934-6536. Prude Ranch Summer Camp, located in the beautiful Ft Davis Mountains, is hiring counselors for 1990. Come on over to Rudder Tower Febuary 9th room 305 AB 12:00pm to 4:00pm and get more information. John Robert Prude and some of the staff will be there to fill you in on all of the fun. Hope to see you there. We are selecting A&M students for our summer sales & manage ment internship program. Stu dents receive 3 credit hrs.,make approx, $395./wk & develope re sume experience. We look for hard working students who can work outside College Station for the summer. For information send name, phone#, major or resume to Summer Work P.O. Box 63 Friendswood ,TX 77546. Parttime Sales Immediate need for parttime sales person, prior retail experience pre ferred. Must be self-motivated and a quick learner to work in cus tomer service oriented bridal bou tique, 15-20 hours per/week in cluding Monday and Thursday evenings and Saturdays. Hourly plus commission. Apply at 1100 Harvey Road, College Station. HOUSTON CHRONICLE Needs carrier for female dorms every other week; pays $180.00 per week . Must be fe male on campus resident. 693-2323 RESORT HOTELS, SUMMER CAMPS, CRUISELINES, & AMUSEMENT PARKS, NOW accepting applications for sum mer jobs and career positions. For free information package and ap plication; call National Collegiate Recreation Services on Hilton Head Island, South Carolina at 1-800-526-0396. (9am-5pm EST. M-F) CRUISE SHIP JOBS HIRING Men - Women, Summer / Year Round. PHOTOGRAPHERS, TOUR GUIDES, RECREATION PERSONNEL. Ex cellent pay plus FREE travel. Caribbean, Hawaii, Bahamas, South Pacific, Mexico. CALL NOW! Call refundable. 1-206-736- 0775, Ext.600 N. BE YOUR OWN BOSS! Distributorships, Dealerships, Money making opportunities, Franchises, & Mail order. Detail, send $2.00 to: NATIONAL MARKETING COMPANY, BOX 3006, BOSTON, MA. 02130. 79t2/8 UNLIMITED INCOME! Assemble products in your home. Easy work. Excellent pay. No Experience needed. Call 318-828-4989 Ext. H 1375 24 Hrs. Inch Sunday. 90t2/23 Prestigious northeast summer camps seek specialists in sports, music, dance, theatre, art, magic, circus, sci ence, waterfront, equestrian. Call French Woods (800)869-6083. 89ttfn HELP W.ANTED ATTENTION: EARN MONEY READING BOOKS! $32,000/year income potential. Details. (1)602-838- 8885 Ext. Bk 4009. 88t2/7 NEW ENGLND BROTHER/SISTER CAMPS - MAS- SACHUSETTS. Mah-Kee-Nac for Boys/Danbee for Girls. Counselor positions for Program Specialists: All Team Sports, especially Baseball, Basketball, Field Hockey, Softball, Soccer and Volleyball; 25 Tennis openings; also Archery, Riflery, Weights/Fitness and Biking; other openings include Perfoming Arts, Fine Arts, Newspaper, Photography, cooking, sewing, Rol lerskating, Rocketry, Ropes and Camp Craft; AUWa- terfront Activities (Swimming, Skiing, Sailing, Wind surfing, Canoe/Kayaking). Inquire: Mah-Kee—Nac (boys), 190 Linden Ave. Glen Ridge, NJ 07028. Danbee (girls), 16 Horseneck Road, montville NJ 07045. Please Call 1-800-776-0520. ‘ 88t3/22 OVERSEAS JOBS $900-2000 mo. summer, Yr.round, All countries, All fields. Free info. Write IJC, PO Bx 52-TXD4 Corona Del Mar, CA 92625. 56tl2/13 Help wanted dishwashers. Apply at 3-C Barbeque 693- 4054. 89t2/9 Healthy males wanted as semen donors. Help infertile couples. Confidentiality ensured. Ethnic diversity de- sirsable. Ages 18 to 35, excellent compensation. Con tact Fairfax Cryobank 1121 Briarcrest Suite 101 776- 4453. 72t5/4 CAMP WEKEELA FOR BOYS/GIRLS, CANTON, MAINE. One of America’s most prestigious camps, seeks creative dynamos for staff positions June 18 - Au gust 19 for tennis, landsports, gymnastics, waterskiing, competitive swimming, water polo, small crafts, piano, dance, drama, song leaders, campcraft/ropes, ceramics, art, photography/yearbook. Also office, kitchen and maintenance positions. If you think you’re tops, con tact: 130 S. Merkle Rd., Columbus, Ohio 43209. (614)235-3177. 85t02/28 FREE Room and Board in exchange for babysitting and light housekeeping, no weekends. Beautiful coun try home 30 miles from TAMU, try home 30 miles from TAMU, private bath all house privileges. FEMALE preferred. Call collect, Nancy 409/878-2248. 87t2/9 Apply now delivery drivers needed at Mr.Gatti’s 107 S.College. 80t2/8 Bug A Boo is looking for great bodies to model swim wear, must apply in person. Call for information 764- 8726. 89t2/8 SERVICES 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 tfiawn 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. (closo campus) 846-5933 lawn 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 7£ ALTERATIONS The Needle Ladies & Men’s clothing Off Southwest Parkway - 300 Amherst 764-9608 ON THE DOUBLE Professional word processing laser jet printing. Papers, resumes, merge letters. Rush services 846-3755 TYPING 7 DAYS / WEEK WORD PROCESSOR FAS T/ACCURATE. 776-40 IS. 90t5/4 WORD PROCESSING: PROEEESIONAL, PRECISE. SPEEDY - LASAR/LETTER QUALITY LISA 846- 8130. 85t5/40 A-1 WORD PROCESSING. Legal/Executive secretary. Proffessional resumes, proposals, reports 778-0587. 72t2/9 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY FOR RENT COTTON VILLAGE APTS Ltd. Snook, TX 1 bdrm $200 2 Bdrm $248 Rental Assistance Available Call 846-8878or 774-0773 after 5pm Equal Opportunity Housing/Handicapped Accessible 60 ttfn A luxury 2 bedroom, 2 bath fourplex on shuttle, 2 blocks from campus. Washer/dryer included. Gas and electric utilities. Semester lease available. Wyndham Mgt. 846-4384. $395. 85tfn Female roommate Needed / Own bedroom / Near Campus / On Shuttle Bus Route / 764-7282. 87t2/9 URGENT SUBLEASE IB/IB Apartment on shuttle. February Rent Paid 764-0512. 88t2/12 FOR FiENT 1 Bdrm. 1 bath efficiency apartment on shuttle. Pool. Private patio, built in study area. Unique horseshoe floorplan. Washer/dryer connection. Wymdham Man agement. 846-4384. 87t3/22 New 3 bedroom condo w/2 baths and garage w/ pan oramic views of Breckenridge, Colorado; available 3/12 thru 3/18, $1400.00. Call (303)795-0601 or (303)744- 3313 ask for Steve. 89t2/13 Deans Typing Service, electric typewriter. Call after 3:00pm 774-0546, before 3:00pm 846-5019, M-T4t2/13 Tremendous parttime earning potential for marketing discount services through Fortune 500 Companies. 696-8611. 85t2/9 Bargains! One and two bedrooms. Close to campus $80.00 to $150.00 696-2038 71t2/8 FOR SALE 1984 Honda Gyro with basket helmet $295 846-9692 Lana. 90t2/14 AMIGA 500 FOR SALE, WILL TAKE BEST OFFER. CALL 847-6839. 87t2/9 ’81 KAWASAKI 440 LTD. RUNS GREAT, 17k, $550, 847-1622 MIKE. 87t2/9 Dorm refigerators, 4.2 cu. ft.,woodgrain or white, $65.00, call 846-8611. 62t2/9 86 K-5 Blazer, Excellent Condition. More details call Todd 696-3264. 87t2/9 1982 Yamaha Virago 750, $ 1500. New battery, tire and seat. Looks and runs GREAT!!! 764-7209. 87t2/9 ATTENTION- GOVERNMENT HOMES FROM $1 (U-Repair). Delinquent tax property. Repossessions. Call 1-602-838-8885 ext.GH 4009. 88ttfn ATTENTION-GOVERNMENT SEIZED VEHICLES from $100. Fords, Mercedes, Corvettes, Chevys. Sur plus buyers guide. 1-602-838-8885. ext.q 4009 88ttfn Samsung monochrome monitor, $60. Genius mouse w/drivers, $35. Robert, 822-2563. 88t2/9 ROOMMATE WANTED NOTICE Bad credit? No credit? Fix your credit report.-Get Loans- Credit Cards. Amazing recorded message re veals details. 693-8475. 72t2/9 Caj's; Body Shop, 35 years experience. 10% off labor to students wiht l.D. . Phone 823-2610. Wrecks wel comed. 87ttfn ANTED: Enterprising Self-Starters When business starts booming it's time to think about expanding your operation. Adver tising in the Classifieds for the right person to fill the job not only makes good nets results! sense, it When you have an item to sell, a message to get across, a product to buy, a service to advertise...en terprising people use our Classi fieds for fast, economical and effective results! CALL 845-0569 The Battalion THE SANDSTONE CENTER them (busineses who violate rules) or deny their permits.” Furthermore, Lasley said, the proposals are not aimed at the re sponsible clubs or restaurants with alcoholic beverage permits, but at the irresponsible “scoundrels and scumbags 1 ’ with the same permits. Lasley said he personally is not overly optimistic about the proposal becoming law at this time because it is only the second time in 15 years that tnere has been a public hearing on a rules question. Other proposals submitted to the TABC include: • barring minors from establism- ments where liquor sales exceed 60 percent of total income. • prohibiting, for one year, the sale of alcohol from any location that has sold liquor to three minors or three intoxicated persons in the pre vious 12 months. Rural entrepreneurs !pe Bal hold own against cities WASHINGTON (AP) — Rural Texas is holding its own against the state’s metropolitan areas in new business growth, according to a study Wednesday that finds the entrepreneurship a hopeful sign amid bleak poverty and high school graduation rates. The study by the Corporation for Enterprise Development said rural Texas was one of the leading states in terms of jobs being created by new businesses in the 1980s. whether small or large, suggesiii there may be some “very dynamit big structural changes in rurjlj Texas” that are creating opportune ties for new business start-ups, cotj poration president Doug Ross said “The best piece of good news f Texas lies in the large number o:i new businesses being born in ruts Texas,” Ross said. “T hat is a hopeft sign for rural Texas’ economic In ture. MOSO [arty tha ' co\ revolutioi Rural Texas, the study found, is actually beating out the state’s urban areas when it comes to the enterprise job growth rate among small busi nesses. The healthy enterprise job growth rate for businesses in rural Texas, “However, there is a shadow t* jjiow alte ing cast across that future by thelo. r or CO ntrc educational attainment of rural Ta jhe de ans. Rural Texans not only compait, jnent tha poorly with other rural Americam; root an d when it comes to high school graAN| ra ble to nation and college attainment, h titles of i they also compare very poorly tour mur ders ban Texans,” Ross said. Aid (Continued from page 1) To share three bedroom house 2 blocks from campus $160 month Anita 823-2865. 90t2/9 can values can be the most powerful but also the most damaging form of aid to other countries, he said. “This idea of enlightening the world really descends from one of the most quintisential American va lues and that is the value that Ronald Regan best expressed when he said ‘We are a city on a hill with all the eyes upon us’ ... we want to go out and try to recreate ourselves abroad,” Hamilton said. “We have a public that has been told not about the benefits of what we can really do, but it’s been told generally what we can do to promote our own values abroad.” Although it’s had its problems, Hamilton said, foreign aid has had many successes too. “Our great successes have been in economics — in creating high growth rates, in raising the living standards and the life expectancy of dissident Brezhnev The de ittee to ] onal moi lolitical n people, raising the literacy rates DOll ucai n this is where we ought to concentraif Qorbac really do,” he said. |^ e 249-n on what aid can The U nited States should see foi ol her off! eign aid as acheiving practical even w j 10 took day impact, Hamilton said, insteaimjj-jj, of carrying out noble aspirations. Hamilton told stuaents to Itf aware that they can help achievt these goals. “In a pluralist world| people like you (the students) I every opportunity to change tlti world.” u To share house one block off campus $ 170/month call 696-8938. 83tl/5 Roommate needed; Huntington Apartments 2br-l 1/2 b; m/f 220.00 all Randy 696-2347. 89t2/13 Sororities 01 (Continued from page 1) gie and not split up into separate groups,” he said. Some main concerns of both fra ternities and sororities in the past have been that they all wanted to build their own houses and to con trol their own finances, Koldus said. Adair said A&M accommodated the Greeks’ requests by agreeing to interfere as little as possible. “We have tried to dispel the many negative feelings about the change,” Adair said. Basombrio (Continued from page 1) people in San Francisco and Las Ve gas and from classes of schoolchil- rJfavErff W j -303 -421-6322 Eating Disorders? Depression? Stress? Anxiety? Relationship Problems? Drug or Alcohol Problem? Free Confidential Consultation 24 Hours Every Day Dependable People for Houston Post routes. Daily Morning, $200,$850 Per Month 846-2911 846-1253 Counselor on Campus, Thursday-Saturday, 9:00 p.m.- Midnight 4201 Texas Avenue South, College Station, Texas 77845 Koldus said the sororities might have resisted the proposal for Uni- versity recognition. “There may have been some de fensiveness on the part of the orga nizations because of not originally being recognized,” Koldus said. Gwen Rainwater, Alpha Chi Omega house director, said becom ing recognized by the University would provide unity within the Greek system. “A stronger Greek system will help A&M much more than it will hinder it,” she said. Rainwater was a house director at Louisiana State University, whert | Greeks were recognized by the uid versity. “The campus provided daily bu) letins from Greek relations, campiii security and if nobody could b found to repair the house then tht fiscal department would send soiw one,” Rainwater said. Delta Zeta member Michelle WJ Hams, a junior journalism majoi from Pasadena, said that someoflti! advantages of Univer sity recognition include the availability of table dii plays at the MSC and the other buildings on campus. ; WASHI House sc Bromley s Itruction v Should be roves it i jialized n assive at' Bromle ience ai he White |:the Hous mental design major, and member of K-2, said Basomorio was a top stu dent and a “model cadet.” “He had the brightest future out of anybody around,” Barbieri said. K-2 cadet, Tres Walker, a senior history major from Union, Ore., de scribed Basombrio this way: “Everyone remembers him for his incredibly high GPA. He always had demands on his time, but he never had a problem fulfilling his obliga tions. “He was the perfect cadet,” Walker said. Basombrio was hospitalized and receiving chemotherapy at Wilford Hall Medical Center at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio. Because Basombrio’s family lived in Houston and couldn’t visit him frequently, Alice Crawford, who is the mother of two A&M students, wrote the San Antonio Express- News and asked Aggies to send Ba sombrio cards and get-well wishes. Columnist Roddy Stinson re ceived the letter and turned Craw ford’s idea into a contest between A&M and the University of Texas. Stinson wanted Aggies and Long horns to send cards, letters, draw ings and school souvenirs to Basom brio in his hospital room. At last count, on January 21, the Aggies were winning with 298 letters compared to the Longhorns’ 95. Ba sombrio also received letters from dren. Damon Arhos wrote a column about Basombrio and the contest in the Jan. 30 issue of The Battalion. Basombrio is survived by his mother, stepfather, brother Juan Carlos and sister Isabella, a student at A&M. Because Basombrio graduated from A&M, he will not be honored at Silver Taps next month. Instead, a special Silver Taps in memory of Ba sombrio was held Wednesday. To mark the distinction of the cere mony from other Silver Taps, the Ross Volunteers played Taps only In Advance [Space and SCON A presents panel on U.S. foreign aid ace the $318 Super colli I be spent j I can be bui MSC Student Council on Na tional Affairs will present a panel discussion on “Formulation of U.S. Foreign Aid” from 8:10 a.m. until noon today in Rudder The ater. The discussion is part of SCO- NA’s program called “United States Foreign Aid: Purpose, Players & Politics.” Panel members will be Dr. James T. Goodwin, coordinator of international agricultural pro grams at Texas A&M; Patrick Breslin, with the Office of Learn ing and Dissemination at Inter- American Foundation; and Col. Charles Rex Weaver, former U.S. Army Chief with the Office of Military Cooperation in Beirut, Lebanon. Admission for this panel dis cussion and all SCONA programs is free. He said |\ 1990 f< super colli Texas, abc Fraternity hosts Greek Olympiad competition Kappa Alpha Psi will host the first Greek Olympiad Saturday night at 7:30 in Rudder Audito- The competition will feature a step show, which is a complicated routine of dance steps set to rhythm. Tickets are available for $5 at Rudder Box Office. For more in formation call Eric Lewis at 764- 0600 or the Multicultural Services Center at 845-4551. SCONA speaker addresses foreign aid execution David Black, a representative of the Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture, will speak tonight at 7:30 in Rud der Theater as part of MSC SCO- NA’s lecture series. The lecture, titled “T he Execu tion of Foreign Aid,” is one of four lectures presented by the Texas A&M Student Council on National Affairs dealing with United States foreign aid. Black has worked with the World Bank, Inter-American De velopment Bank and other inter national funding agencies in pro gram development and implementation. He also served as an adviser for external rela tions to the secretary general of the Organization of American States. Economics professor discusses Free Market Texas A&M economics profes sor Dr. Morgan Reynolds will dis cuss “The Phoenix Reborn: Will Free Market Economics Rejuve nate Eastern Europe?” tonight at 7 in 206 MSC. The MSC Wiley Lecture Series | is sponsoring the discussion. For more information call the Wiley Lecture Series office a! 845-1415. Slide presentation features Alaskan refuge “The Last Wilderness,” a multi-projector slide presenta tion, will be shown at 7:30 tonight in 110 Civil Engineering. The presentaton looks at the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in northeast Alaska. Also fea tured is the controversy about oil development vs. wilderness pro tection in the refuge. A brief question and answer session will follow the presenta tion. \ FEVER STUDY Do you have a fever of 101° or greater} Earn $200 by participating in an 8 hour at home research study with an investigational over-the-counter fever medication. No blood drawn. Call Pauli Research Int'l 776-0400 After 6 & Weekends call 361-1500 C 6R1 Stain* Tues. 6-9pm Wed. 6-9pm #28/81 Laadc Mon. 6- 9pm $28/sl CaUlp Wed. I 7- 9pm •22/el Etcha< Tues. 6-9pm Tues. 1 6- 9pm Tues. J 9-9pm #12/st Hawaii Sat & 9ani-l: Sat A 9am-i: •40/st Mat tin Sat Fe 9-llan Wed. I 7- 9pm Wed. V 7-9pm #25/st WO Dacoy Tues. 1 6:30-9 #32/st Mon. V 6-8:30] #27/ st Advani Sunda- 6-8:30] *30/st P01 PottSTJ Mon. M 3-7pm Mon. M 7:30-9:; Wed. F 7:30-9:; tat. Pol Tues. I 6:30-8:: *28/s h