The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 13, 1990, Image 8

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    Battalion Classifieds
HELP WANTED
HELP W.ANTED
FOR RENT
GRADUATING?
WANT TO TRY SOMETHING
DIFFERENT BEFOR YOU
ENTER THE ‘ REAL ’
WORLD?
Guest Services in Sequoia and
Kings Canyon National Parks is
looking for enthusiastic, en
ergetic, and experienced people
to fill various positions, including:
Cashiers
Cooks
Front Desk Clerks
Retails Clerks
Housekeepers
... and more!
Most positions start in April or
May and continue through Sep
tember or October. The possibility
of year-round employment exists
as well.
For more information contact:
Guest Services Personnel
Sequoia National Park, CA 93262
209-565-3334
Applications and information are
available from your college place
ment office.
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.
Students needed from the fol
lowing cities to survey child
safety seat use for the Texas
Transportation Institution dur
ing Spring Break: Amarillo,
Austin, Beaumont,
Brownsville, Corpus Christi,
Dallas, El Paso. Ft.Worth,
Houston, San Antonio, and
Tyler. Two students from each
city will collect data at desig
nated day care centers and
shopping centers. Approxi
mately 4 days work, plus train
ing. $5/hr. Call Laura at 845-
2736 between Sam and 5pm
for interview.
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.
9012/15
HOUSTON CHRONICLE
Needs carrier for female
dorms every other week; pays
$180.00 per week . Must be fe
male on campus resident.
693-2323
The Houston Chronicle is cur
rently accepting applications for
route carrier positions. Earn $500
to $700 per month. If interested
call James at .693-7815 or Julian
at 693-2323 for an appointment.
Can you edit my book? Must have M.A. in English with
writing skills. Call 693-4437. 93t02/19
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
ATTENTION - HIRINGIGovernment jobs - your
area. $17,840 - $69,485. Call 1-602-838-8885. 92ttfn
National Marketing Firm seeks mature student to man
age on campus promotions for top companies this
school year. Flexible hours with earnings potential to
$2,500 per semester. Must be organized, hardworking
and money motivated. Call Jeanine or Jeb at (800) 592-
2121. 92ttfn
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
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
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 iRmtin
‘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.
IES,
INC.
G&SSTUDI
(cIosq tQ 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 7C
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
1 /O
VISA OR MASTERCARD!
Even if bankrupt or bad credit!
We Guarantee you a card or
double your money back.
Call (805)682-7555 EXT. M-1054.
Cai’s ; Body Shop, 35 years experience. 10% off labor to
students wihl I.D. . Phone 823-2610. Wrecks wel
comed. . 87ttfn
Deans Typing Service, electric typewriter. Call after
3:00pm 774-0546, before 3:00pm 846-5019, M-F4t2/13
TYPING 7 DAYS / WEEK WORD PROCESSOR FAS
T/ACCURATE. 776-4013. 90t5/4
Experienced librarian will do library research for you.
31127
Call 272-3348.
TYPING 7 DAYS/WEEK. WORD PROCESSOR, FAS
T/ACCURATE. 776-4013/846-3273. 92t5/4
WORD PROCESSING: PROFFESIONAL, PRECISE,
SPEEDY - LASAR/LETTER QUALITY LISA 846-
8130. 85t5/40
NOTICE
FOH
Horticulture - Forestry Science
Building -109
Saturday, Feb 17 1990 10-2
Variety of House Plants
845-2390
FOR SALE
Schlotzsky’s is now accepting applications for part-time
evenings and weekend shifts. Apply in person only be
tween 2 - 5 p.m. 93t02/26
CONDOMS
ORDER BY MAIL AND SAVE!!!
Please RUSH In UNMARKED PACKAGE:
□ 12 piece Condom Sampler $5.99
(Sampler contains a selection of TROJAN BRAND CON
DOMS, Including TROJAN RIBBED, TROJAN ENZ and
TROJAN PLUS.)
□ Complete Condom Catalog (with purchase). Free
Catalog Includes the TROJAN BRAND LINE. COLLEGIATE
LINE,(Condoms In your school colors) and the EROTICA
LINE, (Condoms for those special moments you don't want
totocgetten)
Send check or M.O. to: National Health Products
P.O. Box 15650 SO, CA 92115
SEIZED CARS, trucks, boats,
4wheelers, motorhomes, by
FBI, IRS, DEA.
Available your area now.
Call (805)682-7555 Ext. C-1201.
139ttf n
Rolex Vl! gold $1500/o.b.o. Yamaha amplifier, tuner,
deck, turntable, $500/o.b.o. Speakers $100/o.b.o. Au
tostereo $145/o.b.o. 45 in. t.v. $500/o.b.o. 846-2402.
93t02/20
PASSPORT RADAR DEI ECTOR. COMPLETE. IN
BOX. $225.00call Lane, 693-0678. 9U2/15
1984 Honda Gyro with basket helmet $295 846-9692
Lana. 90t2/14
'89 Zuma Scooter. Great Condition, low mileage. $650.
696-2789. 92t2/16
'87 Honda, V-Twin 700. Loaded, like new, garage
kept. 1,015M - 2/helmets. $3650 775-7290. 92t2/16
ROOMMATE WANTED
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 60ttfn
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
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
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
1 or 2 bedroom apt walking distance from campus
$275.00 to 360.00. All bills paid. 846-4266. 92t2/16
Come Play
VOLLEYBALL
Live Oak Nudist Resort
Washington, TX
(409) 878-2216
1989-1990
Texas aAM University'! Video Vearbook
Texas A&M's video
yearbook is more
than 60 minutes
of the sights and
sounds of 89-90.
Order your copy
for only$32.25
(includes taxes
and delivery.)
in room 230
Reed McDonald
Questions?
Cali 845-0048
AggieVision
Order your
copy today!
Roommate needed; Huntington Apartments 2br-l 1/2
b; m/f 220.00 all Randy 696-2347. 89t2/13
ANTED:
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 sense, it
nets results!
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!
CALiL
845-0569
The Battalion
Cindy Smith, assistant manager of the Horticul
ture-Floriculture Greenhouse on Lamar Street
near the Commons, douses some tropical plants
Photo by Fredrick D. Joe
with rainwater. She said rainwater must be
lected for the plants becuase many of them do
not react well to the salt in tap water.
Detention camp prepares
for thousands of aliens
Officials hope to discourage ‘border crashers’
BAYVIEW (AP) — Truckloads of beds and portable
toilets have arrived at a detention camp here as immi
gration officials prepare to hold thousands of illegal
aliens to discourage yet another wave of Central Ameri
cans from traveling here.
Nicaraguans, Salvadorans, Guatemalans and Hondu
rans apparently forgot about the agency’s last show of
force a year ago along the Mexican border, says Gene
McNary, the new chief of the Immigration and Natu
ralization Service.
So the tents, beds, toilets and other equipment are in
place and ready to make good on McNary’s threat to
detain up to 10,000 “border crashers” at a remote de
tention camp here, northeast of the border city of
Brownsville.
McNary, who last month released more than 1,000
people from the same 347-acre compound to save
money, now says he will spend as much as necessary to
show would-bq intruders they can expect to be detained
and deported.
“It will be humane, but it won’t be convenient,” Mc
Nary said in announcing the crackdown Wednesday,
and tied immigration law to the sovereignty of the
United States.
“This is a sovereign nation,” McNary said. “We have
laws. One of the reasons people want to come to the
United States is because of the rule of law ... We are
going to enforce the laws concerning the border.”
At least $ 11 million will go toward the initial effort of
shifting Border Patrol agents and immigration examin
ers from other parts of the country and packing detai
nees into large vinyl tents with plywood floors.
The first tent, to sleep up to 100 on gray metal bunk
beds with military green blankets, was ready for occu
pancy Friday at the Port Isabel Service Processing Cen
ter, the minimum-security detention camp’s official ti
tle.
829 in October and shot up to 1,860 in January, accoii
ing to the INS.
Walner Hernandez, a 21-year-old Salvadoran dea
nee who came to this country to find work and gela*;
from the army as well as anti-government guerri
said he thought word of the massive detention poll
would take hold in his country.
‘I wrote my mother and told her don’t reconm
to nobody to come illegally to the United States,"Ht
nandez said.
McNary’s crackdown is an effort to prevent a re[«
of late 1988 and early 1989, when more than 50,(1
Central Americans streamed across the border toapp
for political asylum in South Texas.
The INS had allowed asylum-seekers to travel
their families in the United States. But officials incit_
with large Central American populations, such as! c * ear
“1 wa
a
Fhis is a sovereign nation. We have
laws. One of the reasons people wantto
come to the United States is becauseof
the rule of law.”
— Gene McNafj
INS chid
won.
Jamt
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Sunday
How
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Doug
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been the
1986.
The t\
other as
Detainees call it “El Corralon,” the big corral, because
of the 12-foot-high double fencing topped with barbed
wire.
The bare expanse on a former naval air station sits in
sharp contrast to the nearby, lush Laguna Atascosa Na
tional Wildlife Refuge with its tropical birds and endan
gered ocelots.
INS officials said it probably would take at least 10
days before the regular red-brick dormitories fill to
their 1,600 capacity, making the tents necessary.
The camp’s population was 1,113 Monday, including
921 Central Americans. Another 664 Central Ameri
cans were detained Monday at five other centers in the
Lower Rio Grande Valley.
The commissioner said steady increases in the num
ber of Central Americans apprehended by the Border
Patrol prompted his blitz in South Texas, the nearest
U.S. point by land to Central America.
“Other-than-Mexican” undocumented aliens —
mostly Central Americans — caught in Texas totaled
ami and Los Angeles, complained they were ok
whelmed, and the INS discovered that morethanli by Doug
of those given travel papers never kept the obligation!
report to INS offices at their destinations.
So the agency restricted travel for those with ■
solved asylum claims.
Hundreds of homeless asylum-seekers began«]
ing out in a makeshift tent city and a condemnedbi ™
ing in Brownsville.
On Feb. 21, the agency announced that asylumapp
cations would be processed in one day at the detenu
camp. Those not able to prove they were fleeingpffi
cution, a requirement for political asylum, immedias
d i
fight, at
said.
The n
and he t
footedm
and ovei
; Doug
taking p
[jawesom
than Ty:
Despi
uppercui
Douglas
Dougi
the time
were detained and
ings
placed into deportation procs
Since most were denied asylum under the sptt;
get-tough process, asylum applications dropped It)
more than 500 a day to fewer than 10.
Now, with so many people still trying togetintoi!
United States, McNary decided to repeat themessaji
avoid a new crisis. Last time, he said, the INS waited®
long to take action.
Refugee advocates said people will come anytw
flee war.
“It’s a life-or-death situation,” said Jennifer Bailf
paralegal at a Central American legal-aid office in Hi
lingen. “It’s not a pleasure trip up north.”
But officials in the Lower Rio Grande Valley as*
as Miami welcomed the renewed border effort.
See Sny
-f
Lamoreux
(Continued from page 1)
overt violation of procedural due
process, which could, by itself, invali
date the denial of tenure.
CAFRT found, however, that La-
moreux’s substantive due process
rights had been violated saying that
existing conditions and policies did
not allow Lamoreux sufficient op
portunities for the reasonable com-
[ iletion of assigned duties or fulfil
ment of the normal criteria for
tenure and promotion.
Members and staff of the Texas
Faculty Association reacted with as
tonishment Thursday after Mobley’s
decision to overturn the recommen
dation of two faculty committees.
“What this means is that at Texas
A&M meaningful faculty involve
ment in the tenure review and ap
peals process is in effect dead,” TEA
Director Charles Zucker said. “It’s
clear that the administration has no
regard for the recommendation
faculty review committees
spent literally hundreds of
viewing Lamoreux’s case.”
Mobley was out of town
available for comment.
Roy D. Brantley, Lamoreux’s
torney, said his client is pursuin:
avenues available to her at this®
“We are certainly disappoi:
that we did not obtain the exp# 1
result after prevailing at the Ten
Advisory Committee and
CAFRT,” Brantley said.
Regents
(Continued from page 1)
of Regent William A. McKenzie.”
McKenzie said the money used
for these expenditures is donated to
the Board of Regents and is not state
money.
for by the Board are visiting A&M
for official purposes, McKenzie said.
“I don’t know of anyone who
brings any guests down there that
don’t have some connection with
A&M or A&M’s business,” he said.
vided only on special occasions,
“The monies that come to the re
gents to maintain the regents’ office
come either from the development
foundation from gifts made to A&M
or from the former students associa
tion,” he said. “It’s not state money.”
People who have their rooms paid
A&M financial records also show
that in several instances Board funds
have been used to pay for piano mu
sic and chamber music at meetings
and luncheons.
“To my knowledge, we hail
had anyone playing any kind offi
ano recital or anything of thatH
lure, not for the regents at I
McKenzie said. “They do have
at the president’s luncheons
things of that nature.”
In January 1989, for instance, the
Board paid $330 for a string quartet
to perform at a regents dinner.
McKenzie said live music is pro-
Robert Smith, vice preside)
finance and administration atfl !
was out of town and could i
reached for comment. Smith,
nandez and McKenzie were
A&M officials mentioned ini
Chronicle’s story.