The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 04, 1990, Image 8

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    Battalion Classifieds
HELP WANTED
Students-need
a fall job?
Earn $400 to $800 per month as
a route carrier for the Houston
Chronicle. Job requires working
early morning hours and a gas al
lowance is provided. If interested
call James at 693-7815 for an
appt.
Houston Chronicle
SINUS HEADACHE
STUDY
Patients needed with history
of SINUS HEADACHES to be
treated with one dose of medication
while headache is acute-
Call for information.
Eligible volunteers will
be compensated.
G&S Studies, Inc.
846-5933
334676/17
THE PSYCHOLOGY DEPT.
at TAMU is conducting research
on group dynamics and we need
participants. We will pay $30 for 6
hrs. over 3 week period. Please
do not apply if you have partici
pated in spring or summer of
1990.
If interested, please sign up
outside room 350.
If you have questions call Michelle
at 845-4990.
DO YOU HAVE WHAT WE NEED?
Are you interested in small aircraft
or, better yet, A&P licensed? If so,
contact Bill or Don at Bryan Aviation,
Coulter Field. 778-6120 8:00 to 8:00.
Professional typing, word processing,
resume writing and editing services
are available
at Notes-n-Quotes, call 846-2255.
191ttfn
GUMBY S PIZZA
is now taking applications for delivery driv
ers. Apply today, start tomorrow. Flexible
hours. Earn $50 to $100 every night and
take 100%
of pay home every night. No experience
necessary.
Call 76GUMBY.
Weekend duty Stocker $5.00 an/hr 15 to 20 hours, ap
ply at Jack Millard Distributing from 2 to 5. 194t9/5
Dependable people needed for Houston Post routes
$200-1800 per mnth 846-1253, 846-2911. 194t9/28
Part-time Help Apply In Person Piper’s Chevron
Texas at University. 190t9/12
Students needed for puppet show at MSC interested?
Elena 845-4111. 195t9/6
Experienced chidcare i
and PM. Call 779-7608.
church nursery Sunday AM
19119/7
INTELLIGENCE JOBS: CIA, US CUSTOMS, DEA,
etc. now hiring. Call (1)805-687-6000 Ext. K-9531.
18U9/19
Intelligence Jobs. FBI, CIA, US Customs, etc. Now hir
ing. Call (1) 602-838-8885, Ext. Q- 4009. 6am - 10pm, 7
dirts. 192ttfn
Dependable student to care for 4 yr. old girl near cam
pus, $4/hr. If you have any mornings free please call,
764-7197. 195t9/6
Part-time delivery person must have own air-coindi-
tioned vehicle. Delivery twice a day and once on Sun
days, Flowerama 764-1828, 195t9/6
Part-time sales person needed for retail store; basic
computer knowledge necessary, 846-3279. 195t9/13
Room and board provided for work with high school
bovs. For information call Allen Academy 776-0731 or
776-1690. ' 196t9/7
Hiring all positions. Apply in person. 3-C Barbeque
1727 South Fexas. 184ttfn
Need Hard Worker to clean houses 15 hrs/week, days
$5.00/hr. 823-4717. 192t9/17
Coronet instructor needed for second year student,
(once per week-30 minute session) at home. Call Lo-
776-0
retta 776-0400.
Earn - $300.00/day with your car or truck. Call (1) 602-
838-8885. Ext. KT- 4009, 6am - 10pm, 7 days. 192ttfn
Elderly person in CS needs help care. Two shifts, 7am
to 3pm and 3pm to 10pm. Call 1-409-828-3968.191t9/7
B/W-Navasota looking for employing student desk
its who
clerk, ideal for commuting students who live between
CSand Navasota. Call l-(409)825-7775. 190ttfn
REAL ESTATE
ATTENTION: GOVERNMENT HOMES FROM $1
(U-repair)! Delinquent tax property. Repossessions.
Call (1) 602-838-8885, Ext. GH- 4009. 192ttfn
SERVICES
RESEARCH HFORMATION
Largest Library of Information In U.S. •
all subjects
Order Catalog Today with VIsa/MC or COD
1121^800-361-0222
In Cam. (213) 477-8226
Or, rush $2.00 to: Research Information
11322 Idaho Ave. #206-A, Los Angeles, CA 90025
THE ORIGIANL’ CHAPULTEPEC
RESTAURANT
Daily Lunch Special $1.99 + tax.
Two enchiladas, rice, beans, chips, and
hot sauce (special changed daily)
1315 South College 823-6996, closed
on Tuesdays. 1t tfn
AGGIE DATING SERVICE: FOR INFORMATION
SEND $2.00 TO P.O. BOX 5436 BRYAN, TEXAS
77805. 195t9/16
Want to keep children in home students or teachers.
Over 20 years experience, have references. 774-4260.
195t9/5.
WORD PROCESSING fast, accurate. Ten year experi
ence. Call Barbara 774-0546.
182t9/10
SERVICES
Professional Word Processing
Laser printing for Resumes,
Reports, Letters and Envelopes.
Typist available 7 days a week
ON THE DOUBLE
113 COLLEGE MAIN 846-3755
166ttfn
TWO BLOCKS EAST OF A&M
1 bdr. Duplex Apts.
408 A&B Ash
Partially furnished $195.00, $235.00
Prefer Grad, students
(512)592-4925 night, 595-3791 day
190ttfn
Resume’s 13 years experience, general typing, call 774-
4769, Penny Borrego, 9am to 4pm. 194t9/26
Experienced librarian will do library research for vou.
Call 272-3348. 9U3/30
WORD PROCESSING: PROFESSIONAL, PRECISE,
SPEEDY - LASAR/LETTER QUALITY. LISA 846-
8130. 19U9/25
WANTED
Officials Wanted:
The training meeting for students in
terested in becoming an Intramural
Flag Football Official will be held
Wednesday, Sept 5, 6:00PM, 267 G.
Rollie White. For more information,
call 845-7826. it<a/R
HEWLETT PACKARD LASERJET PRINTER, OR
CANON PC 10, 14, 20, 24, 25, 696-5519. 19/17
HOUSEKEEPER: 20 hrs./week. Hours flexible. Clean
ing, laundry, shopping, some cooking. Must be avail
able during vacations and summers. Call 846-3765 eve
nings before 9:30 pm. 193t9/4
FOR SALE
1979 Olds. Ninety-eight, low mileage, leather interior,
excellent c ondition, $2500 O.B.O., Call 764-3041.
U9/10
The Bargain Place, across from Chicken Oil 846-2429.
Six drawer chest $35.00, 20x44 inch desk $25.00 and
full mattress set $75.00.* U9/10
1990, Red, Convertible Mustang LX, White top, 764-
7650, leave message. 195t9/6
1987 Suzuki Moped, Excellent Condition. Low miles,
$345.00, 846-9202 A/5:00PM. 195t9/6
Dorm Refrigerators 4.2
$65.00. Call 846-8611.
ft. woodgrain or white
192t9/17
Seven roll-away beds. $40.00 each. Golf clubs, stereo,
typewriter, calculator, 3x5 table, snow skis. Call Cay
776-0400. 194ttfn
Senior Boots r
ver used, size 8-B, $250. Call 693-6526.
195t9/13
’89 Kawasaki Ninja 600R, White, 7800 Miles, Yoshi-
mura Pipe, $2650. 764-7247. 196t9/7
ANNOUNCEMENT
FAST
FUNDRAISING
PROGRAM
VISA OR MASTERCARD, Good credit. Bad credit.
No credit; you can have one. Call 823-6297 for more
information. D9/10
1000
JUST
ONI
WHK.
Earn up to $1000 in one week
for your campus organization.
Plus a chance at
$5000 more!
wealthy males wanted as semen donors. Help infertile
couples. Confidentiality ensured. Ethnic diversity de
sirable. Ages 18 to 35, excellent compensation. Contact
Fairfax Cryobank 1121 Braircrest Suite 101, 776-4453.
147ttfn
This program works!
No investment needed.
Call 1-800-932-0528
Ext. 50
SPECIAL NOTICE
A RHODES AT OXFORD
A Rhodes Scholarship is a glitter
ing prize which allows you to at
tend Oxford Univeristy.
Candidates are usually seniors
with a GPA of 3.75 +.
Information from J.F. Reading,
Room 505, Phsyics Engineering.
Deadline, September 30,1990.
FOR RENT
COTTON VILLAGE APTS Ltd.
Snook, TX
1 bdrm $200 2 Bdrm $248
Rental Assistance Available
Cali 846-8878or 774-0773
after 5pm
Equal Opportunity Housing/Handicapped
Accessible 60t t f h
One bedroom apartment on shuttle pool, W/D connec
tions, unique floorplan, close to campus. Wyndham
Management. 846-4384. 196ttfn
ROOMMATE WANTED
Needed female Christian roommate to share 2Bd/2B.
The Oaks, $195.00 a month. Call Tamara 696-9480.
18H9/7
CHILD CARE
Childcare all ages excellent references. Close to
TAMU-Kroger area. Meals provided 693-4327.19119/4
Pick up your copy today
English Annex or
230 Reed McDonald
Page 8
The Battalion
Tuesday, September 4,1990
Old track loses race
against developers
Dr. Lynn Tutoring Biological Sciences, Genetics, Test
Preparation. 846-2672. 822-9146. 192t9/28
COLLEYVILLE (AP) — Ross
Downs has been the site of horse
races since the 1950s, but its last race
has been run, and soon it will be
transformed into a maze of streets,
curbs and upscale homes.
The track owner said he had no
choice but to proceed with a housing
development after his application
for a Class 2 pari-mutuel racetrack
was turned down in 1989. Ross
Downs closed Sunday.
“We’re cussin’ and discussin’ this
day and how sad it is and what
they’ve done to racing in Texas,”
Donna Tolliver said, who raises
horses at The Colony near Lewis
ville. “Where are we going to go?
“We’ve run a lot of horses here,
and we’re very sad about today,”
Tolliver told the Fort Worth Star-
Telegram.
Ernest Owen, who owns the track,
had grand visions of Ross Downs be
coming one of Texas’ first Class 2
pari-mutuel racetracks. After voters
approved pari-mutuel betting in
1987, Owen poured thousands of
dollars into the track in anticipation
of getting a license.
The 114-acre tract — the domain
of horse enthusiasts since the' 1950s
— will give way to development in
the Fort Worth suburb.
Ross Owen, Ernest’s son for
whom the track is named, was in the
steward’s tower this weekend. An
other steward, Jim Beasley, an
nounced the races. The third stew
ard was Ted Pustejovsky.
Nineteen races were on the pro
gram, with two to eight horses in
each race. Satin Sheet won the first
race in a photo finish wTth Smash
Tim.
Claude Reynolds, 70, who lives
near the track, said things won’t be
the same without the track.
Mobley addresses Republican Club at noon
Texas A&M President William
Mobley will speak during today’s
noon meeting of die Brazos Valley
Republican Club.
The club will meet at the Aggie-
land Ramada Inn and local candi
dates will attend.
A buffet lunch will be served for
$7.50. Call 8-1 (>-9700 lor reserva
tions.
Candidate will speak to Pro-Choice Aggies
Jim James, Democratic candidate
for state representative, will speak
during a Pro-Choice Aggies meeting
at 8:;d() tonight in -10 1 Rudder.
More information can be obtained
by calling 847-0102.
Violinist William Pu performs Wednesday
Violinist William Pu will be the
featured musician Wednesday dur
ing the live Brown Bag Concert.
The concert will be from noon to
12:45 p.m. in 402 Academic.
Pu, a graduate student at the Uni
versity of Houston School of Music,
competed in Moscow’s International
Tschaikovsky Competition in June.
He will perform Tschaikovsky’s
Violin Concerto in 1) Major and
Rondo Capriccioso by Saint Saens.
The Department of Philosophy
and Humanities, the College of Lib
eral Arts and the MSC Operatic and
Performing Arts Society Stark Serio
sponsor the concerts, which arc
broadcast live on KAMU-FM.
The concert is free and open io
the public.
Freed hostage wants ‘fighting war’
GRAPEVINE (AP) — Hostages at
the U.S. Embassy in Kuwait face
starvation, and if the State Depart
ment won’t negotiate their release,
“we ought to have a fighting war,”
says a Texas man who recently was
freed.
“I’m saying that the people re
maining in the Kuwait embassy
might have a fighting chance of be
ing rescued” if American troops at
tack Iraqi soldiers occupying Kuwait,
Lloyd Culbertson of El Paso said.
Texan reports on conditions
for hostages in U.S. Embassy
“The people are starving in that
embassy, or they soon will be,” Cul
bertson said Sunday during a lay
over at Dallas-Fort Worth Interna
tional Airport en route to his home.
“My thought is this: would you
rather starve to death slowly, or
would you rather die with a bullet
through the head?” Culbertson said.
“Take your choice. That’s what I
had to do. That’s what the rest of
them are doing. (Thinking) how will
we die? They’ve all made their peace
with the Lord.”
Airport aboard an Iraqi jetliner
cleared to land only for this home
coming flight.
A U.S. official said 24 women, 11
men and 12 children arrived but de
clined to identify them, citing pri
vacy laws.
Bobby and Odessa Higgins of
Texarkana also were on the plane,
shown in a photo with the Rev. Jesse
Jackson. Mrs. Higgins suffered a
broken hip in a car accident just af
ter the invasion last month. Family
members in Texas could not be
reached Sunday by the Associated
Press.
“The people are starving in that
embassy, or they soon will be,” Cul
bertson said. “I resent very much
that ... our president and secretary
of state have gone fishing” during
the crisis, he said.
He said up to 25 people remained
in the embassy.
Culbertson was among 47 Ameri
cans released from Kuwait, which
was overrun by Iraqi soldiers Aug. 2.
They arrived in the U.S. Sunday at
Washington-Dulles International
Culbertson, 76, said hostages in
the embassy are stranded inside
without fresh water or electrical
power and are fast depleting food
supplies.
“It’s getting bad, very bad — no
water, no electricity, no power of any
kind,” he said.“You couldn’t even
take a bath. If you used the toilet,
you couldn’t flush it. You had to go
out to the pool and get some water to
flush it.
“Let’s talk about those economic
sanctions,” he said. “They are work
ing, but they won’t cripple Iraq to
tally for six to eight months, will
they? In the meantime, can’t we ne
gotiate?”
Asked if the people left behind
feared for their lives, Culbertson
said, “Yes, they certainly do.”
Culbertson took issue with Iraqi
Ambassador Mohamed Sadiq al-Ma-
shat’s insistence that hostages were
treated well as “guests” of Saddam:
“The ambassador from Iraq is dead
wrong.
“If it were not for the grace of
God and Jesse Jackson, we would
not be here. The State Department
has not lifted a hand for us,” Cul
bertson said, who told reporters he
has taught electronics to the Kuwaiti
military for 5‘/a years.
“I don t understand why we cam
negotiate with Saddam Hussein if
Jesse Jackson can,” he said.
Marjorie Walterscheid of
Jacksboro, the wife of another Mid
dle East hostage, met Culbertson ai
DEW to ask if he had seen her Inis
band Rainard.
“In case he has, I drove the 80
miles,” said Mrs. Walterscheid. She
said the latest State Department re
ports indicate her husband, an oil
field worker, is being held in a Bagh
dad hotel.
Culbertson looked at a picture of
Walterscheid and said he hadn’i
seen the man. He hugged Mrs. VVal
terscheid, who broke into tears.
“God bless you,” Culbertson said
softly. “I’ll say a prayer. I wish
could help you.”
Mrs. Walterscheid said later she
was glad to have talked to Culbert
son, anyway.
“The things I have Said about the
president being on vacation, things
have said about the State Depart
ment — he feels the same way,” she
said.
But, she disagreed that U.S,
forces should invade to rescue
Americans.
“I feel like once the shooting
.starts, those people are no longer
going to care ... about our people.
No, 1 don’t want any shooting.”
ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT TO SUBLET YEL-
LOWHOUSE COMPLEX TWO MILES SOU 1 H OF
A&M $305 MONTH 696-9492. ASK FOR LISA.
193t9/4
Move 10 years ahead of the class.
Ii
i i
"S a
ii
i
The new HP 48SX and
a free ‘library card’ can
get you there.
With over 2100 built-in functions, out-
new HP 48SX Scientific Expandable
calculator takes a quantum leap into
the 21st century. Buy an HP 48SX
between August 15 and October 15,
1990, and HP will send you a free
HP Solve Equation Library card (a
$99.95 retail value).
The plug-in application card alone
contains more than 300 science and
engineering equations, as well as
the periodic table, a constants’ library,
and a multi-equation solver. It’s like
having a stack of reference books right
at your fingertips.
The HP 48SX calculator is so advanced,
it will change the way you solve prob
lems forever. It integrates graphics
with calculus, lets you enter equations
the way you write them, and does
automatic unit management.
Check your campus bookstore or HP
retailer for HP’s range of calculators
and special back-to-school offers.
Then check out the calculators that
are years ahead of their class.
There is a better way.
(VI
HEWLETT
PACKARD
The Batl
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