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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 7, 1990)
The Battalion Friday, September 7,199C i Page 6 Battalion Classifieds HELP WANTED 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 volunteeers will be com pensated. G & S Studies, Inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 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 SPRING BREAK, Christmas, summer travel FREE. Air couriers needed and cruiseship jobs. Call (805)682-7555 JExt. S-1026. 191ttfn 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. 19U9/7 COLLEGE REP WANTED to distribute Student Rate subscription cards at this campus. Good income. For information and application write to: COLLEGIATE MARKETING SERVICES, 303 W. Center Ave. Mooresville. NC 28115. 2t9/7 Mr. Gatti’s Pizza is NOW HIRING! Need in store and delivery workers. Day and night shifts available, call 268-8888. 4t9/20 Elderly person in CS needs help care. T wo shifts, 7am to 3pm and 3pm to 10pm. Call 1-409-828-3968.191t9/7 Graduate Students needed as note-takers for Notes-n- Quotes. Call 846-2255. 2t9/10 Needed delivery people. Need valid Texas license. Knowledge of area, A1 696-7697. 2t9/l 1 Need tele-marketing persons. Experienced preferred. Three shifts available Al, 696-7697. 2t9/l 1 Part-time help needed at Grapevine Restaurant. Call 696-3411, ask for Patsy. 3t9/7 Part-time Help Apply In Person Piper’s Chevron Texas at University. 190t9/12 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 hoys. For information call Allen Academy 776-0731 or 776-1690. 196t9/7 Healthy 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 Assistant - Oral Surgery Office. Part-time position 764- 7101. 2t9/18 Hiring all positions. Apply in person. 3-C Barbeque 1727 South T exas. 184ttfn VISA OR MASTERCARD, Good credit, Bad credit, No credit; you can have one. Call 823-6297 for more information. It9/10 Dependable people needed for Houston Post routes "200-$ $200-$800 per mnth 846-1253, 846-2911. 194t9/28 INTELLIGENCE JOBS: CIA, US CUST OMS, DEA, alKD etc. now hiring. Call (1 )805-687-6000 Ext. K-9531. 18U9/19 Need Hard Worker to clean houses 15 hrs/week, days $5.00/hr. 823-4717. 192t9/17 ANNOUNCEMENT FAST FUNDRAISING PROGRAM woo IN JUST ONE WEEK. Earn up to $1000 in one week for your campus organization. Plus a chance at $5000 more! This program works! No investment needed. Call 1-800-932-0528 Ext. 50 FOR SALE i%grl99Q AQQIFVISIOS Now at English Annex and 230 Reed McDonald SEIZED CARS, trucks, boats, four wheelers, motors homes, by FBI, IRS, DEA. Available your area now. Call (805)682-7555 Ext. C-1201. 1980 MERCURY CAPRI, LOW MILES, COLD AC, STEREO, CASSETTE 847-5955. 4t9/l 3 FOR SALE Double bed mattress boxspring and frames, $50. Call 693-1946, GOOD CONDH ION! 4t9/13 1986 Honda Elite 80 Scooter, excellent condition, low mileage, MUST SELL! $700 or best offer (817)883- 3746. 4t9/20 Senior Boots never used, size 8-B, $250. Call 693-6526. I95t9/13 Dorm Refrigerators 4.2 cu. ft. woodgrain or white $65.00. Call 846-8611. 192t9/17 Men’s, Red, Schwinn Bike is like new. Great Deal! $200 or best offer 693-2818. 2t9/11 Carpet with pad, 12x14, 12x12, $25 each. Excellent condition. Rust-colored 696-7410, 845-1146. 3t9/12 Seven roll-away beds, $40.00 each. Golf clubs, stereo, typewriter, calculator, 3x5 table, snow skis. Call Gay 776-0400. 194ttfn 1986 Kawasaki Ninja 1000, Red, Very Clean 7,500 miles $3,400 846-4330. 2t9/7 ’89 Kawasaki Ninja 600R, White, 7800 Miles, Yoshi- mura Pipe, $2650. 764-7247. 196t9/7 Senior Boots: Size 9B, $100, 846-9748. See at Western Union. 2t9/7 NEW YONEX QUALITY BADMINTON RAC QUETS, $55, STRINGING $ 12. PETER 696-9373. 2t9/l1 1979 Olds. Ninety-eight, low mileage, leather interior, excellent condition, $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. D9/10 ROOMMATE WANTED Needed female Christian roommate to share 2Bd/2B. T he Oaks, $195.00 a month. Call Tamara 696-9480. 18119/7 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 Professional typing, word proc essing, resume writing and editing services are available at Notes-n-Quotes, call 846-2255. RESEARCH HFORMATMIN Largest Library of Information In U.S. • - all subjects Order Catalog Today with VIsa/MC or COD 800-361-0222 M.iunmi—| n Ca |||. ( 213) 477-8226 '. (213) Or, rush $2.00 to: Research Information 11322 Idaho Ave. #206-A, Los Angeles, CA 90025 PRIVATE PILOT GROUND SCHOOL Meets at Coulter Field for 10 weeks. Starts Wednesday, Sept. 12th at 7:00pm Call Jeff 822-1913. Resume’s 13 years experience, general typing, call 774- 4769, Penny Borrego, 9arn to 4pth. 194t9/26 Introductory flying lesson $25. Calljeff 822-1913. 2l9/l 1 Dr. Lynn Tutoring Biological Sciences, Genetics, Test Preparation 846-2672, 822-9146. 192t9/28 Experienc Call 272-3 WORD PROCESSING: PROFESSIONAL, PRECISE, SPEEDY - LASAR/LETTER QUALITY. LISA 846- 8130. 19119/25 WORD PROCESSING fast, accurate. Ten year experi ence. Call Barbara 774-0546. 18219/10 FOR RENT RIDING HORSES FOR RENT 2818 (3 Blks. North of Hwy 21, call 779-7052 anytime. Ask for Rudy. Open 7 days a week, 24 hrs a day. 19318/31 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 60tl fn One bedroom apartment on shuttle pool, W/D connec tions, unique floorplan, close to campus. Wyndham Management. 846-4384. 196ttfn ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT TO SUBLET YEL- LOWHOUSE COMPLEX TWO MILES SOUTH OF A&M $305 MONTH 696-9492, ASK FOR LISA. 193t9/4 WANTED HEWLETT PACKARD LASERJET PRINTER, OR ■ACKARD LASERJE CANON PC 10, 14,20,24,25,696-5519. 19/17 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY REPOSSED VA & HUD Homes available from government from $1.00 without credit check. You repair. Also tax delinquent foreclosures CALL (805)682-7555 Ext H-1445 for repo list your area. 191ttfn 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. NOTICE BALLROOM DANCE CLASSES! Learn: Foxtrot, Waltz, Tango, Jitterbug for ring dance, formals, etc. Specially designed classes for sororities/frater nities/other groups. Advanced, begin ning, intermediate classes start Tues day, Sept.25. Susan Quiring 696-7410, 845-1146. MISCELLANEOUS VISA OR MASTERCARD! Even if bankrupt or bad credit! We guarantee you a card or dou ble your money back. Call (805)682-7555, EXT. M-1054. Friday CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST: will have a non-denominational Christian fellowship at 7 p.m. in 108 Harrington. LUTHERAN STUDENT FELLOWSHIP: will have Aggie supper at 6 p.m. at the Lutheran Student Center. CLUB ESPANA: will have its first meeting at 7 p.m. in 302AB Rudder. Call Bernade at 823-4710 for more information. COLLEGE LIFE: will have young life’s leadership training at 7 p.m. in 301 Rud der. Call Harold 846-6788 for more information. ;crt CATHOLIC STUDENT ASSOCIATION: will have a Lay Ministers Workshop from 7 to 10:30 p.m. at St. Mary’s Student Center. Call 846-5717 for more information. TAMU ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY: will have a cookout at 5 p.m. at Southwood Valley Athletic Park. Call Caryl at 268-1162 for more information. ALPHA PHI OMEGA: will have an informational meeting for fall pledges at 8 p.m. in 701 Rudder. UNIVERSITY APARTMENT COUNCIL OF TEXAS AGGIES & UNIVERSITY POLICE DEPT: will have a national night-owl event against crime at 7 p.m. at University-Owned Apartments. Call Sandra at 846-5798 for more information. EPISCOPAL STUDENT CENTER: will have a picnic at 4 p.m. at the Canterbury House, 902 George Bush Dr. Call Rev. Larry Benfield at 693-4245 for more information. HILLEL: will have a freshman dinner at 6:30 p.m. at Hillel. Call Rabbi at 696- 7313 for more information. BRAZOS VALLEY ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE FAMILY SUPPORT GROUP: will meet at 3 p.m. in 160 Medical Sciences Building. PRE-VET SOCIETY: will have a lock-in at 10 p.m. in 125 MSC. Call 696-4033 for more information. Monday TAMU PISTOL TEAM: will have tryouts at 7 p.m. at the range in basement of the Military Sciences Bldg. Call Curtis at 846-0906 for more information. AGGIES WITH KIDS: will have a brown-bag lunch and organizational meeting at noon in Beutel Health Center’s conference room. Call Ann at 845- 1741 for more information. PHI THETA KAPPA ALUMNI: will have a reception for new and returning mem bers at 7 p.m. in 146 MSC. Call Karen at 764-7841 for more information. STUDENTS OVER TRADITIONAL AGE: will have a supper club at 6 p.m. at Casa Tomas. Call Andy at 845-1741 for more information. AGGIES AGAINST DRIVING DRUNK: will have an introductory meeting at noon in 049 Zachry. Call 845-0280 for more information. STUDY ABROAD OFFICE: will have an informational meeting about stt international business in Denmark from 10 to 11 a.m. in 251 Bizzell HaTl West. Call Cathy at 845-0544 for more information. AGGIES AGAINST BONFIRE: will have a meeting at 6 p.m. in the Academic Building, behind Ross Statue. TAMU WRESTLING TEAM: will have its first meeting at 7 p.m. in 260 G. Rollie White. Call Robert at 260-1802 for more information. STUDENT Y: Youth Fun Day applications are available in 208 Pavilion. Saturday LUTHERAN STUDENT FELLOWSHIP: will have Bible study at 8:30 p.m. in 407AB Rudder. ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS: will have a general discussion at noon. Call the C.D.P.E. at 845-0280 for more information. TEXAS A&M SPORTS CAR CLUB: will have free driving school at 10 a.m. at Riverside Campus. For more information call Matt at 822-4833. SIERRA CLUB: wiM have a speaker at 7:30 p.m. at the College Station Commu- ' ifoi TAMU CROSS COUNTRY TEAM: will travel to Stephen F. Austin for its first meet. For more information call 845-5561. nity Center. Call 846-8748 for more information. INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS ASSOCIATION: will have international radio hour at 9 p.m. at KAMU-FM. POLITICAL SCIENCE SOCIETY: will have a general meeting in 301 Rudder at 7 p.m. EAGLE PASS HOMETOWN CLUB: will have its first meeting at 7 503 Cherry St., #121. Call 268-8131 for more information. STAGE CENTER COMMUNITY THEATRE: will have a stage center production of “Driving Miss Daisy" at 2:30 p.m. For more information call 846-0287. p.m. at ASIAN AMERICAN ASSOCIATION: welcome back dance at the Pavilion from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Sunday PHI BETA LAMBDA: will have a cookout and volleyball at 2 p.m. at Central Park. Call Brett at 823-6614 for more information. Items for What's Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald, no later than three business days before the desired run date. We publish the name and phone number of the contact only if you ask us to do so. What's Up Is a Battalion service that lists non-profit events and activities. Submissions are run on a first-come, first-served basis. There is no guarantee an entry will run. If you have questions, call the newsroom at 845-3316. Man pleads guilty, gets 3 life terms AMARILLO (AP) — Prosecut ing attorneys claimed victory af ter a man accused of shooting a Wichita Falls police officer was .sentenced to three consecutive life terms in a plea bargain agreement. “Not only was it right, but jus tice was served for Daniel Martin Fowler,” District Attorney Barry Macha said Wednesday after a brief hearing. Fowler, 39, agreed Wednesday to the guilty pleas in order to avoid a capital murder trial that already had consumed almost eight weeks of jury selection. He admitted to the shooting death of police Lt. Walter T. “Tommy” Collins and the wound ing of two other officers. Fowler, who has been in men- i tal hospitals in three stales more spi than ID times, is a diagnosed par anoid schizophrenic. Macha said three consecutive life terms meant Fowler will “in effect, get the death penalty in prison.” He will have to serve 15 years of each sentence, for a total of 45 years, before he is eligible for parole. Border mayors hope unity gets attention ALL YOU HAVE TO DO IS TV =1 ^ I md ill BRIAN KENNEDY THE STRAWBERRY ZOTS —r—\—? t— /v-, lr~» a v*//-»r/-4. s-tj’irtir-t.al "TV»/» < Nj*-• • u Vl -W” ' j I icinc m It c . ' * f In a word; orisinal. "The Great War Of Words," the poignant debut album from one of the most unusual, enthralling voices in years. Featuring "Hollow" and "Captured." Y<1 A TRIBE CALLED QUEST You are about to begin a journey into a brave new world of rap. Your leaders - A Tribe Called Quest. Their debut album is called "People's Instinctive Travels And The Paths Of Rhythm." Key tracks to follow: "I Left My Wallet In El Segundo," "Bonita Apple bum" and "Push It Along." DAVID J A journey with David J of Love And Rockets. "I'll Be Your Chauffeur," the first track from "Songs From Another Season" by one of modern rock's most accomplished song writers. Hey, cousins, what melts in your brain like psychedelic sonic candy, sending you soaring through the decades and landing smack dab in the 90's? The Strawberry Zots. "Cars, Flowers, Telephones," their debut album, features "Get Me To The World On Time," "Working Girl," and "Little Latin Lupe Lu." ‘~;p- m MICHAEL PENN —c l m Selected as one of the best albums of 1989, by Rolling Stone, who said March "combines bracing Beatlesque pop with the...romanticism of early Springsteen...the work of a formative and promising talent.” Startling and refreshing. Featuring "No Myth," "This & That" and "Brave New World." CASSETTE sw Prices Good Thru September 14th SAY NO! Hastings We’re Entertainment! r College Station « Culpepper Plaza Bryan • Manor East EL PASO (AP) — A U.S. diplomat assured officials from U.S. and Mex ican border cities Thursday that the region has Washington’s attention, But many of the border mayors are hoping for a stronger voice. “If all the.cities on the Mexican and the Amer ifiaH side unite, we may be able to solve some of the prob lems,” San Benito Mayor Gilben Galvan said. “It’s a combined effort They’ll listen to ns better and work with us better if we are united.” The Border Mayors conference was initiated by El Paso Mayor Suzie Azar and is being sponsored to gether with Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. Former A lext to th iec< Mayors and representatives from at least 22 cities on both sides of the border are attending the conference to discuss the problems and potential of the nearly 2,000-mile border be tween the countries. JALTIM sd Wedne Iran-Con jf die \ve;i| caudal beca he retir id-off wii inst Tho “It is here on the border, in the daily lives of our citizens, that I see our bilateral relationship in its mosi concrete and tangible form,” U.S, Ambassador to Mexico John D. Ne- groponte, said. “Some pressing day-to-day issues are not being addressed in the Bor The trial 3hts duri ved the s “If all the cities on the Mexican and the American side unite, we may be able to solve some of the problems.” — Gilbert Galvan, mayor, San Benito der Governors meeting,” Mayor Su zie Azar said. “And then we will have new governors in 1991, so it will take a long time to bring those issues to the border governors’ agenda.” “If we can become a unified force, I think it makes a difference,” she said. For Ojinaga, Mexico Mayor Jesus Rodriguez Benitez, the mayor’s con ference is an opportunity to learn from larger border cities and try to bring business to his community across the border from Presidio. Benitez said small Mexican towns like Ojinaga, which has only one for- eign-owned business, need more outside investment. He said he has seen increased at tention paid to relationships between cities on the border. “Not all the cities on the border have clout,” Benitez said. “So we come here to learn from the cities with experience so we can do it on our own later.” Columbus, N.M. Mayor Charles Hudson said his city already has many binational programs, includ ing sending firefighters across the border to help put out blazes and sharing ambulance service. But Hudson also hopes the con ference will help him get the federal government to finish blacktopping a road between Columbus and El Paso. “We’ve just got to keep putting our point across,” Hudson said “We’ve got to create jobs for our chil dren, we don’t have manyjobs." o is accu s sale ec m m % m m m % % m m