Page 6 The Battalion Wednesday, January 16,19^ The Battalion Classified Ads Phone: 845-0569 / Office: English Annex Help Wanted Help Wanted 1 ■■■■■■■■■ RETAIL STORE MANAGER McGUFFEY'S 1703 Culpepper Plaza Looking for talented men or women for New England catalogue outlet. #1. Are you familiar with J. Crew, L.L. Bean, Lands' End & Tweeds? #2. Do you like to compete and mix? #3. Do you develop your people's potential? #4. Is the customer number one with you? If so, call (806) 372-3266 for an inteview or send your resume to: McGUFFEY’S P.O. Box 15250, Amarillo, TX 79105 UNIQUE FUNDRAISER^ • High Profit Margin • No Investment • Group Bonuses • Individual Incentive We are a Texas-based company that has been helping groups raise money since 1984. Our exciting, easy, and enormously profitable program will help you turn your time and energy into money for your organization. So if you're just plain tired of carwashes and credit card applications, give us a try. CALL GREG AT 693-4484 THE PSYCHOLOGY DEPARTMENT at TAMU is conducting research on group dynamics and we need participants. If interested sign up outside Room 409 or call 845-0478 and ask for JUDY if you have any questions. PATELLAR TENDONITIS (JUMPER’S KNEE) Patients needed with patellar tendonitis (pain at base of knee cap) to participate in a research study to evaluate a new topical (rub on) anti-inflammatory gel. Eligible Volunteers will be compensated G&S Studies, Inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 FAST FUNDRAISING PROGRAM $1000 in just one week. Earn up to $ 1000 for your campus organization. Plus a chance at $5000 more! This program works! No investment needed. Call 1-800-932-0528 Ext. 50 NEED EXTRA INCOME ^ HU* FOR 1991? ( Earn $500 - $1000 weekly stuffing envelopes. For details -Rush$1.00withSASEto: OIH Group Inc. 1019 U. Sherwood • Orlando, FL 32818 Services Professional typing, word proc essing, resume writing and editing services are available at Notes-n-Quotes call 846-2255 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 Typing -fast, and professional. $2.00 per page. Call 693- 5325. Experienced librarian will do library research for you. Call 409-272-3348. TYPING in Macintosh computer. Letter-quality printer. Done 24 hrs. or less. 696-3892. Copy editing. Not responsible for style or format. Triple spaced or IBM disk. No math/science. References. J. Hale. 775-4202. Adoptions ADOPTION...Devoted couple unable to have children have so much to give your newborn. Expenses paid. Call Margaret & Norman collect 203-693-1999. ADOPTION: We have bedtime stories, rocking chairs, aunts, uncles, cousins and grandmas. Sue and Jamie hope you'll call collect about adoption ANYTIME. 802- 235-2312. For Lease Sublease 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartment. January rent - free, no deposit. Shuttle bus route. Sandra 847-2614. Sublease efficiency Tree House Village Apt., $305/mo. All bills paid except electricity. Near campus. 764-3966. Business Opportunity ROBIA'S INTERNATIONAL FOOD MARKET Imported foods from Africa, Asia, Carribean, Cuba, India, Latin Am., Mexico, Middle East, & Spain. 2318 Texas Ave. S - C.S. 696-6196, Across/Disc.Tires '82 Honda 450 Nighthawk $350, Ibanez bass guitar $250, Khica twelve gauge shotgun $225. Negotiable, 822-4826. Take Payments! Beautiful doublewide 3bd/2ba, to be moved. Electric. 409-272-1151. GOVERNMENT SEIZED vehicles from $100. Corvettes. Chevys, Porsches and other confiscated properties. For Buyers Guide (800)772-9212, ext. 1342. Also open evenings and weekends. For Rent COTTON VILLAGE APTS Ltd. Snook, TX 1bdrm $200 2 Bdrm $248 Rental Assistance Available Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5 p.m. Equal Opportunity Housing/Handicapped Accessible Now hiring full and part-time drivers and phone personnel. Call John at Gumby's Pizza. 764-8629. Earn $108.00 CASH monthly donating plasma. Safe, helping Aggie tradition. Most of the thousands of A&M student donors study during their visit. Westgate Plasma Center. 4223 Wellborn Road 846-8855. GUARANTEED WORKI Asserrble items on your own. TopPayl Easy WORK! 1-800-226-3601 ext. 4780. Babysitter wanted for 6 month and 3 year old. Must be able to work between 10 am. and 4:30 on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Experiences, references, and car. Call 696- 7504, (evenings) or 845-9525 or 845-2584 (days). Conference center facility maintenanoe/set-up coordina tor 7 a.m. -4 p.m. M-F. People person, set-up/take-down of conference room. Able to lift object over 50 lbs. Skills: plumbing, carpentry, electrical, audio-visual, computer. Hires and trains 4-5 part-time staff. Obtain bids on major repairs. Non smoking environment $1437a month. Apply by Thursday Jan. 24, 1991 at: City of College Station, personnel, 1101 Texas Avenue South, C. S. TX. Appletree Market now accepting applications for part-time positions. Must be available mostly between 4 p.m. - 12 midnight, and available any hours Saturday and Sunday. Nearest store will be in consideration upon placement. Pay rate $3.85 to $6.00 per hour. Apply Appletree located 2001 Hwy. 21, Bryan. Texas. SECRETARY WANTED to organize & operate office for individually-owned business. Duties require: scheduling appointments, file organization & computerized data man agement, (Lotus & WordPerfect), willingness to work unsupervised, 25-30 hours/week. Send resume to: 3703 Holly. Bryan, Texas 77802. Make $500 in two weeks or less. Sell 100 funny college T-shirts by Feb. 8 with absolutely no financial obligation and make $500. For more Information, call 1-800-245- 3087. Have FUN and pay for your college education plusl Opportunity of a lifetime for motivated, self-starter, entre- preneurtype. 713-878-2005. Earn extra income. Amazing recorded message. 1-800- 732-2834. EARN $500 TO $1500 WEEKLY STUFFING ENVELOPES AT HOME. NO EXPERIENCE. FOR FREE INFORMA TION SEND SELF-ADDRESSED STAMPED ENVELOPE TO: METRO DATA ASSOC., P.O. BOX 9306. LIVONIA, MICH 48151. HOME TYPISTS, PC users needed. $35,000 potential. Details. (1)805-687-6000. HOSPITAL JOBSI To $26.50.hrl Nurses. Technicians, Medics. Housekeeping. Al I skills. (1) 805-687-6000. INTELLIGENCE JOBS. All branches. U.S. Customs. PEA, etc. Nowhiring. Call (1) 805-687-6000, Ext.K-9531. HOME TYPISTS, PC users needed. $35,000 potential. Details. 1-805-687-6000. Ext. B-9531. INTELLIGENCE JOBS. All branches. U.S. Customs. PEA, etc. Nowhiring. Call 1-805-687-6000. Ext.K-9531. Healthy males wanted as semen donors. Help Infertile couples. Confidentiality ensured. Ethnic diversity desir able. Ages 18-35, excellent compensation. Contact Fairfax Cryobank, 1121 Briarcrest Suite 101, 776-4453. Hiring line cooks and prep cooks. Apply In person. 3-C Barbeque, 1727 South Texas. Walk to A&M. Two bedroom, 311 First Street, $260/ per month. 846-8432. Lost & Found LOST white envelope containing about $400. You can keep half. Call Krlssy at 693-7842. Child Care Moore Home infant care near A&M University. 260-1270. Travel Spring Break! Cancun plus $39 taxvs 1-800-BEACH-BUM (Call Now 1-800-232-2428) FLY FOR LESS AS A COURIERI Major Airline. Houston to: London $275 roundtrip, Tokyo $375 roundtrip plus first-time registration fee $50. Call NOW VOYAGER 713- 684-6051,212-431-1616. STUDY ABROAD IN AUSTRALIA! Information on se mester, summer, intern, graduate and January-term pro grams. All under $6000. Call Curtin University, 1-800- 878-3696. Going skiing? Luxury town house sleet 16 located at Red River, New Mexico, $12S-$175 anight (spring break higher). 3 night minimum. 846-8905 from 10-6, John, 774- 4842, John or Margo. PROFITABLE NUMBER! 845-0569 The Battalion Classified Advertising Officials issue evacuation order to threatened valley residents DAYTON (AP) — Liberty County officials Tuesday issued a voluntary evacuation order for several hundred residents in low- lying areas along the Trinity River as rising waters threatened to flood homes for the third con secutive year. Several days of heavy down pours that dumped as much as three inches of rain in some areas near Dayton Monday night alone combined with increasingly large discharges from the Lake Liv ingston Dam to deluge some low- lying areas. “We certainly don’t anticipate anything as devastating as the Flood of 1990 or even as devastat ing as the Flood of 1989,” said Jim Mitchum, director of the Lib erty County Emergency Manage ment system. “This only affects a small por tion of Liberty County,” Mitchum said. “The homes in low-lying areas. I’d say a couple hundred people.” Dayton, which is about 60 miles northeast of Houston, has been swamped with rising waters in May, June and July of 1989 and record-setting floods in May 1990. Mitchum said county officials still were rebuilding from the devastating effects to roads and homes from 1989 when the Trin ity again began to surge this week. “We have several things work ing on in the county from the 1989 flood,” Mitchum said. “On Wednesday, we have a bid open ing to repair a home that was damaged in 1989. It takes several years for the residents to get over it.” WIRED by Scott McCullar ©1991 I7» Y ...50 ALL rHKE-E PEjOPLE WERE... , WE INTERRUPT 00R NEWS WITH A SPECIAL BULLETIN FROM WRPP STATION MANAGER CAROLINE HE.D6E5. TO SUMMARIZE: MV BOYFRIEND, HERE AT T7/E STATION, FORGOT MY BIRTH PAY. AGAIN. Spade Phillips, P.l. by Matt Kowalski Attorneys finish jury selection SAN ANGELO (AP) — A jury has been selected to hear the murder trial of the 76-year-old heir to a ranching empire accused of killing his nephew on a remote Hill Coun try road 15 months ago. Doyle Parker, a Kimble County rancher, is charged in the slaying of Bruce Parker, 41, over an alleged land-use dispute. Bruce Parker was the second of three Parker men killed by gunfire in 1989. All were members of a pioneer ranching fam ily that traces its ancestry back to the Alamo. Conviction carries a maximum penalty of life in prison. A six-man, six-woman jury was chosen Monday in state district court. Testimony was scheduled to begin Wednesday. The case was transferred to Tom Green County from Kimble County by now-retired 198th District Judge V. Murray Jordan of Brady. Senior District Judge Curt Steib of San An gelo will hear the case. Jordan ruled in April that exten sive news coverage made seating an unbiased jury in Junction impossi ble. The murder case against the elder Parker has been a mix of mystery and intrigue from the outset, largely because of a judicial gag order th« silenced principals in the case. On June 10, 1989, four montl before the slaying, Bruce’s cousi Jesse “Jett” Parker was shot to deatl Investigators said robbery was t! motive and charged a fugitive Mex can alien with murder. On Dec. 3, 1989, five weeks afte Bruce’s death, his uncle Raymon Parker died of a gunshot wound t the head. Raymond, 66, Doyle brother, apparently took his ow life. But investigators said the su cide was linked emotionally t Bruce’s death and the murdt charges filed against Doyle. Ex-official’s trial ends in bargain DALLAS (AP) — Former Texas Insurance Commissioner Joseph D. Hawkins has reached a settlement in an $ 11 million civil lawsuit in which state officials accused him of conspiring to loot an insurance company. The Dallas Morning News reported. Hawkins’ attorney, Mark A. Weitz, and Texas insurance regulators involved in the federal law suit, confirmed the settlement but refused to re veal details. Hawkins, of Dallas, was accused of racketeer ing and theft in connection with the 1986 col lapse of Continental Bankers Life Insurance Company of the South. Hawkins, who resigned as state insurance com missioner in 1977, headed a group that bought the company in 1980 and sold it two years later. But state investigators said that during his ownership and for years afterward, Hawkins was part of a conspiracy to defraud Continental Bankers policyholders and, indirectly, state tax payers. State officials and Hawkins asked U.S. District Judge James Nowlin to order both parties to keep terms of the settlement confidential, Weitz said. The settlement also was withheld from pub lic court records. The demise of Dallas-based Continental Bank ers, chartered in Tennessee, has cost taxpayers in Texas and other states at least $ 17 million. In the civil lawsuit, filed by Texas and Tennes see insurance regulators in 1988, Hawkins was accused along with eight others of racketeering, conspiracy and fraud in the alleged looting of Continental Bankers. Two other defendants, Dallas lawyers Stanley S. Crooks and Gary R. Terbert, also have reached settlements which are sealed by court or der, said Lee Jones, a spokesman for the insur ance board. State officials said the remaining defendants include former Dallas insurance executive Billy G. Armstrong, Joseph Stephen Meziere, Robert F. Wolf, Michael E. Holloway, Bette Newman and Charlsie L. Pritchard. Armstrong acquired all Continental Bankers stock in 1982 from a group headed by Hawkins. Newman was Armstrong’s secretary. Court records show Continental Bankers’ offi cers included Holloway, Wolf and Meziere. Pritchard was sued as the executrix of the es tate of her deceased husband, William P. Prit chard, who was president of the company when he died in December 1985j.i< All six of the remaining defendants are fight ing the lawsuit. Hawkins, who resigned as insurance commis sioner in 1977 while under a perjury indictment, has a history of problems in the insurance indus try. Since Continental Bankers’ failure, three other insurance companies formerly associated with Hawkins have collapsed at an estimated cost to Texas taxpayers of $ 10 million. Hawkins was indicted in 1977 on felony charges of lying to conceal his acceptance of two airplane trips from an insurance company. The perjury charges later were dropped in re turn for his plea of no contest to the misdemea nor offense of accepting a free airplane ride from a company under his regulation. He was fined $2,000 and sentenced to a year’s probation. WEIGHT WATCHERS* ANNOUNCES THE WEIGHT LOSS BREAKTHROUGH OF THE DECADE! Choose the plan to fit the way y° u *' ve ' * ma Qi ne - now y oii 9 et your choice of three food levels based on your lifestyle and IrtC* weight loss goals. Best of all, you get to choose the I* level that's best for you. .1^ You'll get all the structure you need. All the flexibility you want. No matter which food level you select you'll be Q01 able to enjoy the foods you love and still lose weight. . i a! Here's a weight loss plan that »• A\f3V*' 5 * thinks for you. Got a party, a ^ wedding, a night on the town? Go ahead, I en i° y yourself. With our new Personal Choice® V Program, you simply move to a different level that week and still keep heading toward your weight loss goal. So simple, it just makes sense. Weight Watchers new Personal Choice Program lets you choose the way that fits your life. You'll see it's the easiest program ever! Sheila Falk Area Director LIMITED TIME OFFER Join Now 4^ For Only. . . ^ Registration Fee $19.00 Weekly Meeting Fee ...$ 9.00 Regular Price $28.00 YOU SAVE $18.00 Still only $9 per week! Come to the Weight Watchers meeting nearest you. BRYAN 4202 E. 29th at Rosemary 9:30 am 11:30 am 9:15 am Sat 10:00 am Mon: Tue: Wed: Thur: Fri: 5:15 pm 6:30 pm 5:30 pm 5:15 pm 22WEIGHT WATCHERS* Offer ends February 2.1991. Offer valid at participating locations (South Texas, West Texas, and Santa Barbara County, Cal.) areas 37, 96,107 only. Offer not valid with any other offer or special rate. Offer valid for new and renewing members oniy. Offer valid for Traditional Weight Watchers meetings only. Weight Watchers is a trademark of WEIGHT WATCHERS INTERNATIONAL. INC. ©WEIGHT WATCHERS INTERNATIONAL. INC. 1991. All rights reserved. IN BRYAN CALL 846-7793 Pilots accept cost-control plans of Continental HOUSTON (AP) — About 3,900 Continental Airlines pilots have agreed to a temporary pay freeze and other cost-saving measures, the company said Tuesday as it tries to control costs in reorganizing under federal bankruptcy laws. The Pilot Operations Group also agreed to defer “gainsharing” pay ments based on fuel savings, a slight reduction in flying hours and a 30 percent cut in the company’s cost for crew meals, Continental said. Continental Airlines Holdings Inc., the Houston-based airline’s parent, filed for bankruptcy protec tion in early December, saying it was overwhelmed by its debts and surg ing fuel prices. It is the carrier’s sec ond filing in seven years. “This accord will make a tremen dous positive difference for our company,” said Hollis Harris, Conti nental’s chairman and chief exec utive officer. “While we maintain a pledge to serve our customers with business as usual, we simply must take the posi tion of not increasing costs,” he said.“Through this agreement our pilots have shown that they recog nize this.,” “We felt that this was an opportu nity for us to get behind him (Har ris) because we do have the goal of getting the company through the fuel crisis and Chapter II,” Bob Rinehart, chairman of the Pilot Op erations Group, said in a message to the pilots. Continental also said it altered its benefit programs to include a retro active extension of the retirement program’s service credit period, giv ing long-time employees better re tirement benefits.