Page 6 The Battalion Thursday, January 17,1991 Thurs The Battalion Classified Ads Phone: 845-0569 / Office: English Annex Help Wanted For Rent Contact Fairfax Cryobank A Division of the Genetics & IVF Institute 1121 Briarcrest, Dr., Suite 101-Bryan TX 77802 HEALTHY MALES WANTED AS SEMEN DONORS Help infertile couples; confidentiality ensured. Ethnic diversity desirable, ages 18 to 35, excellent compensation. 776-4453 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 UNIQUE FUNDRAISER • High Profit Margin • No Investment • Group Bonuses • Individual Incentive We are aTexas^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 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 CENTRAL VALLEY CHEMICALS Is looking for drivers part-time 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mon.-Fri., & Sat. 7 a.m. to 12 noon. Requirements are: 1. Must be 21 years old 2. No DWI, no felonies 3. Have Class C driver's license 4. Rate of pay $5.00 per hour Work description: delivery of Agr. Chemicals. Contact Mr. Liere or Mr. Blackwell 409-272-8470 THE PSYCHOLOGY DEPARTMENT at TAMU is conducting research on group dynamics and needs participants. If interested, sign up outside Room 409 or call 845-0478 and ask for JUDY if you have any questions. f NEED EXTRA INCOME A HII* FOR 1991? Earn t500 - f1000 weekly stuffing envelopes. For details -Rush$1.00withSASEto: OIH Group Inc. 1019 Lk. Sherwood • Orlando, FL 32818 Now hiring full and part-time drivers and phone personnel. Call John at Gumby's Pizza, 764-8629. GUARANTEED WORKI Assemble Items on your own. TopPayl Easy WORKI 1-800-226-3601 ext. 4780. Babysitter wanted for 6 month and 3 year old. Must be able to work between 10 a.m. 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 maintenance/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 forpart-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. Nowhirlng, 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. RIDING HORSES FOR RENT Sandy Point Rd. near Bryan Utility Lake. Call 779-7052 anytime. Ask for Rudy. Open 7 days a week, 24 hrs. a day. Services $COLLEGE MONEY Private Scholarships! You receive a minimum of 8 sources or your money refunded. Guaranteed! COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIPS LOCATORS, P.O. Box 1881, Joplin, MO 64802-1881, 1-800-879-7485 Lost & Found Child Care 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 Moore Home infant care near A&lyyjni varsity. 260-1270. Travel Professional typing, word proc essing, resume writing and editing services are available at Notes-n-Quotes call 846-2255 JAPANESELANGUAGE CLASSES: Various levels, small class sizes. Call 696-1101. Typing -fast, and professional. $2.00 per page. Call 693- 5325. Experienced librarian will do library research tor you. Call 409-272-3348. Spring Break! Cancun UNIVERSITY BEACH CLUB"* ■ *369 p/us S39 taxes 1-800-BEACH-BUM (Call Now 1-800-232-2428) TYPING in Macintosh computer. Letter-quality printer. Done 24 hrs. or less. 696-3892. Copy editing. Not responstole tor style or format. Triple spaced or IBM disk. No math/science. References. J. Hale. 775-4202. Adoptions ADOPTION? Lets help each other. Loving couple, (Karen S Rich) opens home/hearts to your child. Bicycles, birthdays, piggy backs and picnics In plcturesques area. Legal, confidential, supportive. Call collect 215-321- 9029. ADOPTION...Devoted couple unable to have children have so much to give your newboitv. Expenses paid. Call Margaret & Norman collect 203-693-1999. Business 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 Sale King mattress, springs, frame, and two sheet sets $200. Zenith color television, $120. 693-1426. '82 Honda450 Nighthawk $350, Ibaruz bass guitar $250, Ithicatwelve gauge shotgun $225. Negotiable, 822-4826. Take Paymentsl Beautiful doublewide 3bd/2ba, to be moved. Electric. 409-272-1151. 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/Dlsc.Tires For Lease 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. 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. 693-5013. I STUDENT DESKS now on sale. ONLY $27.50 while they last. E.O.S. 1418 Texas Avenue South 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. I Running in circles 1 - : jMfe Two bedroom. 2 bath, duplex. AC-heat, washer, dryer, dishwasher, on shuttle route. $325 per month. Call 847- 5084. A 2B/1,1/2Bath, luxury four-plexes. Close to campus, shuttle bus, washer/dryer available $350.00. 693-0551, 764-8051. Walk to ASM. Two bedroom, 311 First Street, $260/ per month. 846-8432. ' : : - : ; i ' ■ rrvXm ii[§g K tl v m- ■1121 LOST white envelope containing about $400. You can keep half. Call Krlssy at 693-7842. SCOTT D. WEAVER/The Battalion Scott Shelton, a senior BANA major from Spring, runs laps around Kyle Field Monday. Senate supports reform FLY FOR LESS AS A COURIER! 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 AUSTRALIAI 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 townhouse sleet 16 located at Red River, New Mexico, $125-$175 anight (spring break higher), 3 night minimum. 846-8905 from 10-6, John, 774- 4842, John or Margo. AUSTIN (AP) — An ethics proposal that Lt. Gov. Bob Bullock said would help make officials “account able to one boss, the people of Texas,” was introduced Wednesday with support from the entire Senate. The call for ethics reform has been highlighted by news reports of lobbyist spending and the recent indict ment of House Speaker Gib Lewis on two misdemeanor counts of alleged ethics violations. Lewis himself says he supports ethics reform. Bullock said that in meeting with the speaker, “I found him most cooperative and very willing— in every respect a true gentleman ... in our negotiations.” Initial support from all 30 senators and Bullock vir tually guarantees Senate passage of some type of ethics legislation, although historically the Legislature has taken a position that morality cannot be legislated. The ethics bill and proposed constitutional amend ment were introduced by Sen. Bob Glasgow, who said the bill could be improved in committee. “We think we can make this bill better, we can make it stronger and we can make it work more effectively for all people in the state of Texas,” he said. The amendment, which must be approved at a statewide election, would create a seven-member ethics commission, headed by the secretary of state and in- Glasgow, D-Stephenville, said although 30 senators are sponsoring the proposal all 30 “are not in unity about the issues within this bill.” But he said, “It is strong ethics reform.” Greyhound racing back on track CORPUS CHRISTI (AP) — Tex ans have taken a quick liking to pari mutuel greyhound racing in the two months since the sport returned to the state. About 300,000 people have at tended races since the back-to-back openings of Harlingen’s Valley Greyhound Park and the Corpus Christi Greyhound Race Track on Nov. 14 and 15. The two tracks brought legal, pari-mutuel grey hound racing back to Texas for the first time in 53 years. “Both of them are right at expec tations,” said Hilary Doran, an Aus tin attorney who is one of three ap pointed members of the Texas Racing Commission’s Greyhound Section. More than $18.5 million was wa gered on the dogs in the first two months; a 6 percent state tax brought in more than $1 million. The tracks also have generated thousands of dollars in sales, admis sions, and alcoholic beverage taxes and employ hundreds of people. giaqiaaigpipagapi^giggCTaigaioco^ Ttottt '7e& $3 Dine In! Take Out! Delivery! ALL YOU CAN EAT LUNCH BUFFET Soup Hot & Spicy Beef ■ Salad Hot & Spicy Chicken and more Sun - Fri 11:00-2:00 103 Boyett (Across from 7-11) 846-2898 w aaoEieCTaaaaiiim Business Career Fair '91 is coming!! Luncheon and Banquet tickets on sale NOW! Blocker Building Lobby, 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Women in Business Luncheon 11:30 a.m. January 28, 1991 Hilton Career Fair f 91 Banquet 7:00 p.m. January 29, 1991 Hilton Bluebonnet Ballroom ^x^^Sign up now for the company of your choice! "We hired someone who sat at our table!" -a Fortune 500 Company Brought to you by the Business Student Council; For more information call 845-1320. eluding two members each appointed by the governor, lieutenant governor and speaker. The commission, under provisions in the bill, would have the power to conduct audits, subpoena records and levy heavy civil penalties. “I really believe the ethics commission ought to be given a lot of authority and a lot of power,” Bullock said. Lewis, D-Fort Worth, also said he supports creation of an ethics commission. The > House bill probably will have some “minor changes” from the Senate measure, Lewis said. Other provisions in the Senate bill would restrict lobby spending; require reporting of an official’s per sonal financial dealings; set limits on political contribu tions; and cap the amount an officeholder may spend on personal living expenses. The constitutional proposal also would give the com mission authority to set legislative pay and submit the recommendations to voters for approval. Success for the greyhounds par ticularly is welcome in light of the slow start experienced by horse rac ing tracks since the Legislature legal ized both types of pari-mutuel rac ing in 1987. The commission has yet to ap prove licenses for the Class 1 horse tracks reserved for the state’s three largest counties. A smaller Class 2 horse track at Brady opened for three months in 1989, held no races last year and lost its license for 1991. Another Class 2 track at Goliad never opened and also lost its 1991 license. Horse tracks planned for Lubbock and Del Rio withdrew their applications, said Racing Commission spokeswoman Angie Roberts. Dog track operators consistently said they expected to do better be cause greyhound parks are smaller and cheaper to operate than horse tracks. Greyhound tracks have far ex ceeded the expectations of some Texas fans. Juan Sanchez, a Harlingen office building custodian, said he and his wife had financial problems and only $45 in the bank until he visited the track in early January. He won a total of about $4,000 that night on three bets. “Maybe God was helping me out,” Sanchez said. But he keeps in mind the people who did not leave the track better off. “A friend of my wife lost $150 or $200 there last Saturday,” Sanchez said. The biggest single winner so far at either track was retiree Della Miller. She won $30,732 at the Harlingen track Jan. 13. The “winter Texan” from West Virginia, was the only one to pick the first three dogs in ex act order in two consecutive races in a competition known as the twin tri- fecta. She picked the first race with a less-than-scientific method. “I used to be a personnel director in Ohio and the store number was 618,” Mrs. Miller said, so she picked Nos. 6, 1 and 8 to come in first, sec ond and third. She picked the second race by us ing the racing program information, the method the tracks recommend. Because pari-mutuel wagering pits the fans against each other, the tracks lose nothing when people win. They offer betting seminars on the finer points of reading dogs’ records from the forms and choosing win ning combinations. “I feel pretty safe to say that we’re here to stay,” said Ed Mew, general manager at Valley Greyhound Park, which is operated by British-owned Ladbroke Racing Corp., a subsidiary of the world’s largest commercial betting company. 4 eyGRE Of The I Sevei might 1 ave th econon The agreed pm ti ter in C A&N velopir market ment manag well a from I Duk Ri R F01 eted 5 lassoei cently for th< Th< ited, s vorce by de; arepr “Tl ALC NAF ADI AUI OFF DPI UNI PEI CA UN SO OF E