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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 13, 1991)
The Battalion Classified Ads . i Phone: 845-0569 / Office: English Annex INSTRUCTORS Summer Employment Outstanding 8-iveek girls’ camp in Maine needs female and male counselors in the following activities: • Tennis • Swimming • Waterski • Sailing • Canoeing • Kayaking • Ropes/Rock Climbing • Outdoor Living • Horseback Riding • Gymnastics • Dance • Silver Jewelry • Pottery • Photography & Video • Arts & Crafts • Copper Enameling • Fine Arts • Newsletter • Basketball • Field Hockey . Softball • Soccer • Lacrosse • Archery Red Cross Lifeguard Certification (LG) or equivalent required for all waterfront positions and outdoor living. ARC Swim Instructor (SI) preferred for swim. EXCELLENT SALARY -TRAVEL ALLOWANCE - ROOM/BOARD • LAUNDRY, UNIFORMS & LINENS PROVIDED • COLLEGE CREDIT AVAILABLE ‘Tripp Lakg Camp For information and application call 301/653-3082 or 207/998-4347 days; 301/363-6369 or 207/783-4625 eves, or weekends. 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 THE PSYCHOLOGY DEPARTMENT at TAMU is conducting research on group dynamics and needs participants. We will pay $30.00 for 6 hrs over a three week period. If interested, instructions and sign up sheets are posted outside Room 409 in the Psychology Department. SPRING BREAK, Christmas, summer travel FREE. Air couriers needed and cruiseship jobs. Call (805) 682-7555 Ext. S-1026 THE WEKEELA CAMPS. CANTON. MAINE. One o< America's most prestigious camps, seeks creative dyna mos tor staff positions June 17-August 18 for tenins, athletics, lacrosse, gymnastics, competitive swimming, water skiing, sailing, small crafts, piano, dance/baliet, drama, song leaders, campcraft/ropes, ceramics, art, woodworking, photography/yearfoook. Also kitchen and maintenance positions. If you think you're tops, reply to: 130 S. Merkle Rd.. Columbus, OH 43209, (614) 235- 3177, Brazos Beverage Now Hiring banner artist and sing printer part-time only. Flexible hours, pay based on ability. Cali Allen Tidwell, 775-6322, 8-5 p.m. Windsurfing instructors wanted In the Houston area, 713- 326-2724, $5000 GUARANTEE Amazing Hot Details, 1-900-990- 7014+1016 limited time offer. Cost $ 1.99 I st minute, .99c rest. CAMP DAY — SUMMER JOBS. Representatives from summer camps will Interview Texas A&M students Febru ary 18, 1991, from 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. MSC Rooms 226-231. OVERSEAS JOBS. $900-2000 mo. Summer, year- round, all countries, all fields. Free Info, write IJC, PO BX 52-TX04, Corona Del Mar CA 92625. Prestigious northeast summer camps near NYC seek specialists in circus, sports, art, theatre, dance, music, magic, circus, science, waterfront, horsemanship. On campus interviews 2/18/91. Call 800-869-6083 or write French Woods, PO Box 800, Pomona, NY, 10970. Resort Hotels: Cruiselines, Summer Camps, and Amuse ment Parks, NOW accepting applications for summer jobs, internships and career positions in the U.S. and Mexico. For more information and an application, write National Collegiate Recreation Service; PO Box 8074; Hilton Head SC 29938, Part-time help - Part-time bookkeeper. Apply in person. Piper's Chevron Texas at University. NEW ENGLAND BROTHER/SISTER CAMPS - MASSA CHUSETTS Mah-Kee-Nac for Boys/Danbee for girls. Counselor posi tions for program specialists: All team sports, especially baseball, basketball, field hockey, softball, soccer and volleyball;25 tennis openings; aisoarchery, rif lery, weights/ fitness and biking;other openings include performing arts, fine arts, newspaper, photography, cooking, sewing, rollerskating, rocketry, ropes, and camp craft; all water front activities (swimming, skiing, sailing, windsurfing, canoe/kayaking). Inquire: Mah-Kee-Nac (BOYS) 190 Linden Avenue, Glen Ridge, NJ 07028. Call 1-800-753- 9118. Danbee (GIRLS) 16 Horseneck Road, Montville, NJ 07045. Call 1-800-776-0520. TIMBER LAKE CAMPS located in NY'S Catskill Moun tains seek General Counselors, Athletic Instructors, and WSI’s. On-Campus Interviews. TOP SALARIES/TRAVEL ALLOWANCE. 1-800-828-CAMP (9-4:30 weekdays). INTELLIGENCE JOBS. All branches. U.S. Customs, PEA etc. Now hiring. Call 1-805-962-8000. Ext.K-9531. 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. HOME TYPISTS, PC users needed. $35,000 potential. Details. (1)805-687-6000. 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. Services PROFESSIONAL RESUME SERVICE let us prepare a professional resume tailor-made for you! CoTS COUNSELING ©LTESTING SERVICES Call 846-2674 for an appointment 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 WORD PROCESSING: PROFESSIONAL LASER QUAUTY REPORTS. RESUMES, ETC. LISA 696-0958, $1/page typing, laser printed, double spaced. Call Editing Services 776-5560. Services O'BRYAN PLUMBING AND HEATING 24 HRS, SMALU OR LARGE JOBS. 822-6735. TYPING in Macintosh computer. Letter-quality printer. Done 24 hrs. or less. 696-3892. Roommate Wanted Southwood Valley large house. 3B/2Ba, yard, pets, $167/ mo. + utilities. Shuttle bus. Very nice roommatesl 764- 2968, Kelly. For Sale SEIZED CARS, trucks, boats, four wheelers, motor homes, by FBI, IRS, DEA,. Available your area now. Call (805)682-7555 Ext. C-1201. Table and four chairs. Good condition. Call after 6:30, 764-1866. 3/4 Karat diamond engagement and wedding band, sofa, entertainment center. Paul 693-8555. IBM Compatible. 640k, 2 Floppies, $350. Ideal for word processing, 845- 5132. PIANO FOR SALE: Wanted; responsible party to take or small monthly payments on piano. See locally. Call Manager at 800-635-7611. For Rent COTTON VILLAGE APTS Ltd. Snook, TX Ibdrm $200 2 Bdrm $248 Rental Assistance Available Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5 p.m. Equal Opportunity Housing/Handicapped Accessible Houseto rent/share. Female roommate needed. Nice 3b/ 2ba house shuttle. Eastmark furnished all appliances, W/ D, pool close 250/mih. All bills paid + $100 deposit. Call 693-5948 on 713-438-5325 collect. A 2B/1,1/2Balh, luxury four-plexes. Close to campus, shuttle bus, washer/dryer available $350.00. 693-0551, 764-8051. Adoptions We've bedtime stories, rocking chairs and much love, but no baby...yet. Can you help? Call Sue and Jamie collect about adoption. (802) 235-2312. Travel GOING TO EUROPE? 1/2 PRICE OFF YOUTH HOSTEL CARDS WITH PURCHASE OF EURAILPASS EXECUTIVE TRAVEL, INC. 123 WALTON DRIVE at EASTGATE 696-1748 Spring Break! Cancun UNIVERSIT Y B E A C H C L U B’“ / rom s 369 plus $39 fasces 1-800-BEACH-BUM (CaU Now 1-800-233-2428) 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. < 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. rcut here 1 DEFENSIVE DRIVING CLASS February 20, 21,1991 (6-10 p.m. & 6-10 p.m.) March 1,2,1991 (6-10 p.m. & 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.) STATE APPROVED DRIVING SAFETY COURSE Register at University Plus (MSC Basement) Call 845-1631 for more information on these or other classes D&M EDUCATION ENTERPRISES cut here LENT SERVICES at Beautiful Savior Lutheran Church | 1007 Krenek Tap/Across from "JESUS' CROSS is... CENTRAL PARK Feb. 13 (Ash Wed.) ...Obedience before God"-7:00 p.m. 20.. . Innocence before God''-7:30 p.m. 27 ... Power from God"-7:30 p.m. March 6 ... Wisdom from God''-7:30 p.m. 13.. . PEACE with God"-7.30 p.m. 20 ... Salvation from God"-7:30 p.m. 28 (Maundy Thurs.)... Reconciliation to God "-7:30 p.m. 29 (Good Fri.)... Triumph over Sin"-7:30 p.m. 31 (Easter)... Symbol of Life"-10:15 a.m. Fora ride call 693-4514 Study Abroad Summer 1991 with Bulter University Economics majors: Does a Summer Internship in Cambridge or London interest you? Come to the Informational Meeting February 14 2:00 p.m. 251 Bizzel Hall West Students of all majors: Interested in studying in the UK, Australia, or New Zealand? Come to the Informational Meeting February 14 4:00 p.m. 251 Bizzel Hall West Study Abroad Office, 161 West Bizzell Hall, 845-0544 Campus Directories, Aggielands Available If you ordered a 1990-91 Campus Directory and haven’t picked it up, you may get it in the Student Publications business office, room 230 Reed McDonald Building, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monday - Friday. If you did not order a Campus Directory, you may purchase one for $3, plus tax, in 230 Reed McDonald. If you ordered a 1990 Aggietand and haven't picked it up, stop by the English Annex between 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Yearbooks will not be held and refunds will not be made on books not picked up during the academic year in which they are published. Page 6 The Battalion Wednesday, February 13,1991 Police Beat The following events were re ported to the University Police De partment between Jan. 29 and Feb. 1: MISDEMEANOR THEFT: • A Duncan Hall security atten dant reported finding food items belonging to the University in a vehicle. After contacting the vehicle’s owner who gave consent for a search, police found 50 pounds of beef tips, two bags of corn meal, a bag of Fritos, a ham, 10 pounds of corned beef, 10 pounds of ham burger, a box of hot dogs, 25 pounds of hamburger patties and four boxes of orange drink. The suspect was released pen ding further investigation. • A Sbisa Dining Hall employee tried to leave the dining hall with 20 New York strip steaks hidden in a large purse. • Forty compact discs stolen from a room in Dorm 12 were returned to the owner. • Three bicycles were reported stolen. DISORDERLY CONDUCT: • A nude man was seen run ning in a hallway of Moses Hall. He was not located. HARASSMENT: • Three students reported receiving harassing telephone calls. BURGLARY OF HABITA TION: • A woman reported someone entered her room in McFadden Hall and stole a Sony Walkman stereo cassette player. • A man reported clothes sto len from his dorm room were re turned. BURGLARY OF A BUILD ING: • Seven basketball rims were stolen from the Intramural Sports Center garage. • A custodial employee re- E orted a broken window on the lading dock door of the Offshore Technology Research Center. The building was burglarized and seve ral pieces of Macintosh equipment were stolen. CRIMINAL MISCHIEF: • The University Golf Course was damaged when someone drove a vehicle across the lawn. • A person seen sliding his skateboard down a stairway railing at the Engineering/Physics mall was questioned by police. The proctor did not file charges be cause no damage was caused by the skateboard. PUBLIC INTOXICATION: • A man was arrested at the scene of an automobile accident for public intoxication. Recession- report glossed over major problems facing the economy, including a rash of bank failures and a chronic fed eral budget deficit projected to hit an all-time high of $518 billion this year. Michael Boskin, chairman of the president’s Council of Economic Ad visers, was questioned sharply by members of the congressional Joint Economic Committee over whether the administration was not making a major policy error by failing to offer proposals to deal with the recession. “My concern is that I see factors of weakness that were not present in ast recessions,” said Sen. Paul Sar- anes, D-Md. and chairman of the committee. “If the recession is deeper, will the administration do anything?” Boskin said the administration was involved in contingency plan ning but repeated administration opposition to such Democratic pro posals as job-creating public works Continued from pagel programs or cuts in the Social Secu rity payroll tax. Boskin said one major drag on the economy, higher oil prices, had al ready moderated significantly. He said this, along with lower interest rates being engineered by the Fed eral Reserve, should help speed a re covery. T he president’s economic repon said that even before Iraq’s invasion sent oil prices soaring the United States was enduring weak growth, which the report blamed on a world wide increase in interest rates, stricter lending practices by banks and tight-inoney policies pursued by the Fed to fight inflation. The overall economy, as mea sured by the gross national product, fell at annual rate of 2.1 percent in the October-December quarter. The economic report forecast it would fall further in the current, January- March period before starting to grow again. 9TH ANNUAL RUN FOR THE ARTS 5K and IMile Run Saturday, February 16, 1991 Hosted by: MSC OPAS and TAMU ROADRUNNERS WHERE: Texas A&M University at G. Rollie White Coliseum In College Station, Texas START TIMES: 1 mile: 9 A.M. 5K (3.1 miles): 9:30 AM ENTRY FEE: $10.00 Mail Entry Form with check payable to MSC OPAS to: MSC OPAS P.O. Box J-l College Station, TX 77844 COURSE: Mostly flat through Texas A&M campus on paved streets PACKET PICKUP: Memorial Student Center on campus February 13-15 from 9AM to 4 PM and on race day. Map of the course will be included. The OPAS offlee Is located in "SPO West,” Room 223 of the MSC. T-SHIRTS: Guaranteed to the first 200 entries RACE RESULTS: Full race results will be mailed to each runner and to Inside Runner. AWARDS: 5K: Trophies for the 1st Overall male and female and top 3 in each age category 1 mile: Trophies for the 1st Overall male and female and ribbons to the next 5 males and 5 females AGE GROUPS: Men: 15 and under; 16-19; 20-29; 30-39; 40-49; 50-59; 60+ Women: 15 and under; 16-19; 20-29; 30-39; 40-49; 50+ For further information, call David Ortiz at (409) 693-6368 or OPAS at (409) 845-1661 • SPONSORED BY: The Plaza Club David Gardner's Jewelers University Tower • Garflelds Copy Comer Wolf Creek Car Wash • * McDonalds Merrill Lynch Allen Olds Cadillac * ENTRY FORM FOR RUN FOR THE ARTS (One entry per form, please. This form may be duplicated) PRINT NAME: AGE ON 2/16/91: ADDRESS: PHONE: SEX: M □ F □ RACE: 5K □ 1 Mile □ T-SHIRTS: M □ L □ XL □ Waiver Statement: In consideration of my being accepted, I waive any and all claims for myself, my administrators, and my heirs, against all officials, sponsors, and organizaUons connected with the Run for the Arts 5K and 1 mile run for Injury or illness which may directly or indirectly result from my participation in this event. I further verily that I am physically fit to compete in this event. Signature: Date: (Parent or legal guardian must sign If Participant is under the age of 18) Carreathers Continued from pagel System Association of Professional Support Staff (TAPSS), a support group formed in 1987 for staff em ployees. Black History programs will in clude the Voices of Praise at noon to day in the Commons Lobby. Numer ous other activities also have been scheduled for the rest of the month. For further information about Black History Month events, contact the Department of Multicultural Services at 845-4551. Transit killing prompts boost in bus security SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Security may be increased at a shuttle bus stop) following the stabbing death of a man who was involved in a con frontation over a cowboy hat, transit officials said. Joseph Anthony Cielencki, 20, was fatally stabbed at a shuttle bus park-arid-ride station after leaving the San Antonio Stock Show and Ro deo with his father aboard a VIA Metropolitan Transit bus, police said. The attack occurred after two men taunted Cielencki’s father on the bus about his brown cowboy hat, officials said. Alfred Cielencki, 57, the father, survived the attack, but was severely beaten about his face. His son was pronounced dead early Monday at Brooke Army Medical Center. There were no immediate arrests. VIA spokeswoman Suzanne Det- wiler said security at the mall’s park- and-ride depot may be increased. “This was the last bus of the eve ning at about 11:30 p.m. (Sunday), and the supervisors who would have been on hand were gone by that time,” Detwiler said. She said bus riders should notify their driver immediately if there is trouble. “We are just trying to tell our pa trons that it’s still very safe to ride the bus. Our operators are trained to notice anything suspicious, and they will call in and get a uniformed po lice officer to meet them in a very few minutes,” Detwiler said. Police said the father and son had just stepped off a bus at a park-and- ride station near Windsor Park Mall when they were accosted by two men who had harassed them on the bus about Alfred Cielencki’s cowboy hai Alfred Cielencki described the men as “rowdies on the bus.” Wednes Trai deci man Wha, Scott? 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