'■i The Battalion Classified Ads Phone: 845-0569 / Office: English Annex Announcements ■ Announcements I Announcements American General Corporation will be interviewing on campus at Texas A&M on February 28, 1991. American General is a nationwide insurance-based diversified fi nancial services company with over 20,000 employees, organized in a multi-company structure. We have career opportunities available for Internal Consultants who work with all levels of management to develop, maintain and improve the Company’s business manage ment systems. If you have an MBA, 3-5 years’ experience in Consulting, Account ing, or Industrial Engineering, and believe “there is always a better way”, we would like to visit with you. If you are unable to schedule an interview with us, please forward your resume via kiNexus by calling 1-800-828-0422. We are an equal opportunity employer. American General Corporation AMERICAN GENERAL Help Wanted ■ Help Wanted ■ Services INSTRUCTORS Summer Employment Outstanding 8-week girls' camp in Maine needs female and male counselors in the following activities: • Tennis • Horseback Riding • Fine Arts • Swimming • Gymnastics • Newsletter • Waterski • Dance • Basketball • Sailing • Silver Jewelry • Field Hockey • Canoeing • Pottery • Softball • Kayaking • Photography & Video • Soccer • Ropes/Rock Climbing • Arts & Crafts • Lacrosse • Outdoor Living • Copper Enameling • 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 Lafip Camp For information and application call 301/653-3082 or 207/998-4347 days; 301/363-6369 or 207/783-4625 eves, or weekends. 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. Cruise Ship Jobs HIRING Men - Women. Summer/ Year Round. PHOTOGRAPHERS, TOUR GUIDES, RECREATION PERSONNEL. Excellent pay plus FREE travel. Caribbean, Hawaii, Bahamas, South Pacific, Mexico. CALL NOW! Call refundable. 1-206-736-7000, Ext.C.1019 WEKEELACAMPS, CANTON. MAINE. One of America's most prestigious camps, seeks creative dynamos tor staff positions June 17-August IBfortenins, athletics, lacrosse, gymnastics, competitive swimming, water skiing, sailing, small crafts, piano, dancWballet, drama, song leaders, campcraft/ropes, ceramics, art, woodworking, photogra- phy/yearbook. Also kitchen and maintenance positions. If you think you're tops, reply to: 130 S. Merkle Rd.. Colum- bus, OH 43209, (614) 235-3177. Brazos Beverage Now Hiring bannerartist and sing printer part-time only. Flexible hours, pay based on ability. Call Allen Tidwell, 775-6322, 6-5 p.m. Windsurfing instructors wanted in the Houston area, 713- 326-2724, $5000 GUARANTEE Amazing Hot Details, 1-900-990- 7014+ 1016limitedtimeoffer. Cost$1.991 stminute, .99c rest. CAMP DAY — SUMMER JOBS. Representatives from summer camps will Interview Texas A&M students Febru ary 18, 1991, from 9:30 a.ra 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. Appiy 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: Ail team sports, especially baseball, basketball, field hockey, sottball, soccer and volleyball;25tennis openings; also archery, ritlery, 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. HOME TYPISTS. PC^users needed. S35!oOO~potentialT Details. (1) 805-687-6000. INTELLIGENCE JOBS. All branches!. U.S. Customs, DEA.elc. Now hiring. 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 Brlarcrest Suite 101, 776-4453. TIMBER LAKE CAMPS located in NY'S Catsklll Moun tains seek General Counselors, Athletic Instructors, and WSI's. On-Campus Interviews. TOP SALARIES/TRAVEL ALLOWANCE. 1-BOO-828-CAMP (9-4:30 weekdays). 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 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. 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 WORD PROCESSING: PROFESSIONAL LASER QUALITY REPORTS. RESUMES. ETC.LISA 696-0958. $1/page typing, laser printed, double spaced. Call Editing Services 776-5560. O'BRYAN PLUMBING AND HEATING 24 HRS. SMALL 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 roommalesl 764- 2968. Kelly. For Sale 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 Compatble, 640k, 2 Floppies, $350. Ideal for word processing, 845- 5132. PIANO FOR SALE: Wanted; responsible party to take on small monthly payments on piano. See locally. Call Manager at 800-635-7611. 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 Opportunily Housing/Handicapped Accessible Houseto rent/share. Female roommate needed. Nice 3b/ 2ba house shuttle. Eastmark furnished all appliances, W/ D, pool close 250/mth. All bills paid + $100 deposit. Call 693-5948 on 713-438-5325 collect. A 2B/1,1/2Balh, luxury lour-plexes. Close to campus, shuttle bus, washer/dryer available $350.00. 693-0551, 764-8051. Lost & Found LOST: LARGE. BLACK. CAT. WHITE FACE, FRONT. PAWS. BLUE COLLAR. LOST NEAR TREEHOUSE II. PHONE 693-0436. Adoptions We’ve bedtime stories, rocking chairs and much love, but nobaby...yet. Can you help? Call Sue and Jamie collect about adoption. (802)235-2312. FREE ACCOMMODATIONS to ORLANDO HAWAII MEXICO and Many More Destinations CALL 1-900-990-7867 EXTENSION #88 24 HOURS A DAY TOUCH TONE PHONES ONLY SI0 PHONE CALL REFUNDABLE OFFER EXPIRES 2-28-91 Page 10 The Battalion Thursday, February 14,1991 Senate passes bill to cut oil clean-up response time AUSTIN (AP) — The Senate passed a bill Wednesday to protect Texas bays and estuaries by desig nating a single state agency, drawing from a fund of up to $50 million, to respond immediately to clean up oil spills. Bill sponsor Carl Parker said the measure, which was sent to the House on a 29-0 vote, would cut re sponse time for cleaning up spills from days to hours. , “The bays and estuaries of the Gulf Coast represent some of our more precious assets in this state,” Sen. Parker, D-Port Arthur, said. “They are the lifeline of the food chain for all of our shellfish, fish ... and all of the aquatic life and animal life on the Gulf Coast.” Parker cited such major oil spills as the Burmah Agate, which in 1979 dumped 10.7 million gallons off the Texas coast, and last summer when the tanker Mega Borg and an oil barge spilled a combined total of 4.4 million gallons of oil near Galveston. “The largest problem we have in countering and responding to these spills is nobody has been in charge, no one has had access to adequate funding,” Parker said. The bill would make the General Land Office the state’s lead agency for responding to oil spills or other pollutants in coastal waters. It establishes a coastal protection fund of up to $50 million by placing a fee on crude oil transported by ves sel. The fee, either 2 cents or 4 cents a barrel, would depend on how much money was needed for the fund. The fund would pay for state cleanup costs, compensate people damaged by spills and pay for re search. The legislation also requires own ers of oil terminal facilities and ves sels with a capacity of 10,000 or more gallons of oil to maintain ad equate insurance and develop spill prevention and response plans. Criminal and civil penalties are provided for violations. “Most importantly, it will be a great way to get out there and get this stuff cleaned up immediately,” Parker said. “That’s where the harm has been caused, by taking so long to get it cleaned up until it gets in the grasslands or to the beaches and the impact doubles.” Under the legislation, the Texas Water Commission would still have responsibility for hazardous spills except for oil, Parker said. Among several amendments were changes to maintain the Railroad Commission’s role in regulating off shore wells and pipelines. Officials call for tax hike to meet needs of hospitals HOUSTON (AP) — Harris County Hospital District officials said they need a 31 percent in crease in their portion of county property taxes to meet rising emergency trauma cases ana medical costs. Lois Moore, the hospital dis trict’s president, told Harris County commissioners Tuesday that the district could come up $50 million short without the ad ditional revenue. To fund the hospital district, county residents now are assessed 16 cents per $100 valuation, Moore said that should be in creased 5 cents to 21 cents per $ 100 valuation. The tax hike would help the crowded emergency room situa tion by allowing the district to re open Quentin Mease Hospital, she said. The hospital has been closed since January 1990 for asbestos removal. It was unable to reopen as scheduled last summer in part because of the budget shortfall. Sexual business ban City forces move of adult stores i HOUSTON (AP) — The City Council unanimously approved on Wednesday an ordinance that prohibits adult book and video stores and X-rated movie theaters from operating within 750 feet of schools, churches and day care centers. “This is really a major step forward for every citizen in Houston,” said councilwoman Christin Hartung, who has worked on getting the measure approved for D/a years. “It’s the toughest battle I’ve had in my 12 years on the council.” The ordinance also outlaws such businesses from op erating within 1,000 feet of other sexually oriented businesses in an effort to get rid of what Hartung called “combat zones,” or groups of adult-oriented businesses. In addition, such businesses would be prohibited from operating in predominantly residential neighbor hoods. Only 17 of the 54 businesses affected appear to be in compliance with the new ordinance, city attorney Clar ence West said. The businesses have three months to register for city permits and six months to continue operating to recoup their investrnent. West said. A business out of compli ance then must move or cease operations unless it re ceives an exemption from the city. Some Houstonians blasted the council’s action Wednesday, saying it violated the First Amendment. “This is a censorship ordinance,” said Ray Hill, a free speech and gay rights activist. Hill predicted the amendment would be reversed if it is challenged in court. Hartung said she expected lawyers for the businesses to challenge the law, but she added she is confident the measure can withstand a legal battle since it regulates location, not content. “We feel we have taken our time, done the research, dotted every T and crossed every ‘T’,” she said. “We feel relatively comfortable about any court challenge." “We’re only regulating land use controls to ensure that these types of establishments are not close to churches, schools or day care centers,” Hartung said. The measure approved Wednesday adds adult book and video stores and X-rated movie theaters to the city’s sexually oriented business code, which already regu lates topless dubs and modeling shows. Vietnamese teens face racism, struggle with cultural differences, expectations HOUSTON (AP) — Willie Nguyen didn’t know Hung Truong, the Vietnamese youth who was beaten and stomped by suspected skinheads last summer and later died of his injuries. But his death had a big impact on Nguyen and many other Vietnamese teen-agers in Houston. Until then, Nguyen, the youngest of nine children, had felt at home in the United States. His assimilation had been free from the frustrations and fears faced by his older brothers and sisters and their parents when they arrived in 1975. The same is true for his friends Karen Doan and Ha Le, also the youngest in large families, and his classmates at Sharp- stown High School. Nguyen and his peers look at themselves as a new generation, born Vietnamese but raised Ameri can — comfortable with a range of experiences as varied as apple pie and spring rolls. It makes, they ad mit, for an interesting approach to life. But this was the first time Nguyen, 17, a happy-go-lucky sort who is fond of telling jokes, had thought much about racism. “1 know it’s out there, and I’m aware of problems,” Nguyen says. “But I guess it became much more apparent to me last summer.” Since then, Nguyen and his friends have talked about the Tru ong slaying among themselves and with family members. They have read the accounts that suggest Tru ong might have survived if he had gone to a hospital earlier and if he had called his father instead of hid ing his problems — a traditional Asian reaction. Nguyen, Doan and Le acknowl edge that “saving face” is important in their culture. In Vietnam, the per fect image was everything. But they say that their own reaction to Tru ong’s death reflects how American they have become. “I was mad about it at first,” Nguyen says. “It seemed no matter what I wanted to do, it wouldn’t help. A lot of times in the Vietnam ese community, it seems they want you to keep quiet, and it will go away. Like it’s rude to make a scene or stand up for your rights. Butallthai will change with the next generation — with us.” The three Vietnamese teen-agers believe that in many ways they have had the best of both worlds — Amer ican freedom and the closeness shared by most Vietnamese families Of those who came in the first wave of refugees after the fall of Saigon in 1975, they feel most at home. Bythe time they were old enough to re member, their families had recov ered from the initial traumas of their move. Only Doan, 16, who left in 1979, remembers Vietnam. Le and Nguyen left as babes in their moth ers’ arms. To them it is an exotic idea — a place they might like to visit one day, but never home. They have not forgotten their families’ early struggles. Older brothers and sisters remind them of the sacrifices their parents made for them. But often they feel trapped in a world of stereotypes: caught be tween the image of the perfect Asian who gets all A’s and the disaffected Asian who turns to gangs to find an identity. FINAL WINTER CLEARANCE Just in time for spring break! All Ski Jackets & Pants .... 40% off All Accessories 25% off We also have new swimwear Arriving Daily Come ✓ us out; Post Oak Mall 696-1534 Thursday, Arbi bree< pro t Thei about the stai spring. It’s diffi from footbal son when the weather k fans inside, ing up on and spirits. Baseball st lets you go o a warm, s day and patch after w ing the hir ers on televis Baseball is Americans t> authenticity; years. The pi baseball stad open to the e grass. 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