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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 12, 1991)
Page 8 The Battalion The Battalion Classified Ads Phone: 845-0569 / Office: Room 015 (basement) Reed McDonald Building Business Hours Deadline ‘AGGIE* WANT ADS Call or visit us: Monday through Friday 11 a.m. prior to publication LU z $10 for 20 words running 5 days, if your merchandise is priced $1000 or less (price must appear in ad). For private individuals, not businesses. Guaran- 8 a.m.-5 p.m. ITSs^l OR HAL i .^/J /] teed results or you get an additional 5 days at no charge. If item doesn't sell, advertiser must call before 11 a.m. on the day the ad is schedule to Fax us at 845-5408 VISA, MasterCard accepted end to qualify for the 5 additional insertions at no charge. Help Wanted Gun Club For Rent OPENING SOON! €113 Pantry FOODS Bryan, Texas College Station, Texas (October) One of the nation's most dynamic companies, H.E.Butt Grocery Company is bringing one of its newest stores to your area. H-E-B knows firsthand that a quality company begins with quality people. And we are looking for quality people right now . . . PART-TIME AND/OR FULL-TIME POSITIONS AVAILABLE: ■ Checkers ■ Courtesy Clerks ■ General Clerks (Produce, Grocery, Service) H Market Specialists and Wrap Clerks ■ Department Heads* (Produce, Market, Grocery, Customer Service) Ideal candidates must have good communication skills and the desire to demonstrate friendliness toward customers and coworkers. ♦Experience in grocery retailing and supervision required. EMPLOYEE BENEFITS: ■ Excellent working environment ■ Advancement opportunities and training ■ Recognition program ■ Annual pay reviews ■ Credit Union membership ADDED BENEFITS FOR FULL-TIME EMPLOYEES: ■ Insurance ■ Holiday pay , ■ Paid vacations ■ Investment and retirement plan Other store locations include: Pearland, Lake Jackson, Galveston, Liberty, Jasper, West Columbia, Texas City, Columbus, Alvin, Bay town, Crosby, Huntsville, Deer Park, Crockett, Cleveland, Rockdale, Lumberton, Porter, Beaumont, Orange, Groves, Nederland, Port Arthur, and Angleton. Be come a part of a company that genuinely cares about its employees, customers and the community. H-E-B is a Texas-based company with an 80-year tradition of serving communities. Come join the team at H-E-B Pantry Foods. APPLY IN PERSON .vdtUm- Texas Employment Commission 801 East 29th St. Bryan, Texas v* • , September 12-13 September 16-18 if 9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. ***• If you have already applied in the last month, your application is under consideration at this time. We are an equal opportunity employer m/f Ad paid for by employer Attention Allergy Sufferers If you are experiencing red and itchy eyes you may be eligible to participate in a clinical re search study using a currently marketed drug. You must be between the ages of 18 and 65 and be in good general health. Financial compensation is provided upon successful completion of the study. If you are interested in finding out whether you are qualified to be a part of this study, please contact. G&S STUDIES 846-5933 LOOKING FOR A CAREER? DECEMBER GRADS SALES/STOCKBROKER F.N WOLF will be interviewing October 8th on campus! We’re looking for hardworking enthusiastic individuals. Apply at Placement Center or send resume to: F.N. WOLF & CO. 100 Glenborough Suite 900 Houston, Texas 77067 BACK PAIN STUDY Patients needed with acute (recent) onset of muscle spasms (back pain, etc.) to participate in a consumer use research study with an FDA approved drug. Medical evaluation at no cost to patient. Eligible volunteers will be compensated. G&S STUDIES, INC. 846-5933 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. THE HOUSTON CHRONICLE has immediate carriers openings for off campus routes. $450-$700 per month. Require working early morning hours. Call James 693-7815 or Julian 693-2323 for an appointment. GUARANTEED WORK! Assemble items on your own. Top Pay! Easy Work! 1-800-226-3601 ext. 4780. DISCOUNT BIKE REPAIR part-time help needed. Shop experienced required. 846-1946. Adult Video cashier 7 a.m. - 3 p.m. Saturdays and Sun days. Apply 603 Texas Avenue, College Station. Women interested in dealing blackjack. Will train. Call 778-0167 after noon. Leave message. St. Joseph Hospital and Health center is accepting appli cations for a part-time blood collector to work in our laboratory, weekends only. This position will work 2 weekends on and 1 off. Previous blood collecting experi ence preferred, but will train. Interested persons should apply in the Human Resources Department by 4:30 p.m., Friday. 8-13-91. E.O.E. Student Musicians for "El Mariachi Estrella” group. If interested, call 696-2160. ASSEMBLERS: Excellent income. Assemble products from your home. 504-646-1700 DEPT. P777. Part-time dental assistant T-Thurs. afternoons. 260- 9772. NEED CASH? $110/month. Someone you know is already a plasma donor. Safe and easy procedure guar antees immediate cash. Westgate Plasma Center. 846- 8855. Texas World Speedway needs box office ticket sellers with phone experience, high energy, articulate speech. Flexible hours- evenings and weekends. Apply in person only. Six miles south C. S. Hwy 6 (east side). Part-time Service Station attendant wanted. Experience preferred, not required. Apply at Villa Maria Chevron at 29th St. and Villa Marla Rd. Bryan, 776-1261. Help wanted. Apply in person Piper's Chevron Texas at University. Line cooks and dishwashers. Apply in person 3-C Barbe cue Culpepper Plaza. TEXAS RENAISSANCE FESTIVAL—Italian Village now taking applinationsforfood and beverage workers. Please call for appointment and directions. 409-894-2259 or 409-894-2812-. Dependable People Wanted for Houston Post. Routes early morning $300 - $800 month 846-1253, 846-2911. APPEAR INTV COMMERCIALS. EARN EXTRAMONEY. ALL AGES. ALL TYPES NEEDED. NO EXPERIENCE CALL NOW! 1-504-945-6125. Child Care Faculty couple needs weekday afternoon childcare for five year old son. Hours and days negotiable. Must have car. Call 764-2036. Babysitter, on call basis, references required. 764-6710. Adoptions ADOPTION IS LOVING. Happily married, professional couple want to share our hearts with a healthy infant. Will provide lots of love, security and TEXAS PRIDE. Legal and medical expenses paid. Call 1-800-523-5036. ARROWHEAD GUN CLUB. Non-members welcome. Skeet-Pistol-Trap-RifleRanges. OpenTues-Sun, 10a.m. Hwy. 6 S. 1/4 mile past Texas World Speedway. 690- 0276. Services Concerned about your Student Loan Payments? For TRULY PERSONAL service, consider us for all your consolidation needs. Call 1-800-829-4599 for details. GREATER EAST TEXAS SERVICING CORPORATION, INC. COTTON VILLAGE APTS. Ltd. Snook, Texas $0 w/RA $200-$357 for 1 bdrm. $0 w/RA $248-$428 for 2 bdrm. Call 846-8878, 774-0773 a/5 p.m. Equal Opportunity Housing/Handicapped Accessible AWESOME HOUSE with large master bedroom for rent. MUST SEE! Very Impressive. Share with two laid back guys 693-3911. CHEAP. 2 bdrs, 1 bath for lease or sale. 1906 Miller Bryan $350/ mth. 693-3418, a/5:30 p.m. Roommate Wanted Female needed to share master bedroom in 3br/2ba duplex. $110/mo.+1/4 utilities. On shuttle bus route. Call Missy at 846-6502. Travel RESEARCH NFORMAH0N Largest Library of Information in U.S. 19,278 TOPICS - ALL SUBJECTS Order Catalog Today with Visa / MC or COD liiMOO-351-0222 Or, rush $2.00 to: Research Information 11322 Idaho Ave. #206-A, Los Angeles, CA 90025 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 COLLEGE MONEY Private Scholarships. You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money refunded! America's Finest! Since 1981. COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP LOCATORS, Box 1881, Joplin, MO 64802-1881.1-800-879-7485 Professional typing, word proc essing, resume writing and editing services are available at Notes-n-Quotes call 846-2255 Typing on MAC Laser prints. 24 hours or less. 696-3892. Fast, accurate experienced typing. Call 268-1065 and leave a message. Word Processing on Macintosh, laser quality print. Call Lori 646-4731 Shoe Shine Service: Shoes and senior boots. 775-3763 after 5 p.m. HORSES BOARDED - 300 acres on west side of B/Cs behind Dick Freeman Arena, $30/month pasture, $37.50 I FEED. 822-7653. RIF-RAF an -N THE RUTZ BAND - ROCK AND ROLL BANDS available for beginning of the year and RUSH parties. Call 823-4486 for information on booking. TYPING $1.50 PER PAGE. LASER PRINTED CALL 764-7191, Editing Services. Resumes with job search assistance package included. Ten years job placement experience. December grads.. It's not too soon to start. 776-6315 after 3 p.m. M-F. DEFENSIVE DRIVING CLASSES! TICKET DISMISSAL! INSURANCE DISCOUNT! AAA 411 Texas Ave. S. 846- 6117. (BRING AD FOR $2 DISCOUNT!!). Personals TALK LIVE Beautiful women waiting to talk to you 24 hrs. anytime. 1-900-386-5555 $2.50/min. 10 min/minimum ATTRACTIVE GIRLS LIVE! 1-ON-1. 1-900-568-3425. $10/CALL NO MINIMUM. LIVE TALK 1-900-773-3777. Adults only. $2.50/min. 10 minute minimum. Live talk one on one, adults only. 1-900-773-8300, 2.50/ min., 10 min./minimum. SKI THE BEST YOU'LL NEVER SKI THE SAME DICKSON PRODUCTIONS 512-396-1986 OR 1-800-782-7653 Ext. 221 TX COLLEGIATE SKI BREAK p 10th ANNIVERSARY J JANUARY SEMESTER BREAK S T E A M B JANUARY 2-14 • 5, 6 OR 7 NIGHTS BRECKENR1 JANUARY 2-9 • 5, 6 OR 7 NIGHTS VAIL/BEAVER JANUARY 3-12 • 5 OR 7 NIGHTS 10th ANNUAL COLLEGIATE WINTER SKI BREAKS TOLL FREE INFORMATION A RESERVATIONS 1-800-321-5911 "SPRING BREAK BAHAMAS” 5 day/4 nights cruise package. Hotel paid, meals and entertainment Included on ship. Limited tickets. Call 404-924-3345. Notice NATIONAL TALENT SEARCH CONTEST! Every Mon day night, Hilton Hotel, Sundance Club. No entry fee. Singers, models, songwriters. For more information 1- 800-375-6074. 192t/10/8 For Sale WATER FILTERS HOME, DORM, OFFICE USE. 776-3069 for appointment. One roundtrip ticket to Chicago from C.S. from Sept 26th to Sept 29th. $250. Call 823-3632. Red 1985 Ford Escort for sale. Call 846-3931. URGENT! Ford Escort '89 acradlo, automatic, 23,000 miles. Negotiable Jose 696-1113. 1987 Corvette, like new, 22,000 miles, 5-speed, indy yellow with saddle tan leather interior, two tops, all options. $20,000 764-7921. XHE WAITING IS OVER! The long awaited 1990-91 Video Yearbook is HERE! If you ordered a video come by Reed McDonald room 230 to pick up your copy. If you did not place an order there are still some copies available for the price of $29.95 plus tax. Cash, check, Mastercard, or VISA will be accepted. Don't miss out on Aggieland's memories in motion, AggieVision 1990-91. September 11,195'; Nerd House by Tom A. Madisi HEmRT Pia$ THE MONO DAV TO GO SMIM Soviets Baker responded that the decision to remove troops "will be very im portant in terms of public opinion in the United States." The 11,000 figure Gorbachev gave was higher than estimates given by independent and govern ment military analysts in the West. They put the total of Soviet troops in Cuba at between 6,800 and 7,700. Officials at the Soviet Defense Ministry said Wednesday they could not clarify the discrepancy. A Moscow correspondent for the official Cuban newspaper Granma, Pedro Prada, said the re ductions would not include advis ers. He didn't elaborate. Baker said he and Gorbachev also talked quite a bit "about the importance of quickly developing a credible economic reform pro gram for presentation to interna tional financial agencies." Continued from Pagel President Bush has saidfe reducing Soviet aid to Cubaan: cutting defense spending wool: make U.S. economic aid to theS) viets more likely. Recent U.S. government esl: mates indicate that Soviet ect- nomic aid to Cuba dropped fror about $5 billion annually a fe< years ago to $3.5 billion now. Soviet reformers, experts an: commentators have been urge an end to all Soviet aid toCuk Foreign Minister Boris D. Pant said last week it was time tore-e amine ties with Cuba. A day later, Gorbachev an: Russian Federation Preside: Boris Yeltsin echoed the view in: joint U.S. TV interview. Castro, in power since his ip I olution toppled dictator Fulgent! Batista in 1959, has had close ret tions with Moscow since tit ’ abortive, U.S.-backed Bay of Pig invasion in 1961. Ogden Ogden is an effort to make gradu ate students working at least 20 hours a week eligible for health in surance. '' The plan would be expen sive," he said-. "But it.wouldjnake graduate school significantly less expensive for the students. The impact would be great, especially for married students trying to sup port a family while they go to school." Ogden said he was sorry to re port a substantial tax increase for Texans, but said he was happy the legislature was able to avoid what Continued from Pagel he called the 'double whammy "The bad news is the taxi:! crease," he said. "The good ne« is that the increase in tuition aa| fees was only a fraction of whs State Comptroller John Sharp fry ommendeci." A four^dollar per semestr hour increase will hit student: Ogden said. Additional twope:; cent increases would come eat: succeeding year. "The increase is not insigni!:! cant," he said. "On the othe: hand, it's not what I would call! 'student-killer' either." Faculty tion Association had only recently started its push for salary increas es. He said the group expects little trouble raising support at A&M and other universities. ' "I think all faculty members will support us," he said. "Why shouldn't they? They know their salaries are not keeping up with their peers in other states. They know their salaries aren't even keeping up with inflation." TFA is currently scheduling meetings with the State Continued from Page! i Comptroller, and beginning: state-wide mailing campaign Burnside said. He said the TFA chapter leadt: at Southwest Texas State Univers: ty is scheduled to meet withthl school's faculty senate, whereTK: says $2.3 million is available inl^ cal accounts. The TFA's repoi says the funds could be put inti faculty salaries, department; budgets and the library withoii: causing the university any unntt essary financial strain. Weather satellite rainfall estimates to that of radar which is more accurate, they found the satellite estimates to be off by a factor of two, Graves said. Another discrepancy lies in the satellite pictures taken of weather systems. Graves said. Scientists call the 30-mile region observed by the satellite a "foot print." The satellite records one rainfall rate for the "footprint," however there may be many dif ferent ones present. "Because of the variability of rain rates within the footprint, you don't know what the actual rain rate is within that footprint," Graves said. "It could have been a variety of different rates. My re search potentially finds out what is the most probable distribution of rain rates within that footprint." His findings will allow meteo rologists to make long-term, glob- Continued from Page! al rainfall measurements. Scien tists can build the instrument cheaply and send them up o: satellites where they will provict accurate information for aroun; 15 years. Graves said. He said they may also be pul to work looking for indicationsC global warming by examining rainfall averages over a period o! time. Next, Graves plans to invest gate correction factors for satellite: carrying a variety of microwavt radiometers set at differentfre quencies. He will also look in! determining correction factorsfo: other types of weather instrs ments used. Graves received $250,000 it : funding from the National Ocean ic and Atmospheric Administra tion, the Texas Advanced Re search Program, and the Texas In stitute of Oceanography. Merit more Merit Scholars to A&M. Stu dents who were not previously considering A&M might now look into why the University is recruit ing so many Merit Scholars. "I think (this increase) puts A&M in the limelight," she said. "More people will ask - why A&M?" The National Merit Scholar ship Corp.'s 1990 report listed the Continued from Page] following 10 universities as having the highest enrollment of National Merit Scholars: Harvard and Ra! cliffe Colleges, 321; Rice Universi ty, 225; University of Texas ai Austin, 209; Stanford Universitj 169; Yale University, 167; Prince ton University, 152; Texas University, 131; University ok Florida, 124; Massachusetts Inst; tution of Technology, 113; anc Carleton College, 108. c < k- ice: unii an has age had aim the schi an i one play atio ploy mis Reg Air] cam dusl tel s trail fort F C