INTERNET JOBS Attention College Students: Web America Networks, is looking specifically for Texas A&M college students and Blinn College students to staff a brand new Internet Call Center the will be located in College Station. There are immediate openings for Sales Reps, Technical Support Reps, and Customer Service Reps to respond to a massive nationwide direct mail market ing campaign. Reps will respond to inbound calls only. This is not an outbound telemarketing job. Web America Networks offers great income opportunities and benefits, with tremendous opportunities for growth. Inside Sales Representative - responsible for selling customers who call in response to the marketing campaign $ 9.00 per hour, plus commissions that can bring total compensation up to $15.00 per hour. • Actively Pursing College B.A./B.S Degree • Outgoing Personality. Involvement in Student Activities (Corps, MSC Clubs, Greeks, etc) a plus! • Experience working with Customers (Retail, Restaurants, etc) • Highly Motivated and Goal Oriented • Windows 98 proficiency • Ability to clearly articulate to customers over the telephone • Works Well in a Team Environment • Part-Time Opportunities with Flexible Work Hours available with variety of 4 hour shifts, 7 days a week, 24 hours a day • Minimum of 24 Months Experience Using the Internet Technical Support - responsible for solving PC/Modem/Software problems to get customers connected to the Internet. *9.00 per hour • Actively Pursuing College Bachelor Degree in Engineering, Science or MIS • Strong Customer Service, Telephone and Listening Skills • Minimum of 36 Months Experience Using the PC’s and/or the Internet • Strong Windows 95 & 98 Experience (Modem Configuration, Dial Up Networking, etc) • Problem Solving and Analysis skills • Ability to clearly articulate to customers over the telephone • Highly motivated and works well in a Team environment • Part-Time Opportunities with Flexible Work Hours available with variety of 4 hour shifts, 7 days a week, 24 hours a day Customer Service - responsible for dealing with customers inquiries for billing questions, account details, etc. *8.00 per hour • Actively Pursuing College B.A./B.S Degree • Experience working with Customers (Retail, Restaurants, etc) • Works well in a team environment • Windows 98 proficiency • Ability to clearly articulate to customers over the telephone • Part-Time Opportunities with Flexible Work Hours available with variety of 4 hour shifts, 7 days a week, 24 hours a day.' • Minimum of 24 Months Experience Using the Internet ( Web America Networks, Inc. offers flexible scheduling 7 days a week with both daytime and evening hours avail able 24 hours a day. We offer opportunities for quick advancement in a casual dress environment. Web America Networks Management will be in College Station conducting interviews beginning Monday, 9 August. You can schedule an interview 24 hours a day by contacting Web America Networks via any of the following means: WebyAmerica Web America Networks 17250 North Dallas Parkway, Suite 150 Dallas, TX 75287 (800) 215-6974 Attn: Aggie Call Center E-mail resumes to aggiejobs@wans.net Fax resumes to (972) 732-9267 Est.1974 - Keeping you in touch for 25 years. tsrwireless.com TSR Wireless TM 1.800.795. Receive a $30 Mail-In Rebate on any Sprint PCS Phone™ OR a $100 Mail-In Rebate on any two Sprint PCS Phones™* I? Sprint Sprint PCS Nokia 5170 or Samsung 2000 SOQ 99 jr jf • eocn That's Two for the Price of One!! (After $100 rebate) PLUS!! $25 Instant Rebate with the purchase of any Sprint PCS Phone™ Exclusively from TSR Wireless! ‘Cannot be combined with any other mail-in rebate offer. Phone purchase and activation required. Restrictions apply. See printed materials in store for details. Limited time offer. POST OAK MALL - 409-694-7243 Page 10 • Wednesday, August 25, 1999 The: The Battal i Tennessee teen shoots parents Breast mi linked to CHICAGO (AP) - I HIV-infected women I percent chance of gf virus from their mother:I BEDFORD, Tenn. (AP) — A 15-year-old boy killed his father with a rifle yesterday, then shot and wounded his mother when he fired at the bathroom door she was hiding behind, police said. Matthew Hardrick was cap tured shortly after the shooting when he crashed his family’s car about 25 miles from home. “He was crying and banging his head against the side of the window” of the police car fol lowing his arrest, Columbia po lice Lt. James Hanvy said. Police did not say if they knew of a possible motive. The boy was charged with first degree murder and attempted murder. Officers learned of the shoot ing when the boy’s mother, Eleanor Hardrick, waved over a motorist outside her home. She was bleeding from a bul let wound to the leg and had gashes on her head. Police arrived to find the body of James Hardrick, 59, in the living room. He was lying on a couch when he had been shot in the head with a rifle. Hardrick said her son shot her husband. She said she ran into a bathroom and locked the door, but her son shot off the knob, wounding her, Bedford County Sheriff Clay Parker said. When she ran outside, her son followed and beat her, then took off in the car. Hardrick, a sophomore at Shelbyville Central High School, has a juvenile arrest record but police refused to give details. Hardrick, 53, was listed in fair condition at a hospital. Bed ford is 45 miles south of Nashville. waro WASHINC jie-by-lme, j [e past threi they breast-feed for two study conducted inthf nation of Malawi found The study is the firs! that mothers with theAii pass it along throughite as long as they breast: documents, ( though the risk is higher..:| Now, bee, hies’ early months, said: ^nds on U.: author. Dr. Paolo G. Mic: classifiers co National Institute of A: again. Infectious Diseases. ^Legislation Past studies have Squire all of tl breast-feeding transmis:ysure that sens of 4 percent to 20 percer. do not slip ou Breast-feeding is noifi “This is al mended for women wt: 0 nage that is the United States, wtepftergood, wl formula is plentiful, ftirecy at the I In developing didea that they where formula is scanKeen declassi World Health Orgaa^Be th^leda ommends women beinfeples. their risk choice. and make tkfii Present efl K- are driven _—pigned in 199 The order April 2000 — aterial and e narrowly School board changes ruli on wearing religious symbtlKid GULFPORT, Miss. (AP) — A Jewish student told to hide his Star of David necklace at school may wear it freely, the school board said in reversing its ruling that the pendant could be viewed as a gang symbol. “When we made the decision last week, it was based on information from the security officers only,” Harri son County School Board president Randy Williams said after Monday’s vote. “But we realized that it in fringed on freedom of religious expression, and that freedom supersedes the safety issue.” The School Board voted unanimously to exempt re ligious symbols from its policy prohibiting students from wearing anything that could be viewed as a gang symbol. Ryan Green, a junior at Harrison Central High School, wore his Star of David pendant at registration and on the first day of school early this month. He was told to tuck it beneath his shirt because it® terpreted as a gang symbol. Security officials had told board member gang symbols incorporate six-pointed starsar:: Star of David could be confused as such. On the board unanimously upheld theanti-j Ryan’s parents asked school officials tok the policy and the American Civil Libertiesli Friday asked a court to strike it down. Facing increasing pressure and publicatti school hoard met last week with membersoi ish community and decided to reconsider. Ryan’s father, Tom Green, said he wasexci!:i it plXrTnrV, . .accept the new It s a wonderful feeling, he said. Wearerf p r yj- lon - lc -) ous. As a father to a son this is the best principT rector 0 f t j ie ^ teach him: Stand up for your rights.” EHospital hoi program parti' BOSTON ( ived a new one marrow neering opera ill spare her nti-rejection her life. The bone r tion, said the a Study suggests diabetic drivers pose daKis" CHICAGO (AP) — Diabetics of ten decide to drive even when their blood-sugar levels are so low that they could lose coordination and even black out, a study suggests. “That is not to mean that they should necessarily have their dri vers’ privileges taken away or re stricted,’’ said Dr. William L. Clarke of the University of Vir ginia Health Sciences Center at Charlottesville. Clarke said diabetics should be aware of the danger of relying on their ability to detect low blood sugar without measuring it. Almost 45 percent of the time, the diabetics in the study said they would drive when they be lieved their blood sugar to be be low 70 milligrams per 10th of a liter of blood. Previous research among dia betics using driving simulators has shown that blood-sugar levels below 65 lead to loss of control — swerving, spinning and wander ing off the road. The participants all had type 1 diabetes, which affects about 1 ramificati lant patients. The operati million Americans. All!v;S the first time betics must take insufet kidney and hoi several times a day, tolT’ in a single opi metabolize sugar intoei:: Spitzer and o The findings were pul eported on th Wednesday’s Joumaloftk ican Medical Association Previous studies have conflicting data about k ,o S ed with ki type 1 diabetics have a hig: of traffic accidents bee. fluctuations in blood sugar said. He and his colleagi hat had cause not analyze accident rales the participants. ssue of the joi The patient rom the Bos ear ago. At t he also had harrow — m She underv Welcome EJome, Dr. Gaylf Anderson-Smith-Zivney & Associates is pleaseci to announce the association of L. Justin Gayle, M.D, specializing in Obstetrics & Gynecology C Dr. Gayle was born and raised in College Station. Son of Id and Melody Gayle, long-time residents of College Station Gayle is a graduate of A&M Consolidated High School a: Texas A&M University. Upon graduation from A&M, Dr.Ga;| attended medical school at the Texas Tech University He: Sciences Center College of Medicine and served as presii of his medical school class. He completed his residency trairiS in Obstetrics & Gynecology at the Texas A&M Univer: Health Science Center/Scott & White Memorial Hospital whi he served as Chief Resident. Following residency, Dr. Ga)ij joined the Sadler Clinic in Conroe where he had abusypriv practice in Obstetrics & Gynecology. He served as thie Direct of Urogynecology and Pelvic Reconstructive Surgery and Vice Chair of Obstetrics & Gynecology at Conroe Regioi Medical Center. Dr. Gayle could not pass up the opportunity to return toColleS Station and join the practice of Anderson, Smith, Zivne\ Associates. “The chance to return to the area and practice medicine has been a dream of mine sintellt day I started medical school,” says Gayle. Dr. Gayle and his wife, Marilyn, have three children and are active in church and family activities.Hi enthusiasm for leading a healthy lifestyle is evident in his love for the outdoors, sports, and recreation Dr. Gayle is an advocate of patient education and promotes the awareness of women’s health care issue: He will be presenting public seminars on “Women’s Health Talk,” beginning in September. Dr. Gay will lecture on such topics as hormone replacement, cancer screening, options to hysterectomy, are urinary incontinence. NEW PATIENTS WELCOME 1602 Rock Prairie Road, Suite 230 (409) 697-0737 OATE: 1 TIME: 4 WHERE: must h thav 7 must e attexa mauda