Page 6AThe Battalion/Monday, January 27, 1986 Battalion Classifieds WANTED Cough Study Males and Females 18 years of age or older to partici pate in a clinical trial to determine the effectiveness of a over-the-counter cough reducing medication. Monitary incentive: $100. For more information call 776-0411. 78tfn STUDY I Recent injury to wrist, knee or ankle? Severe enough pain to remain on study up to 10 days and 5 visits? STUDY II Recent injury with pain to any muscle or joint? One-dose (4 hours) in-house study. STUDY III Recent untreated in jury to muscle or bone. Study of 2 day duration with only 2 visits required. Volunteers interested in participating in investigative drug studies will be paid for their time and cooperation. G&S Studies, inc. 846-5933 7 - Carpool, Navasota (Stoneham) to Texas A&M. Ed after 6,894-2926. 80tl/28 WANTED TO BUY TICKET To MSC OPAS Hal Holbrook Mark Twain Performance Jan. 28. Phone John Montgomery, 845-7199 or 775-4180. 82n/27 WANTED: To buy a used VCR. Call Teri, 260-2308. 82t2/4 HELP WANTED Jr. or Sr. Computer Science major with good telephone voice, able to work evenings. Programming experience a plus. Call 776-4364. 82t 1/29 Part time trainee for cutting horses. Also work for ride. Dr. Stephenson. 776-2830. 82tl/31 Dental Assistant. Full - time and part - time positions available. Experienced preferred. Apply 2101 Texas Avenuei College Station. 82t2/7 Part time sales person needed. Flexible hours, neat ap pearance. Apply in person, Charli’s. 707 Texas Ave nue. 8D1/29 Wordprocessor needed. Knowledge of Wylbur/Script helpful but not mandatory. Call Debbie at 845-9706 on M WF from 1:00 to 5:00. 80t 1/29 Experienced maintenance person needed to do mow ing, landscaping, clean pools, and other various outside jobs. Must have own vehicle, preferably truck. Contact John, 696-1732. 80tl/29 Hostess needed for 1/31 - 2/2/86. If you have a neat, at tractive appearance, and demonstrated ease in meeting the public, you may qualify. Please stop by the Man power office at 707 Texas Ave., Suite E-100, College Station, Tx. 79tl/28 Houston Chronicle looking for early morning paper delivery route people. $400-$700. monthly. Call Julian at 693-2323 or Andy at 693-7815. 65tfn FOR SALE For Sale: 1976 Black Trans Am. Call 409-535-4774 af terdark. 82tl/31 Name brand box spring and mattress. 696-80098It 1/30 1‘iano for sale. Wanted: responsible party to assume small monthly payments on piano. See locally. Call credit manager, 1-800-447-4266. 78tl/29 1982 Yamaha 650, shaft, 4-cylinder, fully adjustable backrest, oil cooler, 2 helmets, excellent condition, $1,500. negotiable. 846-1104. 80t2/5 SERVICES DRESSING TO BE HIRED can help you get the positioh you want. Give yourself or that special person a session with a professional image consultant. WE SHOW YOU HOW TO DEFINE YOUR BEST IMAGE. Your education and skills are the key, but you must first get the ctiance to show what you can do. Personal Wardrobe Plan Career Wardrobe Guide Dressing to be hired/Wardrobe Mgmt. Call Thelma Fischer at 764-0642 10-7 Mon.-Sat. Messages Please 82ti/27 Lesbian support group for gay and bisexual women meets weekly, 764-8310. 82U/27 Cutting horse chapter being formed in B/CS area. Call Dr. Stephenson, 776-2830. 82U/31 Recording engineering classes. Brasswind Recording Studio. Call Pat at 693-5514. 81tl/30 ON THE DOUBLE All kinds of typing at reasonable rates. Dissertations, theses, term papers, re sumes. Typing and copying at one stop. ON THE DOUBLE 331 University Drive. 846-3755 tfn SPRING BREAK on the beach at South Padre Island, Daytona Beach, F'ort Lauderdale, Fort Walton Beach or Mustang Island/Port Aransas from only $89; and skiing at Steamboat or Vail from only $86! Deluxe lodging, parties, goodie bags, more... Hurry, call Sun- chase Tours for more information and reservations toll free 1-800-321-5911 TODAY! When your Spring Break counts.. .count on Sunchase. 79t3/4 Drain-Doctor. 696-8169. 25% Aggie Discount. 79t2/18 Typing/Proofreading/Mailing Services. Jane Kalinec, CPS. 4010 Stillmeadow, 822-7488. 78t3/14 Short/long forms and small businesses. Start $5.00, call 693-0940. 78t2/7 NEED MUSIC FORA PARTY? Get professional service cheaper from a disc jockey. Call Barry at 693-0760. ROOMMATE WANTED Male roommate for 2 bedroom condominium. $225. month, utilities paid. Cripple Creek, 696-0491. 80tl/29 Roommate needed. Own bedroom. All bills paid. $ 175./mo. Call 693-8637. 80t 1 /29 FOR RENT FOR RENT own room in fully furnished five room house. Walking distance, non-smoking. $150. monthly. Billy, 845-8681,696-0477.. 77tl/27 2 bdrm. apartments near campus. $230.-$255. 779- 3550,696-2038. 77t2/3 OFFICIAL NOTICE RPCV’s new to the community please contact Jerry Namkcn at ,845-4722 or 775-3750. 82tl/29 GRANTS & SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE Students interested in applying for Grants & Scholarships from private foundations & endowments thru a na tional scholarship system write; Grants & Scholarships, 6427 Hillcroft- Suite 1054, Houston Tx. 77081. 7 8t 2/3 SARAH WATTS PIANIST, TEACHER Degree, Piano, And Two Years Piano Faculty, Baylor University “Serious Students of all ages” 500 E. 25th 822-6856 aiti/24 BUT REAL HEAVYWEIGHTS WHEN RESULTS REALLY COUNT. or sell, our Classi fieds can help you do the big job. The % Battalion 845-2611 Station must pay loan to survive KAMU-FM holding fund-raiser By KATHERINE E. MATZINGER Reporter KAMU-FM is having its second of four annual fund-raisers. But the station manager says it’s still unclear whether or not the community will have a public radio station. The listener-supported station has been taking pledges since Jan. 13 and will continue until Thursday. The station must reach a goal of $85,000 by Aug. 31 to pay back a loan received from Texas A&M or face termination. As of Thursday the station had raised about $10,000, about half of its targeted goal for this particular drive. The first drive brought in close to $14,000. Station Manager Rick Howard says, “We don’t like to think about closing down. We’ve always met our goals but we need the support of our listeners.” Howard says the station receives money from the federal government and the University. The University holds the station’s license, but the bulk of the station’s money comes from listeners. How ard says listeners include A&M fac ulty members, students and the sur rounding community. But he says the station gets the bulk of its fi nances from the A&M faculty. He says students provide only a small part of the station’s contribu tions. Increased programming costs and cutbacks in University funding have forced the station to increase the goal for this drive. To help promote the fund-raiser Charles King Horticultural Services “We don’t like to think about closing down. We’ve always met our goals, but we need the support of our listeners. ” — Rick Howard, KAMU station manager. donated several plants to be given away to the highest donor of the day. The College Station Hiltonan: vent ion Center also donateda end for tw'o, including wine f ruit basket, for the biggestco: Howard says the station | a unique format for theconutl “I guess the main reasorl public radio is that we’re trjj reach that part of the con that isn’t serviced by theoila tions,” Howard says. The station started broac; in 1977 and plays classical a; music along with some im Lduegrass. Howard says the futureoi lion lies with the public. “We’re in a situation whei community supports the sta will continue to service the says. “But if they don’t, wt have a public radio station." UIL realigns state school district lines Associated Press AUSTIN — Where a computer failed, the University Interscholastic League hopes that pins stuck in a map will succeed in properly re aligning high school districts across Texas. Every two years the UIL realigns, and in some cases reclassifies, over 1,150 high schools in volved in athletic and academic competition. UIL Athletic Director Bill Farney said, “It’s probably the most controversial thing the league office does beyond a single eligibility case that goes to court.” Farney recalls with slight embarrassment how two years ago two newspapers released the list of new districts, which had been kept under lock and key, before the districts were announced to coaches and administrators at an Austin meet ing. “The culprit has never been located,” Farney said. “. . . We just believe no one on our staff was involved.” Schools are placed in one of five conferences — A through 5A, which includes the larger schools, based on enrollment. Schools with in creasing enrollments could be put in a higher conference, while schools with a declining en rollment might drop. Districts are established within the conferences. The reason for secrecy in realigning districts, Farney says, is that coaches with advance knowl edge could get the jump in booking non-district opponents who would bring in high gate rec eipts or could be beaten easily. Under a plan adopted by the UIL a year ago, what had become known among football coaches as “Schedule Scramble Day” was pushed back three months — from the first Saturday in November to this Thursday. The delay enabled the UIL to use enrollment figures for October in a new formula that pro jects enrollments over the next two years. Without the change, schools would have been classified on the basis of their average enroll ment for 1983-84 and 1984-85. Thursday’s realignments basically affect foot ball and basketball. Tentative alignments for baseball, volleyball, soccer, swimming, track, tennis and golf will be released later, Farney said. Computers are helpful in producing pro jected enrollments but an attempt to let comput ers do all the work failed, according to Farney. The idea was to divide the state by computer into 5-mile grids. The plan was dropped after it was discovered that two nearby schools grouped in the same dis trict would have to travel long distance: across the Colorado River, a barrierbct»f schools. Farney and others on the UILathle.. went back to the old way of doing thins ing pins in a map for each school, startir.; northwest corner of the state and movie; and southeast. Rubber bands are r around groups of pins. Natural boundaries and the availak highways are considered along with gK>; ical location and the history of competk aligning districts. Some schools request certain distrir.: ments but a request alone doesn’t swaytk “We don’t get a lot of letters saying, getting our tails beat, we want out of: trict,’ ” Farney said. “We get letters; ‘We re too small. We’re at the bottomenc alignment. Something needs to be dont can be more competitive,’ ” After the new districts are announced,! may appeal to the UIL Athletic Coe which includes one representative froma the five conferences. Final appeals are scheduled for Feb.1' “under a new concept,” schools cannotii game contracts until after that date, Fame FBI apologizes for shooting at innocent m Associated Press DALLAS — The Dallas FBI office has apologized to a man who was shot at last month when an agent mistakenly thought he was involved in a kidnapping and extortion at tempt, officials said. “We were not pleased that an in nocent citizen found himself in a sit uation like that,” special agent in charge of the Dallas FBI Bobby Gil- Iham said. His office has completed an internal investigation of the inci dent and is waiting for a ruling from vht headquarters Washington be fore taking any disciplinary action against the agent. He said one of his agents fired two shots in an attempt to disable a car that drove through an FBI stakeout for a kidnapping suspect outside Guarantee National Bank the morn ing of Dec. 26. Gillham declined to discuss specif ics of the shooting investigation or confirm the identity of the agent, ex- The car’s driver, Willie Wyche, was not injured. He later told police he believed he was being accosted by a bank robber. Wyche told police he had no idea that the man who pointed a gun at him and ordered him to get out of his car was an FBI agent. Gillham said the agent did identify himself, although he acknowledged Wyche may not have heard it. As Wyche sped away in fear, the agent fired two shots at the vehicle, hitting it in the rear bumper and side door. Gillham said Wyche left the bank just ahead of a woman who had withdrawn $4,000 to pay off the kidnappers of her 2-year-old daugh ter. Although Gillham saidthef grets the incident, “that dot mean there were not circum that would have led alawe;: ment officer to believe i needed to be identified.” “I would have never run seen a badge,” Wyche said feel thankful I’m still alive." According to FBI policy, are only allowed to fire in ening situations, and the used fire by federal agents is rare NEED A TUNE UP? BAD BRAKES? CAR WON'T START? CALL SUPERIOR AUTO SERVICE 846-5344 USES'o/? i 846-5344 TUNE UPS BRAKE REPAIR ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS OIL CHANGES CLUTCH REPAIR CARBURATOR REPAIR GENERAL AUTO REPAIR ON MOST MAKES & MODELS ONE DAY SERVICE IN MOST CASES 111 ROYAL BRYAN 1 MILE NORTH OF CAMPUS ACROSS FROM THE NEW TOM' BAR—&—Q WE ACCEPT LOCAL CHECKS, VISA, AND MASTERCARD 2 for 1 Special °M s =Hr Now through January 31 Post Oak Square, Harvey Rosl 764-2771 at ease the place to see and be seen to advertise call 845-2611 Alpha Kappa Psi The oldest and largest National Business Fraternity Proudly Announces Spring Rush Open to all Business and Economic Major informal January 28 Rm 302 Rudder informal January 29 Rm 510 Rudder See table in Blocker for more information