a Battalion Classifieds WANTED 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 - 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 WANTED: Banjo and fiddle teachers. Call 693-8698. 107t3/6 SERVICES OFFICIAL NOTICE OFFICIAL NOTICE TO TAMU STUDENTS The Registrar’s Office no longer pro duces unofficial transcripts for stu dents. Official transcripts, at a cost of $3.00 per copy, can be ordered in per son in the Office of Admissions and Records, Heaton Hall. Official tran scripts require a minimum of 48 hours to produce. 9713/12 HELP WANTED $10.-$360. weekly/up mailing circulars! No quotas! Sin cerely interested rush self-addressed envelope: Suc cess, P. O. Box 470 CDR, Woodstock, IL 60098. 92t3/7 An opportunity to learn to sell financial planning prod ucts and services. Earn good part time income. 696- 1655. 105t3/5 ROOMMATE WANTED Diamonds for Aggie Rings. Save at least $150. over University price. 2o8-0309. 104t3/5 FOR RENT 1 bdrm., 115. 2 bdrm., 220. (Central air). Near campus. 779-3550,696-2038. 104t3/l 1 Spring Break ’86. South Padre Island. Wilhite Real Es tate. Call collect, (512)441 -6772. 107t3/12 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 TYPING, WORD PROCESSING. Reirorts, theses, dis sertations. Executive Services. 696-3785. 104l3/12 ATTENTION BACHELORS: Cooking isn't tough- women do it! Detailed Men’s Cookbook. Send $2.00 to "Official Manual”, P.O.B. 460163, Garland, Texas, 75046. 104t3/5 Word Processing: Proposals, dissertations, theses, manuscripts, reports, newsletters, term papers, re sumes, letters, 764-6614. 104t3/l 1 Typing, Rubber Stamps, Business Cards, Magazine Subscriptions (New/Renewals). (409) 823-7723. 97t3/14 CARE—A-LOT has opening for 0-13 years old. 779- 8480,693-4930. 105t3/5 Defensive Driving. Insurance discount, ticket deferral. 8-5, Mon.-Fri., 693-1322. UnionTech. 92t5/28 LESBIAN Support Group. Gay and Bisexual women. Weekly meetings, 764-8310. 102t3/5 FOR SALE A house for sale - 3 blocks fomr campus - an Aggie par ent's ideal investment. Will pay for itself with 7 bed rooms, 2 baths, etc. (2400 sq. ft.) $55,000. 696-1655. 105t3/5 IBM-COMPAT1BLES. Starting at just $535. Many models to choose from. 1 year warranty. COMPUTER ACCESS, 268-0730. 100t3/14 Condo in Corpus Christi for Spring Break. 2 bedroom. Condo, 1 Bdrm, 1 Bath, microwave, W/D, ceiling fan, 2 bath, sleeps 10. Call 846-0213. 107tS/7 bus route. Call (214) 495-2123. 96t3/31 SERVICES IBM Selectric III, like new, $750. 696-2817. 107t3/12 JOHN LYONS CLINK:. Bryan #589-3026. March 8- 1 1. Bring your horse. 9912/6 For Sale: Drafting table/desk, $350. Ph. 822-7022 after 6pm. 107t3/7 CRUSIESHIPS: AIRLINES, HIRING! Summer, Ca reer, Overseas! Call for Guide, Cassette, Newsservice! (916)944-4444, ext. 127. 107t3/3 IBM Software, Symphony, includes Lotus 1®2*3 and word processing, 50% below University prices, brand new, $225. Call 696-0158 anytime. 107t3/7 Advertising in The Battalion is as Good as Gold! CALL 845-2611 Page 6/The Battalion/Monday, March 3,1986 World and Nation Swedish prime minister^ funeral^ serf Police say killer tailed leader Associated Press STOCKHOLM, Sweden — The man who killed Prime Minister Olof Palme apparently had him under surveillance for some time before he shot him with a powerful American- made revolver, police said Sunday. Police Commissioner Hans -Holmer told reporters two bullets recovered at the scene of the Friday night shooting were fashioned from an unusual combination of metals and may have been handmade. Police said this could make it harder to track down the source of the bullets. Sweden’s two-day-old caretaker government, meanwhile, held its first session and discussed arrange ments for the funeral of Social Dem ocratic leader Palme, set for March 15. Foreign Ministry spokesman Lars Loennback said the funeral would be closed to the public, but many foreign guests would be invited. Palme, 59, was serving his fourth term as prime minister and was re garded as a top Western European spokesman on disarmament and so cialist causes. Social Minister Gertrud Sigurdsen said there would be no official decla ration of national mourning. Sigurdsen, speaking with Swedish television after the two-hour govern ment session, said there was no need for an official declaration. “The spontaneous reaction of mourning, how people reacted, was correct,” she said. Palme was shot once in the back while walking with his wife, Lisbct, 55, after they attended a movie. He was pronounced dead at 12:06 a.m. Saturday, less than an hour after the shooting, on a hospital operating ta ble. Police had said Saturday they be lieved the assassin fired only one bullet, but on Sunday they reported finding a second bullet. They said one grazed Mrs. Palme and the other may have been the one that killed the prime minister. Holmer told a news conference the couple decided on the spur of the moment to attend the movie, leading police to believe the assassin must have been keeping the prime minister under surveillance. "Everything indicates that the perpetrator stiadowed the (Palmes) to the movie theater, all the way from their home,” Holmer said. The police commissoner said the Palmes traveled to the cinema by subway. He asked anyone who may have seen a man trailing the couple to come forward. Poll says majority believes lie detectors OK for courts Associated Press NEW YORK — A majority of Americans believe lie detectors should be used in the courtroom, but they don’t believe they should be used by businesses in most circum stances, according to a Media Gen eral-Associated Press poll. The nationwide telephone poll of 1,512 adult Americans found that 72 percent believed the machines should be used in court to test peo ple accused of crimes, and 63 per cent said witnesses in court should also be tested. Such tests are not currently al lowed as evidence in court, in part because their validity is open to de bate. The poll also fobnd three-quar- Associated Press WASHINGTON — Half of the cocaine seized in Florida late last year contained benzene, a carcino gen that has been banned from con sumer products because it has been shown to cause leukemia, a federal official said Sunday. “We see the potential as extremely dangerous for lung damage or worse,” said Robert H. Feldkamp, a spokesman for the Drug Enforce ment Administration. The agency in January asked the Centers for Disease Control in At lanta to evaluate the possible effects of benzene used in manufacturing ters of the respondents thought it was appropriate for employers to test workers suspected of stealing, but most objected to the use of poly graphs by businesses in general. Some businesses require prospec tive new employees to take he detec tor tests. Only 37 percent of those in the poll considered it an appropriate use, and only 27 percent thought current employees should be sub jected to lie detector tests. However, two-thirds of the re spondents said they would not object to taking a lie detector test if asked to do so by either a current boss or a potential employer. “I presume that two-thirds of peo ple are honest, so they don’t have any problem taking lie detector cocaine “before we put all the red flags out that people who use co caine may be in danger. We have not yet determined that,” Feldkamp said in a telephone interview. Benzene began to show up in co caine in early 1985 after the agency took steps to prevent illegal drug manufacturers from obtaining ether, previously a key chemical in making cocaine, Feldkamp said. The DEA, however, in its cam paign to curb drug abuse, obtained the cooperation of ether manufac turers to limit the flow of the sub stance to cocaine makers. “We do know that despite the tests,” said Leonard Saxe, principal author of a 1983 study of polygraph validity for the congressional Office of Technology Assessment. “But the problem with lie detector tests is that it’s just not a valid means of figuring out if people are telling the truth or not,” said Saxe, a psy chology professor at Boston Univer sity. The polygraph has an accuracy rate of oetween 50 percent and 95 percent in criminal investigations, experts say, but there is no scientific evidence that it is useful for screen ing those seeking sensitive jobs. Respondents in the Media Gen eral-Associated Press poll included a random, scientific sampling of 1,512 adults across the country Feb. 1-8. campaign, the supply of cocaine has not diminished. So it was necessary to find out what was being used in stead,” Feldkamp said. In January 1985, DEA officials began testing confiscated cocaine to determine what was being used as a substitute, and test results increas ingly showed benzene. By last No vember and December, half of the cocaine seized in Florida contained benzene. Dr. James L. Luke, former medi cal examiner for the District of Co lumbia, said studies have linked ben zene to leukemia and other hemotological disorders. Big stars earn huge salaries for their work NEW YORK — Barbra Strei sand has earned nearly $100 mil lion during her life, but Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev makes a more modest salary of $18,700 a year, People magazine reports. Some stars earn huge salaries for little work, while others toil for every penny, the magazine says in its March 10 issue. One example of the hard workers. People says, is broad caster Larry King, who earns $600,000 a year. People compares hard-worker King with Marlon Brando, who earned $8.4 million for 13 scenes totaling less than 50 minutes in three movies. The top grosser in films was Sylvester Stallone, who com mands $12 million per picture. Miami vice detectives earn about $29,000 a year, People re ports, but “Miami Vice” detec tives Don Johnson and Philip Mi chael Thomas earn a bit more. In the first year of their series, Johnson and Thomas pulled down $29,000 a week and $22,000 a week respectively, but those fees have since been raised by unreported amounts. Joan Collins gets $47,000 for each “Dynasty” episode, but that’s pin money for her. She earned more than $750,000 for pitching Scoundrel perfume for Revlon and $1 mil lion from her miniseries “Sins.” Carcinogen found in some Florida cocaine NASA decisions usually made by telephone Associated Press SPACE CENTER, Houston — With 20 centers in 11 states, NASA does much of its work by tele phone and in telephone conferences — forcing officials to reach decisions without the benefit of reading one another’s body language and ges tures. “Telecom” — linking experts in at least five states — played a key role in the decision to launch the space shuttle Challenger. The presidential commission investigating the shuttle explosion conducted extensive hearings on the conduct of the pre-launch telephone con ferences and declared NASA’s launch-decision process “clearly flawed.” Key centers of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s space shuttle program are widely separated. To link them together for a coordinated effort, managers, engineers and as tronauts criss-cross the nation by air and spend hours participating in telephone conferences. Top management is at NASA headquarters in Washington, but detailed work of the space agency is conducted at 20 centers. Shuttles are launched from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Astronauts are trained at the Johnson Space Center in Houston. The shuttle program office and mission con trol are located at the Goddard Space Flight Cen ter in Maryland and the White Sands Test Facility in New Mexico. And key research is conducted in Ohio, Vir ginia, Louisiana, Mississippi and New York. On top of all that the contractors are widely separated. Rockwell International built the orbit- ers in California. The solid rocket engines are manufacturered in Utah by Morton Thiokol. The space suits are made at a Hamilton Standard plant in Connecticut. Altogether, there are shuttle contractors in more than 40 states, and NASA has to monitor the work of each one. NASA maintains a group of aircraft to speed executives from one center to another. A fleet of T-38 jets is kept near the Johnson Space Center to allow the astronauts to use the two-seater air planes like commuter craft, flying from one end of the country to another. But often NASA’s vital decisions are made on what NASA calls “telecom.” Two such telephone conferences played a key role in the disastrous launch of Challenger on Jan. 28. When engineers at Thiokol in Utah decided the shuttle should not be launched in Florida’s sub-freezing temperatures, they had to explain their findings to NASA decision-makers by tele phone. Engineers in Florida and Alabama were linked by telephone conference with those in Utah. Thiokol managers detected a hostility in the telephoned voices from Alabama and Florida that they interpreted as pressure to change their “no launch” recommendation. But the NASA managers in Alabama and Flor ida deny that they intended to pressure the con tractor and they say they had not known Thiokol engineers opposed launch even after Thiokol Vice President Joe Kilminster approved liftoff. Problem Pregnancy? we listen, we care, we help Free pregnancy tests concerned counselors Brazos Valley Crisis Pregnancy Service We’re local! 1301 Memorial Dr. 24 hr. Hotline 823-CARE 1MMM A World Wide Pictures release in color Featuring BIUY GRAHAM with a message of hope. SCHULMAN 6 7:20 9:35 “Don’t Bother Me, I Can’t Cope” A Theatrical Production Featuring the Charles Gilpen Players of Prairie View A&M University Tuesday, March 4, 1986 8 p.m. Rudder Theatre $4.00/non-student and $3.00/student tickets on sale at MSC Box Office JU Black Awareness