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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 5, 1986)
Page 6/The Battalion/Wednesday, March 5, 1986 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 77 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. 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Gay Student Services. 103ttw Acapulco During Spring Break Condo Sleeps 4 - $400./week March 16-23, 1986 693-2689 1 IBM Software, Symphony, includes Lotus l®2*3 and word processing. 509? below University prices, brand new. S225. Call 696-0158 anytime. !07t3/7 A house for sale - 3 blocks fomr campus - an Aggie par ent’s ideal investment. Will pav for itself with 7 bed rooms, 2 baths, etc. (2400 sq. ft.) $55,000. 696-1655. 105t3/5 Condo, 1 Bdrm, 1 Bath, microwave, W/D, ceiling fan, bus route. Call (214) 495-2123. 96t3/31 Diamonds for Aggie Rings. Save at least $150. over University price. 2o8-0309. 104t3/5 1BM-COMPATTBLES. Starting at just $535. Many models to choose from. 1 year warranty. COMPUTER ACCESS, 268-0730. 100t3/14 For Sale: Drafting table/desk. $350. Ph. 822-7022 after 6pm. 107t3/7 FOR SALE FASHION WISE ENTREPRENEURS—We are seek ing local distributors for our unique collections of high fashion jewelry handmade from around the world. Earn money - have fun - look great! 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Near campus. 779-3550, 696-2038. 104t3/l 1 Spring Break '86. South Padre Island. Wilhite Real Es tate. Gail collect. (512)441-6772. 107t3/12 Condo in Corpus Christi for Spring Break. 3 bedroom, 2 hath, sleeps 10. Call 846-0213. 107t3/7 ClASSIfl* 118 i spur mm. BUT REAL HEAVYWEIGHTS WHEN RESULTS REALLY COUNT. i ‘o matterwhat you've go to say or sell, our Classi fieds can help you do the big job. ALL: The % Battalion 845-2611 GOP Gubernatorial Candidates Ex-governor 'can solve problems' Clements sees need for change UNIYECiA 3-speed bicycle. Diacompe brakes, shimano gearing, great condition. 845-9736. 108t3/5 IBM Selectiic III, like new, $750. 696-2817. 107t3/J2 Associated Press LONGVIEW — Flying toward the first stop in what will be a 12-hour campaign day. Bill Clements is laughing. Reading one of three newspapers that were neatly tucked beside the seats when he boarded the private plane, Clements studies a story about possible state budget cuts. “Listen to this,” he says to two aides before quoting a Democratic legislator. “She says the budget can’t be cut any more. She says it’s down to the bone now. She says there’s no fat left. Ha. We’ll cut fat when I’m elected.” Bill Clements — oilman, self- made millionaire, first Republican g overnor since Reconstruction — is ack on the campaign trail. While facing two fellow Republi cans in the May 3 primary, Clements voices no doubt about who voters will have to choose from come No vember. “It is a very serious time for us in Texas,” he said. “We have some / think the re-election of (Democratic Gov.) Mark White would be a disaster for this state. That’s why Tm run ning. — Bill Clements, former Texas governor and gu bernatorial candidate. enormous problems that need solu tions. I think the re-election of (Democratic Gov.) Mark White would be a disaster for this state. That’s why I’m running.” Clements says he has the experi ence to put the state on course for the 21st century. He says White doesn’t. “He has no sense of what I’m talk ing about. He does not have any sense of the direction that this state should be taking to the year 2001,” said Clements, elected in 1978 and ousted by White in 1982. He said White broke promises against raising taxes and college tu ition. He said White can’t work with the Legislature. But Clements said his administration cut taxes and won lawmakers’ cooperation. What he won’t say is just how he would handle the SI.3 billion state government shortfall predicted for the next 18 months. While White asks agency directors to trim 13 percent from their spend ing plans, Clements guarantees he could cut the budget. He flatly re fuses to say how. “I absolutely can cut it,” he said. “I’ve proved tnat with my record. I guarantee you I will do it. But if you think I’m going to suddenly start act ing as his (White’s) chief counsel and adviser in his problems, you’re mis taken.” Clements figures the numbers are with him in this priman little about either GOPi U.S. Rep. Tom Loefflero Democratic congressnii| Hance. “I think Tom Loefflcr young man, and I’ve knov long time,” Clements said going to make any comi him. As for Hance, ClemtncJ off suggestions the poi Texan can bring enougl live Democrats overtotht can primary to win. So in campaign ap| Clements spends most oi hammering on White. Pointing at White’s own theme, education reform, finds much to criticize. Clements said the six-wen! lion from extra-curricular under the no-pass, no-plaij too long. It should be three In speech after speech, voters the state’s proble solved by electing him go Name helps bid, says Letter, er, Loeffk Associated Press THE WOODLANDS — Tom Loeffler frequently says “Tom Loeffler,” perhaps because many Texas voters never have. “As far as I’m concerned, Tom Loeffler will be the next governor of Texas. That’s the driving force in my life,” he said aboard a campaign flight. “Quite frankly, Texas needs Tom Loeffler. “Tom Loeffler is not a man who ever believes government should op erate in the red,” he told a Conroe newspaper editorial board meeting. The name is German and it’s pro nounced Lef-ler. Forget the “o.” Many mouths can’t. Tom “Loff-ler,” said a Houston disc jockey at a Woodlands sock hop in introducing Loeffler as a twist contest judge. “They probably will butcher my name for the rest of my life. As long as people know it starts with an L ana it’s got a funny spelling, that’s all I care about,” said Loeffler, a Hill Country congressman seeking the GOP nomination for governor. Loeffler, 39, is confident his TV ads are making his uncommon name more common among voters and narrowing the name identification gap between himself and GOP oppo nents Bill Clements and Kent Hance. The four-term congressman from Hunt is giving up a promising Wash ington career to bring his wife and three children home to Texas and to run for governor. He will leave Washington as the third-ranking House Republican and a solid mem ber of President Reagan’s team. To Loeffler, the Reagan revolu tion means government always can spend less. He promises to veto a state income tax and stall any tax hike until every possible penny is squeezed from the state budget. “We have an adequate revenue base now to meet the needs of gov ernment in Texas,” he said. Loeffler frequently blames many state ills on what he sees as a lead ership vacuum in the governor’s of fice. White blew a chance to fine tune the education reform bill by resisting changes last year, Loeffler says. The GOP challenger sees several places for improvements, including a halv ing of the six-week penalty carried by the no-pass, no-play rule. Loeffler, a former University of Texas football player, said his inter est in politics was sparked when he went to work for U.S. Sen. John Tower in Washington after law school. Later, in 1975, he became a special assistant for legislative affairs for President Gerald Ford. In 1979, he became a congressman. Despite the years in Washington, Loeffler claims a close tie to his Hill Country ranchland. He moves easily in a crowd, smil ing and grabbing hands. He enjoyed a Friday night sock hop at The Woodlands Country Club that brought back the ’50s for a few hours. Instead of a basketball court. The Woodlands’ version took place on three indoor tennis courts. The next morning, at a breakfast that raised more than $3,800, Loeffler said all seemed well in The Woodlands and in hiscampi “I run into doubten .. who doubt the RepublicanP said. "They doubt the They doubt the ability of 1 ways be the Texas we’ Well, I don’t.” “I believe in our great say to those doubters even everywhere I run into their! we’re Texas and don't ever can’t be done,’ ” he said, applause. Sometimes, when making Loeffler says “Tom Loeffler 1 aid Reagan” and “Texas" a! thought. One recent occasio: The Woodlands during i meeting at which he showed est TV ads. “These spots emulate»! party’s all aoout. They cei for what Tom Loeffler’s That is being upbeat, b< being honest with the Texas and giving them feeling that we are the team that can lead like Roni gan has in Washington,” he Hance trying to make new friends in GOP Associated Press MARSHALL — Kent Hance knew there was no sense in denying it. The locals knew about it and demanded answers. The best he could do was explain why he had done it and promise never to do it again. Hance said he was a victim of circumstances. He had to do it. In 1984, after losing to Lloyd Doggett in a Democratic runoff for the U.S. Senate nomi nation, Hance — ever so meekly — endorsed Doggett over Republican Phil Gramm in the gen eral election. Since then, Doggett has become a catchword for everything wrong with liberals, Gramm has become a heavy-hitter in Washington and Hance has become a Republican candidate for gover nor. Hance often fields Republicans’ questions about his Doggett endorsement. It came up as dinner talk during a small gathering here and as speech talk during an appearance at Marshall. “I ran for the Senate as a Democrat and you get asked, ‘If you don’t win the primary are you going to support the ticket?’ ” Hance said. “There’s nothing you can say but yes. That’s one of the reasons I changed parties.” It was Gramm who later urged Hance, a for mer Democratic congressman from Lubbock, to jump to the GOP. Now Hance is battling U.S. Rep. Tom Loeffler of Hunt and former Gov. Bill Clements for the Republican nomination for governor. The Hance style is aggressively relaxed, yet he prides himself on having never been out-cam paigned. He is the reigning king of comedy among Texas politicians. “I even campaigned at the wrestling matches,” he told an audience in Marshall. “Let me give you some advice: If you ever run for office, don’t campaign at the wrestling matches. There’s a mood of violence that runs through that crowd, and it’s just not good.” When Hance gets to your town, ask him about the wrestler Tokyo Joe. Ask him about the L- shaped gym, in which he played high school bas ketball and about the unlikely, unassisted triple play he pulled off during his brief career as a Little League pitcher. Ask him why he thinks he would be a better governor than Clements was or than Loeffler could be. “Clements wants to be governor,” Hance said. “He liked flying in the governor’s plane. He liked the police escorts. He likes that stuff.” But Hance, 43, also said, “Clements is 68 years old. He had his chance.” Loeffler suffers from inexperience, according to Hance. He goes as far as semi-seriously ques tioning Loeffler’s credentials as a Texan. The poinirtl ini Hunt congressman has been out of Washington, for four terms, Hance And Hance gives himself a big edge category — electability. Formerly a com Democrat, Hance positions himself as a ate Republican with the best shot atm Democratic Gov. Mark White. Loeffler’s too far to the right, and Cle® a proven loser against White, Hance said. The Republican Party, Hance tells audf is “based on freedom, free enterpriseandl Merit produced Ronald Reagan, f dues and seniority produced Tip O’f Republican crowds responded well toll planation. Nevertheless, there were sc vidual brush fires for Hance to put out. In Marshall, he made an unscheduled! the Trinity Episcopal Church to talkwillj lyn Abney, a longtime Republican whoseo| generated by her endless political according to a Hance supporter. Abne'| cleaning up after a covered dish supper! church. “This has been my only question, and you make a great talk,” Abney told f “But I can’t stand Doggett and didn’t! you could endorse him.” Hance gave his standard explanation ani convinced he had made another friend! new political home. Student Official Tanning Center of the Miss Texas A&MPagent The Original. Perfect Tan Post Oak Square, Harvey Road 764-2771 School of Hair Design 693-7878 1406 Texas Ave. S. College Station, Tx, MEN’S shampoo cut blowdry. WOMEN’S shampoo (fcrtoo cut &> blowdry. PERMS $16“ All work done by students Supervised checked by our qualified, prpfessional instructor