9 Battalion Classifieds ^ Page 6/The Battalion/Monday, March 31,1986 World and Nation For Summer. NICE 1 bdrm. furn./part furn. apt., condo, WANTED \ house, S.H.S.U. Sr. doing internship in Bryan. (713)973- 0852, (409)588-1475 Conroe. 123t4/ll 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. Volunteers interested in participating in investigative drug studies will be paid for their time and cooperation. G&S Studies, inc. 846-5933 7 - •vpJ igTfc Wanted: Individuals 18 years of age or older to participate in our “AtHome” Cold Study with an over-the-counter cold prepara tion. Incentive: $40. Call 776-0411. c* 1 fi* fN jr* C* cN m|nl i^TJ) npl \D ■Til ^rfc uTlI ^r|t %P i^ra JT|fc ^tb ■tb FOR RENT Quiet two bedroom one bath duplex in South Wood PRE—LEASE for fall HUGE duplexes near H1L- ' C ° Ver Pat ‘° TON Ceilin e tans - “replaces, fenced yard. 846-2471, 822-0074, 822-3098. U1U/31 846-4818, 693-1627. 116t5/l POOL CLUB ROOM 3-LAUNDRY ROOMS LARGE STORAGE 24 HR EMERGENCY MAINTENANCE HALF SUMMER RENT FOR LEASES SIGNED THROUGH MAY. Starting at $250.00 3902 COLLEGE MAIN country place apartments 846-0515 SERVICES HELP WANTED SPRING MGAT PREP. Prepare for 913 MCAT before you leave for summer. Classes start 4-5-86. Call Kaplan Center, 696-PREP. Scholarships available. 123t4/4 Expert Typing, Word Processing, Resumes. Guaranteed error free! PERFECT PRINT. 822-1430. 123t5/7 New Credit Card!!! No one refused!!! Also, information on receiving Visa, MasterCard, with no credit check. For details call: 602-248-0779, ext. #505. 123t3/31 ABEL SERVICES. New location, same quality word pro cessing. 3832-B Texas Ave. Next to Kwik Kopy. 846- ABEL 123t4/4 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 ^ WORD PROCESSING: Papers, reports, dissertations. Fast, accurate, reasonable. 846-6200. 120t4/ll 1 YPIN'G. Thesis, Dissertations, Reports. Reasonable. 693-1598. 108t5/2 ATTENTION FOREIGN STUDENTS: We carry overseas 220 volts, 50 hz. Appliances, transformers, microwaves, televisions, videos, plugs, small appliances and major kitchen appliances. SPECIAL DISCOUNTS TO STUDENTS. L.A.W. International Inc. Tel. (713)784-2733. I13t4/1 STUDENT TYPING — 20 years experience. Fast, ac curate, reasonable, guaranteed. 693-8537. 112t5/9 Word Processing: Proposals, dissertations, theses, manuscripts, reports, newsletters, term papers, re sumes, letters. 764-6614. 114t4/l Typing, Rubber Stamps, Business Cards. Wake-Up Service. Payne, (409)823-7723. 118t4/18 Defensive Driving. Insurance discount, ticket deferral. 8-5, Mon. -Fri., 693-1322. UnionTech. 92t5/28 GMAT Classes for 6/21 exam. Beginning 4/7. Call Kap lan, 696-PREP. 120t4/4 HELP WANTED 1513 Texas Ave., 693-3526 Now Hiring: for Culpepper Plaza location: Drivers & Cooks Asst. Manager Positions Also Available. Come join the New Delivery Team FAJITA RITA’S EXPRESS 123t4/4 Part time waiter’s or waitress’. $4. an hour plus tips. Re liable transportation a must. Call 1-364-2920 during the day, after 6 p.m. 774-1134. 121t3/31 OVERSEAS JOBS. Summer year round. Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia. All Fields. $900-2000/mo. Sightseeing. Free info. Write IJC, P.O. Box 52-TX-4 Corona, Del Mar, CA 92625 115t4/4 SUMMER WORK ’86. Looking for good work experi ence? Need to earn a good income? Have the whole summer free to work? Then you may qualify for our program - our Aggie students earned an ave. $4438. last summer and gained 3 credit hours. For interviews call 846-4386. 121t4/l Summer job for College Student. Would you like to spend your summer vacation in Colorado Mountain Coun try as host or hostess and manager of The Wild Horse Mesa Lake Building, renting boats and trailers, selling gro ceries and greeting land owners? Just send a resume and snapshot to Jack York in care of Wild Horse Mesa. P.O. Box 353, San Louis, Co. 81152. 114t3/31 Part time help. Grapevine personality. Call 696-3411. 122t4/4 TROPICAL SNO-HAWA1IAN SHAVE ICE. Dealers needed. No francise fees. No royalty payments. Less than $8,000. for your own business. Pays for itself in one season. Call after 4:30 p.m. (512)258-0646. 118t4/3 $10 - $360. WEEKLY! Master Commission Mailing. Home - Operated! Sincerely Interested rush self-ad dressed envelope: Headquarters - CEG, P.O. Box 1072, Crystal Lake, IL. 60014. 119t4/18 ROOMMATE WANTED Female. 3 bdrm. house. $200./mo. & utilities. Extras. Call Maryann, 845-2243 (8-5). 12114/2 FOR SALE Kelty Backpacks, $30-45., mini mark stove, $20., pocket computer w/printer $120. 846-6136. 123t4/4 Keep alert pills. Quick, safe pickups. Great for agnums. $15. per bottle of 100. 696-0888, 123t4/4 Double bed matress w/platform $30. Wing back chair $20. Both clean, excellent condition. 775-8807. 123t4/4 * FOR SALE * Plymouth Arrow ’78, Good Condition. A/C, Stereo. Call 693-0069. 120t4/1 Nikon Camera with flash attachment; zoom lens; and carry case. $200. Call 696-2219. 122t4/1 Easter baby rabbits, 3-4 weeks old, $6.00. Call Carey, evenings, 693-0835. 122t4/1. ’75 MGB for sale. New top. $2500. or best offer. Call 260-0202. 120t4/l Condo, I Bdrm, I Bath, microwave, W/D, ceiling fan, bus route. Call (214) 495-2123. 96t3/31 Riva 80 Scooter - Yamamha, 1985 white w/ Fairing & Helmet. Excellent condition. $749. 764-7448. 120t4/l 1984 Honda Elite. Extras: Windshield, trunk, helmet, transportating equipment. Call 693-3317. 12D4/2 Beautiful AKC Champion German Shepherd Puppies. Large Boned. 8 weeks old. 268-0977, 764-2771119t3/31 The Battalion 845-2611 WISE MO/E 100,000 rally to demand direct elections in Korea KWANGJU, South Korea (AP) — Up to 100,000 people rallied in the streets of Kwangju on Sunday to de mand direct presidential elections and other democratic reforms. Police stood by during the main rally, which went off peacefully, but later used tear gas to disperse youths trying to stage a sit-in. No arrests were reported. The huge rally was the third held by the opposition New Korea Demo cratic Party since it began collecting signatures last month on a petition to amend the constitution. Earlier rallies were in Seoul and the south ern port of Pusan. The demonstra tion at Kwangju held special signifi cance because this provincial capital was the site of a bloody anti-govern ment rebellion which was put down by troops in May 1980, with at least 191 people killed. President Chun Doo-hwan was a general at the time and took power with military backing a few months later. Rally organizers said more than 100,000 people took part Sunday, assembling around a YMCA build ing to hear speeches by party leaders over loudspeakers. HONOLULU (AP) — Ferdinand Marcos on Sunday called the gov ernment of Corazon Aquino a “plain and simple dictatorship” and said he still considers himself to be president of the Philippines. “Of course,” Marcos said in re sponse to a question whether he still considers himself president. The deposed leader made the re marks on the lawn of his home after a private Easter Mass. It marked the first time he answered reporters’ questions since fleeing the Phil ippines. Marcos said that since arriving in Hawaii Feb. 26, he has been busy writing about recent events, but he said his lawyer advised him not to talk about what he has been writing. He said he has been resting and eating well, and has gained two pounds since his arrival. Marcos also Government authorities said only 20,000 to 30,000 people attended. Independent observers put the number at 50,000 to 60,000. Kwangju, with about 900,000 peo ple, is 200 miles south of Seoul. As night fell, hundreds of youths sat in the street near the rally site, chanting anti-government slogans and singing protest songs. Riot po lice sealed off the block and after more than an hour, moved in to dis perse them. The youths regrouped in front of the provincial capital building and again tried to stage a sit-down pro test, shouting, “Down with dictatorship!” They scattered when police fired tear gas, apparently af ter the demonstrators started to build a bonfire. Dissident leader Kim Young-sam told the daytime rally he was at a loss for words to address Kwangju resi dents bereaved by the 1980 uprising. “I pray for those killed in the tra gic mishap and extend my condo lences to the bereaved families,” he said. Earlier, Kim visited the Malwol- dong cemetery outside the city, where about 100 victims of the rebel lion are buried. said he had no immediate plans to leave Hawaii. An Easter picnic planned Sunday for Marcos was canceled after Secret Service agents objected to the size of the crowd and the city said the party couldn’t be held in a park. Instead about 100 friends and rel atives joined them for Mass, after which Marcos and his wife, Imelda, sang “You’ll Never Walk Alone;” The picnic was planned for the rented $1.5 million beachfront house where the Marcoses moved last Monday. Unlike parties at Malacanang Pal ace in Manila before Marcos left in the face of rising rebellion, guests were told to bring their own food be cause of the short notice for the gathering, announced Friday. An Easter egg hunt, a singalong and an The uprising took place during a period of widespread unrest that fol lowed the October 1979 assassina tion of President Park Chung-hee. City residents led by students seized the provincial capital building and were dislodged after nine days by troops with tanks and heavy artil lery. The government says 191 pro testers were killed, but opposition groups put the number at more than 1,000. T he issue of Kwangju has been a sensitive one for Chun. Many oppo sition forces,say Kwangju is an ex ample of what they call the illegiti macy of Chun’s government. In demanding direct presidential elections, the opposition claims the present electoral college system is weighted in favor of Chun’s govern ing Democratic Justice Party. Chun insists that constitutional amend ments be put off until after the Sum mer Olympic Games in Seoul in 1988, which also is the year his term expires. Kim Young-sam told the rally the Kwangju incident was a “historic and democratic people’s struggle to de fend democracy, not a revolt as the government alleges.” Easter Mass on the beach had been scheduled, organizers said. But the Secret Service, which is providing security for Marcos, ob jected to having 1,000 people at the residence, along busy Kalanianaole Highway. At home, the Marcoses dabbed their eyes with handkerchiefs as the Rev. Terrence Fisher, pastor of the nearby Holy Trinity Catholic Church, said Mass. Marcos then said a prayer, and he and his wife sang and made brief re marks in a native Filipino language. During the Mass, motorists on the highway in front of the house honked their horns in apparent sup port of about a dozen anti-Marcos protesters. The picnic would have been the first social occasion in Hawaii for the Marcoses. Filipinos rout strikers’ picket of U.S. base CLARK AIR BASE, Phil ippines (AP) — Hundreds of bar maids and taxi drivers, furious over lost business, routed Filipino workers blockading a U.S. air base on Sunday and tore down barricades the pickets had built. Filipino police fired pistols into the air to break up the 20-minute melee in which at least four peo ple were injured, including one man who lost a front tooth when a rock hit him in the mouth. About 300 attackers came run ning, throwing rocks and waving sticks. After the 150 strikers on the barricades fled, the hostesses and taxicab and passenger jeep driv ers ripped out the workers’sound system, smashed the windows of a pick-up truck, broke chairs and set fire to a tarpaulin the pickets used as a tent. They then cheered U.S. mili tary personnel who returned to the base after being stranded out side by the 9-day-old strike. About 22,000 Filipino civilian workers represented by a union federation are demanding higher severance pay from Clark, Subic Naval Base and six smaller U.S. bases. Officials said clubs, restaurants and local transport around Clark, Subic and the other bases have lost about $1 million worth of business since the strike began. The workers vowed to return Monday to rebuild their barri cades of logs and rocks, which they erected to block the gates of the bases. Union leaders said barricades were undisturbed at Subic Naval Base and hall a dozen other smaller U.S. bases. Earlier, talks between union leaders and Brig. Gen. Charles Luigs, commander of the 13th U.S. Air Force, failed to reach a settlement. U.S. negotiators say they will negotiate only after the strikers lift the barricades. When asked about union alle gations that the U.S. military in stigated the attack, Clark spoke- man Maj. Thomas Boyd said “Absolutely not.” Some strikers claimed some American and Aus tralian bar owners also prompted the attack. Marcos calls government in Philippines dictatorship Oscar-winner James Cagney dead at 86 NEW YORK (AP) —James Cagney, who won an Oscar as the song and dance man of “Yankee Doodle Dandy” but earned his place in movie his tory as the pugnacious hoodlum of such classics as “The Public Enemy” and “Angels with Dirty Faces,” died Sunday. He was 86. Cagney, who suffered from diabetes, had been in declining health in recent days. He was re leased from Lenox Hill Hospital last week, where he had been treated for a circulatory ailment, and died at his Dutchess County farm north of New York City. Marge Zimmerman, his manager and confi dante, said at the time of his hospital release that Cagney was returning to his farm in Stanford- ville to be among the surroundings he loves. On Sunday, she would only say that he had died. She refused to give other details. In a statement, President Reagan said, “Jimmy Cagney was the classic American success story. lifting himself by determination and hard work out of poverty to national acclaim. I believe the entire nation loved Jimmy Cagney, and I think he must have loved us, too, because he always gave us his very best. . . . Goodbye, dear friend.” Reagan, who is vacationing at his California ranch, said he and first lady Nancy Reagan “have lost a dear friend of many years today and Amer ica has lost one of her finest artists.” Anna Strasberg, widow of acting teacher Lee Strasberg, said she and her husband both knew Cagney well. “Lee thought that he had so much integrity,” she said. “He certainly did give the world an image of decency, didn’t he? ... I always thought that he uplifted people.” Cagney had suffered a minor stroke in 1977 after being hospitalized for anemia. It was, in part, because of his health — “The doctor says ‘keep the man busy,’ ” Cagney re-. called — that he emerged f rom 20 years' retire ment to star in “Ragtime” in 1981. Asked in 1984 how he wanted to be remem bered, Cagney shot hack, "1 don’t want to here- membered at all.” Then he paused, gave a big stage wink, and smiled. He drew ovations for a wide range of roles- including mobsters in “The Roaring Twenties" and “White Heat”; the neurotic ship captain in “Mister Roberts”; Lon Chaney in “Man of a Thousand Faces”; and George M. Cohan in “Yankee Doodle Dandy,” the role for which he won his only Academy Award. The Cagney stance — balanced on the balls of the feet, shoulders forward, fingers snapping or fist smashing into opposite palm — and .staccato delivery became a favorite of impersonators. 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