The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 04, 1986, Image 6

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    Page 6/The Battalion/Tuesday, November 4,1986
Battalion
Classifieds
NOTIC€
S€flVK€S
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ON THE DOUBLE
All kinds of typing at reasonable rates. Dis
sertations, theses, term papers, resumes.
Typing and copying at one stop.
On The Double
331 University Dr.
846-3755 iset
H€IP LUflNT€D
THE HOUSTON CHRONICLE
Has immediate openings for
route carriers. Carrier positions
require working early morning
hours delivering papers and can
earn $400. to $600. per month
plus gas allowance. Call Andy at
693-7815 or Julian at 693-2323
for an appointment. 3 8tufn
3000 GOVERN.MENT JOBS List $16,040 - $59,230/yr.
Now Fliring. Call 805-687-6000 Ext. R-9531. 34tl2/16
FOfl Sfll6
YARD SALE
Used & Antique Solid Oak
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Also, Chairs, File Cabinets,
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Nov. 5 & 6
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(214)536-2609
INJURY STUDY
Recent injury with pain to any
muscle or joint. Volunteers in
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paid well for their time and co
operation.
G & S STUDIES, INC.
846-5933
Patients with “acute diarrhea’’
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needed to evaluate potential
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FOfl fl€NT
Room in - House - $125. mo All Bills Paid 775-4513
Days, 779-0365 Nights 44tl 1/5
2 Bdrm., 1 Ba. Unfurnished house. Carport. Yard.
Close to campus. $270./mo. 696-4251 44tl 1/5
SUB—LEASE APARTMENT. 2 Bdrm., 2 bath, near
campus, shutde bus, $360./mo. For information, 696-
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Furnished home, Southwood Valley. Rooms $225. plus
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WORD PROCESSING
New Address - Same Quality
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Abel Services (Formerly with
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PROFESSORS F.NAM I ILFS lor Engineering. Chem-
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846-4360 108 North Ave.
Apple He: 64K, 2 disk drives, monitor, $750. Call 776-
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PC’s Limited Furbo-PC, PC/XT compatible. 4.77MHz
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Yamaha moped, 8 months old, great for campus, $400.
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Waterbed, queensize, mirror headboard, excellent con
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WANTED
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we listen, we care, we help
Free pregnancy tests
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On the Shuttle Bus Route
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Across S. College From Tom’s B-B-Q
SCHULMAN THEATRES
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THE BAIT
DOES IT
DAILY
(AP) — David Jacobsen’s release
from captivity in Lebanon after 17
months as a hostage was greeted
Monday with tears of joy and cau
tious hope by his relatives and those
of the remaining hostages.
“I first saw the footage (film) of
my father just this morning and now
I really feel that it’s true for the first
time,” Jacobsen’s son Eric said on the
“CBS Morning News.”
The younger Jacobsen said he
didn’t regret his past criticism of the
government’s handling of the hos
tage situation.
“I think obviously my father’s re
lease kind of eases my anxiety and
any antagonism I may feel, but at the
same time I think it’s important that
our family continues to impress on
the American people the urgency of
the situation and the fact that there
are other hostages still being held,”
he said.
Jacobsen earlier hinted in a pub
lished interview that Tuesday’s U.S.
elections were a factor in negotitions
as they were in resolving the Ameri
can hostage crisis in Iran, which
ended with President Reagan’s inau
guration in January 1981.
“It sure is a coincidence, isn’t it?”
he said. “I don’t want to be bitter or
cynical about that. I don’t care what
it takes to get him out.”
Eric, his brother Paul and their
sister Diane Duggan, later flew with
their spouses to Washington. From
there they were to be flown to Wies
baden, West Germany, for a reunion
with their father.
At a brief airport news confer
ence, Eric Jacobsen said the release
of his father thrilled him but “the
crisis is by no means over.” He said
his family and his father will try to
work for the release of the other
men held in Beirut.
Before leaving Los Angeles Paul
Jacobsen, 28, of Upland, Calif., said,
“I feel better than I’ve felt in years.
I’m just so happy I can’t tell you. I’m
happy enough to start crying.”
But Paul expressed sorrow for As
sociated Press correspondent Terry
Anderson and the other Americans
still held captive in Lebanon, saying,
“I just pray those men will get out.”
Eric, of Huntington Beach, Calif.,
said, “As happy as I was when my fa
ther was released yesterday, when I
talk to those other (hostages’) fami
lies it brings tears to my eyes.”
Anderson’s sister, Peggy Say, said
she was “severely disappointed but
still optimistic,” and bolstered by
word from Jacobsen that her
brother was well. “We are a whole lot
closer to resolution than we’ve ever
been,” she said.
“I’m not devastated,” Say said at
her home in Batavia, N.Y. “I think
it’s movement. Any time one person
gets out, of course that’s good news.
“Tsee that David Jacobsen is very
grateful to the government. I cer
tainly am. There’s finally
movement.”
Waite says
he'll return
to negotiate
NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) —
Anoy Terry Waite says he will re
turn soon in his effort to free
American captives in Lebanon,
but his absence Monday, to ac
company the latest hostage re
leased, indicated a momentum
loss.
Waite’s trip to West Germany
with freed captive David Jacobsen
meant a break in negotiations
that could last several days.
A flurry of other activity ac
companied Jacobsen’s release by
Shiite Moslem kidnappers.
• U.S. officials said various
undisclosed channels were being
tried to pursue the release of at
least five other Americans still
held in Lebanon. White House
spokesman Larry Speakes in
sisted no concessions were being
made to the kidnappers.
• French officials were said to
be in Cyprus and Damascus, capi
tal of Syria, seeking freedom for
eight captive Frenchmen.
A statement from Islamic Ji
had, the pro-Iranian Shiite group
that held Jacobsen and still has at
least two American captives, indi
cated contact between the U.S.
government and the kidnappers.
It said Washington was respon
sible for the “current ap
proaches” on the hostages and
warned of consequences “in case
the American government fails to
complete these approaches to ar
rive at the hoped-for results.”
In Pennsylvania, the family of
hostage Joseph James Cicippio, ab
ducted Sept. 12, drew new hope
from Jacobsen’s release.
“This is the first time that some
body went in there and tried to get
the hostages’ release,” said Cicippio’s
son David, apparently referring to
Anglican Church envoy Terry
Waite, who arrived in Beirut in a
new effort to free the hostages two
days before Jacobson’s release.
“Having somebody openly go
over there and negotiate is very
helpful,” he said at his home in the
Philadelphia suburb of Norristown.
“It’s helpful for the families, too,” he
said. “It gives us the feeling that
something is being done, instead of
the quiet diplomacy of our govern
ment.”
A former hostage, the Rev. Law
rence Martin Jenco, said on the
“CBS Morning News” that he be
lieved Waite was “very much in
volved in the release.”
U.S., U.S.S.R. announce
joint space project
PADUA, Italy (AP) — The United
States and the Soviet Union will join
an international space research pro
ject aimed at improving long-range
weather forecasts, government sci
entists from the two countries re
ported Monday.
A dozen satellites are to be
launched during the 1990s as part of
the Solar Terrestrial Physics Pro
gram to study solar wind and radia
tion, they said. Japan and the 11-na
tion European Space Agency also
are participating.
More accurate long-range fore
casts and greater ability to determine
the causes of weather changes could
result from the program, the scien
tists said, along with better under
standing and more effective use of
solar energy.
The U.S.-Soviet agreement, ex
pected to be announced formally to
day, was confirmed in separate in
terviews by Roald Sagdeev,
president of the Soviet Space Re
search Center, and Burton I. Edel-
son, associate administrator of the
U.S. National Aeronautics and
Space Administration.
Asked at a news conference
whether U.S.-Soviet differences over
the American “Star Wars” project —
formally named the Strategic De
fense Initiative — for a space-based
defense system, could affect the col
laboration, Sagdeev said:
“A peaceful space exploration like
this should not be made hostage to
differences over the Defense Initia
tive or any other military enter
prises.”
Sagdeev and Edelson were among
49 space scientists participating in a
two-day meeting of the Inter-
Agency Consultative Group.
Bell says Hasenfus will ask
tribunal court for mercy
MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) —
Former U.S. Attorney General Grif
fin Bell, who is assisting in the de
fense of American mercenary Eu
gene Hasenfus, said Monday the
prisoner will appeal to the People’s
Tribunal for mercy.
Bell told a news conference that
Hasenfus, charged with terrorism,
will make a statement to the revolu
tionary tribunal today.
Bell added, “We hope it will help
him by mitigating the charges
against him. We hope it will cause
the Sandinista, the Nicaraguan, gov
ernment, to be more merciful.”
Bell, from Atlanta, Ga., returned
to Nicaragua Sunday. He said he has
not been able to talk directly to Ha
senfus. “I think it’s quite obvious that
he’s going to be convicted,” Bell said.
“He didn’t fall out of the sky. He was
on a plane carrying arms.”
Bell is working with Hasenfus’ Ni
caraguan attorney, Enrique Sotelo
Borgen.
Hugo Mendieta, a pilot and the
prosecution’s expert witness on avi
ation, testified Monday and retraced
the flight of the cargo plane that was
shot down Oct. 5 by Sandinista
troopers.
He said he based his account on
documents found on the U.S.-made
C-123 downed as it crossed into Ni
caragua from Costa Rica.
Hasenfus, 45, of Marinette, Wis.,
parachuted to safety after the C-123
was hit by an anti-aircraft missile.
The three other men aboard, Amer
ican pilots William Cooper and Wal
lace Blaine Sawyer, Jr., and a Nicara-
gucan rebel were killed in the crash.
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General Election Nov.4
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Fast forward”
Featuring Fall
Fashions from
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• Paul Harris
• Ladies & Lords
Thurs., Nov 6
7:30