Page 12/The BattalionTThursday, November 20, 1986 Battalion NEED MONEY??? Classifieds Sell your BOOKS at University Book Stores Northgate & Culpepper Plaza enemas $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 Wanted Males 18-45, Nonsmokers with mild asthma, chronic cough, or shortness of breath to participate in a 30 hour research study. $200. incentive for those chosen to participate. Call 776-0411 or 776-6236 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 Problem Pregnancy? we listen, we care, we help Free pregnancy tests concerned counselors Brazos Valley Crisis Pregnancy Service We’re local! I 1301 Memorial Dr. 24 hr. Hotline 823-CARE DEFENSIVE DRIVING. TICKET DISMISSAL, YOU'LL LOVE OUR FUN CLASS! 693-1322.3502/17 CHILD CARE Y°, CORN aoodl 1621 Texas Avenue South College Station, Texas 77840 Culpepper Plaza (:\'ear Hastings and Hehind Holiday Inn), 10-8 M-F 10-4 SAT Bonfire Buddy Gifts! USE THIS COUPON! Receive a 50< Bag of Popcorn ** or 50f Discount Toward Your Purchase • WANTED INJURY STUDY Recent injury with pain to any muscle or joint. Volunteers in terested in participating in in vestigative drug studies will be paid well for their time and co operation. G & S STUDIES, INC. 846-5933 Patients with “acute diarrhea” (less than 48 hours duration) needed to evaluate potential over-the-counter medication for diarrhea. Volunteers will be paid for time and cooper ation. G & S Studies, Inc. 846-5933 45111 26 • TRAVEL LAST CHANCE!! Limited space remains on TAMU Winter Ski Weeks to Steamboat, Vail, or Keystone with five or seven nights deluxe lodging, lift tickets, moutain picnic, parties, ski race and more from only $142.! HURRY, call Sunchase Tours toll free for full details 1- 800-321-5911 TODAY! 46tl 1/21 » HELP WANTED COLLEGE REP WANTED to distribute “Student Rate” subscription cards on campus. Good income, no selling in volved. For information and applica tion write to: CAMPUS SERVICE, 1745 W. Glendale Ave., Phoenix, AZ. 85021. 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. 38tufn Need student to clean house twice weekly for four hours each day. Call 823-8606. 59tl 1/25 Part time temporary day care workers. Apply at 3404 Cavitt between 3 & 5. No phone calls please. 57tl 1/25 3000 GOVERNMENT JOBS List $ 16,040 - $59.230/vr. Now Hiring. Call 805-687-6000 Ext. R-9531. 34t 12/16 Local dental center needing licensed denial hygenist. For information call Dr. Lawson, 696-9578. 51111/21 • LOST AND FOUND LOST navy blue jacket BILL—-BLASS—BRAND Wednesday Oct. 29, Karl 690-1497. 845-9733.56tl 1/21 Missing 11-11-86, adult female, smoke gray, long haired cat. Vacinity Dartmouth & SWPkwy. Sandy, 696-6001. 57t 11/20 Lost Nov. 1 1 gold add-a-bcad necklace with heart chat in. Reward! Has sentimental value. 846-7 132. 55t 1 1/20 Infant care person needed full or part time starting late November. Call 846-3765, 7-9 p.m. weeknights. 53tl 1/25 *> FOR RENT SPECIAL! Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx. 1 Bdrm.: $150. /2 Bdrm.: $175. Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5 p.m. Apartment. All utlilities paid, $200. monthly, $50. de posit, quiet person only. Call 823-1179. 57t 11 /24 Condo - fireplace. 2l)dt in.. 2 hath, private, backyard, w/d conn., t ing. Ian. 696-9262 alter 5 p.m. 52t j 1/21 Furnished home, Southwood Valley. Rooms $225. plus .... . 46tl 1/26 bills, nice. 693-0939. Preleasing for Spring. Neat Hilton. 2/3 bedroom du plexes. 846-2471 or 693-1627. 50tl2/17 • ROOMMATE WANTED Male needed for nice apartment. 2 bdrm./l bath, close to campus $130./mo. 8c elec. 268-0898. 57tl 1/21 V SERVICES ABEL SERVICES Top Quality Word Processing 3832-B S. Texas, Bryan (Next door to Dan’s Kwik Kopy) 846-ABEL Bring this ad for discount! 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 1561 NO MORE WRINKLES! IRONING BY BETH. CALL AFTER 3:00p.m. 846-0138. 59tll/26 TYPING: Accurate, 95WPM, Reliable. Word Proc essor. 7 days a week. 776-4013. 59tll/20 Roommate/Babysitter needed. Exchange rent for care of two children. After 3 p.m. and evenings. For more info write: Angell, P.O. Box 9588, C.S., TX, 77840. 57t 11/25 VERSATILE WORD PROCESSING. Fast, Accurate, Inexpensive, LaserWriter Quality. Call 696-2052. 47U2/4 TYPING BY WANDA. Am kind, am length. Rea sonable t ales. 690-1 I 13. 52t I 1/24 Resort Hotels, Cruiselines, Airlines, Amusement Parks, NOW accepting applications. For more information and an application; write National Collegiate Recre ation Service. P.O. Box 8074, Hilton Head, S.C. 29938. 59t 11/26 TYPING. No Job Too Small. Answering/Wake Up ‘ - ' - - 2/2 Service (409) 823-7723 44tl2/! s i l 1)1-M TYPING - 20 \ KARS experience. Fast, accurate, reasonable, gnatanteed. 693-8537. 4 It 12/17 Expert Typing. Word Processing. Resumes. Front SI .35 per page. PERFECT PRINT, 822-1430. 16t 11/26 WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu scripts. reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614. 49t 12/5 TYPING/WORD PROCESSING - Fast, Accurate, Guaranteed. Papers - Dissertations. Call Diana - 764- 2772. 53t 11/25 F.diiingTtonfieading. Dissertations, theses, all longer, iiianust tipis. L.l. Cat lisle-696-3657. 39t I 1/26 # ; FOR SALE HP-41CX, OPTICAL WAND PROGRAMS, LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN 696-7642. 59tll/25 1980 YAMAHA 400 ASKING $550. 2 HELMETS IN CLUDED. AFTER 5:00p.m.. 764-1865. 59tl 1/26 1976 Corvette Stingray, Blueprint 350 engine, trans mission, new paint, tires, 58,000 miles. 845-3859, 774- 4036. 59t 11/26 1986 DAYTONA TURBO, BLACK W/BLACK IN TER, GOLD PSTRIPE, AM/FM CASSETTE, CS PACKAGE, LOW MILES, AFTER 6pm. 846-2510. 59t 11/26 Cold & Silver chains- closeout- All prices, wholesale. Lars 764-6619 evenings. 56tl 1/21 TEXAS A&M - UT GAME TICKETS - 20. EACH. CALL (512)255-4111. 57tll/24 Mustang C aimortible. let. 846-7857. rhite top. Best of- 5511 1/20 LOOK! A FRF.F PROGRAM. NO PURCHASE RE QUIRED! I.B.M. COMPATIBLES FROM $599. COMPUTERS. F.TC. 693-7599. 55t I 1/20 MOBILE HOME. 14x70. New carpeting, good condi tion. $5,500. negotiable. 776-8149. 54tl 1/26 SUZUKI CS750L 901 HIM I 8750. 693-2698. 696-3337. 56111/20 l ot Salt 1982 Foul 1- \P. Met eii. good condition, tom speed. 16.000 miles. Asking $ 1650. 776-8755 5511 I '20 Call Battalion Classified 845-2611 STUDENT/YOUTH TRAVEL EXPERTS! ADVENTURE ?? FLY ON SCHEDULED AIRLINES BUDGET TOURS ?? RAIL PASSES & HOSTEL CARDS OVER IDO OFFICES & INI'L SIUDENI I D. CARDS Co// os at (2 14j 360-0097 6609 Hiflcrest Ave. • Dallas 75205 SCHULMAN THEATRES 2.50 ADMISSION 1. Any Show Before 3 PM 2. Tuesday - All Seats 3. Mon-Wed - Local Students With Current ID’s. 4. Thurs. - KORA "Over 30 Nlte” •DENOTES DOLBY STEREO PLAZA 3 226 Southwest Pkwy 693-2457 CROCODILE DUNDEE r« is l]l\ *C0L0R OF MONEY n CHILDREN OF A LESSER GOD r 7:101 8:50 I MANOR EAST 3 Manor East Mall 823-8300 SOMETHING WILDr LET’S GET HARRY r TOUGH GUYS i SCHULMAN 6 2002 E. 29th 775-2463 TOP GUN rs 7:10 9:M SHADOW PLAYpg-ii 7:35 9:55 KKYS 105 Presents $ DOLLAR DAYS $ This Week's Features Are: STAND BY ME r 7:30 8:40 RUTHLESS PEOPLE H 7:20 8:45 RUNNING SCARED « 7:15 •:35 THE BOY WHO COULD FLY 7:25 8:55 Battalion Classifieds Call 845-2611 U.S. economy rebound? with car sales, defense s WASHINGTON (AP) — The na tion’s economy, bolstered by a boom in car sales and hefty defense spend ing, grew at a respectable 2.9 per cent annual rate last summer, sub stantially better than the dismal performance during the spring, the government reported Wednesday. While the Reagan administration hailed the increase as proof that the long-awaited rebound in economic growth is under way, private econo mists expressed fears that the strength could be short-lived. The Commerce Department re ported that the gross national prod uct, after adjusting for inflation, ex panded from July through September at a 2.9 percent pace, up substantially from a barely discern ible 0.6 percent growth rate turned in from April through June. The estimate of third-quarter GNP growth marked an upward re vision from an initial report last month that put growth at a 2.4 per cent rate. The faster growth was accompa nied by higher inflation as the bene ficial effects of plunging oil prices wore off. Prices, as measured by a GNP inflation index, rose at an an nual rate of 2.4 percent compared with 1.7 percent in the second quar ter. In other economic news Wednes day, the government reported: • Construction of new homes and apartments edged down 0.2 percent to an annual rate of 1.65 million units. It was the fifth decline in the past six months and put the annual construction rate at its lowest level since February 1985. The decline came from weakness in apartT”’ building, and analystssaidthisML is likely to remain sluggish m]L of overbuilding and negativenL of the new tax law. Corporate profits dimy F hill • Corporate profits dimbfrlk zn eni in the third quarteriJP llion, their strongest gainsfI 4.5 percent rise in the months of 1985. Industriesen, profit gains included chemi food, while petroleum com and manufacturers of durable, suffered declining profits. Commenting on the GNPitH presidential spokesman IL-. Speakes said it provided evJL that the pace of economk cJk. was quit kening as the couninIff pleted four years of sustain pansion since the 1981-198: sion. wn ret Group says seafood not regulated enough WASHINGTON (AP) — A nutri tion group, saying the health bene fits of eating fish are being offset by the risk of contamination, launched on Wednesday a quest to set up a new system of federal inspection for seafood. “This is a public health scandal in the making,” said Ellen Haas, direc tor of Public Voice for Eood and Health Policy, a non-profit group. A study released by the advocacy group said Americans, attracted to fish in growing numbers because it is a healthy source of protein, are at in creasing risk from bacterial, viral and toxic contamination because fish is among the least regulated foods. “We advise consumers to eat fish only with caution (and) to avoid raw fish,” Haas told a news conference. Spokesmen for the fisheries in dustry, while saying they also favor a stepped-up inspection program for their products, called the Public Voice warnings overblown. “Americans eat 350 to 400 million pounds of seafood a year,” said Roy Martin, science director for the Na tional Fisheries Institute. “Where are the people dropping over? We don’t have a great big problem. We do have a perception problem.” Richard Cutting, the institute’s lobbyist, said the industry is awaiting the outcome of a two-year, $350,000 federal effort to design an improved inspection and sampling program. He said other nations, notably Canada, New Zealand, Norway and Japan, have used improvements in their inspection systems as a market ing tool to sell more seafood. More than 60 percent of seafood con sumed in the United States is im ported, he said. Public Voice, in a 44-page study, said it is estimated that thousands of Americans become ill each year from eating seafood contaminated with bacteria or viruses. The report said the federal gov ernment should assume responsibil ity for setting uniform national stan dards for fish and seafood and set up an inspection program to make sure those standards are met. 'Dallas'sta/s parents killeo at their taverc T. BOULDER, Mom. (AP|- parents of “Dallas” star Pat in agi coi: full hor sai< 198 aho sini I con wife oth< Duffy were killed by sli< blasts at the tavern theyoi and two suspects, onewithl ■ ill ci Imn. uric .mesT; a girlfriend’s tip and a high-spiK' 11 t base, off icials said WednesdiK*,. I errcnce and Mane kf| e whose son plays Bohhv Fwinflir ^, the popular CBS televisionkt*; sj, were killed late Tuesday in : „ western Montana town. Kj. . Patrick Duffy, 37, wasflraim- from Los Angeles, said JudiM^ rinen, a friend of the fanuk?- htmMd. J L|i] Filming of “Dallas" shuldaRr^, in the morning, but DuffyuJjT m the i iew to continue work,™,,,, i i t ■Sr UI1 snooting resumed in the ljL e j u-t noon, Lorimar-Telepiffi* p f spokeswoman Barbara 6ro^fl m[1 said in Los Angeles. || i The slayings apparently*®^ and New motivated by robbery. Panel attacks all-terrain vehicles awai Sc beat field WASHINGTON (AP) — Restrict ing use of the all-terrain vehicles by youngsters, improving rider training and requiring better suspensions could help reduce accidents involv ing the popular motorized tricycles, Consumer Product Safety Commis sion officials said Wednesday. “Driver inexperience is a highly significant factor,” in the more than 100,000 injuries annually involving these machines, said Rae Newman of the commission’s Directorate for Ep idemiology. People with less than a month’s experience riding the off-road vehi cles have 13 times the risk of an acci dent than the average rider, New man said. More than half of all accidents involve drivers under age 16 — although they constitute less than one-third of riders, she said. Roy Deppa, of the agency’s Direc torate for Engineering Sciences, told the commission that requiring a full suspension on all wheels of these ve hicles would improve driver control. At a briefing culminating an 18- month investigation into the hazards of the vehicles, which have become both widely popular in recent years, Newman told the Safety Commis sion, “Riding an ATV is a very com plex feat.” Little known before thesianl this decade, more than 2 millioiH the vehicles are now in use in ® ica, primarily as recreationalvtsR in beach and wooded areas. ra| At the same time, the t(tS| deaths and injuries hasskyrodS There have been 559 ATV-reiR deaths reported since 1982 W 50,<)()() injuries requiring hosfp treatment in the first half of tliify alone. R Any decision by the threei her commission on whetherloi||/ the recommendations is unliktl a f ew weeks. Market rebounds after trading scandal NEW YORK (AP) — There is growing uneasiness among some people on Wall Street that the in sider-trading scandal leaves the stock market vulnerable to a nasty spill. But Wall Street’s best-known stocks rebounded Wednesday from the market’s severe decline in the previous session, and other analysts commented on the talk of the possi ble collapse in the market. “If the end of the world was com ing, today should have been equally as bad as yesterday, and certainly it’s not,” said Ralph Bloch, senior vice president of the investment firm Raymond Janies Sc Associates in St. Petersburg, Fla. “I think the market is going to shake this off and ignore it.” Manuel Johnson, vice chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, also pre dicted the scandal would not perma nently harm the U.S. financial sys tem. numbered rising issues on tk® York Stock Exchange, and taktoR related stocks again sufferedsp of the heaviest losses. ButtkH Jones average of 30 industrial!® 9.42 points to 1,826.63 afterM* ing 43.3 1 Tuesday. Some other)® ket indexes also advanced, nf “There’s always a temporary reac tion and an overreaction to these sort of things that can temporarily impair financial market confidence,” Johnson told reporters in Washing ton. Stocks falling in price again out- Nonetheless, some analysis J tend the market recently mainly on the strength of frel takeover speculation, and thai* the widening scandal this abruptly ended most rumors it® tively kicked the support oui under the market. SAVE 50 ON ANY jAl^SiverLiglf CIGARETTE PAPERip CIGARETTE PAPER RETAILER: You are authorized to act aso (or redemption of this coupon. We will n. you 50