The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 09, 1986, Image 8

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Battalion Classifieds
• WANTED
$200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200
Wanted patients with very mild asthma, ex-asthmatics,
patients with cough or occasional weasing or short
ness of breath, even with exercise. To participate Jan.
3 - Jan.19. $200. incentive for those chosen to partici
pate.
Call 776-6236.
$200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200
$20 $20 $20 $20 $20 $20 $20 $20 $20 $20
FEVER STUDY
We need to test 4 new thermometers. If you have
a temperature over 100°, and have taken no pain
medication (aspirin or tylenol), and could use
$20 for a short visit call us at 776-6236.
$20 $20 $20 $20 $20 $20 $20 $20 $20 $20
68112/17
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 46tn/26
• FORRENT
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
•7 FORRENr
WNMMNMH
822-7321
Newly Remodeled
Newly Redecorated
Very Large 1 bedrooms from $200.
2 Bedroom, 2 Baths as low as $335.
Many Leasing Specials Available!
Pool On site staff
Sun Deck Security
Club Room Laundry Facilites
Near Shuttle Large Closets
3200 Pinfeather
Professionally managed by Chatham Enterprises
65t1/30
Duplex
1711 A Trinity PI.
* 2 Bdrm., IVaBath
* Fenced Back Yard
* Garage
* $350./mo.
Call Bill at 693-5177
after 5 p.m.
2nd Semester Special!
2 Bdrm. apt $245./mo.
Available Now & Dec. 15
Casa Blanca Apts.
846-1413
Room in older home with 3
other female students. Fur
nished. W/D, $175./mo. In
cludes utilities. South edge of
campus within sight of Presi
dent’s home and Duncan Hall.
Call Laura at
696-8643 after 5 p.m.
Bargain at $225.2 Bdrm. apart
ment in 4-plex, Bryan. W/D con
nection, dishwasher, disposal,
near shuttle, 1.7 miles from cam
pus, no dogs.
693-7761 or 775-5270.
SPECIAL!
Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx.
1 Bdrm.: $150. / 2 Bdrm.: $175.
Call 846-8878 or
774-0773 after 5 p.m.
Sublease 1 Bdrm. apartment. $240./mo., no deposit, 5
minutes from campus. Shuttle bus. Will give new occu
pant furniture of needed. 846-4391, Monica. 70tl2/15
Duplex, 1 Bdrm., partially furnished, walk to campus,
$170./mo. 696-0350. 70tl2/15
Large, nice house - 3 Bdrms., natural wood floors, ga
rage, fenced yard. Pets o.k. 5 minutes from campus, off
Texas, $450. 696-6657. 66U2/9
Sublease large 2 Bdrm., 2 bath. Near shuttle, pool,
laundry. $325./mo 696-3706. 66tl2/9
Preleasing for Spring. Near Hilton. 2/3 bedroom du
plexes. 846-2471 or 693-1627. 50t 12/17
House - very nice. 3 bdrm., 2 bath, living room, den,
fenced yard, pets o.k. On Dominik near campus. $495.
696-6657. 66tl2/9
Condo - fireplace, 2 bdrm., 2 bath, private, backyard,
w/d conn., clng. fan, 696-9262 after 5 p.m. 65U2/15
2 Bdrm., large apt. Garage. 415 S. Springs, $300. 413
Nagle, $280. Efficiency $180. 779-3700. 67U2/10
5 Bdrm., 2 Bath house, 307 C. Main $500. - apts. near
univesity $165. up. 693-0122, 779-3700. 67U2/10
Sublet large efficiency, 550 sq. ft., $275./mo., free de
posit. Ceiling fan, newly remodeled. 693-1653.67tl2/17
Sublease 2 Bdrm, 1V 1 .' bath, new carpet, ceiling fan, mi
crowave. 696-3253. 67tl2/10
2nd Semester
Private Room - Dorm Plan
2 Persons Per Apt.
All Bills Paid / Furnished
$170./Per Month
Per Person
Casa Blanca
4110 College Main/846-1413
close to campus-quiet-convienient
49111/19
Duplex near campus. |an - May o: future lease. 2
bdrm, 1 bath, fenced yard. No pels. $250. rent. $150.
deposit. Call 846-1274, leave message. 67ll2/17
•TRAVEL
Spring Break ’87. Beach and ski breaks available now!
South Padre Island, Daytona Beach, Steamboat
Springs, Miami Beach/Fort I^auderdale, Mustang Is
land/Port Aransas, Galveston Island and Fort Walton
Beach. Call Sunchase Tours Central Spring Break toll
free hot line today for information and reservations, 1-
800-321-5911. 64U2/12
Srwemce
DEFENSIVE DRIVING, TICKET DISMISSAL,
YOU’LL LOVE OCR KCN CLASS! 693-1322.35tl2/17
TOTAL MOVE IN
$40.00
No Rent Until January ’87 On A 9 Month or 1
Year Lease!
Plus, 15 sessions at Total Tan paid for by
Country Place Apts.
Only 8 Blocks From Campus!
0!^
country place
®ents
apartments
3902 College Main
846-0515
a compass management
property
• LOST AND FOUND
Lost Yellow Cat. University Oaks and Munson area.
(Large Kitten) 693-8882. 69t 12/12
• SERVICES
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
TYPING BY WANDA. Any kind, any length. Rea
sonable rates. 690-1113. 67tln
Typing and Word Processing. Thesis, pissertations.
Reports. Reasonable Rates. 693-1598. 62U2/12
Typing/Word Processing, fast. Accurate, Guaranteed.
Papers - Dissertations. Call Diana. 764-2772. 66U2/17
S I 11)1 \ I I ') PING - 20 'i I \RS experience, fast,
act in ate. i easonable. gnat a meed. 693-8537. 4 1112/17
TYPING: Accurate, 95 WPM. Reliable. Word Proc
essor 7 Days A Week. 776-4013. 69U2/9
WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu
scripts, reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614.
69t 12/15
• HELP WANTED
The Houston Chronicle
Has immediate openings for holi
day season & spring route car
riers. Carrier positions require
working early morning hours deliv
ering papers and can earn $400.
to $600. per month plus gas allow
ance.
Call Andy at 693-7815 or Julian at
693-2323 for an appointment.
OUTDOOR TRIP LEADERS
WANTED to lead day and week
end adventure trips. Outdoor
skills, first aid certification re
quired. For more information call
Patsy Greiner, 845-7826.
69t12/17
CHRISTMAS BREAK EMPLOYMENT
Students from Dallas, Ft. Worth, Corpus
Christ!, Tyler, and Brownsville needed to
observe seat belt use during Christmas
Break.
3 Days, $100.
Call Julie, 845-5815
69112/12
3000 GOVERNMENT JOBS List $16,040 - $59,230/yr.
Now Hiring. Call 805-687-6000 Ext. R-9531. 34t 12/16
♦ FOR SALE
New Louis Vuitton purse. Paid $230., sell for $125.
Great Christmas Gift! 696-1422. 70tl2/I5
’86 FORD F-150, PS/PB, AM-FM Cassette, bed tool
box, big 6 cyl, 4000 miles, standard, factory warranty,
buy it for the payoff of $8990., Sc if your car runs, I will
give you $2000. cash for it. 1-817-829-2445, 1-817-829-
1481, (waco area). 66tl2/9
Coastal Hay, fertilized. $1.65 per bale. Delivery avail
able. Call 845-4921. 68t 12/10
3 Seat Sofa, neutral colored Broyhill with'Oak h im. Ex
cellent condition. $300. 693-2058 after 5 p.m. 68t 12/15
Yamaha Maxim 400. Very low mileage. Inquire at 260-
1587. G6t 12/9
Country Living. 14’x 60’. ’77 Sandepoint. 2 Bdrm., 1
bath, on wooded, Vl2 acre, rented lot. 10 minutes from
Vet. School. Good condition. 690-0421. 66t 12/17
Rangoon red ’65 Mustang. 14,000 miles on rebuilt V8-
289 motor. Call 846-7856 evenings. 69t 12/12
ABSOLUTELY INCREDIBLE! IBM—PC/XT COM
PATIBLE: TWO 360KB DRIVES, 640KB—RAM.
8/4.77MHZ TURBO, PHOENIX BIOS. KEYBOARD,
MONITOR, SOFTWARE: $649. COMPUTERS,
ETC. 693-7599. 67tl2/10
Aggie Senior Boots for sale. Size 12. $225. Call Fed,
822-3629. 67tl2/17
Unset diamond. l/3rd carat. Flawless. $650. 260-6106
or 846-6703 mornings. 67tl2/10
Regular
Haircuts
$6
MSC Barbershop
Lower Lever MSC
846-0629
Shoe Shines
Hours:
8 a.m.-5 p.m. M-F
Call
Battalion Classified
845-2611
Page 8/The Battalion/Tuesday, December 9, 1986
World and Nation
Honduran troops chase
Nicaraguan stragglers
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (AP)
— Honduran troops, flown by U.S.
helicopters, hunted for stragglers
Monday of a Nicaraguan force that
Honduran officers say crossed the
border during the weekend and
burned three deserted villages.
A military intelligence source said
the troops also were acting as a
guard against further incursions.
The source, who spoke on condi
tion of anonymity, said about 20
Honduran air force planes had
bombed and strafed retreating Nica
raguans, who he said were pursued
by three Honduran infantry battal
ions.
Nicaragua’s leftist Sandinista gov
ernment denied that an incursion
took place and claimed that war
planes from the Honduran side of
the border bombed two villages in
side Nicaragua, killing seven soldiers
and wounding 1 1 people.
Honduras said that 18 of its sol
diers were wounded in intense fight
ing in the border area over the week
end and that its troops inflicted
undisclosed “heavy” casualties on a
force of 700 Sandinista raiders.
U.S. Embassy and Honduran mili
tary sources, who spoke on condition
that they not be identified for secu
rity reasons, said 14 U.S. helicopters
ferried hundreds of Honduran
troops to the border site on Sunday
after the Nicaraguan force crossed
into Honduras the day before.
The helicopters, all unarmed,
provided transportation from Palm-
erola, an air base where U.S. forces
are headquartered 30 miles north
east of Tegucigalpa, to an air strip
called Jamastran, about 90 miles east
of the capital, they said.
The Jamastran air strip is 30 miles
from the border, in line with stand
ing instructions to American troops
to avoid possible clashes with the Ni
caraguans.
Honduran officials said residents
of about 40 villages fled to safety
elsewhere when the Nicaraguan
force penetrated three miles inside
Honduras on Saturday and set fire
to three deserted villages near the
town of Cifuentes, about 70 miles
east of Tegucigalpa. The villages,
Mitingale, Buena Vista and La Espe-
ran/.a, all were in El Paraisoj
ince.
Gapt. Carlos Quezada Aji
spokesman for Honduran arj
forces, said heavy fighting rj
Sunday around Cifuentes kiis
sided Monday morning as thei
nistas began withdrawing totl(|
caraguan side of the border.
1 ndependent confirmation oil
battle accounts was not
since reporters were barred;
the area.
Last weekend marked then
time ill is year that President Joi
cona Hoyt) asked President[
for military help to lend i
ported Nicaraguan incursion!;
the border, where Ll.S.-badtdf
ira rebels maintain base
their fight against the Sani
government.
The United States also
military helicopter trans)
for the Honduran army in
when Honduras complained
force of about 1,500 S;
troops crossed the borderinpu
of a C Contra force.
South Africa reports
256 children under 16
jailed on no charges
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa
(AP) — The government said Mon
day that 256 children under 16 were
in jail without charge, including one
only 11 years old. Anti-apartheid
groups reported a huge troop
buildup in black townships.
Police Commissioner J.P. Coetzee
made the announcement about chil
dren detained under the nationwide
state of emergency imposed J une 12.
Monitoring groups estimate the
number of black children under 18
being held at 1,300-4,000 and have
demanded they be freed before
Christmas.
Coetzee gave no indication of how
many people aged 16-18 were being
held.
One monitoring group, the Detai
nees’ Parents Support Committee,
called that omission “the most cyn
ical sleight of hand.”
“It is clear that the 16-, 17- and
18-year-old group are the prime tar
get of state repression,” it said.
“Whatever the exact number may
be, even one child in detention is too
many.”
The End Conscription Campaign,
an anti-draft group that opposes the
use of white army draftees in black
townships, said Monday there had
been a "massive concentration of
troops" in townships over the past
week.
Soldiers were setting up roadb
locks at the entrances to townships
around Johannesburg area and con
ducting house-to-house searches for
suspected activists, the organization
said. It added that the army had mo
bilized thousands of conscripts in the
past two weeks and was not granting
leaves during December.
When asked for a response, the
army issued a statement saying it
“does nQt comment on troop
strength and deployment.”
Anti-apartheid groups have pre
dicted a major crackdown on activ
ists and tighter press restrictions.
Under current emergency rules, re
porters may not describe security
force actions or publish the names of
detainees without permission, or
publish “subversive statements.”
An estimated 20,000 people have
been detained at some point under
the emergency, and monitoring
groups believe about half remain in
jail.
Cab drivei
injures 13
in Chicago
CHICAGO (AP) — Atti
ran a red light and plowedi
crowd of |>edestrians onadi
town street at lunchiimeMomi
injuring at least 13 people,i»f
them critically, police said.
“I was walking acrosstliestrs
with the rest of the peopleikd
heard screams,” said Caniel
Martit lovich, 26, a downiowH;
fice worker. “1 heard
thump.’ I turned around,Ital
were lx>dies all over the place"
T he taxicab ran a red fyk
struck the pedestriansalifccor
ner of State and Monroe street!]
in the lx>op and hitanum
police car parked in front ol^
Palmer House hotel, said Pal
man James Miller andwitnes
The impact of the crash Hi
unmarked squad car partialis
the sidewalk, its rearm
crushed.
T he injured were transpoi
to four hospitals.
T he cab driver was late
police from the scene io II'
Hospital, where spokes*
Julie O’H eir said he was
conscious.
A*
Ire
Student protests prompt premie
to pull university modification b
PARIS (AP) — Premier Jacques Chirac on Monday
withdiew a bill to modify the the state-run university
system, giving in to a three-week campaign of some
times violent protests by high school and college stu
dents.
In the Latin Quarter, the capital’s student district,
about 30,000 demonstrators marched peacefully
through the streets to mourn the death of a 22-year-old
student. According to the autopsy, the student died of a
heart attack after he was beaten by police.
Throughout the country, people paused for a mo
ment of silence.
Opposition to Chirac’s government has been snow
balling since the protests began. Teachers, unions, left
ist politicians and even government officials have spo
ken out against the university bill.
The government has said the measure would make
higher education more competitive, but critics claim it is
elitist and diminishes students’ freedom of choice
“No modification of the universities, asnecessan j
may be, can he carried through without widesf[
from all of the interested parties, notably student j
teachers,” Chirac said in a televised announcemeni [
“It can only be done in calm,” he said. “Itdeaiil
pears that that is not the case today. Demonstrate
process, with all of the risks of violence andlhei
they entail for all, are the proof.”
Chirac said he asked Education Minister RenJ
nofy to draw up a new proposal to reform thecoiii
78 universities. He said he hoped the new pla
meet “the legitimate aspirations of the young.’
T he office of President Francois Mitterraril
nounced that the government accepted the resifl
of Higher Education Minister Alain DevaqueU
thor of the original bill. Devaquet submittedhisrf
tion Saturday.
BRAXTON ASSOCIATES
Announces An
IMMEDIATE JOB OPPORTUNITY IN HOUSTON
Job Description
2-3 Year Internship With An Inter
nationally Known Management
Consulting Firm
Qualifications
Bachelors Degree
Demonstrated Academic Excellence (A-
/B + GPA Minimum)
Travel Involved
Highly Motivated
Keen Business Interest
Salary-Mid $20K
• Strong Interest In Attending Graduate
School
A more detailed description of Braxton and this position, as well as a Correspon
dence Address are at the Career/Placement Center.