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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 20, 1987)
^1^ ^1^ Page 8/The Battalion/Friday, February 20, 1987 Battalion Classifieds Jicsfe^esIcjlesloloicjIcjIc^jIcjIcjlejIcjIcjIc^c^jIcjIcjIcjlMlc ♦ NOTICE ♦ FOR SALE INJURY STUDY Recent injury with pain to any muscle or joint. Volunteers interested in participating in investiga tive drug studies will be paid for their time and cooperation. G&S Studies, Inc. 846-5933 102t3/31 Fever Blister Study If you have at least 2 fever blisters a year and would be interested in trying a new medication, call for information regarding study. Compensation for volunteers. G&S Studies, Inc. 846-5933 irata/ai State Law Allows a Student To Exempt Either Political Science 206 or 207 By Examination Exemption Examinations Will Be Given At 5:30 PM April 13, June 8, and July 14, 1987 Registration and Information Room 002, Bolton Hall 845-3127 10112/23 GOVERNMENT HOMES. Delinquent tax property. Repossessions. Call 805-687-6000 ext. T-9531 for cur rent repo list. 102t2/27 Defensive Driving, Ticket Dismissal, Dates, Times, You’ll Have Fun!II 693-1322. 9U5/8 ADOPTION NOTICE: Happily married physician and nurse hoping to adopt infant and share love, fun, and secure future in our family. Yours is a difficult dis- cision, let us help ease your burden thru peace of mind. Call Lori and Sherman collect anytime (201)654-9561. 10U3/4 ♦ SERVICES TYPING: Accurate, 95 WPM, Reliable. Word Proc essor. 7 days a week. 776-4013. 102t2/20 TYPING BY WANDA. Any kind, any length. Rea sonable rates. 690-1113. 9512/24 Versatile Word Processing. Term Papers, Reports, Thesis, Resumes, Dissertations, Graphics. LASERW RITER QUALITY. Best Prices. Call 696-2052. 83t5/8 Spring Break Hurry! Limited space available at these number one collegiate beach and ski destinations. South Padre Island, Daytona Beach, Steamboat Springs, Miami Beach/ Fort Lauderdale, 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! 83t2/20 Figure Drafting/Illustrations. Theses, etc. Seven years experience. Satisfaction guaranteed. 778-8564. 97t2/20 The Costume ConnecUon Partygrams. Fun for any oc casion. Singers needed. 778-0303. 97t2/20 Expert Typing, Word Processing, Resumes. Error Free. PERFECT PRINT. 822-1430. 86t3/13 TYPING/WORD PROCESSING. Fast, Accurate, Guaranteed. Papers, Dissertations. Diana, 764-2772. 99t3/2 Computer Programs, Consulting Hardware, Repairs, More...Please call COMPU-HELP, 846-2766. 93t3/6 WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu scripts, reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614. 98t3/13 • FORRENT The Golden Rule Renting for the Spring Semester. 2 Bdrm., 2 Bath, furnished apartments. Locked storage, free laundry, bus UTILITIES & CABLE PAID!! Telephone connected. One deposit for all! Deposit earns 5% interest. $150./mo. - share bedroom. 2 openings for females Call 693-5560 TODAY! HELP! Tenants Needed! 2 1 / 2 blocks from campus 1 & 2 Bdrm efficiencies Cheap Rent! 260-9637 Shave Ice/Snowcone Machine and accessories. Great business opportunity. David, 268-0192. 102t2/26 Ski Boots - Nordica Air-System, men’s size 8Mt, good condition, $100.,o.b.o. David, 268-0192. 102t2/26 Cheap auto parts, used. Pic-A-Part, Inc. ’78 and older. 3505 Old Kurten Road, Bryan. 102tfn 1969 Gibson Classical Guitar. $275. 2x15 Sunn Bass cabinet with Peavey Head, $350. 260-2050. 10U2/25 Apple lie Computer, monitor, mouse, printer, lots of software. $900. 764-2911. Scott. 10U2/25 ’82 Kawasaki CSR 305. Great commuter value, nice condition. $480. 764-7017, 776-6494. 100t2/24 Escort radar detector for sale. $125. 268-0372 anytime. Marc. 100t2/24 ABSOLUTELY INCREDIBLE! IBM-PC/XT COM PATIBLE: TWO 360KB DRIVES, 640KB-RAM, 8/4.77MHZ TURBO. PHOENIX BIOS, KEYBOARD, MONITOR. SOFTWARE: $699. COMPUTERS, ETC. 693-7599. • WANTED Artist. Earn $200. by sketching drawings for research study on children. PLEASE CALL Bonnie, 846-7146 or Lisa, 846-7626. 100t2/20 • TRAVEL Florida (Ft. Lauderdale) Spring Break. Share gas and driving. 775-4513, 779-0365. 99t2/2S SUMMER EMPLOYMENT Colorado mountain resort em ployer, in Estes Park, is seek ing applicant’s for: Retail Sales, Food Service and Mis cellaneous jobs. Openings from May thru September. For information write: National Park Village North, c/o Mark Schifferns, 740 Oxford Lane, Fort Collins’, Co. 80525 100t2/2 o STRETCH Your Dollars! \ WATCH FOR BARGAINS IN THE BATTALION!! Large one bedroom, furnished apartment. Close to campus. 846-3050. Hurry only one left! $225. plus util ity plan. 84tfn Preleasing Now! 2 & 3 bdrm duplexes near the Hilton 846-2471,776-6856. 83tufn Large 2 bdrm., 2 bath near A&M, shuttle, w/d, call 846- 5735 days or 846-1633 evenings ask for Paul. 92tfn * HELP WANTED Handyman. Experience necessary. Tools and transpor tation a must. Beal Realty. 823-5469. 102t2/27 WANTED: Students with high g.p.a. and common sense. Law firm wants student with high g.p.a. and common sense to do various tasks in afternoons. Work includes running errands, interviewing witnesses and some research. Call 823-1012. 10D2/25 . ROOMMATE W/WTED Female roommate needed. Have your own room, bills paid. Furnished. $125./mo. 846-1413. 97tfn World and Nation Cuomo decides he won’t seek Democratic nomination in 1988! NEW YORK (AP) — Gov. Mario Cuomo said Thursday that he would not be a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1988. “I will not be a candidate,” the New York gov ernor said at the end of a call-in show on WCBS radio in New York City. The 54-year-old governor said that he had “no desire to increase the speculation” about a possi ble run for the White House. “This decision is the best thing for my state,” Cuomo said, adding that it was also “the best thing for my family” and “the best thing for my party.” Recent nationwide polls had placed Cuomo as a strong second to former Sen. Gary Hart of Col orado as the choice among Democrats for his party’s nomination. “In my opinion, the Democratic Party offers a number of candidates who can prove themselves capable of leading this nation toward a more sane, a more progressive and a more humane fu ture,” Cuomo said. “I will not add my name to that number. “I will continue to work as hard as I can to deal with those problems here in New York and to support the selection of our party as vigorously as I can in my role as governor of the state of New York. “I’m very, very grateful to a lot of people who suggested I might adequately serve as the candi date myself, but the decision I’ve made, I think, is lx*st for my state, best for my family and I j also best for my party. And I make this stale: now so that no one, no one, will bedisadvaai by the false expectation of a candidacyol part. “There were some people who oping expectations and I don’t want them J damaged as a result of that, and solch«(| moment to make my position clear- be a candidate.” Cuomo shied away from throwing his vj to any other potential candidate. “It’s kind of early for that," Cuomosa/:| want to see the campaign develop.” • BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY ’’WORKING PARTNER’’ NEEDED BY NATIONAL COMPANY. If you qualify and can invest $13,500. for 50% of equipment, the company will set up the busi ness for you. Your job will be to service accounts estab lished by the company with Hormel, Castleberry and Campbell’s food products. No selling or special vehicle needed. National census Figures shows average annual earnings of $13,643.52. Write New American, P.O. Box 360247, Birmingham, AL 35236 or call toll-free 1- 800-231 -0563. Ask for Operator 1 -F. 102t2/20 • Europe, Amer., Austrialia, Asia. All Fields. $900.-$2000./mo. Sightseeing. Free info. Write IJO, P.O. Box 52-Tx4. Corona Del Mar, CA 92625. 95l3/6 U.S. report sees ‘troubling trend’ in South African police control WASHINGTON (AP) — The State Department on Thursday called the police crackdown in South Africa the most troubling human rights trend of 1986 and dismissed some of the Soviet Union’s newly proclaimed human rights moves as “only talk.” The department’s annual report to Congress on human freedoms in 167 countries also criticized South Korea, a close American ally. But the questions raised about South Korea didn’t come close to matching the department’s condem nation of North Korea. Like its predecessors, the 1,356- page human rights survey is a de tailed report card on the human condition in lands ranging from the democracies of Western Europe to North Korea — which Assistant Sec retary of State Richard Schifter lik ened to the regime in George Or well’s classic novel of repression, “1984.” Besides the long-standing prob lems created by South Africa’s racial system, apartheid, the department complained about a state of emer gency imposed on June 12, “which has been steadily tightened since then.” “It has been estimated that 20,000 persons were detained under the state of emergency and that 10,000 remained in detention by the end of the year,” Schifter said. The Soviet Union was praised by Schifter for releasing several dissi dents from prison last year and for some steps that have “allowed some what more breathing space for a great many average Soviet citizens.” “But it is not freedom yet, not by a long shot,” Schifter said. He noted that many of the freed prisoners signed admissions of guilt and promises to refrain from anti-gov ernment activities. In South Korea, which received $164.5 million in U.S. assistance last year and is experiencing a growth in anti-government dissent, there were credible reports of mistreatment and torture of prisoners, the department said. “The use of excessive force by the police continues to be a pervasive and ingrained problem,” the report said. Soviet dissident freed from labor camp MOSCOW (AP) — Psychiatrist Anatoly Koryagin came home Thursday after five years in a labor camp, and officials said Jewish activ ist Josef Begun would be out of prison in 24 hours, nearly a week af ter his release was first announced. Foreign Ministry spokesman Gen nady Gerasimov reported the re leases at a news briefing. Koryagin, who had accused authorities of put ting sane dissidents in psychiatric hospitals, and Begun were among the most prominent dissidents still held, but other well-known activists remain in prisons or labor camps. Begun, 55, was still at Chistopol Prison on Thursday. An Interior Ministry official tele phoned Begun’s wife Inna on Thursday night and told her to go to the prison, 500 miles east of Mos cow, for her husband’s release Fri day. “Boris and I will be going to Chis topol as soon as we can get tickets,” Inna Begun said. Boris is Begun’s son from a previous marriage. “I was told my husband will be freed tomorrow, in the second half of the day,” she told the Associated Press by telephone. Begun, a teacher of Hebrew, was pardoned Tuesday by a decree of the Supreme Soviet, the nominal na tional parliament. He was sentenced in 1983 to seven years in prison for anti-Soviet agitation and propa ganda. A Soviet official had announced his release prematurely in a tele vision interview on CBS last Sunday. 2 bodies four 1 still missing after avalancf BRECKENRIDGE, Colo — More than 250 mounts using long poles to probe i deep snow across an avalancl recovered two more Thursday and continued' ing for at least one moremisEj skier, authorities said. All three victims of We day’s snow slide were men,s| their bodies were found ino area of the steep slope. The first body was Wednesday, less thanthreeli after the avalanche. The (wo were found in 4 tobfeej snow Thursday. “We have developed in tion that a fourth victim M volved in the slide. We i shifted our emphasis to theo side of the slide,” said Sum County Sherif f Delbert Ewoi He said the missing manwasiij ing with his stepbrother and»: not with the other victims. A helicopter dropped ed sives to release loose snow! could cause more avalanche!j Peak 7, a steep slope north of j Breckenridge ski area, beforeij searchers, aided by dogs,hei!r out Thursday. Sixty certified mountaindl and 200 volunteers searched^ snow Thursday in the Arapi National Forest 65 miles wesi| Denver. Question-answer sessions suspended Media access to Reagan limited WASHINGTON (AP) — The president was meeting with congres sional leaders in the Cabinet Room about an arms sale to Saudi Arabia. From the back of the room, a re porter asked him if he thought members of the press should be prosecuted for security leaks. At another time in the same room, the president was meeting with members of the Senate Finance Committee about a tax bill. Again, a reporter asked a question. This time, it was about the Saudi arms sale. The two incidents, both last year, represent a type of question-and-an- swer session that used to occur about once a week at the White House. The last one was Dec. 4. The Battalion 845-2611 White House officials decline to say why they have been suspended. Reporters are free at such sessions to ask questions about whatever is in the news, and the news has been dominated for weeks by the crisis over secret arms sales to Iran, and the apparent diversion of some of the money to help Nicaraguan re bels. Since Dec. 4, there has been con flicting testimony about whether Reagan approved arms sales in 1985; there have been reports that an investigating board is looking into whether the White House attempted a cover-up; there has been confusion about how active a role Israel played in the sales. Reporters wishing to question the president about these matters have been limited to shouting their que ries at him as he goes to or from Air Force One or his Marine Corps heli copter. Reagan, who is hard of hearing, often does not respond to such ques tions. When he does, his on-the-run answer is necessarily brief, some times just one word. The reporters have no chance to follow up. The type of sessions that have been suspended, although also helter-skelter, provide a slightly bet ter chance for reporters to explore a subject. Sometimes,the president begins the meeting with brief renffl the open session, then the rejx ask their questions and are t out of the room. Spokesman Marlin Fitzwats| sponded last Friday, “It’s i sion on coverage of these ever/l arbitrary and that’s thewayitis l He promised reporters would have increased access® president, but did not say when] Meanwhile, the White Ho* not saying when the presidetj hold another news conferee I last one was Nov. 19, beforeij closure that funds had beendij to the guerrillas in Nicaragua CO-OP CAREER FAIR Monday, February 23, 1987, the employers listed will be on campus participating in the Co-op Career Fair. These employers will primarily be interested in hiring co-op students, but if you are interested in either summer or full-time employ ment, please feel free to come by. The Co-op Career Fair will be held between 8:30 am and 3:30 pm with a lunch break from 11:45 to 12:30. EMPLOYER Carter & Burgess - Ft. Worth Dow Chemical USA - Freeport Ft. Hood - Ft. Hood General Dynamics - Ft. Worth Lockheed Missiles & Space - Austin McNeil Consumer Products - Round Rock NASA - Johnson Space Center - Clear Lake Northern Telecom - IOS - Dallas Nynex Business Center - Dallas LTV Missiles & Electronics - Dallas Texas Instruments - Dallas Trane Company - Tyler U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service BOOTH LOCATION Zachry Zachry Zachry Zachry Zachry Zachry Zachry Blocker Blocker Zachry Zachry Zachry Nagel