The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 04, 1987, Image 10

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    5^C Page 10/The Battalion/Wednesday, March 4, 1987
Battalion Classifieds
^^c4c4c^c^c^c^c^o|c^c^c^oio|o|o|o|c^o|o|o|o|c)|c
NOTICE
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&$ Studies, Inc.
846-5933
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
<S V 6,
CORN
SiGDcQ £2®CHS
16elTexas Avenue South
College Station, Texas 77S40
Culptpptf Plaza
i Wear Hastings and behind Holiday Inn),
Mon-Sat 10:30-6:30
Get your popcorn for
Spring Break
USE THIS COUPON!
Receive a 50t Bag of Popcorn
or
SOi Discm ’ Toward Your Purchase
Delcnsive Uiiwns, ticket Dismissal, Dates. Times,
You’ll Have k'uii!!l 69I4-1822. 91t5/8
ADOPTION NOTICE: Happily married physician
and nurse hoping to adopt infant and share love, fun,
and ■ ure future in family. Yours is a difficult dis
ci- , let helpc i.. hurd« ; ti duu peaceol t d
: .all Eori and Sherman collect anytime (201 )t>tr4dJr o;.
101t3/4
«' SERVICES
WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu
scripts, reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614. •
98t3/13
Ready Resume, Service. 24 hour turn around. Info,
taken by phone: $9^vf 1^8 ’ I'()3t4/i7
Figure Drafting / Illustrations. Theses, etc. Seven years
experience. Satisfaction guaranteed. 778-8564. 106t3/5
'The Costume Connection Partygrams. Fun for any oc
casion, Singers needed. 778-0303. 106t3/5
TYPING BY WANDA Any kind, any length Rea
sonable rates. 690-i 1 13. 106t3/l 1
Computer Programs. Consulting Hardware. Repairs.
More . Please call COMPU-HELP, 846-2766. 93t3/6
Versatile Word Processing. Term Papers, Reports.
Thesis, Resumes, Dissertations, Graphics. LASERW
RITER Ql IALITY. Best Prices. Call 696-2052. 83t5/8
Expert Typing, Word Processing, Resumes. Error
Free. PERFECT PRINT. 822-1430. 86t3/l3
Typing. Prompt. Reasonable. No Job Too SmalL
Payne. (409)823-7723. Anytime. ‘ 103t4/l
TYPING/WORD PROCESSING, Fast, Accurate.
Guaranteed. Papers, Dissertations. Diana 764-2772.
1 10t3/17
FOR RENT
HELP!
Tenants Needed!
2 1 / 2 blocks from campus
1 & 2 Bdrm efficiencies
Cheap Rent!
260-9637
Private 1 Bedroom Garage Apartment Newly Remod
eled, Fenced, Covered Parking, Shade Trees.
$ 175./mo. 779-7723. 109i3/9
Preleasing Now! 2 8c 3 bdrm duplexes
846-24 71,776-6856.
ear the Ililtori
83tufri
2 Bdrm House, Wcllboi
693-0713,690-0376.
ea, $250/mo., fenced yard.
105t3/31
Large 2 bdrm., 2 bath near A&M, shuttle, w/d^ call 846-
5735 days or 846-1633 evenings ask for Paul. 92tfn
Large one bedroom, furnished apartment. Close to
campus. 846-3050. Hurry only one left! $225. plus util
ity plan. 84tfn
Clean, Quiet, 2 Bdrm, 1 Bath Apt., washer connection,
some pets, walk to class, $170. to $190. plus bills. 696-
7266. HOtS/lO
• FOR SALE
MI TSUBISHI, ’84, Starion Turbo, leather interior,
sunroof, cruise. $6500. Call Paul, 846-5186 or 846-
4783. 104t3/30
36” projection TV, Mitsubishi, stereo, extended war
ranty, 1 Vz years old, perfect condition, $1500. 822-
1248 day, 846-4555 after 6. 108t3/6
Coppcrfield, 2 BDRM, 2 Bath, Garage. Rent $450. Sell
$45,000. 846-3954. 107t3/12
Cheap auto parts, used. Pic-A-Part, Inc. ’78 and older.
3505 Old Kurten Road, Bryan. 102tfn
1983 Jeep Wagoneer Limited, low miles, excellent.
1985 Dodge Crew' Cab truck, must SELL... 1983 Mazda
Sundowner, low miles, new tires. Dee McIntyre 822-
0459, 822-5290. 110t3/10
Manx cat for stud. Call after 5pm weekdays. 822-6955.
108t3/i3
lelp!
available. 845-5822, 775-6780.
egotiable, financing
1 ldt3/10
• BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
.OVERSEAS JOBS. Summer, yr. round. Europe. S.
Amcr., Austrialur, Asia. All fields. $900.-$2(XM)./mo.
Sightseeing. Free info. Write IJC, P.O. Box 52-1x4.
Corona Del Mar. OA 92625. 95t3/6
HELP WANTED
Microcomputer Pnigrainmers Wanted- Assembler and
‘C’, if you are sell-motivated,. goal-orienu*d and can
work 40 or more hours weekly. Call 268-5809. 105t3/6
Part-time assistant for doctor’s office. Typing l equiredT
minimum 45-50 WPM. Apply at 3020 E. 29th St.
Bryan. 108tfn
• HEJLJP WANTED
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
DURING SPRING BREAK
Texas Transportation Institute
needs students from Amarillo, El
Paso, Lubbock, and Waco to sur
vey child safety seat use during
spring break. $5./hr. Call Julie at
845-5815 between Sam and 5pm,
March 4 for interview.
There’s A Job For You
In A Summer Camp
The American Camping Association
(NY) will make your application avail
to over 300 camps in the Northeast
Exciting opportunities for college stu
dents and professionals Positions av
ail: all land and watei sports, arts &
crafts, drama, music, dance, tripping,
nature, R.N.’s, M.D s, Aides, kitchen,
maintenance. COLLEGE CREDIT
AVAILABLE CALL OP WRITE FOR
APPLICATION AMERICAN CAMP
ING ASSOCIAI ION, 43 W. 23 St.,
Dept (AM), New York, N Y 10010,
212-645,8620. i 09,3/5
$$$ STUDY AND WORK $$$
If you could find a brand of sheer
pantyhose in 36 fashion colors
that absolutely would not run and
met your quality expectations
Would you buy them? Many will!
Canadian manufacturer seeks lo
cal distributors. NO BOSS - NO
INVENTORY -NO CASH DOWN.
UNLIMITED INCOME. DESK
TOP BUSINESS. Cali 69 NO
RUN for free info, packet
AIRLINES, CRUISELINES HIRING! Summer. Ca-
reer! Good Pay. Travel. Call For Guide, Cassette,
Newsservice! (916) 944-4444 Ext 127 108t3/4
Homeworkers Needed! to Stuff Envelopes. Send Self-
Addressed Stamped Envelope. Whittaker Dynamics
1102-D Spring Loop, College Station, Tx 77840.
110t3/10
PERSONALS
FREE Home Bible Correspondence Course. Call 693-
0400. 110t3/4
TYPING: Accurate, 95 WPM. Reliable. Word Proc
essor. 7 days a week. 776-4013. 109t3/4
South Korean peace march
marred by street clashes
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) —
Demonstrators fought for hours
against nearly 50,000 riot police in
hit-and-run clashes Tuesday on the
streets of Seoul during a day of re
membrance for a student who died
during police torture.
Violent confrontations also were
reported in six other cities.
Police said 20 people were hurt in
all, two seriously, and 395 were de
tained.
At least four opposition lawmak
ers were injured, one seriously, in
leading protesters against police,
who fired tear gas and used shields
and truncheons to fend off demon-
14 while being questioned by police
using water torture.
A 49th-day rite is a Buddhist prac
tice to mark the entry of the de
ceased person’s soul into another
world.
National Police Director Lee
Yong-chang said 20 people were put
under house arrest.
But Dong-A Ilbo. the nation’s big
gest independent national daily
newspaper, and Yonhap News
Agency said at least 72 people, in
cluding top dissident leaders Kim
Young-sam and Kim Dae-jung, were
confined to their homes.
Seoul, and Chongju, 70 miles south-
southeast of the capital.
)lei
Despite the violence, police were
largely in control of Tuesday’s street
actions, through which critics of the
government sought to point up their
demands involving greater democ
racy and human rights in South Ko
rea.
The number of marchers ob
viously fell short of organizers’ ex-
pections.
strators.
Tuesday’s “Grand Peace Marches
for Anti-Torture and Democratiza
tion” were called by the main opposi
tion New Korea Democratic Party
and 47 dissident and church groups
to mark the 49th day after the death
of Park Chong-chul, 21.
Park, a dissident student from
Seoul National University, died Jan.
Lee said 123 students were among
those detained.
He said 171 people were held in
Seoul and 25 in Pusan, the nation’s
second-largest city, 205 miles south
east of the capital.
Other arrests were made in
Taegu, Kwangju and Taejon.
Demonstrations also were re
ported in Chonju, 120 miles south of
Many students chose to hold their
own rallies on campus.
The opposition protests shad
owed the start T uesday of President
Chun Doo-hwan’s seventh year in
office.
The usual tributes accorded Chun
on such an occasion were buried in
coverage of street clashes.
The Korean Constitution limits a
president to seven years in offica.
Chun, a former general, has said
several times he will step down in
1988 when his time is up.
Jury indicts
Israeli officer
in U.S. spy case
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
federal grand jury on Tuesdaif
indicted Israeli Air Force officer |
Aviem Sella on charges he con
spired with convicted spy Jona I
than Jay Pollard to gather top-se
cret U.S. military intelligence. |
The three-count espionage in
dictment accuses Sella of recruit
ing Pollard, then a Navy civilian
intelligence analyst, to gather mil
itary secrets helpful to Israel in
the summer of 1984.
.IV
Sella was charged with conspir
acy to commit gather or deliver
national defense information
gathering such secrets, and re
ceiving or obtaining classified in
formation as a foreign agent.
But Sella may never haveio]
stand trial for the charges be
cause the U.S.-Israeli extraditionj
treaty exempts espionage. Hov
ever, he would face arrest if he I
were to travel to the Uniiedl
States.
Study: Women still placed in low-paying jobs
leir o\
_Gam
who be
Tasting
WASHINGTON (AP) — There have been
striking changes in the economic lives of women
in recent decades as they improved their educa
tion and work prospects, yet historical patterns
placing them in lower-paying jobs persist. Census
Bureau analysts said Tuesday.
“Women remain in a secondary economic sta
tus despite unprecedented change,” Cynthia M.
Taeuber and Victor Valdiser wrote in their re
port, “Women in the American Economy.”
And they said the future for women “is uncer
tain and remains a challenge to the American
economic, political and social system and to
women themselves.”
“Making it in today’s world is not the same for
all women,” the report observed.
It noted that the reasons for the continuing
economic problems of women are complex and
not easily measured. Among these are the pres
sures
educations
crimination by men, who do most of the hiring
and promoting.
jle,
gap 1
by "c
of family responsibility, social conditioning,
ations that differ from those of men and dis-
For example, the median income of women
working full time in 1984 was $15,600, compared
with $24,004 for men.
But that ratio of women earning 64 percent of
men’s income — up from 59 percent in 1970 — is
a statistic of ten misinterpreted, the report said.
The median is affected by the fact that many
women are concentrated in relatively low-paying
jobs, not that they are paid only 64 percent of
what men earn for the same jobs, it said.
And things are changing. For people age 18 to
24, the ratio of female to male income was 88
percent in 1984, up from 76 percent in 1980, "an
indication of significant improvements in the
wage gap among younger workers over a short
time period,” the study found.
This has improved as more women have pur
sued educations, which tend to increase pay, the
report noted.
may be explained in part by “differences in th<B l . w ^
productive capacities of men and women, differ
ences in the distribution of men and womet
among different jobs, and discrimination in tin
labor market.”
of the b
jst got
Some women choose lower-paying jobs fT,
other benefits, such as flexible hours givingthe:|§ t V &
more time with their families. This may be an-|P lh " ^
tional decision because men can earn moreworl
ing full-time, in general, the analysts said.
In addition, they said, women often takedif
ferent educational courses, leading to differct!
jobs.
In recent years, women have made signifia*
gains in employment, it said. Many of these wtn
women who entered the labor force in thedfr» ve , u l
cades after World War II with little experience:
aining, however. IWitn
In 1985, some 54.5 percent of women age!: t 0 °V I
and over were in the civilian labor force.
ound
:ad gc
th in
But
cidec
lish tl
Jone
et the
■ And
striking
landmc
T Cent
|on th
his first
TEXAS A&M
MSC AGGIE CINEMA
i: "We
get in,
The
pmooi
osite c
IN ASSOCIATION WITH
GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION
PRESENTS
H
AUTO EXPO
—-
DATE:
-
K s
WM
MARCH 4 & 5
PLACE:
—
, t
9
1 I
' w&llilM' ' 1
9*
—
mtWrnmm :
f; ,: '.'i-mSTW
. - 3:00 RM.
V
U
Him
- -
—
By attending your school’s GM Auto Expo event, you can be eligible to win a
VCR courtesy of General Motors. Just fill out an entry form and drop it in the
box marked “GM Auto Expo.” The winning entry will be drawn at the end of
the GM Auto Expo event. No purchase is necessary to enter or win. Winner
need not be present. Good luck!
*1986 SANYO VHR #2250 Video Cassette Reeorder (retail value $475)
General Motors./.’sharing your future
55