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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 23, 1987)
Page 8AThe Battalion/Monday, March 23, 1987 Battalion Classifieds ' World and Nation HELP WANTED Bryan - College Station TELEMARKETING Newspaper subscription sales, Friday evenings, Saturdays and Sundays, indi vidual account assignments, commis sion only, experience preferred, but not required. To apply: complete an application at the Eagle, 1729 Briarcrest Drive, Bryan, Texas. Qualified applicants will be con tacted by telephone. NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F EXCEPTIONAL SUMMER OPPORTUNITY - Be a counselor at CAMP WAYNE in NE PENN. Warm, fun family atmos. Specialists needed in all sports, water front, camping, computers, arts. Campus Interviews arranged. Write 570 Broadway, Lynbrook, NY 11563 or call 516-599-4562. 117t5/23 Experienced student for child care in C/S home 8 hrs./week. References required. 693-0964. 117t3/25 RN, LVN Needed Full Time Part-Time, All Shifts, All Areas, Contact Director of Nursing, Navasota Regional Hospital (409) 825-6585 EOE. 114t3/16 Part-time assistant for doctor's office. Typing required, minimum 45-50 WPM. Apply at 3020 E. 29th St, Bryan. 108 tin Earn $480. weekly - $60. per hundred circulars mailed. Guaranteed. Work at home and participate in our Company project mailing Circulars and assembling Send stamped self addressed envelope ' liforr materials. JK.B Mailcompany PO Box 25, Castaic, California 91310. 115t4/3 A Warm Loving Community of Christians Needs an organist / choir director at St. Paul's Episcopal Church, NAVASOTA (22 miles south). Call (collect) 409-825- 7726. 115t3/27 ♦ NOTICE 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 10213/31 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 10213/31 Defensive Driving, Ticket Dismissal, Dates, Times, You’ll Have Fun!!! 693-1322. 91t5/8 * SERVICES WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu scripts, reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614. 117t4/17 TYPING/WORD PROCESSING, Fast, Accurate, Guaranteed. Papers, Dissertations. Diana 764-2772. 110t3/17 Ready Resume Service. 24 hour turn around. Info taken by phone. 693-2128. 103t4/17 Typing. Prompt. Reasonable. No Job Too Small. Payne. (409)823-7723. Anytime. 103t4/l Versatile Word Processing. Term Papers, Reports, Thesis, Resumes, Dissertations, Graphics. LASERW RITER QUALITY. Best Prices. Call 696-2052. 83t5/8 % 4WANTED WANTED Individuals with sore throat pain to participate in an over the counter medication trial. $25.- $100. monetary incen tive. 776-6236 ADOPTION - NOT ABORTION: loving, financially secure couple anxious to legally adopt Caucasian infant. Will help with expenses. Please answer our prayers. Call collect anytime 313-557-5433. 117t3/27 • FOR RENT AIRLINES, CRUISELINES HIRING! Summer. Ca reer! Good Pay. Travel. Call For Guide, Cassette, Newsservice! (916) 944-4444 Ext. 127. 117t3/25 Summer Jobs: Houston Area. We are hiring managers and lifeguards to work at our swimming pools this summer. Salary range $700./$900. plus lessons. 713- 270-5858. 117t4/3 Special! Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx. 1 Bdrm.: $150. /2 Bdrm.: $175. Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5 p.m. Business/Scientific Programmers Needed - Tx, Ok, Ks, Co, Mo, Ne locations. InfoService Box 4688, Wichita, Ks. 67204. 117t3/27 2 Bdrm APT NORTHGATE $200., 1 Bdrm BILLS PAID $190., LARGE 2 Bdrm, 1095 SPRINGS, GA RAGE, FENCE $300. 779-3700. 117t3/27 AGGIE ACRES - 2 Bdrm, 1 Bath. Duplex. Central air and heat. Pets o.k. Stables nearby. 823-8903 (or 846- 1051 for L.B.). 1 17t4/17 Large one bedroom, furnished apartment. Close to campus. 846-3050. Hurry only one left! $225. plus util ity plan. 84tfn 2 Bdrm House, Wellborn area. $250/mo. 693-0713, 690-0376. diced yard. 10513/31 Carriage house in historic west Bryan $165. includes water. Prefer couple or grad, student, consider trade out for services. 822-1229 after 4 pm. 115t3/13 Large 2 bdrm., 2 bath near AXcM, shuttle, w/d, call 846- 5735 days or 846-1633 evenings ask for Paul. 92tfn Preleasing Now! 2 & 3 bdrm duplexes i 846-2471,776-6856. • the Hilton 83tufn ♦ FOR SALE Is It True You Can Buy Jeeps for $44. through the U.S. Government? Get the facts today! Call 1-312-742- 1142 Ext. 8390. 117t3/23 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. H7t3/27 Cheap auto parts, used. Pic-A-Part, Inc. '78 and older 3505 Old Kurten Road, Bryan. 102tfn MITSUBISHI, '84, Starion Turbo, leather interior, sunroof, cruise. $6500. Call Paul, 846-5186 or 846- 4783. 104t3/30 ♦ FREE FREE PERSIAN CAT TO GOOD HOME. 764-7162. 1 17t3/25 • MISCELLANEOUS Vintage jewelry Sc hats. Attic Antiques. 118 S Bryan (Downtown). 822-7830. I I6t3/26 OYSTER BAR Coronas Happy Hour 3-6:30 Oysters $3 25 /doz COMING TOMORROW! Chick Willis blues recording artist Fri: & FRIENDS Sat: Julius Alillei' THE UNTOUCHABLES 103 Boyett next to Campus Theater 846-3497 • Books • Gifts • Supplies Hours: M-F 7:45-6 Sat 9-5 845-8681 Soviet official: Demands of U.S may be sabotaging arms talks MOSCOW (AP) — Veteran arms control ne gotiator Viktor Karpov said Sunday the United States may be trying to scuttle breakthroughs in medium-range missile talks with demands about short-range nuclear weapons and with other pro posals. “There is increasing evidence that the United States does not really desire the elimination of medium-range missiles in Europe, that the ‘zero option’ was a bluff from the very outset,” Karpov said. Elimination of medium-range missiles in Eu rope, the so-called “zero option,” was first pro posed by President Reagan in his first term. Progress toward an agreement was blocked by wrangling over U.S. deployments of medium- range missiles and announcement of the U.S. “Star Wars” research program. On Feb. 28, Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorba chev offered to negotiate an agreement on elimi nating U.S. and Soviet medium-range missiles from Europe without linkage to other issues, in cluding Star Wars — the Strategic Defense Initia tive for a space-based missile defense system. The NATO allies welcomed the development, but expressed concern over Warsaw Pact superi ority in conventional arms and Soviet deploy ment of short-range nuclear missiles in East Ger many and Czechoslovakia. Gorbachev said the issue of short-range mis siles could be dealt with after a medium-range pact. The United States has no short-range nu clear missiles in Western Europe. dis Karpov, a longtime Soviet disarmament nego tiator, in January became head of the Foreign Ministry’s newly created arms control office. His statements came in an interview published Sun day by Izvestia, the Soviet government newspa per. “The proposal put forward in Geneva by the American delegation foresees the possibility of iile; re-equipping medium-range missiles, in part, shing 2 missiles, into missiles of Pershing 2 missiles, into missiles of a lesser dis tance,” he said. “Factually, for this it is only nec essary to remove the second stage from the Per shing 2. “That means that virtually all 108 Pershing 2s would remain in Europe, with the preservation of the installations to service them. Above all, the United States proposes not to destroy the cruise missiles deployed in Europe, but to move them out for deployment on ships and submarines.” In other words, Washington obviously would like to preserve all these medium-range weapons, but in another guise.” If U.S. officials “wish to palm off on us a scrap of paper as a cover for the preservation of the U.S. nuclear missile potential in Europe, we will not agree to that,” Karpov said. The Soviet proposal on medium-range weap ons would require dismantling U.S. weapons de ployed in West Germany, Britain, Belgium, the Netherlands and Italy, and Soviet tnedium j weapons targeted on Western Europe, five-year period. Each side could keepl((| dium-range missiles — the United States | territory, the Soviets on the Asian conlinera| A U.S. counterproposal was made Maidl Geneva, site of the arms control talks, liindl provisions for on-site verifications. U.S. o!5| said they were optimistic an agreementcoiS reached soon af ter the issues of verificaiiod! short-range missiles were “nailed down." ® There are 31b U.S. and, by Soviet couufe Soviet mid-range missiles in Europe. Thtf missiles have single warheads, the SovietT three. U.S. cruise missiles have a range of i 1,500 miles, and Pershing 2s, all deplovti West Germany, 1,080 miles. The Soviet5" have a 3,000-mile range. Some Western estimates say the Soviet!J 650 shorter-range missiles in Europe, theSI SS-22s and SS-23s with ranges of fromSOOlf miles. Reagan and Gorbachev reached ltd agreement on medium-range missiles; October summit in Iceland, but theSovittii linked a final accord to U.S. concessionsons appe frorr capons testing The Geneva arms talks are in recessuncii 23. Dog track owner to donate $1.3 million to Oral Roberts ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — A mil lionaire dog track owner said Sun day he’ll go on television to person ally give $>1.3 million to evangelist Oral Roberts, but said the gift has nothing to do with Roberts’ claim that he might die if he didn’t reach a fund-raising goal. Roberts said in March 1986 that God had given him a year to raise $8 million for scholarships so Oral Rob erts University’s medical-school graduates could afford to be mis sionaries in Third World countries. Benefactor Jerry Collins is not a follower of Roberts and said he’s do nating the final $1.3 million to help the medical program, not because of the pioneer television evangelists’ statements that God would “call him home” at the end of March if the fund-raising drive failed. “The whole purpose of this is edu cation and my interest in it,” Collins told reporters Sunday before eating lunch with Roberts’ son, Richard. On Saturday, Collins said of Rob erts, “To be sure, he doesn’t have to commit hara-kiri now.” “I think he needs psychiatric treatment,” Collins told the Orlando Sentinel. “He needs to relax . . . and get back on the main street.” The check will be turned over Monday during Richard Roberts’ live morning television broadcast from Tulsa, Okla., the headquarters of the Oral Roberts Foundation and home of Oral Roberts University. Richard Roberts, who flew here to meet Collins, said his father would be on the program. In Tulsa, Roberts, 69, went up into his prayer tower on the univer sity campus Sunday to fast and pray. He said last week that he would be spending much time in the tower, in the center of the 500-acre campus, until the end of the month. Roberts told his followers on Jan. 4 that God had told him his life would end at the close of March if the money were not raised. Roberts, who has denied requests for inter views, indicated in February that he believed he could die in the tower. nated millions to other educational Several years ago, he projects, boueht tl >ught the Clyde Beatty-Cole Broth ers Circus and donated it to Florida State University. FSU sold the circus for $2 million. Recently, Collins helped New College in Sarasota pay for a $ 1 million library. Collins, who served four terms in the Florida House as a Democrat, owns the Sarasota and Sanford-Or- lando kennel clubs, which handled $50 million in bets last year. Collins says he has cash assets of $14 million and is worth $75 million. Roberts has opposed pari-mutuel betting, and just last week the Okla homa legislature voted down a bill to legalize greyhound racing. New PTL host appeals for money to pay loan “I’m going to be in and out of the prayer tower praying and fasting until victory comes or God calls me home,” he said in a letter to follow- Asked what he thought of Roberts and his activities, Collins said, “It’s not my way of promoting, but. . . .” Collins, 79, noted that he has do- FORT MILL, S.G. (AP) — The Rev. Richard Dortch, in his First Sunday sermon since succeeding evangelist Jim Bakker in the PTL pulpit, asked the often-applauding and sometimes-weeping congrega tion to give money to “let the world know this ministry is going to stay strong.” “We will not be defeated,” Dortch said during the two-hour service at Heritage USA, now controlled by the Rev. Jerry Falwell, founder of the Moral Majority. “We will move forward, and we will see our God walk us through the storm,” he told the congregation of 2,300. That storm began Thursday when Bakker admitted he had been black mailed after a sexual encounter seven years ago. He turned over his 500,000-member PTL ministry to Falwell. Dortch, who had been executive director of PTL under Bakker, was elevated to PTL president and host of its television ministry. He told the congregation Sunday that it should be thankful for Fal- well’s rescue of PTL. “I want to say on behalf of this church how deeply we appreciate Jerry Falwell reaching out to us,” Dortch said. His comment was greeted with a standing ovation. Falwell, who delivered his own sermon Sunday at his ministry’s headquarters in Virginia, has ac knowledged that he faces problems in operating PTL, which stands for “People That Love” and “Praise The Lord.” The Charlotte (N.C.) Observer re ported that PTL officials have been seeking a loan to refinance a long term. term debt and to raise cash. Falwell said the loan would be for more than $50 million; PTL documents say it would be backed with property at Heritage USA used as collateral. The complex includes a 500-room hotel, shopping mall, cafeteria, con vention center, water-amusement park, offices, a school, a television studio and several real-estate devel opments. Falwell’s takeover came two weeks after Bakker’s admission that his wife, Tammy Faye Bakker, was be ing treated for drug dependency at a clinic near their home in Palm Springs, Calif. Don Hardister, who described himself as Bakker’s security guard, was quoted Saturday by the Los An geles Times as saying Mrs. Bakker was at the Betty Ford Center. The Bakkers are secluded in a Spanish-style home protected by closed-circuit television and guards, the Times said. Dortch said the full story has yet to be told on Bakker’s reasons for transferring the ministry to Falwell, but he told the congregation to be patient. ‘If there are things you don’t un derstand about this,” he said, “have a little faith and a little confidence. “The real story as to what hap pened in the last few weeks has not been told. In God’s time, it will all come out.” Bakker’s ministry traditionally has been Pentecostal, while Falwell is a fundamentalist Baptist. After a par ticularly upbeat rendition of “His Eyes on the Sparrow,” Dortch ex claimed, “We Bapticostals really love that.” Final jurors to be chosef... for Goetz trie* Ul NEW YORK (AP\ - f ■ j-j than two years after he sImHFj teen-agers in a subwav, Goetz is about to get hisduH argue that he was a crime Jp arrested for fighting bad | . SEA He is charged with atMjB n d G murder, and final juiy«D e ^P s I >< y m s i< x l.i \ I he |ui:H . point to decide whether theelecr iurge The ixx'iiilist w<is justified wliei V ega snot four youths whosutmf deficit him and demanded $5 onil vance t way Dec. 22, 1984. I Sixtl Goetz, free on $50.00. ( to tie t said he pulled out his unlices > ho th .38-caliber pistol and startecl ends 1< ing because the youths werc| 4ime ra ing to rob him. The youthsc they were panhandling moDfl play video games. When Goetz surrenders! police in Concord, N.H, 1 more than a week on thenal told them, “1 knew what! were going to do. You stand? It was at thatpoimii cided I was going to kill’emf The shootings and comments touched off a nasi debate on vigilante justice! tially, a grand jury refused It j diet Goetz on anything mon nous th.m .t weapons (E, creating an outcry among!) and others who sawtheshoci as unjustified and racist. A second grand jury wass moned and, after learning! Goetz shot Cabey a second US he lay wounded, returned tempted murder charges judge threw out that indicffl in January 1986, but his dec! was reversed on appeal i charges reinstated. The twelve jurors and few ternates will be chosen fi nearly 140 prospective jw screened during one-daya* sessions conducted since Dee her by Justice Stephen Crane Goetz, 39, tall, thin andbie had been the victim of a prw mugging in which he wash beaten and suffered torn i cartilage. Unrepentant about shootings, Goetz says! it again if he had to. While much was made of fact that Goetz is white and four youths are black, GoeB® tends race had nothing todot the shooting and should | part in jury selection. South African guerrillas refuse to cease JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) — Archbishop Desmond Tutu said Sunday after his first formal talks with the African National Con gress that he asked the guerrilla group to consider a cease-fire, but ANC leader Oliver Tambo refused. Tutu spoke at an airport news conference on returning to Johan nesburg from two days of talks with ANC leaders at their headquarters in Lusaka, Zambia. The ANC, outlawed in South Af rica, is the largest guerrilla organiza tion fighting to overthrow this coun try’s white-led government. “I was asking them to review their own position, whether they ought to consider the renunciation of the armed struggle, in order to throw the ball back in the court of the South African government,” said Tutu, the black leader of South Afri ca’s Anglican Church and a top op ponent of apartheid. But Tambo said in bidding fare well to Tutu at Lusaka’s airport, “There is no reason why negotia tions should not start without our necessarily declaring a cease-fire, least of all a unilateral one.” Tutu, winner of the 1984 Nobel “It is no use pretending that the ANC will not be a part of the nego tiations for a new constitution and that they are not a very significant factor in present-day South Africa, ” Tutu saia. “To think otherwise is to These are not bloodthirsty vampires, but people who love South Africa passionately and who want to see a new dispensation in our country. — Archbishop Desmond Tutu Peace Prize, embraced Tambo be fore leaving the Zambian capital but said his church “still differs with the ANC over its use of violence.” Tutu also met Sunday with Presi dent Kenneth Kaunda of Zambia. He said Kaunda suggested it might take more than one meeting “to bring the ANC to see some of the points I was trying to convey.” have buried our head in the sand.” Advocates of majority rule in South Africa demand a new consti tution to do away with apartheid, which by law and custom establishes a racially segregated society in which the 24 million blacks have no vote in national affairs. The 5 million whites control the economy and maintain separate districts, schools andt services. The prelate said he opp ANC’s use of bombings otage but supports its non-racial democracy. He he suggested a cease-fire, “it tened very carefully, and cussed it very seriously.” He said: “These are notl thirsty vampires, but peopk love South Africa passional: who want to see a new disptf in our country. These peopli here, they want to come no come home with honor.” The South African govefl considers the ANC a terrorisj nization and says it will not® negotiating with it until thej renounces violence. Tambo, the ANC preside:] said the number of people ANC guerrillas is a small frac? the number of blacks killed t f rity forces. Oflirijl !>V ftp »n ihpj 'hp t. C.>,