The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 01, 1987, Image 10

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    Battalion Classifieds
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• wotice
(OnMMMNi
*)&e>T-
‘?rt«C«*r -
- , —-*C*L
AUGUST GRADUATES
RACE OVER TO
THE STUDENT FINANCE CENTER
ORDER YOUR
GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS
DURING DEAD WEEK
LAST DAY JUNE 11
217MSC
MONDAY - FRIDAY
SAM-4PM 145t5/
ANNOUNCEMENTS
THERE ARE STILL PLENTY
OF OFFICIAL TEXAS A&M
GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS
AVAILABLE IN THE
MSC STUDENT FINANCE CENTER
ROOM 217 MON-FRI 8am-4pm
MSC
TUDENT FINANCE
ENTER
$
0
15.645 % *
CURRENT
QUARTER
COUPON
INCOME PAID QUARTERLY IN U.S. DOLLARS
J.R MORGAN & CO.
FLOATINQ RATE
AUSTRALIAN DOLLAR
NOTES
AAA by Moody’s and S&P
The
Jameson Group. Inc.
CALL TODAY FOR ALL THE FACTS
1-800-USA-2580 - Ext. E-36
Member NASD and SIPC
• FORRENT
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 102ta/31
THE GOLDEN RULE
Summer and/or Fall/Spring
Openings for Men and Women, Chris-
tian-like, non-smoking
Telephones in, Deluxe Apts
UTILITIES AND CABLE PAID
Free Laundry, storage, Bus
CALL/ASK: 693-5560 TODAY!
$150./mo. Share B/B, $250./mo. Own B/B
SUMMER SPECIAL: $240
Newly decorated Executive
Office Suites
Near University. All bills and
janitorial.
Start at $95./mo. Call 846-4783
Special!
Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx.
1 Bdrm.: $150. / 2 Bdrm.: $175.
Call 846-8878 or
774-0773 after 5 p.m.
Luxury 2 Bdrm, 1 */2 Bath, washer 8c dryer, water paid,
near campus. $275./$325. 696-0632, 693-0551. 132t5/8
♦ FOR RENT
CASA BLANCA APTS
SPRING SPECIAL!
2 bdrm apt. for 2 occupants
for $255. per month
Enjoy your own private
bedroom at an affordable price
•Close
•Quiet
•Shuttle bus
4110 College Main
846-1413
3 Bedroom, 2 Bath four-plex, Washer/Dryer, near
A&M and Mall, $250-$350 /month (summer rates),
pre-leasing for fall. 846-1712 and 693-0982. 125t5/l
Bargain! 2 bdrm, washers and dryers, $175./summer,
$ 195./fall. 779-3550, 696-2038. 128t5/6
AGGIE ACRES - 2 Bdrm, 1 Bath, Duplex. Central air
and heat. Pets o.k. Stables nearby. 823-8903 (or 846-
1051 for L.B.). 117t4/17
Large one bedroom, furnished apartment. Close to
campus. 846-3050. Hurry only one left! $225. plus util
ity plan. 84tfn
1 & 2 bdrm. apt. A/C & Heat. Wall to Wall carpet. 512
& 515 Northgate / First St. 409-825-2761. No Pets.
140tfn
TAHOE APARTMENTS 3535 Plainsman Lane,
Bryan, Texas. 846-1771. WE LOVE AGGIE STU
DENTS. 139t7/16
Must Sublease! 2 bedroom, 2 bath, poolside apartment
with shuttle bus, perfect for summer! Call Bruce 764-
7366. 139t5/6
Preleasing Now! 2 & 3 bdrm duplexes near the Hilton
846-2471.776-6856. 83tufn
CASA BLANCA APTS
Private Bedroom Dorm Plan
Summer $170. per month
Fall-Spring $195. per month
All bills paid - furnished
4110 College Main
846-1413
2 Bcfrm Apartment in modem 4-plex in
Bryan near shuttle, 1.7 miles from campus.
Dishwasher, disposal, w/d conn., trees.
$200./mo. June & July. $265./mo.
beginning August 1.
822-2892, 693-7761. 139t 5/ 8
Rooms for rent $175 plus bills, washer & dryer. 693-
0939. 138t5/8
1 bdrm apt unfurnished, $190, 2 bdrm unfurnished,
$200, efficiency-bills pd., 415 College Main, $220. 779-
3700. 145t5/6
HELP!
Tenants Needed!
2Vz blocks from campus
1 & 2 Bdrm efficiencies
Cheap Rent!
260-9637
2 Bdrm, 1 Bath, condominium, $375./mo. + deposit.
W/D, patio, miniblinds, shed, 2101 Barak Lane, #24.
775-5050 daytime, 696-1934 nights. 145t5/6
• FOR LEASE
One room walk to campus. $90./mo. + ‘/i utilities. Billy
846-4247. 142t5/8
Summer lease available on spacious 2 bedroom, 1 bath
duplex on Dominik. $320./month (furnished or unfur
nished). 693-8647. 144t5/5
• GARAGESALE
• FOR SALE
ROOMMATE WANTED
OUTRAGEOUS your own bed
room, your own door in a house
only five small minutes from
Northgate with you very own feet.
Call now 764-8801, Cyrill after
10pm. 14415/1
Aggie needs roommate starting July in Dallas. Call
Kirstin 214-394-7739. 145tE/4
• HELP WANTED
SUMMER WORK FOR RENT
Apartment provided for summer in
exchange for repairs and/or
ranchwork from May 18 to June 5.
846-1413
4110 College Main 145t5/7
Babysitter Wanted. Loving, energetic person to care
for three children full-time in my home. Summer or
longer. Transportation necessary. 822-1751 or 845-
7388. 14 lt5/l
Experienced church organist. Resume required. Call
779-1591. 14415/5
FATBURGERS NOW HIRING DRIVERS. CALL
846-4234. 145t5/l
• SERVICES
MANUSCRIPT T YPIST-TECH & SCI EXP FROM
$ 1/PACE. 846-3046. 146t5/7
TYPING BY WANDA. Any kind, any length. Rea
sonable rates. 690-1 1 13. 146t6/3
Moving? We can HELP movin' <
. 846-MOVE (6683).
146t5/27
WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu
scripts, reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614.
' 137t5/8
Typing: Reportrs, theses, dissertations. Low Prices,
allf
Call Burtha 696-3785.
TYPING AND WORD PROCESSING. ALL KINDS.
12 YEARS EXPERIENCE. 764-2931. 140t5/8
Versatile Word Processing. Term Papers, Reports,
Thesis, Resumes, Dissertations, Graphics. LASERW
RITER QUALITY. Best Prices. Call 696-2052. 83t5/8
Defensive Driving, Ticket Dismissal. Dates, Times,
You’ll Have Fun!!! 693-1322. 9U5/8
Ready Resumes $ 18. info taken by phone. 693-2128.
132t5/8
TYPING/WORD PROCESSING, Fast, Accurate,
Guaranteed. Papers, Dissertations. Diana. 764-2772.
14U5/8
Reasonable, Fast, Accurate Typing Services. Call Pat
822-0235 Weekends/ After 5:30 Weekdays. 136t5/15
T YPING AND WORD PROCESSING. EAST, REA
SONABLE, QUICK TURNAROUND AVAILABLE.
693-1598. 13U5/8
Perfect Print, 1516 Echols. 822-1430. Expert Word
Processing, Resumes, Graphics. Guaranteed error free
Perfect Print. 822-1430. 125(5/6
• WANTED
Wanted
Patients with acute diarrhea to
participate in a 2 day
“at home study”
no blood collection involved.
$50 incentive for those cho
sen to participate.
Pauli Research Interna
tional
Call
776-6236.
i The Battalion
845-2611
Page 10/The Battalion/Friday, May 1, 1987
Multi Family Garage Sale, Saturday 9am-1pm at Uni
versity Married Housing on Avenue A off University
Ur. 145(5/1
TRAILER HOME 14x65 FULLY FURNISHED
VERY NICE, MUST BE MOVED FROM TRAILER
PARK. COLLEGE ST AT ION NO.: (409) 260-5680
SAN ANT ONIO NO.: (512) 698-2195 138(5/7
World and Nation
Registered yellow Labrador Retreiver puppies,
wormed, shots, beautiful animals. 846-6743. 146t5/6
Boa Contrictor, 4 Vi ft. Excellent terarium habitat with
lock. Best offer 764-7442. 14115/7
Cheap auto parts, used. Pic-A-Part, Inc. 78 and older.
3505 Old Kurten Road, Bryan. 102tfn
AFFORDABLE 1BM-PC/XT COMPAT IBLES $539.
INCLUDES 256KBRAM, 1-360KB DRIVE, KEY
BOARD, MONITOR. 640KBRAM, 2-360KB
DRIVES, 8MHZ TURBO. KEYBOARD, MONITOR:
$669. 20MB DRIVE: $359. 1200BAUD MODEM:
$109. CITIZEN 1201) PRINTER: $199. COMPUT
ERS, ETC. 693-7599. 138t4/27
Seized aircraft papers link
U.S. intelligence to Contras
House, Senate include documents in probe 1
Female to share duplex for summer $150./mo. + utili
ties. Your own bedroom/bathroom. Non-smoker. Pets
allowed. Sharia 260-2572. 143t5/4
Female, Townhouse close to campus $100./mo. own
bedroom and bath. 260-6969. 143t5/4
Full-time Summer Jobs available in the Houston area.
If you are looking for steady summer employment and
the opportunity to develop your Public relations and
marketing skills, slop by ManPower 707, Texas Ave.
Suite E. 100. 146t5/7
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
telephone number of a secret U.S.
intelligence operation in Honduras
was discovered in papers confiscated
by federal drug agents from a plane
they seized in Florida last month, the
Associated Press has learned.
A knowledgeable U.S. govern
ment source indicated this week that
the intelligence operation was aiding
the U.S.-backed Nicaraguan Con
tras. The papers, apparently belong
ing to the plane’s pilot, also contain
the names and telephone numbers
of top Contra leaders.
Lawrence E. Walsh, the indepen
dent counsel investigating the Iran-
Contra affair, has expressed interest
in the papers found abhard the air
craft, it was learned. The AP has ob
tained copies of some of the docu
ments.
House and Senate investigators
are examining the papers as part of
a wider inquiry into allegations that
crews who ferried supplies to the Ni
caraguan rebels brought plane loads
of drugs into the United States while
U.S. intelligence officials looked the
other way.
In one document, a calendar, the
names of two Contra officials are
handwritten on a page dated March
7, 1987, just weeks before the U.S.
Drug Enforcement Administration
seized the plane March 24 in Char
lotte County, Fla., because it was
wanted in connection with an illegal
drug operation.
Authorities say they found no
drugs on the plane.
Another entry for March 7 says,
“Called Tom Wire ...” A separate
page of what appeared to be the
same calendar book lists a telephone
number for Wire.
Reached at the Honduras tele
phone number by the AP, a man
with an American accent who an
swered to the name of Wire said he
was “connected with the military. We
are the local military group.”
The man said he had no military
rank and referred all calls to the U.S.
Embassy in Tegucigalpa. He then
gave a reporter the correct embassy
telephone number. “W’ire” said he
could not recall anyone named
Frank Moss, the pilot of the plane.
The embassy had no comment.
The U.S. source, speaking only on
condition he not be named, said the
Honduran operation “has intelli
gence connotations” linked to a civil
ian agency he would not name. He
would not discuss whether it was the
Central Intelligence Agency.
He indicated the ph<
was that of a U.S. civilian
agency in Honduras,
me number
intelligence
the staging
area tor the rebels fighting the Saudi
inista government in Nicaragua;
The CIA has aided the rebels since: HO
congressional ban on U.S. aid tottwxas
Contras ended last October. |& v i n
Jack Hook, a Drug Enforcemerthe Sc
Administration spokesman in Mirecoicl
ami, said authorities believe the DCjional
4 — sought since 18 people wereimbne c
dieted in a drug-smuggling ringtnjhis we
years ago — was “purchased wiiiM"! |
drug money for the intent of smujHurra
gling drugs.” Bews
The Contras and the CIA haitBte tli
denied any involvement in drugtr;It seen
flicking. just pa
“CIA does not engage in orcoJ Mur
done drug smuggling. Drug traffidiree ag
ing is against the law and CIAdocB ' I re
not violate U.S. laws,” agenoBot, n
spokesman Sharon Foster said. l(Bd bt
fact, the CIA cooperates withottitBoustc
U.S. government enforcementagei)Bel, sa
cies to eliminate drug smuggi/shop ]
she said. Biere
Moss says he bought the DC-4bch,nice
than tw'o years ago, but he has bet,Bow.'
unable to prove ownership, Hocl A&I'
said. Moss nas not been arrested Aniedt
the case. By was
On the plane, agents found matl “I c;
and manifests, the calendar ) said. “1
other documents relating to Mo«jpcl co
aii cargo company, Hondu-Cirhad be
Cargo Inc. of Ceorgetown, Crari
Carman island.
27-year-old American
buried in Nicaragua;
U.S. blamed by family
MATACALPA, Nicaragua (AP)
— Benjamin Linder, an American
volunteer killed in an attack by U.S.-
backed Contra rebels, was buried
with honors Thursday in this pro
vincial city among the people he was
trying to help.
The 27-year-old mechanical engi
neer from Portland, Ore., and two
Nicaraguan militiamen were killed
Tuesday near the hamlet of La Cain-
aleona in northern Nicaragua,
where Linder worked as an unpaid
volunteer in a rural electrification
project.
- “He believed that through work
he could make life better for (the Ni
caraguan) people and help
strengthen democracy,” Linder’s fa
ther, David, said during the funeral
ceremony.
“It is clear to me that people here
understand what he did,” he said.
“My family and I are very proud to
have Benjamin interred in your
city.”
The elder Linder spoke in English
at the cemetery and his wife, Elisa
beth, translated his words into Span
ish.
President Daniel Ortega, who es
corted the family from Managua
and was present at the funeral, com
pared Linder’s death to the John
Donne poem and the title of Ernest
Hemingway’s novel, “For Whom
The Bell Tolls.”
“For whom the bells tolls, Hemi
ngway would ask,” Ortega said. It
tolled for Linder and seven Euro
pean volunteers killed by Contra at
tacks in Nicaragua since 1983, he
said.
Linder’s family, including his
brother John and sister Miriam, flew
to Managua from the United States
earlier in the day for the funeral,
which was attended by many Ameri
can volunteer workers and top offi
cials of the leftist Sandinista govern
ment.
When Linder’s parents arrived at
a hotel in the capital Thursday
morning, Ortega embraced Mrs.
Linder and was heard to say: “It is a
blow to every one of us.”
State radio said the leftist Sandi
nista government had awarded the
Order of Commander Jose Benito
Escobar to the dead volunteer. It is
the highest citation for workers and
had never been given to a foreigner.
Shortly after arrival, David Linder
said of his son: “He worked here and
he gave his life here, and he must be
buried here. He belongs here. He
wanted to make this a better place
for people to live.”
At the airport, the Linder party
received an emotional welcome from
Foreign Minister Miguel d’Escoto,
his deputy Victor Hugo Tinoco and
Ortega’s wife, Rosario Murillo.
When asked who killed his son,
Linder said: “Who killed Ben?
Someone who paid someone who
paid someone who paid someone
and so on down the line to the presi
dent of the United States.” His voice
broke and he wept.
U.S. Lutherans
unite to elect
head bishop
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -I
M ost of the nation’s Lutheran!
united Thursday, ending two!
centuries of separation, and ini-1
mediately plunged into a drawn
out election of their new presid i
ing bishop.
Delegat es of three merging de
nominations, themselves largely
products of a long succession of
the gradual interweaving off
about 50 strains of Lutherans/
unanimously approved founding!
documents of their merged def
nomination.
The Evangelical Lutherani,
Church in America combines:
membership of 5.3 million peo !
pie, fourth-largest in American!
Protestantism. Its constitution
pledged ecumenical cooperation
with other churches to “foster
Christian unity.
Promptly after the historicacj
lion, which followed a service of!
prayers and hymns, the conven
tion went into a prolonged voting
process for the new top officer.
Leading on the first four bal!
lots were Bishop David W. Preus
head of one merged body, the
American Lutheran Church, and
Bishop Herbert W. Chilstrom;
head of the Minnesota regional
synod of another, the Lutheranj
Church in America.
Close behind was the Rev. Wil-I
liam H. Lazareth, an internation I
aly influential theologian and:/
N.Tiar f'it*/ r'voefrxY'
New York City pastor.
COUNTDOWN ’87
Tonights the first night of the rest of your life!
This is it folks! Hope you all enjoy the weekend
thoroughly and Congrats to those graduating in
May or August.
P.S. THE END
Sincerely,
The Class of’87
Class Council
Uni
Na
B