The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 27, 1987, Image 4
Page 4/The Battalion/Wednesday, May 27, 1987 Battalion Classifieds World and Nation m FOR RENT lANGLEWOOD south CURES Apartment Hunter's All bills paidl 1, 2, 3 bdrm. apartments 2 swimming pools 2 laundry rooms Exercise room Party room Covered parking Convenient location 1/2 mo. free rent with 6 mo. lease or more Ask' about our Great Giveaway! 693-1111 c laijj*leWood §outl^ Mon.-Frl. 8-7 Sat. 10-5 Sun. 1-4 4li‘Harvey Rd. LEASING NOW FOR SUMMER! ALL BILLS PAID! As Low As $225 •Extra Large Pool •Tennis Court •Sauna •Balconies & Patios •All Electric Kitchen •Individual A/C & Heat •On Ground Mgmt. & Security •24 Hr. Emergency Maintenance •Ceiling Fans Open Daily Mon-Fri 9-5 Open Sat. 10-5 Sun. 1-5 Wm. J. Garrett ‘47 Where one check pays all! 1601 Holleman College Station, Texas 409/693-6716 ATTENTION AGGIES! Great rates for Summer Leases & storage Fantastic rates for Fall & Spring se mesters. 2 Bdrm, AVz bath, very clean, on shuttle bus, vaulted ceilings w/ceiling fans Avail. University Hills Apts 1007-D Spring Loop 846-2676 Prof, managed by Stapleton Inter ests, Inc. 14716/3 • SERVICES Reasonable, Fast, Accurate Typing Services. Call Pat 822-0235 Weekends/ After 5:30 Weekdays. 136t5/15 WORD I’ROCKSSING. All kinds. Kxpci icnced. De pendable. Reasonable Rates. ACTOMA 1 KD (II.ERI CA!. Sl.RYlCKS. (i<i:l-l()7(l. 152l5/27 Moving? We can HELP movin’ on. 846-MOVE (6683). 146t5/27 TYPING BY WANDA. Any kind, any length. Rea sonable rates. 690-1113. 146t6/3 • WANTED 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 Special! Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx. 1 Bdrm.: $150. / 2 Bdrm.: $175. Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5 p.m. 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. Call Pauli Research Interna tional 776-6236 PIANO FOR SALE: Wanted Responsible party to as sume small monthly payments on piano. See locally. Call manager at 618-234-1306. 15476/16 • FOR SALE Room for rent, all bills paid $250./mo call Kelly 693- 1177. 154t6/10 One block from campus. Special one time offer. One bdrm $145./mo. Two bdrm $195./mo. Going fast. Call 822-2188. 150t5/27 1 & 2 bdrm. apt. A/C & Heat. Wall to Wall carpet. 512 & 515 Northgate / First St. 409-825-2761. No Pets. 140tfn Summer months only! 2 Bdrm, 1 lA Bath, special low rates. 696-0632, 693-0551. 153t6/30 LUXURY 2 Bdrm. 1 Bath studio fourplex, washer & dryer conn, $250./ $325. 312 manuet Dr. C.S. 696-0632 693-0551. 153t6/30 One. two & three bedroom apartments near campus. $ 105./$275. 779-3550, 696-2038. 154t6/12 Quiet room with private bath. Private home near cam pus. 696-7840. 153t6/10 Available Now! 1 and 2 Bedroom Apts. $190./$245. Year Round! 846-0880, 268-2015. 153t6/30 Walk lo A&M. I&2 Bedroom Eourplexes. Summer K- Fall Rales. 776-2300. weekends 1-279-2967. 15216/9 2 Ixhin iinliitu with stove, reltig. $200./mo + elect $50. dep. Shuttle Bus 846-8055. l52t0/3 Large one bedroom, furnished apartment. Close to campus. 846-3050. Hurry only one left! $225. plus util ity plan. 84tfn ^L ttlc i^L nt,ques S. Bryan Bryan, Texas 23% NIVERSARY ALE 5 ^ J^une 6 C* EXCEPT ITEMS PLREPOY SOLE PRICED!) 15015/18 LIQUIDATION SALE Must pay for school. Fisher compo nent stereo system, Honda CB400t motorcycle, and answering machine. All must go this week. Please call 693-8827 and leave a message, will return call with specs and prices. 15415/2 Cheap auto parts, used. Pic-A-Fart, Inc. 78 and older. 3505 Old Kurten Road, Bryan. l()2tfn Need Summer lease only? Call us. Two bedroom, some bills paid, $I95-$205. 779-0480, 696-2038. 148t6/12 Soundproof cover for 80 column printer $50. 775- 0400. 153t6/3 Preleasing Now! 2 & 3 bdrm duplexes near the Hilton 846-2471.776-6856. 83tufn TAHOE APARTMENTS 3535 Plainsman Lane. Bryan. Texas. 846-1771. WE LOVE AGGIE ST U DENTS. 139t7/16 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. 153t5/20 • ROOMMATE WANTED • SERVICES ()\vn loom walk t<; 84<MLM7. umpiiN £<)<)./mo. + futilities. Bilh I52t5/‘J7 SARAH WATTS PIANIST, TEACHER Degree, Piano, and Two Years’ Piano Faculty, Baylor University “SERIOUS STUDENTS OF ALL AGES” 500 E. 25th 822-6856 14514/30 House near campus $150. All bills paid. Non-smoker, male. 696-3884. 149t5/20 HELP WANTED Houston Chronical is currently excepting applications for summer route carrier positions. Routs require working early morning hours, income ranges between $400.-$(>00. per/mo if interested call James (>93-2323 for an apointment. 15^t6/12 Kx|x*i ienced Church organist, resume required, di van 779-1591. 152(5/27 Flexible I lours: Pat 1-lime evening and afternoon shifts available. Applv Sthulmaii 0 Theater 2002 Fast 29ih St. Bryan, during business hours. 152(5/27 • HELP WANTED ♦ NOTICE ACUTE LOW BACK PAIN STUDY Persons needed with recent, painful low back injury. Take one dose of medication and evaluate for 4 hours. Volun teers will be compensated for their time and cooperation. G&S Studies, Inc. 846-5933 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 15.645°/°* CURRENT QUARTER COUPON INCOME PAID QUARTERLY IN U.S. DOLLARS J.R MORGAN & CO. FLOATING 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 ACUTE DIARRHEA STUDY Persons with acute, uncom plicated diarrhea needed to evaluate medication being considered for over-the- counter sale. G&S Studies, Inc. 846-5933 15316/3 NEW CREDI I CARD!!! NO ONI. REIT NED!!! ALSO INFORMATION ON RECEIVING VISA. MASTER CARD WITH NO CREDIT < HICK TOR Dl . MTS ( ATI.! 602-248-0779 I N I 505. l:52t6/3 LOCAL ADVERTISING RATE CARD Effective September 1,19B6 The Battalion Division of Student Publications Department of Journalism Texas A&M University College Station. Texas 77843 SALES OFFICE ENGLISH ANNEX Ross Streel, Campus PHONE: 409-845-2696 or 7 BUSINESS OFFICE Room 230 Reed McDonald Building Ross and Ireland Streets, Campus PHONE: 409-845-2611 AH ril«* on thli card rafer lo Standard Advartlalng Unlta LOCAL DISPLAY AD RATES Monday* Tuesday At Ease •Back to School edition Monday, Sept. 1, 1986, will be charged at higher rate. Special rates for officially recognized Texas A&M Campus organizations. Classified Display: $5.70 per column inch. Classified (regular): 30 cents per word with minimum charge of $3 for each day. If ad runs consecutive days, to tal charges will be reduced 10 percent for each added day up to maximum of 40 percent deduction for 5 days or more. Color: Only spot color available. Charge for each time run, in addition to column inch charges: $50 if in At Ease or on Monday or Tuesday (with exception of Back to School issue which is charged at higher rate); $90 if ad runs Wednesday, Thursday or Friday. Color limited to ads 60 inches or larger. Inserts: Pre-printed material will be inserted into only non mail copies of The Battalion, and will be charged at $50 per 1.000 copies, or $45 per 1.000 if 15.000 or more are inserted. (Special reduced rate is available on most Fri days for first customer.) Minimum inserting order is 5.000. Delivery of inserts must be one week in advance, properly bundled, boxed or stacked on skids. If insert has unusual folding, or is unusual shape, size or stock, sample must be submitted before final acceptance, and will be rejected if mechanical inserting is impossible. Reverses and double burns: $10 each in addition to other charges. • Books • Gifts • Supplies Hours: M-F 7:45-6 Sat 9-5 845-8681 Wanted Boys To Work On Summer Grain Harvest. 817-471-5642 or 817-471 -5794. 15116/3 Management position available w/loeul outdooi adver tising agency. Commission & profit share structure . Call for apt. 775-7885. 154t6/l 1 U.S. expanding duties^ of Navy in Persian Gulf . )M/ WASHINGTON (AP) — The Navy, in an unexpected first step to ward taking on expanded duties in the Persian Gulf, escorted a Kuwaiti merchant ship carrying U.S. arms to Bahrain on Monday, the Pentagon disclosed Tuesday night. The Kuwaiti cargo ship was carry ing American-made M-60 tanks that had been sold to Bahrain by the United States. The ship completed its journey Monday night “without incident,” the Pentagon said. The Defense Department, in a statement released in response to pi ess queries, said it decided to offer escort protection to the vessel be cause “it is important that the United States remain a reliable supplier of defense items to friendly countries.” “On a case-by-case basis, given the situation in the Persian Gulf, we will escort (such) shipments to friendly, non-belligerent countries,” the statement added. The disclosure came as' a surprise because the Reagan administration had previously announced plans only to provide escort protection to Kuwaiti oil tankers that changed their registry to the U.S. flag. That protection is expected to begin sometime early next month, accord ing to Pentagon sources. The administration had said noth ing before Tuesday about using U.S. warships to keep an eye on foreign vessels if they were carrying Ameri can-made arms. Although President Reagan and other top officials have vowed to proceed with the plan to allow Ku waiti tankers to change their regis try, the move has drawn criticism on Capitol Hill in the wake of the May 17 attack on the frigate USS Stark. The Stark was heavily damaged in an Iraqi air attack that left 37 sailors dead. Both the United States and Iraq have described that attack as in advertent. The Stark was part of the Navy’s Mideast Task Force, which normally consists of six or seven small warships that patrol the Persian Gulf to keep an eye on U.S. vessels. Although the attack on the Stark years o was (he first on an Anieiicaiu^'ti'iHy the Navy’s work in the gulffe n |tioiu come increasingly dangerouilei cause Iran and Iraq—whidiff AK.N been fighting each otherfoi Pj ,te 1 sc-\ ct i \ c.11 x h.i\ c stepped Wo. ld tac ks on commercial shippingBlf'Drh bid to c i ipple each other'seaii Bfl 1 / e<:l da\ And Calif, 1-0 vict which t to fore U.S. ceremony honor sailors killed in attac by Iraq on USS Stark DOVER AIR FORCE BASE, Del. (AP) — The remains of 36 of the men killed in a “strike of madness” on the USS Stark arrived Tuesday in the United States to a solemn cere mony attended by grieving relatives and fellow sailors. With a huge American flag as a backdrop, members of a Navy honor guard stood at attention behind each flag-draped coffin, set on cinder blocks in a hangar known as Memo rial Hall, while the Navy Band played the “Navy Hymn” and the national anthem. Adm. Carlisle A.H. frost, chief of naval operations, told relatives and others the deaths “are an ache in our hearts.” Thirty-seven sailors were killed in a May 17 Iraqi missile attack in the Persian Gulf. One sailor is missing and presumed dead. Of the 36 bodies returned to the base, the 35 that will be prepared here for burial were honored in the ceremony. The remains of another sailor. whose name was not released; request of the family, wasslij champ lex; Iasi twe Cal Sta U( LA And bo i h t game. home about 90 minutes bef® 2:30 p.m. ceremony. 'frost called the attack a‘sui madness." “Today, with heavy heart! mourn their tragic loss," hesaid "We find it hard to untb why fate has singled them frost said. “But we do kirn they were doing a tough job they died in the service o(; country, believing lo the end: wonderful ideals.” Ac ini I A l tenet Relatives, who were ovt with grief when the coffinsw loaded earlier from a C-141E jet, shed tears and console! other during the brief cert while state and local officials on. Charles C. Carson, base cian, said all of the remains* shipped to their hometowns the end of the week. I he fit expected to leave Wednesday Korean leader fires 8 to ha protest after student’s deal US- en ce si Bill Livi seen be often a thnt the ■ test 11 hilling | ■As a the ball fences. Suite Lake I Lis ntgsi home. \ Stoll this yea every b overcan more se to hit .4: ■fie s Conferc annual Alneric; JLivin him ihi: SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — President Chun Doo-hwan fired his prime minister and seven other Cab inet members Tuesday in an attempt to quiet outrage over the death of a student under police questioning. Critics demanded Chun’s resigna tion. Thousands of students chanting “Down with the government that uses torture and murder!” staged anti-government protests, and some fought riot police. Most observers agree that the dis missals will not satisfy most people, but they don’t believe that the for mer general’s government will lose its grip or that much will change. Those dismissed with Prime Min ister Lho Shin-yong included the heads of the national intelligence agency and the Home Affairs Min istry, which is in charge of police. Lee Yong-chang, the national po lice chief, submitted his resignation, but whether it was accepted was not immediately known. Lee took over after a previous chief was forced out of office soon after the torture death was revealed. The government contends the Jan. 14 death of dissident student Park Chung-chol was an isolated in cident. It cites dismissals of of ficials and arrests of police officers as evi dence of its refusal to condone such conduct. To many South Koreans, the dead student has become a sym bol of what ails their country after years of authoritarian rule. A government spokesman said the dismissals announced Tuesday were a result of Chun’s “decision to put an end to public doubts trig gered by recent developments and to achieve . .. stability and unity.” Official sources said that all 26 Cabinet members were instructed to submit resignations because of the torture death and other embarrass ing events, and that Chun accepted eight as bearing “political and moral responsibility.” Public anger over Park’s death in custody increased after a group of Roman Catholic priests revealed last week that more police officers were involved then was admittedimi Police commanders have beem tioned about a possible cover-up Little significance is give Chun’s reorganization. Thep minister and Cabinet have power, anti the new appointee regarded as Chun loyalists,lik predecessors. Lee Han-key, the new prime ister, is an obscure law profess* most of the new ministers are lively unknown. and will MiClur The this seas Opposition groups dismissed shakenp as a token and come that nothing short ol Chun’su nation will satisfy the nation. The Reunification Demur Party, (he main opposition (i claimed the government still concealing what happened torture death. Party spokesman Tae-ryong said: “The presen: gime must step down.” A dispatch from the Korean! agency Yonhap said 7,000stui took part in protests at 23 ui lies and colleges around the a Wednesday Thursday Friday $5.39 if less than 50 inches $5,67 $5.11 from 50 to less than 100 $5.38 $4.85 from 100 to less than 250 $5.11 $4.69 from 250 to less than 500 $4.94 $4.32 from 500 to less than 750 $4.55 $3.77 from 750 to less than 1,000.. $3.97 $3.25 from 1,000 to less than 2,000 $3.42 $2.72 2,000 or more $2.86 Japanese paper: Data on U.S. aircraft may be part of spy package TOKYO (AP) — Technical data on a new Boeing AWACS radar plane may have been part of the in formation four alleged Japanese spies sold the Soviet Union, the newspaper Yomiuri said Monday. Police found copies of a manual for maintaining, inspecting and fly ing the plane in the home of Masa- teru Tachibana, 59, a military writer and former employee of a U.S. air base, the newspaper reported. Ta chibana and three other men were arrested May 19 on suspicion of spy ing for the Soviet Union and China. Yomiuri publishes papers in both Japanese and English, and the two versions gave different types of ra dar planes as the alleged target of es pionage. The Japanese version said the plane is a new Boeing ESC, a remod eled version of the E3A Airborne Warning and Control Systems craft, which is based on the Boeing 707. j uiiuuii omciuia saiu later the En glish version was wrong and the plane was a Boeing of the Sentry se ries. .i . Japanese officials said they would not confirm or deny the Yomiuri re ports and U.S. military offices were closed Monday for Memorial Day. Earlier unconfirmed reports said the four men suspected of espionage sold information on the U.S. F-16 fighter to the Soviets. Hiromi Date, 62, a counselor at the private China Technical Center, was arrested after trying to pass doc uments to V.B. Aksenov of the So viet trade office at a western Tokyo park, police reported. But the English version called it a Boeing E3C Hawkeye. Boeing makes no Hawkeye, but Grumman does. The Grumman Hawkeye, which has the U.S. Navy desigations E-2A, E-2B or E-2C, also is an early warning aircraft with a large radar pod mounted on its back similar to the Boeing AWACS craft. Authorities said Date and other members of the group sold U.S. mil itary documents to Aksenov and Igor A. Solokov, a first secretary at the Soviet Embassy, for 100 million yen ($714,286), the paper reported. Hiroshi Osumi, 65, an employee in the technical library of the U.S. Yokota Air Base in western Tokyo, was picked up for allegedly stealing technical documents, according to the newspaper. It said Tachibana and Sadao Gotoh, 60-year-old presi dent of Sanko Ltd., a trading com pany doing business with China, were arrested on charges of buying stolen goods. One-day ga by market as third large: CL ★( • Dent; • Even • Comj c Dan Lavt NEW YORK (AP) —Tlielj Jones industrial average madt third largest one-day gain Tu day, as investors shook offi recent concern about inflation- The closely watched indie leaped 54.74 points to 2,291' The advance was the biggest® April 21, when the blue-chip rometer rose 66.47 point* 2,337.07. Advancing issues outstrip! decliners by about 4-to-l on New York Stock Exchange. Analysts said stock prices" boosted throughout the iraj session by Tuesday’s advance bond prices and the dollar's' 1 and by a decline in comnw 1 prices. A sharp rise incomnn 1 prices had sparked concern 1 ® inflation could build moment 1 depressing share prices. The Commerce Departm* report that Americans’incon® ter taxes plunged 2.4 perce^ April, the steepest monthlv cline in 12 years, did not dam! Wall Street’s bullish sentim The big drop in after-tax inn was blamed on higher-than- trial tax payments this year. Reports from the seven niostic tuf< makers that ne"’ didn’t slow the market'sadvtm