Page 6/The Battalion/Thursday, June 18,1987 Battalion Classifieds • FO R RENT ACUTE LOW BACK PAIN WALK TO CLASS STUDY SMALL APT. COMPLEX, QUIET, 1 Persons needed with recent, painful low back injury. Take one dose of medication and evaluate for 4 hours. Volun- LOCALLY OWNED AND OPER- 1 ATED, 2B, 1B, $170-200/mo. + 1 BILLS. 696-7266 i56t6/9 j teers will be compensated for their time and cooperation. Special! Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx. G&S Sfudies, Inc. 1 Bdrm.: $150. / 2 Bdrm.: $175. 846-5933 , 53 , 6 „ Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5p.m. 117tfn \ 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 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 WANTED Individuals with high fever to participate in a 6 hour study using over-the-counter medi cation. $50 incentive for those chosen. For more information call Pauli Research International 776-6236 160tln $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 WANTED Male Individuals 18-45 yrs. old with mild asthma or short ness of breath to participate in a 30 hr. on site study. $200 incentive for those chosen. For more information call Pauli Research International at 776-6236 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 1020/31 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 WANTED Individuals 18 yrs. old or older with acute diarrhea to participate in a 2 day at home study. $50 in centive for those chosen. For more information call Pauli Research International at 776-6236 160tfn $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 FLEA PROBLEMS? Outdoor study providing free yard treatment for fleas. Limited number of yards accepted. For information contact - Dr. Roger Meola or Kathy Savage 845-8977 (Entomology)i62te/i9 • LOST AND FOUND $REWARD$ LOST WALLET Call Orlando Tenorio 696-8398 • PERSONALS PRIVATE ADOPTION DESIRED: Wish to provide loving, secure Christian home for infant. Local references provided. (904) 373- 4218. Collect, nights, weekends. 161t6/26 HELP WANTED Female Student to help with home care 6-8 hr/wcek. $4.25/111'. 696-7114. 160(6/23 ♦ FOR SALE I\1 200 R. k ...mI S I'iO I •i:l. vi-t It'K-il I (i2l(i/2(i ;iiilo pans, used. Pic-A-Part, Inc. 78 and older. SSOSOId Km ten Road, Bryan. 102tfn Ace I'scd Appliances and Furniture Guaranteed Ap pliances 822-2088. 713 South Main, Bryan. I(>1 t6/l 9 Two Yorkshire Terriers. 7 & 8 weeks old. Parents silver H- platinum. $223/250. 775-902(i. 16U6/23 COMPUTERS. ETC. 693-7599. LOWEST PRICES EVER! IBM-PC/XT COMPATIBLES: 640KB-RAM, 2-360KB DRIVES. TURBO, KEYBOARD. MON ITOR: $6-19. PC/AT SYSTEMS: $1249. I6D8/I4 ROOM CLOSE TO CAMPUS. QUIET. NICE HOME. AE TER 6pm. 846-0919. 162l6/23 CUSTOMIZE YOUR APARTMENT. Choose from ceilinR fans, mini-blinds, wallpaper, fencing or washer. Quiet area in E. Bryan. 2 Bdrm, start at $295./mo. 'At off 1st month rein. 776-2300. wkends 1-279-2967. 1601.7/2 WAI.K TO A&M. 1&2 Bedroom Fourplexes. Summer & Fall Rates. 776-2300, weekends 1-279-2967. 156t7/2 TAHOE APARTMENTS 3535 Plainsman Lane, Bryan, Texas. 846-l'771. WE LOVE AGGIE STU DENTS. 139t7/16 Large one bedroom, furnished apartment. Close to campus. 846-3050. Hurry only one left! $225. plus util ity plan. 84tfn Available Now! 1 and 2 Bedroom Apts Year Round! 846-0880, 268-2015. $190./$245. 15316/30 Preleasing Now! 2 & 3 bdrm duplexes near the Hilton 846-2471.776-6856. 83tufn 1 & 2 bdrm. apt. A/C Sc Heat. Wall to Wall carpet. 512 & 515 Northgate/ First St. 409-825-2761. No Pets. 140lfn I Bdrm, 2 Bdrm Apts, Furnished, Unfurnished. Sum mer $150. up. LEASING FOR TALL. NORTHGATE 779-3700. 15916/19 3 Bdrm House; $200./mo. Emerald Forest; responsible students only; pool & tennis courts; Call 693-6359. 16116/24 • SERVICES GUARANTEED STUDENT LOANS Attention Students & Parents: $100,000,000 NOW AVAILABLE $54,000 maximum loan available per student INTEREST FREE WHILE IN SCHOOL Take 15 years to Repay Starting 6 months after Graduation at an 8% in terest rate We make comittments for each and every year that you are in school! APPLY NOW to reserve your loan amount! Call for information: FIRST VENTURE GROUP 696-6601 160t6/19 Ready Resumes $18. Laser printed. Information taken by phone. 693-2128. 16<)t6/31 WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu scripts, reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614. 159t7/17 -O' Problem Pregnancy? we listen, we care, we help Free pregnancy tests concerned counselors Brazos Valley Crisis Pregnancy Service We’re local! 1301 Memorial Dr. 24 hr. Hotline 823-CARE Books • Gifts • Supplies Hours: M-F 7:45-6 Sat 9-5 845-8681 CASH for gold, silver, old coins, diamonds Full Jewelry Repair Large Stock of Diamonds Gold Chains TEXAS COIN EXCHANGE 404 University Dr. 846-8916 3202-A Texas Ave. (across from El Chico.Bryan) 779-7662 World and Nation orth refuses to testify private about role in Iran-Contra affa »USTI Jam I the [Dali progr lion Wed i irships fc jhe ihuhIk WASHINGTON (AP) — Lt. Col. Oliver L. North, in a surprise move that sharpened the adversarial na ture of the Iran-Contra probe, re fused Wednesday to undergo pri vate congressional questioning that was to set the stage for later public testimony. Leaders of the Senate investigat ing panel said there would be no ef fort to cite North for contempt ol Congress as a way of forcing him to testify now. Such a move, they said, could delay North’s public appear ance, expected in mid-July, or even mean he would never tell his story to Congress at all. However, Rep. Lee Hamilton, D- Ind., chairman of the House com mittee, said at a news conference that his panel has yet to decide whether North should be cited for contempt at this point. He said a vote on that could come Thursday. Rep. Richard Cheney, R-Wyo., the House committee’s vice chair man, said legal papers filed with the committee by North’s attorneys “re iterate North’s desire to testify in public session.” “I take them at their word,” he said. Earlier Wednesday, in an inter view, Hamilton said it is too early to conclude that President Reagan is in the clear in the Iran-Contra affair, as Reagan suggested on Tuesday with a declaration that “there ain’t no smoking gun” linking him to a diver sion of Iran arms-sale profits to the Nicaraguan rebels. “We don’t understand things like whose idea it was to start the diver sion,” Hamilton said. “Everybody’s against it, but it happened. Some body had the idea. Somebody pushed it through. “We certainly don’t know the an swer to the question the press has been most interested in, and that’s the president’s knowledge. We’ve got a lot of things we haven’t re solved at this point.” And Hamilton, following up on comments he made last weekend, said there are “multiple possibilities” that could lead to congressional pressure for impeachment, other than the discovery of diversion evi dence that would constitute a “smok ing gun.” He declined to elaborate. As for North, Sen. Daniel K. Inouye, D-Hawaii, chairman of the Senate Iran-Contra panel, said con cern about long delays would keep him from recommending a move to force North to submit to private questioning. Sen. Warren Rudman, R-N.IL, the Senate committee’s vice chair man, said one reason for North’s ac tion might be to lure Congress into voting contempt, purposely causing delays. “If you delay it long enough, you might never appear before Con gress,” Rudman said. He said North’s action will change the nature of the investigation when he does appear, probably in mid- July. Reagan chooses professor to fill chairman’s post at SEC WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Reagan on Wednesday chose David S. Ruder, a business law pro fessor, as chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission and said the nation can expect a continued crackdown on insider trading and securities fraud. If confirmed by the Senate for the $82,500-a-year job, Ruder would succeed John Shad. Shad resigned after six years as chairman to become ambassador to the Netherlands. After meeting with Reagan in the Oval Office, Ruder, a faculty mem ber and former dean of Northwest ern University law school, told re porters: “I would continue the Securities and Exchange Commis sion’s strong enforcement policy against insider trading.” “My view is that as long as there are people, there will be people that have criminal motives and that in sider trading will be a problem for years to come and it needs to be ad dressed,” he said. But he added that the SEC al ready is “doing a great deal” to com bat it. Reagan hailed Ruder, 58, as one of the nation’s foremost experts on securities regulation and corporate finance. Ruder, discussing his qualifica tions, noted he had taught securities law for 25 years and said, “I believe myself to be as well informed in a large number of areas as almost any one in the country.” As the government’s chief watch dog over securities markets, the SEC has become deeply involved in re cent months in the insider trading scandal on Wall Street and has stepped up its pursuit of other abuses in trading. U.S. Attorney Rudolph Giuliani, the New York prosecutor handling the criminal side of the insider trad ing cases, was the White House’s first choice for the SEC post but turned it down. Ruder was dean of Northwest ern’s law school for eight years, until 1985. He helped found Northwestern’s Corporate Counsel Center, which provides le^al research and continu ing professional education for cor porate lawyers. He has been presi dent of the center since 1983. Official: 27 cities near Chernobyl will remain deserted indefinitely KIEV, U.S.S.R. (AP) — The explosion at the Cher nobyl nuclear power plant left at least 27 nearby cities and villages too contaminated for people to live in for the foreseeable future, a government official said Wednesday. Soviet officials have halted decontamination work in these areas, said Konstantin T. Fursov, deputy chair man of the Kiev regional government committee in the Ukraine. Forsov told a group of Moscow-based reporters that the areas include the city of Pripyat, which was home to more than 50,000 people before the April 26, 1986 di saster. Pripyat is only two miles from the nuclear power sta tion, where an explosion and fire tore apart the No. 4 reactor, spewed radioactivity that killed 31 Soviets and eventually spread around the world. Regional officials contend most of the 69 cities and villages evacuated will eventually be resettled, but said they could not predict when the process will be com plete. All the towns were in an 18-mile danger zone around the plant. “There are 27 populated points that will not be re settled in the foreseeable future,” Fursov said. The others will be repopulated gradually, he said. Fursov said two towns in the 18-mile danger zone, Cheremoshnya and Nevitskoye, had returned to nor mal with fully operating schools, stores and public transportation. Some residents have returned to another 16 towns that have been decontaminated but still lack many pub lic services, he said. “People are returning there without permission, mostly elderly people,” Fursov said during a meeting with reporters ai the regional government headquarters in Kiev. “Conditions there are safe, but the social services are not ready yet,” he said. “These people are coming back of their own volition. It’s their home.” The reporters, on a trip organized and controlled by the Soviet Foreign Ministry, also visited the new village of Tavriya, built last year to house 205 familes evac uated from the “Path of Communism” collective farm 17 miles from the accident site. Many of the evacuees told reporters they were satis fied with their new home but would prefer to live in the towns and villages where they grew up and raised their children. Officials have said 135,000 people were evacuated from the northern Ukraine and southern Byelorussia after the Chernobyl accident. Fursov said 91,000 of them were from his Kiev region. Another deputy chief of the regional government, Anatoly Duda, said the two towns that have been com pletely resettled account for only about 500 of the evac uees. Fursov said 52 new towns like Tavriya have been built in the Kiev region, but he did not say how many evacuees have been housed there or how many of the settlements are temporary. Two of Chernobyl’s four nuclear reactors have been brought back on line since the accident and are working at full capacity. The 2,000 workers who operate the station are bused in from Zelyony Mys, a collection of temporary dwell ings 35 miles southeast of the power station. Fursov said an investigation into the accident was continuing and at least two former plant officials, the director and chief engineer, would stand trial. A Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Williams College in Massachusetts, Ruder earned nis law degree at the University of Wisconsin, graduating with honors in 1957. From 1978 to 1982, he was a member of the legal advisory com mittee to the boaro of the New York .Stock Exchange. He also has served on the advisory board of the Securities Regulation Institute and has been a frequent contributor to legal journals on is sues involving securities law. “It becomes in my vieiudve recru rial,” Rudman said. lpP us ' North, a Marine officeranHt was iih i olliti.il on the stilt ubhad mip 11 ' tional Security Council, is ak hot" f° ot l investigation by Lawrence Hithwest the independent counsel wkplaced on tempting to determine wheifeeBons in 19 have been broken. Fj l' e v > (1 Rudman said that if theft entertainn Senate cited North for contetWd other would have the right to puisBs, the s matter at various court levels,i ball tickets ess which could take monthl to prospe plrtc could ex I ■ns and And he and Inouye saidi 1 ! u5e >' nc * uc els are determined to cony f counsel to delay any action he bring chan wish to take.” ■fkandl ■ after: ■ I gg le w Market slow Low- ■ Luke s ANSA after posting record highs idmilted J fetors pa lant tumc iwser’s b iThis is Dick How; men of oui lioper Pete memo sas Cit (see, FI; es have e is sui w NEW YORK (AP)—Hit market barely budged Wei day, encountering some« tance after Tuesday’s rise j cord highs. The Dow Jones averaged industrials closed at 2,40/1 changed from Tuesday twin d . drilling in a narrowrangea.* Volume on the Nevlfl Stock Exchange stepped cl The we 184.72 million shares su gery la 157.79 million in the prewinning n session. Lague at < tn I u< stl.O the Dint j BO'iMcm I dustrial average rose iB an d coc points, surpassing its pn getful, nigh of 2,405.54 set on) The market began We: day’s activity with a seven- winning streak, even thouj ding volume has pin a less than impressivep .Analysts say stocks nave filed lately from a spreadiei lief that the dollar has stall in foreign exchange, reii upward pressure on inti rates. At the same time, monev agers at many investing irJ lions are believed tobeeagt add to their stock holdings^ end of June, when theri their midyear reports to bosses and clients. The market’s advance!# down a hit, however, assottit ders evidently opted toosltit t heir recent gains. There was an elementof# in Wednesday’s sluggishsho* 1 given widespread fears of creasing market week with the approachofa terly “triple witching horn volving a group of expinngs index options and futures In a change of pro some of those contracts« settled as of the opening on day, rather than the dost same day. Thus, analysts say, thep# ity still remains that the Pfe will see some storms as eai Thursday afternoon, in co( to Wednesday’s calm. Nuveen Municipal' 1 Fund, a new issue, led the* list, t l ading at its offeringpo 10 on volume of moretnai million shares. Atlantic Richfield gained 93%. The company said iti sidering selling a minorit) est in its Arco Chemical Co. public. ► Korean officials close down 28 universities Rem to own a RCA 19” color TV in 8 months. 696- 3183. 161(6/19 SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Masked students held off police from behind street barricades Wednesday and officials began clos ing universities, the spawning grounds of anti-government vio lence. Opposition leaders called for new protests in their drive to oust Presi dent Chun Doo-hwan’s military- backed government. The students in Seoul shouted “Down with the military dictatorship!” and “Revolution!” as they bombarded police with gasoline bombs and rocks. Battles were reported in at least four other cities. Protesters attacked police stations and burned vehicles in the eighth day of South Korea’s worst political violence since Chun, then an army general, rose to power after President Park Chung-hee was assassinated in 1979. Officials shut 28 universities Wednesday to stop campus protests, and dozens more were expected to close. Police firing tear gas dispersed protesters chanting slogans in the downtown districts of several cities. Students in Chinju blocked a highway and seized two liquefied gas tankers. Police recaptured the trucks before the students could carry out threats to blow up the tankers. Other youths blocked railway tracks and seized a train. About 6,000 people battled police in Taegu. Protesters attacked two police stations in Taejon and three in Pusan. The U.S. Consulate in Pusan was closed as a precaution on the advice of police because it is in the area af fected the demonstrations, Ameri can diplomats said. Protesters often accuse the United States of keeping Chun in power with its support. Thousands of students battled riot police around several major uni versities in Seoul, pelting police with gasoline bombs and other missiles from behind their street barricades. At Inchon, a western port, 1,200 Roman Catholics led by priests and nuns held a candlelit procession and sit-down strike in front of the city’s cathedral. Violence was less widespread than in recent days, perhaps because tens of thousands of students attended university rallies in preparation for major protests Thursday. Students marched on campuses with Hags ...id banners, singing protest songs. Riot police surroundi/J campuses, in an unusualsD'l straint, allowed students I peaceful demonstrations. 1 removed their tear gas i rea University to show th(J not attack and waved to * who applauded them. A new alliance of poPl gious and dissident groups tional Coalition for a D f|t '| Constitution, has called for Tear Cas Day” on Thursdaifl ^ tionwide protests deman^w ^ police stop using the weapon fa ^ The alliance, which pled^l founding statement to la'll “power of the masses” again-1 >imized the June 10ralft*J gan the current waveofp tl T