The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 19, 1987, Image 6

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    Page 6/The Battalion/Friday, June 19, 1987
Battalion Classifieds
FOR RENT
mmmmernmmtr-
TAPJOLEWOOD SOUTH
CURES
Apartment Hunter's
All bills paid!
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 GIveawayl
693-1111
c Iaijj*leWood Soutl^
Mon.-Frl. 8-7 Sat. 10-5 Sun. 1-4
4li‘Harvey Rd.
LEASING NOW FOR FALL/SPRING!
ALL BILLS PAID!
As Low As $308
•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. 10-3
Sun. 2-5
Wm. J. Garrett ‘47
Where one check pays all!
1601 Holleman
College Station, Texas
409/693-6716
Special!
Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx.
1 Bdrm.: $150. /2 Bdrm.: $175.
Call 846-8878 or
774-0773 after 5 p.m.
• NOTICE
Large one bedroom, furnished apartment. Close to
campus. 846-3050. Hurry only one left! $225. plus util
ity plan. 84tfn
WALK. TO A&M. 1 &2 Bedroom Fourplexes. Summer
Sc Fall Rates. 776-2300, weekends 1-279-2967. I56t7/2
CUSrOMIZK YOUR APARTMLN 1 . Choose from
ceiling fans, mini-blinds, wallpaper, fencing or washer.
Quiet area in L. Bryan. iT'B'mTri, start at $295./mo. ] /2
off 1st month lent. 776-2300, wkends 1-279-2967.
160t7/2
1 & 2 bdrm. apt. A/C Sc Heat. Wall to Wall carpet. 512
& 515 Northgate / First St. 409-825-2761. No Pets.
140tfn
3 Bdrm House; $200./mo. Emerald Forest; responsible
students only; pool Sc tennis courts; (lull 693-6359.
16U6/24
1 Bdrm, 2 Bdrm Apts, Furnished, Unfurnished, Sum
mer $150. up. 1.EASING FOR FALL,. NORTHGATE
779-3700. 159t6/19
Available Now! 1 and 2 Bedroom Apts. $190./$245.
Round! 846-0880, 268-2015. 153t6/30
Preleasing Now! 2 &: 3 bdrm duplexes near the Hilton
846-2471.776-6856. 83tufn
RC >OM CI.OSK TO ( A.MITS. QUIT 1 . NICE HOME.
ATI KR 6pm. 846-09 19. 162t6/23
TAHOE APARTMENTS 3535 Plainsman Lane,
Bryan, Texas. 846-1771. WE LOVE AGGIE ST U
DENTS. I39t7/16
• help wATfreb
Female Student to help with home care 6-8 hr/wcek.
$4.25/hr. 696-7414. 16016/23
0 NOTICE
SINUSITIS STUDY
DIAGNOSIS - Acute Sinusitis? If
you have sinus infection you may
volunteer and participate in a
short study, be compensated for
time and cooperation and have
disease treated (all cases treated
to resolution).
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 160tfn
$50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50
$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
$50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50
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
• LOST AND FOUND
$REWARD$
LOST WALLET
Call Orlando Tenorio
696-8398
SKIN INFECTION STUDY
DIAGNOSIS OF ABCESS OR
CELLULITIS? Patients needed
with skin infections such as ab-
cesses, impetigo, traumatic
wound infections and burns.
Make money compensatory for
time and cooperation. All disease
treated to resolution.
G&S STUDIES, Inc.
846-5933
$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
• PERSONALS
PRIVATE ADOPTION DESIRED:
Wish to provide loving, secure
Christian home for infant. Local
references provided. (904) 373-
4218. Collect, nights, weekends.
FOR SALE
‘86 SUZUKI MOPED. Low Mileage, Great Condition,
$275. Carol 696-0414. 163t6/26
Ace Used Appliances and Furniture Guaranteed Ap
pliances 822-2088, 713 South Main, Bryan. 161t6/19
Two Yorkshire Terriers. 7 Sc 8 weeks old. Parents silver
Sc platinum. $225/250. 775-9026. 16U6/23
COMPUTERS, ETC. 693-7599. LOW ESI PRICES
EVER! IBM-PC/XT COMPATIBLES: 640KB-RAM,
2-360KB DRIVES. TURBO, KEYBOARD. MON
ITOR: $649. PC/AT SYSTEMS: $1249. 161t8/14
Rent to own a RCA 19” color TV in 8 months. 696-
3183. 16U6/19
Cheap auto parts, used. Pic-A-Part, Inc. 78 and older.
3505 Old Kurten Road. Bryan. 102tfn
1983 Honda \1 200 R. good condition. Micci legal.
ST>n. 696-3153. 162l6/26
♦ SERVICES
TYPING: Accurate, 95 WPM, Reliable. Word Proc
essor. 7 days a week. 776-4013. 163t6/19
• 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
16016/19
VERSATILE WORD PROCESSING - BEST PRICES.
FREE CORRECTIONS. RESUMES. THESES, PA
PERS, GRAPHICS, EQUATIONS, ETC. LASER
QUALITY. 696-2052. 163tfn
WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu-
scripts, reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614.
159t7/l 7
Ready Resumes $18. Laser printed. Information taken
by phone. 693-2128. 160t6/31
PREGNANT?
Consider all the alternatives
FREE PROFESSIONAL COUNSELING
SOUTHWEST MATERNITY CENTER
(Established in 1895)
6487 Whitby Road,
San Antonio, Texas 78240
(512) 696-2410
TOLL FREE 1-800-292-5103
Books • Gifts
• Supplies
Hours:
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Sat 9-5
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SCHULMAN THEATRES
2.50 ADMISSION
1. Any Show Before 3 PM
2. Tuesday - All Seats
3. Mon-Wed - Local Students With
Current ID s
4. Thur - KORA "Over 30 Nile''
•DENOTES DOLBY STEREO
M - W PLAZA 3
226 Southwest Pkwy 693-2457
•WITCHES OF EASTWICK r
Million Daliar Mystery (pg) |;|o
MANOR EAST 3
Manor East Mall
‘THE dttfftUCKABllsT
823-8300
Benji The Hunted (p
•Ernest Goes to Camp (pg)
SCHULMAN S
2002 E. 29th
Platoon (r>
775-2463
2:10 4:40
7:10 9:15
R&SSING ARIZONA PG13
$ DOLLAR DAYS $
This Week’s Features Are:
PROJECT X po
mm
Crocodile Dundee <pg)
MANNEQUIN pg
ms
ome Kind of Wonderful 4:so
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 ot 40 percent deduction tor 5 days or
more.
Color: Only spot color available. Charge for each lime
run, in addition to column inch charges: $50 it 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-
marl 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
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Delivery of inserts must be one week in advance, properly
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Reverses and double burns: $10 each in addition to
other charges.
GENERAL INFORMATION
Published Monday through Friday during regular semes
ters; Tuesday through Friday during summer sessions;
Wednesday only during most other weeks.
Ad reservation deadlines: 9 a m. two working days be
lore publication except for At Ease (weekly entertainment
tabloid) which is 9 a m. Tuesday before publication, and
Back to School edition, which has various deadlines to be
checked out with advertising reps.
Ad copy deadlines: 4 p.m. two working days before pub
lication except tor At Ease which is 4 p m. Tuesday before
publication. * a "
Circulation: 23.000 press run. Paper serves about
36,000 fulltime students, more than 9,700 faculty and
staff. Delivered to all dorms and many other campus build
ings. as well as some homes and most apartments in Col
lege Station. Other distribution at high tratlic points both
on and off campus.
Reproduction: Offset.
World and Nation
Skipper to be replaced Be
before Stark sails home ai
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
skipper of the USS Stark, Capt.
Glenn R. Brindel, will be relieved of
his command before the ship sails
for home early next month, Penta
gon sources disclosed Thursday.
The officials, who asked not to be
named, said a decision was made
earlier this week to assign another
Navy officer to the ship to sail it
home after temporary repairs are
completed in Bahrain.
NBC News, meantime, reported
Thursday the military board of in
quiry that investigated the attack on
the Stark had recommended Brindel
be court-martialed for negligence.
The network quoted unidentified
sources as saying the recommenda
tion was included in the investigative
report provided last week to Gen.
George Crist, the officer in charge of
the U.S. Central Command.
Crist, who is headquartered in
Tampa, Fla., is in charge of all U.S.
forces assigned to the Middle East,
including the Persian Gulf where the
Stark was attacked.
Pentagon officials contacted by
the Associated Press refused to im
mediately confirm the network's re
port, noting Crist had yet to forward
the report to Washington.
The officials acknowledged such a
recommendation was expected,
however, given the Navy’s standing
policy of holding a ship’s com
mander responsible for everything
that happens aboard his ship.
“He (Brindel) will be relieved over
there (in Bahrain),” one source said.
“It remains to be seen whether he
will be relieved immediately for
cause or just relieved,” the source
said. “But he’s not bringing the ship
back, that’s for sure.”
According to the sources, Crist, a
Marine general, is expected to re
view the inquiry’s findings and either
endorse its findings or offers]
nal recommendations of hisot j
lore forwarding themtotkl
Chiefs of Staff and Defense!
iary Caspar W. Weinberger.
Although the legal situationi
a bit unclear, the sources sail|
recommendations involving
martials would probably be stl
Adm. Carlisle A H. Frost,ihtj
of naval operations.
It will then be up tolrosttoj
the final decision, the sourcej
eluded.
Brian Be
NFL has
Eai get fo
The L
llad to s
lo, an
IlCAA f
Itoo hap
Thirty-seven sailors were I
the Stark on May 17 whenin
tacked by an Iraqi warplane]
the United States and Iraq id
scribed the attack as inadvene
a case of mistaken identity.
Brindel has told congressirj
vestigators he was never notiiil
his crew that the Iraqi plane'-I
proaching at such dose range
low hi
joor to
jotball ;
Riercials.
jlemenU
le oppe
|n the N
Boswo
iken in
Seattle.
American journalist beak
kidnapped in Beirut suburb
K Seattle,
live and h
| Not to
He has
lat he wi
‘he team
the mold,
Kidnappers grabbed
Glass, beat him and
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)
American journalist Charles Glass,
stuffed him into a car trunk, then abducted the son of
Lebanon’s defense minister when he told them to stop,
police said Thursday.
Police said 14 gunmen in four cars intercepted Glass
and Ali Osseiran in Osseiran’s chauffeur-driven white
Volvo on Wednesday in Ouzai, a suburb of Syrian-po
liced Moslem west Beirut.
The gunmen, most of them bearded, dragged Glass
out of the car, hit him with rifle butts and bundled him
into the trunk of a silver Toyota near a fish restaurant
only 350 yards from a Syrian army checkpoint, police
said.
Ali Osseiran, son of Lebanese Defense Minister Adel
Osseiran, shouted at the gunmen to stop, police re
ported. But the kidnappers grabbed him and his Leb
anese chauffeur.
Glass, 36, of Los Angeles, became one of nine Ameri
cans kidnapped in Lebanon.
He was also the first foreigner kidnapped since Syria
moved 7,500 troops into Moslem west Beirut Feb. 22 to
quell fighting among militias.
No group claimed responsibility. The
backed Shiite Moslem Hezbollah, or Party ofGod,
base a few yards from the restaurant.
In Washington, the State Department
statement condemning the kidnapping as“anodie
rorist attempt to manipulate the l'nited Stalest!
our concern for our citizens.”
“We will not yield to terrorist blackmail 1
statement said.
Let’s lo
alteam lo
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arguably
and whosi
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aces to j
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fit his mol
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at hope
ake sure
nglasses
ctits.
Boswor
lie
The abduction was a serious blow to Syria’seHq
restore order to west Beirut, which had erupted
anarchy after militias wrested control ofthe)l>|
sector from the Lebanese army in February
Class, a former correspondent for the ABCteW
network, was in Beirut researching a book heisn
on the Middle East.
Class was noted for his coverage of the 1985
hijacking, during which he had a ground-to-codd
terview with the jetliner’s captain, John Testntf
bearded gunman pointing a gun to Testrake’she;:
peared in the film several times. h ^
Besides Class, 24 foreigners are missing afierlB re ,| u . |
abducted in Lebanon. ®here Fli
jCHlCA
lia, in a c
(anager 1
tq manage
pursday,
Police report 1 dead,
9 hurt on anniversary
of shooting in Soweto
Itle more
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa
(AP) — Security forces killed one
black, injured nine and arrested
seven on the anniversary of the 1976
police shooting in Soweto that
started nationwide riots, authorities
said Wednesday.
Police said four whites beat a black
man to death in Boksburg, a white
suburb of Johannesburg, but their
motive was not known.
An independent monitoring
abc
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
$5.39 if less than 50 inches $5.67
$5 11 from 50 to less than 100 $5.38
$485 from tOOtolessthan 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
group said about 70 percent of the
country’s black workers stayed away
from work Tuesday, as anti-apart
heid groups had urged.
A powerful advisory council con
trolled by the governing National
Party gave Parliament a report on
youth Wednesday that recom
mended rehabilitation centers for
politically motivated juvenile delin
quents.
The report from the President’s
Council, addressing itself primarily
to black youngsters, suggested in
creased use of military service to fos
ter discipline and urged more book
and entertainment censorship.
Pat Poolingham, a member of the
Asian chamber of the three-house
Parliament, responded: “The plan
for compulsory youth camps is abso
lutely disgraceful and is similar to
the re-education centers in newly
communist countries such as Viet
nam and Mozambique.”
South Africa established Parlia
ment chambers with little power in
1984 for people of mixed-race and
Indian descent, but the ruling white
minority of 5 million denies a voice
in national affairs to South Africa’s
24 million blacks.
Blacks stayed home Tuesday to
commemorate the day in 1976 when
police fired on marching school chil
dren in Soweto, killing two and set
ting off months of rioting that
spread through the country and cost
at least 575 lives by official count.
Soweto’s 2.5 million residents ef
fectively closed down Johannes
burg’s huge black satellite city for
the anniversary.
Violent protest and confronta
tions with police have marked most
anniversaries of the Soweto shoot
ing, but several black anti-apartheid
groups called for a peaceful and dig
nified observance this year.
Rejected cul
refuses food
from vets/
00100012 00100011
MEXICO CITY (AP)-
panda cub rejected by its®®
after it was born here this''
died Thursday, but its twin
still alive, Chapultepec Zoo
cials said.
“Thursday before dawnit ;
gan to cry restlessly in theintt'
tor and although the doc
tried to feed it, the panda
jected (the food) and died;
hours later,” zoo director
Elena I loyo said.
The mother, Ying-Ying,(
tinned to hold the otherenk’
tween her arms, she said.
Shortly after the cubs* :
horn Monday, Ying-Yingte
to nurture what appearedi
the larger one and rejected
other. Named Ping-Ping, it*
placed in an incubator 20m®
after its birth, wrapped inac
and given panda milkbroufi
from Washington, Hoyosaid
A male, Ping-Ping weir
about 6'/z ounces atbirthand 1
about six inches long with;’
inch tail.
Koop: Studies to indicate if AIDS
will spread in homosexual groui
WASHINGTON (AP) — Surgeon
General C. Everett Koop predicted
Thursday that AIDS testing of sur
gery patients will soon be routine
and said it should be clear in several
months whether AIDS will explode
among heterosexuals.
Koop also told a House panel he
believes young children can be
taught to abstain from sexual rela
tions before they marry, but con
doms must be offered to the 70 per
cent of adolescents who already are
sexually active.
“If you tell that 70 percent to just
say no, they laugh,” Koop told the
House Select Committee on Chil
dren, Youth and Families during a
hearing on teen-agers and AIDS.
“And if they try to say no, they find
it very difficult.”
Koop said adolescents exploring
their own sexuality and possibly in
travenous drugs are particularly vul
nerable to AIDS. He said they are
“extraordinarily difficult to deal
with” because they believe they are
immortal and resist changing their
behavior.
“I was talking to some teen-agers
about long-term monogamy and this
one girl said, ‘How long? A semes
ter?’ ” Koop recalled.
“You have to introduce such
things as condoms, knowing that it
offends the sensibilities of some peo
ple, but that as a public health offi
cer . . . the only thing I can do is of
fer them,” he said.
Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., the
committee chairman, said 148 teen
agers had AIDS, acquired immune
deficiency syndrome, as of June 8.
But he said many of the 7,500 AIDS
victims aged 20 to 29 probably were
infected as teen-agers, given the two-
to-10-year latency period of the dis
ease.
“We must not let the currently low
number of teen-agers with AIDS dis
suade us from taking the threat to
youth seriously,” Millei said.
Koop said the federal Ceni'
Disease Control is condtrf
study to determine iheincidf
AIDS infection in the gener;
ulation.
“The thing we would like'
you, hut we can’t, is if we are*
ing on the threshold ofahete*
ual explosion of AIDS,” K#'
under questioning. “We will!* 1
six to eight months.”
Asked whether hospitals'
routinely test patients lot
upon admission, Koop saidd*
problem is with surgical palie [!
said doctors and nurses inti®
ating room are exposed
pricks, knife cuts and other® 01
that could enefanger them.
There will be an increa^
rnand by medical person/
AIDS testing, he said.
•Ind<
• Rac
•Voll
• Bas
• lnd<
• Ten
• Wei
• Aen
•Tan
•Sna
• Lou