The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, July 01, 1987, Image 4

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    Battalion
Classifieds
•••*•!* •••!•!* •!•!•!* •!•!•!* •!•••?* •?•*•?* •••••?* •t%*I •!••••
%*•••, %%% -•••••• •••••• ••••*• %•••# •I*I% •••*•• •••••• %•••• ••••*• •••••• ••••*• •
FOR RENT
?AKCHLEWOOI> SOUTH
CURES
Apartment
UNTER S
All bills paldl
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 Iaqj*IeWood Soutl^
Mon.-Frl. 8-7 Sat. 10-5 Sun. 1-4
41iHarvey Rd.
Special!
Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx.
1 Bdrm.: $150. / 2 Bdrm.: $175.
Call 846-8878 or
774-0773 after 5 p.m.
Preleasing Now! 2 & 3 fxli m duplexes near the Hilton
846-2471.776-6856. 83tufn
3 Bdr, 2 Bath 4-plex, & 2 Bdr, 2 Bath duplex, near Post
_ . ,_^ n - - — — ——
Oak Mall. $350./mo. with W/D. 696-4384, 693-0982.
169t8/31
CUSTOM I/.l. YOUR APAR TMEN T. Choose from
ceiling tans, niini-hlinds, wallpaper, fencing or washer.
Quiet area in E. Bryan. 2 Burnt, start at $295./mo. Yl
off 1st month rent. 776-2300, wkends 1-279-2967.
160t7/2
oartments
Special! One or two bedroom apa
$225. All bills paid. 846-3050. Scholar’s Inn. John & Jo
hanna Sandor managers. 164tfn
SOUTHWOOD VALLEY, 2 BDRM DUPLEX,
FENCED BACKYARD, W/D CONN., SHUTTLE
STOP, $300./mo., 693-3823. 168t8/4
BARGAINS! Two Bedroom. Some Bills Paid. Some
With Washer/Dryer. $195-215. 779-3550, 696-2038.
168t7/31
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
WALK TO A&M. 1&2 Bedroom Fourplexes. Summer
Fall Rales. 776-2300, weekends 1-279-2967. 156t7/2
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 159tf
$200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200
WANTED
Male individuals 18-45 yrs. old
with mild wheezing or short
ness of breath, ex-asthma or
coughing with exercise to
participate in a one day study.
$200 incentive for those cho
sen.
776-6236
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
$75 $75 $75$75 $75 $75
FEVER STUDY
Wanted individuals with an el
evated temperature to partici
pate in a fever study using over-
the-counter medication. $75 In
centive for those chosen.
For more information call Pauli
Research International
776-6236
$75 $75 $75$75 $75 $75
$75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75
DIARRHEA STUDY
Individuals 18 yrs. old or older
with acute diarrhea to participate
in a 2 day at home study. $75 in
centive for those chosen.
For more information call Pauli
Research International at
776-6236
160tfn
$75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75
• FOR SALE
Parents, Students, Faculty!
Foreclosed condo. Near campus.
Fireplace, all appliances. Great
terms.
Call John @ Century 21 Beal Real
Estate, Inc.
775-9000 or 846-1534 16417/17
J<>
69t
14x80 two bedroom, 1 Vi bath, furnished, central air,
fenced lot set up in North Bryan park with swimming
pool, playground. Includes 8x8 storage shed. Must sell
$10,000. Ask fo
l for Patti 778-8322 or 693-9946. 169t7/17
Used Bikes for SALE. YAMAHAS DT100 $195., VI
SION 550 $795., VISION 550 $849.. VIRAGO 700
$1995., CA50 Scooter $475., price does not include
tax. title, license. University Cycles 696-8222, 8:00-
6:00. 164t7/l
Cheap auto parts, used. Pic-A-l’art. Inc. 78 and older.
3505 Old Kurtcn Road, Bryan. I02tfn
COMPUTERS, ETC. 693-7599. LOWEST PRICES
EVER! IBM-PC/XT COMPATIBLES: 640KB-RAM,
2-360KB DRIVES, TURBO, KEYBOARD, MON
ITOR: $649. PC/AT SYSTEMS: $1249. 16U8/14
♦ CHOJDCARE
Babysitter wanted. Two children SVfcyr. and 2yr. Hours
negot. Call Gail 268-4162.
167t7/7
• HELP WANTED
Need Extra Cash? We need 200 inventory personnel
Friday July 10th and Saturday July 11th. If interested
stop by our office at 707 Texas Avenue Suite E-100
Manpower Temporary Services. 169t7/9
m PERSONALS
* i SERVICES
Page 4/The Battalion/Wednesday, July 1, 1987
World and Nation
Shiite: Iranian group smuggled
2 U.S. hostages out of Lebanon
FREE Home Bible Correspondence Course. Call 693-
0400. 169t7/8
TYPING AND WORD PROCESSING. FAST, REA
SONABLE, QUICK TURNAROUND AVAILABLE.
693-1598. 166t7/10
Ready Resumes $18. Laser printed. Information taken
by phone. 693-2128. I60t6/31
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.
159t7/17
STUDENT TYPING - 20 years experience. Fast, accu
rate, reasonable, guaranteed. 693-8537. 168t7/14
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — Ira
nian Revolutionary Guards have
smuggled two American hostages
from Lebanon to Iran, hiding them
in coffins part of the way, a Shiite
Moslem source said Tuesday.
A top LJ.S. official expressed skep
ticism about the report and Iran’s
foreign minister denied it.
The source told the Associated
Press the Americans were “probably
Terry Anderson and Thomas Su
therland,” who were seized sepa
rately more than two years ago by
Shiite extremists loyal to Iran. The
source has been reliable in the past
on information regarding foreign
hostages.
Anderson, 39, chief Middle East
correspondent of the AP, was kid
napped March 16, 1985, in Moslem
west Beirut. Sutherland, 55, acting
de^n of agriculture at the American
University of Beirut, was seized June
9, 1985.
Other reports in the past few
weeks, none confirmed, have said
two or more Americans were taken
to Iran. They were among many re
ports over several months about the
fate
or physical condition of Ameri-
and other hostages, and where
can
they were being held.
According to the Shiite source,
who spoke on condition of anonym
ity, transfer of the Americans to Iran
led Syria to impose travel restrictions
on Revolutionary Guards based in
the Bekaa Valley of east Lebanon
and on Iranian diplomats.
Revolutionary Guards, fanatical
followers of Iran’s Ayatollah Ruhol-
lah Khomeini, arrived in Lebanon in
1982 to help Syria against the invad
ing, Israelis. Syria is the country’s
main power broker and keeps
25,000 soldiers in northern and east
ern Lebanon, including the Bekaa
Valley.
A group calling itself Islamic Ji
had, or Islamic Holy War, has
claimed to hold Anderson and Su
therland, who are among 25 for
eigners missing and believed kid
napped in Lebanon. Nine are
Americans.
Anglican Church negotiator
Terry Waite also is missing. He
dropped from sight after leaving his
west Beirut hotel Jan. 20 to meet
with hostage holders.
The source said the two Ameri
cans were taken from Lebanon to
the Iranian Embassy in Damascus,
the Syrian capital, late in May in cof
fins purported to contain the bodies
of “Revolutionary Guards martyrs
killed »n artjon against Israel."
T he coffins went from the Beta
c
DA
Jcetbal
Valley to Damascus in a Revolutioi
ary Guards jeep on a military roai F ia J <)I
the source said, and “an Iranian Eir/ ,l< s
bassy car with a diplomatic licers
plate transported them from Dan®
cus to Iran via Turkey."
Syria now has banned the est
mated 3,000 Revolutionary Guari
in the Bekaa from military roads as P 1 '!' 1 "
also imposed “restrictions on i £ IS . ' r
cross-border movements of Iranii' , j (
diplomats in Lebanon and Syna P
the source said. 0 fli 1
His report comes two weeksafie I •
June 17 kidnapping of Amenci issl()
journalist Charles Glass, 3o, in a Be
rut slum controlled by the Irania.
hacked Hezbollah, or Party ofGai;
Many of the hostages are belieit:
held in the Shiite slums of south Be
the
Reagan says U.S. protection
of Kuwaiti ships to proceed
Army defuse:
WWII bomb
in London
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Reagan,
unswayed by objections from Congress, served notice
Tuesday that the United States will proceed with put
ting Kuwaiti oil tankers under the protection of Ameri
can warships in the war-torn Persian Gulf by mid-July.
The White House announced Reagan’s decision after
the president met with Democratic and Republican con
gressional leaders in the Cabinet Room for more than
an hour, listening to fears that his plan would draw the
United States into the Iran-Iraq conflict.
Presidential spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said the
lawmakers raised “concerns about timing and tactics” of
the planned escorts after 11 tankers are placed under
U.S. flags and captains. He acknowledged that not a
single member of Congress spoke up at the meeting in
support of Reagan’s idea.
Later, talking with reporters in the White House
driveway, Democratic leaders conceded they failed to
persuade the president to delay the convoy ©{Deration.
However, they indicated Congress would not try to de
rail the plan with legislation prohibiting escort duty.
“To pull the rug out from under that commitment
could be dangerous,” said House Speaker Jim Wright,
D-Texas. Yet, he said Democrats told Reagan they were
worried about the possibility that in escorting Kuwaiti
ships, the United States could “inadvertently slip and
slide our way into being an active participant in the
Iran-Iraq war.
Senate Majority leader Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., said,
“We came to express our hope that the administration
would delay . . . until we can all think this thing through
together.”
Acknowledging that Reagan was unmoved by their
plea, Byrd said, “We don’t want to take action to stop
iflai
this reflagging because we can’t do that in a timely fash
ion. They plan to go forward.”
On Capitol Hill, the Senate Foreign Relations Com
mittee voted 1 1-8 in favor of legislation to halt the oper
ation. Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., said he would “do all I
can” to prevent the bill from being considered, and
Byrd said he would oppose the legislation.
Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., a specialist on defense issues,
said, “On this point, I clearly disagree with them (ad
ministration officials). I do not think they’ve thought
through the strategic implications. ... I don’t think the
piolicy holds up to any kind of scrutiny."
Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger said, “It is not
a risk-free operation and it has not been presented as
such. But the risks of not doing it, I think, are a lot
higher.”
South Korean president accepts
plan for broad political reform
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) —
President Chun Doo-hwan an
nounced Wednesday he “fully ac
cepts” demands for broad changes
in the nation’s political structure, in
cluding direct presidential elections.
In a nationwide television ad
dress, Chun said he was taking mea
sures to “promote epochal demo
cratic development and national
harmony.”
South Korea has been ravaged by
weeks of violent anti-government
demonstrations.
Chun made the announcement
two days after Roh Tae-woo, the
chairman of the ruling Democratic
Justice Party and Chuns chosen suc
cessor, presented an eight-p>oint pro
posal and said he would resign if
Chun rejected it.
The president said he had been
briefed by Roh on the proposals.
Chun said the next election “will
be held under a new constitution if
the basic law is expeditiously revised
and enacted following an agreement
between the government party and
the opposition on a direct presi
dential election system.”
He also repeated his pledge that
he will step down when his seven-
year term expires next Feb. 25 and
transfer “the reins of government to
the president thus elected.” The
president is currently elected by an
electoral college system that favors
the party in power.
Chun declared that amnesties and
the restoration of civil rights “will be
extensively granted, while all those
detained in connection with the po
litical situation, except for a very
small number of felonious offend
ers, will be set free.”
He said he agreed with the sub
stance of Roh’s proposals “for grand
national compromise and reconcilia
tion.
“I thus decided to fully accept Mr.
Roh’s recommendations and take
measures to promote epochal demo
cratic development and national
harmony,” Chun said.
Roh, like Chun, is a former gen
eral and a close associate of the pres
ident.
The reversal by the government
and by the ruling party came after
18 days of nationwide demonstra
tions. The demonstrations began
June 10, the day the Democratic Jus
tice Party formally nominated Roh
to be Chun’s successor.
Security forces were ordered off
maximum alert Tuesday for the first
time since protests began three
weeks ago aimed at ousting Chun’s
authoritarian government.
limits i
lision
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sustatr
ote oi
thola
ary.
■ Mar
J
were a
pig se:
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lunch,
tinned
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WII
1 .ONDON (AP) — Policeemp
tied the streets, evacuated apan
ments and closed pubs. Mort
than 500 people took shelter i
community halls where souf
kitchens and beds were sel u|
hurriedly. Ambulances and fin Jinnm
engines stood by. Btope
London held its breath (« i ,)U gb
more than 30 hours until Ian cation
Tuesday afternoon while arro Mikac
experts defused a World Warll | liar,e
bomb dropped by the Gem® Ah (
Luftwaffe near Tower Brkte » ours
and buried under 21 feet of dir t mer S
near the banks of the Rk |i cl(,n
Thames. a !
It was a sce'ne out of theNai » u g os
Blitz. I Alsc
But this was 1987, not 194(M; I'ere t
when the German war machi.1! M ats ^
rained hundreds of thousandst: au( i Ai
bombs on London to soften tk 2 seta I
British capital for an invasion^ r°-
never happened. |K 0 - 11
Construction foreman Mkhit
Killeen said he thought his wor!
ers had hit a cast iron pipe?!
about noon Monday while mint!
pile driver on a constructionst
where abandoned Victorii:
warehouses are being convetlf.
into apartments in the maw
urban program in southeast!/]!
don’s Docklands area.
“We picked it up and thenki
drop,” ne said. “It wasonlytk
we realized it looked likeabcr
and called the police. Thar,
gocxlness I didn’t break it or*
would all have been goners.”
It was actually a 2,200-pou;
device, one of the largest theCf]
mans dropped over Britain di
ing the Blitz which killed itf
than 15,000 Londoners anddaij
aged or destroyed 3.5 mi
houses.
Londoners had nicknamedhj
particular type of bomb “H
mann” because its rotund sh)
with a wide hand around the®
die reminded them of A
Marshal Hermann Goering,
hefty head of the Germain
force.
WORDSTAR FOR THE BEGINNER
BYTE
One-week classes
^ f for those who want to learn
12this popular word processing program
July 6 - July 10
5:00 - 7:00 p.m.
COST: $35.00
Evans Library
[Yiake sense learning resources department
Of Computers For more information and registration forms, go to
at the library LRD ’ Room 604 or contact Mel Dodd at 845-2316
erformance
"Is our Business"
We believe in Performance:
In Your Car or Truck
For any Repair-Import or Domestic
Bryan Drive Train call us 268-AUl
A Hm
Hfpi
P III M
CLINICS
AM/PM Clinics
Minor Emergencies
10% Student Discount with ID card
3820 Texas Ave.
Bryan, Texas
846-4756
401 S. Texas Ave.
Bryan, Texas
779-4756
8a.m.-11 p.jn. 7 days a week
P*
Walk-in Family Practice
AFFORDABLE HOUSING
* Single Family Housing from $30-$200 / 000
* Condominiums - On Shuttle Bus, Close to Campus
* Income Producing Property
* Raw Land
STANFORD
STANFORD
'The First
Name in
Real Estate'
REAL ESTATE
I tsf V ESTMENTS
776-0331
Someone
Always
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