Page 4/The Battalion/Friday, July 17, 1987 Battalion Classifieds Warped » TORRENT •: • notice '• v' \ ?AKGT.EWOOD 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 $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 ISOtfn $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 1/2 mo. free rent with 6 mo. lease or more Ask'about our Great Giveawayl 693-1111 ^aqglcWaod Sonify Mon.-Frl. 8-7 Sat. 10-5 Sun. 1-4 4iTHarvey Rd. APARTMENTS Newly remodeled apartments Now Available 700 Dominik College Station. Texas 77840 693-POLO 173t7/17 WOODBROOK CONDO 2 Br, 2V2 Baths, LR, DR, Cent. AC, Ceiling fans, washer/dryer, Wet Bar, Fireplace, Patio, Shuttle Bus CALL: (713) 360-5419 rioncE 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 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 Special! Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx. 1 Bdrm.: $150./2 Bdrm.: $175. Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5 p.m. 117tfn Country Living Convenient to Campus, Two Bed room, One Bath Duplex, Furnished or unfurnished. Pets O.K., Stables Nearby. 823-8903 or (846-1051 for LB) 178t8/31 WALK TO A&M. 1&2 Bedroom Kourplexes. Summer & Fall Rates. 776-2300, weekends 1-279-2967. 156t7/2 CUSTOMIZE YOUR APARTMENT. Choose from ceiling fans, mini-blinds, wallpaper, fencing or washer. Quiet area in E. Bryan. 2 Bdrm, start at $295./mo. '/it off 1st month rent. 776-2300, wkends 1-279-2967. 160t7/2 2 Bdrm, 2 Bath, duplex near Post Oak Mall, washer- /dryer, new carpet. $375. 696-4384, 693-0982. 176tfn SOUTHWOOD VALLEY, 2 BDRM DUPLEX, FENCED BACKYARD, W/D CONN., SHUTTLE STOP, $300./mo„ 693-3823. 168t8/4 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 HIGH FEVER Wanted patients with fever to participate in a one day study to be treated with an over- the-counter medication. No blood collected. Call Pauli Research International 776-6236 $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 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 Preleasing Now! 2 & 3 bdrm duplexes near the Hilton 846-2471.776-6856. 83tufn $225. All bills paid. 846-3050. Scholar’s Inn. John & Jo hanna Sandor managers. 164tfn 1 HELP WANTED Part time position in interiorscaping. Must be able to work mornings, Monday thru Friday. Horticulture ex perience required. Apply at The Greenery, Teu, Wed & Thur, 8 to 9 am. 15I2Cavitt. 174t7/10 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 Call Battalion Classified 845-2611 AUGUST GRADUATES!!! Graduation Announcement Orders Pick-Up MSC STUDENT PROGRAMS - RM216 A&B JULY 13-24, MON-FRI. 8am-5pm extra announcements on sale - Student Finance Center Rm 217- THURSDAY, JULY 16, Sam. First come first serve. 175t/7/23 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 Officials want assault suspect to get AIDS test What’s up mmm mmmm TYPING: Accurate, 95 WPM, Reliable. Word Proc essor. 7 days a week. 776-4013. 178t7/I7 DEFENSIVE DRIVING TICKET DISMISSAL. IN SURANCE DISCOUNT, YOU'LL LOVE IT!!! 693- 1322. 170t8/14 WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu scripts, reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614. 159t7/17 VERSATILE WORD PROCESSING - BEST PRICES. FREE CORRECTIONS. RESUMES, THESES, PA PERS, GRAPHICS, EQUATIONS, ETC. LASER QUALITY. 696-2052. 163tfn CHICK LANE STABLES - Large and small pens and stalls. Close to University. Fishing included. 822-0817. 17118/3 « FOR SALE Parents, Students, Faculty! Foreclosed condo. Near campus. Fireplace, all appliances. Qreat terms. Call John @ Century 21 Beal Real Estate, Inc. 775-9000 or B46-1534 16417/17 Cheap auto parts, used. Pic-A-Purl, Inc. 78 and older. 3505 Old Kurtcn Road, Bryan. !02tfn 14x80 two bedroom, 1VS 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 f . for Patti 778-8322 or 693-9946. 169t7/17 SPECIAL Everyway 3-5 Bdrm, 3 Bath. THREE LIV ING AREAS, BEAUTIFUL LOT, GREAT LOCA TION, MUCH MORE MUST SEE. 514 Wayside, 172t7/23 Bryan. 775-4928. CAD program $65.; Mous 845-8975 (w), 846-5576 (h). $65.; Mouse $105. Local dealer Les, 172t7/23 COMPUTERS, ETC. 693-7599. LOWEST PRICES EVER! IBM-PC/XT COMPA TIBLES: 640KB-RAM, 2-360KB DRIVES, TURBO, KEYBOARD. MON ITOR: $649. PC/ATSYSTEMS: $1249. 16U8/14 Honda Aero 50 Scooter. Runs great! Blue. $300. Jill 7 /p ( 176t7/17 STRETCH Your Dollars! WATCH FOR BARGAINS IN THE BATTALION!! HOUSTON (AP) — A state dis trict judge set a hearing for Monday to determine whetner a man charged with sexually assaulting a 15-year-old boy can be forced to take an AIDS test. The Harris County district attor ney’s office is seeking a court order to force Clarence Gerald Shelvin to submit to an AIDS test at the request of the Houston Police Department. Shelvin, 26, was arrested July 2 and charged with aggravated sexual assault in an alleged attack on the teen-ager, police spokesman A1 Baker said. Shelvin’s bond was set at $50,000, and he remains in the Har ris County Jail. More charges may be filed against Shelvin before his July 25 arraig- ment because police spokesman J.C. Mosier said investigators believe Shelvin may have assaulted as many as 12 boys between the ages of 14 and 18. Shelvin has not been asked if he would take the AIDS test volun tarily, Coffee said Wednesday. “He might not voluntarily submit, but he won’t have a choice,” Coffee said. “It does not violate his Fifth Amendment rights.” Coffee said he was confident the court would issue the order because previous courts have ordered similar tests for suspects in recent years. Blood tests are routinely ordered to determine whether a suspect’s blood matches that of semen used as evidence in sex crimes, Coffee said. Police say they believe this is the first time the department has asked to force a suspect to have an AIDS test. Harris County prosecutors say other sex crime suspects have been tested in the past six to eight months. Police asked for the AIDS test “strictly as a preventive measure . . . There is no evidence he has AIDS,” Mosier said. Shelvin had been out of prison for less than two months when the at tack allegedly occurred. He had been paroled after serving six years of a 16-year combined sentence for burglary and sexual assault of an other child, police said. Frida y I tall. ASSOCIATION OF AMATEUR ASTRONOMERS: it Cc view a video on the Galileo Jupiter Orbiter, discuss teck aid niques for solar observation and use the 14-inch telescopt tv • . at 7 p.m. in 404 Rudder. Sunday AGGIELAND BICYCLE CLUB: will sponsor the Watei melon Bike Tour,” a 10-mile leisure ride beginning at; n.m. at the Brazos Center on Briarcrest Drive in Bryan The cost is $1 per person with refreshments served aftn the ride. For more information, call Aggieland Schwinnai 696-9490. MDA SOFTBALL TOURNAMENT: will be held Sept instead of July 18-19 as previously scheduled. For moreh m caii r a hhAh — formation call Betty Conner at 693-1375. Items for What’s Up should be submitted to The Battalia j ea( j 216 Reed McDonald, no less than three working dapkm^ fore desired publication date. ■ “j Three additional tests of redesigned rocket added to NASA plan SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) — Three additional full-scale tests firings of a redesigned solid rocket engine have been added to the space shuttle recovery program, a NASA ced PI manager announced Thursday. John Thomas, manager of the team that is redesigning the flawed :aused engines that caused the Challenger accident, said the three new tests were added after some astronauts and a National Research Council committee recommended that more test firings be done on the new en gines. The additions bring to a total of eight the firings planned with the re designed rocket. Thomas said he hopes to get all three of the additional tests per formed before shuttle flights resume next June, but that the schedu “exceptionally tight.” “The three extra tests art mandatory before the next he said. “We expect to get; two of the three, but hopeful get all three.” Challenger exploded and kiln seven-member crew on Jan. 28, after one of two solid rocket I leaked flame and caused a f to burst shortly after launch. A presidential commisE blameci the accident on a flawdl sign in joints and O-ring sealsof| solid rocket booster inanufafl: by Morton Thiokol. Thomas and a team of NASI Thiokol engineers have com: the flaws in the rocket joint aul conduct full-scale tests to proit new design at the Thiokol plan Brigham City, Utah. Ivis s teni] start Texas senators celebratin OK of windfall tax repeal WASHINGTON (AP) — Wash ington’s oil gladiators in the Senate and administration joined to success fully push through repeal of the Windfall Profits Tax as part of the omnibus trade bill early Thursday. Oil state senators, led by Phil Gramm, R-Texas and David Boren, D-Oklahoma, were joined by Trea sury Secretary James A. Baker III in pushing the debate, which began Wednesday afternoon and ended just after midnight. “We won big, ’ Gramm told a news conference hours after the Senate vote. “Whether it’s going to get it over the top we’ll have to wait and see.” Last year the Senate passed a simi lar measure, which languished in the House and finally died in confer ence. “To see it pass with that kind of bi partisan support was most hearten ing,” said Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D- Texas, and chairman of the Finance Committee, who managed the omni bus trade bill. However, Bentsen was not overly optimistic, and released a statement in which he predicted “substantial opposition from the House side.” “I anticipate a tough fight in the conference committee as we try to convince the House to keep the re peal provision on the trade bill, but we have a real shot at getting this tax repealed,” Bentsen said. Bentsen said he would be talking with Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, chair man of the House Ways and Means committee, which has jurisdiction in the House, about its chances in con ference. Rostenkowski, D-Ill., will be the key vote in the conference, he said. Treasury Secretary Bab Houston businessman whoisao personal friend of Bentsen’s,sail joined in the lobbying effort for peal of the tax Wednesday, diit calling several Republican sens about the vote. “We were clearly in coopen on the Windfall Profits Tax volt' night,” said Baker, referrint Bentsen. “We were both in co® last night tying down votes.” If the repeal survives a Ho, Senate conference committee of signed by the president, supper say it would increase conftden® the oil industry, fostering morel* loans for further domestic exti' th Ca az C ch ge tic tic T< It’ th fo fll ch Sc tion. The measure would lift a * tiered 1980 tax on oil that stall kick in when crude oil hits rel. Official: Budget proposal to fora school districts to increase taxes AUSTIN (AP) — The budget agreement worked out by state leaders would force school districts to raise property taxes to make up for decreased state funds, a Texas As: day. ply shifting the tax burden from the state level totW cal 1 Association of School Boards official said Thurs- But Speaker Gib Lewis, disputing that claim, said tne chai change as an excuse some school boards might use to pass unneeded tax increases. Lewis, Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby and Gov. Bill Clements have agreed to a $38.3 billion 1988-89 state budget that would make school districts pay for 34.8 percent of their costs. Under the current formula, districts pay 33.3 percent, with the rest coming from state and fed eral funds. property tax level.’ He said school districts actually need $430 mi more in state money to cover student enrolls growth through 1989. Crow also said one Texas Edn tion Agency committee study shows that state fund* is now $2.9 billion short of the amount needed todof erything the slate requires schools to do. Overall state funds for public education would go up in the proposed budget, but the change in the funding formula would cut about $170 million from state funds for local school districts. “I think legislators know that a cut in public educa tion will have a direct impact on local property taxes,” said James Crow, director of governmental relations for ' Te ‘ ----- - yc current programs?’ ” he said. “Some districts prol* could. Many districts couldn’t.” Larry Yawn, assistant superintendent for go«| mental relations for the Houston Independent Sc^ District, said the change will cost his clistrict up r million a year. HISD, the state’s largest school disii 1 now gets about $250 million a year in state monei said. the Texas Association of School Boards. “They are sim- But Lewis said actions taken by the Legislature not have to guarantee local tax hikes. “The fear that we have many times, which hasl/ borne out many times, is that many local taxing em use action of the Legislature as a crutch, as an excusi increase their taxes,” he said. Lo br< wi $1 A« Ur yo go $1 In Be