%^^%^%%^4c3|e3|c2|c3|c3|e3|c2|e3|e3|e3|e3|e3|e2|c3|c3|c Battalion Classifieds ^^^%?£3|C3|C3|C3iC3|C3|e3|C3|C3|C3|C3|C3|C3|C3|C3|C3|e3|C3|e3|e • FOR RENT mmrnm* H mi timmn TANGLEWOOE> SOUTH CURES Apartment H unter's Headache All bills paid! 1, 2, 3 bdrm. apartments 2 swimming pools 2 laundry rooms Exercise room Party room Covered parking Convenient location 693-1111 c ]aiyJleWood Soutfy Mon.-Fri. 8-7 Sat. 10-5 Sun. 1-4 1/2 mo. free rent with 6 mo. lease or more Ask about our Great Giveaway! 411 Harvey Rd. W00DBR00K CONDO 2 Br, 2 1 / 2 Baths, LR, DR, Cent. AC, Ceiling fans, washer/dryer, Wet Bar, Fireplace, Patio, Shuttle Bus CALL: (713) 360-5419 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. It# 4 HELP WANTED The Houston Chronicle Has immediate openings for sum mer & fall route carriers. Carrier positions require working early morning hours delivering papers and can earn $400. to $600. per month plus gas allowance. Call Andy at 693-7815 or Julian at 693-2323 for an appointment. Hi &JCJKV I V.C»«> : 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 I60t6/19 TYPING: Accurate, 95 WPM, Reliable. Word Proc essor. 7 days a week. 776-4013. 181t7/24 TUTORING available: Algebra and Business Math courses; Economics: Principles, 311, 321, 323; Market ing: 321,401. Call Mark: 779-9105. 181t7/28 DEFENSIVE DRIVING TICKET DISMISSAL. IN- SURANCE DISCOUNT, YOU'LL LOVE IT!!! 693- 1322. 170t8/14 CHICK LANE STABLES - Large and small pens and stalls. Close to University. Fishing included. 822-0817. 17118/3 TYPING: By Wanda. Forms, papers, and word proc essing. 690-1113. 179t8/4 WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu scripts, reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614. 179t8/19 SERVICES VERSATILE WORD PROCESSING - BEST PRICES. FREE CORRECTIONS. RESUMES, THESES, PA PERS, CRAPFIICS, EQUATIONS, EEC LASER QUALI TY. 696-2052. 163lin • NOTICE 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 CUSTOMIZE YOUR APARTMENT Choose from ceiling fans, mini-blinds, wallpaper, fencing or washer. Quiet area in E. Bryan. 2 Bdrm, start at $295./mo. '/i off 1st month rent. 776-2300, wkends 1-279-2967. 160t7/2 WALK TO A&M. 1&2 Bedroom F'ourplexes. Summer & Fall Rates. 776-2300, weekends 1-279-2967. 156t7/2 For Lease Newly remodeled 3 Bdrm, 2 Bath Apt. Close to campus. Call 693-POLO. 179t7/24 1 & 2 bdrm. apt. A/C & Heat. Wall to Wall carpet. 512 & 515 Northgate / First St. 409-825-2761. No Pets. 140tfn 4 Bdrm, 2 Bath house, on Carter Creek $600./mo. Call 846-5517. 180t8/6 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 Spec $225. All bills paid. 846-3050. Scholar’s Inn. John & Jo hanna Sandor managers. 164tfn $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 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 1Q2t3/3l Fever Blister Study now enrolling if you previously signed up for the fever blister study please call to update information & schedule appointment. G&S Studies, Inc. 846-5933 ...... ♦ BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY NO SPEED LIMIT Join the most explosive op portunity of the 80’s. Condom vending Top locations avail able NOW! 10 locations, $8,000; 20 locations $15,500 includes all machines, busi ness supplies, product, and company secured locations. First Marketing Co. 3959 Nova Road Port Orange, FI. 32019 1-800-227-4952 ♦ FOR SALE TANDY/2000 256K Memon Keyboard For Sale. Aslo Programs: Basic Compile:. Word Processing, Account ing. Call 779-9105 Ask foi Mark. 18)t7/28 COMPUTERS, ETC. 693-7599. LOWEST PRICES EVER! IBM-PC/XT COMPATIBLES: 640KB-RAM. 2-360KB DRIVES. TURBO, KEYBOARD. MON- Fl'OR: $649. PC/AT SYS TEMS: $1249. !61i8/!4 Large dorm refrigerator $75.; 9xl2fl aqua carpet $70. "■3-6763. (near new). 693-6763. Cheap auto parts, used. Pic-A-Purt, Inc. 78 and older. 3505 OKI Kurtcn Road, Bryan. 102lfn 1982 Olds Omega, Air, Good Condition. One Owner, $2600. Call 693-0730 after 5pm. 179t7/S 1 VVOODBROOK CONDO Poolside. 2 Bdrm. '>'/■< Bath, fireplace, $59,500. 764-0765. l81t8/7 Ace Used Appliances and Furniture. All types. Appli ances and Furniture Guaranteed. LAYAWAY. Deliv ery Available. Buy. Sell. Trade. 822-2088 713 S. Main Bryan, Tx. 179t7/28 Page A/The Battalion/Friday, July 24, 1987 Tire falls off jet; Delta plane forced to land Warped by Scott McCulb = THIS IS A WP® SPECIAL REPORT HOUSTON (AP) — A Delta Air Lines jet was forced to land at Hous ton Intercontinental Airport after a tire apparently fell off when the air craft took off from Houston Hobby Airport about noon Thursday, offi cials said. Delta’s Flight 881 from Hobby in southeast Houston enroute to Dallas lost one of its four main landing gear tires on the plane’s right side, said Bill Ainsworth, manager of public affairs for Houston’s aviation de- wtth Merrit Jennings goov Armwocrt FROft AUSTIN. TEXAS governor bill CLEMENTS HAS TosT A A/NOUN CEP TO THE STATE LEGISLATURE... partment. Delta spokesman Jackie Pate said, “The pilot decided to go over to In tercontinental to land since the run ways are larger and did so without incident.” The Boeing 737 jet landed at In tercontinental in north Houston at 12:25 p.m. and was being inspected, Ainsworth said. The 106 passengers on board were taken by bus to an air port terminal, he said. Arrangements were made for pas sengers to get to Dallas on other flights, Pate said. Delta has been plagued in recent weeks with a series of near-accidents and other problems. Last Sunday, because of controller error, two Delta jets flew danger ously close to each other in the air over Virginia, the Federal Aviation Administration said. Delta airliners caused at least two near-collisions with other aircraft, landed on the incorrect runway, landed at the wrong airport and came perilously close to crashing into the Pacific Ocean because of a pilot’s mistake, officials said. Police arrest Dallas men seeking sex DALLAS (AP) — In a lunchtime sting that lasted for two hours out side a Dallas motel, undercover fe male police officers arrested a dozen men who offered to pay an average of $30 for various sex acts, authori ties said. The roadside-decoy operation, conducted Tuesday on Harry Hines Boulevard, is conducted periodi cally, and police would not say when they plan to strike again. “It’s something we could do every day if we had the time and man power,” Dallas police Sgt. Don Marks said. “It’s like fishing in a stock tank,” he said. “There’s no telling the num bers we could pick up.” Marks said those arrested rep resent a cross-section of the commu nity, with about half the clientele wearing business suits. HIS PECISION TP SCRAP ALL CURRENT STATE BJpGET PLANS ANP PROPOSAL'S FOR ONE HE'S ttORE FAMILIAR WITH-- HE'S DECIPEP UP THE STATE VJIT A STSTENl OF slush FUNDS m a JL1 ^ What s up Friday CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST: will conduct a Fridai Night Alive” meeting at 6 p.m. in 410 Rudder. Saturday PERUVIAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION: will celebratePe ruvian Independence Day at Manolo’s. For more informa tion contact 8teve after 6 p.m. at 696-4235. KAMU RADIO: will air “What ’ya know,” a weekly nationally broadcast radio program from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Thisweelf Aggie traditions will oe spotlighted. Sunday COLLEGE STATION PARKS AND RECREATION DP PARTMENT: will present the bands The Brotherhood and The Momentos in a free, live concert at Central Part from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. For more information call the ret reation office at 764-3408. Items for What’s Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald, no less than three working days be fore desired publication date. Texas, southern states not receiving fair share of U.S. funds, report says sign low< nan lead igna Red WASHINGTON (AP) — A shift in the way the federal government spends its money on the states has left economically strapped states in the South with fewer dollars and Texas at the bottom of the list, according to a report released Thurs day by the Sunbelt Institute. “As this report makes clear, the West-South Central region of the country — which includes Texas as well as Arkansas, Louisiana and Okla homa — ranks dead last in a regional ranking of per capita federal grants,” said Rep. Mike An drews, D-Houston, chairman of the congressio nal Sunbelt Caucus. The report states that while New York sends only 75 cents to Washington for every dollar of aid it receives, Texas sends $1.59, the worst ratio of taxes paid to benefits received of all 50 states. Florida is second to last with a $1.49 to $1 ratio, according to the report. Rep. Clay Shaw Jr., R-Fla., said, “The bottom line is the South is not receiving its fair share.” Dr. Bernard L. Weinstein and Richard W. Wigley, who authored the report, said, “The rea son for the regional imbalance is clear: biased and misdirected federal formula grants, and a steady flow of federal procurement dollars to states outside of the Sunbelt.” At a press conference in the Capitol, half a dozen Sunbelt Caucus members declared that changing the system under which federal grants- in-aid and procurement are allocated will be the number one goal of the Sunbelt Caucus in the 100th Congress. But the Sunbelt Institute report shows south ern states ate not the only states paying more than they are receiving in federal aid. New Jersey ranks third to last at $1.42 followed by Connecti cut at $1.35. A statement released by the Northeast Mid west Institute claimed that under the current federal system “Frost Belt” states get more fed eral grants-in-aid because they pay more in taxes and matching grants. “Northeastern states paid $12 billion more in federal taxes in fiscal 1986 than they received in federal outlays; the Midwest paid $21 billion more,” according to the release. “The S« gained $27 billion, and the West, S29 billion If grants and procurement are taken ini:; : count, so should federal salaries and wages: payments to individuals, said Diane Dew: rector of policy for the Northeast Midwest! tute. “Of the ten states receiving the highest ait:, of federal expenditures per dollar of fees taxes, four were in the South . . . and sixra; the West,” DeVaul said in her statement. Among actions being pursued by the Sub Caucus is a bill by Rep. Charles Bennett, W: that would require use of the most currentceJj data to determine per capita income for ai! tion of federal grants. “It ought not to depend on whether sor nes’s got a better congressman, a morechanr. more charismatic congressman,” Bennettsaii He said most southern states rank at thcr tom of the list in per capita income yet art: getting the federal monies designed to pro aid to disadvantaged parts of the country. R tc ir c Car anti hor Cle Tei ( anc his sea son Am plei 1 sea Cle New air-conditioned helmet cools off motorcycle riders PLANO (AP) — Summertime, with its balmy evenings and bright days inspires communion with the out-of-doors, and what better way to enjoy the summer elements than as tride a motorcycle? One of the drawbacks to Texas bikers has been the heat, especially while wearing the safety helmets re quired by law. While manufacturers have re duced the weight and bulk of most motorcycle helmets, they have not managed to combat the heat until re cently. But a Plano company, Cool- Power, is offering riders some relief — an air-conditioned motorcycle helmet. “Motorcycle helmets have at least an inch of Styrofoam insulation, and an inch of Styrofoam is also what they use in refrigerators to keep the heat they generate inside,” said Richard Buist, president of Cool- Power. Using a thermoelectric cooling system, Cool-Power helmets main tain an interior temperature that is almost 30 degrees lower than what- evfer inferno is sweltering outside. The Cool-Power helmet operates on the principal that most blood at one time or another flows through the head to the brain. The headgear cools that blood, which then flows on to other parts of the body, eliminat ing all but the most delicate of per spiration. “I think the greatest thing about it is that it does work,” said Buist, a physicist who has been a pioneer in the development of thermoelectrics. The key elements of the Cool- Power system are two 1.2-inch square ceramic plates that sandwich semiconductor material — made from “dust off a bat’s wing, the eye of a newt and stirred in the light of a full moon,” Buist said, joking. Two electrical leads attached to a 12-volt battery convert the module into a heat pump that directs heat from one ceramic surface to the other. The helmet plugs into the motorcycle’s power source through a coiled cord hooked up to an electri cal attachment. A finned aluminum strip strad dling the top of the helmet exhausts the heat collected in one plate of the module. And while heat is drawn to one surface, the other ceramic plate be comes cool. A copper coating melded to the cool plate transmits cooling to a copper braid suspended “It just seemed like an other wild idea, but when I really started thinking about it, I also knew the application was small enough to be practical. ” — Richard Buist, president of Cool-Power in a “bladder” filled with fluid. The braid cools the fluid, which in turn cools the wearer’s head. “Thermoelectric modules have been used for a long time by the mil itary and NASA, but it’s only re cently that they’ve been applied to consumer goods,” Buist said. He said a similar cooling system is used in small, portable picnic coolers and that French technicians have experi mented with thermoelectric power to cool railway cars, although such a large application is not yet feasible. An entourage of about 15 Cool- Power employees assemble the cool ing systerfi in the back rooms at com pany headquarters in Plano. The package is shipped to a hel met manufacturer in Idaho, who in stalls the cooling system along with a typical plastic foam and terry-cloth lining. /' Because Cool-Power has farmed its business out to a manufacturer that uses a special technique to con struct its helmets, each helmet ex ceeds U.S. Department of Transpor tation regulations by almost 50 percent, company officials say. And the cooling unit adds only four ounces to the total weight of a hel met. “Within eight months, this will be the wave of the future,” Buist said. Cool-Power started marketing its helmet in April, and already the company boasts a backlog of almost 60 units. A motorcycle shop in Arlington sells the helmets, and Buist said Plano Honda is among many distrib utors that have requested a Cool- Power helmet to test. “Most people have been positive about the project,” he said. “They usually get this look on their face and then say, ‘Well, I once thought of something like that,’ or ‘I was wondering when somebody was going to come up with a way to do that.’ ” The primary drawback to the hel met is cost. Each one retails for about $500, but Buist said he hopes to reduce production costs to $350 in the near future. Top-quality hel mets sell for between $250 and $1,000, depending on the labels they bear. Buist said the Cool-Power helmet is manufactured by the same com pany that produces Best helmets, some of which sell for $ 1,000. Best markets a helmet that has a system of vents to circulate air within the headgear, but Cool-Power, which Buist said holds exclusive world-wide patents on its product, is the only company to sell a helmet that actually is air-conditioned. When Mississippi inventor Jerry McCall first approached Buist in 1983 with the idea for a refrigerated motorcycle helmet, Buist was a se nior vice president for technology at Marlow Industries in Dallas and a skeptic. “We thought he was just another crackpot,” Buist said ol McCall. “It just seemed like another wild idea, but when I really started thinking about it, I also knew the application was small enough to be practical.” Marlow Industries worked with McCall to devise a prototype. How ever, Marlow became concerned with the potential liability of such a product and abandoned the project. Callers give police clue in murders HOUSTON (AP) — TheH: ris County Sheriffs office®f; has received more than from citizens since investip: released voice recordings of man suspected of killing a fc wood couple earlier this monik The tapes of July 14 telepkff calls from a man reporting ' slayings to authorities wj broadcast on local radio and® vision stations Wednesday. The recordings were releas by Harris County sheriffsiinS gators in their latest move tosd 1 the slayings of Edward Brucei Millian, 49, and his wife,JoM 51. The bodies of the coupM ’ found in the early morningliolJ of July 14, after the mysterfi caller notified authorities. Sgt. J.J. Freeze said that some of the calls received inJ spouse to the recordings soa have been pranks, others 1? provided information thatW checked out by investigators. “We feel that somebody 1 ' there knows the suspect, and 1 hope (he) will come out,” Ft# said. Lt. Drew Warren saidthetif had been heard by about 1 friends, relatives and business* sociates of the slain couple,' none could identify the caller “The voice is that of a pet* that had a lot of anger invoMI a person that would beasiL path or psychotic in nat# Warren said. Investigators said the ftrstjj phone call to an emergency of ator came from a man at the# couple’s home at 1:22 a,m l: caller said, “There’s been a if| der by the lake, Kingwoodli 1 The second call was placd 3:27 a.m. to a dispatcher. “If you hurry to Shore Laf Kingwood Lakes number may still be alive,” the callers#;: T he caller made no atteP? ; disguise his voice on the first 1 ' but the voice on the second was disguised, with the t |1 | voice sounding deep and rasp;) A the 9, v sea fice sinj C fou one sea off ( Te: Pet Pet sea var pas anc uti' Rai Tii