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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (July 28, 1987)
Battalion Classifieds FOR SALE Page 4/The Battalion/Tuesday, July 28, 1987 Cheap auto part*. u«-<l. I’ic-Afl’ui'l, Inc. 78 and older. 3505 Old Ktirtcn Road, Bryan. 102tfn 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 « FOR RENT THE GOLDEN RULE Summer and/or Fall/Spring Openings for Men and Women, Chris tian-like, non-smoking Telephones ip, 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. 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 Summer Special! One or two bedroom apartments 1 bills r ' — '• ‘ " $225. All bills paid. 846-3050. Scholar’s Inn. John & Jo hanna Sandor managers. 164tfn 4 Bdrm, 2 Bath house, on Carter Creek $600./mo. Call 846-5517. 180t8/6 1 & 2 bdrm. apt. A/C & Heat. Wall to Wall carpet. 512 & 515 Northgate / First St. 409-825-2761. No Pets. 140tfn 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 ♦ 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. Part-time Help Wanted. Apply at Piper’s Gulf, Univer sity and'Texas Avenue. 183t8/7 <* 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 STUDENT TYPING — 20 years experience. Fast, ac curate, reasonable, guaranteed. 693-8537. 183t8/14 LET US CLEAN YOUR HOME. CALL NOREEN OR NATALYN: 693-9924. 183t8/4 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 CHICK LANE STABLES - Large and small pens and stalls. Close to University. Fishing included. 822-0817. 171t8/3 DEFENSIVE DRIVING TICKET DISMISSAL. IN SURANCE DISCOUNT, YOU’LL LOVE IT!!! 693- 1322. 170t8/14 TYPING: Accurate. 95 WPM, Reliable. Word Proc essor. 7 daysa week. 776-4013. I81i7/24 (IllMISCELLANEOaS SPECIAL BARGAIN! Your personal scientific 12 page Astrology profile, only $10. Send today: Zodiac-D, 400 Woods, Teaneck NJ 07666 (include birth info.) 18317/28 ♦ 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 VERSATILE WORD PROCESSING - BEST PRICES. FREE CORRECTIONS. RESUMES, THESES, PA PERS, GRAPHICS, EQUATIONS, ETC. LASER QUALITY. 696-2052. 163tfn Ace Used Appliances and Furniture. All types. Appli- kWAY. Deliv- • NOTICE 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 Fever Blister Study CFA Blue Persian Female Kitten. 779-6418. 183t7/29 1982 Olds Omega, Air, Good Condition, One Owner, $2600. Call 693-0730 after 5pm. 179t7/31 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 10213/31 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 ..... $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 $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 medications No blood collected. , 1 Jlt - Call Pauli Research International 776-6236 CrepeMyrtte ^—11:30-2:00 p.m.—-s All You Can Eat Daily Buffet $299 Only In the Best Western Inn at Chimney Hill 901 E. University 260-9150 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 Nite" •DENOTES DOLBY STEREO MANOR east 3 (Vlanor East Mall 823-8300 WOODBROOK CONDO Poolside, 2 Bdrm, 2'/2 .Bath, fireplace, $59,500. 764-0765. 18 U8/7 ances and Furniture Guaranteed. LAYAV ery Available. Buy. Sell. Trade. 822-2088 713 S. Main Bryan, Tx. 179t7/28 Doctor calls drug addiction hazard of job Warped by Scott McCullc AUSTIN (AE) — A California physician said Monday there is a growing awareness by professionals who treat drug abuse that narcotics addiction is an “occupational haz ard” among medical doctors. Dr. David Smith, founder and medical director of Haight Ashbury Medical Clinics in San Francisco, said many adult children of alcoholic parents are going into medicine. “They don’t drink but expose themselves to other drugs,” Smith told the annual Institute of Alcohol and Drug Studies. Smith, the leadoff speaker at the Five-day meeting, told of one doctor who hooked himself up to a 24-hour intravenous solution of cocaine and 5EE., | WE SoT E6G5, 5/MMPOO WHAT ELSE DO r /i/EEP? LET ME SEE WK BACK- <W, PEAS, CHICKED, CHEESE ... OKA’f, LET'S 5EE YOUR STOMACH. AH, BMAMS, ANP cantaloupe. WHAT /s GOING ON with you TWO? I SCRiBBLEP MV SHOW LIST do WAV ALL CNER his bopv. called it “recreational drug use.” Onis reason for narcotics addic tion among doctors, Smith said, is that they are not afraid of neetlles “where among a lot of people in our society the needle is taboo.” Smith said so many people are now abusing more than one drug that “the pure alcholic is an endan gered species.” “Young people are abusing every thing under the sun,” he said but named alcohol as the No. 1 cause of drug overdoses at rock concerts. However, he said, often when par ents are informed that their child al most died of acute alcoholic poison ing, their first reaction is, “Thank God he’s not on drugs.” “Young people like to mystify drugs,” Smith said. He said a “new” street drug called “ecstasy” was first made in 1914. “But this generation has learned from Madison Avenue,” he said. “They take an old drug, give it a new name, say it makes sex better and theye’s a line a mile long to get at the drug.” Smith said there is general agreement “that a broad-based co caine abuse epidemic has occurred in the United States between 1980 and 1986, the peak of which is not yel in sight.” “If you think cocaine is a rich man’s drug, you’re hopelessly out of d f See Jane Swim Photo by Robert W. Rinc date,” he told the audience. Allori Sebenoler, 13, of A&M Consolidated Junior High School, trains for a swimming meet. Sebe noler is one of 52 swimmers from this area to place in the top two of their age groups at regionals. FBI places former Texas Klan leader “\ on 10-most-wanted list of criminals lesD out s Cafe Aujhen(t Country Cooking DAUUAS (AP) — A former Ku Klux Klan leader and “ambassador- at-large” for the white supremacist Aryan Nations has been added to the FBI’s 10-most-wanted list three months after his indictment for con spiring to overthrow the U.S. gov ernment. The grand jury that indicted Uouis Ray Beam Jr. said the plot combined millions of dollars in sto len and counterfeit money with plans fpr bombings and assassina tions. “I believe he is one of the most dangerous men in the world,” said David Berg, a Houston lawyer who in 1981 and 1982 helped to win court orders preventing Beam from harassing Vietnamese fishermen on the Gull Coast and from operating paramilitary training camps in Texas. “T was just aS surprised by Uouis Beam’s making the 10-most-wanted list as I was waking up this morning to discover the sun,” Berg said. Beam, who has “Born to Uose” tat tooed on his left arm, now faces his greatest threat, said Mark Briskman, director of the Dallas regional office of the Anti-Defamation Ueague, an arm of the Jewish fraternal organi zation B’nai B’rith. “He’s now desperately afraid,” Briskman said of the man who has spent years escaping one close brush with the law after another. As a charismatic Klan leader, Beam, who patrolled the Mexican border with compatriots looking for illegal aliens, is remembered as a fer vent anti-communist who tried to as sault a Chinese vice premier and a had to leave town by sundown. The schools Beam and Borel attended were white and most residents were comfortable with segregation, Borel said. Beam, in the fourth grade, boasted to playmates that he was a Klansman, and by the sixth grade he was trying to recruit like-minded 12- '1 invSi Pf in “I was just as surprised by Louis Beam’s making the 10-most-wanted list as I was waking up this morning to discover the sun. ” — Houston lawyer David Berg workaholic who established a na tional computer network for right- wing extremists. As a teen-ager growing up in Lake Jackson south of Houston, Beam was obsessed by the history of the Civil War and the South and carried a Confederate flag, those who knew him say. “We played Civil War, and he was always the rebel and always said the South was going to rise again,” said Allen Borel, a boyhood friend who still lives in the town of about 20,000 in Brazoria County. Blacks in Lake Jackson in the 1950s and early 1960s knew they year-olds, Borel said. Beam, by high school, was carry ing a little Confederate flag to class each day, said James Phillips, now principal of Brazosport High School near Lake Jackson. Beam married a Lake Jackson woman, the first of at least three wives, and went to fight in the Viet nam War as a helicopter gunner. In his manifesto, “Essays of a Klansman,” Beam bragged of 51 kills in Vietnam. He joined the United Klans of America after Vietnam but later switched to the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, the Anti-Defamation League said, a group which itors right-wing groups. Beam in the 1970s was inis] gated in the bombing of an an™ M radio station and for shootingupti leagi Houston headquarters of the» prof ist Workers Party. In 1979, Bo* reali lunged at Chinese Vice P™ PI feng Hsiao-ping as he wasbit Ang his Houston hotel. ptug He became grand titan andikB sion; grand dragon of the Texas Kb E' 1977, he launched Klan “bordeiSj are . 1 trols” in South Texas to catch iff ,na j ( - im migrants. the In 1978 and 1979, he led aft theii recruitment drive at Fort H« Aoac near Killeen. Armed Klan® mar * from the Army later appeared/ their him at a rally in Euless, theAntii amadou League said. I ea g> The Klan in 1979, 1980 and I? 5 entered a dispute between Ait day- and Vietnamese fishermenalonji d°>’ Texas Gulf Coast. Vietnamese/: terli threatened, crosses were bumeJ Yoi their yards and their boats»' f aus burned. ‘ n g.’ Beam in the late 1970s alsotc Fa nized the Texas Emergency Rest: fhe I where Klansmen trained in war(i .! or 1' Beam retired as grand drape ma< * June 1981 and associated' .l°h-” Aryan Nations in the IdahoPant S die. agan THERE’S NO SUCH THING AS AN ORDINARY CITIZEN. 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And that makes it anything but ordinary $185 CITIZEN CO/MPUTER 403B University Dr. (Northgate) College Station c N35 Citizen Amene.i Cnrpor.itinn Citizen and the Citizen are trademarks ut Citizen Mi'atJl Ca>. I.td IBM |s iepjsteleil ttademark ,,l Intel national Business Machines Curp Epsiin is a registered trademark ot Epson C.orp ALL PROVISIONAL STUDENTS must attend a meeting “I com: mem Thursday, August 6 224 MSC 4-5 p.m. mandatory Petal Patch FLORIST TEXAS - DOZEN YELLOW ROSES (15 Roses!) JULY’S SPECIAL! *19.50 All Major Credit Cards Accepted By Phoi 40% OFFALL SILK FLOWER ARRANGEMENTS TEXAS 707 College Station 696-6T ■ — 1