Monday, October 5, 1987/The Battalion/Page 7 jts ion DUS' hLRLB, knot, ;ty FM 99, coj determine ilj aff in America, i a unanimou use those votm sed free Teu Jgly" T-shirts. ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Battalion ClassiHeds ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ le real ugh Tech’s i It’s nod :e in tJit wt ugly." KAMC-Tl hor in a Jive the Tm ech campus oney of the cot ent him s ng with photo ■ depicting tk pictures look to Europe garden settmp to FM 99, L> -shirts “in got d that he» ; river windim ;h the campus. Tech’s newsp Daily, sought t’s more that he “ugliest cait disagreed ms , noting that tit 1 uttered" it its "openness ny charms Tech ex Jod ,ustin got inti >rd. In a lettttl ay in SI, Btatt' that Looney 1 ! ed rebuttal, jective ohservet o wrote”...Mvl vith its elegar,:| lear as Steube: abbock to shak| aage... bing the catni ed "A Real Lm appeared in tl e of Sports lint at in che firt 1 year, offals ions in schools Act, a decrease tied during the ilso are i vith at least sis from twoinct- k, students, tea- ■ators are con- ;1 of violence it tnts. Iheld icion ing A dry-cleaniei severely beat# ed the store art omers after tk tore clerk trast iditionatBrae tiile an 18-yea' d in police cts oeating androt slice repotts y-cleaning st y. He tookth aack of thesto" r, police spotes dd. up real badly ;otng to be fin c of a beadiii was used • NOTICE $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 HEADACHES We would like to treat your tension headache with Tyle nol or Advil and pay you $40. CALL PAULL RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL 776-6236 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 TEMPERATURE STUDY WANTED: Patients with elevated temperature to participate in a short at-home study to evaluate currently available over-the-coun ter fever reducres. No blood taken. $75 offered to those chosen to particcipate. Call Pauli Research 776-6236. 1tfn 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 159 « n 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 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 ALLERGY STUDY WANTED: Patients 18-60 yrs. with known or suspect Fall Weed Allergies/Hayfever to participate in a short allergy study. $100 in centive paid to those chosen to participate. Call Pauli Research Interna tional 776-6236 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 4t*n ULCER STUDY We are looking for people who have been recently diagnosed to have one or more stomach ulcers to participate in a 6 week to 1 year study. $250 to $350 offered to those chosen to participate. Cad Pauli Research International at 776-6236. 1tfn DON’T WAIT! ENROLL NOW! 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. You must be enrolled before your next fever blister. Compensation for volunteers. G&S STUDIES, INC. 846-5933 ACUTE LOW BACK PAIN STUDY Persons needed with recent, painful low back injury. Take one dose of medication and evaluate for 4 hours. Volun teers will be compensated for their time and cooperation. G&S Studies, Inc. 846-5933 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 DEFENSIVE DRIVING TICKET DISMISSAL, IN SURANCE DISCOUNT. CLASSES EVERY WEEK!! 693-1322 . 24 U2/16 t SERVICES WORD PROCESSING: Fasl, Accurate, Experienced, Guaranteed. Papers - Dissertations. Call Diana 846- 1015. 25tl0/10 • SERVICES Financial Aid Grants, Scholarships & Awards available. Guaranteed 5 to 25 sources or your money back. For information: F.A.C.T. 100 Fidelity College Station, TX 77840 or call 409-779-6798 after 7 p.m. 693-2653 STUDENT LOANS AVAILABLE! Stiil making loans for the fall semester. GSL, SLS, and Plus Loans available. Apply now to reserve your loan amount! FIRST VENTURE GROUP 696-6601 16t9/25 • TRAVEL • HELP WANTED Top Fortune 500 company is seeking a Campus Manager to supervise on-going projects throughout the school year. Excellent weekly salary. If in terested call or send resume to: Campus Dimensions 2000 Market Street 11th Floor Philadelphia, Pa 19103 attn: Nancy Law 1-800-592-2121 25t10/6 Pi«a -Hut. NOW HIRING Delivery Drivers •must be 18 •must have own car •must have liability insurance •earn $6-8/hour (wages, tips, reimbursment) Apply at: 1103 Anderson (at Holleman) 4207 Wellborn Rd. 3131 Briarcrest __ CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING. M/F Summer & Carer Opportunities (Will Train). Excellent pay plus world travel. Hawaii, Ba hamas, Caribbean, etc. CALL NOW: 206-736-0775 Ext. 466H ijtfn Earn extra income! Set your own hours. Benefits. Call 1 -800-338-6228. Aggie Girl Cosmetics. 2It 10/5 Assistant Manager, retail accessories and apparel store. Send resume to PO Box 10061 College Station 77840. 23tt0/7 NEED GU I GOING PEOPLE FOR SINGING TELE- GRAMS. THE COSTUME CONNECTION PARTY- GRAMS. 693-3004. 23tl0/9 "HIRINGl" Government jobs - your area. $15,000 - $68,000. Call (602) 838-8885, ext. 4009. 20tl0/16 Electronic Technician- Able to repair audio amplifiers. I’art-time. No phone calls. Lange Music - 1315 S. Texas. 24tl0/8 • PERSONALS Desperately Seeking David. Contact Rachel in Hunt sville...Emergency. 23tl0/5 ♦ TORRENT Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx. 1 Bdrm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $248 Rental assistance available! Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5pm. 4tf RENT FREE, House or Trailer hookup, 2 male stu dents in return for help with cattle, etc. 13 miles from campus. 778-1276. 25tl0/9 Furnished - 1 Bedroom Apartment, Shuttle, Quiet Area, $300. per month. Sublease. Call 696-5763. 19tl0/8 1 8c 2 bdrm. apt. A/C 8c Heat. Wall to Wall carpet. 512 & 515 Northgate / First St. 409-825-2761. No Pets. 140tfn • FOR SALE • TOR SALE NINJA 900 1984 EXCELLENT CONDITION, LOOKS AND RUNS LIKE NEW $2500. 696-1511. 22tl0/6 1985 HONDA MAGNA V65. GREAT CONDITION $2100. O.B.O. Tracey 696-8214. 22tl0/6 ADEL'S LQ PRINTER. UNDER WARRANTY. $140. CALL DOUG 693-2215. 24U0/5 83 KAWASAKI 550 LTD, 4000 mi, $995. May finance. David 846-2463. 24U0/8 B.V.S. New and Used Windsurfers, Sailboarding acces sories, Low prices. 696-3884. 22tl0/6 Cheap auto parts, used. Pic-A-Part, Inc. 78 and older. 3505 Old Kurten Road, Bryan. 23tfn WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu scripts, reports, term papers, resumes. 764-66141 It 10/9 (TYPING BY WANDA, forms, papers, and word proc- rssing. Reasonable. 690-1113. 12t9/29 VERSATILE WORD PROCESSING - BEST PRICES. FREE CORRECTIONS. RESUMES, THESES, PA PERS. GRAPHICS, EQUATIONS, ETC. LASER QUALITY. 696-2052. 163tfn COUN TRY CABIN FRAME SHOP $Drive a little - Save a lot.$ Quality picture framing. Elmo Weedon Road, 776-8005. 22tfn Let’s go skiing over Christmas Break! Suncbase Tours Sixth Annual Collegiate Winter Ski Breaks to Vail- /Beaver Creek, Steamboat. Breckenridge. and Winter Park for five or seven nights including lifts, parties, pic nics, races and more from only $154. Optional round trip air and charter bus transportation available. Call toll free for your complete color ski break brochure. T 800-321-5911 TODAY! 19tX0/8 Auto Liability Insurance from 15 00 per month Texas State Low Cost Insurance 3202 S. Texas (across from Walmart) 775-1988 Auto Service “Auto Repair At Its Best” General Repairs on Most Cars & Light Trucks American & Import OPEN MON-FRI 7:30-5:30 846-5344 Just one mile north of A&M On the Shuttle Bus Route as HTR! lllRoyal, Bryan Across S. College From Tom’s B-B-Q 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 MANOR EAST 3 Manor East Mall 823-8300 LIKE FATHER LIKE SON pg-u 1:8 ‘HELLRAISER r m BIG TOWN r m PLAZA 3 226 Southwest Pkwy 693-2457 ♦FATAL ATTRACTION r £12 * STAKEOUT r £3 ♦THE PICK-UP ARTIST pa n m SCHULMAN 6 2002 E. 29th 775-2463 BACK TO THE BEACH pg NO WAY OUT r $ DOLLAR DAYS $ REVENGE OF THE NERDS II pg-u ♦BEVERLY HILLS COP II r DRAGNET pg-i 3 12 12 LABAMBA pg-13 12 ♦ LOST AND FOUND Blue Stone Sr. Ring. NJB inside. Please call 696-2244. 25tl0/9 MOVING SO MUST SELL MY 24 hr. GYMS OF TEXAS MEMBERSHIP. CHEAP! 776-2150 25tl0/7 36” projection TV, Mitsubishi, stereo, perfect condi tion. $1200. 822-1248 day, 846-4555 after 6. 25tl0/9 COMPUTER'S ETC. 693-7599. LOWEST PRICES EVER! EBM-PC/XT COMPATIBLES: 640KB-RAM, 2-360KB DRIVES, TURBO, KEYBOARD, MON ITOR: $599. PC/AT SYSTEMS: $899. Ufn >INY ADS, BUT REAL HEAVYWEIGHTS WHEN RESULTS REALLY COUNT. Battalion Classified 845-2611 WVVWWVVVWVWWVWVVJ World and Nation 6 killed in Tibetan riot; Chinese impose curfew LHASA, Tibet (AP) — Chinese authorities imposed a curfew Sun day and tried to stop at least one bus load of foreign tourists from leaving this Tibetan capital after pro-inde pendence demonstrations that killed at least six people. Dissidents proclaimed the six as martyrs. They put up signs saying those who died in Thursday’s dem onstration “died for all the Tibetan people, not for themselves.” Nineteen policemen were se riously wounded in that demonstra tion, which was held to protest the arrests of participants in an earlier Sept. 27 demonstration. Buddhist monks at the Sera Mon astery outside Lhasa said they hoped to stage another protest on Wednes day, the 37th anniversary of the day Chinese communist troops moved into Tibet to annex it in 1950. The monks also said in a taped in terview with three French tourists that the 20 monks who staged Thursday’s protest had not returned to the monastery and were believed to be hiding from police. In London, a representative of the Tibetans’ exiled spiritual and civil leader, the Dalai Lama, called the protests “the tip of the iceberg.” The Dalai Lama fled to India in 1959 after a failed uprising against the Chinese. Meanwhile, an American diplo mat in Chengdu, the nearest large city to Tibet, said two Americans de tained in Lhasa after the Sept. 27 demonstration were released and believed to still be in the city. A 10 p.m. curfew was imposed on Tibetans in Lhasa, although foreign ers were allowed to move about past the curfew. Chinese authorities posted warn ings at several hostels that foreigners should not become involved in the unrest, William Milberger, a tourist from San Francisco, said. The nation’s leading newspaper, the People’s Daily, carried a detailed story and pictures of last week’s demonstration. The evening tele vision news for the first time snowed film of the protest. It showed a crowd surging through Lhasa’s Jok- hang Temple square and tossing stones at police and the police station there. Trade agreement receives support from U.S., Canada WASHINGTON (AP) — President Reagan hailed a tentative U.S.-Canadian free trade agreement Sunday that would eliminate all tariffs between the two coun tries as a historic pact beneficial to both nations’ econ omies. “Now, in addition to sharing the world’s largest un defended border, we will share membership in the world’s largest free trade area,” Reagan said in a statement released at the White House. Treasury Secretary James Baker III and Canadian Finance Minister Michael Wilson told a joint news con ference they were confident the agreement would be approved by the U.S. Congress and Canada’s parlia ment. Both described it as a “win-win situation,” good for both countries. U.S. and Canadian negotiators had settled on the general framework for the pact linking the world’s two largest trading partners just before the midnight Satur day deadline that had been set for submission of the agreement to Congress. A preliminary report gave these details of the agreement: • All agricultural tariffs would be eliminated within 10 years, with more access to Canadian markets for U.S. farm products and the conditional elimination of Ca nadian import licenses for U.S. wheat, barley, oats and grain products. • Discriminatory pricing of alcoholic beverages in Canada would be phased out. • Free and open energy trade would be established, with Canadian access to oil from Alaska’s north slope, “subject to certain conditions.” • On automobiles, Canada would immediately elimi nate a tarrif subsidy program linked to export perfor mance or local production. • Many restrictions that require government agen cies to buy only products made within the respective country would be eliminated on both sides. • Border crossings for business purposes would be made easier. • Virtually all existing import and export restric tions would be eliminated, but with procedures set up to lessen the effects on specific industries. • Citizens of each country providing services in the other would be treated as equal to the country’s own cit izens in all new measures affecting services. • Existing laws dealing with subsidies and dumping of inexpensive foreign merchandise in either country will remain. y f*s i Union spokesmen OK contract to end strike for Chicago teachers CHICAGO (AP) — Representa tives of the Chicago Teachers Union late Sunday approved a two-year contract that ended a four-week tea chers’ strike, the longest in the city’s history. The 563-95 vote by the union’s House of Delegates guarantees that the system’s 28,000 teachers and other employees will start work Monday, union spokesman Chuck Burdeen said. The contract will be submitted to rank-and-file union members over the next few weeks, Burdeen said. The system’s 430,000 students would return Tuesday, officials said. Teachers went on strike Sept. 8, their ninth walkout in 18 years. Elsewhere, the Little Rock school district and its teachers reached agreement on a two-year contract to end the first teachers’ strike in Ar kansas. Some 1,400 teachers had been on strike since Sept. 25 against the 26,000-pupil school system. Strikes also continued at Elizabeth, N.J., and two small districts in Penn sylvania. The proposed contract, reached Saturday, called for a 4 percent pay raise this year and a 4 percent in crease the next year, with the sec ond-year increase depending on ad ditional state funds. The contract also called for some reductions in class size. The Board of Education, which has insisted it had no money for raises, planned to finance the $43.8 million package largely through lay offs, including teacher layoffs, board spokesman Robert Saigh said. “You’re asking if teachers are going to be hurt in this process?” he said. “You bet.” He estimated that 1,300 full-time and 500 part-time positions would be cut because of the new contract, many of them classroom teachers with the least seniority. About 100 people would get lay off notices this week, he said. Royal couple from Japan visits U.S. town FAIRHAVEN, Mass. (AP) — Japanese Crown Prince Akihito and Princess Michiko visited this tiny seacoast town where the first Japanese citizen is believed to have taken up residence in the United States. The royal couple also visited historic Plymouth Plantation in Plymouth, where the Pilgrims first arrived in Massachusetts to settle in 1620, and boarded the Mayflower II, a replica of the ship that brought the Puritans from England. In 1841, 14-year-old Manjiro Nakahama was one of five Japa nese fishermen stranded on a small island in the Pacific after they were blown out to sea by a storm. They were rescued from the island six months later by an American whaling vessel and Na kahama eventually settled in Fairhaven. The prince and princess ar rived in Massachusetts on Satur day for an eight-day U.S. visit. { Hold Amigos! Come by for FAJITA RITA’S new Fiesta Night Drink Specials 7-10 p.m. MONDAY $1 25 Margaritas Mucho Grande TUESDAY $1 25 All Mexican Beer WEDNESDAY $2°° Gold Margaritas on the rocks Happy Hour 4 p.m.-7 p.m., ; every night Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m. midnight Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m.-l a.m. Sun. 11 a.m.-IO p.m.