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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 16, 1987)
Page 8AThe Battalion/Friday, October 16,1987 Battalion Classifieds 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 A 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 1973 Honda 350, 4 cylinder motorcycle. 764-9222. Windshields, Navasota Glass will pay $50. deductible. Insurance claims handled. 1-825-3202 anytime.27tl 1/3 powe- ramp, Thallia preamp Denon turntable. Send phone# to: James PO Box 3657 C.S., Tx. 77844. I will call you. 33t 10/21 SERVICES VERSATILE WORD PROCESSING - BEST PRICES. FREE CORRECTIONS RESUMES, THESES, PA PERS, GRAPHICS, EQUATIONS. ETC. LASER QUALITY. 696-2052. 163tfn 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 $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 WORD PROCESSING: Fast, Accurate, Experienced, Guaranteed. Papers - Dissertations. Call Diana 846- 1015. 25tl0/16 $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 4tfn WORD PROCESSING. Thesis, Dissertations. Experi enced. Dependable. AUTOMATED CLERICAL SERVICES. 693-1070. 3111 1/23 GOLD STAR TYPING. Business, Manuscripts, Aca demic. Reasonable. Call Anna 775-6695. 30tl0/16 Word Processing-Reasonable rates. Call Ber- 3785. 30tl 1/6 WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, dieses, manu scripts, reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614. SOU 1/6 PERSONALS Do You Struggle For Intimacy in Personal Relationships? Free information Bernard Richards, Inc. PO Box 1368 Fair Lawn, NJ 07410. 34tl0/16 DEFENSIVE DRIVING TICKET DISMISSAI SURANCE DISCOUNT 693-1322. CLASSES EVERY WEEK!! 24tl2/16 • BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY • HELP WANTED ACUTE LOW BACK PAIN STUDY Persons needed with recent, painful low back injury. Take one oose of medication and evaluate for 4 hours. Volun teers will be compensated for their time and cooperation. G&S Studies, Inc. 846-5933 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 WANTED: Patients with high blood pressure, either on or off blood pressure medication, to par ticipate in a research study to evaluate and treat h.b.p. Ages 21 - 70. $400 monetary incentive of fered to those who participate. Cali Pauli Research International 776-6236 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 PIZZA NOW HIRING DRIVERS • great pay • flexible hours • loads of fun Call or come by 1702 S. Kyle, Suite 101 (next to Thomas Sweet) 764-8629 must have own car & insurance The Houston Chronicle is taking applications for immedi ate route openings. Pay is based on per paper rate & gass allow ance is provided. The route re quires working early mornings, 7 days a week. If interested call: James at 693-7815 for an appointment. 33,10/23 CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING. M/F Summer & Carer Opportunities (Wil! Train) Excellent pay plus world travel. Hawaii, Ba hamas, Caribbean, etc. CALL NOW: 206-736-0775 Ext. 466H 19tfn Auto Liability Insurance from 15 00 per month Texas State Low Cost Insurance 3202 S. Texas (across from Walmart) 775-1988 Thomas Pool Winter Hours M-F 5:30 a.m.-6:30 a.m. Adult Laps 9 a.m.-7 p.m. General Public Sat. 8c Sun. 11 a.m.-l p.m. Adult Laps 1 p.m.-7 p.m. General Public Masters Swimming Available 1300 James Parkway Overseas Jobs. Summer, Year-round. Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia. All fields. $900-2000. mo. Sightseeing. Free Info. Write IJC PO Box 52 Corona Del Mar, Ca 92625. 27tl0/27 Are you an exercise enthusiast? Energetic & fit women edei' 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 needed to teach classes. Work 1 on 1 with our members & handle membership sales. Apply in person. Shape- Way Women's Fitness Center. Full-time & Part-time positions available. 3710 E. 29th St. 29tfn Earn $480 weekly— $60 per hundred circulars mailed. Guaranteed. Homeworkers needed to perform mail services. Incentive programs available. Send legal size stamped self addressed envelope to United Service of America 24307 MaGIC Mtn. Parkway, Suite #306, Va lencia, Ca. 91355. 32t 10/23 Delivery man wanted. Must have own car. 5-10pm. Chick-Fil-A 764-0049. SU10/19 Student wanted. Part-time housekeeping. Flexible hours. Good pay. 776-4273 after 6. 30U0/16 ral. temporarily needed to assist me in locating hous ing. 512-346-1984. 30tl0/16 “HIRING!" Government jobs - your area. $15,000 - $68,000. CaU (602) 838-8885, ext. 4009. 20U0/16 ULCER STUDY MALE DANCERS NEEDED. THE COSTUME CON NECTION PARTYGRMAS. 693-3004. 33tl0/21 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. P/T afternoon/evening person wanted to manage flight operations desk, (scheduling charters, bookkeeping, ordering). 846-3591. 33tl0/16 FOR RENT Call Pauli Research International at 776-6236. 1tfn Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx. 1 Bdrm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $248 Rental assistance available! Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5pm. 4tfn 607 Texas Avenue (acroM from Texas A&M) 696-1427 World and Nation i U.S. military loses track of Stealth fighter plane Twii is sl( LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) — An Air Force plane that Pentagon sources said was a top-secret Stealth fighter was missing Thursday and the Air Force said it was searching for the aircraft. A Pentagon official in Washing ton who asked not to be named de scribed the missing plane as a Stealth fighter, similar to the plane that crashed in 1986 in California. The source refused to discuss the conditions under which the plane disappeared and it could not be learned immediately whether the plane was on a training exercise or a flight test. CBS News, quoting unidentified Pentagon sources, said the pilot of the Stealth was missing. The Air Force refused, however, to say what kind of plane it was or how many crew members were aboard. The plane was last tracked on ra dar at 8:45 p.m. Wednesday about 100 miles northwest of here, Mjr. Victor Andrijauskas of Nellis Air Force Base said. Andrijauskas would not say where the plane was from or release any other details. He said emergency crews are in the vicinity searching for the aircraft. The Air Force generally releases the type of aircraft and the number of crew members aboard when crashes occur. Andrijauskas refused to comment on the unusual secrecy. A plane believed to be a Stealth fighter crashed in July 1986 in the western Sierra Nevada, touching off a 150-acre brushfire in Sequoia Na tional Park. The crash occurred about 12 miles northeast of Bakersfield, Calif. Air Force guards carrying rifles and pistols barred people from that crash site. The area of the crash is about 100 miles south of a secret base where the Air Force is known to be testing Stealth fighter aircrafts. The F-19 fighter known as the Stealth has been descril»ed as an ex- MINNF [Viola and 1 : sota Twins' d have to pai St. Louis C; electronic technology, materialsa World Sene aerodynamic design to foil ns “I dom and infrared sensors. [ American L n team spet The Air Force has said it wilj before the 750 of the proposed advancedbj American L cal fighters, which will be highiec ypeofball. nology planes slated to become:; they can be m.imsi.n ni die I'.S. air defense iaj they’ll still u tern through the mid-Slstantuij I Viola, 17 AL’s second A ‘‘Gunsmoke ’87 compel® lamed by among < i .it k Aii Force cre«Kelly to sta bases across the nation ended: because hei week on the Nellis Air Force!; idinals, who Range, but Andrijauskas refe witch-hitter vt\ il i he missing airplaneluo earn agaimi any of those bases. Itional Leagi one o to test super-secret bombing and gun Nellis is vada used craft. Its range covers about 3 millionitrsi desert and mountain areas, aridjj tiers on three sides the Nevada:1 Site, where nuclear weapons J are conducted. three siiesE 1 Francisco. Viola, wh< tiangeup, n Ujetroit in th Rcord and 6 ■ “It’s hard vision,” Viol go after the jjYou’ve got i You can’t wa "ALL CASH BUSINESS** National company seeks self- motivated person to own and operate their own busi ness. Census reports show average profit of $1,346.48 per month expanding to* $3,231.54 due to company’s participation. No selling involved. Service company owned accounts currently handling Frito-Lay and other name brand food products. Requires approxi mately 8 hours per week and investment of $15,000 cash for equipment. Cali National Commerce Systems, Inc. toll-free 1-800-782-1550. Operator 4-S. Anytime. 29tl0/9 Reports: Iraqi missile attach on Stark was preventable Ro WASHINGTON (AP) — The Iraqi missile attack on the USS Stark could have been prevented had the frigate’s top officers properly done their jobs, hut the crew reacted hero ically after the attack to save the ship from a terrible fire, Navy reports concluded Thursday. The May 17 attack in the Persian Gulf killed 37 sailors and touched off a still-unresolved fight between President Reagan and Congress over Reagan’s policy of placing 11 Ku waiti oil tankers under the American flag and escorting them with Navy ships. The conclusions about the Stark attack were contained in a pair of re ports provided to the House Armed Services seapower subcommittee. One report was prepared by a commission appointed to assess the “survivability” of frigates such as the Stark. The second, by a panel chaired by Rear Adm. Grant A. Sharp, was an investigation into why the Stark failed to defend itself. The Stark was attacked at mid evening by the pilot of an Iraqi F-l fighter plane who fired two French- made Exocet missiles. Both hit the ship, but only one exploded. There had not been any previous attacks on U.S. ships and tne Iraqi plane was presumed to be “friendly.” Iraq has admitted the at tack and said it was due to mistaken identity. Much of the information in the Sharp report has been previously detailed in public because it was the basis for disciplinary actions against some Stark officers. But the final report paints A de tailed picture of a fighting ship that wasn’t ready to fight despite warn ings from higher U.S. authorities about the possibility of “indiscrimi nate attacks” in the war-lorn gulf. Despite the warnings and the fact that the Iraqi plane had been tracked for more than an hour by U.S. AWACS radar planes, the Stark’s defensive weapons were never taken off standby status, and some of the critical positions in the Combat In formation Center or CIC, the ship’s nerve center, weren’t even manned, the report said. In fact, it said, top officers on the Stark were so unworried about the By 1 Iraqi plane that they went with a previously scheduled! the ship’s engines, the rep®- That test ended onlv 12nunir/M Playing sp fore the attack. Biesome oc i ■ . ; ; jCpmpleteh it approach to fire die £.?«?:• w® 16 P^ an i < l< n<if!< (■<I thisiur.. •■•I'WrmerTexa , port said. BRoaches, State runnin I' .i* 1' led 1 he rtile- ; Houston Sin: H.igrment that were in existesBA&M as z wei < * MiltHieni to enable ta|j| new coac piepeiK warn the Iraqiaircnrffcllard’s inn 11111eI\ in.inner, of the presei«B72 season. U.S. warship; and, if the n^^Vith the was not heeded, the rule; "fwwers, and u.it;onu-iu were suffidenlinitffiaches new Si.uk to defend herselfapsaKboth a wi< nli- intent and imminent :::‘Orthe Aggie w 11 !ii nil ,11)m >i Sing the firsth: “With the i In i ep( >i t said theStark- td^e main thii action officer, Lt. Basil E. Mop "failed to defend Stark astern required." It said the ship's comBj Capt. Glenn R. Brindel.'fcj provide combat-oriented leara allowing Stark’s anti-air 4 readiness to disintegratetotlfil that his Combat Informaiionfo team was unable todefeudM 44 Our main course is fun. Contras offer to talk directly to Sandinistas WASHINGTON (AP) — The po litical directorate of Nicaragua’s Contra rebels offered Thursday to go to Managua for direct talks with the leftist Sandinista government to arrange a cease-fire by a Nov. 7 deadline. The surprise announcement, made at a brief Capitol Hill news conference, means that “we are starting today the hardball game” in testing Sandinista commitment to a five-nation peace accord signed Aug. 7, said Alfredo Cesar, a mem ber of the directorate of the Nicara guan resistance. SCHULMAN THEATRES 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 FOR RENT: PASTURE FOR HORSES. 823-4484. 34t 10/22 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” 1 & 2 bdrm. apt. A/C Sc Heat. Wall to Wall carpet. 512 & 515 Northgate / First St. 409-825-2761. No Pets. 140tfn DENOTES DOLBY STEREO “So far the Sandinistas have been able to comply with the easy part of the plan,” by reopening some news media outlets, Cesar said. Another member of the directo rate, Pedro Joaquin Chamorro said the leaders of the four other Central American countries that signed the accord had been briefed on the of fer, and all “told us of their decision to support it.” rent political process in Nicaragua. “Rather, it makes an extra effort” toward a cease-fire that could en hance the peace process and stop bloodshed in the country,” Cha morro said. The group has asked Nicaraguan Cardinal Miguel Ohando y Bravo, a leading critic of the Sanclinistas, to serve as an intermediary in arrang ing the trip and setting up the talks. Adolfo Calero, another Contra leader, said the trip couldn’t be made until the Sandinistas approve. The Sandinistas have in the past steadfastly objected to direct talks with the rebels, saying they are crea tures of U.S. policy and therefore any talks should be with the United States. The United States has re fused such a course. But the Contra leaders noted that leaders in Guatemala and El Salva dor are talking directly with the re bel groups in their countries and said the government of Nicaragua should do the same. Blaze kills six childre as they sle His statement said the resistance “does not embrace the amnesty” of fered by the Sahdinistas or the cur- “If they don’t change their minds, they will be responsible for the fail ing of the peace process in Central i,” Cb America,” Chamorro said. MILWAUKEE (AP) killed six children as t early Thursday in a cio’l home where electric space ers were being used b»i gas had been shut off,briitt 18 the number of peopli have died in inner-city fcj three weeks. The mother of fiveom children was away fro® hospitalized after giving t another child two days^ Neighbors who tried to rf/J children were drivenbadd 1 and smoke. “I’m just devastated,"i* derman Michael McGee,^ blamed inner-city povert 1 Sept. 30 fire that killed 12(J including 10 children,afc mile from the scene oL day’s fire. “It’s got to be econoi® said. “Tnere havetobef these people so theydon’d live in these kinds of coitf If they had had gas Inal' hood this wouldn't have ned.” | Sublease 2-2, $355. & elec. On bus route, lease through May. 693-3347. 30tl0/16 MANOR EAST 3 Manor East Mall 823-8300 • FOR SALE HIKE FATHER UKE SON pg-i> HI $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 WANTED: Individuals ages 18-65 with acute low back pain to par ticipate in a one week pain relief study. No blood drawing involved. $50 incentive for those chosen to participate. For more information: Call Pauli Research International 776-6236 2Wri $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 8 BAYLOR/A&M TICKETS 4-30 yard line 4 - 40 yard line price negotiable Justin 846-3039 NELUUUSERr Israeli folk heroine leaves USSR after 16-year battle to emigrate *SWKIDBl! I 1 Buy Compact Discs, Records, Tapes for fifty cents. Free information. Bernard Richards 7-02 Fair Lawn Ave., Fair Lawn, NJ 07410. 34tI0/16 Cheap auto parts, used. Pic-A-Part, Inc. 78 and older. 3505 Old Kurten Road. Bryan. 23tfn 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 PIANO FOR SALE. Wanted: Responsible party to as sume small monthly payments on piano. See locally. Call Manager at 618-234-1306 anytime. 30tl0/20 Women’s 10 speed bike $40. New back tire. 696-7967. 3000/16 pariMBKiir 1 " 1 a i TRIRCESS BMDE PG VM 1 *THE PICX-UP ARTIST pq-13 v £8 I SCHULMAN 6 * 21)02 E. 29th 7^5-2463 STAKWTr NOWAY OVT r Si $ DOLLAR DAYS $ <* Adventures in Babysitting 7:20 9:40 Witches of Eastwick 7:10 9:50 FULL METAL JACKETS r 7:15 9:35 LABAMBA pg-is i 7:25 9:45 TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) — Ida Nudel, once dubbed the “guardian angel of refuseniks” for her tireless work on behalf of imprisoned Soviet Jews, arrived Thursday from Moscow, ending a 16-year battle to emigrate. Nudel, 56, whose determination and courage earned her international fame and made her an Israeli folk heroine, arrived with her pet collie on a direct flight aboard the private Boeing 727 of U.S. industrialist Ar- mand Hammer. As the doors of the white plane opened, Nudel’s sis ter, Elana Fridman, stepped inside for an emotional private reunion. Waiting on the tarmac were Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir, Foreign Minister Shimon Peres, mem bers of Parliament, various Cabinet ministers and more than 200 reporters. Before she left Moscow’s Sheremetyevo Airport, Nu del hugged and kissed relatives and told reporters she thought the Kremlin was signaling a shift, in its tight emigration policy by allowing her and otht' leave. “Now I am very hopeful,” Nudel said. ^ kind of new spirit I feel.” On Wednesday, Vladimir Slepak, whofe, more than 17 years, was told he may emigraii tember, more than a dozen long-term reft^l ceived permission to leave the country. The Soviet government said this year thete* 1 10,000 refuseniks, or people refused permit 1 -' grate, but Western officials say the numbs* higher. In 1986, 914 Jews were allowed to ernif'* this year more than 5,000 have received leave. But emigration has not approached^ 1979, when 5 1,000 were allowed to leave. “After Slepak got permission yesterda' long-time refuseniks will receive permission del, a gray-haired woman who stands 4-fooi l‘ limited deli Sales tax no