The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 19, 1987, Image 8

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    Page 8/The Battalion/Monday, October 19,1987
Battalion
Classifieds
• NOTICE
♦ LOST AND FOCIND
$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.
Call Pauli Research
International
776-6236
$400 $400 $400 $400 $400
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
$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
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 159tf
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.
ACUTE LOW BACK PAIN
STUDY
Persons needed with recent,
painful low back injury. Take
one oiose of medication and
evaluate for 4 hours. Volun
teers will be compensated for
their time and cooperation.
G&S Studies, Inc.
846-5933
$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 biood drawing involved.
$50 incentive for those chosen to
participate. For more information:
Call Pauli Research
International
776-6236
$50 $50 $50 $50 $50
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
23t10/2
$40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40
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.
Call Pauli Research
International at
776-6236. 1ttn
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Lost around Academic
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r mmmm i
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oe HZZA £3 69
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STUDY
Persons with acute, uncom
plicated diarrhea needed to
evaluate medication being
considered for over-the-
counter sale.
320 Jersey
211 University
Carter Creek
Center
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846-5933
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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. 33^0/23
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 19tfn
WM. ROSS & CO. Campus Jewelry - GREAT JOB OP
PORTUNITIES FOR STUDENTS... Many full-time
students now earn 1,000’s each semester marketing
Wm. Ross &: Co.'s beautiful fashion jewelry on campus.
Join this successful group. CALL COLLECT - 713-
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needet'
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& handle membership sales. Apply in person. Shape-
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after 5pm. 4tf
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& 515 Northgate / First St. 409-825-2761. No Pets.
140tfn
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to: James PO Box 3657 C.S., Tx. 77844. I will call you.
33tl0/21
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3505 Old Kurten Road, Bryan. 23tfn
% SERVICES
Bicycle training analyzed or developed by USCF coach,
Richard ~
improvements guaranteed
half hour Free
• TRAVEL
Problem Pregnancy?
we listen, we care, we help
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Beck 846-8768. 1st
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WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu
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MANOR EAST 3
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‘LIKE FATHER LIKE SON pg-u
HELLRAISER r
‘SURRENDER pg
Fourth-inning rally keys Twins win;
series moves to St. Louis for next3
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Randy
Bush and Tim Laudner sparked an
other night of fourth-inning hanky
panky as the Minnesota Twins de
feated the St. Louis Cardinals 8-4
Sunday night for a 2-0 lead in the
World Series.
Bert Blyleven pitched seven in
nings, allowing six hits and two runs,
while the Twins, whose seven-run
fourth keyed a 10-1 mismatch in
Game 1, again got their 55,257 fans
shouting early at the Metrodome.
Gary Gaetti’s homer in the second
off Danny Cox set the crowd scream
ing and by the time Minnesota com
bined six hits, including a two-run
single by Tim Laudner, and two
walks in the fourth, the crowd was
singing “My Baby Does The Hanky
Panky” and it was 7-0.
The white sea of homer hankies
signaled the Cardinals’ surrender,
and Laudner completed the Twins’
scoring with a 420-foot home run to
dead center in the sixth.
The Cardinals scored two runs in
the eighth off reliever Juan Bereng-
uer, and Jeff Reardon threw the
ninth.
Minnesota’s 56-25 home record
was the best in baseball and the
Twins seemed stronger than ever in
blowing away the Cardinals, whose
49-41 road mark was tops in the ma
jors. Of the 37 teams that have taken
a 2-0 lead in the World Series, 27
have gone on to win.
Game 3 is scheduled for Tuesday
night in Busch Stadium with Minne
sota’s Les Straker, 8-10, facing left
hander John Tudor, 8-2.
The Cardinals headed home
shell-shocked and with a five-game
losing streak in the World Series.
They lost the last three in the 1985
Series and have been outscored 37-7
during their drought.
Blyleven, who won twice in
American League playoffs and isii
in postseason play, easily derisio,'
Cox in the first Series meetiiid
pitchers born outside the Uoii
States.
Blyleven, a native of
looked comfortble at homeandt
up just three hits through the:-l
six innings. He struck outeicbl
ASHINC
walked one. ' * Presidem
The British-born Cox, rejirit® ica ^ t Ult 1
by Manager Whitey Herzog asift’ 1510311(101
Cardinals’ best bitr-game Diirll» n . no s P lt:
seemed rattled in foreign tem:l§ al 1 1( f 1 *?
and yielded seven runs on six hist 15 exu . , nt ’ '
*t innings.
The I wins came out swinjcii i i ‘
making three outs in the first:::* 1 , a ^ v W(
on four pitches. That patternqa* 1 s P ' V SK la
changed. ^ If stat( :™ e
Caetti, MVP of the AL plav:W an s 12 T
with two homers, connectedon!ipl ele *y salls *~ lt;
next delivery and sent it SS’isB 1 ^ res f )ect '
Klhe presid
Piston forward Dennis Rodman battles
controversial statements, racist image
From the Associated Press
Just after ending his rookie season
in the NBA with a controversial ver
bal attack on Larry Bird, the Detroit
Pistons’ Dennis Rodman drove to his
“second home” in rural Oklahoma to
be with his “second family.”
Rodman, 27, cut loose on Bird
during an interview after the Celtics
defeated the Pistons in the seventh
game of the Eastern Conference fi
nals last spring.
He said: “Larry Bird is overrated
in a lot of areas. I don’t think he’s the
greatest player. He’s way overrated.
Why does he get so much publicity?
Because he’s white. You never hear
about a black player being the great
est.”
Piston teammate Isiah Thomas,
also black, agreed with Rodman, but
the public did not.
“It was the kind of statement that
should never have came out,” Rod-
man said. “I made a mistake.”
To escape the controversy, Rod-
man went to Bokchito, Okla. to
spend the summer with his white
“second family,” Byrne Rich and
parents.
Rodman became friends with
Bryne, 18, four years ago during
summer basketball camp at South
eastern Oklahoma State University.
Pat and James Rich wanted Bryne
to attend the camp hoping it would
end the depression he had felt since
his best friend had been killed dur
ing a shooting accident nine months
earlier.
Brvne came home from the camp
bubbling about his new friend,
whose nickname was Worm, and
wanting to invite Rodman to dinner.
*Ti was the first time I’d seen his
face light up about anything,” said
Pat Rich. “I said, ‘Sure, you can
bring him.’ He came hack later and
said, ‘There’s just one thing I haven’t
told you. He’s black.’ ’’
Pat Rich said Bokchito, when she
and her husband were growing up,
was not an enlightened racial envi
ronment.
copter to Bei
Center early
kulit the fina
Hay’s surger
I Hutton’s sta
hite House
tzwater, saic
1 and her
d stable.” It
ling “very 1
“White people treated the blacks
then as kind of outcasts,” she said.
“Blacks have their place; whites have
their place.”
Nothing had happened to the
Riches to change that opinion before
Rodman came to dinner.
At that time, Rodman was strug
gling to make college work for him.
He graduated from South Oak Cliff
High School in Dallas in 1979 and
didn’t play high school basketball.
Rodman grew from 5-11 to 6-8 dur
ing the year after graduation.
He started playing basketball in
community college, but had no di
rection until Southeastern coach
Jack Hedden brought him to the
school in Durant, Okla.
Rodman and the Riches grew to
gether during the next four years as
they endured the narrow-ini
ness of neighbors and famili
tried to surmont cultural and a
differences.
“Afier a while,” Brvne said,
been around each other fors
that he was like a brother.”
When Rodman finishedhis
seat at SoutheasternastheN.il
leading scorer and rebounde
went to the Portsmouth, Viti
merit for players not expected
selecteil in the first roundic-flu \\ \\| \
the Most V aluable Plaverawart p e |th a t wrec
The Pistons selected himv s h ot ” t hr
third pick in the second roum jallomplex c
1986 draft, 27th overall. F<| military s<
Rodman was old forarootri i n Washing
became an important player jfietlu r he ii
bench for the Pistons. He. ?eek about his
for an unpleasant from NE HcB'eporters:
during his second season, es'-pon was, Rea
f rom avid Bird fans. [Also Sunday
km H. Zakhei
But Rodman has never be onsultations,”
of Bird’s. Even when sittingThe official
\s.iu lung NBA games - Imitv, said h
Riches, Rodman would say :|ons was relat
luck when Bird made jumpd Kuwaiti off!
and that he could guard Bird Ij
Rodman said his detractors
be surprised to know thathe
the summer with a white fanA
"It would shock thenCRs!
said. "It sure would. But if
knew me and would come
here and find out the backp®
they’d realize.”
in
m
NFL regulars post large numbers
as replacement games conclude!
‘FATAL ATTRACTION r |
‘PRINCESS BRIDE pg
‘THE PICK-UP ARTIST pg-is
IM
SCHULMAN 6
2002 E. 29th 775-2463
STAKEOUTr
NO WAY OUT r £§
$ DOLLAR DAYS $
I ADVENTURES IN BABYSITTING pg-is
WITCHES OF EASTWICK r
n
FULL METAL JACKETS r
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LABAMBA pg-is
m
From the Associated Press
The strike replacements learned a
lesson Sunday. There’s a big differ
ence between real NFL players and
their stand-ins.
Steve Largent and Joe Montana,
plus such backup quarterbacks as
Gary Danielson, Jeff Kemp, Pat
Ryan and even Doug Flutie spent
their first week back taking advan
tage of playing against the second-
liners.
But even the presence of Law
rence Taylor couldn’t prevent the
New York Giants’ fifth straight loss,
a 6-3 overtime loss to Buffalo in a
game marked by 258 yards in penal
ties, five missed field goals and nine
turnovers.
For some, the heroics were almost
embarrassing, particularly Largent,
who almost surely would have set a
new record for catches in a game
had he not left Seattle’s 37-14 win
over Detroit with 9:26 left in the
third quarter.
“The only record I was concerned
with was getting a win,” said Lar
gent, who had to be content with ex
tending his NFL record of consec
utive games with a reception to 143.
He also moved within 36 catches of
becoming the league’s all-time ca
reer leader and helped Kemp to 20
completions in 27 attempts for 344
yards and four touchdowns.
“I don’t take any personal joy in
this day at all,” said Danielson, who
completed 25 of 31 for 281 yards
and four touchdown as the Browns
used nine regulars and routed the
Cincinnati “B” team 34-0.
“That shows what happens when
you get professional football players
involved in these kind of games —
the cream always rises to the top,”
said Ken O’Brien, the New York Jets
regular quarterback after Ryan, his
backup, led the Jets to a 37-31 over
time win over Miami.
The one notable exception on the
third and final week of strike foot
ball was Erik Kramer, Atlanta’s re
placement quarterback, who threw
for 338 yards and three second half
touchdowns as the Falcons overcame
a 17-0 def icit for a 24-20 victory over
the Los Angeles Rams,
veterans back.
But the rule was mismaw
those veterans who reftj
Wednesday toyed with tea® >:
veterans came back whenik
ended too late for Sunday's
Montana, one of 17 regu
on the field, was 31 01391®:
yards and four touchdotf
TD, to tight end Ron Hell®
San Francisco a 34-28 win® 1
Louis, which had 21 play*
from the strike.
The Jets’ Ryan wentSOoil
301 yards and four touchdo®
eluding the winner in overt*
There was no rush bad’
fans.
The day’s average attend®
about 26,500, 38 percentoffl!
The high for the ea
46,813 at Chicago’s Soldi®
where the Bears lost fore
time, real or replacement,
New Orleans, as Coach Mil®
alternated quarterbacks moil
second half to shuttle in pi
were 40,719 in Cincinnati
Mar
M©bil
‘Tfurnfe for dropping in.
Our Career Day on Sept. 24th was an outstanding success. More than 5,000
Aggies visited the Mobil display in the Exhibit Hall of Rudder Tower. Our sincere
thanks and appreciation for your participation in Mobil's Career Day. Mobil 1
Racing backpacks have been mailed to the following winners:
VERSATILE WORD PROCESSING - BEST PRICES.
FREE CORRECTIONS. RESUMES, THESES, PA
PERS, GRAPHICS, EQUATIONS, ETC. LASER
QUALITY. 696-2052. 163tfn
Let’s go skiing over Christmas Break! Sunchase Tours
Sixth Annual Collegiate Winter Ski Breaks to Vail-
/Beaver Creek, Steamboat, Breckenndge, 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. 1-
800-321-5911 TODAY! 19tl0/8
Mark Vacek
Lori Durham
Clara Artenbum
Saul Laurel
Stefanie Squires
Kathey Leonard
Mark W. Espenscheid
Kevin Stuteville
Jay Sansom
Greg Martin
Rick Doan
Brian Campion
Kaye Carter
Delbert Glass
Julia Lenzer
Brian Seifent
James Marcus, Jr.
Jana Gibson
Melissa Samuel
Joe McGee
Mark Miller
Zane Shadbume
Masaharu Iwasa
Jeri Wackier
Ola Mae Moore
Rosa Mosley
Vanessa Giese
Danny Guerra
Daryl Spillmann
Stephen Price
Henryk Derek
Trey Jenkins
Bob Kamell
Lisa Garcia
Scott Campbell
Steve Warren
Lea Scott
Debra Grooms
Chris Scott
All M<