Battalion Classifieds • NOTICE # SERVICES 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. 1Mn Typing, Word Processing-Reasonable rates. Call Ber tha 696-3785. 30tl 1/6 VERSATILE WORD PROCESSING - BEST PRICES. FREE CORRECTIONS. RESUMES. THESES, PA PERS, GRAPHICS, EQUATIONS, ETC. LASER QUALITY. 696-2052. 16Stfn Word Processini anytime. Call 823-3802. • SPECIAL NOTICE $125 $125 $125 $125 WANTED: Patients with fre quently occurring heartburn to participate in a 4 week study using currently available medi cation. $125 incentive paid to those chosen to participate. Call Pauli Research International 776-6236 38tfn $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 WANTED: Individuals with fre quent aches & pains (headache, toothache, muscle ache, back ache, minor arthritis, menstrual cramps) who regularly take over- the-counter- pain medication to participate in an at home study. $40 incentive for those chosen to participate. Please call: Pauli Research International 776-6236 $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 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. 1tfn $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 $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 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $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 Mil 0/2 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 DEFENSIVE DRIVING TICKET DISMISSAL, IN SURANCE DISCOUNT. CLASSES EVERY WEEK1! 693-1322. 24U2/16 • SERVICES TYPING: Accurate, 95 WPM, Reliable. Word Proc essor. 7 days a week. 776-4013. 41110/27 Bicycle training analyzed or developed by USCF coach, ‘ “ rd I improvements guaranteed. Richard Beck 846-8768. 1st half hour Free. 35tl0/30 WORD PROCESSING. Thesis, Dissertations. Experi enced. Dependable. AUTOMATED CLERICAL SERVICES. 693-1070. 31tll/23 STICKLETS HALLOWEEN COSTUME CONTEST CLASSIFIED ADVERTISMENT Planning an original, creative or outra geous costume for Halloween? Send a picture of yourself (or group) in cos tume to the STICKLETS HALLOW EEN COSTUME CONTEST, 80 Fifth Ave., Suite 905, NY, NY 10011. Win big cash ($500 - $2,500.) or other prizes. A pack of STICKLETS GUM must appear somewhere in each photo. For information, prizes and rules, call 1-800-332-4FUN. • TRAVEL 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 $151. 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 WANTED 11 m lira i Commuter Wanted - Houston - Let’s Alternate Driving Time and Cars. Spring Semester. Call Donna (713) 937-9172. 38t 10/28 • HELP WANTED 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 Part-Time waitress; over 21, neat appearance, out going. Apply in person at Squires, 913 S. Texas Ave nue, Bryan. 4D10/30 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. 27U0/27 Part-time morning help. Call Grapevine for appt. 696- 3411 Patsy. 39tfn Progressive local office equipment company seeks com puter literate sales rep. for local market. MS/DOS knowledge is a must. Desktop Publishing background is a plus. Jeff693-9986. S8tl0/29 SALESPERSON WANTED. COMMISSION SALES. EASY MONEY, OWN TIME. BRANDT. 696-1054. 40t 10/30 Sales and service person to service coffee route. 774- 7656 for appointment. 37tl0/27 Part-Time Sales. Average $4. to $8. hourly showing Keyboard products. If you play a little or even years ago this could be for you! Call 764-0006 for appoint ment. Keyboard Center, Post Oak Mall, 40tfn • FOR RENT Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx. 1 Bdrm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $248 Rental assistance available! Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5pm. 4tfr 1 & 2 bdrm. apt. A/C & Heat. Wall to Wall carpet. 512 & 515 Northgate / First St. 409-825-2761. No Pets. 140tfn Sub-lease efficiency apartment. $250./mo. -f electric ity. Willowick complex. Remodeled. Call Leigh 693- 9165. 39t 10/29 Sublease Large 1-1, Nice, $215./mo., Nov-May. 823- 1476, 776-0568 evenings. S8tl0/28 • FOR SALE mm ori Sound PO BOX 590232 - HOUSTON. TEXAS - 77259 COMPACT DISCS Thousands available slarting at $#.##! We specialize in CDs, accessories, and mall ordering convlenience. Send $4 for 14,500 disc catalog or write for ordering information and prices. Orders shipped PROMPTLY! Graduate All-Season Pass $65. Message (name/number). Call 693-1616 Leave 41110/28 Cheap auto parts, used. Pic-A-Part, Inc. 78 and older. 3505 Old Kurten Road, Bryan. 23tfn 1978 Firebird, New Tires/Transmission, Tape Deck, Excellent Condition. 823-5400. 37tI0/27 Arkansas football tickets for sale ■ per ticket. Call 696-8942. reserved seats $15. 39t 10/29 Windshields, Navasota Glass will pay $50. deductible. Insurance claims handled. 1-825-3202 anytime.27tl 1/3 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 NINJA 900 GREAT SHAPE, SEE TO APPRECIATE, PRICED TO SELL. $2400. 696-1511. 38t 10/28 Yamaha 250, with helmet. Very good condition. Must sell, graduating! Call 696-2150. 40tl0/30 Body Building Supplements: Metabol 2.2 lbs. $20. Muscle Nitro $ 15., Aminos, Inosine. 764-7115. 40t 10/30 • ANNOUNCEMENT New Credit Card!!! No One Refused!!! Also Informa tion on receiving Visa, Mastercard with No Credit Check. For Details Call: 602-248-0779 Extension 505. 41tl0/27 Auto Liability Insurance from 15°° per month Texas State Low Cost Insurance 3202 S. Texas (across from Walmart) 775-1988 WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu scripts, reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614. 30tl 1/6 Reports, Documents, etc. All types, 37t 10/27 Attention Horsemen fsj The American saddlery is over- s N stocked. Must auction a truckload of K western saddles of all kinds includ- ^ N SS ing Circle Y, American, Tex-Tan,I ^ Action, Billy Cook, with 14”, 15”, W and 16” seats. Some handtooled sil- ^ ^ ver laced & buckstitched, some N N plain hard seats, some childrens sad- K les Also English saddles, several full silver show saddles. ALL adult N saddles have a 5 yr. written guar- v > antee. ^ ^ Partial Tack Listing t ; Electric clippers, SS spurs, SS bits, wool blankets, ropes, bridles, silver headstalls, and show halters. Plenty- , a of halters of all kinds. Hundreds of V items too numerous to list. Tack to be sold individually & in group v ,o„ s Terms: Cash, Mastercard, Visa, or k s | Checks with proper I.D. ^ Inspection Time: 6 p.m. Sale Day > Auction: Oct. 29 7 p.m. s Name Brand Merchandise V. F. W. 2818 W. ByPass Bryan, Texas > s s s s s N 5 N S s [Auctioneer: Melvin Chapin C ■ TXS.017-0891 Page 8A"he Battalion/Tuesday, October 27, 1987 Refusenik pioneer arrives in Israel from Soviet Union TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) — Vladi mir Slepak, a pioneer among Jews trying to leave the Soviet Union, landed in Israel on Monday and said “a simple strength, a holy strength” sustained him during his victorious 17-year struggle. “I have the feeling this has hap pened to someone else, not to me,” Slepak told about 200 friends and supporters, some of whom handed him bouquets. “It’s not real.” Slepak, who arrived from Vienna aboard a private plane and was th greeted with a full minute of ap plause, hugged and kissed friends who preceded him out of the Soviet Union. He fought longer than almost any other Soviet Jew to leave the Soviet Union and is considered a leader among refuseniks, or Jews who pressed for the right to emigrate de spite Soviet refusals and KGB ha rassment. He had struggled to keep information flowing to the West in the darkest hours of the movement. “I am not an outstanding person,” the white-bearded Slepak said when asked how he had managed to hold up during the fight to emigrate. “I’m a simple Jew witri a simple strength, a holy strength.” When asked about his immediate plans, Slepak replied, “To get a shower.” Immigration Minister Yaacov Tzur presented Slepak and his wife, Maria, with new immigrant docu ments. “We’ll still need your strength to build this land,” Tzur told the cou ple. Slepak stressed that the West should not grow overly optimistic over his release and the visas granted recently to other leading So viet Jews. “The few who have left do not in dicate any change in Soviet policy,” he warned. “It was only done to ob tain something from the West usual trick of Soviet power,'' Slepak arrived just threefc fore his 60th birthday. Pri Chaim Herzog plans to host day party for Slepak at his resi later this week, and ForeignMi Shimon Peres is due to host at a reception Tuesday. Slepak, who had arrivej Vienna from Moscow on Sit: joins a growing number of . known Jewish dissidents who) received permission to emigre the last several months. The releases and a climb in«t emigration figures isviewedasn of a thaw in Israel’s ties with if: that could have a favorable on the climate of East-Westrel and ef forts to arrange M peace talks. Israel has insisted on achiij Soviet policy towards emigrate precondition for Soviet involvi in the peace process. ISri-i;, Wk m 2^. iw T 1NYADS, BUT REAL HEAVYWEIGHTS WHEN RESULTS REALLY COUNT. io matter what you've go to say or sell, our Classi fieds can help you do the big job. Battalion Classified! 845-2611 Mice experiments produce protein for human drugs WASHINGTON (AP) — Genetic engineering experiments have de veloped mice that produce a useful human protein in tneir milk in a de velopment that could have billion- dollar implications for drug man ufacturers, scientists said Monday. The procedure offers the pros pect for making a variety of pharma ceutical proteins relatively safely and inexpensively in what would amount to living animal factories. While the initial experiments were on mice, a herd of goats is already being assembled to get a larger vol ume of milk. Eventual plans are to use cows. The protein induced in the initial experiments was TPA, an anticlot ting agent in human blood that is be ing cieveloped as medication for heart attack victims. However, researchers from the National Institutes of Health and from Integrated Genetics Inc. of Framingham, Mass., said they see no major technical problems in dupli cating the process to develop other human proteins that could have medical applications. Although TPA, or tissue plasmi nogen activator, is still awaiting Food and Drug Administration approval for general use, it already has been used on an estimated 4,000 heart at tack patients in clinical testing. Many physicians have said it can save the lives of heart attack victims by dissolving clots in their blood. Dr. Charles Abbottsmith, director of cardiology at Christ Hospital in Cin cinnati, has referred to it as the “penicillin of heart attacks.” TPA now is available in commer cial form only from Genentech Inc., of South San Francisco, which uses a relatively expensive synthetic proc ess to produce the drug. The com pany nas received permission to market TPA in France, New Zealand and the Philippines. The NIH announcement said the procedure developed by Integrated Genetics and the government scien tists offers a technique for isolating human proteins that is both safer and cheaper than existing methods. Both the safety and cost factors concern the difficulty in purifying the desired protein from human blood without also passing along un desirable factors. The NIH tape mentioned the AIDS virus as an ex ample of blood-borne products that have to be carefully screened with the existing technology. By programming animals to pro duce only the desired human pro tein in milk, scientists believe the ex traction and purification process would be safer — though Smith said not necessarily that much cheaper. The big savings, he said, come in the cheap cost of the milk itself once a herd is established. Katherine Gordon, another Inte grated Genetics researcher, esti mated that a herd of 100 cows could produce enough TPA to supply the world market “and that’s actually quite conservative.” Drug addict loses custodi of children Iprom the ■frail medi v$eyball h jjjjs season, prance ha right fut [gram. [There d< ibt that i become Jikers some ■The previ ■ the "out (guide. 1 “ed team meted I |alling sta iter pos |) placing iference |986,the itrating a Cir recon C HICAGO (AP)—Ault (Cy have y started papierwwk Mond fcufle or an a deny a pregnant drugadd)C3BP owevei ’ |(><1\ of her two babies,o«l ( r R e ^ O' after she looked throughiji partition and identified i i month-old boy as the chi Ag Former defens ind three i All-Southw ball traded for $50 worth of com faSlL "T he child pointed ai ki™ child knows its mother,si circumstances might be, circumstances might be, youth division investigatorh Giunta said Monday, dexnj the brief reunion between Ann Powell and her soc iftto the Te thony. K FameS; “Even though she's £ ifeilton Inn mitted addict, a mother :Bjoining mother,” he said. “She haCa Tavlor, ha m hei eves, she lookedatiki Jim 1955 and asked if she could geu closer.” Anthony has been in: Cynthia Gc care since he was found ill J and doned outside a day laboup June 16 and turnedovertoitt linois Department of Chi I and Family Services, said ajt spokesman Dave Schneidnai Police, not realizing .\iieJ had been found and place: foster parents by the Fan# ices agency, had been lookiti him since they arrestedPo»i an outstanding prostitution rant July 23. Powell, 26, was well-knor case workers from Fan# ices because of past reportsoli gleet involving Anthony a# 9-month-old brother, JoKj Schneidman said. 1976-79. ■Green, Seattle Se; Jc select toe year h< Reagan says Soviet affairs ‘up in air’ due to Gorback PI WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Reagan said Monday that U.S.- Soviet affairs are “a little up in the air” following Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev’s refusal to pick a date for a summit, but added he still be lieves a treaty to ban medium-range nuclear weapons is “going to be signed.” “I don’t think it was a diplomatic setback, and whether it was a ma neuver or not, I wouldn’t have an answer to that,” Reagan told Euro pean television correspondents. But at the same time, the presi dent acknowledged that “we were hoping they would set a date” for a superpower summit that would bring Gorbachev to the United States for the first time. “We have said to them, that it’s up to them to set a date if they would like to have it, and I have not counted it out as yet,” Reagan added. “I don’t think that it was a de liberate negative because I think they would have simply said they weren’t going to be” attending a summit, he said. Of the move by the two superpow ers to reach agreement on a treaty to eliminate intermediate-range nu clear force weapons, Reagan said, “It seems that our negotiators have eliminated all of the major differ ences, and there may be a few little details to work out. But we do be lieve that’s going to be signed. . . . Of course, we’re a little up in the air right now.” “The president won’t give them something in exchange for a summit that he thinks is unwise from the standpoint of the United States,” Shultz said on the “MacNeil-Lehrer News Hour.” Shultz said the U.S. side was pre pared to discuss with the Soviets the U.S. quest for a space-based defense against ballistic missiles. “But we are not don’t think we ever will bem- throw in the towel on learaj to defend ourselves," Shukiwl Earlier, the president tiij cated that he had no inclina®! drawn into a battle of wits* bachev over whether tht* leader would accept an i visit the United States fora® meeting. At the same time, spokesman Marlin Fitzwaul U.S. officials are perplexed I bachev’s refusal to set a da«l summit that both sides have® plated to consumate theLN'frf During a picture-taking J with congressional leaden.ft ,, con was asked if he thought W was trying to play mind ptf him on the issue of superpo*' mi try. “If he is, he’s pla'i taire,” the president replied Battered stock market posts la i Regis in reaction to overseas sellolls m* NEW YORK (AP) — A fresh wave of selling gripped Wall Street on Monday as the stock market, reacting to a stock selloff overseas, posted its worst performance since last week’s historic collapse. In a procedure adopted Friday, major exchanges closed two hours early to curb the enormous volume building up since Monday’s plunge, when stocks lost more than $500 billion in value and the Dow Jones in dustrial average plummeted 508 points. The New York and American stock exchanges said they also planned to shut down early through Friday. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks, which registered a 300-point deficit last week, plunged 156.83 to 1,793.93 — an 8.04 percent decline. That was the second-largest daily point drop and the sixth-largest loss in percentage terms since the average was increased to 30 stocks in 1928. Losers outpaced gainers by about 14 to I on the New York Stock Exchange, with 1,788 down, 126 up and 102 unchanged. ^Nll? As measured by Wilshire Associates’indes I | than 5,000 stocks, the market lost $203billion®^ Big Board volume totaled 308.82 million: ] sixth-ljusiest day on Wall Street. “There’s a spreading feeling of pessimist j ^ Q really didn’t exist last week,” John D. Connol man of the investment committee at Deanq j _ nolds Inc. said. “Last week I would categorizt It was stunning but there were some people tudes just weren’t changed by the decline, looking for opportunity in the decline. T deeper feeling of pessimism.” < Chan The stock market began to plunge right'I opening as traders reacted to a stock selloffo' f T Stock prices were sharply lower in Tokyo 2 don. And in the often-volatile Hong Kon? where trading had been suspended for tht®] business days, stocks took a record drop. Over on