The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 02, 1987, Image 8

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Battalion
Classifieds
Page 8/The Battalion/Wednesday, December 2,1987
• NOTICE
iMtt
ACUTE DIARRHEA
STUny
Persons with acute, uncom
plicated diarrhea needed to
evaluate medication being
considered for over-the-
counter sale.
G&S Studies, Inc.
846-5933
153t6/3
$40 $40 $40 $40 $40
WANTED: Individuals with fre
quent aches & pains (arthritis,
burcitis, joint pain, headaches,
long term sports injuries) who reg
ularly 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 51tfn
$40 $40 $40 $40 $40
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
■mm!
$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 $40140
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
• rORREHT
for the good life...
and all the comforts of home!
•1,2,3 bedrooms
• Laundry facilities
• Lots of closet space
• Party room
•Pool
• Shuttle bus
• 6 floor plans
Pepper Tree
" Apartments
2701 Longmire
College Station
693-5731
Looking for a quiet place to live?
Townshire Manor
Apts.
401 Lake-Bryan
822-7178 or 268-8620
Professionally managed by
On-Line Property Managers.
THE GOLDEN RULE
Fall or Spring Openings for
Men and Women
Christian-like, non-smoking
Telephones in Deluxe Apts.
UTILITIES AND CABLE PAID
Free Laundry, Storage, Bus
CALL/ASK: 693-5560 After 4pm
$150./mo. Share B/B, $250./mo.
Own B/B 3t9/4
Cotton Village Apts.,
Snook, Tx.
1 Bdrm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $248
Rental assistance available)
Call 846-8878 or 774-0773
after 5pm.
4tfn
One* bedroom, quiet, wooded, convenient area. Half
month free. 846-6473 evenings.
65U2/4
3-2 Apt. in Tanglewood. $485./mo. All Bills Paid. 693-
7401.
65U2/8
♦ FOR RENT
Large quiet 1 bedroom apt..Wooded area. 4 plex. Deck,
washer/dryer, All Major appliances. Call Nancy 693-
1766 ' 6St 12/3
House for rent; Spring Semester only, furnished,3
bedrooms excellent location, $450. plus utilities. Call
846-9339 63t/12/4
Pre-leasing 3 BR/2 BA Duplex near Hilton. 846-
2471/776-6856 6St/indef.
Rooms for Rent. Call Mrs. Thomas 696-1072.63t/12/l 1
1 & 2 bdrm. apt. A/C & Heat. Wall to Wall carpet. 512
& 515 Northgate/ First St. 409-825-2761. No Pets.
140tfn
Sublease my 1-bedroom apartment @ Country Place. 8
blocks to campus, shuttle, pool, etc. $265./mo. 846-
5148. 6U12/3
Furnished 1 bedroom apt. @ Lincoln Square. No de-
' " ' ‘ ' ' i rt. 764-8"*
posit. On shuttle bus i
-8510.
SUBLEASE 1 bedroom apt. @ Plantation Oaks. Avail
able 12/12/87 thru 6/12/88. Mary 845-9163. 61tl2/S
3 Bedroom, 2 Bath Duplex for rent 693-4335. Carport,
washer/dryer connection. Call anytime. 64tl2/4
TREEHOUSE VILLAGE EFFICIENCY APART-
MENT AVAILABLE DECEMBER 16th. $275./mo.
696-1269 ANYTIME. 64tl2/2
2 Bdrm, 1 Bath, $4]0./mo. Normandy Square Apts, in
Northgate. 764-7314. 46tfn
A Luxury Fourplex, 2-lVS, appliances, washer/dryer,
ct. heat/air, $S25./mo. 303 Manuel Dr. 696-0551, 696-
0632. 46tfn
♦ 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
Earn $480 weekly - $60 per hundred circulators
mailed. Guaranteed . Homeworkers needed to per
form mail services. Incentive programs available. Send
legal size stamped self-addressed envelope to United
Services of America, 24307 Magic Mtn. Parkway Suite
306, Valencia Ca., 91355.
65tl2/3
COUNSELORS - Girls camp in Maine. Good sal., room
& bd., travel allowance, beautiful modern facility, must
love children & be able to teach one of the following:
Tennis, W.S.I., Sailing, Waterski, Softball, Basketball,
Soccer, LaCrosse, A&C, Photography, Horseback,
Dance, Piano, Drama, Ropes, Camp Craft, Gymnastics.
Call or write: Camp Vega, Box 1771, Duxbury, Mass.
02332.(617)934-6536. 64tl2/2
C Programmer, full-time. Assembler, expert systmes,
and knowledge of Naval Warfare helpful. 1805 Briar
Oaks, Suite B. Bryan, Tx 77802. 62tl2/10
EMPLOYMNET OPPORTUNITY DURING
CHRISTMAS BREAK. Students needed from Abi
lene, Beaumont, Brownsville, Corpus Christi, Dallas,
Ft. Worth, Houston, Laredo, Midland, San Antonio,
Tyler and Wichita Falls to observe safety belt use for
the Texas Transportation Institute. 3 days, $100 mini
mum pay plus gas. Call Katie at 845-2736 between Sam
and 5pm. 64tl2/4
WANTED: OUTDOOR SOCCER OFFICIALS. Any-
one interested in officiating Intramural Soccer should
attend a training metting on Wed., Dec.2 at 6pm in 167
Read. For more information, contact Chris at 845-
7826. 64t 12/2
COUSNELORS - Boys camp in Berkshire Mts., West,
Mass. Good sal., room & bd., travel allowance, beauti
ful modern facility, must love children & be able to
teach one of the following: Tennis, W.S.I., Sailing, Wa
terski, Baseball, Basketball, Soccer, LaCrosse, Wood,
A&C, Rocketry, Photography, Archery, Pioneering,
Ropes, Piano, Drama. Call or write: Camp Winadu, 5
Glen La., Mamaroneck, NY 10543. (914) 381-5983.
64tl2/2
ESSAYS S REPORTS
16,278 to choose from—ail subjects J
Order Catalog Today with Viaa/MC or COD [
800-351-0222
in Calif. (213) 477-6226
Or, rush $2.00 to: Esssys & Reports
11322 Idaho Ave. #206-SN. Los Angeles. CA90025 j
Custom research also available—all levels
g. Word Processing. Reasonable rates. Call Ber
tha'696-3785. 52tl2/9
WORD PROCESSISNG. Term papers, reports, theses,
dissertations. Call Rusty 846-8684. 62tl2/S
WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu
scripts, reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614.
49tl2/8
DEFENSIVE DRIVING TICKET DISMISSAL, IN
SURANCE DISCOUNT. CLASSES EVERY WEEK!!
693-1322. 24tl2/16
EDITING & WRITING. Articles, papers, newsletters.
Words Worth. 690-1553. 58tl2/4
TYPING AND WORD PROCESSING. FAST, REA
SONABLE, QUICK TURNAROUND AVAILABLE.
693-1598. 51tl2/ll
TYPING BY WANDA. Forms, papers, and word proc
essing. Reasonable. 690-1113. 47tl 1/18
VERSATILE WORD PROCESSING - BEST PRICES.
FREE CORRECTIONS. RESUMES, THESES, PA
PERS, GRAPHICS, EQUATIONS, ETC. LASER
QUALITY. 696-2052. 163tfn
Typing, Word Processing, Resumes. Guaranteed error
free, from $I.35/page. PERFECT PRINT. 822-1430.
42tl2/9
♦ ROOMMATE WANTED
Grad Students Need Third Roommate For Spring Se
mester. $165./mo. Duplex. No Deposits. Call 846-9062.
65t 12/4
Searching for a new roomate 3-2 House $125. a month
823-0340 after 5p.m. 63t/12/ll
Non-smaoking Christian roommate needed for spring
semester in furnished 2 bedroom apartment. Call
Mickey 693-1926. 6U12/3
♦ TRAVEl, V '"-X:, ''''
LAST CHANCEI Limited space remains on A&M
Winter Ski Breaks to Steamboat, Vail, Winter Park and
Breckenridge for five or seven nights deluxe lodging,
lift tickets, mountain barbecue, ski race and more from
only $154. Optional air and charter bus transportation
available. Hurry, call Sunchase Tours toll free for full
details and color brochure 1-80-321-5911 TODAY!
55t 11/20
Spring Break '88 trips available now! Your choice:
South Padre Island; North Padre/Mustang Island; Gal
veston Island, Texas. Daytona Beach; Fort Walton
Beach; Miami Beach; Orlando/Disney World, Florida.
Hilton Head, South Carolina or sking at Steamboat/
Colorado. All the most wanted destinations at discount
prices. Call toll free for complete Sunchase Tours Sev
enth Annual Spring Break Bash color brochure and
reservations today. 1-800-321-5911 63tl2/ll
Plane ticket C/S to Hanford, Ct. Cheap Must Sell. Mary
845-9163. 6U12/3
1982 Ford Granada. 4 door, low mileage. Family car,
extremely well cared for. $3750. 845-5803, 778-1235.
49t 12/8
• FOR SALE
EMERALD FOREST, $97,900
•Spacious 4 bdrm., Corner Lot
T SC** •Energy Efficient, Family
Home
^^^••Call John Clark
268-7629
RE^WSKB-CS Realty
Across from Hilton
49111/9
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
Manor East Mall 823-8300
TEEN VIOU TOO pa
£8
THREE MEN ft A BABY pa
£3
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7:1*
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pa
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226 Southwest Pkwy 693-2457
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PLANES, TRAINS A AUTOMOBILES r
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SCHULMAN 6
2002 E. 29th 775-2463
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STAKEOUTr
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CAN’T BUY ME LOVE 77
£8
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m
THE LOST BOYS r
m
WADS.
BUT REAL
HEAVYWEIGHTS
WHEN RESULTS
REALLY COUNT.
o matter what
you've go to say
or sell, our Classi
fieds can help you
do the big job.
845-2611
World and Nation
GOP candidates clash
in debate about treaty
TAKE OVER 5 ACRES. NO DOWN. $49./mo. Beauti
ful trees. GREAT HUNTING. Owner: (818) 363-
7906.
65U2/9
MOPED: 1985 Honda Aero 80, good condition. $450.
CaUJohn® 846-1260.
65U2/4
‘86 Honda Spree, black w/painted fish. $250 firm. 845-
1294, 846-5291 after 5pm. 62tl2/3
COMPUTER'S ETC. 693-7599. LOWEST PRICEti
EVER! EBM-PC/XT COMPATIBLES: 640KB-RAM,
2-360KB DRIVES, TURBO, KEYBOARD, MON
ITOR: $599. PC/AT SYSTEMS: $899. Hfn
Aggie Throw Quilts. Taking Limited Orders For
Christmas Delivery. $43.95. 779-3550, 696-2038.
62U2/10
SHORT
ON
CASH???
Sell your BOOKS
at
University Book Store
Northgate 8c Culpepper Plaza
WASHINGTON (AP) — Republi
can presidential rivals clashed in de
bate Tuesday night over the soon-to-
be-signed arms control treaty, while
Democrats taunted their GOP rivals
for failing to support the accord ne
gotiated by the Reagan administra
tion.
The six Democratic contenders
aimed their criticism at the Republi
cans in a two-hour series of separate
but equal debates televised nation
ally.
The Republicans Fired mainly at
one another when the treaty was the
topic.
“It is nothing short of appalling
that five of the six Republican candi
dates refuse to support the new arms
control agreement,” Sen. Albert
Gore, D-Tenn., said in the opening
moments of the forum televised over
NBC.
Rep. Richard Gephardt, D-Mo.,
said, “Every Democrat here is for the
INF treaty. I hope you will ask them
why only one of them is supporting
their president."
NBC moderator Tom Brokaw did
exactly that when the Republicans
g ot their half hour on stage to de-
ate foreign policy.
Alone among the Republicans,
Vice President George Bush em-_
Cuban prisoners
reach agreement
with U.S. officials
ATLANTA (AP) — Negotiators
for 1,110 Cuban inmates holding
hostages at a federal prison reached
“substantial agreement” with gov
ernment representatives Tuesday on
a number of issues, a government
spokesman said.
A one-hour negotiating session
was “considerably more encouraging
than others we have had over the last
few days,” the department said in a
statement.
The inmate leaders took the pro
posals to the rest of the detainees,
who are fighting plans to deport
them back to Cuba, and another ne
gotiating session was scheduled for
later in the day, the department said.
Patrick Korten, deputy director of
public affairs for the U.S. Justice De
partment, said the “very business
like” negotiations with four inmate
representatives seemed to indicate
that a dissident minority did not
have as much sway in the negotiating
process Tuesday as they have had in
the past.
“This one (session) did not have
the grandstanding and role-playing”
by inmate negotiators that marked
previous talks, Korten said. He de
clined to elaborate.
He stressed that federal negotia
tors did not know if the dissidents’
influence had waned enough for an
agreement to be reached.
Earlier Tuesday, federal officials
had said a Cuban-born Catholic
bishop who helped end the prison
siege in Louisiana would not join in
Atlanta negotiations until the detai
nees united and chose leaders.
Roman Catholic Auxiliary Bishop
Agustin Roman of Miami, a native of
Cuba, said he was willing to help in
negotiadons with the men who
burned three buildings and took 90
prison workers hostage after taking
over the prison Nov. 23.
A videotaped message from Ro
man has been credited with ending
an eight-day siege Sunday at the fed
eral detention center in Oakdale,
La., where 950 Cuban detainees
held 26 hostages.
But he remained in Florida Tues
day, a spokesman for the archdio
cese said.
Until Tuesday’s reports of pro
gress, a group of at least 100 Cubans
had repeatedly blocked efforts on
behalf of the other inmates to reach
a settlement and release their hos
tages.
Michael Quinlan, director of the
federal Bureau of Prisons, said in
Washington that the hard-liners
were mostly younger than the ma
jority of the detainees. “They’re just
less desirous of coming to any kind
of agreement regardless of what the
government might offer under the
circumstances,” Quinlan said. “They
are less willing to reason as people of
all types generally can reason things
out.”
braced the treaty, which would elim
inate intermediate range nudear
weapons.
Senate Republican Leader Bob
Dole of Kansas said he wanted to
read the treaty before taking a posi
tion.
“I’ve never let the president down
yet,” he said. “But I have a right to
read and study.”
The other Republican contend
ers, former Secretary of State Alex
ander Haig, Rep. Jack Kemp of New
York, former Delaware Gov. Petedu
Pont and former television evangel
ist Pat Robertson, all expressed their
opposition.
“We should not rush into signing
an agreement with the Soviet Union
until we force them to comply with
previous agreements," Kemp said.
Differences over the treaty took
center stage quickly as the debate un
folded in the shadow of next week's
supeipower summit between Presi
dent Reagan and Soviet Leader Mik
hail Gorbachev.
Despite their quarrels over the
treaty, Republicans criticized Demo
crats for failing to support the Con
tra rebels in Nicaragua when the dis
cussion turned to Central America.
Haiti council
says decree
not legal
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti
(AP) — The independent Provi
sional Electoral Council said
Tuesday the military-led junta’s
decree dissolving it is unconstitu
tional and any elections held
without its supervision will be ille-
g al - . |
Lt. Gen. Henri Namphy, the
j unta leader, says he wants to
xold elections and hand power to
a civilian president and National
Assembly on Feb. 7, the second
anniversary of the flight of dicta
tor Jean-Claude Duvalier.
Namphy issued a decree re
moving the electoral council after
it canceled the national election
then in progress because of vio
lence. Bands of men with guns
and machetes killed at least 34
people.
Study: Talks to reduce arms
by less than leaders report
WASHINGTON (AP) — Propo
sals made in U.S.-Soviet strategic
arms reduction talks would cut nu
clear arsenals by about 30 percent
instead of the 50 percent advertised
by leaders in Moscow and Washing
ton, according to a private study re
leased Tuesday.
The study by the liberal Natural
Resources Defense Council said the
catch is in how the superpowers tally
warheads, such as counting a
bomber or submarine as one war
head rather than counting all bombs
or missiles aboard. Thus a bomber
with 24 bombs would be counted as
one weapon rather than 24.
It concluded that no matter how
much progress President Reagan
and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorba
chev make during their summit next
week, the complicated issues in
volved in strategic arms talks known
as START probably cannot be re
solved before Reagan leaves office.
While a START treaty would
have the positive effect of reducing
nuclear arsenals, the report said, it
would not stop the modernization of
weapons systems, would probably
not significantly reduce military
spending and might actually destabi
lize the nuclear balance by leaving
intact too many land-based ballistic
missiles.
“The negotiating proposals made
by the two sides have not been fully
thought out,” said William M. Arkin,
an author of the study. “A grand
strategy doesn’t seem to exist.”
Unlike the Intermediate Nuclear
Force pact, which Reagan and Gor
bachev plan to sign at the summit,
proposals for a START treaty for
the most part would elifninate old
rather than modern systems, the
study said.
“Every current and future U.S.
and Soviet nuclear weapons system
would be permitted under the terms
of the current proposals, though
perhaps not in as large numbers as
originally planned,” the study said.
“The nuclear modernization process
may be accelerated in some cases.
“Under a START treaty the na-
Reagan: U.S. needs
to avoid being lulled
by missile agreement
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) —
President Reagan pledged on Tues
day to “keep right on marching” to
ward further arms agreements after
next week’s expected treaty signing,
but he said the United States must
not be lulled into a new period of de
tente allowing a secret Soviet mili
tary buildup.
Less than a week before his sum
mit meeting with Soviet leader Mik
hail Gorbachev, Reagan had harsh
words for that period of broadly im
proved relations with the Soviet
Union.
“More than a decade ago, there
was a warming in U.S.-Soviet affairs
that we called ‘detente,’ ” Reagan
said. “But while talking friendship,
the Soviets worked even faster on
the largest military buildup in world
history. They stepped up their ag
gression around the world. They be
came more repressive at home. We
do not want mere words. This time
we’re after true peace.
“In the excitement of the summit,
the treaty signing and all the rest, we
must not forget that peace means
more than arms reduction.”
In a speech to high school seniors
and their parents in Jacksonville
Veterans’ Memorial Coliseum, Rea
gan said he and Gorbachev will
“have words about Soviet expansio
nism” during their three days of
meetings in Washington.
And he said that in his talks with
Gorbachev he might find himself
“bending his ear” on what he said
was a need for religious freedom
and other reforms in the Soviet
Union.
One student asked Reagan to de
fend his “Star Wars” space-based
missile defense plan, prompting the
president to compare it to “a gigantic
gas mask.”
Reagan recalled that gas masks
were retained after poison gas was
outlawed. The Strategic Defense Ini
tiative, he said, was “a gigantic gas
mask and maybe . . . the thing that
could bring about the end of nuclear
missiles.”
The president made no reference
in his speech to Gorbachev’s hour-
long NBC television interview on
Monday night.
ture of the arms race would
markedly shift from quantitative to
qualitative competition,” as the su
perpowers replace old systems with
more accurate and deadly ones to
meet START limits, it said.
Thus the United States would
phase out forces already headed for
retirement, such as Minuteman mis
siles, Poseidon and Trident I nuclear
submarines and 25-year-old B-52
bombers, but would continue de
ploying more modern MX and Tri
dent II missiles, as well as the B-1B
and Stealth bombers. It would re
duce its stocks of one new system,
the Air-Launched Cruise Missile.
The Soviets would retire missiles
and bombers of similar vintages
while continuing a very ambitious
program to field new weapons, the
study said.
“Both sides are modernizing their
forces. It’s business as usual” in spite
of the arms control talk from the
White House and Kremlin, co-au
thor Thomas B. Cochran told a news
conference.