Battalion Classifieds 1? s. " i *. May Graduates! Order Your GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS NOW! MSC Student Finance Center Room 217 Monday-Friday 8am-4pm Last Day February 11! $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 Frequent Aches & Pains WANTED: Individuals with back pain, menstrual cramps, headache or joint pain who regularly take over-the- counter pain relievers for back pain, menstrual cramps, headaches or joint pain to participate in an at home study. $40 incentive for those chosen to participate. Please call: Pauli Research International 776-6236 83tfn NIGHTTIME LEG CRAMPS Do loeg cramps wake you at night? Call now to see if you are eligible to be treated with one of 4 study medications. You will need to be followed for approximately 3 weeks. Eligible volunteers will be compensated. Call today! G&S Studies, Inc. 846-5933 7Mn $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 COLD STUDY WANTED: Patients who are suf fering from a cold to participate in a 5 day at home study. $40 in centive for those chosen. Call Pauli Research International 776-6236 83tfn $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 Cold-Flu-Fever Study wanted individuals with fever of 101° or over to partici pate in short term study with an over the counter medication $75. incentive for those cho sen to participate. Call Pauli Research 776-6236 $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 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 153t&3 HELP! Rudder Theatre Complex Needs student workers For stagehand and spotlight work To Apply Come To: Rudder Auditorium Tues. Feb. 2: 7:00pm COME SIGN UP!! AGGRESSIVE ENTREPRENEURS Our company has grown from 5,000,000 in sales in 1984 to 75,000,000 in 1987! 1988 (200,000,000-projected) will be the year to be in the booming water treat ment business! Stable 18 yr. old, 3a Dunn & Bradstreet rated company ex panding in Bryan/College Station. Our associates may earn in access of $10,000/mo. Successful national marketing director based in Bryan- /Coilege Station seeks aggressive entrepreneurs who understand that timing creates wealth. Investment $2500 backed up by inventory. This is an excellent opportunity for stu dents, as it can be done part-time. Call Eddie Norman Monday thru Friday Sam to 5pm 409-696-3786 ' 8312/3 ODD Jobs, hours flexible, $4.00/hr. 764-7363, 693- 5286. 83t2/3 DIRTY JOB AVAILABLE- As press helper for Baual- fKlit ' ♦ FOR RENT WAKE UP AGGIES! Luxury 4-p!ex 1,000 sq. ft. 2 bedroom, Hollywood baths washer/dryer shuttle bus Call WYNDHAM MGMT 846-4384 2 Bdrm furnished 413 Nagle: $270. 415 Main: $250. 3 Bdrrn house 1614 Oakview: $450. 779-3700. 85i2/5 Roomy 2/1 house fenced yard, 2 mi from TAMU. 1906 Miller $325/mo. 693-3418 after 5:30. 85t2/15 Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx. 1 Bdrm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $248 Rental assistance available! Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5pm. 4tf] Pre-leasing 3 BR/2 BA Duplex near Hilton. 846- 2471/776-6856 63t/indef. 2 Bdrm, 1 Bath large windows & tall trees. $410./mo. Normandy Square Apts, in Northgate. 764-7314. 69tfn ♦ ROOMMATE WANTED Share or rent room in nice duplex, 10 min campus, near shuttle with graduate student. Prefer non- smoker, quiet, male/female. 696-4221 Riichard. 86t2/8 Housing Problems? Male, nonsmoker needed to share spacious, well furnished apartment. Call 764-2938 or 846-4263 for details. 86t2/3 To share 2 bdrm, 2 bath Timbercreek Apartment. Lease through May. Call 846-2195 male/female. 83t2/3 3-2 Spacious nice townhouse. Own room. $155./mo. + 1/3 utilities. Fireplace. 823-0497. 84t2/4 2br/lba. duplex, fireplace, backyard, dryer furnished. $100 + 1/3 bills. Shuttle bus. 693-9514. 83t2/3 • SERVICES WANT TO LOSE WEIGHT BEFORE BREAK? CALL CARRIE 778-1100. SPRING 82t2/2 VERSATILE WORD PROCESSING - BEST PRICES. TREE CORRECTIONS. RESUMES, THESES, PA PERS, GRAPHICS, EQUATIONS, ETC. LASER QUALITY. 696-2052. 163tfn Carpet Steaming Service $25. for 2 bedroom house. 764-2864. 86t2/3 xpenem all 272-3 TYPING: Accurate. 95 WPM. Reliable. Word Proc essor. 7 davsa week. 776-4013. 85t2/30 Resumes. Best quality and prices. 696-2052. 77tfn SCHOLARSHIPS, undergraduate and- postgraduate. MILLIONS $$$ available. No income limitations. Re sults guaranteed, full refund. FREE information. Call 1-800-USA-1221 Ext. 7470. 75t2/2 Professional Typing, Word Processing, Resumes. Guaranteed error free. PERFECT PRINT 822-1430. 81t5/4 CASH FOR COLLEGE- Loans. Grants, Scholarships. There is still plenty of money available. Rush self-ad dressed, stamped envelope for more information to: COSM1CORP, PO Box 20129 Oakcreek, Az 86341. 8312/3 TYPING«Y WAN:DA Forms. papcrs^indT-ordyVtmc- essing. Reasonable. 690-1113. 80t2/26 • PERSONALS ADOPTION Happily married financially secure California couple want to adopt white newborn. Expenses paid. Confidential. Call Gale collect (213) 791-8616 8312/10 someone to love. Medical & legal expenses paid dential. Call collect Sherry & Bob (718) 743-3795. « FOR SALE v < s COMPUTERS ETC. 693-7599. LOWEST PRICES EVER! IBM-PC/XT COMPATIBLE 640KB-RAM, 2- 360KB DRIVES, TURBO, KEYBOARD, MONITOR: $649. PC/AT SYSTEMS, 10MHZ TURBO: $849.86tfn COMPUTER TERMINAL: Hazeltine, like new, uses TAMU facilities. $220/inci. modem. 846-1639. 86t2/9 Summer Jobs: We are hiring managers and lifeguards to work at our swimming pools this summer. Salary range $700-900 plus lessons. (713) 270-5858. 86t2/19 1983 Aero 80. Good condition. Phone 779-6397. $450. 86t2/4 INSTRUCTORS needed fo- University Plus workshops in areas of AUTO MECHANICS, JEW ELRY CASTING, YOGA, COLOR DARK ROOM, WEDDING PLANNING, ORAL GERMAN AND FRENCH, PAINTING & MORE. 845-1631. 78t2/2 (2) ‘84 Honda Aero 80’s. 1 red/ 1 silver. Excellent con ditions. $500/$400. 764-6905. - 85t2/5 1982 Kawasaki LTD 550. Excellent condition. Low mileage includes helmet. Call 764-8912. 85t2/5 ARE YOU LOOKING TO MAKE EXTRA POCKET MONEY? CATTCO INC introduces Europe's leading fashion catalog to your University. We are looking for highly motivated individuals to market our catalog. For more info call (817) 554-3133. 83t2/3 Futon Bed $200. Bunk bed frame $30. neg. Diane 846- 6556. 83t2/3 12 ft. Catamaran sailboat with trailer. Good condition. MUST SELL! 846-6532. 83t2/3 Like New Yamaha Maxim X, water cooled, 1600 miles. 1 -348-2886. Great buy. 83t2/3 ion. No experience required, fninimum pay. Must be available between 10am-l:30pm any or all weekdays. Job can be yours alone or shared. Must be dependable. If interested call Donjohnson 845-2646. 84tfn YAMAHA QT50 MOPED. Low miles! Great shape! Must sell! $250. non-negotiable. Call Jarrod 260-6898. 83t2/3 COMPUTER’S ETC. 693-7599. LOWEST PRICES EVER! IBM-PC/XT COMPATIBLES: 640KB-RAM, 2-360KB DRIVES, TURBO, KEYBOARD, MON ITOR: $599. PC/AT SYSTEMS: $899. Itfn Computer- IBM Clone, monocrome monitor, built-in modem, 640K RAM, 20M internal drive, keyboard, some soft-ware. $ 1000 or best offer. 846-4023. 82t2/2 • LOST AND FOCirflP ^ LOST! Canon AE-1 Camera after Cotton Bowl. Please return to Association of Former Students on campus. 82t2/2 REWARD! LOST 6 month 50 lb. black male Lab. 774- 0527. Family distraught. 82t2/2 Lost dark grey & white male cat, short-haired, TAMU Vet. Tag #1173. Reward. South Knoll Elem. area. 845- 4821/69S-8975 eve. 76t2/2 V alentine Personals Put Your Heart On the Line in our Valentine To Mom, Dad, Boy, Girl ? ? ? ? ? Love Lines Section to be published Feb. 12th For $5 00 you can surprise someone special. Page 8AThe BattalionATuesday, February 2, 1988 World and Nation =■ Israeli shooting kills two, wounds three protesters ANABTA, Occupied West Bank (AP) — Israelis killed two Arabs and wounded three others Monday when they opened fire on a crowd of stone-throwing Palestinians who had trapped a convoy of soldiers and ci vilians, the army said. Soldiers wounded four Arabs in two other clashes, a military spokes man said. The Arab-owned Palestine Press Service put the number of Ar abs wounded by gunfire at 22 and provided a list of names. Troops battled Palestinians in protests throughout the West Bank and Gaza Strip, leaving more than a dozen Arabs hospitalized with beat ing injuries and three soldiers in jured by stones. The renewed violence caused the first deaths from gunfire since Jan. 15 and brought to 41 the confirmed Arab death toll in the rioting that be gan Dec. 8. It came as the United Jurors probed about publicity of KKK trial ADOPT- Childless, loving couple wishes to adopt white chi: newborn. Our hearts are reaching out for that special \ Confi- MOBILE, Ala. (AP) — Attorneys Monday questioned potential jurors in the murder trial of two former Ku Klux Klan leaders accused in the death of a black teen-ager who was beaten and hanged from a tree in a case that eventually drove a Klan or ganization into bankruptcy. Mobile County Circuit Judge Mi chael Zoghby withheld rulings on several pretrial motions Monday, in cluding a defense request to exclude blacks from the jury. Bennie Jack Hays, 72, and his son- in-law, Frank Cox, 32, were indicted in August in the March 1981 beating death of Michael Donald, 19, whose death resulted in a $7 million civil verdict that led to bankruptcy for the United Klans of America. Zoghby gave attorneys permission to question potential jurors individu ally after nearly all the panelists raised their hand when asked if they had heard of the case. The judge also considered a de fense request for separate trials for Hays and Cox. Zoghby earlier den ied that request, but defense attor ney Neil Hanley asked the judge to reconsider. Earlier, Hanley argued that race must be an issue injury selection be cause of the Klan’s hatred of blacks. “If I strike blacks (from the jury) because it’s a Klan case, it is the same reason I would strike Jews from the trial of a PLO member,” Hanley said. But District Attorney Chris Gala- nos opposed the request. “Just because they’re black doesn’t mean they hate the Klan,” Galanos said. Beulah Donald, 67, the victim’s mother, sat in court Monday as the jury was selected. After her son’s death she filed suit in federal court against the Tuscaloosa-based United Klans of America Inc. An all-white jury a year ago awarded her $7 million. As part of the judgment, the national head quarters of the United Klans in Tus caloosa was deeded to Donald’s es tate. Hays’ son, Henry Francis Hays, was convicted of capital murder in the slaying in 1983 and sentenced to death. James “Tiger” Knowles pleaded guilty to federal charges of violating Donald’s civil rights and was sentenced to life in prison after agreeing to testify for the govern ment. Leftist leader wins election in Ecuador Happy Valentine Day Mom, I love you Herbie Come by the English Annex, Monday thru Friday, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. to place yours. Last day to place ad Monday, Feb. 8 QUITO, Ecuador (AP) — Ro drigo Borja, who has vowed to shift Ecuador to the left, apparently won the election Sunday to replace pro- American President Leon Febres Cordero. But Borja failed to receive a majority and faces a runoff. With more than 80 percent of the vote counted, Boija was leading with about 20 percent, and appeared headed for a runoff May 8 with an other opposition candidate, Abdala Bucaram. With 2,907,908 ballots counted, Borja, leader of the Democratic Left Party, had 592,233 votes, or 20.4 percent of the total, according to of ficial results. Bucaram received 449,166 votes, or 15.4 percent of the tally. Sixto Duran, 66, the conservative candidate of the governing Social Christian Party, had been favored to make the runoff against Borja. But *• after learning that he had 381,195 votes, or 13.1 percent, Duran con ceded defeat. States was exploring ways to revive the stalled Middle East peace proc ess. Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin said he hoped the new U.S. initiative would lead to political negotiations, but he warned that Israel would use force and collective punishment to quell protests. “I just want to make it clear to Pal estinian residents of the territories that we are ready — even if it de mands lenghty action — to act with force,” he said on Israel TV’s Ar- abic-language program. In response to the upsurge of vio lence, the army clamped curfews on seven refugee camps and two towns. In Anabta, a town about 60 miles northwest of Jerusalem, hundreds of protesters barricaded the Nablus- Tulkarem highway and stoned Is raeli vehicles, an army spokesman said, speaking on condition oi ' c nyrnity Two civilian cars, a policevd and a bus carrying soldiers trapped by the crowd. Some of Israelis got out of their cars opened fire, killing two Arabs wounding one, the spokesman Army officials said they were gating whether the shots were by soldiers or civilians Army reinforcments arrived the scene and opened fire, w ing two more Arabs in thelep sjKikesman said. Israel radio and Arab-run Palestine Press Sei said a total of four Arabs wounded in Anabta. A 22-year-old Anabta resi who would only give his first Mohammed, said demonsira battled soldiers for about four elementary school near main highway. — World Briefs Reagan argues for Contra aid package WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Reagan argued Monday that Nicaragua’s leftist leaders would not comply with a regional peace plan without a "threat hanging over them” and that his $36.2 million Contra aid package would do the trick. Meanwhile, the White House scrambled to make the aid pack age palatable to doubtful House members as the outcome of Wednesday’s high-stakes vote re mained in the hands of some 20 fence-sitters. “One question must be an swered,” Reagan said. “Sandinista promises of the past have been oroken. Can we believe them now?” The president argued that the Sandinista government has re l neged on a string of pledges: democratize, and that unless a| to the Contras is continued, itv3| do the same thing again. “The Sandinistas haven’t madt| one concession on their own wit-1 out a threat hanging over thenj he said. “It’s just this simple— thewi| to democracy and peace in Nidi ragua is to keep the pressureot the Sandinistas, taking irrevers: hie steps to comply with there gional peace plan, and givingaii to the freedom fighters no«j Reagan said to his enthusiasitl audience at a Washington hotel The president is fighting forii; package that includes $3.6 nil lion for ammunition and antiair | craft missiles. 75 5t; an fth< act eas |to the les: cla: by |tou the Breast cancer death rates increase WASHINGTON (AP) — The breast cancer detection rate among American women is the highest on record but death rates have increased slightly instead of improving from early treatment as experts had hoped, according to a federal study released Mon day. The study, compiled by the National Cancer Institute to re flect rates of incidence and death from all types of cancer, said breast cancer is still the leading cause of death from malignancy among women. It says this finding suggests women are not taking advantf I of screening techniques tbii could detect breast cancer alii stage when cure is more likely,al l though detection of breast canct s ; is at the highest rate in history. The study also said that al though lung cancer remains! leading cause of cancer death the death rate decreased amonf males in 1985 but continuestoinj crease in women. NCI used various studies i compile a report generally rej fleeting cancer statistics for to 1985, with some cancer esii mates for 1987. Inouye asks for program support WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen. Daniel K. Inouye, saying “I have made an error in judgment,” told the Senate Monday that he wants Congress to rescind $8 million to build schools in France for North African Jews. But Inouye, D-Hawaii, de fended his action in supporting the program, which drew wide spread criticism from members of Congress, the Reagan adminism tion and civil liberties groups. The American Civil LiberM Union and the American Jewisk Committee both were looking into the legality of building rfli gious schools abroad. In th United States, such a prograi would violate the constitutional separation of church and state. Companies bid on phone contracts WASHINGTON (AP) — A General Services Administration official said Sunday the agency was given reason to believe com petitors for $55 million in gov ernment telephone contracts had received secret information about AT&T’s bid but the GSA still al lowed the competitors to bid on the contracts. Paul Trause, deputy GSA ad ministrator, said a GSA contract ing employee received a tele phone conversation from a representative of one of the peting companies and was conj cerned but not enough toraisesf rious questions in the agency. “What you had is a good pci son in good faith making i judgment call that in retrosptf turned out to be wrong,” he said He said the employee, he would not identify, received the call last spring, well beforethi final bidding deadline for contracts that were awarded it October. Firms begin intense hiring process NORMAL, Ill. (AP) — Work history, education and an inter view with a personnel supervisor are only a minor part of the hir ing process for a joint automak ing venture between Chrysler Corp. and Japan’s Mitsubishi Mo tors Corp. Applicants for jobs at the Di amond Star Motors Corp. must take general aptitude tests, drug tests and written exams and per form assembly line simulations. They also undergo counseling and in-depth interviews designed to determine each person’s com pany loyalty, team spirit and ver satility. “They take nothing for gi anted, said Bob Warner, wlio never thought he’d be subjected to an intense screening process first developed to hire U.S. un dercover intelligence officers. Warner, 40, was hired lastfal as a group leader, or assembl' line supervisor, at the $650 mil lion Diamond Star plant, whick soon will begin building sport' coupes for the 1989 model year. Eventually, the plant is ex pected to build 240,000 cars an nually and employ 2,900. Warner had 12 years’ supervi sory experience on assembly lines I and in fabrication and machine shops when he lost his job build ing coal mining equipment in West Virginia.