The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 08, 1988, Image 8

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    Page 8AThe Battalion/Monday, February 8, 1988
Battalion
Classifieds
* NOTICE
♦ SERVICES
i
■IsaSS' & ' # S. =! X:
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
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
$50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50
COLD STUDY
WANTED: Patients who are suf
fering from a cold to participate in
a 5 day at home study. $50 in
centive for those chosen.
Call Pauli Research
International
776-6236 83tfn
$50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50
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
/A^stu
STUDENT LOANS
AVAILABLE
GSL, SLS, and PLUS Loans
(still making loans for this semester)
In Addition To Making Loans, We Offer:
•3 to 4 week processing time in most cases
•No credit check for SLS loans if a full-time student
•Loan consolidation
•Graduated repayment
•Debt management
•Scholarship search service
For More Information Call-
696-6601
First Venture Group
7607 Eastmark Dr
College Station, Tx. 77840 75ti/i9
ADOPTION
Happily married financially secure
California couple want to adopt
white newborn. Expenses paid.
Confidential.
Call Gale collect (213) 791 -8616
83t2/10
* FOR RENT
lili •mi •in imtmmam+tmu*
amm
WAKE UP AGGIES!
Luxury 4-pflfex
1,000 sq. ft.
2 bedroom, Hollywood baths
washer/dryer
shuttle bus
Call WYNDHAM MGMT
846-4384
Cotton Village Apts.,
Snook, Tx.
1 Bdrm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $248
Rental assistance available!
Call 846-8878 or 774-0773
after 5pm. 4tfl
2 Bdrm, 1 Bath large windows 8c tall trees. $410./mo.
Normandy Square Apts, in Northgate. 764-7314. 69tfn
Clean, quiet, 2 bdrm., 1 bath' apt., walk to class, $190.
and bills. 696-7266. 87t2/12
Roomy 2/1 house fenced yard, 2 mi from TAMU. 1906
Miller $325/mo. 693-3418 after 5:30. 85t2/15
Pre-leasing 3 BR/2 BA Duplex near Hilton. 846-
2471/776-6856 63t/indef.
Efficiency Apartment. All utilities paid. Quiet person
only. $50. deposit, $200./mo. 2500 Tabor Road Bryan,
778-8755. 89t2/l 1
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
*tOSTiUS0 FOUND
LOST*. Male Golden Retriever. 75 lbs. Reward. Call
846-8982. . 89t2/l 1
• TRAVEL
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,
■■r TSttn
rnmmm
South Padre Island $ 128
North Paore/Mustanc Island .?1S6
Oavtona Beach $ 99
Orlando/Disnev World $ 132
Miami Beach s 133
H iltoh Mtao Island; *131
Several openings for round trip busfare to Brecken-
ridgc or Steamboat over Spring Break for $115. Call
J ulie Oliver 260-8294. 89t2/8
« FOR SALE
• FOR SALE
• HELP WANTED
Professional Typing, Word Processing, Resumes.
Guaranteed error free. PERFECT PRINT 822-1430.
81t5/4
Experienced librarian will do library research for you.
Call 272-3348. 86t2/29
WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu
scripts, reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614.87t3/l
Resumes. Best quality and prices. 696-2052. 77tfn
TYPING BY WANDA. Forms, papers and word proc
essing. Reasonable. 690-1113. 80t2/26
VERSATILE WORD PROCESSING - BEST PRICES.
FREE CORRECTIONS. RESUMES, THESES, PA
PERS, GRAPHICS, EQUATIONS, ETC. LASER
‘QUALITY. 696-2052. 163tfn
TYPING: Accurate. 95 WPM, Reliable. Word Proc-
essor. 7 days a week. 776-4013. 8:>t2/30
GOLD ST AR TYPING. Business, Manuscript, Aca
demic- Reasonable. Call Anna 775-6695. 89t2/l 1
« . PERSC ‘kLS
•We listen, U’e care. We hetp
•Free Pregnancy Tests
•Concerned Connie Cars
Brazos Valley
Crisis Pregnancy Service
We’re Local!
3620 E. 29th Street
(next to Medley's Gifts)
24 hr. hotCine
823-CARE
SCHULMAN 6
2002 E, 29th 775-2463
FOR KEEPS PG-13
7:30
»:50
THE COACH TRIP r
7:30
1:50
$ DOLLAR
DAYS t»
DUTY DANCING pa-13
7:18
HELLO AGAIN pq
TM
*:»
BABY BOOM pg-is
7:10
*35
PRINCESS BRIDE pg
7:25
*45
‘DENOTES DOLBY STEREO
PLAZAS
226 Southwest Pkwy
693-2457
“FATAL ATTRACTION r
7:20
*50
“GOOD MORNING VIETNAM r
7:10
9:40
“WALL STREETr
7:15
*46
MANOR EAST 3
Manor East Mai 1 823-8300
I“THREE MEN & A BABY pg
7:10
*38
I THE LAST EMPEROR r
VM
[OVERBOARD pg
7:28
*48
Museum
1982 Yamaha Maxim 550. Good condition. Asking
$800. Call 764-0622. 90l2/12
‘83 Champion 14x56, 2 br’s/1 bath, central a/h, fur
nished, clean. $182./mo. no equitv. Near TAMU. (713)
440-4724. 90t2/19
Nissan '84 Sentra 4 door Deluxe. 35,592 miles in good
condition. AC, radio hatch back. $5,200. Price negotia
ble. Phone (409) 846-8090, Houston (713) 799-9108.
87t2/9
Bookshelves for sale, seven feet, assembled. $50. 776-
271 1 or 779-4036. 87t2/9
COMPU TER TERMINAL: Hazelline. like new, must
sell NOW! $ 175./incl. modem. 846-1639. 89t2/9
36" Projection TV, Mitsubishi Stereo, perfect condi
tion, $1000. 822-1248 day, 846-4555 after 6prn.89t2/l 1
Aggie bears and valentine bears for someone special!
Call 764-201 1. 87t2/6
Own new tuxedo for same price as rentals. Call 696-
7219. 87t2/9
COMPUTER’S ETC. 693-7599. LOWEST PRICES
EVER! IBM-PC/XT COMPATIBLE 640KB-RAM, 2-
360KB DRIVES, TU.RJSO. KEYBOARD, MONITOR:
$649. PC/A “ ’ ' ““ “ '
(Continued from page 1)
“We want to create that kind of
environment, where students feel
like this is part of their living room,”
he said.
Reynolds said that so far, there
has been enough money pledged to
cover the $150,000 to $175,000 cost
of remodeling. Funds pledged came
from the MSC, the Student Center
Complex fee budget, private dona
tions and the Association of Former
Students, he said.
In particular, the Association of
Former Students, previously located
in the Forsyth Center, has offered to
pay the approximately $40,000 it
will cost to replace the carpet and
window coverings, he said.
Reynolds said the renovation
won’t be a major undertaking and
could be completed by late spring.
“Hopefully, we could have the
grand opening (during) commence
ment weekend,” he said.
In a phone interview, the former
student said his gift to the University
Offices
has been in the planning stages for
several years but declined to com
ment further.
As Reynolds explains, “Many
years ago, (the former student) ex
pressed an interest ... in devel
oping a personal art collection and,
ultimately, in giving it to the MSC to
place in the immediate environment
of the students.”
This communication between the
former student, the University and
the Board of Regents led to a resolu
tion in 1986 by the Board, which
pledged the Forsyth Center to house
the former student’s collection, Rey
nolds said.
After this resolution, not much
was done in the way of getting the
former student’s collection to A&M,
Reynolds said.
After suffering some health prob
lems, the former student began to
put pressure on the University to
make a decision regarding his collec
tion, Reynolds said.
At the November 1987 Board
meeting. Chairman David G. Filer
announced the appointment of (j
Ad Hoc Committee on Art
dons.
One of the committee’s first
lions was to make the MSCrespJ
ble for culminating the process;
getting the trust document sigi
Reynolds said.
The former student madeitc
that his collection should bei
played in the MSC in a manneri
would be most attractive and
coming to the student body, I
nolds said.
To insure maximum exposure!
the students, the formerstudeml
sisted that his collection be;
tered through Student Serna
rather than through the acadeaj
side of the University. Reynoldssi
This donation, combined withill
art currently in the MSC, wil
A&M’s student center an art col
don rivaled by that of only oneo
student center in the United Staid
I ndiana University, he said.
“They had a 20-yeai headsta j
Reynolds said.
I 11 eg u aids. Pool Managers, and Swim Instructors
needed. Full and part-time hours. May thru Septem
ber. Competitive pay. Call (713) 578-8227 or write: Ad
vantage Pool Service, 803 S. Mason Rd., Sto. 460, Kitty,
Tx 77450. * 90t2/8
$10-$660 weekly/up mailing circulars: Rush self ad
dressed stamped envelope: opportunity: 9016 Wilshire'
Blvd., Box 226, Dep.CP, Beverly 1 lilts, Ca 90211.
90t2/10
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.L, 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
COUNSELORS - Girls camp in Maine. Good sal., room
8c bd., travel allowance, beautiful modern facility, must
love children 8c be able to teach one of the following:
Tennis. W.S.l., Sailing, Waterski, Softball, Basketball,
Soccer. LaCrosse, A8cC. Photography, Horseback,
Dance, Piano. Drama, Ropes, Camp Craft, Gymnastics.
Call or write: Camrt Vega, Box 1771, Duxbury, Mass.
02332 (617)934-6336. 64tl2/2
Sutmiiet jobs. We art: hiring managers and lifeguards
to v,s/i L at our swimming pools this summer. Salary
range $700-900 plus lessons. (713) 270-5858. 86t2/l 9
Sweet Meat B®B®Q
3511 S. College at the Block (next to
the Farm Patch)
$l no off each lb. of sausage,
brisket, fajitas, ribs or buy one
sandwich at regular price and
get 2nd sandwich for V2 price.
Good thru 2-28 M-F
open 10:00-7:00 M-S
Problem Pregnancy
(Continued from page 1)
elude the A&M Development Foun
dation, the Business Technology De
velopment Division of the Texas
Engineering Experiment Station
and the Minority Outreach Program
of the Office of School Relations.
The most frequent user of the of
fice facility will be the $25 million In
stitute of Biosciences and Technol-
ogy, which will he built soon,
Adkisson said.
The A&M system and the new bi
osciences institute are committed to
helping the economic development
of Houston, he said. The construc
tion of the institute will provide jobs
and the institute will attract other
businesses to the area.
Mary Jo Powell, assistant director
of A&M’s Office of Public Informa
tion, said the Houston office will
give A&M another base for opera
tions.
“It will provide the system with a
place from which to work, and it will
provide the system with a home,"
Powell said.
It is hoped more cities in Texas
will become homes for the A&M sys
tem, Powell said, because it is impor
tant for A&M to be recognized in
large metropolitan areas.
“We (A&M officials) are trying to
achieve a greater urban presence,”
Powell said. “Texas A&M needs to
be seen in some way in other larger
cities.”
Adkisson said that the Target
2000 plan, put together in thet
1980s by the Texas A&M Boar: I
Regents, was targeted at threee]
cities — Austin, San Antonio a
Houston.
The Houston office wil
second system office; the others
tem office in Austin. A&M’s (
urban area representations indsa
an engineering and experiment!!
tion and an engineering extens
service in Arlington andanagi
ture research and extension <
in Dallas.
Another agriculture research
extension center is planned I
Antonio sometime in the future.il
kisson said. But for now, conceair|
tion is on the Houston office,!
said.
Video
(Continued from page 1)
Despite previous problems with
the creation of a video yearbook,
Smith is confident about the new or
ganization and future success of Ag-
gie vision.
“I think we’ve got off to a wonder
ful start,” Smith said.
He said the Aggievision staff has
organized an advertisement cam
paign to begin in the Memorial Stu
dent Center in March.
During this time, representativies
of Aggievision will take orders for
the video as well as suggestions from
students.
The video costs $47.93 or can he
ordered together with The Aggie-
land for $53.25.
Steve W’hite, Aggievision video-
grapher, said the video was not avail
able to be purchased as a fee option
in Spring 1988 registration.
“We tried to get it in, hut we
missed the deadline and the hooks
had already been printed,” White
said.
However, hr* said, students
able to purchase Aggie vision as lii
option when they register for thea
semester.
Smith said other organization]
such as KAMU, are sellingvideff:]
particular A&M events, buphe?
minute video Aggievision wil
ferent, because it will beanovci
view of the student body.
Smith expects the first issue (
Aggievision to be released in )i]
gust, when most other publicaiiof
such as The Aggie land are reb'fi
Andrews County officials
say dump will aid economy!
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''
ANDREWS (AP) — Some leaders
of Andrews County in West Texas
believe one way to get an economic
boost from the county’s vast empti
ness, low population density and
limited surface water would be to
build a dump site for all forms of
waste.
To end the county’s dependence
on oil, county leaders are examining
waste management as a way to pro
vide steady, long-term economic
growth and stability.
Because extensive research and
drilling for oil has been done, much
is known about West Texas geology,
said James Roberts, Andrews
County Industrial Foundation presi
dent.
With help from the new Center
for Energy and Economic Diversifi
cation at the University of Texas at
Permian Basin, the county could
place itself on the cutting edge of
waste management, Roberts said.
Former Andrews Chamber of
Commerce President Carroll Kysar
said last week that while oil service
industries are still the county’s
“bread and butter,” the search is on
for long-term, stable industries.
Although Andrews County
ranked third last year in state oil
production, Kysar and other leaders
say petroleum revenue alone cannot
maintain service levels, provide fu
ture jobs and propel growth.
“Oil companies have been taken
over by Harvard Business School
gradiiates that deal with numbers
and wouldn’t know a drill stem core
from a door stop,” Roberts said.
“They’re never going to he the same
again.”
Last year, Andrews County was
one of six finalists in landing a hid
for a 500-bed minimum-security
Texas Department of Correction’s
prison. But the TDC ultimately
chose a site closer to urban areas for
the prison.
The state also spurned Andrews
Illegal alien flow
shows no change
despite new laws
HOUSTON (AP) — A new U.S.
immigration law does not appear to
be affecting the flow of illegal aliens
from Mexico, say researchers inter
viewed by the Houston Chronicle.
In its Sunday editions, the news
paper reported that the researchers
believe U.S. Immigration and Natu
ralization Service statistics on illegal
immigration arrests are nearly
worthless for gauging the flow of il
legals across the border.
The newspaper said researchers
pointed out that many immigrants
are often arrested many times in one
day, inflating arrest figures. INS fig
ures are also subject to manipulation
for political purposes, the research
ers said.
Illegal migration to the United
im M^c^dtdt4Fop. hi
Mexico and to the increasing costs of
getting across the border, the re
searchers said.
“The (INS) legislation has has ab
solutely no impact on reducing mi
grant flows, and in fact beginning in
January we are seeing the reverse,”
said Jorge Bustamante, director of
the College of the Northern Border
in Tijuana.
INS spokesman Duke Austin in
Washington disputed Bustamante’s
contention.
“Aprehensions went down
500,000 for 1987 compared with
1986,” Austin said. “Every month
since the bill was passed, apprehen
sions have been down.”
County last year for placementofl
low-level nuclear waste
because it is on top of the Onl
Aquifier, the giant watershea
stretches into West Texas from
ada.
Roberts said the Department
Energy has been storing all grades
waste, including nuclear, in
ground salt beds at a wastei:
pilot plant in New Mexico, about
miles west of Andrews Countf.
Even if a suitable place foraw
facility is found in the county,Rt
erts said the idea would I
tain opposition and it would have
be sold to Andrews residents
those in other counties.
“That’s the biggest problem,
said. “Anytime you have a story
headline writers are goingtosay
Dump’ and it automatically
up images of pickups backingup'
pit and dumping something.. '
mention nuclear and that's a
word, people just go bananas.’
Crude oil price
will stay dowc
experts say
DALLAS (AP) — Crude oilpt*
will stay below $20 per barrel*
natural gas prices will continut
jump up and down with the seas®
industry experts say.
Top energy and banking
utives warn that continued relii
on relatively cheap foreign oilc<
lead to a crisis, but they rejecti®!*
ing an oil import fee to propup'
ailing domestic industry.
Such an import fee would lx I
gered by a floor price, the af
told the Dallas Morning NeM (
story published Sunday.
“The problem is a floor 1
come a ceiling,” Stephen BrottiJ
nior economist with the Federq
serve Bank of Dallas, said.
Bustamante’s data has been based
upon a monitoring project begun by
would take any actj
Taw went into effec t. boost oil prices, the experts said
But an oil import fee [
non-issue, since neither the
States government nor theOrj
zation of Petroleum Expp rii