Mammon Battalion Classifieds "r*m 'Ml NOTICE 'A A ^ Vfc ^ kf* *" ^ i i r%* l\ rJ fcaSr & May Graduates! Order Your GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS NOW! MSC Student Finance Center Room 217 Monday-Friday 8am-4pm Last Day February 11! $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 $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 „„„ $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 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 MISCELLANEOUS HAS YOUR BICYCLE LEFT YOU FLAT? SPORTS ATTIC will sell your good used bicycle on consign ment. 846-7021. 91t3/9 HAS SCUBA DIVING LEFT YOU ALL WET? SPOR TS A l l IC will sell your good used scuba equip ment for you! 846-7021. 91t3/9 "End all your speeding tickets with a Police Radar Jam mer." $20. (512) 949-8855. 9U2/16 ♦ NOTICE Earn $$ with your unwanted clothing on consignment at Y’s Ideas. Call 779-7334. 9112/11 SERVICES # CHILDCARE ESSAYS & REPORTS 164278 to choose from—all subjects Order Catalog Today with Visa/MC or COD 800-351-0222 mjiSmSiUcW in Calif. (213) 477-0226 Full-time babysitter available! Very Reasonable rates. 764-0530. 90t2/15 Or, rush $2.00 to: £sspys & Reports 11322 ldai-o Aw). /206-SN, Los Angeles. CA 90025 Cus , '' r ;: research al. ': avclable—all levels * LOST ANJD FOUND German Shepard female, tan. 846-4701. 693-4057. CAL’S BODY SHOP. 10% discount to students on la bor. Expert color matching. Foreign domestic. 30 yrs. experience. 823-2610. 92t2/29 LOST*. Male Golden Retriever. 75 lbs. Reward. Call 846-8982. 89t2/l 1 WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu scripts, reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614.87t3/l * FORSALE Professional Typing, Word Processing, Resumes. Guaranteed error free. PERFECT PRINT 822-1430. 81t5/4 Kenmore washer and gas dryer, 2 years old. $180 or best offer. 260-6407. 92t2/16 GOLD STAR TYPING. Business, Manuscript, Aca demic- Reasonable. Call Anna 775-6695. 89t2/11 1982 Yamaha Maxim 550. Good condition. Asking $800. Call 764-0622. 90l2/12 TYPING: Accurate, 95 WPM, Reliable. Word Proc essor. 7 days a week. 776-4013. 85t2/30 ‘83 Champion 14x56, 2 br’s/1 bath, central a/h, fur nished, clean. $182./mo. no equity. NearTAMU. (713) 440-4724. 90t2/19 TYPING BY WANDA. Forms, papers and word proc essing. Reasonable. 690-1113. 80t2/26 Experienced librarian will do library research for you. Call 272-3348. ' 86t2/29 36" Projection 'TV', Mitsubishi Stereo, perfect condi tion, $1000. 822-1248 day, 846-4555 after 6pm.89t2/l 1 Type papers in my home. $1.75 a page. Call 776-4702. 9112/23 Bicycle Bianchi 12-speed, 23". Excellent condition $175. Call 845-4032 (John). 846-8404. 91t2/12 Resumes. Best quality and prices. 696-2052. 7tfn VERSATILE WORD PROCESSING - BEST PRICES. FREE CORRECTIONS. RESUMES, THESES, PA PERS, GRAPHICS, EQUATIONS, ETC. LASER ‘QUALI TY. 696-2052. 163tfn Complete Apple He computer system: disk drive, mon itor, modern, printer, word processor, 8c spreadsheet. $1000 negotiable. Paul Woods 845-7050 weekdays. 9D2/16 Get ready for spring. 87 Yamaha Riva 80. 1100 mi., like new. $750. 693-3907. 90t2/15 • TRAVEL 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: $849.86tl n Galveston Is Fort Walton Beach .. *126 Orlando/Disnev World *132 Hilton Head Island DON'T DELAY TOLL FREE SPRING BREAK INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS ^-000-321-5911/ • HELP WANTED Safeway Stores Inc. has immediate part-time checker openings ('l5-24 hrs. per week) at the Safeway store located at 1805 Briarcrest. To apply, pick up an applica tion at the Briarcrest store. Pay rate is $3.80-$5.75 based on experience. E-O-E M/F/H/V WORLD STUDENT SERVICE CORPS This summer WSSC will bring together students from many nations to work in Guatemala and Honduras. Volunteers will be involved in making lasting im provements in sanitation, health and education. WSSC sponsored by CARP. 512-322-0404. 9112/16 ^ 75* m * 2 50 PITCHER OF BEER 6 Daily Lunch Specials Served with Chips & Hot Sauce MTV & Sports in Aggie Rooqi; Approved Checks-Credit Cards 3109 Texas Ave., Bryan 823-7470 / Sandestin Beach Hilton Destin, Florida ^pSpringbreak-SS^ A TOTAL PRICE * / tfeL-Jk PACKAGE INCLUDES: OVERSEAS JOBS. Summer, yr. round. Europe, S. Amer., Australia, Asia. All fields. $900-2000 mo. Sight seeing. Free info. Write 1JC, PO Box 52-Tx 04 Corona Del Mar, Ca. 92625. 90t3/4 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 Wait person & kitchen help wanted. Apply 8-10pm. 701 University East. Pacific Gardens. 9H2/16 • FOR RENT WAKE UP AGGIES! Luxury 4-plex 1,000 sq. ft. 2 bedroom, Hollywood baths washer/dryer shuttle bus Call WYNDHAM MGMT 846-4384 6 DAYS ON THE BEACH 2 5 NIGHTS HOTEL FOUR TO A ROOM 3 2 BEACH PARTIES WITH UVE BANDS 4 1 BREAKFAST/2 BUFFET DINNERS * BREAKFAST ON ARRIVAL DAY ■* FLORIDA LUAU BUFFET ON THE BEACH * GREAT BARBEQUE BUFFET BY THE POOL 5 ROUNDTRIP TRANSPORTATION BY AIR CONDITIONED, RESTROOM EQUIPPED, MOTORCOACH • COMPLETE PACKAGE WITHOUT ROUNDTRIP TRANSPORTATION •IBS. 00 Doug Hill Travel 8144 Walnut Hill Lane • Walnut Gten Tower • Suite 171 Dallas, TX 75231 • 214-73^3390 In Texas 1-800-52&4100 • TELEX 794949 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” SCHULMAN 6 . 2002 E. 29th 775-2463 Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx. 1 Bdrm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $248 Rental assistance available! Cali 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5pm. 4tfl Efficiency Apartment. All utilities paid. Quiet person only. $50. deposit. $200./rao. 2500 l abor Road Brvan, 778-8755. 89t2/l 1 2 Bdrm, 1 Bath large windows 8c tall trees. $410./mo. Normandy Square Apts, in Northgate. 764-7314. 69tfn Roomy 2/1 house fenced yard. 2 mi from TAML Miller $325/mo. 693-3418 after 5:30 1906 85t2/15 Clean, quiet, 2 bdrm., 1 bath apt., walk to class, $190. and bills. 696-7266. 87t2/12 Pre-leasing 3 BR/2 BA Duplex near Hilton. 846- 2471/776-6856 63t/indef. 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 Richard. 92t2/17 ATTENTION Male roommate needed. Share IB/IB apt. Lease thru May. 696-4380 Scott, 764-7276. 90t2/15 Scutters Mill Condo. Room for rent. $100 weekly, $300 monthly. 696-0633. 90t2/15 FOR KEEPS pg-13 7:30 »:5ff THE COACH TRIP r 7:30 9:50 $ DOLLAR DAYS $ DIRTY DAHCSNS pg-is m HELLO ASAIX pq 7.29 9:39 BABY BOOM pg-is 7:10 9:35 PRIHCESS BRIDE pg 7:25 9:45 •DENOTES DOLBY STEREO PLAZA 3 226 Southwest Pkwy 693-2467 1* FATAL ATTRACTION r 7:20 9:50 1*0000 MORNING VIETNAM r 7:10 9:40 |*WALL STREETr 7:15 9:45 MANOR EAST 3 Manor East Mai 1 823-8300 1*THREE MEN & A BABY pg 7:10 9:35 1 THE LAST EMPEROR r 7:45 |OV»BOAROpg 7:25 9:45 Page 127The Battalion/Thursday, February 11, 1988 Found: Old, deaf Beagle, female, near Chicken Oil. 845-9061 (d), 696-8971 (n). 9U2/L6 Meoooouuuch! Juniors Laurie Ross and Nancy Miller cut the skin and muscle off of their cat in Zoology 210 Wednes day. The class dissects cats to understand thesimi lai ities of the anatomy of cats and humans. Photo by SheltmiW^ ■n Ai Id pi; nen |r, a dou Convicted murderer plans to fight with executioners : 51,11 Ir be tell. HUNTSVILLE (AP) — A Hous ton man with a history of violence vowed to fight his executioners if they tried to put him to death before dawn Thursday for the slaying of a woman during a burglary eight years ago. Calvin Williams, 27, faced lethal injection for the 1980 strangulation of Emily Anderson. This was his fourth execution date. “I’m not going to walk in there and just hop up on that table,” Wil liams said in an interview last week. “I’m going to fight them. There’s no doubt in my mind what I’m going to do because I don’t want to die for something I didn’t do.” Williams acknowledged breaking into the apartment where the woman was slain, but insisted the burglary occurred a month before the killing. His fingerprints, how ever, were found in Anderson’s sto len car, recovered a few blocks from Williams’ home. Prison officials have said they were prepared for any resistance by an inmate en route to the death chamber. Williams’ mood Wednes day after being moved to a small holding cell outside the chamber was described as calm. “He told me he would see me later,” said fellow death row inmate Gary Graham. “He felt like the state was about to kill him.” Williams’ attorneys contended in appeals the Texas death penalty law is flawed in that it does not allow ju rors to consider mitigating circum stances and forces them to return a death verdict. A federal judge in Houston was considering the request Wednesday. The defense argument has been used to obtain stays in manyres Texas capital punishmeni cases® that challenge to the law is pens] before the U.S. Supreme Coil another Texas death row case, “As far as I’m concerned,hesij eight years she didn’t have,"saSli derson’s sister, Ellen Varrell.t sent that, although 1 iindersianJl process. I think he’s had all tip peals he should have undertM My favorite saying is: ‘She Ml appeal. He was her judge, her ] and her executioner.’ ” A H ouston jury in I980toolJ six minutes to decide Wil should get the death penalty,‘HI edition witnesses included women who said he attackedthed “He’s been assaulting people| close to 10 years — every dij most,” Assistant District Ned Morris said. Athletes l\i (Continued from page 1) a full-time semester. He’s making whatever progress he can.” Carter says the general percent ages are computed by following a freshman class for six years; close to 70 percent still are enrolled through the fourth year. “We consider that if they’re still enrolled through the fourth year, they are making progress toward a degree and will eventually gradua te,” Carter says. The athletes’ high graduation rates are partly the product of the Athletic Department's academic pro gram, Hunt says. The department’s system of study hall, tutoring sessions, academic counseling and mandatory class at tendance is designed to develop the students’ self-discipline and time- management skills, he says. “We reinforce positive behavior and do whatever the case may be for negative behavior,” Hunt says. “We can act as a friend or as a big brother. But we can also act as par ents — we know how to pat people on the back and know how to kick them in the rear end.” Besides this system of reward and punishment, the academic program is designed to help the athletes bud get their time. “Our biggest problem is time management for athletes,” Hunt says. “Even in the offseason . . . they stay busy. Some people talk about the glamour of student athletics, and it’s true when you’re winning, but it takes a lot of time.” Basketball players can miss three days of school when they travel to an out-of-town game, and they still have to keep up in their classes. Even during the off-season, athletes have workouts and practice, he says. “It’s an especially big strain for freshmen to manage their time,” Hunt says. So all new students (freshmen and transfers) must attend study hall four or five nights per week for two hours each night, he says. Athletes who are on scholastic probation must attend, too. “They’re monitored by a graduate assistant, and there are tutors avail able to help them during study hall,” Hunt says. The department has a file of about 125 tutors for all subjects. They are either graduate students or advanced undergraduates who are willing to give their time to help the athletes. Graduate students are paid $5 per hour and undergraduates are paid $4 per hour. “Their main function is not only enlightenment, it’s to save time,” Hunt says. “Tutors know what’s im portant in a class, they know' what the students need to grasp and they can get down to the nitty-gritty.” big priority on it like the resltj do.” Tutors do not do the atW schoolwork, she says. “There’s no spoon-fed ’1 rtj your work for you,’ ” KleibriiM “If there is, I don’t know ate| Tutors doing work for athletesii condoned by Dr. Crews (CainN supervisor).” But Kleibrink says she hasH students’ English assignments] them. “Eve taken a paper and loof l it and thought it would bebetWI me to revise it and demonstrator was correct than to explain it stfi step,” she says. “I took it andr|T then I explained to him whyldij Mil I „ The v Sm Teresa Kleibrink, an English tu tor, says some athletes make school a high priority, but others concentrate more on sports. “Some are over there sweating it out just like anyone else,” says Klei brink, a junior English major. “But most of the ones who have their priorities set on sports are disinter ested in school. They don’t blow it completely off, but they don’t have a “I don’t consider it doinjp work for them. That’s just ni;j sonal approach to teaching fl how to do it right. 1 do thf« thing for students who areif? letes that I tutor privately.” fj In another attempt to savej! letes’ time, the department seven computers in Cain Hall mester. “We have computers hookfl into the A&M system with(wi printers,” Hunt says. “Wltaji they use — Wylbur, VAX-* ( | tied into that, too. “The main reason we did thiji to save time. Time is valuable. 11 have curf ews and places theyi® go so they don’t have time to "'ail a computer.” Friday’s story will examitH f unds that support athletes - ""1 the money comes from and goes.