The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 15, 1988, Image 10

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    Page 10/The Battalion/Monday, February 15, 1988
Battalion
Classifieds
NOTICE
Skin Infection Study
Patients needed with skin in
fection such as infected cuts &
scrapes, boils, infected burns,
infected insect bites, etc. Pa
tients will be paid for time & co
operation.
G & S Studies, Inc.
846-5933 qMr
$75 $75 $75 $75 $75
COLD-FLU-FEVER
Individuals with fever of 101° or
higher to participate in an at home
study. We will come to your home to
start you in study. $75 incentive for
those chosen to participate.
Call Pauli Research
International
776-6236
$75 $75 $75 $75 $75
$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
$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
NIGHT TIME 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
75tfn
• 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
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.
RooniV 2/1 liousc f'etitecl vard. 2 ini f rom T AML'. 1906
Miller $325/mo. 693-34 18 after 5:30. 85t2 1-5'
MISCELLANEOUS
HAS SCUBA DIVING LEFT YOU ALL WET?
SPORTS ATTIC will sell your good used seuha eqnrft
nient for you! 846-7021. ' 9113/0
• ROOMMATE WANTED
Share or rent room in nice duplex, 10 min. campus,
near shuttle with graduate student. Prefer nun-
smoker, quiet, male/female. 696-4221 Richard. 92t2/17
ATTENTION Male roommate needed. Share IB/lIi
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
Scandia Apartments. Own room. $140./month (nego
tiable). Call Collect (713) 446-3202. 93t2/18
# SERVICES
mmmtammimmuammnmmummm
y#^ TUI
Jsk
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 tor 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
Lose weight by Spring Break!! Guaranteed. No drugs.
No hunger. No exercise. Call Sherry. 512-444-2042.
94t2/26
SCHOLARSHIPS ARE AVAILABLE! Professional
Service Finds Scholarships For You. Low Cost - Guar
anteed Results - Free infro. FINANCIAL AID RE
SEARCH INSTITUTE 1 -800-USA-1221 Ext. 7343.
9 112'1:
VERSATILE WORD PROCESSING - BEST PRICES.
FREE CORRECTIONS. RESUMES, THESES, PA
PERS, GRAPHICS, EQUATIONS, ETC. LASER
QUALITY. 696-2052. I6StFn
Resumes. Best quality and prices. 696-2052.
77tfn
WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu
scripts, reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614.87t3/I
CAL’S BODY SHOP. 10% discount to students on la
bor. Expert color matching. Foreign & domestic. 30
yrs. experience. 823-2610. 92t2/29
TYPING BY WANDA. Fotms, papers and word proc
essing. Reasonable. 690-1 1 13. 80(2/26
Professional Typing, Word Processing, Resumes.
Guaranteed error free. PERFECT PRINT 822-1430.
■ ■ ■ y y "8H5/4
TYPING: Accurate, 95 WPM, Reliable. Word Proc
essor. 7 days a week. 776-4013. 85t2/30
Type papers in my home. $1.75 a page. Call 776-4702.
- 9D2/23
Experienced librarian will do library research for you.
3all r
Call 272-3348.
* HELP WANTED
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. 91(2/16
Lifeguards, 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., Ste. 460, Katy,
Tx 77450. 90t2/8
Help needed with housekeeping 1 or 2 afternoons per
ek. Cai
week. Car necessary. 696-4221.
Full-time college student made $7,000 in one month. I
can show you how. Tray (303) 988-3318. 94t2/19
COUSNELORS - Boys camp in Berkshire Mts., West.
Mass. Good sal., room & bd., travel allowance, beauti
ful modern facility, must love children 8c 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.
64H2/2
Last Chance For Spring Break ‘88! Limited space re
mains at South Padre, North Padre, Daytona Beach,
Fort Walton Beach and Steamboat, Colorado for ski
ing. Hurry, Call Sunchasc Tours toll free 1-800-321-
591 1 for reservations and information TODAY. Credit
cards accepted. 94t3/4
COL’NSELORS - Girls camp in Maine. Good sal., reem
& bd., travel allowance, beautiful modern facility, must
Idvc children & be able to teach one of the following:
Tennis. W.S.L, Sailing, Waterski, Softball. Basketball,
Soccer. LaCrosse, A&C. Photography, Horseback,
Dance, Piano. Drama, Ropes, Camp Craft, Gymnastics.
Call or write: Game Vega, Box 1771, Duxbury, Mass.
02332 (617)934-6536. 64tl2/2
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
OVERSEAS JOBS. Summer, yr. round. Europe, S.
Amer., Australia, Asia. All fields. $900-2000 mo. Sight
seeing. Free info. Write IJC, PO Box 52-Tx 04 Corona
Del Mar, Ca. 92625. 90t3/4
Wait person 8c kitchen help wanted. Apply 8-I0pm.
701 University East. Pacific Gardens. 91t2/16
Tutor wanted for ENTC Machine Design. Call 846-
5564 evenings, Michael. 93t2/IH
• FOR SALE
'85 Renault Encore 4 door. 5 speed, fact, sound, 20.000
miles, clean. $3,700. Ben @ 776-8352. 94t2/19
PIANO FOR SALE. Wanted: Responsible party to as
sume small monthly payments on piano. See locally.
Call manager at 618-234-1306 anytime. 94t2/23
Get ready for spring. 87 Yamaha Riva 80. 1100 mi.,
like new. $750. 693-3907. 90t2/15
COMPUTER'S ETC. 693-7599. LOWEST PRICES
EVER! IBM-PC/XT COMPATIBLE 640KB-RAM, 2-
360KB DRIVES, TURBO, KEYBOARD, MONITOR:
$649. PC/AT SYSTEMS, 10MHZ TURBO: SS99.86tfn
2 Bdrm, 1 Bath large windows 8c tall trees. $410./mo.
Normandy Square Apts, in Northgate. 764-7314. 69tfn
Complete Apple He computer.system: disk drive, mon
itor, modem, printer, word processor, 8c spreadsheet.
$1000 negotiable. Paul Woods 845-7050 weekdays.
91t2/16
Radar detectors! "Best Prices In T<
between 12-6pm Mon-Fri.
Call 696-7139
93t2/23
HAS YOUR BICYCLE LEFT YOU FLAT? SPORTS
ATTIC will sell your good used bicycle on consign
ment. 846-7021. ' 9U3/9
'83 Champion 14x56, 2 br‘s/1 bath, central a/h, fur
nished, clean. $182./mo. no equitv. NearTAMU. (713)
440-4724. 90t2/19
CtRLDCARE
"End all your speeding tickets with a Polic*;JjiffF' 'bttbvsittel avUiIable \ ery Reasonable rates,
mer." $20. (512)949-8855. 91(2/16 764-0530. 90t2/15
• LOST AND FOUND
Male to share 2br/lba apartment. $167./mo. utili
ties. 5 blocks from campus. Shuttle. Call Edward 846-
4957 leave message. 94t2/19
German Shepard female, tan. 846-4701, 693-4057
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 Nile"
SCHULMAN 6
2002 E. 29th
775-2463
FOR KEEPS pg-13
FATAL ATTRACTION r
7:30
9:50
$ DOLLAR DAYS S
DtiTTY DAJtCiftG PG-13
HELLO A&A1N po
7:19
fcM
BABY BOOM pg-13
7:10
9:35
EDDIE MURPHY RAW r
7:25
*48
•DENOTES DOLBY STEREO
MANOR EAST 3
Manor East Mai 1 823-8300
1 ‘THREE MEN & A BABY pg
7:10 j
9:35 R
I THE LAST EMPEROR r
J ‘SHOOT TO KILL r
7:25 B
9:45 |
STRETCH
Your Dollars!
WATCH FOR
BARGAINS
IN
THE
BATTALION!!
World and Nation
Researcher:
Exercise may
prevent cancer
Found: Old, deaf Beagle, female, near Chicken Oil.
845-9061 (d), 696-8971 (n). 9U2/16
BOSTON (AP) — Girls should be
encouraged to exercise vigorously
enough to delay their puberty, be
cause this may help protect them
from breast cancer and other dis
eases later in life, a researcher said
Sunday.
Grade school girls who play stren
uous sports often have their first
menstrual period, or menarche,
later than usual. Even after adoles
cence starts, they may miss periods if
they exercise regularly.
Although delayed or missing
menstruation is often thought to be
abnormal, some experts now say that
it is natural and even desirable, be
cause it may protect the body from
the damaging effects of sex hor
mones.
American girls have been going
through puberty at increasingly
early ages throughout this century.
I
Dr. Rose E. Frisch of the Harvard
School of Public Health said that
typically American girls now have
their first period at age 12V2. But if
they exercise in such vigorous sports
as tennis, running, basketball or soc
cer, their average age at menarche is
15'/a, the same as it was 100 years
a s°-
And Frisch said a simple rule
seems to apply: The more menstrual
cycles a woman has over her lifetime,
the greater her chance of breast can
cer, the biggest cancer killer among
U.S. women. So anything that delays
the start of menstruation should
lower the cancer risk.
“I suggest that regular exercise
starting early in elementary school
would have a long-term spin-off in
reduced risk of breast cancer and,
from our data, a reduced risk of dia
betes and cancer of the reproductive
system,” Frisch said.
She and other experts who study
the effects of exercise on reproduc
tion presented their work at a meet
ing of the American Association for
the Advancement of Science.
Recent federal statistics suggest
that the risk of dying from breast
cancer may actually be increasing.
Dr. Jack Fishman of Rockefeller
University said breast cancer may
take 40 years to develop. “What you
do in puberty can be very relevant to
what happens in breast cancer after
menopause,” he said.
Frisch based her recommenda
tion, in part, on a study she con
ducted on 5,398 women who grad
uated from 10 U.S. colleges. She
found that those who had been ath
letic in college and high school had
only about half as much cancer of
the breast and reproductive system
later in life as those didn’t get regu
lar exercise.
Those who have delayed or irreg
ular periods during their teen-age
years seem to suffer no long-term
problems. Frisch’s study found that
athletic women had just as many
children as those who were less ac
tive.
Dr. Tenley E. Albright, a Boston
surgeon who was an Olympic skating
champion, said coaches and parents
often consider delayed or missing
periods to be a disorder, while
young athletes often do not.
She said the condition should be
thought of as an “appropriate adapt
ive response” by the body, not a de
fect.
The relationship between exercise
and fertility is complex. Experts be
lieve that very lean and muscular
women sometimes cannot get preg
nant because their bodies do not
have enough fat. to nourish a grow
ing fetus. They must slow down
their exercise and put on some
weight to become fertile.
Orientation Meeting For
NEW Volunteers For
Volunteers in Public
Schools
External Affairs Meeting
Rudder Rm. 230 8:30 p.m
February 15,1988
STUDENT
ERNMENT
A AUjl UNIVERSITY
World Briefs
Next president may face recession
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
recent spate of skittish economic
indicators is raising concerns that
the next president will take office
without the tools to combat a re
cession, even if an election-year
downturn can be avoided.
That’s because the federal bud
get deficit has grown so huge that
the historical remedies for jolting
an economy out of a recession —
lower taxes and more federal
spending — simply will not be
available to the next president, a
growing number of analysts say.
In fact, if anything, the next
occupant of the Oval Office will
be under extreme pressure to
press for higher taxes to reduce
the budget deficit —a tactic that
would become all but impossible
during an actual recession.
In 1981, when the last reces
sion began, the federal budget
deficit stood at $78 billion. By
1987, with the recovery from that
recession entering its sixth year,
the shortfall was $148 billion af-
he
ter soaring to a record S221 bil
lion in 1986. —
1 he bloated budget delicilsolB
the 1980s will make it thatiiiiidi
harder for President Reagan's
succ essor to cope with a recession, B
s.n analysts troubled by recent re-H ,
ports showing * a faltering econ- B '
omy and by last week’s Congres-B )
sional Budget Office report
the deficit may hit SI76 billi
next year.
"The ability of the new presi
dent to use the discretionan
parts of the budget, particularly
large tax cuts, just aren’t there.'
said David Jones, senior econo
mist for Aubrey U. Lanston and H e( j
Co. K
And William Dunkclberg,biisi- B al
ness school dean at Temple Uni
versity, suggests: “The chicken is
coming home to roost. On Oct. 15
(the stex'k market plunge) be
came looking fora place toroosi
hut Ik- didn't do it. He was«
obst-i \f(l io be a very large
' llil k< " " and u
Activists make proposal for elections
ridit fie
Bi th
hoi
MOSCOW (AP) — Communist
Party activists proposed in an arti
cle on the front page of Pravda
on Sunday that more than one
candidate be put forward for top
party posts and that all party
members be allowed to vote.
The suggestions, appearing in
the party’s main newspaper, came
from party activists in the Uk
raine.
Although the proposals do not
have the party’s formal approval,
their appearance on Pravda’s
front page indicated the lead
ership is seriously considering
them.
The article said the issue would
be formally taken up at the 19th
All-Union Party Conference, a
rare gathering of the nation’s
Communists to be held June 28 in
Moscow.
Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorba
chev has said electoral reform will
be a key topic at the conference.
He has talked about many of the
same suggestions printed in
Pravda, beginning at a plenary
meeting ol the party’s Central
Committee in January 1986.
At that session, he raised the is
sue of secret ballots and discussed
the possibilities of giving party
members a choice in voting for
top party officials.
He also criticized the system
that allows bureaucrats to reirnin
in party posts for life while per
forming little work. He lalkeb
about broadening the nominatM
procedure for government elec
tions.
Some of the suggestions have
been adopted experimental
I-ast June, “multiple-candte
elections” for local party pose
were held in several areas. The
government called the system
democratization, although all
candidates must be approved bv
the Communist Party, and no
ot her parties can be created.
In the June experiments,part)
members in one of every 25 vy
ing districts chose among more
than one candidate for local gov
erning councils. Runoff elections
had to be held in 59 of the Soviet
Union’s 52,000 districts because
candidates tied.
Although there lias been no
firm indication whether the ex
periment will be expanded,
continuing articles in the pressin-
dicate the idea is, still very mueb
alive. The party cohference in
June could set the stage for mak
ing the system permanent and
nationwide.
and stru
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for the s
ir
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It hat
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re ah
Baiyior ;
year wit
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all but
Millions jobless in communist China
BEIJING (AP) — Every day,
they gather by the dozens, some
times hundreds, near a highway
overpass in Beijing in hopes of
finding a job in this so-called
workers’ paradise, where practi
cally no one is ever fired.
“I’ll take anything,” said a 20-
year-old girl from clirt-poor An
hui province, muffled against the
cold by several sweaters and a
greatcoat as she waited for job of
fers at the unofficial street labor
market.
She is among millions of
Chinese — some down and out,
others just restless — who are
drifting beyond the fringes of tra
ditional socialist work patterns.
Some come To these informal
labor markets. Others find jobs in
small factories which are spring
ing up in former rice paddies as
part of a drive to absorb the na
tion’s surplus farming popula
tion. Many are moving into the
nation’s mushrooming service in
dustry or taking avantage of
China’s new system of contracted
labor.
All together, they have given I
China’s economy a new mobly
and vitality, as well as introducing ,
new problems of rising ui
ployrnent and a breakdown in so-’
cial controls.
The Anhui girl said sk
worked for two years in Beijingas,
a waitress, returned home fora
while, and now was back for an
other try.
A 37-year-old handyman from I
H enan province said he had fin-1
ishecl a work contract that gave I
him a bed and about $1.20 a day I
He said if he can’t find “suitable' I
work, he planned to return totk I
wife and two children heleftbe j
hind on his farm.
Such roving would have been
impossible a decade ago, when
Chinese were assigned jobs fot
life and were seldom allowed to
leave their village. But Deng
Xiaoping’s market-oriented re
forms, begun in 1979, are grad'
ually turning the Chineseworket
loose, and in doing so, chai
the face of the land.
FLU TREATMENT IS HERE
A study using the new drug Rimandatine
.... , ^ ' He ’ ’ ^
is available at the Beutel Health Center
If you have Flu Symptoms
- Fever
- Muscle Aches
- Chills
- Sore Throat
Come to the health center within the first 24 hours
of illness and ask for the Flu Doctors (Day or Night-
Flu Docs don’t sleep)
You may win a paid vacation ( $160.00 ) in the Health Center
Dr John Quarles 845-3678
What do you think?
Let us know
Battalion Opinion Pag«j :