Battalion Classifieds • MISCELLANEOUS Page 8AThe Battalion/Wednesday, February 17, 1988 HAS YOUR BICYCLE LEFT YOU FLAT? SPORTS ATTIC will sell your good used bicycle on consign ment. 846-7021. 9U3/9 * FOR RENT • NOTICE MMHMLt SKIN INFECTION STUDY Persons needed with skin in fections such as infected cuts and scrapes, boils, infected burns, infected insect bites, etc. Eligible volunteers will be paid for time and cooperation. G & S Studies, Inc. 846-5933 ■urjn ACUTE DiARRHEA STUDY Persons with acute, uncom plicated diarrhea needed to evaluate medication being considered for over-the- counter sale. G&S Studies, Inc. 846-5933 THE GREENERY Landscape Maintenance Team member Full-time or Part-time Interview Mon-Thurs from Sam - 9am 823-7551 1512 Cavitt, Bryan $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 $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 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 Sunchase Tours toll free 1-800-321- 5911 for reservations and information TODAY. Credit cards accepted. 94t3/4 Defensive DRIVING, TICKET DISMISS, Insurance DISCOUNT, FUN CLASS! Call 693-1322. 95t5/13 • ANNOUNCEMENT MODELS WAN FED FOR SPRING SHOW AT THE EDGE. AUDITION DATES ARE FEB 21 & 22. FOR I NEC) CALL BENETTON. 764-8726. 97i2/19 • 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 Male to share 2br/lha apartment. $167./mo. + !4> utili ties. 5 blocks from campus. Shuttle. Call Edward 846- 4957 leave message. 94t2/19 Scandia Apartments. Own room. $140./rnonth (nego tiable). Call Collect (713) 446-3202. 93t2/l8 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 • SERVICES 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 7511/19 CAL’S BODY SHOP. 10% discount to students on la bor. Expert color matching. Foreign & domestic. 30 yrs. experience. 823-2610. 92t2/29 Type papers in my home. $1.75 a page. Call 776-4702. 9H2/23 Lose weight by Spring Break!! Guaranteed. No drugs. No hunger. No exercise. Call Sherry. 512-444-2042. 94t2/26 TYPING: Accurate, 95 WPM, Reliable. Word Proc essor. 7 days a week. 776-4013. 85t2/30 WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu scripts, reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614.87t3/l VERSATILE WORD PROCESSING - BEST PRICES. FREE CORRECTIONS. RESUMES, THESES, PA PERS, GRAPHICS, EQUATIONS, ETC. LASER QUALITY. 696-2052. 163tfn Professional Typing, Word Processing, Resumes. Guaranteed error free. PERFECT PRINT 822-1430. 8U5/4 Mother of 1 yr. old child would like to care for your child age, 9mo.-2yrs. 846-9202. 95t2/22 TYPING BY WANDA. Forms, papers and word proc essing. Reasonable. 690-1113. 80t2/26 Resumes. Best quality and prices. 696-2052. Exi xperienced librarian will do library research for you. all 272-3348. 86t2/29 • HELP WANTED COUSNELORS - Boys camp in Berkshire Mts., West. Mass. Good sal., room 8c 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, A8cC, Rocketry, Photography, Archery, Pioneering, Ropes, Piano, Drama. Call or write: Camp Winadu, 5 Glen La., Mamaroneck, NY 10543. (914) 381-5983. 64112/2 COUNSELORS - Girls camp in Maine. Good sal., rccm 8c bd., travel allowance, beautiful modern facility, must love children 8c he able to teach one of the following: Tennis. W.S.I., Sailing, Waterski, Softball. Basketball, Soccer. LaCrosse, A&C. Photography, Horseback, Dance, Piano, Diama, Ropes, Camp Craft, Gymnastics. Call or write: Camn Vega, Box 1/71, Duxbury, Mass. 02332 (617) 934-6536. 64U2/2 Teaching adult classes. 20 hours a week. Min./wage, 97t2/23 apply at AAA, 909 S.W. Parkway. Needed musicians for C&W Band, or band with female vocalist opening. 693-3241. 97t2/23 Help needed with housekeeping 1 or 2 afternoons per week. Car necessary. 696-4221. 94t2/19 Full-time college student made $7,000 in one month. I can show you how. Tray (303) 988-3318. 94t2/19 Tutor wanted for ENTC Machine Design. Call 846- 5564 evenings, Michael. 93t2/18 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 • TRAVEL Springbreak Get-A-Way. South Padre Island, Texas. Accomodations available. Budget. Moderate. Deluxe. Call 512-761 -1392 after 6 p.m. 97t2/23 FINALLY GRADUATING! 12 x 60 Skyline Trailer 2 Bedroom, 1 bath, a/c, central heat, washer/dryer, partially furnished, 2 miles from campus, yard & pets al lowed, available after May 15, 1988. $5000. 696-6547 HAS SCUBA DIVING LEFT YOU ALL WET? SPORTS ATTIC will sell your good used scuba equip ment for you! 846-7021. 91t3/9 World and Nation Judge allows clinics to give abortion advice 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 '85 Renault Encore 4 door, 5 speed, fact, sound, 20,000 miles, clean. $3,700. Ben <® 776-8350 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 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: $899.86tfn Radar detectors! "Best Prices Ir between 12-6pm Mon-Fri. Town”. Call 696-7139 93t2/23 '83 Champion 14x56, 2 br’s/1 bath, central a/h, fur nished, clean. $182./mo. no equity. Near TAMU. (713) 440-4724. 90t2/19 Problem Pregnancy ' •U’c dsten, We care, We he(p •Free Prcqnanc\> Tests •Concerned Counselors Brazos Valley Crisis Pregnancy Serv ice We’re Local! 3620 E. 29th Street (next to MedCev's Gifts) 24 hr. hot fine 823-CARE DENVER (AP) — A federal judge Monday temporarily barred en forcement of a new federal rule that prevents federally funded family planning clinics from advising preg nant women on abortion. The ruling applies to three orga nizations in Colorado and Utah that brought suit. U.S. District Court Judge Zita L. Weinshienk granted the motion by the three birth control services groups seeking a preliminary injuc- tion against the new rule scheduled to go into effect March 3. “The order just says the govern ment cannot put these regulations into effect until we have a chance to hear it in a final hearing,” Weinshienk told the Associated Press. The judge said she expected new hearing dates to be set within a week. She also said two similar cases are before federal judges in Boston and New York. Filing the suit against the govern ment were Rocky Mountain Planned Parenthood based in Denver, Planned Parenthood of Utah and rhf> Boulder Women’s Health Clinic The ruling temporarily barring enforcement of the rule applies only to those three organizations, Weinshienk said. The suit claims that the new fed eral ruling violates the Federal Title X statute and the intent of Congress, censors free speech rights at family planning clinics and violates the right of privacy of clinics and their patients. The Department of Health and Human Services had ruled that be ginning March 3, family planning programs receiving federal funds could not provide pregnant women with information on abortion or refer them to other sources, even if they ask. Administration officials have said the rule is intended to make sure federal funds are not used to pro mote abortion, even indirectly. Weinshienk said she based her de cision on many U.S. Supreme Court rulings that said there could not be rules that “dictated to doctors what they say to patients, which is what the regulations attempted to do.” Conrail engineer gives plea of guilt for manslaughter TOWSON, Md. (AP) — A Conrail engineer who ran a stop signal and caused an Amtrak crash that killed 16 people pleaded guilty to one count of manslaughter Tuesday in a bargain that will bring him no worse than five years in jail and a $1,000 fine. Rick L. Gates, 33, who was sched uled to begin a trial on 16 counts of manslaughter by locomotive, was op erating the three linked Conrail en gines Jan. 4, 1987, when they skidded in front of an Amtrak pas senger train carrying 660 people. The worst accident in Amtrak’s history left 16 dead and more than 170 injured. Gates was granted the guilty ver dict after attorneys agreed to include in the single misdemeanor count the names of all 16 fatalities. Prosecutors reserved the right to ask for the maximum sentence of five years and $1,000. Baltimore County Circuit Judge Joseph F. Murphy set sentencing for March 29. Gates remained free on $11,500 bail. Despite the admission by Gates and brakeman Edward Cromwell that they smoked marijuana in the cab, prosecutors said expert wit nesses were “unable to render an opinion regarding impairment.” Blood and urine samples showed that both men tested positive for marijuana. dent drug testing for all railroad workers. Families of victims, survivors and friends filled the small courtroom, some crying and others shaking their heads while a prosecutor read a 42-page statement of facts detailing the crash and actions by Gates and Cromwell. After the hearing, Gates told re porters outside the courthouse, “I am ultimately responsible for the crash and for my negligence. “I can’t begin to imagine the pain and grief of the families. I am sorry.” Man opens fire in office, hides from police “This is the first-ever manslaugh ter by locomotive verdict,” said Sandra O’Connor, Baltimore County state’s attorney and the chief prosecutor. “This will send a message that (op erators) cannot work under the kind of negligence that Mr. Gates did,” she said. But prosecutors, she said, were not certain the judge would have sentenced Gates, if convicted, to 16 consecutive five-year terms. O’Connor said one reason she de cided to accept the plea agreement was the recent federal appeals court ruling against automatic post-acci- SUNNYVALE, Calif. (AP) — A former employee shot several peo ple at his company’s offices Tuesday afternoon, and there were at least some fatalities and people holed up in the building, authorities said. The man, who reportedly was up set over a relationship with a female employee, barricaded himself inside the two-story ESL Corp. building and refused to talk to police. Capt. Hal Scott of the Sunnyvale Public Safety Department said there were “some bodies on the floor” on the first story of the building. Two people were taken to hospitals. One of those shot was the woman with whom the gunman had a relationship, Scott said. The gunman, who was fired from ESL three years ago, had been dat ing a woman at the company, Scott said. “He had given her a warning and she didn’t heed the warning and he said this was his way of making a point,” Scott said. SPRING BREAK MEXICO IN '8B! Round-Trip Air, 7 Nights Hotel, Airport Transfers, Welcome Cocktail, Jam Party, Discount Funbook, Morel Downright affordable prices from: CAKICUH . ACAPUUCO IXTAPA * $2-65 Don't let the Party start without you! Call STUDENT TRAVEL CONNECTION Today! (409) 696-9741 or (713) 447-6670 Patrols deter Lithuanian protests VILNIUS, U.S.S.R. (AP) —Po lice and civilian auxiliary officers patrolled near churches, in a his toric cemetery and in the center of this Baltic capital Tuesday, preventing demonstrations to mark Lithuania’s brief indepen dence. Jadvyga Beliauskiene, a Ro man Catholic activist, told report ers shortly before midnight Mon day that four Lithuanian nationalists were under house ar rest to stop them from leading protests. A high profile by police, show ing a harder line by Soviet au thorities against expressions of Baltic nationalism, seemed to deter the people of Lithuania from any large-scale showing of national feeling. Western reporters brought to Vilnius by the Soviet Foreign Ministry for a government-ap proved visit were followed con stantly in cars and on foot as they visited Lithuanian activists and traveled through winding medi eval streets to visit sites when protests had been scheduled. Beliauskiene, a former rntt her of an anti-communist pain san movement in the 1940sA spent 12 years in prison, waso# of about 200 people whosignedi petition to Soviet leader S. Gorbachev in January astej that authorities not “tenons people who wanted to celehti Lithuanian independence. Tuesday marked the 7 niversary of Lithuania’s deeb ( he 1 d uf weep :ats i der 1 tion of independence fromSov bur runs for-8 with 11, Russia months after the vik revolution brought theG» munists to power. Lithuanian independent until it wasabsorW by the Soviet Union in 1940, Activists called on citizens» pray at two Vilnius churchesal— lay flowers at a monumenttoPd f I )/ )ases ’ ish-Lit huanian writer Ada savv M ic k icu u / ,md the gr.uc.:' I* 11 ' 1 l ,M 1 Basanavicius, a doctor and chr B 1, ^ ca pion of the Lithuanian lanpia JS ettir1 ' who died 61 years ago, on Fr| ome run 16,1927. m’s f a! i don’t hit Israel: Behavior was 'unacceptable’ JERUSALEM (AP) — Israel’s deputy chief of staff said Tuesday some soldiers had committed “to tally unacceptable” acts against Palestinians, and hospital officials reported three Arabs wounded by troopers in the West Bank. Maj. Gen. Ehud Barak also said more than 200 Israelis had been injured, most of them lightly, since Arab riots began Dec. 8 in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. He said 53 Palestin ians had been killed, but the United Nations puts the number at 54. Arabs shortly after they wereb ied. Riot police stopped a buscam ing Israeli Arab high schoolsli dents from school in Haifa! their homes in Umm al FahmanJ beat several of them, the dai newspaper Al Hnmishmar if ported. An official at Umm al Fata confirmed the report to the Assn ciated Press. Police declined com of in and i Barak confirmed some soldiers had used a bulldozer to bury four Palestinians alive near the West Bank city of Nablus and declared: “This pattern of behavior ... is totally unacceptable under the standards of the Israeli Defense Forces and any civilized norms. Whoever is found responsible for this event will be punished.” Neighbors rescued the four ment. Transport Minister Chain Corfu appeared to suggest brad bombed a ferry that was to cam Arab deportees from a Cypni port to Israel. If the Palestineli ; eration Organization obtained another vessel, he said, “Its will lx* the same.” Barak said the army is succeed' ing in “gradually (improving)the caliber of behavior of our forcei, but added: “We are confronting new type of threat. Wecannotaf ford to yield to it, and wearend going to.” day Egypt, Jordan push for conference CAIRO, Egypt (AP) — Egypt and Jordan said Monday the United States should not advance interim solutions to the Palestin ian problem and urged that any U.S. peace plan aim for a final settlement through an interna tional conference. President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt and Prime Minister Zaid Rifai of Jordan separately out lined that position in remarks to reporters. Rifai arrived in Cairo Monday for a one-day visit. U.S. Secretary of State George Shultz will visit the Middle East at the end of this month. Officials in Washington and Is rael have said a new U.S. peace plan was outlined to Arab and Is raeli leaders by Richard Murphy, the assistant secretary of state (# near Eastern affairs. The Egyptian president visil Washington last month: talks in Cairo with Murphy la! week. However, Mubarak “The Americans have not us a specific (peace) plan," For any peace plan to succeed Mubarak said, it must envisagf “the final outcome, and we nui« stay away from any wordsorpif visions that were in theCampDi- vid agreements because they am otitdated and finished.” He referred to an autonon? plan outlined in one of the US mediated 1978 Camp David accords between Egypt and It rael. Reports: Soviets dismantle missiles BERLIN (AP) — The Soviet Union has begun dismantling their supply of intermediate range nuclear rockets that are sta tioned in East Germany, the state- run news agency ADN reported Tuesday night. According to the report, the in termediate range nuclear rockets that are stationed near Neubran- denburg, north of Berlin, have been dismantled. They are being placed in crates and officials are reporting that they are ready for transportion back into the Sour Union. The nuclear missile treali which was signed in Was in December at the superpoivtm summit by President Reagan Soviet Communist Party Genera! Secretary Mikhail S. Gorback' led to the much agreement by the superpower for the elimination of the mediate-range missiles. The U.S. Senate has not)* 1 voted on approving the ralifa' tion of the treaty. PECHUGA MONTEREf $5. 5(1 “Grilled chicken breast with sauteed mush rooms, onions, and peppers. Topped with melted Monterey Jack cheese, Spanish rice> frijoles ranchero and guacamole.” 3109 S. Texas Ave. • Bryan • 823-7470