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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 4, 1988)
Page 10/The Battalion/Friday, March 4, 1988 World and Nation Leaders agree on modernizing tr $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 COLD STUDY 18 & Older If you have recent onset of cold symptoms you can earn $75 by participating in a short at home study using over-the-counter cold medications. Call Pauli Research International 776-6236 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $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 23 tl 0/2 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 warn ■ You’re the one who’s number one. Peppertrec Apaurtments 2701 Longmire College 693-5731 Across From A&M Walk to Campus •Quiet •New Paint *New Carpet •Large 1,2 & 3 Bedrooms Now leasing & Preleasing University Terrace 1700 Jersey #101 693-1930 WAKE UP AGGIES! Luxury 4-plex 1,000 sq. ft. 2 bedroom, Hollywood baths washer/dryer shuttle bus Call WYNDHAM MGMT 846-4384 86tfn 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 & tall trees. Normandy Square Apts, in Northgate 846-4206. 99tfn 2 Bdr/1 Bath Mobile Home. 1 mile from University. $250,693-1530/693-8777. 105tS/4 SPRING BREAK SKIING - Beaver Creek Colorado. 3 bath condo. Sleeps 10. Booked 3-12-88 thru 3-19-88. Must cancel. $185 per night. 776-5020, 846-8262. 104t3/8 Pre-leasing 3 BR/2 BA Duplex near Hilton. 846- 2471/776-6856 63t/indef. 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 weapons during NATO summit BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) — NATO leaders pledged Thursday to modernize nuclear weapons in Eu rope to deter war and intimidation, glossing over a dispute that had threatened to mar solidarity at the first alliance summit in six years. C (o wi nection PARTYGRAMS Bellygrams Stripograms Singing Telegrams 693-3004 Defensive DRIVING, TICKET DISMISS, Insurance DISCOUNT, FUN CLASS! Call 693-1322. 95t5/13 Last Chance For Spring Break ‘88! Limited space re- maihs 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- 591 1 for reservations and information TODAY. Credit cards accepted. 94t3/4 TYPING: Accurate, 95 WPM, Reliable Word Proc essor. 7 days a week. 776-4013. 85t2/30 COUNSELORS Summer employment. Female and male. Outstanding eight week girls’ camp in Maine needs instructors in the follow ing activities: tennis, swim ming (WSI), water ski, sailing, canoeing, kayaking, rope s/outdoor living skills, horse back riding, costume director, theatre technical director, sil ver jewelry, pottery, nature arts and crafts, photography, copper enameling, fine arts, arts and crafts, newsletter, gymnastics, dance, lacrosse, field hockey, basketball, softball, and soccer. ALS re quired for all waterfront posi tions, with WSI required, as well, to teach swimming. Ex cellent salary, travel allow ance, room/board, laundry, uniforms and linens provided. For information and applica tion call: 301/653-3082 or 207/998-4347 days. Evenings and weekends call 301/363- 6369, 207/783-4625 or 203/649-4147. TRIPP LAKE CAMP 10913/4 SUMMER EMPLOYMENT - Experienced Pool Man agers, Assistant Managers, Swim Coaches, Certified Lifeguards and Instructors with CPR, First Aid - and dedication. South, Southwest Houston Area. (713) 499- 2664. 109t3/10 Students from the following cities are needed to ob serve child restraint use during spring break (March 14-18): Amarillo, Austin, Brownsville, Dallas, El Paso, Houston, Lubbock, Tyler and Waco. Two students from each city will collect data at designated day care centers and malls... Approximately 4 days work, plus training...5.oo/hr...call Katie at 845-2736 between aam and 5pm for interview...interviews will be held 2/23 thru 3/4 I05tfn 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 %. TOR SALE *355555*3355 : . . :• ‘85 Elite 80. Good condition. $750 or best offer. 696- 9741 after 5. 106t3/4 PATRICK NAGEL prints. Rare pieces available. Best prices anywhere. 764-7562. 107t3/8 1982 Kawasaki LTD 550. Low mileage, includes hel met. Call 764-8912. 105t3/4 COMPUTER’S ETC. 693-7599. LOWEST PRICES POSSIBLE! IBM-PC/XT COMPATIBLE 640KB- • ROOMMATE WANTED RAM. 2-360KB DRIVES. TURBO, KEYBOARD, MONITOR: $729. PC/AT SYSTEMS, 10MHZ TURBO: $849. 105tfn 2 Bdrm - 1 */!> Bath Condo. Own room share bath $250. ABP 822-4239. 109t3/10 ’85 Alliance Convertible. 1.7 L, 1 owner, 25,000 miles. $5195. 822-9013/774-4953. 108t3/25 ’86 Cavalier Z-24. 2.8 FI, loaded, nice, automatic onlv. $6750. 823-8444, 776-0778. 108t3/25 Happy Birthday Danica Love, Michael '85 Suzuki. Fa 50. good condition. Low mileage. $250. 846-3517 or 260-2287. 108«3/9 Alpine 5900 Car Compact Disc Player. - New. S550. Asking $300. 696-1943. 108t3/9 iftSR/WEil Spring Break - Go For It!! South Padre Island Texas. •♦Last minute accomodations.** Call 512-761-6868 or leave message. 105t3/4 • BUSINESS OPPORTUNrtY * MISCELLANEOUS mm. ALL CASH BUSINESS - Local condom route distrib utorship available to qualified individual. Service com pany owned accounts with automatic expansion pro gram. Will net $810 per month based on only 6 vends per day. Requires approximately 4 hours per week and investment of $7,700 cash for equipment. Call toll-free 1-800-782-1550. Operator 3-M. Anytime. 109t3/4 HAS YOUR BICYCLE LEFT YOU FLAT? SPORTS ATTIC will sell your good used bicycle on consign ment. 846-7021. 91t3/9 Typing, Word Processing. All kinds. Reasonable Rates. Call Bertha 696-3785. 103t3/9 WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu scripts, reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614. 106t4/5 Professional Typing, Word Processing, Resumes. Guaranteed error free. PERFECT PRINT 822-1430. 8U5/4 Experienced librarian will do library research for you. Call 272-3348. 106t3/31 CAL'S BODY SHOP. 10% discount to students on la bor, Except color matching. Foreign & Domestics. 30 years experience, 823-2610. 108tfn VERSATILE WORD PROCESSING - BEST PRICES. .FREE CORRECTIONS. RESUMES, THESES, PA PERS, GRAPHICS, EQUATIONS, ETC. LASER 'QUALITY. 696-2052. 163tfn Summing up two days of talks by leaders of the 16-member organiza tion, President Reagan said, “The state of the alliance is excellent. We’re strong, we’re united, we’re prosperous and we’re free.” “All of us understand the absolute necessity of maintaining the credibil ity of our deterrent,” he said, under scoring NATO’s commitment to keep nuclear weapons in Europe. “We will never trade that credibil ity away at the negotiating table and we won’t give it away through ne glect,” Reagan said. With the exception of a brief opening session, the summit was held behind closed doors at NATO’s heavily guarded headquarters. As intended, the meeting closed with proclamations of Western unity intended to strengthen Reagan’s hand in arms-control negotiations with the Soviet Union. “The alliance has agreed on its arms control priorities and is ready to get down to business,’’Reagan said. “NATO fully supports my ef fort to negotiate deep reductions in strategic weapons.” In a minor embarrassment about two hours after the summit’s close, Reagan told reporters he had not seen the final communique from the meeting. However, White House chief of staff Howard Baker quickly inter jected, “No. We saw it last night. No problems and it’s very good.” Taking his cue from Baker, Rea gan said, “Yes, very good, no prob lems.” Jewish teen-ager assaulted by Arab in West Bank city JERUSALEM (AP) — An Arab man stabbed a teen-age Jewish set tler in the back Thursday as he shop ped for the Jewish Purim holiday in the occupied West Bank city of He bron, the army and witnesses said. Minutes later, angry Jewish set tlers attacked photographers taking pictures there, witnesses said. Elsewhere in the West Bank, Is raeli troops wounded four Palestin ians in violent protests. On the diplomatic front, U.S. Sec retary of State George P. Shultz ar rived in Israel Thursday night for a last-ditch effort to sell his peace pro posal. He was met by Foreign Min ister Shimon Peres, but no statements were made. Legislators of Prime Minister Yitz hak Shamir’s right-wing Likud bloc have rejected the U.S. proposal, say ing they will not agree to an interna tional conference or to the exchange of land for peace. The scuffle in Hebron, 20 miles south of Jerusalem, began shortly af ter 16-year-old settler Aharon Peretz was stabbed. The army said later Peretz was treated for slight injuries at a Jerusa lem hospital and released. A photographer on assignment for Time magazine was struck with her camera by enraged Jewish set tlers. She fell to the ground unconscious, with a one-inch gash in her forehead that required five stitches. The attack reflected the growing anger of settlers and much of the Is raeli public at the news media, which they blame for tarnishing Israel’s image abroad and for inflaming un rest. In the Arab village of Idna on Thursday, riot police fired on doz ens of Palestinians who stoned their jeep. An army spokesman said three Arabs were wounded in the legs. Troops shot a fourth Arab youth in the neck after Palestinians in Beita, a village eight miles east of Nablus, hurled rocks at soldiers, according to hospital officials and the Arab-run Palestine Press Service. Congressmen draft bill for ‘dramatic’ embargo toward Noriega regime WASHINGTON (AP) — Six Re publican and Democratic congress men introduced a bill Thursday to impose an “immediate, dramatic and devastating” trade, air travel and cu- rency embargo against the regime of Panamanian strongman Manuel An tonio Noriega. and prohibit U.S. banks from trans ferring any funds to Panama and its banking system. The lawmakers said they would seek speedy congressional approval of the embargo bill. But they said they also hoped to prod President Reagan to act inde pendently to adopt a far stronger se ries of punitive sanctions against the Noriega regime than he has ap proved to date. “By stopping the transfer of funds from U.S. banks to Panama, we go for the jugular,” said Sen. Alfonse D’Amato, R-N.Y., a principal spon sor of the embargo plan. “Because of Panama’s heavy reli ance on its economic ties with the United States, the impact of a U.S. trade embargo would be immediate, dramatic and devastating to Noriega and his cohorts,” D’Amato said. The proposed embargo would bar all imports from Panama, prohibit all U.S. exports to that nation, bar all air travel between the two countries Panamanian opposition leader Ri cardo Arias Calderon, president of the Christian Democratic Party, told reporters later that a trade embargo would be “strong medicine” but that such a remedy is sometimes needed for people to regain their health. “L. G.” CRUM IS THE ONE HAS SCUBA DIVING LEFT YOU ALL WET? SPORTS ATTIC will sell your good used scuba equip ment for you! 846-7021. 91t3/9 Family: Wife: Patricia Ann (McCoy) Sons: Barry-A&M ‘81 Doug-A&M ‘84 Kevin-Bryan High Student • For A Brighter Future • For A Full Time Commissioner • For Better County Roads • For Wise and Prudent Management • For Proven Leadership • For Addressing Economic and Social Issues Rep. Primary March 8, 1988 For County Commissioner Pet. 3 Background: B.S. AgEd, Texas A&M ’54 (Corps of Cadets); MBA, Michigan State University ’64; U.S. Army Retired Colo nel; Transportation; Programming; Planning; Budget ing; Project Management; Contracting; Procurement; Construction; Working with people. Paid Political Advertisement, Clyde L. Brothers, Treasurer, Rt. 3, Box 297, C.S., TX 77840 Secretary of State George P. Shultz flew to London to meet with Jordan’s King Hussein in a continua tion of Shultz’s Middle East peace making mission. Reagan’s national security adviser, Lt. Gen. Colin Powell, said in an ABC-TV interview that the allies “gave the president a rousing send- off’ for negotiations to halve the number of U.S. and Soviet long- range missiles. attack with nuclear weapons. IhetL said a key goal of the alliance wasi!f^ s seek to “gradually overcome the natural division of the Europeail? continent.” Wq While notin of change”in bei ig encouraging sigA |v the policies of theStr i viet Union and some of its East Ei| Oly NATO Secretary General Lord Carrington said he was heartened that Soviet leader Mikhail Gorba chev has recognized the East-West imbalance in European conventional forces that favors the Eastern bloc and “is willing to do something about them.” The allied leaders reaffirmed their determination to defend the West “for the forseeable future” un der a strategy of deterring a Soviet ropean allies, the NATO leaderM^ cautiously referred to suggestions(1 fundamental reforms in the SovirB system. 1 “We look beyond pronounce®! ments for tangible and lasting polio* r changes addressing directly the sues dividing East and West,’’ tin* communique said. ■ “However, we have to date wW..i nessed no relaxation of the militanE effort pursued for years by the So® r( viet Union. The Soviet Union peL sists in deploying far greater miliunEjjj forces than are required foritsdtE!„ fcnse - ■lai World Briefs por Tim - tom tire* B Ma) Hopefuls given endorsements in South From the Associated Press Democrat Michael Dukakis blasted Richard Gephardt Thurs day for backing “a $50 billion burden” with his call for an oil import fee, while Republican Bob Dole and Democrat Albert Gore Jr. touted endorsements for their Southern campaigns. Dole won backing from a fa vorite of the Republican right, former U.N. Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick, and Gore got sup port from Charles Robb, the for mer governor of Virginia, and Gov.-elect Buddy Roemer of Louisiana. Republican front-runner George Bush and rivals Pat Rob ertson and Jack Kemp were all in South Carolina, where Republi cans vote Saturday in what Bush thi jpes ils I arc- six pels him toward far more dele gates in the rest of the South on Super Tuesday. Dukakis, the Massachusetts governor, defended his opposi tion to a fee on imported oil in Texas, the big prize of Super Tuesday primaries and a state where local sentiment runs in fa vor of the tax. He said an oil import fee “will put a $50 bilion burden on this nation’s economy.” Gephardt, the Missouri con gressman, was back in his home state after picking up $4 25,000at two fund-raisers there a day be fore — money that is critical for getting his message on television ads in the South. Kan jtfte enct SVV< I A Ark coni I outc com fito R in in .st pfhe (C/ Mar House defeats package for Contra aid WASHINGTON (AP) — The House on Thursday killed a $30 million package of purely “hu manitarian” aid for Nicaragua’s Contras that had been pushed by Democrats as a way to ease pres sure for future military aid for the rebels. The final vote of 216-208 against the plan came minutes af ter the lawmakers had voted 215- 210 to accept a Democratic ver sion of the aid package that also included sharp restrictions on how the rebels could use the money and a new fund to aid chil dren who are victims of the Nica raguan civil war. Defeat of the aid package meant the rebels, whose last U.S. aid ran out on Tuesday, would be left without new supplies until Congress could make another try Liberal Democrats, who have steadfastly opposed aid to the re bels in the past, teamed with Re publicans, for whom the package was too weak, to defeat it. As the House debated the Democratic plan, Rep. Charles Stenholm, D-Texas, charged that it would have placed control of a | $14 million fund to aid children who are victims of the civil war in the hands of the leftist Nicara guan government, prompting an angry response from House Speaker Jim Wright, D-Texas. Earlier, the speaker had called the dispute over the aid package “a battle for peace in Nicaragua, and for a constructive role for the United States in Central America as opposed to a destructive role." Macy’s aquires department store chain NEW YORK (AP) — Feder ated Department Stores Inc. agreed Wednesday to be acquired by R.H. Macy & Co., but an un daunted Campeau Corp. pro ceeded with its rival bid for the nation’s fifth largest retailer. A Federated spokesman said in a joint statement with Macy, the nation’s 10th largest general re tail concern, that the two compa nies had signed a definitive agreement to create a new com pany, Macy’s-Federated Inc. Macy operates 96 stores in 14 states, while Federated has 650 stores — including such depart ment stores as Bloomingdale’s, Foley’s, Filene’s and Bullock’s — in 36 states. The agreement provides for Macy to begin a cash tender offer of $74.50 a share for about 80 percent of Federated’s 89.6 mil lion outstanding shares, or a total of $5.25 billion, the companies said. The remaining Federated shares would be exchanged for stock in the new company. Campeau, a Toronto-based real estate developer and retailer, had offered $68 a share in cash outright for all Federated shares, or a total of $6.1 billion. Late Wednesday, Campeau said it was amending its pre viously announced $68 cash ten der offer for Federated. Phone No. 696-1827 Culpepper Plaza (near Hasting’s) Jewelry Limited High quality 20 pt. diamond set in Aggie Ring $185°° Any watch battery $3°° • Ring stripping available