Page 8AThe Battalion/Tuesday, March 29, 1988
Battalion
HELP!
Rudder Theatre Complex
Needs student workers
For stagehand and spotlight work
To Apply Come To: Rudder Auditorium
Tues. April 5 7:00 p.m.
COME SIGN UP!!
THE GREENERY
Landscape Maintenance
Team member
Full-time or Part-time
Interview Mon-Thurs
from Sam - 9am
823-7551
1512 Cavitt, Bryan
THERE’S A JOB FOR YOU IN A
SUMMER CAMP
The American Camping Association
(NY) will make your application avail,
to over 300 camps in the Northeast.
Exciting opportuniiites for college stu
dents and professionals. Positions av
ail: all land and water sports, arts &
crafts, drama, music, dance, tripping,
nature, R.N.’s, M.D.’s, Aides, kitchen,
maintenance. COLLEGE CREDIT
AVAILABLE. CALL OR WRITE FOR
APPLICATION. AMERICAN CAMP
ING ASSOCIATION, 43 W. 23 St.,
Dept (AM), New York, N.Y. 10010, 1-
800-777-CAMP. 11714/13
The Houston Chronicle
is taking applications for immedi
ate route openings for spring &
summer. Pay is based on per pa
per route & gas allowance is pro
vided. The route requires working
early mornings, 7 days a week. If
interested call:
James at 693-7815 or Julian at
693-2323 for an appointment.
Laboratory Technicians. Full-time positions available
immediately. Must be experienced in wet chemical or
soil, gas chromotography, and AA. Must be able to
work evenings and/or weekends. Call MANPOWF.R
846-3535. 12U4/1
Instructors needed for UNIVERSITY PLUS summer-
/fall classes. In the following areas: Conv. Spanish, Ger
man, Drawing, Wedding Planning, Ballroom Dancing,
and Real Estate. If you have a talent and would like to
teach, give us a call. 845-1631. 117t4/5
Need part-time and full-time leasing agents with Texas
Real Estate license. Brazosland Properties 846-0606.
120t4/8
Any PATRICK NAGEL prints. Rare pieces available.
Best prices anywhere. 764-7562. 119t4/7
‘84 Red Honda Spree Moped. Good Condition. Best
Offer. Sissie 696-1387. 119t3/31
Senior Boots $400. Adam Computer $100. Call 764-
9037 Leave Message. 119t3/31
Piano For Sale: Wanted: Responisble party to assume
small monthly payments on piano. See locally. Call
credit manager 1-800-447-4266. 120t4/5
Color Television, 19” RCA, $175. Excellent Condition.
Jeff 693-0104, 696-2677. 118t3/30
Redlail Boa, three feet. $100. Call Carmen 696-2483.
120t3/30
150 Elite Deluxe Honda 1985, $1000. 696-9433.
120t4/l
85 Honda Interceptor 500CC, Excellent Condition.
Must Sell. $1400. 822-9506. 12H4/4
POOL TABLE - Full size 5’x9' with cues, WALL
RACK, and X-TRA BALLS. GOOD CONDITION.
$400 negotiable. 764-0519. 117t3/29
NINJA 900, 11,000 miles, see to appreciate, $2200
Neg. 822-5518. 117t3/29
240Z Datsun. 3-Webers Rebuilt Engine. New tires & in
terior. $4000. Paul 846-1444. 120t4/l
PC/AT 286 CLEARANCE! 1.2MB drive, 512KB RAM,
10MHZ turbo, keyboard, monitor - $795. 693-7599.
113tfn
TORHEHT
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
SUMMER LEASING SPECIALS!
Luxury 4-plex
1,000 sq. ft.
2 bedroom/hollywood baths
washer/dryer
shuttle bus
Call WYNDHAM MGMT
846-4384
2 Bedroom/ 1 Vit Bath Studio, all appliances, w/d con
nections, carport. $295./$350. 693-1723. 119t4/15
3 Bedroom / 1 V2 Bath Duplex, all appliances, w/d con
nections, carport, wooded $365. 693-1723. 119t4/15
3 Bedroom / 2 Bath Townhome, fireplace, all appli
ances, w/d connections, $525. 693-1723. 119t4/15
1 Bedroom Studio, in the trees, ceiling fan, all appli
ances, pool, washateria, shuttle, $195./$295. 693-1723.
119t4/15
A Luxury 2 Bdrm/lV'z Bath 4-plex. Washer & Dryer.
All Appliances. $325/$250. Manual Dr. 693-0551, 696-
0632. 113tfn
* FORREHT
mm
Cotton Village Apts.,
Snook, Tx.
1 Bdrm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $248
Rental assistance available!
Call 846-8878 or 774-0773
after 5pm. 4tt
Pre-leasing 3 BR/2 BA Duplex near Hilton. 546-
2471/776-6856 63t/indef.
Sublease 2 Bed. Unfurnished near student apt. $250
per month. 846-5937. 117t4/5
A 3 bdrm, 2 bath 4-plex near A&M with washer/dryer
$395.-$495./mo. Summer rates available. 696-4384,
693-0982. 117t4/19
Efficiency w/loft, vaulted ceiling, appliances, pool,
shuttle, $175./$225. 693-1723. 119t4/15
2 Bedroom Studio, wooded, balconies, ceiling fan, ap
pliances, pool, shuttle $275./$395. 693-1723. 119t4/15
2 Bdrm, 1 bath large windows & tall trees. Normandy
Square Apts, in Nprthgate 846-4206. 99tfn
# NOTICE
Allergy Study
Wanted: Individuals with sea
sonal allergies to participate in a
short allergy study. $75-$200 in
centive for those chosen to par
ticipate.
v Call Pauli Research
International
5 $$ 7 $$ 6 $ 2 $ 3 $ $$$$$$
Deliver Pianos Part-Time In Your Pick-Up. Average
$6.00 hr. plus mileage. Keyboard Center 764-0006 for
appointment. 117tfn
$100 $100 $100 $100 $100
HEARTBURN STUDY
Wanted: Individuals with fre
quently occurring heartburn to
participate in a 4-week study us
ing currently available medica
tion. $100 incentive for those
chosen to participate.
Call Pauli Research
International
776-6236
$100 $100 $100 $100 $100
IMnilllBim I lf II HIIIMMIIl UMinTtilKlWBBT" Wli iHli Hall HIM i l
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
SKIN INFECTION STUDY
Persons needed with skin in
fections such as infected cuts
and scrapes, boils, infected
burns, infected insect bites, in
fected blisters, etc. Eligible
volunteers will be paid for time
and cooperation.
G&S Studies, Inc.
846-5933
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
$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
Defensive DRIVING, TICKET DISMISS,
DISCOUNT, FUN CLASS! Call 693-1322.
Insurance
95t5/13
• SERVICES
TOESL Test preparations / $500. for 9 mo. program.
1-20 Study Visas available. Kaplan Center 696-PREP.
116t.3/22
Locked Out? Keys for cars, motorcycles, mopeds. Im
ports & Domestic. 764-1105. 119t3/31
T YPING BY WANDA. Forms, papers, and word proc
essing. Reasonable. 690-1113. 119t4/28
LAWNBUSTERS COMPLETE LAWN CARE SERV
ICES, Quality Work, Reasonable Rates. 696-0318.
112t3/30
Experienced librarian will do library research for you.
Call 272-3348. 106(3/31
Professional Typing, Word Processing, Resumes.
Guaranteed error free. PERFECT PRINT 822-1430.
8U5/4
WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu
scripts, reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614.
106t4/5
Typing and editing by PhD. Rush Jobs 846-6501
WORDPROCESSING - Fast, Accurate, Guaranteed.
Papers, Dissertations. Experienced. Call Diana 846-
1015. 118t3/30
pNEPLEX ODEON
a AND
PUTT THEATRES
IROST OAK THREE
1500 HARVEY RD.
693-2796
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7:08 0:05
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2.50 ADMISSION
1. Any Show Before 3 PM
2. Tuesday - All Seats
3. MonWVed - Local Students With
Current ID's
4. Thur - KORA "Over 30 Nlte"
•DENOTES DOLBY STEREO 1
0.BJL a
MANOR EAST 3
Manor East Mai I 823-8300
I THE FOX AND THE BOUND a
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Hrs. 10:37-7:03, M-Sat.
(near Hasting’s)
Culpepper Plaza
693-7221
Pop has new balloon creations
and wonderful popcorn for Easter!
•Ship Easter gifts early
(ask us how!)
•We deliver
Watch for Parent’s Weekend
Specials
$1 00 off med.
bag of “smokey cheese”
flavor popcorn
845-2611
World and Nation
Contras, Sandinistas
work out pact details
TYPING: Accurate, 95 WPM, Reliable. Word Proc
essor. 7 days a week. 776-4013. 85t2/30
VERSATILE WORD PROCESSING - BEST PRICES.
: FREE CORRECTIONS. RESUMES, THESES, PA
PERS, GRAPHICS, EQUATIONS, ETC. LASER
‘QUALITY. 696-2052. 163tfn
CAL’S BODY SHOP. 10% discount to students on la
bor. Precise color matching. Foreign & Domestics. 30
years experience. 823-2610. 11 Itfn
SAPOA, Nicaragua (AP) — Fresh
from signing their unexpected peace
agreement in this border outpost last
week, Sandinista and Contra nego
tiators gathered here Monday to
work out details for a 60-day cease
fire.
Negotiators aimed to determine
the areas where rebel fighters will
gather during the cease-fire, out
lined in the accord signed Wednes
day night.
The delegation from the leftist
government, led by Maj. Gen. Joa
quin Cuadra, deputy defense min
ister and chief of staff of the Sandi
nista army, arrived first.
The Contra rebel negotiators
were to be led by Aristides Sanchez,
one of the directors of the umbrella
Nicaraguan Resistance.
The delegation, including re
gional commanders from key com
bat zones, was temporarily delayed
by travel difficulties and had not ar
rived by early afternoon.
The peace agreement calls for a
60-day cease-fire beginning April 1.
Further high-level negotiations
are tentatively scheduled for April 6
Jackson wants
delegate leader
to be nominee
Associated Press
SCHULMAN 6
2002 E. 29th 775-2463
*3 MEM AND A BABY pq
SHOOT TO KRLr
im
*40
!> DOLLAR DAYS $
ACTIOH JACKSOK pa-13
7:38
• FATAL ATTRACTION r lla '
PLANES, TRAINS & AUTOMOBILES r
FOR KEEPS PQ-13
TS
fcS«
Jesse Jackson said Monday he ex-
E ects Democratic leaders to embrace
im as the nominee if he wins the
most pre-convention delegates be
cause “I would have earned it from
the people.”
Democrat Richard Gephardt
ended his candidacy, and Republi
can ex-candidate Jack Kemp
climbed on George Bush’s bandwa-
gon.
As Democratic leaders wrestled
with the implications of Jackson’s
overwhelming weekend victory in
Michigan, Gephardt left the race for
the Democratic presidential nomi
nation.
“It’s been said the opera isn’t over
until the fat lady sings,” Gephardt
said. “Last Saturday in Michigan I
think I heard her walking to the mi
crophone.”
He was pushed to withdraw by a
third-place finish in Michigan’s cau
cuses, far short of the “Michigan
miracle” he sought to revive a candi
dacy that blossomed in Iowa’s lead-
off caucuses but was trampled in the
South.
Jackson and Michael Dukakis
both campaigned in Connecticut on
the eve of its primary. Sen. Albert
Gore Jr. campaigned in New York
and was joining Jackson and Sen.
Paul Simon at a debate Monday
night.
Dukakis, the governor of Massa
chusetts, was hoping his neighbor
state would provide a victory suffi
cient to ease the pain of his loss to
Jackson in Michigan — a loss that
raised questions about his candidacy
and his abilities as a campaigner.
GOP front-runner Bush, confi
dent of winning in Connecticut, the
state he grew up in, began a three-
day campaign swing through Wis
consin, the next battleground with
primaries next week.
Kemp, the New York congress
man who abandoned his conserva
tive candidacy two weeks ago, joined
Bush in Milwaukee to offer an en
dorsement.
“George Bush is going to be the
nominee of the Republican Party
and has earned that nomination,”
Kemp said.
“The time has come for all Repub
licans to unite behind this man who
has been a fine and loyal vice presi
dent, and to help him be the next
president of the United States,” he
said.
Bush’s remaining two rivals be
haved as though their races were
over, even though they kept their
candidacies alive.
Sen. Bob Dole, all but conceding
the nomination to Bush, spoke to
campaign workers in Washington in
what sounded like a last hurrah —
though aides said he wasn’t ready to
withdraw.
He said the Republcan Party
“must cast off the restrictions of
privilege and class. We must offer
help to those who need it. We must
support and defend civil rights.”
Former television evangelist Pat
Robertson, with only 17 delegates to
show for a campaign that has spent
$25 million, took the week off.
Gore, the Tennessee Democrat,
spoke at a congressional hearing in
New York City on homelessness.
“The frustration for most Ameri
cans is not that they do not care to
help, but that they do not know
how,” Gore said.
in Managua, the. capital, to reach a
more permanent truce.
Monday’s session also could ad
dress the issue of when the l .S.-sup
ported rebels must lav down their
arms.
On Sunday, the leftist Sandinista
government fulfilled the first pan ol
the cease-fire accord by freeing 100
political prisoners under an amnesn
program.
Most of them were accused of ac
tivities linked to the Contra rebels.
Afterward, Interior Minister Fo
mas Borge called the amnesty “possi
bly the beginning of the end of the
(6-year-oldj war,” and he called on
the Contras to release Nicaraguan
peasants its troops had kidnapped.
After celebrating Palm Sunda\
Mass, Roman Catholic Cardinal Mi
guel Obando y Bravo called the pris
oner release “ver\ positive.”
During his homilv, the Managua
archbishop warned the cease-fire
agreeement did not mean that “we
have already reached peace."
“Let us not make a mistake," he
said. “Let us not confuse ourselves.
They have only signed a cease-fire."
Under the Sapoa agreeineiu
bel forces are to gather with®
terference from Sandinistafou
specified zones inside Nicas
during the lirsi two weeks of As
Monday’s lalks between 5
commissions ol the two sidest
he extended and were to defim
location, size and modus open
of those zones, according to ik
of 1 he Sapoa accord.
Nothing is said in the J
agreement about the Conirasli
down their arms, and that coal
taken up as well.
In past talks, the rebels insist
keeping their weapons untilalj
visions of an accord were a
out.
Once rebel fighters have mi
into the truce zones, the la
leadership can send up loei^n
gates to participate in the fin
tional reconciliation inlksonAft
Last week’s pact providesaj
ual amnesty for Nicaragua's:
political prisoners: guarantee
dom of expression, which (hei
had demanded: and perm;!
exiles to return home and p;
pate in the political process.
hits, a se
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Its.”
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difficult
â– lorly-e
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Hrprise
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prised v
tl\e run
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awhile,’
thusk
me.”
The g
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first basi
The r
World Briefs
Oil products’ prices continue to rise
IC'.OIX
NEW YORK (AP) — Oil prices
edged higher in the 10th straight
advance on Monday in spite ol an
influential newsletter’s report
that production had risen within
the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries.
On the New York Mercantile
Exchange, contracts for May de
livery of West Texas Intemediate,
the benchmark U.S. crude, set
tled at $17.10 per 42-gallon bar
rel Thursday. That was 7 cents
higher than Friday’s close.
Among refined products, the
April contract for wholesale heat
ing oil rose 0.39 cent to ...
ms in 1 c.ilh >11. .diet nsintiJ* ‘
1 ini I t ul i\ l nlcnded gaJ® St f Pa
ui) 0.61 ( cm ! 1 i(la\, rose 0 'll.'
18.02 cents a gallon.
l eaders said there was HL u ,
i resh m \s s (o account ioi :i,< f? 1 1 u 11
1111111 > I 1 .ill-, .ililiough lmpe< H? 11 ' 1 11
tered on th< possibility
()PF(. s pricing 1 ommittee
achieve an agreemcmto^M^^
1 he previously annouiKMr^' e
meeting will be held in Vier* iether
starting April 9, it was B
nounced. H
First troops return from Honduras
FORT BRAGG, N.C. (AP) —
The first American troops to re
turn from a training mission in
Honduras to counter a Nicara
guan advance earlier this month
parachuted into their home base
Monday amid cheers of relatives
and f riends.
An estimated 800 soldiers
dropped into the Sicily Drop
Zone at Fort Bragg, home of the
82nd Airborne Division, about 5
p.m. They were met by a military
band and commanding generals
from the base.
Earlier in the day, the troops
from ihe 82nd Airborne win®
as they boarded seven C-
transports for the UniiedStales
“It’s great to be going hi
Sgt. Dale Taylor, 22, of
Springs, N.C., said. “It’sgoi
be ,t sis-boom-bah occasu
They’re going to have aba
our families will he (here.”
"This is nice, it's beautifil
Sgt. Elliott Cook, 22, of Mia
said when he saw the 1
carry him and his fellow sol
home/ “I am happy to go!
because nothing happened."
Israel will help in Iran-Contra probe
WASHINGTON (AP) - Inde
pendent Counsel Lawrence
Walsh has reached agreement
with Israel after year-long nego
tiations for its cooperation in his
investigation of the Iran-Contra
affair, both sides announced
Monday.
Under the accord, Israel has
given Walsh the historical and fi
nancial chronologies covering its
role in the shipment of U.S.
weapons to Iran in 1985 and
1986, an Israeli official said.
“He (Walsh) will get what he
wants without us having to
up what we wanted,” theoffc
said, speaking on condition
not he named.
Israel had sought immui
from prosecution for thefourk
Israeli players in the arms
profits from which were divtn
to the Contra rebels in Nicaraf
Two former White Hoi
aides and two U.S. businei
have been indicted in the IT
States for conspiracy to
the government, in the f
version.
Rare book by Poe will be auctioned
Associated Press
— A rare first edition of Edgar
Allan Poe’s first book, a collection
of poetry written when he was 14,
is to be auctioned by Sotheby’s,
which calls it “the most exciting
book discovery in many years.”
In the 161 years since its publi
cation, only 11 other copies of
“Tamerlane and Other Poems”
have been found. Published in
1827 by an obscure Boston
printer when the poet, short story
writer and critic was 18, it could
bring as much as $300,000 at auc
tion on June 7.
T his 12th copy of the hoof
discovered in a bin of early 2f
century pamphlets on fertile
and farming machines by a I
sachusetts book collectorwliik
browsed at an antique barn
New Hampshire. The price
$15.
Recognizing the title from
article he had once read, the®
lector contacted Sotheby’s fa
inspection and appraisal.
“It was quite a thrill,”said, 1
Dillon, an assistant vice presT 1
in Sotheby’s Rare Books*
ment.
Editorials call for Koch’s resignation
NEW YORK (AP) — On Feb.
15, 1986, the Amsterdam News
printed a front-page editorial
calling upon Mayor Edward I.
Koch to resign.
Koch ignored it.
He also ignored the next
week’s editorial, and the one after
that. He has now ignored 110
consecutive editorials on the
front page of New York’s oldest
black newspaper, each broadside
demanding that he leave office.
The Amsterdam's weekly di
atribe has become as much a part
of New York’s clockwork as Billy
Martin’s hiring and firingasW
kee manager, as the daily ebbat
flow of commuters, as alteritf
side-of-the-street parking.
“Mr. Koch is incredible. E'®
week he gives me something!'®
something outrageous, so®'
thing wrong” to write about'
Wilbert A. Tatum, authorof
editorials and editor-in-chief
the 40,000-circuIation weekly
The Amsterdam News is (f
sidered the establishment bb 1 ’
newspaper, less radical than so'
ot hers published in the city.