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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (June 7, 1988)
gg Page 8/The BattalionTuesday, June 7,1988 I Battalion ♦ SNOTICE ILl'IDMM**-—ltw» AUGUST GRADUATES!! RACE OVER TO THE STUDENT FINANCE CENTER ORDER YOUR GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS DURING DEAD WEEK LAST DAY JUNE 10 MONDAY-FRIDAY 217MSC 8am-4pm $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 4 Wanted: Patients currently suffer ing from urinary tract infection to undergo antibiotic treatment for a one week research study. Free physical examination and eye ex amination. $100 incentive for those chosen to participte.* Call Pauli Research InternationaP 776-6236* ROOMMATE WANTED SHARK SUTTERS MILL. CONDO. FULLY FUR NISHED, EXTRA NICE. SUMMER ONLY 300./mo. ALL BILLS PAID. 696-0633. 150t6/10 Female for 3 bedroom home with many extras. $150./$100. dep. -f 1/3 utilities. 822-4104. I46t7/13 ♦ CHILDCARE Sitter needed - must enjoy kids - ages 2 yrs. & 8 yrs.; 15- tible. f 20 hours/weekdays; schedule flexible. 693-4234. Babysitter for 2 children ages 8 and 14, half-days. Call 693-3418 after 6prn. 153t6/8 rtJCJUr W/VniKU NIGHT TIME LEG CRAMPS Do leg 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 75t ,n 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 1171 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 Allergy Study Wanted: Individuals with sea sonal allergies to participate in a short allergy study. $75-$100 in centive for those chosen to par ticipate. Call Pauli Research International S $ 7 $ 7 $i 6 $ 2 $ 3 $$$$$ 1 $$ NOW HIRING Delivery Drivers •must be 18 •must have own car •must have liabiliy insurance •earn c6-8/hour (wage, tips, reimbursmwnt) •immediate openings for daytime drivers Apply at: 1103 Anderson (at Holleman) 501 University Drive 3131 Briarcrest The Houston Chronicle is taking applications for immedi ate route openings. Pay is based on per paper rate & gas allowance is provided. The route requires working early mornings, 7 days a week. If interested call: James at 693-7815 for an appointment. Defensive DRIVING, TICKET DISMISS, Insurance DISCOUNT, FUN CLASS! Call 693-1322. 95t5/13 • FOR SALE ♦ HFORRENT 'riniiiMritmtii i« THE GOLDEN RULE Summer and/or Fall/Spring Furnished Apts for Christian-like non smoking Men and Women UTILITIES AND CABLE PAID Telephones in, Free Laundry, Locked Storage, Bus, Extras. CALL/RESERVE: 693-5560 SUMMER SPECIAL: $125/$240 Share B/B or Own B/B Call Today! 147tfn Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx. 1 Bdrm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $248 Rental assistance available! Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5pm. 4tf Near campus. 2 bdrm Apts, and houses. $190 & up. 693-0122. 154t6/17 1988 COTTON BOWL COMMEMORATIVE BY CASE #153TA-ALL STAINLESS EXECUTIVE LOCK- BACK KNIFE. HANDLE ETCHED "1988 COTTON BOWL CHAMPIONS” TAMU $24.95* #175TA-GENUINE STAG HANDLE CASE "TRAP PER", SERIALIZED, NICE COMMEMORATIVE BOX FOR DISPLAY. MASTER BLADE ETCHED "'1988 COTTON BOWL CHAMPIONS’", OTHER BLADE ETCHED “TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY". PRICE $54.95* OFFERED EXCLUSIVELY BY: PUMPHREY KNIVE S* 2142 WELLINGTON DR.* GRAND PRAIRIE, TX. 75051 * (214)660-3396*15316/10 CARPET DISCOUNT WAREHOUSE Prices As Low As Roll Inns 12x9 = $48 Roll Inns 12x12 = $64 Roll Inns 12x15 = $80 Across from Bosier Dodge 1426 S. Texas Ave. 779-1618 A $99 deposit, 2 Br/1 Ba Fourplex, Northgate, Sum mer rates ($ 199/mo.), call 846-4465, wkends 1-279- 2967. 150t7/20 3 Bedroom 2 Bath Condo, Fireplace, all appliances, car port. Summer Only! $525./mo. 693-1723. 150tfn 2 Bedroom house, .all appliances, trees, use of pool, $285/$395,693-12723. 150tfn Pre-leasing 3 BR/2 BA Duplex near Hilton. 846- 2471/776-6856 63t/indef. * SERVICES 2 Bedroom Studio, wooded, balcones, ceiling fans, ap pliances, pool, shuttle. $275/$285, 693-1723. 150tfn LSAT test preparation classes begin 7/12. nostics available. Kaplan Center 696-PREP. Free diag- 154t6/14 14’x60’ 2 Bdrm. Mobile Home. Ready for occupancy - easy access to university; $225./mo. 150 Greenbriar, Bryan. Will sell-terms. 151t6/15 LSAT test preparation classes begin 7/12. Free diag nostics available. Kaplan Center 696-PREP. 154t6/14 One bedroom apartment for rent (Northgate). 1 year lease only. 233/mo. Call 846-4465, weekends 1-279- 2967. 153t7/l CAL’S BODY SHOP. 10% discount to students on la bor. Precise color matching. Foreign & Domestics. 30 years experience. 823-2610. llltfn • ANNOCINCEMENT Experienced Librarian will do research for you. Call 272-3348. 149t6/30 GOLF LESSONS & FAWN CARE. DAVE SCHAKEL. TAMU GOLF INSTRUCTOR 693-3911. 154t7/i TYPING: Accurate, 95 WPM, Reliable. Word Proc essor. 7 days a week. 776-4013. 85t2/30 World and Nation Ohio, NY pact fights acid rain COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The governors of Ohio and New York have agreed on an approach to fighting acid rain that balances the interests of coal-producing states and environmental preser vation, officials said Sunday night. Sulfur dioxide emissions from the burning of coal from such states as Ohio long have been blamed as a major cause of acid rain, which envi ronmentalists say is destroying waters and wood lands in the Northeast. Gov. Richard Celeste’s press secretary, Debra Phillips, said the agreement, which she termed an outline at this point, is a proposal to Congress and would be unveiled Monday. She said the next step is for Celeste and New York Gov. Mario Cuomo to meet with congressional leaders. The New York Times quoted Cuomo in its Monday editions as calling the agreement “a rea sonable and imaginative effort to resolve our dif ferences and solve the problem of acid rain.” He said he would “push hard and will keep pushing” to achieve a national program to deal with the is sue. Celeste considers the agreement “a balance be tween preserving jobs and cleaning up the envi ronment,” Phillips said. State Sen. Bob Ney, a Republican, said the agreement is a “hard slap across the face” of Ohio’s coal miners. Ney said Celeste has promised some form of sulfur dioxide emission reductions to fellow Democrat Cuomo, possibly in exchange for New York’s dropping of a federal lawsuit ihn tempts to force emission reductions in coalk ing states. “I’ve been told that Ohio was agreeingtot reduction over a period of years," Ney said Celeste to do this, he would either havetodoij executive order or ask the Ohio Legislature it J it. He would have run into a brick wall there Ohio Environmental Protection AgencyD tor Richard Shank would not discuss detailsy day night, but he said the agreement "enter clean-coal technology and sulfur dioxide tsj sions reductions . . . and also nitrogen mb which also is a contributor to acid rain." Californian officials support limiting growth of population Summer job! Work your own hours. National Whole- rke under $100? Call for facts today. (602) 837-3401 Ext. 942. 15H5/18 LOS ANGELES (AP) — For more than a century, California has been the promised land for those who heeded the age-old American advice to “go west.” But now, the millions who have gone west are causing many others to go to the polls. Across the state, and particularly in Southern California, voters are being asked to put the brakes on growth, at least until the roads, sew ers and water supplies can catch up. In November’s elections in Cali fornia, 15 ballot measures aimed at limiting growth won approval. On Tuesday, voters in Orange County, Pasadena, Hemet and San Marcos are being asked to adopt growth-related initiatives. In rapidly developing northern and western Los Angeles County, Supervisor Mike Antonovich is being chal lenged by candidates who say he has allowed developers to make lives miserable. And more such challenges and slow-growth measures are in store for November. “What we have is an authentic grass-roots movement,” said Bob Buster, who co-wrote a successful 1979 Riverside growth initiative and who supports a new Riverside County measure. “We think it’s time to fight back,” he said. The movement started to gather steam in 1986, when Los Angeles voters chose Proposition U as a means to slow growth by cutting housing densities in some areas. Also that year, San Francisco voters passed Measure M, slashing office construction in half for up to 10 years. Worries about rapid growth are especially severe in Southern Cali fornia, where the 13.1 million resi dents of the six-county region are expected to be joined by 5 million others by the year 2010, an amount equal to the population of Indiana. In Riverside County, the 4-year- old city of Moreno Valley, a patch- work of housing tracts and shopping centers, is often cited as an example of growth gone awry. In 10 years, its g opulation has tripled to near 0,000. Flood control in some areas con sists of crude ditches and sand bags. Many schools are surrounded by tra iler classrooms, laid like dominos to hold a student population that has more than doubled in four years. “We are being packed in like sar dines,” complains Gerald Silver a San Fernando Valley no-growth ac tivist. People rally to do battle with obesity NEW YORK (AP) - ^ have flown in from aroia America, each filling two aiit; seats, to lose weight and call tention to Dick Gregory's alii a national war on obesity. They are a dozen very fai^ pie, from 268 to 600 pounoi whom Gregory has of fered at last chance to lose weight- service the comedian-turncik. tritionist says the govermc should Ik* rendering. Since the case of Walter Ha son, one of several highly cized obese people who have: weight under Gre guidance, a group of invisiblt: people have become visible, gory said. He said obesity is a much ger problem than drugaddi ^ Editor peared ii Battalion STAR |the botto |30, Cal S Johnson jvvanted t for nine n The T , and a |game th pouth R Ivin that Igive Fulh Five ri lutes latei Jconvincii |5-3, elimi Ion play IVorld St 1 The A [urn aro [hree-rui Soar ove center fie [ A&M Iced awt K)maha. 1 In the ni rested pi figured c jage in th 1 A&M rWith i thought Heeling w But it the cart h Ralph Inning. B bin the n ■ DEN\ ay mac enver < os jerse uizzed sale Marketing Director needs students to advertise product. Call 696-7600, M-F, 9am-1pm. 154t6/10 Swimming coach to help two boys perfect their swim ming strokes, and increase swimming speed. Twice a week. 776-0411,764-7921. 154t6/7 Rcceptionist/traffic position available with KTAM- /KORA. Applicant should pocess good telephone and typing skills with some computer experience. Contact KORA/KTAM at 776-1240. EOE/MF. 154t6/8 NEEDED: Person to help set up Peachtree Accounting System for small business. Call 823-0208. After 5:30pm 774-1169. 153t6/10 Student or student couple for summer ranch work. Housing -f small salary. 40 mi. from BCS. 846-1413 no calls after 7pm. 137tfn Free Summer Apts, in exchange for work between se mesters. Work involves apt. make ready or ranch con struction. Apply at Casa Blanca Apts. 4110 College Main Bryan, Texas 846-1413. No calls after 7pm. 137tfn K-Bob’s Steakhouse is now accepting applications for all positions. Flexible hours. Apply in person 809 Uni versity Drive East. 15116/10 oin some health care plans, and most local doctors will suddenly be off limits to you and your family. Regardless of preference. Regardless of need. Some plans require that you see only doctors on the plan payroll. Others limit your access to health care facilities. Some even lack dental coverage. In many cases the list of trade-offs easily outweighs the promised benefit of “greater convenience.” ivy to V !.V •V !vd ■v. Can you buy Jeeps, Cars, 4x4’s seized in drug raids for ■ all r ‘ ‘ COMPUTER DISCOUNT XT/286AT/S86AT compa tibles. Lowest prices. 693-7599. 151tfn PIANO FOR SALE: Wanted: Responsible party to as sume small monthly payments on piano. See locally. Call Manager at 618-234-1306 anytime. 153t6/15 Don’t compromise your family’s health care choices. Make sure the insurance plan you choose guarantees your freedom of choice. i*: :;N iV' Want to know moil iVi S: options? Two free booklets jrfi 1 ,*.* Brazos Independent Physiatt ■Vd \v can help clear the ti IP Esgjpl Brazos Independent Physicians To receive a coin! "Making the Right Choice" id iTiy "Is an HMO Really for W call 774-3627 toitf There's no cost or obligati 'V