Page 6/The BattalionAThursday, July 7, 1988 'Y***'^ ' X It M "H| JL^Pd %i Jl M World and Nation * FOR RENT PARKWAY CIRCLE Only a few to choose from washer-dryer connections 2 & 3 bedrooms 401 Southwest Pkwy., C.S., Tx. 696-6909 PLANTATION OAKS 6 Floor Plans No Utility Deposit Shuttle Bus-Tennis Courts 1501 Harvey Rd., C.S.,Tx. 693-1110 TIRED OF HIGH UTILITIES? Come to Tanglewood South • Great Location • Party Room/Study Room • 2 Pools • 2 Laundry Rooms • Exercise Room/Fitness Center • Covered Parking • During orientation we are open until 8:30 p.m. All Utilities Paid 411 Harvey Road, C.S. 693-1111 Armenians claim paratroopers open fire on airport protesters All Bills Paid! • Luxury Redecorated • 1 -2-3 Bedroom Units • Ceiling Fans • Dishwasher • Patios • Pool • Saunas • Tennis • Near A&M Campus • On Shuttle • Security • 24-Hr. Maintenance Std. 1 BR as low as $318 One Check Pays All At VIKING 1601 Holleman off Texas 1 Blk. South of Haryey Rd. 693-6716 i All Bills Paid! 1-2 Bedroom Units On Shuttle •Tennis • Pool On-site Maintenance Close to campus Rent Starts at $310 SCANDIA 693-6505 401 Anderson 1 Blk. off Jersey - W. of Texas Near Campus Luxury 1-2 Bedroom Units Pool • Laundry Shuttle • On-site Security 24-Hr. Maintenance ' Shopping Nearby Rent Starts at $275 SEVILLA 1 Blk. South of Harvey Rd. 693-2108 1RK CAL’S BODY SHOP. 10% discount to students on la bor. Precise color matching. Foreign 8c Domestics. 30 years experience. 823-2610. Ill tfn 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. 167t7/7 AGGIE WORD PROCESSING - Close to campus. Ex perienced w/Aggies. LaserJet printing, competitive prices. 696-1394. I70t7/19 Professional Word Processing, Resumes. Guaranteed Error Free. PERFECT PRINT 822-1430 v 162t8/10 Accurate Fast reasonable typing. Call Pat 696-2085 af ter 5:30. 158t7/7 Mr FOR SALE Deer in the Backyard! Lovely 4 bedroom in Foxfire * Over two acres * Quality throughout, - $164,900! PAUjkS/* * CALL JOHN CLARK 268-7629 164.6/2: • helr wArniiD m. Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx. 1 Bdrm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $248 Rental assistance available! Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5pm. 4tt Need one graduate student who wants his own quiet, clean, freshly painted, new carpet, 2 bedrom apart ment in Northgate. Call Sandy at 268-0279. 167t7/12 Luxury large 2 bdrm/1 Vfc bath 4-plex. Washer & dryer. All appliances, $350. Close to campus, 774-7970, 693- 0551. 62tfn Pre-leasing 3 BR/2 BA Duplex near Hilton. 846- 2471 /776-6S56 63t/indef. 2 Bedroom Studio, wooded, balcones, ceiling fans, ap pliances, pool, shuttle. $275/$385, 693-1723. 150tfn 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 ♦ ROOMMATE WANTED Female for 3 bedroom home with many extras. $150./$ 100. dep. + 1/3 utilities. 822-4104. 146t7/13 MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST (Part-Time/Full-Time) MT ASCP or equivalent needed to work in Student Health Center Clinic laboratory performing rou tine tests such as UA, chemistry, microbiology, and hemotology. Working hours are flexible. Refer to job #8800615. Call 845-5154 for appointment. Personnel Department, Texas A&M University, YMCA Building, College Station, Texas 77843. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY AFFIRMATIVE ACTION EMPLOYER 17017/8 MOSCOW (AP) — Armenian ac tivists said Wednesday that Soviet Army paratroopers fired on protes ters trying to shut down Yerevan’s airport and killed up to Five people. A Soviet official denied there had been any clashes or deaths. “The rumors that an Armenian was killed are groundless,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Vadim Perfi- lyev told a news conference. But Perfilyev and the activists agreed that some 2,000 people had tried to shut down Zvarnots Airport, and that troops quashed what the ac tivists said was a political protest in the southern republic related to a simmering territorial dispute. Since February, Yerevan has been the scene of extensive demonstra tions by Armenians demanding an nexation of Nagorno-Karabakh, a mostly Armenian region of neigh boring Azerbaijan. Until now, the protests reportedly have been peaceful. The Communist Party daily Pravda said planes were allowed to lanH hut that demonstrators “grossly disrupted order” and pre vented them from taking off again. Hundreds of passengers were stranded, it said. The evening television news pro gram “Vremya” said 3,000 people took part in the protest, and that 60 flights were grounded along with 14,000 passengers. Perfilyev told the Tass news agency that more than 400 people swarmed into the airport’s terminal, while another 1,500 gathered out side. He said the demonstrators im- E eded the sale of tickets and the eol ation of luggage, ventured onto the landing strip, stopped passen gers from entering the terminal, and paralyzed the work of the airport dispatcher. For an hour, internal security troops with bullhorns ordered the protesters to leave, then intervened to evict them. “They were forced out, but there were no clashes or Fights,” Perfilyev said. Protesters then began hurling Soviets prepare to first of two probes MOSCOW (AP) — Space officials from more than a dozen countries converged on a Central Asian steppe Wednesday for the launch of the first of two probes to Mars’ potato shaped moon, Phobos. The Soviet Union says the mission will help prepare for manned flight to the red planet. Soviet media said final prepara tions were being made at the Baiko nur launch site in Kazakhstan for the launch Thursday of Phobos I, a joint East-West project to study Pho bos and Mars itself. Phobos II, the second satellite, is scheduled to blast off July 12. Soviet television late Tuesday showed the silver-white probe and its 60-yard-tall Soviet-made Proton rocket being moved into place. The satellites will enter Mars’ gravity in January, and begin a three-month remote study of the surface and atmosphere of Mars. Af ter that, scientists said, they will draw closer to Phobos and drop descent vehicles carrying laser, ionic and ra dar equipment to help determine the internal structure and composition of the moon. The probes are expected to be sent to Phobos in about April of next year, according to Roald Sagdeyev, director of the Soviet Academy of Sciences’ Space Research Institute. Soviet space scientists said Phobos is an important step toward a manned flight to Mars, which they hope can take place in the early 21 st century. Officials including Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev have proposed that the United States take part in the mission. “First, it is necessary to draw up a more accurate n^p of* t^e.Mars sur face in order to choose a place for the future landing,” said Vyacheslav Balebanov, a deputy to Sagdeyev. “Then, it is necessary to study the climate and soil characteristics and find out whether oxygen should be taken from Earth, or whether it can be gotten directly on the planet. The rocks and bottles, and 36 people “had to seek medical assistance,” Perfiliyev said. The government daily Izvestia said the demonstrators demanded that the airport staff shut down op erations. “An intervention by the forces of order became necessary,” the paper said. “Unfortunately, in the clashes that ensued, some violators of law and order suffered, as well as several policemen.” It gave no further de tails. Armenian activists in Moscow, however, said witnesses had tele phoned them from Yerevan to say that army troops carrying machine guns and backed by tanks had begun firing without warning on the pro testers. “All of a sudden, they started shooting,” artist Kuryun G. Nagape- tyan told about 50 people who gath ered for an evening rally outside Moscow’s red-brick Armenian church. launch to Mars study of Mars renewed under the Phobos program should provide an swers to those questions," he said in an interview with the newspaper So- vietskaya Rossiya, published Thurs day. The Soviet news agency Tass said the Phobos television system will provide color photographs and a memory unit will permit transmis sion of up to 1,100 pictures to Earth. Soviet space officials said the launch itself will cost about $65 mil lion and that the total cost of the project was about $480 million. Also participating in the pre are Austria, Bulgaria, Hungary, Germany, Ireland, Poland, Fink France, West Germany, Czech< vakia, Switzerland, Sweden, United Slates and the Euroj Space Agency. Many of those countries have vided equipment for experimen be conducted by Phobos. >ject East ind, >slo- the >ean pro- ts to Bizarre theories follow Gulf plane crash Sofa- good condition; $125. Golf clubs complete set; $100,774-7545. 17U7/8 COMPUTER DISCOUNT XT/286AT/386AT compa tibles. Lowest prices. 693-7599. 151tfn '77 Blue Fiat Convertible 70,000 miles, am/fm cassette deck $3,700. 846-0072. 170t7/13 wmmmmm NIGHT TIME LEG CRAMPS Do leg cramps wake you at night? Call now to see if you are eligible to be treated with one of 4 study medications. You will need to be followed for approximately 3 week$. Eligible volunteers will be compensated. Call today! G&S Studies, Inc. 846-5933 Part time mornings or afternoons. Apply at Tire 8c Auto Center, 400 E. University Dr. 171 tfn Robert G Cook Inc. is seeking an assertive individual to teach and conduct no money down real estate semi nars. You have seent them on t.v....Now, do them in person. $5,000 to $10,000 a month possible p/t. $10,000 to $25,000 a month full time possible. Don’t* delay, call today...208/385-0301. 168t7/12 Piper’s Gulf part-time, flexible hours, corner of Texas and University. 846-3062. 169t7/19 Student or student couple for summer ranch work. Housing + 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 WASHINGTON (AP) — The un answered questions remaining about the Iranian Airbus destroyed by an American missile have given rise to some bizarre theories about the downing of the plane. Those television images of bloated bodies floating in the Persian Gulf fuel speculation but no answers. On television, the bodies ap peared to be nude and to be so bloated as to suggest they were in the water for some time. How come? How did the Iranians have a tele vision camera in place to capture what Iranian television said were shots of the plane at the moment it was hit? (To the viewer, the plane was a mere dot on the screen and the pictures were too grainy to lead to that conclusion.) No American official has publicly suggested that Iran’s revolutionary government deliberately sent civil ians on Iran Air flight 655 to their death, but terrorism expert Robert Kupperman said he had heard “a few people in the Pentagon” ad- Hopefuls See related story, page 1 vance such theories. “I don’t give much credence to it personally,” said Kupperman, a se nior adviser at the Center for Strate gic and International Studies, a think tank. “I don’t believe that any body is going to be able to prove that this has been a set-up.” Neil C. Livingstone, a conserva tive expert on terrorism, said there are “some real strange questions” about the incident, citing television footage provided by the Iranians. “It’s very hard to explain why someone would be taking pictures of a plane flying in the gulf,” Liv ingstone said. Dr. Charles Ruehle, the former commander of the Armed Forces Institute of Medical Pathology, said finding floating, bloated bodies within a short time would not be un usual after a crash into warm, salty water. The gulfs sea surface tempera ture averages about 89 degress Fahr- “They were carrying clubs, policemen in the West, andtht|| people right and left." Three students were killed» “officers shot them with pistols,' gapetyan said. He said 3/other pie reportedly were hospitalized Alexei Mananikov, an the unofficial Moscow journalC; nost, said Khachik Kazaryan,2ii , killed in a confrontation her.; protesters and soldiers at the; port. 1 le said sources in Yerevant him that as many as 40 people; been wounded by soldiers ttyiti reopen the airport. Lev. G. Gambaryan, another menian who lives in Moscow,( the rally that reports from leu on Wednesday indicated twod dren, age 6 and 10, hadalsodc gunshot wounds. ButheandJi* petyan said it was not ten whether the two reported dez were new or among the three; viously reported. enheit and the salinity is higher than in the Atlantic Ocean off the Florida coast. Ruehle said he was puzzled by why the bodies appeared to be nude. “In my experience, there has been nothing that would explain that," he said. The experts, however, all said there is not enough available infor mation to evaluate exactly what hap pened. Gary Sick, a Columbia University professor and a National Security Council aide under President Car ter, said he began to hear people suggest “within hours” of Sunday’s attack that the Airbus had taunted the Navy warship Vincennes on pur pose. “It is an easy explanation that takes the United States off the hook for having shot the plane down,” Sick said. At present, the evidence does not justify that conclusion, he said. Firms seek suspensionoi Perot contrail WASHINGTON (AP)- federal hearing examineristt sidering recommending susj* sion of a contract between To billionaire H. Ross Perot and: U.S. Postal Service, an offii said Wednesday. The official, whospokeonn dition of anonymity, said the; aminer is expected to rtto mend that the contract suspended. Catherine Hyatt, the hoi examiner, declined to conm on the matter. In Dallas, spokesman Sharon Holmz, not immediately return j/i phone call from the Assooiti Press on Wednesday. Perot and Postal Service o! cials, at a hearing Tuesdav fused to comply with requei provide documents or have viduals testify before the the GSA board official said Postal officials acknoute that they declined to cooper® with the agency, arguing tk lacks jurisdiction over the Pos Service. Suspension of the Perotn tract was sought by Elected Data Systems Corp., Perots mer company which is nowa# of General Motors, and by P: ning Research Corp. ofMcle Va. Those firms argued thai Postal Service should havesott competitive bids before award the contract to Perot. The contract is in twop! The first is a $500,000 agreec calling for Perot to analyze pi operations and recommend to save money. It was annous June 2 and immediately criticism from a varietv sources. After the first 90-day there was to be a second part ; which Perot would be paida: centage of any savings these: realized from implementk • recommendations. The Senate, meanwhile,h quested the General AccouC; Office to investigate termso! deal. rntmium Part time housekeeper, two (3-4 hrs.) days. Can be morning or afternoon. 823-8606. 170t7/8 Student seeking Student Organization for money mak ing project. No Investment. Great Opportunity. Jimmv 846-8611. 170t8/12 Have a news story or photograph suggestion? Call THE BATTALION at 845-3315. 155tfn * SERVICES TYPING-WORD PROCESSING-BEST SERVICE IN TOWN-REASONABLE RATES 764-2931. 156t7/8 your business deserves some prime-time exposure. readers use these pages to see what's happening on the tube. let them Know what's happening with you. call 845-2611 to place advertisements in at ease. (Continued from page 1) lease the names of those inter viewed. Presidential candidate Dr. George Pincus, dean of the Newark College of Engineering at the New Jersey In stitute of Technology, said the lack of openness by the Board is not sur prising, but perhaps not entirely right either. “I feel that this interviewing proc ess is of great interest to people of many constituencies — students, alumni, faculty and government — and I’m surprised that the list of can didates has not been narrowed,” he said. “Usually as the process goes on, there is a narrowing of the list to get to the candidates who are actually being considered. That does not seem to be the case here. “In many cases though, a lot of people would not participate if their interest was known.” The list includes the names of five A&M administrators; however, only Dr. William Mobley, executive dep uty chancellor, and Dr. Robert Walker, vice president for devel opment, were available for comment Wednesday. Mobley offered no comment and referred all questions regarding to his candidacy to Pres- nal. Walker said he has heard noth ing from the committee and also di rected other inquiries to Presnal. Two of the other three A&M candi dates, Dr. Duwayne M. Anderson, associate provost for research and graduate studies, and Dr. Donald McDonald, provost and vice presi dent for academic affairs, were out of town and unable to be reached. A&M Deputy Chancellor Eddie J. Davis couldn’t be reached Thursday through Wednesday. The other four “no comment” re sponses came from Dr. C. Roland Haden, vice president for academic affairs at Arizona State University; Dr. James M. Howell, chief econo mist for the Bank of Boston; Dr. Robert J. Kuhne, chairman of the Department of Management and General Business at Hofstra Univer sity in New York; and Dr. Simon Si- monian, professor in the depart ment of surgery at Hahnemann University in Pennsylvania. Unavailable for comment was for mer A&M associate professor of eco nomics James C. Miller III, director of the federal Office of Management and Budget, who was earlier ru mored to be a “leading candidate” for the position in the “Washington Whispers” section of the March 25 issue of U.S. News and World Re port. A March Battalion story reported that these rumors could not be con firmed. Miller, who was a part of A&M’s faculty from 1972 to 1974, is still on the list of candidates released by the Board. Other candidates not reached were Dr. William H. Hinton, chan cellor for Houston Baptist Univer sity; Dr. James Meindl, provost for Rensselear Polytechnic Institute in New York; Dr. Jack Weihaupt of the department of geography, geology and physics at the University of Col orado at Denver; and Dr. ft Ross Ridge and Dr. John] liardo with no work addressesf Several of those seeking il* who hadn’t heard from theSek Committee thought the lackof tact indicated that they wef longer under consideration. Dr. William E. “Bud”Davt cellor for the Oregon State' of Higher Education, said,"hi my resume back in March haven’t heard anything froi since. As far as I know, si Board hasn’t contacted me. been removed from conskk for the position.” Retired Lt. Gen. WillardV j now executive director of thf i ciation of Military College* Schools of the United States. also sent in his resume as ref)^ hut has not heard anythingff^J Board in the past three month Comment from eight ofthffl candidates was unavailable Ixi t hey were out of town and us* ( be reached the past two week