The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 12, 1988, Image 8

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    Page B/The Battalion/Monday, September 12, 1988
Battalion
Classifieds
• HELP WANTED
HELP!
Rudder Theatre Complex
Needs student workers
For stagehand and spotlight work
To Apply Come To: Rudder Auditorium
Tues. Sept. 20 7:00 p.m.
COME SIGN UP!!
1119/20
THE GREENERY
Landscape Maintenance
Team member
Full-time or Part-time
Interview Mon-Thurs
from Sam - 9am
823-7551
1512 Cavitt, Bryan
11813/31
£# PIZZA
***& (• FACTORY*)
NOW HIRING DRIVERS
• great pay • flexible hours
• loads of fun
Call or come by 1702 S. Kyle, Suite 101
(next to Thomas Sweet)
764-8629
must have own car & insurance
29110/16
RITA’S EATERIE AND CANTINA. An exciting new
restaurant opening soon is accepting applications for
kitchen and service positions. Apply in person 9-6 p.m.
Near Thomas Sweet. 9t9/14
Farmer’s Market Northgate now hiring for part-time
delivery person MWF 11-5 p.m. Perfect for a biking
enthusiast. Apply in person between 2-4 p.m. M-F.
8t9/13
Archie’s now hiring bright, smiling faces! Counter help
8c cook positions. Flexible hours. Apply at 919 Harvey
Rd. in Woodstone Center. 696-0274. 9t9/14
Dependable Men, Women or Couples for Houston
Post Routes. Early a.m. $200-800/mo. 846-1253, 846-
2911. 7t9/20
University Plus needs workers for airbrush, drawing,
X-mas craft workshop 8c many more areas. Call 845-
1631 for more information. 3t9/13
University Plus needs instructors for airbrush, draw
ing, X-mas craft workshop 8c many more areas. Call
845-1631 for more information. 3t9/13
• NOTICE
• SERVICES
$200 $200 $200 $200
URINARY TRACT
INFECTION STUDY
Do you experience frequent urina
tion. burning, stinging, or back
pain when you urinate? Paul! Re
search will perform FREE Unri-
nary Tract Infection Testing for
those willing to participate in a 2
week study. $200 incentive for
those who qualify.
Call Pauli Research International
776-6236 6tfn
$200 $ 2 00 $200 $200
FREE WEED ALLERGY
TESTING
Children (6-12 years) to partici
pate in short allergy study-known
allergic children welcome. Mon-
itary incentive for those chosen to
participate.
Call Pauli Research
International
776-6236 ^
$100 $ 2 0 0~n OTT'S^U'o
ALLERGY STUDY
Individuals with Fall weed Al
lergies to participate in one of
our allergy studies. $100-$200
incenhve for those chosen to
participate.
Call Pauli Research
International
776-6236 6Mn
s?nn 5 100 5 2 0 0 510 0^
Resume? Need help? We prepare professional laser
printed resumes in 48hrs. Telephone consultation 8c
authorizing service means you don’t lift a pen. lOyrs. +
experience, cash discount. Mon-thur. 10a.m. - 5p.m.
696-7737. IU9/23
Don't Be Late
For Yotir
MSC Student Finance Center
Rm. 217
Open
Monday - Friday
8 a.m. - 4 p.m,
SKIN INFECTION STUDY
G&S studies, inc. is participatingin
a study on acute skin infections.If
you have one of the following con
ditions call G&S studies. Eligible-
volunteers will be compensated.
* infected blisters * infected burns
* infected boils * infected cuts
* infected insect bites * infected scrapes
("road rash")
NIGHT LEG CRAMPS
G&S studies is participating in a nation
wide study on a medication recommended
for night leg cramps. If you experience any
one of the following symptoms on a regular
basis call G&S. Eligible volunteers will be
compensated.
* restless legs * rigid muscles
* muscle spasms * weary achy legs
* cramped toe * Charley horse
G&S STUDIES, INC.
846-5933
G&S STUDIES, INC.
846-5933
tiii^iiifirt mm iniiwiwiiiwirtwiiiwiw
NOW HIR*NG
•Good Benefits
•Free Uniforms & Food
•Flexible Hours: Apply Now
Work For Number One
College Station
801 University Dr
2420 Texas Avenue
Post Oak Mall Food Court
Bryan
825 Villa Maria
2930 East Hwy 21
NOW
HIRING
Delivery Drivers
•must be 18
•must have own car
•must have liability insurance
•earn $6-8/hour (wages, tips,
reimbursement)
•daytime drivers start at $4/hour (plus tips,
reimbursment)
Apply at: 1103 Anderson (at Hoiieman)
501 University
3131 Briarcrest
Pytsa
-Hut.
fcjgnacraab
♦ LOST AND FOUND
Lost black 8c w'hite female cat. Bee Creek area. 845-
5221 /696-5560. 194t9/l 5
• FOR SALE
NEED A HOUSEPLANT
but don’t want to pay an arm an a
leg?
Call 846-8908
Aggie Special-6ft. braided ficus $15.
Free $5. hanging basket w/$40. pur
chase. Ilt9/I6
BURLESON COUNTY; EASY ACCESS
TO A&M 3 Bdrm., 2 bth. on 3/4 acre lot. 1344
sq. ft. plus 240-sq. ft.screened porch,central air
& neat, cathedral ceiling, smoke detectors, ceil
ing fans, major appliances including dish
washer, washer/dryer connections, partially
fenced, insulated wellhouse, storage bldg, on
concrete slab and much more. Close to fishing
and swimming. 272-3814
Ladies 10-speed for sale. Good condition. $55. Call 846-
2994. ' lit9/16
Any PATRICK NAGEL prints. Rare pieces also avail
able. Great prices. 764-7562. 8t9/20
’86 Honda Spree Scooter. Aqua 8c white. ‘‘Special Edi
tion”. Excellant condition, only 695 mi. 693-0084/696-
8904. 8t9/23
Honda CB 650 17,000 miles excellent condition &:800
metalic black. 823-0311. I0t9/15
European moped, good condition . Inexpensive 693-
6868 Leave message. 10t9/15
Must sell dorm ref. $65, Couch $75, make offer 693-
6804. 10t9/15
Buy/Sell New used antique furniture. 402 N. Texas,
823-2595. 9tl0/5
Furniture for sale: desk, tables 8c chairs, etc. 696-0525
after 6 p.m. 9t9/14
Technicians (BSc, MSc,): Experienced in tissue culture Australian Sheperd puppies - Double Registered-
or analytical biochemical methods 846-5357 10t9/15 Wormed &: Shots - $150. 1-409-873-2855. 7t9/12
L.A. LAW? Think you have the right stuff for law
school? Find out your capabilities w/ our free aptitute
test call 696-PREP. Ilt9/16
LSAT Test Prep classes for December exam begin 9-
27. Enroll today! Call 696-PREP. llt9/23
ON THE DOUBLE Professional Word Processing,
laser jet printing. Papers, resume, merge letters. Rush
services. 846-3755. 181tfn
Experienced librarian will do library research for you.
Call 272-3348. 4t9/31
CAL’S BODY SHOP. 10% discount to students on
bor. Precise color matching. Foreign 8c Domestics. 30
years experience. 823-2610. Ill tfn
1 FOR RENT
Near Campus
• Luxury 1-2 Bedroom Units
• Pool • Laundry
• Shuttle • On-site Security
• 24-Hr. Maintenance
• Shopping Nearby
Rent starts at $273
SEVILLA
1 Blk. South of Harvey Rd.
693-2108 i94tfn
All Bills Paid!
•2 Bedroom 1 1 / 2 Bath
• On Shuttle • Tennis • Pool
• On-site Maintenance
• Close to campus
Rent Starts at $409
SCANDIA
693-6505
401 Anderson
1 Blk. off Jersey - W. of Texas
166tfn
Cotton Village Apts.,
Snook, Tx.
1 Bdrm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $248
Rental assistance available!
Call 846-8878 or 774-0773
after 5pm. 4t1
Efficiency, vaulted ceilings, appliance, pool, shuttle.
$210. -225. 693-1723. lltfn
2 Bdrm. Studio, ceiling fan, appliances, pool, shuttle.
$360.-385.693-1723. lltfn
Fourplex in Bryan. 2 bdrm/1 bath, extra storage, new
carpet throughout. Wyndham Mgmt. 846-4384. 5tfn
Duplex in Bryan. 2 bdrm/1 bath, Fireplace, ceiling fan,
new carpet throughout. Wyndham Mgmt. 846-4384.
5tfn
For Rent $100/mo. Nice 2 Bdrm /I bath Mobile Home,
Call 776-0230. 10t9/12
• ROOMMATE WANTED™
Beautiful 1 Bdrm Apartment. New carpet 8c mini
blinds. Must sublease. Call Kris. 696-1276 or Brett 693-
0077. 10t9/15
A&M
Steakhousel
Delivers
846-5273
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.
Chancellor
asks $525,000
for mansion
HOUSTON (AP) — The chan
cellor emeritus of the American Ed
ucational Complex is attempting to
sell his residence built with public
funds despite the earlier assurance
he would give it back to the school,
the Houston Chronicle reported.
Luis Morton Jr., the chancellor
emeritus and a consultant to the Kill-
een-area complex, is asking
$525,000 for the elaborate Spanish-
style home put up for sale about six
weeks ago, the newspaper reported
in a copyright story Sunday.
Although a 1978 special state au
dit showed that the college paid the
$247,456 cost of building and fur
nishing Morton’s hillside home, a
real estate agent said the college will
not benefit from its sale.
“The college is not involved one
bit,” listing agent Robert Whitney
said. “It’s for sale or trade, just like
we advertised it.”
W.A. Roach, chairman of the
AEG Board of Trustees, said he will
check with a college lawyer to deter
mine whether the school has any le
gal claim on Morton’s residence.
Roach acknowledged that Morton
had said publicly in the past that he
intended to return the home to the
In Advance
Fulbright Grant applications dued
Applications for the Junior of professional study ot
Fulbright Grants, funding for
overseas study, must be sub
mitted for review by Oct. 3.
Applicants must be U.S. citi
zens who are graduating seniors,
graduate students or performing
art' students who have four sears
lent experience.
A minimum 3.5 gradeptl
tio is required at thetimeofj
cation.
Applications are avaitJ
161 Bizzell Hall.
Faculty Senate to discuss curriculi
The Texas A&M Faculty Sen
ate will have its first meeting of
the fall semester today in Rudder
Tower.
The Graduate Council will sug
gest that Medical College Admis
sions Test scores be accepted in
place of Graduate Record Exams
for students applying for the
combined medical-doctorate pro
gram.
Approval of new ts;
course withdrawals and
changes in the Universin
ulum also will be discussed
A&M President WilJ
Mobley will make a guest
tation.
The deans of the acadetj
leges will have re freshmen;
Mobley and the Facultvil
before the meeting.
Slow oil econom
boosts arson rate
CONROE (AP
Eire investiga-
Itere, said Welsh, whot
lormed countv tomniiss
college and was making legal pr
o vi
as the eo
nnoniy
goe-
s d
own
, and
1 12 arsons
. went wiihouiil
sions to do so.
Montgomt
TV Coi
jnty <
a flu
dais
sav a
investigalix
ms last vear it«
cooling ii
i the
once
-Ixx
miii
ig oil
and invest
igatoi Mad 1-fe
“I think at one time that he ha
ed it
countrv h;
as app
lareiu
ly s
spar
ked a
unable to s
pare the time, i!
in his will,” Roach said. “But I d
on’t
rash of iutt
mtiona
1 fires
"We're i
n a prime areiK
know that it was necessarily pn
om-
Arson
has bt
?en ;
I SI
nob
iering
to Houstor
i. Welsh saidtfl
ised. I don’t know if he was just t
alk-
problem ii
i this ci
ounty
jus
t no
ifth ol
up. and w
e'it* seeing the®
ing.”
Houston.
that, strict
In because o[«
Whitney said that if Morton c
:an-
Montgoi
mery C
iounu
v of
ficia
Is said
tion.”
not get his asking price, he hope
s to
losses totaf
ed $6 n
itilliot
i in
198
7.
Most ars
on investigation;*
trade it for an Austin-area ranch or
That wa
is near
l\ doi
iblt
the
■ 1986
have been i
i esidentialdne j
for apartments near the Univei
sity
level ol ars
on inci
denct
I hese «i
ie structures
of Texas that he could rent to
stu-
In the 1
ust qti
latter
of
this
year.
dally strap
ped homeowner:*
dents as income property.
the count
v fire
mai
rsh;
tl’s
office
uidated i<
a insurance E
“He just doesn’t need that
big
added 30 s
tructui
e ars<
:>ns
to it
s case-
through ar
son, Welsh said
mansion for he and his wife to r<
xam
load, doitb
le the i
nimbi
it in tin
i same
But arse
>n is one of thlf
around in,” Whitney said.
period of 1
987.
crimes to p
rove, he said. P
“Since
1984,
a rso
>n
hen
? has
Evidence
:• is usualh dop
The former chancellor could
not
jumped tq
i and
stavei
d u
P.”
Mont-
arson cases
and e\euitnf»||
be reached Sunday by the Assoch
ited
gomery (!i
ountv
Fire
Mai
rsha
1 Dan
eiv availuhl
e, he said.
Press for comment.
Welsh said
. ' It s
a tier
id 1
’m ;
it tittle
Authorii
ies are still serjl
Morton resigned in April amid
concerned
about.
the transie
nt. last seen it 1
numerous problems. His succes
sor.
Figu res
from tin
? s
tale
fire
suspected <
of selling a fut*
Phillip R. Swartz, resigned 1
bur
marshal's <
ol lice
show
Me
mtg<
amery
let state 45
truc k stop.
months later. The AFC! is a Killeen-
Countv’s tt
end is
not at
i ise
date
d one.
The fire
■ killed twotncl
area consortium consisting of the
tax-supported Central Texas Col
lege and three related operating
units that offer education contract
services to the military.
Morton mortgaged the house last
year to gain a $4/5,000 loan from
the college pension plan.
He paid off the mortgage in June
after published accounts revealed ii
as the only one made by the pension
plan to a college employee.
Structure arsons have increased
steadily in Texas for three years.
Harris County and other areas
that have suffered since the oil
prices plunged have been partic-
ularlv hard hit.
But Montgomery County's prob
lem is compounded by an under
staffed two-man department.
The department lost four investi
gators to a 1983 tax rollback.
and caused an estitnaitdii
in damage.
While many cases of J
economically motivated, vl
erv County has also been: 1
unusual string of firesau!:i
tribute to volunteer fireiK:|
Joseph Wavne BergcrT
awaiting tti.tl on eight oc;
ond-degree felonvarsoncb!
fires that included the dew
a church.
Injuries lead to 14th fatality
in crash of Delta Flight 1141
DALLAS (AP) — A 64-year-old
Waco man who became the 14th fa
tality of Delta Flight 1141 Sunday
died of injuries sustained when he
returned to the wreckage in a futile
attempt to save his wife, friends said.
Edmond Fadal was pronounced
dead at 1:43 a.m. Sunday at Park
land Memorial Hospital in Dallas,
where he had been listed in critical
condition since the Aug. 3 1 crash of
the Boeing 727 at Dallas-Fort Worth
International Airport.
His wife, 65-year-old Marian, died
in the crash along with 12 others.
Some 94 passengers and crew mem
bers survived the accident.
Fadal family friends and longtime
traveling companions, Jean and
Frank Nix, also of Waco, had joined
the couple on the Delta flight for a
trip to Lake Tahoe.
Mrs. Nix, 54, told the Associated
Press on Sunday that three of them
escaped from the jet wreckage with
out severe injuries, but Fadal re
turned to the plane for his wife.
“The plane broke open right in
front of us,” Mrs. Nix recalled. “We
all unbuckled our seat belts and tried
to run out . . . We never looked
back.”
But when the Nixes and Edmond
Fadal noticed Marian Fadal was not
with them, Fadal ran back to the
wreckage.
“That’s when (Edmond) first ran
back to get her,” Mrs. Nix said.
Frank Nix, 65, tried to stop Fadal
from going back into the plane, but
Fadal kept running, Mrs. Nix said.
Both men sustained most of their
burns when returning to the air
craft, she said.
Nix finally was able to pull Fadal
away from the plane, but not before
both men were burned, Mrs. Nix
said.
“We had to be lucky to be sitting
there because there was a gaping
hole in front of us,” Frank Nix told
the Waco Tribune-Herald in an in
terview after the crash.
“The plane was not engulfed, but
heat and smoke was everywhere,”
Nix said. “Ed rolled out of the plane
next, but before he could get back to
the plane to get his wife, it became
engulfed in flames. He rushed to get
his wife, but I had to pull him back.
It cooked his face. He had to be re
strained.”
Former Waco State Rep. Rollin
Khoury, Edmond Facial’s cousin,
had told the Tribune-Herald that
the Fadals were an inseparable cou
ple. “ I hey were loving people, very
warm people and they were well-re
spected in the community,” Khoury
said.
Edmond Fadalhad been active
with Nix in many civic activities. His
uncle, Edd Fadal, said Edmond Fa
dal earlier had complained he would
miss the Baylor University season
opener because of the trip to Lake
Tahoe.
“He’s such a Baylor fan, he’s
never missed a Baylor opening
game,” Edd Fadal had told the Tri
bune-Herald.
Mrs. Nix said she and her hus
band were upset to learn of Facial’s
death, but not surprised, given the
extent of his injuries. “We knew it
was coming,” she said.
Fadal suffered from smoke inha
lation and severe burns over 60 per
cent of his body, hospital officials
said.
“He had mostly third-degree
burns over 50 percent of his body,”
hospital spokesman Paula Turner
said. “He never did improve from
critical condition.”
Fadal’s death marks 14 persons
killed after Delta digit
crashed on takeoff jusu
DEW runway. The accidc
three years alter DEW'skos
saster, the crash of Deltafi
which killed 137 people.
Meanwhile, a pliysiciani
ref used to allow National!:
tation Safety Board invtss
interview the Delta fligt
Capt. Larry Davis is listed
condition at Parkland, wlif
being treated for back and:
juries.
Dr. William Thompson,!
director of surgery for the
sity of Texas Southwestern 1
Center in Dallas, said heisj
ing investigators’ interview
pilot until his medicalcond:
proves.
“Tentatively, Capt. Daiis:
with the* NTSB early next«
pending on his condition,
change from day today,”Tl!
said in a statement issued Si:
NTSB officials have coif
that they are being kepta*:
the Delta captain by overp'
Air Line Pilots Association.
LULAC: Candidates
need Hispanic vote
BEAUMONT (AP) — Presi
dential nominees George Bush and
Michael Dukakis need the Hispanic
vote to win Texas and the White
House in November, the leader of a
national Hispanic organization said.
Jose Garcia De Lara, national
president of the League of United
Latin American Citizens, said Satur
day that both political parties must
attract Hispanic voters if they want
to win the presidential race.
“The politicians finally are realiz
ing that the Hispanic vote is a very
important vote,” Garcia told the
Beaumont Enterprise.
“Obviously Texas is going to be
the battleground,” he said. “This is
where the blood is going to be shed,
and whoever wins in the state of
Texas is going to be the next presi
dent of the United States.”
In I exas, Hispanics make up 25.5
percent of the population, but only
19.4 percent of the adult population,
according to the Southwest Voter
Registration Project otSanll
While LULAC does no:
candidates, Garcia said the (I
tion promotes discussion «1
sues and urges Hispanic'
“Our most precious freedoi
voting rights,” he said.
Hispanics represent 13i|
of the registered voters in Til
cast 8.8 percent oftheballol
1986 gubernatorial election
ject statistics show.
Garcia, who was in Beat'
address the state executivetj
LULAC!, said he hopes his«l
tion and others like itcanfcl
panics have a stronger volil
by continuing a voter reif
drive.
The league hopes to refi
additional 1 million Hispanj
nationwide by October,
“Bexar County alone will
15,000,” Garcia said. “Ceri
can do 1 million in America