Battalion Classifieds Page 6/The Battalion/Friday, September 23, 1988 Warped by Scott McCulla Ol/AY, GUY5, YOU'VE HEARD ABOUT 5AF£ SEX, BUT DO YOU KHCM Mi THING ABOUT 5AFE LOVE? • NOTICE Don't Bo Late For Your Date Order '■ Graduationj_,i, Aiinburice'me'iit's V \ J i September 1 - 29, 1988 MSC Student Finance Center Rm. 217 Open: Monday - Friday / 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. Public Notice to College Station Banks The U. S. Postal Service is accepting offers from FDIC in sured banks to maintain a bank account for post office remittances from the College Station Post Office. Offers must be received by Septem ber 29, 1988. For more information contact the Postmaster, 2201 Hilltop, College Station. Phone No. 693-4152/693-4363. 19,923 URINARY TRACT INFECTION STUDY If you PRESENTLY have the following signs and symptoms call to see if you are el igible to participate in a new Urinary Tract Infection Study. Eligible volunteers will be compensated. • PAINFUL URINATION • FREQUENT URINATION • LOW BACK PAIN G&S studies, inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 17,10/31 ♦ 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 1! • HEU* WANTED 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 181tfn SKIN INFECTION STUDY G&S studies, inc. is participatingin a study on acute skin infections. If you have one of the following cdn- 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”) G&S STUDIES, INC. 846-5933 Safeway Stores Inc. has immediate part-time checker openings (15-24 hrs. per week) at the Safeway store located at 1805 Briarcrest. To apply, pick up an applica tion at the Briarcrest store. Pay rate is $3.80-$5.75 based on experience. E-O-E M/F/H/V ENGINEERING JOBS Don’t send blind resumes! Use our weekly listing of the best opportunities nation-wide. $14/12 issues. JOBNET, ROB 12817, Lake Park, FL 33403-0817. Specify your major: ME, CE, or EE. 1 20,9/23 WOMEN NEEDED FOR A NEW LOW-DOSE ORAL CONTRA CEPTIVE PILL STUDY. ELIGIBLEWOMEN PARTICIPATING IN THE 6 MONTH STUDY WILL RECEIVE THE FOLLOWING FREE: •oral contraceptives for 6 months •complete physical . •blood work •pap smear •close medical supervision Volunteers will be compensated. For more information call: 846-5933 G&S studies, inc. * FOR RENT THE GREENERY Landscape Maintenance Team member Full-time or Part-time Interview Mon-Thurs from Sam - 9am 823-7551 1512 Cavitt, Bryan 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 3 hours per day. Earn $500-$700. per month. If inter ested call: Julian at 693-2323 or James at 693-00I6 for an appt. All Bills Paid! •2 Bedroom 1V2 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 Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx. 1 Bdrm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $248 Rental assistance available! Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5pm. 4tfn Pari liitK* (l tation alluded to in the titleoccursi young angel appears before Jesus, telling him that God is pleased and does not wish him to die. In these quence, Christ is shown visionsofli ing as an ordinary man with a nil and children. The much talked about love scene between Christ and Mary Magdalene takes place in thi context. The scene is neither inde cent nor lustful and it lasts about® seconds. The temptation sequence contin ues as it shows Christ growing old The film then makes a sudden re turn to reality and Christ’s death on the cross. The crucifixion is one the most astonishing scenes of the entire film, visually and emotionally Filmed in Morocco on a S6.5mi lion budget, “Last Temptation” is film of visually impressive scenes Scorsese’s Holy I-and is a barrende sert, full of violence and treachen Michael Ballhaus’ cinematography is consistently fine throughout. The film also boasts a harrowine soundtrack by Peter Gabriel and some great performances. Dafoe, Keitel and Hershey all give outstanding performances, but there are some memorable cameos as well, including Harry Dean Stan ton as Saul/Paul and David Bowieas Pontius Pilate. With “The Last Temptation Christ,” Martin Scorsese has crafted a moving, challenging film that is visual, and most of all, a spiritual tn umph. AIDS infected children face uncertain future in schools It’s been three years since Ryan White’s highly publicized battle to go to school in Indiana, and three years since another child with AIDS qui etly entered schools in Massacnu- setts. For children infected with the hu man immunodeficiency virus, the same uncertainty remains. Some started classes with little or no fuss this year, while a boy in Illinois who has already fled one town faced more protests in his new home. “AIDS Kills,” said one sign carried by protesters in Illinois. “Help Keep AIDS Out of Our Schools,” said an other. “We don’t want to be in the spot light. I don’t want to be a civil rights activist,” says Tammie Robertson, whose 8-year-old son Jason hopes to enter school in South Roxana, Ill. In Lakewood, Colo., and St. Al bans, W.Va., 5-year-olds with AIDS entered kindergarten classes with no fuss. However, there were some pro tests in another Colorado senool when parents learned that an 8-year- old who had tested positive for the AIDS antibody, an indicator of ex posure, was attending classes. Kay Pride, spokesman for Jeffer son County schools, said state law re quires school officials to keep the child’s identity confidential. How ever, she said it is school policy to no tify parents whose children attend the same school as a child who has been exposed to the AIDS virus. The Centers for Disease Control issued guidelines three years ago saying there was apparently no risk within a classroom of contracting AIDS, which is transmitted by sexual contact, sharing infected hypoder mic needles or receiving a transfu sion of contaminated blood. Of the more than 72,000 AIDS cases confirmed since June 1981, the CDC says not one was transmitted within a school. President Reagan’s commission on AIDS, headed by Adm. JamesD Watkins, affirmed earlier this year that “there is no need to treat those infected with HIV in a manner dif ferent from those not infected ii such settings as the workplace, hous ing and the schools.” “We’ve won all the cases. The case law is pretty clear, that there is n reason to exclude HIV children, says William Rubenstein, staff coun sel for the AIDS and Civil Liberties Project of the American Civil Liber ties Union. Winning the case, however, isn’l always enough. Ryan White won his legal fight to attend school in Russia ville, Ind., but gave up in thefaceof protests. Jason Robertson won a court order last school year to join classes in Granite City, Ill., but his family also decided to move. John McCarthy, superintendent of schools in Swansea, Mass., pre sided over the peaceful admission of an AIDS victim in 1985. PRE-LAW SOCIETY MOCK LSAT Saturday, Sept. 23 8:30 am 102 Blocker For more information call Linda 774-0633