Page 10/The Battalion/Monday, September 26, 1988 Battalion Classifieds • NOTICE Don't Be Late For Yoar Date % Order Y _ ( ,i^(Grraduationj~i , An n o u ri c ein e ri t s September 1 - 29, 1988 MSC Student Finance Center! Rxn. 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.lt 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") G&S STUDIES, INC. 846-5933 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 17110/31 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. (close to campus) 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 181 tin Hurry! Available spate for A&M skiers is filling fast, on Sunchase Tours’ Seventh Annual January Collegiate Winter Ski. Breaks to Steamboat, Vail, Winter Park and Keystone, Colorado. Trips include lodging, lifts, parties and picnics for five, six or seven days from only $156! Round trip flights and group charter bus trans portation available. Call toll free. 1-800-321-5911 for more information and reservations TODAY! 21(10/24 • FORRENT 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 194tfn 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 Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx. 1 Bdrm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $248 Rental assistance available! Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5pm. 41f 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 2BDRM, 1 bath all appliances, ceiling fan, trees, $370- 395 a month. 693-1723. 17ttfn • HELP WANTED Bridal Consultants Bride n’ Formal has an immediate opening for full time Bridal Sales. Successful candidate will be hard working and aggressive. Sewing background preferred. Prefer min imum 2 years retail sales experi ence. We will train. Bridal position is 30-40 hours per week including Saturday. Hourly + commission. Good company benefits including major medical, dental and life insurance.Profit sharing and pension plan. Apply at: Bride n’ Formal 1100 Harvey Rd., C.S. NOW HIRING Between the hrs. of 11:30a.m.-4:30p.m. and 8:30p.m.-4:00a.m. BURGER KING Culpepper Plaza 1719 Texas Ave, 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. THE GREENERY Landscape Maintenance Team member Full-time or Part-time Interview Mon-Thurs from Sam - 9am 823-7551 1512 Cavitt, Bryan Assemblers. Earn money assembling musical Teddy Bears. Materials supplied. Write: J()-E1 Enterprises, P.0. Box. 2203, Kissimmee, Florida. 32742-220314tl0/14 Piper’s Gulf, Part-time help. Apply at corner of, Texas Ave & University Dr. 8-5. 846-3062. 1819/30 Delivery Drivers. Unlimited income. Flexible hours. Own car. License 8c insurance. Apply in person. 2406D, Texas Ave. 18t9/27 • FOR SALE NEED A HOUSEPLANT? But don’t want to pay an arm and a leg. Call, 846-8908. New shipment of plants just in. Aggie Special- eft. Braided ficus-$15. 3ft. Ponytail Palm (for those without a green thumb) $12. Ask about our other specials. 21 g/30 • SERVICES $200 $200 $200 0200 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 $200 $ 2 00 $200 $200 FREE WEED ALLERGY TESTING Children (6-12 years) to partici pate in short allergy study-known allergic children welcome. Mone tary incentive for those chosen to participate. Call Pauli Research International 776-6236 S 1 0 0 $ 2 0 0 OTJ 'STTu 0 ALLERGY STUDY Individuals with Fall weed Al lergies to participate in one of - our aliergy studies. $100-$200 incentive for those chosen to participate. Call Pauli Research International 776-6236 6tln sm,.,..? 200 s1fJQ «r. Wren’s Wheel Alignment 500 W.J. Bryan Pkwy, Bryan 822-7884 Front End Alignment $17.95 Cars Only •Brakes*Shocks*Struts* WORD PROCESSING-Papcrs. resumes, theises, dis sertations. Rush services. Call Becks'. 822-21I8. I6t9/I9 ON THE DOUBLE Professional Word Processing, laser jet printing. Papers, resume, merge letters. Rush services. 846-3755. 181tfn CAL’S BODY SHOP. 10% discount to students on ■ Oor. Precise color matching. Foreign & Domestics. . V' years experience. 823-2610. 1 1 Htn Experienced librarian will do library research for you. Call 272-3348. 4t9/31 ♦ LOST AND FOUND Lost male RottWeiler, 1 l^yrs.old. Please contact Charles at, 764-0073. $RcwardS 20t9/29 1 HR AUTO PHOTO 727 University (beside McDonalds) I FREE SECOND PRINTS We want your business- We’ll treat you like it! Min [ Co up on - Big V a I u e. ^ A&M Steakhouse ^Delivers 846-5273 SERVICE For a resume that can do the job, depend on Kinko’s. kinko # s the copy center 201 College Main 846-8721 2 Bdrm. Studio, ceiling fa $360.-385. 693-1723. appliances, pool, shuttle. lltfn Compatible color monitor software, 640K. Dual disc, $ 1000. 696-2389. 1 2119/28 1981, Black Yamaha 550. Runs well. $600. It’s, a great deal! 696-6015. 19t9/28 Buy/Sell New used antique furniture. 402 N. Texas, 823-2595. 9tl0/5 Suzuki 750, full fairing 8c saddle bags. Tuned-up, new brakes. $750. Gary. 693-2316. 18t9/27 Sunlamp. Dorm refrigerator, Wedding dress.archer) equipment, exercise rower. 779-8246. 20t9/29 ROOMMATE WANTED Male. 2BDR/ Bath house w/fenced yard, 2Car garage. $160mo, + l/2Bills. 822-2760 evenings. 845-5051 days. !7t9/26 Cripple Creek Condominiums, $200. month. Own room. Pool, tennis. 696-0491. 20t9/29 VGet- ACTION with nwr AX Advertise an item in the Battalion. Call 8*45-261 1 Pancreatic cancer kills 51-year-old Billy Carter PLAINS, Ga. (AP) — Billy Carter, the former “first brother’’ and beer drinking good ol’ boy whose candor and business ventures amused and sometimes embarrassed the Carter administration, died Sunday of can cer. He was 51. The brother of former President Jimmy Carter suffered for a year with pancreatic cances — the disease that killed his father and a sister — and lived longer than his doctors ex pected. He died three days after leaving the hospital for his home in this southwest Georgia hamlet. Carter “died quietly and peace fully in his sleep . . . with his family at his bedside,” according to a statement issued by the Carter Presi dential Center on behalf of the for mer president and his family. “He had struggled courageously with his illness, never losing his sense of humor and always more con cerned about those who loved him than about himself,” the family said. Billy Carter, who once defined himself as a beer-drinking good of boy, was forced into the spotlight when his older brother rocketed from their tiny hometown into the White House. He put his name on a brand of beer that flopped, got into hot water with remarks denounced as racist or anti-Semitic, accepted money from Libya and was forced to sell some properties to pay a debt to the Inter nal Revenue Service. But underneath the mask of the court jester was a perceptive man, an avid reader, a fighter who refused to go down quietly under the pressures of alcoholism or cancer. “I’ve been asked, a thousand times, I guess, what I would do if I had it to do over again,” he added. “And I said, ‘Probably the same thing,’ because if I had to do it over again I’d probably screw up worse the second go-round.” He was born William Alton Carter III, the youngest of four children. He was a child with a stutter who did badly in school while his siblings shone. Billy was 16 when his father died in 1953 and Jimmy, a Navy officer 13 years his senior, moved back home to Plains to take over the fami ly’s peanut business. Billy chafed un der his brother’s stewardship and soon married his high school sweet heart, Sybil, and joined the Marines. of the peanut business, which grew into a $5 million a year operation under his stewardship. During his brother’s presidency, he made no effort to smooth out his image. He cultivated a redneck per sonality and was known for a quid and often profane wit. He put his signature on the label of "Billy” beer, but later joked thai one reason he gave up drinking was that the beer was so bad. He returned to Plains in 1964, t-,f> o-rrtHi •-•II,- -iccMrrvor! rontrol Doctor billings may be changed BOSTON (AP) — A long- awaited study being released this week could dramatically change the way doctors are paid, sharply reducing fees for many kinds of operations while raising charges for office visits. The study has been the object of intense speculation and appre hension in the medical world since it was undertaken 2V‘i years ago by economist William CL Hsiao of the Harvard University School of Public Health. The massive project attempts to determine the amount of work involved in everything doctors do — from checkups and well-baby visits to brain surgery and coro nary bypasses — so they can be paid what their services are worth. There is widespread agreement that the current pay ment system is unworkable. The fees are distorted and inequitable, Hsiao said. H siao’s plan, retjnested by Con gress, will try to correct that. It would pay physicians more for the time they spend thinking about patients, examining them and talking to them and less for specific procedures. In an interview, Hsiao said that if adopted by government health agencies and insurance compa nies, his 2,000-page plan could have a profound effect on the na tion’s health care system. Among other things, it could: —Improve care by encourag ing doctors to spend more time with their patients. —Lower medical costs by dis couraging expensive tests, proce dures and operations. A summary of the findings is scheduled to be published in the New England Journal of Medi cine on 1 hursday, the same day the report is released by the fed eral Health Care Financing Ad ministration. Mexico commemorates executed Catholic priest MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexicans crowded into a special Mass on Sun day to celebrate the beatification of a popular Roman Catholic priest who was executed by firing squad 60 years ago on orders of the president. The Rev. Miguel Agustin Pro was made a “blessed” of the Roman Catholic Church on Sunday, a step toward sainthood. He was one of six people beatified by Pope John Paul II in an open-air Mass at St. Peter’s Square. In the northwestern city of Chihuahua, Archbishop Alberto Al meida ordered church bells rung to “join in the jubilation” and in Mexico City, Mass was said at the Basilica of Guadalupe, the country’s most sa cred shrine. Photographs of him were at the doorway. Late Saturday, an estimated 3,000 Catholics held a two-hour meeting at the old National Lottery building on Reforma Boulevard, on the site where Pro was executed Nov. 23, 1927. The gathering blocked traffic for about 30 minutes. Then, following a pickup truck carrying a life-size image of Pro and waving flags of Mexico and the yel low and white Vatican colors, they marched to the Holy Family Church where he is buried. Stopping in front of the Interior Department, shouting loudly, “Long Live Christ the King,” “Long Live Catholic Mexico,” “Long Live Mi guel Agustin Pro.” Pro, his brother Humberto and two friends, Juan Tirado and Luis Segura Vilchis, were arrested after an unsuccessful attempt to assassi nate the military strongman, Gen. Alvaro Obregon, at the height of church-state conflict in Mexico. Segura Vilchis admitted plotting to kill the general by bombing his car, but the Pro brothers denied any participation. There was no trial and President Plutarco Edias Galles quickly ordered them executed. “Luis Segura found no other way out than to attack Obregon and with three lx>mbs they wanted to elimi nate him,” newspapers quoted a speaker at the meeting as saying. “On Reforma they threw two, which destroyed his car, but they (authori ties) stopped those who attacked him and the car they were using be longed to a brother of Father Pro.” The speaker said Obregon threat ened greater repression tlianCalles. Obregon was killed July 1928 by Jose de Leon Tot al. Boxer apprehended for assault, possession NEW YORK (AP) — Boxer Mitch Green, whose August street brawl with Mike Tyson left the heavy weight champ wearing a cast on his hand, was arrested for the second time in four days after he was charged with assaulting a woman. Green, 31, was charged with third-degree assault in the Saturday night incident, police spokesman Sgt. Maurice Howard said. The woman claimed Green struck her, causing pain to her chest and arm. Green was taken to an unidenti fied hospital for psychiatric evalua tion after he became violent at the police precinct. The down-and-out boxer had been arrested Wednesday on charges of disorderly conduct. Police found him ranting and rav ing and acting irrationally on a street. He was charged with driving with a suspended license and seventh-de gree criminal possession of a con trolled substance. Green lost a bout with Tyson for the United States Boxing Associa tion heavyweight title in 1986. In the Aug. 23 scuffle, the two fought outside a 24-hour boutiquein Harlem. Green pressed assault charges but dropped them four days ater. S'H gies ci a rou? mod' 1 attacl one i J nation Tin they bv the Tin The h tab Tlit quarit fensivi The startei passe' down, with .i a 73-y; But on tin compl wall u homa lalofh 0SI who c lion's compl yards broke totielii Cot Sande 111) car ica let vards Mo: iirsi h yards vards of its I A& and i who f on 25 Tin sVighil lowed bv the But A& said, “ on tin The College Station Justice Court Hears: • Campus misdemeanors and traffic offenses • Landlord/Tenant cases • Civil cases involving up to $2500. • Drivers license suspensions Elect An Attorney Jim Locke for Justice of the Peace Political Advertising paid for by Jim Locke Campaign, Pat Boughton treasurer .u