Battalion Classifieds * houce • SERVICES Don't Be Late For Yoar 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”) 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 imo/si 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 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 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. 4tf Apartment available , IBdrm. Cripple Creek Condo miniums. 696-3516. 23t9/28 2 Bdrm. Studio, ceiling fan. appliances, pool, shuttle. $360.-385.693-1723. lltfn * FOR RENT Fourplex in Bryan. 2 bdrm/1 bath, extra storage, new carpet throughout. Wyndham Mgint. 846-4384. 5tfn Duplex in Bryan. 2 bdrm/1 bath, Fireplace, ceiling fan, new carpet throughout. Wyndham Mgmt. 846-4384. 5tfn ♦ ROOMMATE WAWTEP Cripple Creek Condominiums, $200. month. Own room. Pool, tennis. 696-0401. 20t9/29 • HELP WANTED 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 693-0016 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 Delivery Drivers. Unlimited income. Flexible hours. Own car. License 8c insurance. Apply in person. 2406D, Texas Ave. 23t9/30 Dental Assistant-Part-Time. Will train. Need: Bright energetic person for dental office. 2014 S. T exas, Bryan. Apply Friday, Sept.30, only. 23t9/30 Assemblers. Earn money assembling musical Teddy Bears. Materials supplied. Write: J0-E1 Enterprises, P.0. Box. 2203, Kissimmee, Florida. 32742-220314tlO/14 Piper’s Gulf, Part-time help. Apply at corner of, Texas Ave 8c University Dr. 8-5, 846-3062. 18t9/30 Delivery Drivers. Unlimited income. Flexible hours. Own car. License 8c insurance. Apply in person. 2406D, T exas Ave. 18t9/27 Murry! Available space 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, f arties 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! 21110/24 • FOR RENT • 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. 21t9/30 Sleeper sofa, recliner rocker, 3 tables, 4 lamps, Good condition. All $250. 9-5. 846-7040. 23tl0/04 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 I.B.M., Compatible color monitor software, 640K. Dual disc, $ 1000. 696-2389. 2119/28 Sunlamp, Dorm refrigerator, Wedding dress,archer) equipment, exercise rower. 779-8246. 20t9/29 ♦ LOST AND FOUND Lost male RottWeiler. I , A , \ rs Charles at. 764-0073. $ Rewards Please contact 20t9/29 SERVICES $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 ALLERGY CONGESTION STUDY Wanted: Individuals with conges tion and /or allergies to participate in five day study. (No blood drawn) $100 incentive for those chosen to participate. CALL PAUL RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL 776-6236 23ttfn $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $200 $200 $200 $200 URINARY TRACT INFECTION STUDY Do you experience frequent urina tion, burning, stinging or back pain when you urinate? Pauli Research will perform FREE Urinary Tract In fection Testing for those willing to participate in a 2 week study. $200 incentive for those who qualify. Call Pauli Research International 776-6236 $20 0 $200 $ 200 $200 Wren’s Wheel Alignment 500 W.J. Bryan Pkwy, Bryan 822-7884 Front End Alignment $17.95 Cars Only •Brakes*Shocks«Struts« 19t10/5 CAL’S BODY SHOP. 10% discount to students on 1 5or. Precise color matching. Foreign & Domestics. . , years experience. 823-2610. 11 Itfn ON THE DOUBLE Professional Word Processing, laser jet printing. Papers, resume, merge letters. Rush services. 846-3755. 181tln 1 HR AUTO PHOTO 727 University (beside McDonald’s) $1 OFF Color Slides We want your business- We’ll treat you like it! Mini Coupon-Big Value. A&M Steakhousel Delivers 846-5273 SERVICE For a resume that can do the job, depend on Kinko’s. kirtko's the copy center 201 College Main 846-8721 TRAVEL FOR LESS LONDON $569.00 PARIS $608.00 MADRID $678.00 ROME $718.00 DELHI $1199.00 HONG KONG $829.00 TOKYO $759.00 BANGKOK $969.00 SINGAPORE $885.00 KUALA LUMPUR $885.00 CARACAS $290.00 PANAMMA CITY $290.00 SAN JOSE $290.00 RIO $599.00 ST. CROIX $220.00 SYDNEY $954.00 KATHMANDS $1209.00 THE TRAVEL DIVISION OF CIEE EXPERTS IN STUDENT TRAVEL SINCE 1947 3300 W. MOCKINGBIRD #101 DALLAS. TX 75235 • ALL FARES ROUND-TRIP FROM HOUSTON • WE ISSUE EURAILPASSES, HOSTEL PASSES AND INTER NATIONAL STUDENTS ID CARDS. CALL OR WRITE FOR A FREE COPY OF OUR STUDENT TRAVEL CATALOG. 2BDRM, 1 bath all appliances, ceiling fan, trees. S370- 5 x P^j encec * librarian will do library research for you. 395 a month. 693-1723. I7ttfn CaI1 272-3348. 4t9/3 j The Battalion 845-2611 r Page 10/The Battalion/Wednesday, September 28, 1988 Peers commend teacher for detaining triggerman GREENWOOD, S.C. (AP) — A teacher who was wounded while try ing to stop a gunman during a fatal shooting spree in an elementary school, and then held the man for dice, thinks about others before erself, colleagues said. An 8-year-old was killed and two teachers and eight students were wounded in Monday’s attack at Oak land Elementary School. “He seemed to be shooting people who were screaming,” School Super intendent Robert S. Watson said. “The teacher said those who were screaming or making noise, he shot them.” City Recorder Ted Windham denied bond Tuesday for James Wil liam Wilson, and retired state Su preme Court Justice Bruce Little john, acting as a special judge, ordered Wilson to undergo psychiat ric examination. Relatives said Wilson, 19, had been in and out of a hospital psychi atric ward. Police Chief James Coursey said Tuesday that Wilson was charged with murder and other charges were being drawn up to be served after the psychological evaluation. Solici tor Townes Jones said his office will consider pursuing the death penalty. A 7-year-old who was shot in the neck was returned to surgery Tues day because of complications and was in critical condition. Coursey said Wilson walked through the school’s front door Monday morning, went to the cafe teria and opened fire with a ,22-cali- ber, nine-shot revolver, wounding one teacher and three students. He left the cafeteria and entered a girl’ 5 ! restroom rn reload Retired agent: Inaccurate film portrays Hearst LOS ANGELES (AP) — A retired FBI agent who helped capture kid napped newspaper heiress Patty Hearst said a new film based on her autobiography inaccurately portrays many events of the saga. “Patty Hearst,” directed by Paul Schrader, details how Hearst was ab ducted in 1974 by the Symbionese Liberation Army, was kept blind folded in a closet for 57 ^days and participated in a bank robbery and other crimes. Hearst, who claimed she had been brainwashed, spent three years in custody before her sentence was commuted. She is now a housewife. “I felt the movie was an apology for Patty Hearst,” now retired FBI agent Charles Bates, 68, said. “I’ve talked to a lot of people who’ve com mitted crimes. Everybody has an ex cuse, but I still believe people have to be responsible for their conscious acts.” In a telephone interview from his Redwood City home, Bates said he questioned how Hearst could know how long she was kept blindfolded. He compared her ordeal to prison ers of war in Vietnam. “People were held there for over five years, Bates said. “They were beaten and deprived, and they didn’t break and go over to the Viet Cong.” He criticized a film sequence showing uniformed San Francisco police officers arresting Hearst. He said it was actually plainclothes FBI agents and a police detective who captured her. Physical education teacher Kat Finkbeiner followed and tried to prevent him from leaving the room, Coursey said, but when they scuf fled Finkbeiner was shot in the hand and mouth. Wilson got by Finkbeiner and opened fire in a classroom, wound ing five students and killing Shequila Tawonn Bradley, Coursey said. After emptying his pistol, Wilson dropped it. Finkbeiner told him to raise his hands and made him stay in place until a police officer arrived, the chief said. Those who know Finkbeiner said her action came as no surprise, Gay McHugh, principal at Lakeview El ementary School said, where Fink beiner also teaches. When she heard a physical educa tion teacher had helped stop tht gunman, she knew immediately ii had to he her, McHugh said. “Sheii always willing to go that extra mile, she said. Penny Dean, who used toteachai Oakland, said Finkbeiner think about others before herself Dean said Finkbeiner really cares about people. “Everything she does she does with gusto,” she said. Finkbeiner was in fair condition Tuesday at Self Memorial Hospital and has not yet talked with police, spokesman Dan Branyon said. Asec ond teacher was in good condition. Superintendent Watson said he knew of no connection between the gunman and the school. Taxes, one-liners highlight Bush talk Associated Press George Bush courted the mid dle class on Tuesday with a mod est plan to allow small savers to put something away for a rainy day and defer taxes on the inter est. Michael Dukakis criticized an other Bush tax cut proposal as a $40 billion giveaway for the rich. The vice president got in the snappiest one-liner of the cam paign day when he told an audi ence at Miami University in Ohio that a current television show re minds me of what interest rates might be if the Democrats get back in again. “It’s called ‘thirty- something,’” he said. The Democrats ridiculed right back. Asked what a Dan Quayle ad ministration might look like, Democratic vice presidential can didate Lloyd Bentsen laughed and said very exciting. Asked later what he meant, Bentsen laughed again and said, “I’ll leave it at that.” Republican vice presidential candidate Dan Quayle cam paigned in Bentsen’s home state of Texas, where he challenged Dukakis to resign his mem bership in the American Civil Liberties Union. “Let him today resign from the ACLU. Let him renounce all their bizarre positions. Let him make clear — no more waffling and backsliding — that he no longer supports the outrageous stands that the ACLU takes,” Quayle told a Houston rally of Asian-Americans. The two vice presidential can didates are scheduled to debate on Oct. 5 in Omaha, Neb., and the jockeying for advantage was already well under way. Democrats have criticized Quayle unsparingly during the campaign, but in an apparent bid to raise expectations about the In diana senator’s debate perfor mance, Bentsen characterized him as a skillful debater. “I think Dan Quayle is going to do very well in the debate,” said the Texas senator. He said Quayle loves to debate on the Senate floor and “I’m not so con frontational.” The vice president upgraded his own self-evaluation in last Sunday night’s debate with Duka kis. "I feel better today about the way ihe debate went than I did the night of the debate." He joked about the “handwringers" on his staff who feared he would “massively foul it up.” Bush outlined his plan for a tax break for low- and middle-in come people in a speech in Co lumbus, Ohio. He called the program an indi vidual savings account and said it would help the nation gain better control over our long-term eco nomic f uture as well as help sav ers put something away for a rainy day. One adviser said the tax de ferred on interest the First year on S1,000 would save roughly $12 for a taxpayer in the 15 per cent income tax bracket and slightly more in later years. Bush said the plan would allow many Americans to lock up as much as $1,000 a year — in acounts of five years or more — with federal income tax deferred. -When withdrawn, the accumu lated interest would be taxed at the saver’s income tax rate then in effect. The tax break would be fully available to taxpayers with ad justed gross income of less than $50,000 a year. It would grad ually phase out until it disap peared for someone with ad justed gross income of $60,000. Bush officials estimated the program would benefit 8 million Americans, at a cost to the Trea sury about $70 million in 1989 and $550 million by 1993. Dukakis renewed his attack in an appearance in Peoria, 111., call ing the capital gains cut a “five- year, $40 billion giveaway to the wealthiest Americans, people making more than $200,000 a year.” The Democrat also depicted Bush as no friend of Social Secu rity and Medicare who cast a tie breaking vote in the Senate seve ral years ago in favor of a plan to cut cost-of-living increases in fed eral benefits for retirees. “The first time George Bush ran for the Senate he opposed Medicare and called it ‘socialized medicine,”’ Dukakis said. “The first time George Bush ran for president he called Social Secu rity ‘basically a welfare pro gram.’” Financial advisers debate outlook for U.S. economy NEW YORK (AP) — One of the most thankless and unrewarding positions to be in today is that of the fi nancial adviser waiting for the recession. It’s been a very long wait for some of them, and a very costly experience for their customers. One of the breed, for example, advised his clients to get out of the stock market back in 1982, just before the bull charged. While his clients thus lost out on some fantastic gains, the investment adviser celebrated on Oct. 19, 1987, the day of the big stock market crash, believing his views were vindicated and his long wait made worthwhile. Re-invigorated, his company then made the scenario even more bleak and black, warning that interest rates would soar, major banks would collapse, production would cease, and a pall would descend over economic America. But it didn’t happen. Instead of falling into line with his dictates and the pronouncements of his brethren, the U.S. economy has grown sturdier since last year, and even dedicated doomsayers now are losing their patience. What had sustained many of them through their long, barren wait was the near certainty that economic expansions have limited lives — that the very existence of an expansion was reason enough to forecast a reces sion. Each month, therefore, their conviction grew stronger but, unfortunately, so did the stability of the economy. And now, in spite of it nearing age 71 months, the economy is producing great doubts about the recession scenario. Sam Nagakama, a widely followed business econo mist, is among those who have recently expressed the notion that perhaps the count ry already has worked its way through a problem period and may be ready forte- newed expansion. Broadly speaking, this is a thesis put forward by economists such as Edward Yardeni of Prudential- Bache Securities Inc. and Albert Sindlinger of Sind- linger & Co., among others, but Nakagama gives it his own particular touch. As he views events, the oil price decline and the dol lar’s depreciation helped the economy avoid recession in mid-1986 while at the same time setting in motion a new cyclical expansion. Sindlinger went on record back in late 1986withan argument that at least 31 states were in recession, no matter what the national statistics showed. From dial point on, he states, the economy has become much stronger. Yardeni, who has challenged the conventional think ing at every opportunity in the past year, provides an insight into how the economy can continue to grow while, in the view of many, it is at the limit of its capac ity. He describes two scenarios that are held clear by the “end of cycle crowd.” 1. If the economy continues to grow, oddsarethat unemployment will fall below 5 percent. Labor shorl- ages will boost wage inflation. Higher inflation will push interest rates to levels that ultimately triggerreces- sion. 2. If the economy continues to grow, capacity utiliza tion rates will rise and so will prices. Again, higher infla tion will push interest rates to levels that ultimatelytrig- ger recession.