The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 08, 1988, Image 8

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    Battalion
Classifieds
•PipiK*
* HELP WANTED
: te • SERVICES V
ATTENTION
DECEMBER
GRADUATING
SENIORS
If you have ordered a 1989
Aggieland, please stop by
English Annex between 8
and 5 and pay a $4.00 mail
ing fee along with your for
warding address so your
Aggieland can be mailed to
you next fall when they ar
rive.
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
Yearbook fee’s are refundable in
full during the semester in which
payment is made.
Thereafter no refunds will be made
on cancelled orders.
Yearbooks must be picked up dur
ing the academic year in which they
are published.
Students who will not be on cam
pus when the yearbooks are pub
lished, usually in October, must pay
a mailing and handling fee.
Yearbooks will not be held, nor will
they be mailed without necessary
fees having been paid.
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)
STUDENT DIRECTORIES ARE
NOW AVAILABLE!!!
Bring your Fall ‘88 fee slip to
Rm. 230 in the Reed McDonald
Bldg, between 8-5
3 49ttfn
«HEU> WANTED
</>
b
S<
2 N
OH
a a
Now Hiring
Delivery Personnel
Must be 18 and have own car
and insurance
Earn $6-$8 per hour
Wage, Mileage, and tips
Apply between 2p.m. and 5p.m.
1504 Holleman College Station
693-2335
4407 Texas Bryan 260-9020
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 interested call:
James at 693-7815 or Julian at
693-2323 for an appt. 4 9tii/o7|
CRUISESHIPS NOW HIRING
FOR CHRISTMAS, next
spring and summer breaks.
Many positions.
Call (805)682-7555
Ext. S-1026. 52t12/02
Brasswind Recording Studio is looking for a part-time
recording engineer with previous experience. Please
bring resume by 2551 S. Tx. Avenue, Suite F, College
Station. 48t 11/08
Drivers Wanted. Take All Your Money Home Nightly.
Apply In Person. Gumby's Pizza. 1702 S. Kyle Suite
101. 48tl 1/08
Wren’s Wheel Alignment
500 W.J. Bryan Pkwy.(25th),
Bryan 822-7884
Front End Alignment $17.95
Cars Only
•Brakes»Shocks«Struts«
Part-time coed needed for domestic work. 6-8hrs. per
week. 696-7414. 51t 11/10
TACO CABANA 24-hour patio cafe now hiring cash
iers, cooks, line servers, & utility people. Apply in per
son Friday Nov. 4th through Sunday Nov. 1 1th from 3-
7p.m. 701 Texas Ave. S. 51tll/ll
♦ FOR LEASE
Must sublease Apartment for Spring ‘89. 2 Bdrm, 2
baths, microwave. $430./mo. 846-6270. 52tl 1/14
• ROOMMATE WANTED
Roommate wanted: 23 yr. old male needs roommate to
share 2 Bdrm apt. $137./mo. plus 1/2 utilities. Gender
doesn’t matter. 696-2922. Leave message. 52t 11/14
• FOR RENT
TANGLEWOOD
SOUTH APTS.
All utilities paid, 1,2,& 3 Bdrms.
2 pools, exercise room, party
room, & 2 laundry rooms.
Shuttle bus.
Pre-listing for spring semester
1/2month rent off in Dec.
411 Harvey Rd.
College Station, Texas.
Cotton Village Apts.,
Snook, Tx.
1 Bdrm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $248
Rental assistance available!
Call 846-8878 or 774-0773
after 5pm. 4ttl
In Bryan- Four Plex 2 Bdrm/1 Bath extra storage/fire
place, ceiling fan, new carpet. Also adorable 1 Bdrm ef
ficiency. 52ttfn
PROFESSORS or CONSULTANTS; 150 sq.ft, suites,
two blocks from TAMU; Lisa 693-8661 after 1:00p.m.
48t 11/08
Lg. Rm., bath, private entrance/,'! block from campus,
util, pd., no kit. priviledges, $170./mo. 764-7363 or
693-5286. 50U1/10
GRAD. STUDENT NEEDS ROOMMATE. PRIVATE
BEDR/BTH/; CENTRAL AIR/HEAT; CABLE; MI
CROWAVE; GRAND PIANO; SHUTTLE. $225/mo.
696-1227 early/late or 845-3018 message. 51tl 1/11
: • TRAV1FI
DEFENSIVE DRIVING, GOT A TRAFFIC TICKET 5
GET YOUR TICKET DISMISSED?! 693-1322. 909
S.W.Parkway. 26tl2/09
SPRING BREAK ’8S
Trips Available Now
South Padre Island, TX
Steamboat, CO
Daytona Beach, FL
Mustang Island, TX
Hilton Head Island, SC
Don’t Wait Until It’s Too
Late!
Call Sunchase Beach & Ski Breaks
1-800-321-5911
• PERSONALS
ADOPT
A BABY IS OUR DREAM!
Happily married, financially successful
couple hope you’ll call collect.
Legal. Expenses paid.
Call Lynn & Martin collect.
(212)362-6884. 51111/11
« SERVICES
$40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40
SORE THROAT STUDY
Wanted: Individuals, 18-70
years old, with sore throat
pain, for 90 minute study to
compare over-the-counter
pain relief medication (no
blood drawn).
$40. incentive for those
chosen to participate.
CALL PAULL RESEARCH
INTERNATIONAL
776-0400 43ttfn
$40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40
$200 $ 20 0 $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 r'aull Research International
776-0400
$200 $200 $200 $200
Experienced librarian will do library research for you.
Call 272-3348. 48t 11/29
TYPING—WORD PROCESSING—REASONABLE
RATES—BEST SERVICE IN TOWN. 764-2931
33t 12/07
ON THE DOUBLE Professional W'ord Processing,
laser jet printing. Papers, resume, merge letters. Rush
services. 846-3755. 181tfn
WORD PROCESSING. Write a great paper-well see
that it lookslike one! 268-0191 51tll/ll
Sophomore or J unior with electronics background for
part-time sales/stock work With local distributor. 779-
0204 for information. 49t 11/09
Make hundreds in your spare time placing posters. No
selling. Call (918)-33MONEY. 49tl 1/09
• FOR SALE
Must sell 14x60 2 Bedrooms 1 Bathroom central air-
/heat furnished. Best offer. Lynn 845-9184 or 779-
0593. 49tl 1/16
1987 Suzuki SP125 $1000. OBO 2 Helmets. 260-1759.
48t 11/08
Piano For Sale. Wanted: Responsible party to take on
small monthly payments on piano. See locally. Call
manager at (618)234-1306 anytime. 48tl 1/10
1981 grey mazda GLC, 4-door, $2500. O.B.O. Great
condition. Call 696-4217. 46tl 1/1 1
^ A&M
Steakhousel
Delivers
846-5273
CHIMNEY HILL
BOWLING CENTER
"A FAMILY RECREATION CENTER”
40 LANES-AUTOMATIC SCORING
OPEN BOWLING EVERY DAY
HAPPY HOUR ALL THE TIME
PITCHER OR BEER $3.00
PITCHER FROZEN MARGARITA $8.00
WINE COOLER $1.50
DRAFT WINE COOLER $1.00
WITH THIS COUPON
BOWL 2 GAMES AT 1.85 EACH AND GET 3RD
FREE.
TAX NOT INCLUDED, SHOES EXTRA.
OPEN EVERY DAY FROM 10 A.M. TO MIDNIGHT
BAR-SNACK BAR-POOL TABLES-
VIDEO GAMES-TV
701 UNIVERSITY DR. E. 260-9185
TIME FOR A
RESUME
Kinko’s can help you
prepare for your future. We
have a wide range of papers
and envelopes to give your
resume the professional
look it deserves.
kinko's
Great copies. Great people.
201 College Main
846-8721
don't
let
your
business
bomb.
coll 845-2611
to advertise
at ease
Page 8 The Battalion Tuesday, November 8,1988
World/Nation
S
Severe quake in China Le<
kills 600, reports claim 9th
y JL ■ Blas vega
Cal’s Body Shop-We do it right the first time! 823-
2610. 32ttfn
TAXIDERMY- Quality work competetive prices quick
return. 693-4189 48tll/08
Permanently disabled man has computer & printer, &
will do your typing & have it ready on time. Bill 846-
2678. ' 48tl 1/08
Typing: Accurate, 95wpm, reliable. Word Processor.
7days a week. 776-4013. 27tl2/07
STUDENT TYPING— 20 years experience. Fast, accu
rate, reasonable, guaranteed, 693-8537. 50t01/17
For Sale Honda GB-125S. Best offer. Call 764-8045 af
ter 5:00. 49t 11/08
BEIJING (AP) —- A powerful earth
quake struck just inside China’s moun
tainous southern border, and two official
radio stations reported Monday that 600
people were killed.
Radio Beijing and the Peoples’ Cen
tral Broadcasting Station quoted the
same reporter, Hu Jiaqi, about the death
toll.
Radio Beijing also quoted him as say
ing most of the dead were in Shanmato, a
village in Yunnan province that was
nearly wiped out by the earthquake,
which registered 7.6 on the Richter
scale, which measures the intensity of
earthquakes.
Hu’s account could not be confirmed
independently. An earlier Radio Beijing
report said total casualties were 600, in
cluding dead and injured victims from
the quake.
The State Seismology Bureau in Beij
ing, which had reported 18 killed and 54
injured, said it had no new figures avai-
lalble.
cates a tenfold increase in strength and a
temblor of 7 can cause heavy damage in
populated areas. In the case of Monday’s
earthquake, it is not yet known how
much damage was done in any areas near
the quake.
Following Sunday’s quake, the State
Seismology Bureau said dozens of af
tershocks had struck the Yunnan region
through Monday night, with the strongst
measuring 7.2 but most ranging from 4.0
to 6.0.
Roads to the affected area were cut
and Yunnan authorities ordered an airlift
of food, medicine and other relief sup-
Dispatches from the official news
agency Xinhua said at least 37 people
were dead and more than 100 injured in
the much debated statistics.
No telephone service was available to
the affected part of Yunnan province
near the Burmese border. It is sparsely
inhabited by farmers, many from the
Lahu and Va minorities with their own
languages and live in houses of wood
and mud.
A Yunnan official reached by tele
phone said the provincial government
had no idea how many people were
killed. Asked whether 600 was a plau
sible, he said: “It might be. It might not
be.”
If the death toll of 600 is accurate, this
would be China’s worst earthquake since
the 1976, when 242,000 people were
killed in the northeastern city of Tan-
gshan.
That quake measured 7.8 on the Rich
ter scale. Each number on the scale indi-
Leonard got i
plies. The provincial govcmmeni, imockdown to 1
early Tuesday that doctors hadseloi j n the ninth nn
the area and the governor, He Z:;:.. | 0rv Monday r
was en route. . fnlhter to wii
classes.
The quake was centered in Yuic Mrhe sensatio
Lancang and Menglian counties, ? thf World Box
240 miles southwest of the pro. alight title hel
capital Kunming. Xinhua said vacant WBC sl
houses in the two counties were fafff After Lalonc
lished and buildings were destroy, ond time in I
14 surrounding counties. |ft|chard Stock
'Count, but rus
Seismologists in Kunming repon:. Leonard threw
damage in the city of 1.5 million.mB Lalonde see
years ago, a quake of 6.3 on theR,, trouble earlier
scale killed 22 people. of punches b
__Honard foughi
■ IBlonde with i
■th a flurry o
[iding champ
blonde stru
_ # # # m ■indatory 8-c
discrimination case ferr 1
U.S. court will hear ^
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Su
preme Court today agreed to study
the case of a former Dallas high
school football coach who says he
lost his job because he is white.
The court said it will hear compet
ing appeals filed by Norman Jett,
longtime coach and athletic director
at South Oak Cliff High School in
Dallas, and by the Dallas Independent
School District.
The justices will study a 5th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals ruling that
ordered a new trial for Jett’s lawsuit
against the city school district and
Frederick Todd, South Oak Cliffs
principal.
ferred to another city high school,
Jett had been named head coadi |
and athletic director at the school i
1970, the year the racial composite I
at South Oak Cliff changed from pit,
dominantly white to predominate:
black.
Todd, who is black, became ihf ’
school’s principal in 1975.
&1V
>lac<
:olf
According to the 5th Circuit conn
tensions between Todd and Jett wen
exasperated by events surrounding
South Oak Cliff s loss to Plano in thi ;
state high school championship game
in November 1982.
A federal jury had awarded Jett
$850,000 in damages, reduced by a
federal trial judge to about $563,000.
Jett had coached the South Oak
Cliff football team since 1962 when,
in the spring of 1983, he was trans-
Jett’s appeal said, “Todd believed;
that South Oak Cliff would havelo!
recruit young black athletes attheje
nior high school level and he evi
dently believed that a successful re
cruder would have to be black.”
The appeal added that Todd re
placed Jett with a black coach.
Returns in key states
will predict winner
The Texas
lam finished
jiar Lady (
/ildwood C
taod.
Texas Chi
bent with a
Southern M
i/ith 919, ai
935.
A&M’s A
Uth place in
t33 total.
Kellie Kie
nd Caroline
|38.Leigh D
nd Rebecca
hind with a 2
TCU’s Cl
hidual honor
The tour
Schedule for
WASHINGTON (AP) — After a year
long presidential campaign, four states
where the polls close early tomorrow
could provide the answer to who will be
the next president.
The winner could be known early if
Republican George Bush is making a
strong showing.
But if Democrat Michael Dukakis is
doing well, it could be a long night with
the result hanging on returns from the
West Coast.
The four states cited by election ana
lyst William Schneider of the American
Enterprise Institute are Connecticut,
Kentucky, Ohio and Vermont.
“If Dukakis wins Vermont and Con
necticut, it’s good news for the Demo
crats,” Schneider said. “Keep tuned. If
Dukakis wins Kentucky and Ohio, it’s
very good news for the Democrats. ’’
On the other hand, he said, “If Bush
wins all of those states, it ought to be a
good night for him. ”
Of those four states, Ohio has been
targeted by both Bush and Dukakis.
Both candidates campaigned there Mon
day, the last of several trips they’ve
made to woo Ohio voters.
In addition, they’ve poured a lot of
money into advertising and direct mail
aimed at Buckeye voters.
Most polls said Bush was leading in
Ohio, but Dukakis is insisting the margin
is closing rapidly.
All that attention makes Ohio a pretty
good barometer of which candidate’s ap
peal got through best to voters.
“We’ll be looking clearly at places
like Vermont and Connecticut,” Dukakis
campaign spokesman Leslie Dach said.
“We’d like to win, which we think
would be a strong signal for us.”
He also cited the big Midwest indus
trial states, Colorado, Montana and
South Dakota as states where the Demo
crats hopes to show strength.
Another extremely important state
where the polls close early and the vote
is tabulated fairly quickly is Illinois.
The results from Chicago should indi
cate how successful Dukakis was at per
suading blacks to get out and vote for
him. A large black turnout in Chicago is
essential for a Democrat to overcome Re
publican majorities in the city’s suburbs
and elsewhere in the state.
Other states to watch — for various
reasons — are Massachusetts, New Jer
sey, New York, Rhode Island and West
Virginia.
Massachusetts should be safe for Du
kakis. But if the outcome is closer than
expected it could be a sign of trouble for
the Massachusetts governor.
The same is true for Rhode Island,
also considered part of Dukakis’ I
but a state where some polls have sai ;
the race was closer than expected.
The flip side is New Jersey, whicli
considered reliably in the Bush coliw
Should Dukakis pull an upset or eve
come close, it would indicate hccouldt! '
headed for an upset.
New York was considered part of ft-
kakis' base early in the campaign,k
more recent polls said the contest fort 1 * |
state’s 36 electoral votes had nanows
considerably.
Hard times and a Democratic ti
made West Virginia look like a natiin
for Dukakis’ populist campaign rheloii;
Polls show Bush leads
as voters choose today
NEW YORK (AP) — George Bush
concluded his campaign for the presi
dency Monday maintaining his months-
old lead over Michael Dukakis in the
polls, but his margin varied from four
points in one survey to 11 in another.
strongly. They can vote the way tkt;
say, they can stay home, or they cant*
urged by somebody to change W
vote
A CBS News poll found the race tight
ening somewhat, with Bush’s lead slip
ping from nine points to six.
A Harris poll said Dukakis had closed
to within four, while Gallup found Bush
solidly ahead and holding steady.
Pollsters blamed their differing figures
on relatively high levels of voter dissatis
faction and indecision, factors that in
crease the difficulty of determining who
is likely to vote — and make turnout a
crucial element.
Twenty percent in Gallup’s final pi*
election poll were undecided orsaidlkf
could change their minds easily enotij)
to alter the outcome in the many I
states where the. election was close.
Nationally, the Gallup poll gaveBi^
an 11-point lead among likely voters,.'
percent to 42 percent.
Apportioning the 5 percent whoi ,
mained undecided by their backgrout:
and ideology, Gallup arrived at a:
estimate.
“When the vote is soft like this, the
get-out-the-vote efforts take on a lot
more importance,” Gallup pollster Larry
Hugick said. “People don’t feel about it
A Harris poll conducted Wednesdi)
through Sunday put the race at 50 pd'
cent to 46 percent, and pollster Loid
Harris said his findings indicated thatll*
race had drawn closer late last week a
through the weekend.
PEKING
EXPRESS
TM
MAGNIFICENT CHINESE BUFFETS
Ovar 20 SaUctlons Of Salads & Entraes, lead Taa
ALL YOU CAN EAT
2 For Only $6.49
(REG $3 80 Wit * 1 Thi * Coupon
A $4.19) 606 Tar row
11:00-2:30, 4:30-8:30 Mon.-Fri. 7b * S9 *°
11 am - 8:30 pm Sat. & Sun.
■> P
One Coupon Per Person Per Visit
Offer Valid 11/8 thru 11/14
Not Good W/Any Other Offer
2C
b rYAN
courts^
h* • ^
Green
Fees
WITH CART RENTAL
• Monday-mday B e, °[ e ^_° 0 es
• Excluding Holidays • £*P
Two Person Minimum
Must Bring Coupon
Witn Student ID
A basketful of cash is better
than a garage full of 'stuff'
Have a garage or yard sale this week - Call 845-2611
Anol