Paged The Battalion Monday, November28,19 Battalion Classifieds 1*991*11 • HELP WANTED • FOR RENT $25,200 PAYS FOR A LOT OF COLLEGE. In the Army, we’ll train you in a valuable skill, and help you earn up to $25,200 to pay for almost any college or an approved vocational/technical training program of your choice. If money for advanced education is on your mind, the Montgomery GI Bill Plus the Army College Fund could be a big help in making your plans. Talk it over with your local Army Recruiter. ARMY. BE ALL YOU CAN BE. HELP WANTED NEED STUDENTS TO WORK A BROADWAY SHOW ON DECEMBER 7th. IF INTERESTED CONTACT RUDDER THEATRE COMPLEX AT 845-8903 OR COME BY ROOM 107 OF RUDDER • SERVICES amm BURGER KING Now Hiring Shifts available during the following times: 5a.m.-11a.m. 11:00a.m.-4:30p.m. 4:30p.m.-8:30p.m. 8:30p.m.-4:00a.m. Apply in person between 2:30p.m.-4:30p.m. 1719 Texas Ave. Culpepper Plaza RIARMAGOLOGIST Pharmacologist for pharma ceutical research firm spec ializing in bioavailability, bioequivalency and pharmakin etics studies. Call Pauli Research International. 776-0400 CRUISESHIPS NOW HIRING FOR CHRISTMAS, next spring and summer breaks. Many positions. Call (805)682-7555 Ext. S-1026. 52112/02 • NOTICE 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 DO YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS ABOUT YOUR LONG DISTANCE SERVICE? Interested in learning about calling plans and special prod- ucts that may save you money? Contact Pam Vela, your AT&T Student Campus Manager here at Texas A&M. Call:696-1151 Between 9:30-11:30 M-W-F 8-10p.m. T-R 64tii/2t $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 Internatloiia! 776-0400 $200 $ 2 0 0 $200 $2 0 0 $40 $40 $40 $40$40 $40 $40 $40 Are you suffering from a TENSION HEADACHE?? Call To see if you qualify for a medication survey. $40 financial incentive for those chosen to participate. CALL PAULL RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL 776-0400 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 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) SORETHROAT 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 5 4ttfn $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 WORD PROCESSING-Papers, resumes, theises, dis sertations. Rush, services. 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Mike 823- 2666. 64t 12/02 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! Cali 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5pm. „ Spring Term. Large one Bedroom Apartment. $295. month. Call 764-6902. 64tl2/02 2 Bdrm studio. Ceiling fan, appliances, pool, shuttle. $360-$385/mo. Glade East. 696-9669. 58t 12/07 In Bryan- Four Plex 2 Bdrm 1 Bath extra storage/fire place, ceiling fan, new carpet. Also adorable 1 Bdrm ef ficiency. Wyndham Mgmt. 846-4384. 57ttfn • ROOMMATE WANTED 3-1 House 2 miles from campus. 101 Highland. $110. + 1/3 utilities. 822-3235. 64tl 1/28 • FOR SALE Honda Express SR Moped $200. or best offer. 693- 9174. After 5:00p.m. 64t 12/01 83 Honda NightHawk 450, looks good, runs good, new seat $950. Robert 846-9366. 64t 12/02 Moped $225. 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Word Processor. 7daysa week. 776-4013. 27t 12/07 WISE MO/E Press reactions to DEA ‘plants’ express conceii HOUSTON (AP) — As might be expected, journalism experts and law enforcement officials voice vastly different opinions about the Drug Enforcement Administration’s prac tice of planting false news stories as a tool in the nation’s war on drugs. Media experts generally argue that planting government-generated See related story/Page 3 no matter how - damages the na ui misinformation well-intentioned credibility of a free press and under mines the trust journalists and the public place in official information. Will Norton, professor of journa lism at the University of Mississippi, minced no words: “I haven’t heard of anything quite so insidious be fore,” he said. “Government is sup posed to be your friend. This doesn’t sound too friendly.” And Paul LaRocque, an assistant journalism professor at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, asked, “How can the public trust what they read in the paper, if the paper has been converted to an arm of government?” Law enforcement officials, how ever, said the practice is actually in the public’s best interest because it is so effective in combating interna tional drug trafficking. “I support any legal tactic or tech nique to take the drugs off the street,” Harris County Sheriff Johnny Klevenhagen said. He said that withholding informa tion is a common police procedure, and that it does not constitute lying for officers to withhold the true ori gin of drugs when discussing a staged seizure. Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Police Chief Joe Gerwens said that investi gators walk a fine ethical line which, if crossed, can damage the fragile- credibility police enjoy with the press. “I wouldn’t put anybody in our organization in the position of lying directly to the media,” he said. Credibility should suffer onl) j disinformation has a less worthyn live, such as political or mate gain- The issue forced Chronicle t tors to consider the im plications (I exposing a DEA practice agency said was designed to prod the safety of undercover agentsa maintain ongoing undercover opt ations. When law enforcement offn became aware that the Chronicle^ preparing to run such a story, tl requested and received advances lice of its publication date sot could take action to protect unt cover agents. It could not be determinij whether the disclosure interfenj with ongoing investigations. “I guess if someone gets killed,* won’t be able to use that techniqj anymore,” Federal Drug Enfora ment Administration spokesmd Maurice Hill said. But SMU’s LaRocque said [ take a risk by involving themedia:! ive Tie But the press should not automat ically distrust the police because of deception to protect an undercover operation, Gerwens said. a masquerade. “If welietothepi lie, who’s going to believe us?" Griff Singer, of the University Texas journalism departmei voiced similar concerns: “They! using the press as a means to tficB * ends, when the press istryingtop information the public needs." Steve Bertucefii, head of the nized crime division fortheBrowai County Sheriffs Department Florida, said it would be preferal to confide in the media when a is staged and release the informatiu in partnership with reporters. “I think it’s part of the responsil ity of the media, for the pii good,” Bertucelli said. But he conceded that reporffi might be uneasy with that arranji ment, and LaRocque said such par nerships in deception would viola journalistic ethics. Gerwens said he knows of nosu arrangements. “I’ve never knoi anybody in the press who’dbeani mg participant in planting a ston, he said. Norton said the DEA practiced for increased press skepticism of in formation released by drug enfora ment officials. ive) UT rece ick Richey ; ted a pass it Texas book dealer detects forgeries of 13 documents HOUSTON (AP) — A Texas rare book and document dealer says he has uncovered forged and fab ricated copies of 13 different Texas documents, including more than 50 facsimiles located in museums, li braries, university and private collec tions. W. Thomas Taylor of Austin said the popularity of Texana and the in crease in available cash during the boom days of the 1970s and early 80s created an atmosphere ripe for forgery. Among the alleged phony docu ments are copies of the Feb. 24, 1836 “Victory or Death” letter written by William Barret Travis, appealing for aid at the Alamo, and the declara tion of independence from Mexico, approved by rebellious Texas set tlers in a convention at Washington- on-the-Brazos in March 1836. To rally support for the Texas Revolution, Texan printers put out hundreds of copies of Travis’ letter and the Declaration of Indepen dence in the form of broadsides, or circulars. The most lucrative documents came from this romantic period of Texas history, but only rare copies still exist, he said. “Virtually all the printing done in Texas during that period took the form of highly perishable broad sides,” Taylor said, and only a hand ful surrvived, generally in institutio nal collections. “How frustrating that must have been for our bibliographic entrepre neurs,” he told the Houston Chroni cle. “They moved quickly to remedy the imbalance by two simple expe dients: theft and forgery.” For several months, the Public In tegrity Section of the Travis County District Attorney’s Office has been investigating whether criminal viola tions occurred in the reproduction and sale of the allegedly forged and fabricated documents first cited last year by Taylor. Assistant District Attorney Steve McCreely said the investigation is nearing completion, and, if indicta ble offenses appear to have oc curred, prosecutors will present evi dence to a grand jury. About 1970, thieves systematically stole documents from many impor tant Texas collections, but for the most part, these thefts were not pub licly disclosed, he said. If the thefts had been reported, he said, the stolen items might have been recovered and their copies rec- _ ognized when they appeared in I market. Until 1973, only two copiesofik broadside relating Travis’ faiM message from the Alamo were if ported to exist, he said, but sim then, 10 copies have surfaced, number, which to any thinkingpti son, is wholly implausible.” “In the 1970s, I had sold copies of the Declaration of pendence and one copy of thelu vis letter for a great deal of mone|, he said. “I would wince and worry when I would see another copy these documents, but I did not out looking for trouble.” Among the documents he has termined to be fakes wasoneTafl unwittingly sold to the Sanjacii Museum of History in Houstt seven years ago for $30,000. He he refunded that money. All told, Taylor said, hehasif funded $58,000 for fake documei he inadvertently sold. “The Declaration of Indepfl dence proved to be a kind ofRosH Stone for the discovery of oil forgeries,” he said. “I simply lool for once-rare documents that 1 become common, that original with certain dealers, that poorly printed or which sho»< signs of re-touching a negative," $40 $40 $40 !$400 $400 $4 $400 $400 ^ Individi $400 3,1 ** $400 .Particip $400 $400 $4 S40C $400 Among his other discoveries iff 1 five forged documents thathadl* 1 presented as gifts to the Univers' of Houston. He also located fake Texas dod merits in the possession ofthelh ker Texas History Center, Yale ft versify, the American Antiquafii Society, the Star of the RepublicSl' seum at Washington-on-the-Braff* Baylor University, the Texas Historical Association, the ! Public Library, the branches ( University of Texas system atS* Antonio and Arlington and assoitf private collectors. A forged copy of the DeclaraW of Independence turned up in Texana collection of Gov. ents. “In addition to the forging a« fabricating of printed documcf Taylor said, “I suspect a signifitf number of autograph letters by portant people about import matters in this state’s history pn bly are forgeries and describe even that never happened.” 200 $200 m URI 1200 Do you 200 back pt 200 FREE! 2oo particip ;2oo w ho qu, $/ $40 $40 $40 $40 __ $40 JE Call To , cial ince $40 $100 $1 00 m FRI $100 For indi $100 io partk $100 strep th $100 $100 $100 $40 $40 $4 $40 . $40 Wanted: $40 licipate i $40 over-the $40 those ch $40 $40 $ FF For indivic ter cedar« als also w