The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 19, 1989, Image 8

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    Battalion Classifieds
Page 8
The Battalion
Monday, January 17,1989
•TRAVEL
5w' llC ^ iCy 8th Annual
HIM
RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW!
• BREAK WITH A WINNER • NO AIR MATTRESSES • CONFIRMED RESERVATIONS •
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
SHERATON CONDO OR HOTEL, HOLIDA Y INN, GULF VIEW OR
LANDFALL TOWER CONDOS • 5 OR 7 NIGHTS from
STEAMBOAT
SHADOW RUN CONDOS OR OVERLOOK HOTEL *5007 NIGHTS
LODGING-LIFTS-PICNIC-RACE-GOODIE BAG! firom
DAYTONA BEACH
TEXAN HOTEL AND KITCHENETTES
7 NIGHTS
MUSTANG ISLAND/PORTA.
PORT ROYAL CONDOS
5 OR 7 NIGHTS
HILTON HEAD ISLAND
HIL TON HEAD ISLAND BEACH & TENNIS RESORT
7 NIGHTS
CENTRAL SPRING BREAK
DON'T DELAY!
EAK INFORMA TION & RESERVA TIONS
1-800-321-5911
7AM-7PIVI M-Th, 7AM-5PM Fri, 9AM-5PM Sat, Mountain Standard Time
Reservations may be made by credit card
or you may contact your local Sunchase campus representative or your favorite travel agency
* Depending on break dates and length ol stay
• HELP WAffTED
* FOR SALE
Now hiring. Good benefits,
good pay. Free uniforms and
food. Flexible hours
Work for Number 1!
AA
M McDonald's
Apply at: 801 University Dr., C.S.
2420 Texas Ave., C.S.
Interviewing 9 a.m.- 5 p.m. Wed.,
Jan.18 & Thurs., Jan. 19
See Manager for an application
77t01/18
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 I7t
USED CARPET — NICE! 5
14x20:$55, & pad. Grey: 5x9:$ 10.
CALCULATORS - Hewlett Packard, Sharp, Casio,
Texas Instrument. Best Prices! 846-7409. 76tl/20
TYPEWRITERS - New with warranty. Smith Cornona,
Brother. Best Prices! 846-7409. 76tl/20
• FOR RENT
COUNSELORS - Girls camp in
Maine. Good salary, room & board,
travel allowance, beautiful modern fa
cility, must lovechildren and be able to
teach one of the following: Tennis,
W.S.I., Sailing, Water Ski, Softball,
Basketball, Soccer, LaCrosse, A&C,
Photography, Horseback, Dance, Pi
ano, Drama, Ropes, Camp Craft,
Gymnastics. Call or write:
Camp Vega, Box 1771,
Duxbury, Mass. 02332.
(617)934-6536. 75tfn
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.
Cotton Village Apts.,
Snook, Tx.
1 Bdrm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $248
Rental assistance available!
Cali 846-8878 or 774-0773
after 5pm. 4Ml
SPRING BREAK SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
7 nights at the Luxurious Beachfront Padre
Grand
Call Now~$229./per person based on 6 per
2 bedroom/2 bath condo.
VERY LIMITED AVAILABILITY
1-800-Hi-Padre
South Padre Island Central Reservations
Spacious 2/1condo style. Washer/dryer included.
1050 sq. ft. Summit Street Apartments. 696-3875.
77t01/20
COUNSELORS - Boys camp in
Berkshire Mts., West Mass. Good sal
ary, room & board, travel allowance,
beautiful modern facility, must love
children and beable to teach one of
the following: Tennis, W.S.I., Sailing,
Water Ski, Baseball, Basketball, Soc
cer, LaCrosse, Wood, A&C, Rocketry,
Photography, Archery, Pioneering,
Ropes, Piano, Drama. Call or write:
Camp Winadu, 5 Glen La.,
Mamaroneck, NY 10543.
(914)381-5983. 7
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. 49111/071
“STREP THROAT STUDY”
Volunteer? needed for streptococcal
tonsillitis/pharyngitis study
* Fever (100.4 or more)
* Pharyngeal pain (Sore Throat)
* Difficulty swallowing
Rapid strep test will be done to con
firm. Volunteers will be compensated.
G&S Studies, Inc.
(close to campus)
846-5933
SKIN INFECTION STUDY
G&S Studies, Inc. is participating in a
study on acute skin infection. If you
have one of the following conditions
call G&S Studies. Eligible volunteers
will be compensated.
* infected blisters * infected cuts
* infected boils * infected scrapes
* infected insect bites (“road rash’’)
G&S Studies, Inc.
(close to campus)
846-5933 76
2BR/1BA Duplex, Fenced, Pets Okay, Bryan,
$310./mo., 846-4465, weekends: 1-279-2967. 66t01/17
1 & 2 BR Fourplex (Northgate), semester leases okay.
846-4465. Weekends: 1-279-2967. 66t01/17
Nicest barn in Brazos County. Stalls for rent. Call Hank
Bird at 589-2564. 75t01/26
Room, large, 1 block from Campus. $170. Private bath,
entrance. Utilities included. 764-7363 or 693-5286.
76U/20
* PERSONALS
Are you pregnant Sc considering adoption? Our happy
family would love to have a new baby join us. Confi
dential. Expenses paid. For more information, call col
lect (408)288-7100, A149. 76t 1/23
Hi
Car stereo installer needed. Full or part-time. Experi
ence necessary. 779-0065. 77t01/20
Stereo Salesperson needed. Full or part-tirrje sales ex
perience preferred. 779-0065. 77t01/20
Earn $35.-$200. per pay selling newspapers to students
& faculty! Call Jerry at 846-1253 or Steve at 846-6079.
75t01/26
Mason’s
MOBILE CAR
REPAIR
Call For Estimate
Guaranteed
Reasonable
Convenient
Mason Grimes
696-6689
$40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40
HEADACHE STUDY
Do you have a headache?
Earn $40. for a 4 hour at home
study with currently available
medications. No blood drawn, no
physical exams. Call today:
Pauli Research International
776-0400
after 6 p.m. call 361 -1302
$40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40
Farmers Market Northgate now hiring delivery driv
ers. Must have bicycle. Apply between 2 & 4, Mon. -
Fri. 846-6428. 75t01/20
STUDENT TYPING- 20 years experience
rate, reasonable, guaranteed, 693-8537.
Fast, accu-
50t01/17
Nursery worker needed at First Presbyterian Church.
Sunday & Wednesday. Kathryn, 846-6853. 75t01/20
ON THE DOUBLE Professional Word Processing,
laser jet printing. Papers, resume, merge letters. Rush
services. 846-3755. 181 tin
Part-time help. Morning and afternoon shift. Call to
make appointment. Ask for Patsy. 696-3411. 75t01/17
Cal’s Body Shop-We do it right the first time! 823-
2610. 32ttfn
iVork by hour, flexible times. $4., yard work, cleaning,
sainting, etc. 693-5286. 76tl/20
#:•; TOR SALE
DoubleDave’s is now hiring delivery drivers. Earn $5.-
$8./hour. Apply at 326Jersey 2-4 p.m. 76tl/20
SORETHROAT
Earn extra money this Spring Semester on your cam
pus by Marketing the“ Breaker Saver", the ultimate
Spring Break discount card for South Padre Island.
Call Now!!! 1-800-344-6883. (24 hours). 76U/20
CRUISESHIPS NOW HIRING FOR CHRISTMAS,
next spring, and summer breaks. Many positions. Call
(805) 682-7555 ext. S-1026. 70t02/01
GIANT PLANT SALE
Everything must go. Many varie
ties of Ivy, Dieffenbachia, Dra
caena, Corn Plant, Philodendron,
more. Up to 2’ in height.
$6. each or 3 for $15.
Call 846-8908 7611/20
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
^^40^40^40^40140^40^
The Battalion
Number One in Aggieland
OVERSEAS JOBS. $900. - 2000. month. Summer,
Year round, ail countries, all fields. Free info. Write:
IJC. P.O. Box 52 - TX 04, Corona Del Mar, CA. 92625.
74t02/13
14x56 home, 2/1, built-ins, set up in low rent park. Best
offer. 846-3565, 690-0280. 77t02/01
Cocker Spaniel puppy, male, buff color, no papers. 1-
399-6134. 77t01/23
What’s Up
Tuesday
OFF CAMPUS AGGIES/OFF CAMPUS CENTER: will have an off-campus
roommate session at 5 p.m. at the off-campus center.
STUDENT Y: will meet at 7 p.m. in 601 Rudder.
CATHOLIC STUDENT ASSOCIATION: will have a discussion about the Bible
and how it was written at 7 p.m. at St. Mary’s Student Center.
ON CAMPUS CATHOLICS: will meet at 9 p.m. at All Faiths Chapel.
Wednesday
HELLENIC STUDENT ASSOCIATION: will meet at 7 p.m. at Mr. Gatti’s on
Northgate.
RIO BRAZOS AUDUBON SOCIETY: will show the film "Sand County Almanac"
at 7:30 p.m. at the Brazos Valley Museum. There will also be an officer and
board meeting at 7 p.m.
NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS: Call the Center for Drug Prevention and Educa
tion at 845-0280 for details on today’s meeting.
ALOCHOLICS ANONYMOUS: Call the Center for Drug Prevention and Educa
tion at 845-0280 for details on today’s meeting.
CATHOLICS ON THE QUAD: will meet at 9 p.m. in Lounge B on the quad.
NEWMAN: will have an activity to set the pace for the spring semester at 7:30
p.m. at the student center.
CLASS OF ’89: is accepting pictures and negatives for the senior banquet slide
show in the Student Programs Office.
STUDENT Y/ T-CAMP: applications for counselor and T-Team are available in
211 Pavilion.
Items for What's Up should be submitted to The Battalion. 216 Reed McDonald,
no later than three business days before the desired run date. We only publish
the name and phone number of the contact if you ask us to do so. What's Up is
a Battalion service that lists non-profit events and activities. Submissions are run
on a first-come, first-served basis. There is no guarantee an entry will run. If you
have questions, call the newsroom at 845-3315.
Researchers
link anger,
heart attacks
Israelis harbor doubts
about PLO ceasefire
na: 12xl4:$45.
-1146,696-7410.
76t 1/20
Honda CB125 motorcycle for sale. Best offer. Call af
ter 5. 764-8045. 76tl/20
JERUSALEM (AP) — Yasser Ar
afat’s guerrillas have refrained from
attacking Israeli targets for the past
two months, observing an unde
clared cease-fire that could give
credibility to the PLO’s peace initia
tive if it endures.
Some Israeli officials have called
attention to the lack of Fatah opera
tions but have expressed doubt
about Arafat’s ability or even desire
to make it last.
“We have not identified any fla
grant act on the part of the PEC)
against the security zone or Israel
since Arafat committed himself to
end terrorism,” Uri Lubrani, a se
nior Defense Ministry official re
sponsible for Lebanon policy, said.
It is too early to judge if the truce
would be lasting, Lubrani said on Is
rael radio.
Foreign Ministry Spokesman
Alon Liel said in an interview it was
“not 100 percent clear” whether the
cease-fire encompassed only Arafat’s
own Fatah guerrillas or all Palestine
Liberation Organization factions.
There have been two recent infil
tration attempts by Syrian-based
groups, one headed by Abu Nidal
which is outside the PLO umbrella
and the other, the Palestine Liber
ation Front, which is part of the
PLO. Israeli soldiers killed six of the
guerrillas.
The last attack by Arafat’s Fatah
came on the eve of the PLO’s decla
ration of statehood in mid-Novem
ber when a five-member Fatah squad
took U.N. soldiers and Lebanese ci
vilians hostage for 18 hours. The
guerrillas shot to death one Leb
anese man before surrendering.
Anat Kurz, a terrorism expert at
Tel Aviv University’s Jaffee Center
for Strategic Studies, said in an in
terview that a cease-fire would have
to be more enduring to overcome Is
raeli suspicion about the PLO.
Kurz noted Arafat had never re
nounced armed struggle or the right
to attack targets in Israel but said it
was in Arafat’s interest to suspend
anti-Israeli attacks to give his initia
tive credibility, especially with West
ern countries.
However, she said there were se
rious doubts among Israeli poli
cymakers about whether Fatah could
tolerate a long period of inaction
without clear political gains.
The center estimates Fatah has
about 8,000 guerrillas, or half the to
tal number of Palestinians under
arms. Most are based in Lebanon.
Many Israelis, especially those on
the political right, view the 18-
month Palestinian uprising in the oc
cupied territories as a form of ter
rorism aimed at destroying Israel.
MONTEREY, Calif. (AP) -
search into the link between Type
behavior and heart disease sugie
that the real killer is anger, noli
patience.
For many years, experts believi
aggressive, always-in-a-hurry peot
‘— the classic Type A’s — were worl
ing themselves toward heart attacli
However, new evidence is emerp
that being distrustful and quid:
reach the boiling point arethein
culprits.
“Being a workaholic, being in
hurry, interrupting people, aren
necessarily bad for your heart,”Di
Red ford B. Williams Jr. of Dul
University Medical Center said Mm
clay.
“What is bad,” he said, “isifn.
have high levels of hostility andi-
ger and you don’t bother to hide
when dealing with other people.”
Williams, speaking at a meeting
the American Heart Associate,
said the term “Type A" has pre
outlived its usefulness, and peopj
should concentrate on undent®
ing the poisonous effects of anger#
the heart.
“Many of us had thought than)*
definition of Type A was too broad
Dr. Wayne J. Katon of the Univti
sity of Washington said. "Dr. Ifl
Hams is narrowing it down.”
In a study scheduled to be pul
lished soon in Psychosomatic Medi
cine, Williams and colleagues df
scribed a follow-up study of Hi
students who took a personalitytes
during law school. Twenty-fiveyeat
later, 20 percent of those who hat
scored in the highest quarter ondi
hostility scale had died, compare
with 5 percent of those who hai
scored lowest.
The research showed that beia
paranoid or neurotic or avoiding si
cial contact were not associated nil
heart attacks. Instead, those at higl
risk tend to harbor a cynical mistru:
of other people’s motives. Theygu
angry of ten and openly express then
displeasure, rather than holdingi
in.
Such people tend to get furiow
for instance, in slow-moving baii
lines. They complain to themselves
about why other customers haven
filled out their deposit slips ahead
time and may show their unhapp
ness by making sour faces or evei
surly comments to those ahead
them.
“I’m not talking about anxieti
wailing in line,” Williams said. Ti
talking about anger.”
He said this makeup could be
problem fbr perhaps 20 percento
the population, and they probabl
have these tendencies from birth
Whether people can help thenv
selves by trying to control their feel
ings of rage is still not clear, but\l
Hams said that such attempts
behavior change are harmless anc
may help.
Soviet press hails Reagan,
Shultz for helping relations
MOSCOW (AP) — Soviet media
once fumed at President Reagan,
but its two most prestigious newspa
pers bid respectful and even fond
farewells Monday to Reagan and his
secretary of state, George Shultz, for
helping U.S.-Soviet relations.
“Of course, Reagan has remained
Reagan, the anticommunist and the
troubadour of Western society,” the
government newspaper Izvestia said
in a front-page article. “But the re
structuring of international relations
could not bypass the White House.”
In 1984, Reagan quipped into an
open microphone that he would be
gin bombing the Soviet Union in five
minutes. In the last days of his presi
dency, however, Soviets recall not
those “five minutes” but his five
summit meetings with Mikhail S.
Gorbachev, /zvest/a said.
“And this is not because we have
short memories, but because a long
road lies ahead of us, which we can
only overcome together,” wrote the
newspaper’s commentator, former
U.S.-based correspondent Meior
Sturua.
Pravda, the Communist Party da
ily, painted an extraordinarily inti
mate portrait of Shultz, Reagan's
secretary of state since July 1982,
and declared: “It will be just to note
that Shultz was one of the architects
of the turning-point in Soviet-U.S.
relations.”
In the recent warming between
the superpowers, Pravda said,
“Shultz’s realism had a telling effect,
as well as his sober recognition of the
fact that in the nuclear age, the self-
preservation of our two countries
can be guaranteed only by the ave
nues of dialogue.”
the lives of their own leaders.
Pravda did make one criticism
Shultz in its profile of him, sayingk
had been keener than former US
Defense Secretary Caspar Wein
berger to send U.S. troops todefeni
American interests.
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The U.S. secretary of state is also
the father of five children, an expe
rienced gourmet cook, an ardent
golf and tennis player and an avid
clevotee of ballroom dancing, Pravda
told its readers — surprising reve
lations in a country where most citi
zens know virtually nothing about
well-known what hlood-lei-
ting was caused by the feverisk
forced march of Marines to Gre
nada, to Lebanon, and by the bomf
ing of Libya,” Pravda said.
It also said his Middle East polio
had been a flop, but that it was nec
essary to pay Shultz “his due” for
recognizing in the 11th hour of the
Reagan presidency that it was time
to begin a dialogue with the Pales
tine Liberation Organization.
“Shultz is one of the few members
of the Reagan administration whose
name has practically not been in the
background of the financial, political
and ethical scandals that have inces
santly rocked Washington in recent
years,” Pravda said.
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SCOTT&WHITE
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1600 University Drive East
I
Audiology
Richard L Riess, Ph D.
Cardiology
Dr. J. James Rohack
Dermato logy
Dr. David D. Barton
General Surgery
Dr. Frank R. Arko
Dr. Dirk L. Boysen
Internal Medicine
Dr. Valerie Chatham
Dr. Alton Graham
Dr. David Hackethorn
Dr. Michael R. Schlabach
Health Education
Sally Scaggs, RD
Obstetrics / Gynecol ogy
Dr. James R. Meyer
Dr. William L. Rayburn
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Occupational Medicine
Dr. Walter J. Linder
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Dr. Mark R. Coffman
Orthopedic Surgery
Dr. Robert F. Hines
Otolaryngology
Dr. Michael J. Miller
Pediatrics
Dr. Dayne M. Foster
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Plastic Surgery
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Psychiatry
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Psychology
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Radiology
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Urology
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'Available November 1988
Scott and White specialists work with your doctor to provide high
quality health care for you and your family.
Call 268-3322 For Appointment
RRR2
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