Wednesday, January 25,1989 The Battalion Page 5 M Police isolate crime-infested area f: > ■ v iSS Vacant Houston apartments closed to drug dealers, prostitutes | Fall 86 I Falls? 1 HOUSTON (AP) — Houston po- |ce say they will seal off an area of ostly abandoned apartments to anyone who doesn’t pay rent to live there in an attempt to curtail wide spread drug dealing and prostitu- Km. 1 Residents of the surrounding area have complained about the crime that has spread into the southwest Houston area known as “Death Val- An elderly woman in the area was lied last September by a teen-ager ho was attempting to finance a va Nolan 3 Fall 88 I Falls? drug buy, police said. Police say the crackdown Friday will focus on about 3,000 apartment units that were considered fashiona ble during Houston early boom years and now are mostly aban doned and used almost exclusively by prostitutes and drug dealers. Rats run freely through the row after row of buildings. Many win dows are broken or boarded up. Guard dogs man the fences of the few properties whose owners are committed to keeping the drugs out. “We have dealers who are squat ters in vacant apartments, who come here and sell dope for the day,” Houston Police Capt. Bill Edison said. “And we have lots of consumer trade. “If you just drive down the street in the nighttime, people will ap proach you to try to sell you drugs. You could run over them,” Edison said. “You can’t get past them with out getting stopped at night.” Civic group members plan to go into the area Saturday after it is closed off to clear out trash and dis pose of the hundreds of syringes and needles littering the ground. “The intent of this operation is not necessarily to make arrests,” Edi son said. “If there’s crime going on, we will make arrests. But the idea is to give this neighborhood a chance — so we can put it back together.” Police compare their plans for Fri day with last year’s effort to discour age teen-age cruising on popular lower Westheimer. Highway sniper remains free after police search in El Paso Construction on campus closes several streets a Nolan ■ EL PASO (AP) — Police used a lelicopter Monday night to search lor a sniper who shot at several cars |nan Interstate 10 access road. No one was hurt in the shootings, ad police didn’t find the sniper, El iso police Sgt. Don Georgens said. Police began the search after two lotorists said their cars were struck y bullets Monday evening as they rove on a westbound access road on |ie west side of town. Another iver had reported being shot at while driving in the same area Sun day, Georgens said. Police enlisted the aid of a Border Patrol helicopter with a spotlight, and six El Paso police officers and a canine unit searched a brushy area, but the two-hour search ended at 8:30 p.m. Monday without anyone being found. Georgens said one of the cars might have been struck by a rock, but police believe damage to the other two vehicles was caused by bul lets. stealing |*. •rtunities ’ police trym plainclothe ’ith student s on topo! :e. > his depart ie said, is rs. ice Depart- tified polia ) patrol offi- md supen :ers were ngjobs. Scrambled Eggs to discuss t 7:30 p.m. p.m. at St. dder. )uad. i.m. in 212 .m. in 164 3 Rudder, onal meet- Audder. show and a planning jg Preven- Drug Pre meeting at are due in ; are avail- grams Of- vise, Stu- ough Feb. IF VOU THINK TlllS IS H£LL, WAIT TIL YOU See THS RetrTKOOMt). Several streets on the Texas A&M campus are closed or rerouted be cause of continuing construction on campus. The parking garage on the north side of campus is accessible by Ire land Street from University Drive. Ireland Street is one-way south bound from University to the park ing garage and one-way northbound from Ross Street to the garage. Asbury Street is now one-way from Ross to University. A traffic signal is planned for the corner of Asbury and University by mid-Feb ruary. Ireland to Ross remains open. The eastbound side of Joe Routt Boulevard is closed for construction on the power sub-station for the new south-side residence halls. Construction on the sub-station, which is in the Military Sciences Building’s parking lot, will remain as is until March. All parking spaces in the North- side garage have been sold. Approx imately 250 students have not picked up their permits. Those spaces will be reallotted for sale if their owners do not contact the parking adminis tration department. Those wishing to pick up parking permits and appeal citations should go to the garage’s northwest corner on the first floor. Those sections of the parking administration have been moved there. As of Feb. 1, billing for parking ci tations will be added to fee statements. Students who do not own a park ing space can park in the garage for 50 cents per hour or four dollars a day. CIA Waldo (Continued from page 1) select the highest qualified students for its co-op program, because only they can pass the agency’s stringent security clearance requirements. “What we look for is the best and the brightest student we can find,” she said. “We’re not looking for any particular (academic) discipline. We’re looking for bright people who are of high moral character and who have an interest in working in for eign affairs. From that, it then de pends on what the qualifications of the individual are.” Sasso said requirements for the top-level security clearance are rigid, but that it’s necessary because of the agency’s importance to national se curity. The agency’s research into a stu dent’s past is, often, more extensive than the student might expect. by Kevin Thomas rOUR LASER BEAM DOESN'T] SEEM TO BE WORKING, DR. GLADSTONE.' IT APPEARS TO BE A PROBLEM WITH THE LIGHT FREQUENCY/ ft NEED A "CRYSTAL OSCILLATOR" THAT possesses adequate: ^ELECTRONIC PROPERTIES ft CRYSTAL/?) “A lot of people don’t want to go through that kind of rigid process of obtaining a security clearance,” she said. “We not only want to see your academic standing, but also your personal standing, your financial sit uation, your social behavior, your sexual behavior, drug usage. We ei ther go back to age 18 or the last 15 years, depending on what your age Yates said the agency’s strict re quirements for a security clearance are necessary because the CIA doesn’t want to hire anyone with ske letons in their closets that could be used as blackmail if discovered. Yates said the general feedback he receives from the students he has worked with has been positive be cause of the type of work the CIA as signs students. “The feedback of the students that I have personally talked to has been excellent,” he said. “They really like it. The CIA has a big co op program, and they’re utilizing the co-op not only for hiring co-ops, but also to train them and to hire them. It’s a very intriguing type of work, very stimulating.” Yates said students who wish to apply with the CIA through the co op program need to do so at least six months in advance. He also said the agency prefers students to start co opping as early as possible, and to take a variety of courses. “They want to encourage students to start co-opping as early as their sophomore year,” he said. “They en courage them to take more foreign languages and courses that have to do with international studies.” Yates said the CIA looks at the co op program as a long-term invest ment because they want to hire the student who already has been trained and who already has worked for them. ; Unique in w the film :reek party Mil present t Inn pent- m. in 203 mediocrity the spring lilton Sun- 6 MSC. .m. in 125 ^evention Center for r for Drug I McDonald, | nly publish ; j hat's Up is | ms are rur run. If y oil jl ★★★★★★★★★★★ Declare Your Independence From High Cost Banking With Commerce National Bank’s. . . FREEDOM $100 MINIMUM BALANCE If you are tired of paying high monthly service charges on your personal checking account, try the Freedom Checking Account from Commerce National. We offer free checking for maintaining only a $100.00 monthly minimum balance. You’ll receive unlimited free check writing and have all your cancelled checks returned at no additional charge. So now is the time to become independent and take advantage of a good deal. We call it the Freedom Checking Account.. .You’ll call it free! Available only at Commerce National Bank. Member FDIC i8sf Commerce National Bank 2405 Texas Ave. S. / College Station 693-6930 s Ou>r\ Hall 1)03 pi fo iu !We Deliveri Lunch For i Lunch For 11-4 Tax 405 W. University 846-0379 ! Two $4" Small 12” 1 Topping 2 Cokes Four 11-4 $8" + Tax X-Tra Large 1 Topping 4 Cokes Large 16” | 2 Large 16” f Small 12” j 1 Topping! 1 Topping j 2Toppings] Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m.-12a.m. Sat.-Sun. 1 p.m.-12a.m. D MSC Political Forum POLITICAL FORUM WANTS VOU... TO JOIN US! FIRST GENERAL COMMITTEE MEETING Wednesday. January 25th 212 MSC 7:00 P.M. ftr $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 l]°° IRRITABLE BOWEL SYNDROME STUDY $100 Wanted: Symptomatic patients with physician diagnosed $100 finn ,rrital:)le Bowel Syndrome to participate in a short study. $100 «« $100 incentive for those chosen to participate. 00 $100 K K $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 iiSS ASTHMA STUDY $200 Individuals who have regular asthma to participate in $200 $200 an asthma study. $200 incentive for those chosen to $200 *200 Participate. goo $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $]oo SORE THROAT/STREP THROAT STUDY $100 For individuals 12 years and older with sore throat willing $100 t° participate in a study to treat strep throat. Diagnosed $100 strep throat welcome. $100 incentive for those chosen to $100 participate. $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 PAIN STUDY Do you take at least one over-the-counter pain reliever per month for any reason? If so, you may be eligable to participate in an at-home analgesic study. Monetary incentive for those cho sen to participate. $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 ACUTE BRONCHITIS/PNEUMONIA | 100 Do you have any of the following? 1. Productive $100 couQ 11 2 - Fever 3. Rattle in chest. Call for information $100 about a three week antibiotic reseach study with close MD $100 supervision. $100 incentive for those who qualify. $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 CALL PAULL RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL 776-0400