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Battalion Classifieds ON YOUR MARK, GET SET, GO-ORDER YOUR GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS Room 217. MSC 8:00AM-4:00PM MSC STUDENT FINANCE CENTER MONDAY-FRIDAY « HELP WANTED • SERVICES 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 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 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. 4gtn/o7| ESSAYS & REPORTS 16£78 to choose from—all subjects Order Catalog Today with Visa/MC or COD wmm 800-351-0222 Mil-ianlujr In Calil. f213! 477-8226 Or, rush $2.00 to: Essays & Reports 11322 Idaho Ave. #206-SN, Los Angeles. CA 90025 Custom research also available—all levels ON THE DOUBLE Professional Word Processing, laser jet printing. Papers, resume, merge letters. Rush services. 846-3755. 181tfn DEFENSIVE DRIVING! GOT A TRAFFIC TICKET? TICKET DISMISSAL! INSURANCE DISCOUNT! 693-1322. 85ttfn P/T $I5-$20hr. Direct Sales. M&D Enterprises. Rt.5 Box 168 Brvan 77803. 88t02/I I • ROOMMATE WANTED Schlotzky’s is now accepting applications for P/T eve ning Sc wk. end shifts. 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Stackable space for w/d., fenced pa tio, pool, built-in study area. 846-4384. 83t03/07 Room for rent. Unique house near campus $125./mo. $ 150./deposit. 268-3223. 85t02/02 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 I7t10/31 “STREP THROAT STUDY” Volunteers needed for streptococcal tonsillitis/pharyngitis study * Fever (100.4 or more) * Pharyngeal pain (Sore Throat) * Difficulty swallowing Rapid strep lest will be done to con firm. Volunteers will be compensated. G&S Studies, Inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 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. Luxury 2-Bdrm. 1 Wbth. W/D. On bus route. Call 846- 4384. 85t02/17 April Bloom 2-3 bdr. duplex, near shuttle. 846-2471, 776-6856. 87tfn • FOR SALE LATEX GLOVES Tired of looking for your best deal on LATEX GLOVES? Trade with an AGGIE and save time. TOP Quality LOWEST PRICES BEST SERVICE NO WAITING GUARANTEED PURE RUBBER ANY SIZE ORDERGIG 'EM CONSTANT INVENTORY FREE ORDER: 1-800-635-4405 Ask for: RIP COLLINS FATRIC NAGEL LIMITED EDITION 1’RIVI #S Girl in vellow sweater with arms over bead. IT amed to Museum quality standards S.iOtl. |ohii. 822-9253 690- 0938 evenings. HXt02 <17 1987 YAMAHA |OG MOPED 365 MILES. I.OCkA- Bl.E TRUNK SSOII. 266-8414. 88t02 07 IBM XT'S. 16 Mil/. I Year Wanann . 512 RAM. 360K Drive. 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TANYA. 696-1363. 87t02/06 ♦ PERSONALS Run with diligence towards the true Bloody Cross. 1 Peter 1:18-19. 86t02/03 Are you a SWF looking for a sincere, relaxed relationship? Do you love cuddling on cold winter eve nings? This hopelessly romantic, slightly shy, lean and fit, 22 yr. old seeks you (yes you) for conversation, hugs, prolonged bouts of eye contact or anything that makes you smile. Box 6482, College Station, TX 7/844. 87t02/01 « TRAVEL SPRING BREAK 89 LAST CHANCE! GOTTV) TODAY! \ DON'T WANT 0 BE 5TUCK IN COLL&C& | ) SOUTH PADRE ISLAND from* 149' STEAMBOAT from*213' DA YT0NA BEACH tram* 118' MUSTANG ISLAND from*136' HILTON HEAD ISLAND fram*10r DON'T WAIT TIL IT'S TOO LA TE! CALL TOLL FREE TODAY 1’800-321-5911 'Max ‘Depending on break dates and length of stay IF YOU’RE THIRSTY 4 THE BEACH IN CORPUS CHRISTI CALL THE EMBASSY SUITES 4 A BEACHIN’ TIME 1 -800-678-sleep 88t0 2 i teigp*. WADS. BUT REAL HEAVYWEIGHTS WHEN RESULTS REALLY COUNT. 'o matterwhat you've go 10 say or sell, our Classi fieds can help you do ihe big job. Battalion Classified 845-2611 Pages The Battalion Wednesday, February 1,1989 Handicapped football player proves he has what it takes BOERNE (AP) — Scrawled on the ‘f bulletin board in the Boerne High School coaches’ office is a saying: “Everyone is born equal with the chance to become unequal.” For Wayne Langbein, the oppo site is true. Langbein, who played defensive end and fullback for the Grey hounds, started life on an unequal footing, but has since surpassed many of his peers. Langbein was born deaf. On Thursday, Langbein will make the longest trip of his life when he goes to Washington, D.C. to visit Gallaudet College, a college for the deaf. It is a Division III school that does not offer athletic scholarships, but he will get some financial aid. Because of his scholastic record at Boerne, it is likely Langbein would have been awarded an academic scholarship. But it was his play on the football field that got the atten tion of the Gallaudet coaches. Two years ago, when Langbein transferred from the Texas School for the Deaf, his family was con cerned about about the difficulties Langbein would face at BHS, not only in the classroom but on the football field. “The decision was entirely Wayne’s,” said his mother, Peggy. “But I wanted him to get back in the hearing world. When he came from TSD, it was supposed to be a one se mester try. At TSD he probably would have been valedictorian and he didn’t want his grades to drop. But in the first six weeks, he had a 4.0 GPA.” Boerne head coach Jack Moss be came something of a father figure to Langbein, who said he learned many years ago that an athlete could over come deafness. “When 1 was in college, I played with a boy who was deaf and went to TSD. I roomed with him one time and learned we could commu nicate,” Moss said. Moss’s roommate at Hardin-Sirn- mons was Sammy Oates, who later earned All-American honors. Other coaches weren’t so about Langbein. “I didn’t know how wecouldct* municate,"” said defensive coordinj tor Hack Holcomb. “But it becait: obvious quickly that he reads lip well. He is a visual learner. He see t hings and concentrates so hard tie when he sees something once, 1 learns it.” Coaches were eager to give Lam. bein a try. He is 6-2, 230 poundsaix consistently runs the 40 in 4,7 see onds. Langbein was put at defensin end and fullback and seldom pointed the coaches. Last season he recorded 77 tadfe and had a team-high seven sack Langbein played fullback on shot yardage situations to block or cam the ball. He finished the seasonwiti 310 yards rushing and four toudi downs. Because lie couldn’t hearthesnai count, Langbein had to peel through the quarterback’s legs aul goon the movement of the ball Plano head football coach returns after reconsidering Henderson job PLANO (AP) — Tom Kimbrough said on Tuesday he decided to re turn to Plano from Henderson as head football coach because of the pull of his family and friends. He said he never felt comfortable with his decision to leave Plano after two decades of making the Wildcats one of the most feared teams in Texas schoolboy football. “I had been on the road for about an hour (to Henderson) when 1 took the exit and turned around and came back,” Kimbrough said at a news conference. “I went back home and started back out at about 4:30 the next morning. “I was trying to interpret (what he should do)...I don’t have a direct line (to the heavenly father).” UH’s Yeoman will quit as school fund raiser HOUSTON (AP) — Bill Yeoman, former Houston head football coach, is expected to retire from his university fund-raising position by early March. The details of Yeoman’s retire ment, however, are not yet com plete, school officials told the Hous ton Chronicle. “It’s going to happen,” a source said Monday. “It’s now just a matter of time.” Yeoman is in the third year of a four-year, $412,000 contract. After he leaves, he is expected to be com pensated according to his individual retirement options. Yeoman, who coached the Cou gars for 25 years, has served in the fund-raising post since he retired from football coaching in 1986. The Cougars were placed on three years’ probation in December by the National Collegiate Athletic Association for recruiting violations. Yeoman’s direct role in the improp rieties and his initial reluctance to cooperate in the NCAA inquiry were noted in the association’s report. The NCAA probation, the school’s third since Yeoman took over the Houston program in 1962, prohibits bowl game appearances tor the next two seasons and live television next year. The sanctions also include a reduction in Hous ton’s allotment of scholarships. The NCAA indicated the penal ties against the Cougars would have been harsher had several steps not been taken to improve the integrity of the athletic program. The changes included Yeoman’s retirement^ the hiring of Rudy Dava- los as athletic director and academic and financial reforms instituted within the athletic department. The NCAA also called for the school to suspend Yeoman from fund-raising activities involving the athletic department. Yeoman, 61, retired with one of college football’s winningest records at 160-108-8. In his last five seasons, however, Houston teams won only 22 of 56 games. The coach invented the Veer of fense, a dominant college offense in the 1970s and early ’80s. It is still used widely in high school football. In 25 years, Yeoman’s teams went to 12 bowl games, including three Cotton Bowls in Houston’s first four years in the Southwest Conference in the late 1970s. His 1984 team re turned to the Cotton Bowl. While he was at Henderson, brough said “I was trying to do a good job for them. So I attacked iff work just like I would have here “The small town atmosphere was definitely a factor in my decision leave (Plano). But I guess after 21 years here I’ve become absorbed in the larger town atmosphere.” Kimbrough said he missed Ills family which was still in Plano,!® children going to school and his wife trying to sell the house. Kimbrough said “You think about your boy who needs you and about the third week you knowil’i still going to he four or live montli! (before he saw him). It’s tough. I makes you want to spend that mud more quality time with him. “You want to look in that bof eyes and get out and throw the ball to him (six-year-old Kyle) a little til more.” Kimbrough said Plano athleticdi rector John Clark was understand ing. “John wanted the same thing for me that the people in Hendersoi wanted,” Kimbrough said. “The)' wanted me to do what was best for me. For awhile, I was doing il be cause they (the people in Hender son) were such good friends." Plano’s booster club organized! going away party for Kimbroughdie (lay before he left for Plano and about 500 persons attended, was scheduled as a two-hour stretched into four hours. “I was touched because notoneof them ever mentioned winning Kimbrough said. “That’s what surprised me. I fig ured most people thought winning was the most important thing. By they talked to me about value ethics and work habits. I believe the were sincere too. They kept coming up with tears in their eyes. Most of the women were crying and abom half of the men. Shi for TANK MFNAMARA by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds , 0K, COACH. X GOE-^ VJJ6- UJOKJ'T OF’PO^e lO\A/6f?lMO APMie^lON) £>TAMPAP?P5> Fop SOUP RgGPUlTS*. ^ 301 UU6 f?£^NT' , 5TUpgNTS>" N WHO HAVE MO iMTEMTlOK) OF GettltAO COM^UMlMG OMiVePSd-W CAN) THAT yoof? ujomt r 7^om mV mother l MICROWAVE Afghanistan: The Cultural & Social Implications of Soviet Involvement THE BLACK TULIP A short film sponsored by: The MSC Jordan Institute for International Awareness and introduced by Dr. Manochehr Dorraj, Visiting Assistant Professor, Political Science Dept. Monday, February 6,1989 Room 504 Rudder 7-8:15PM BEIJING i Minister Edi rives Wedne touches on pi Sino-Soviet s communist g valry 30 years Shevardna year of rapid lations expet spring when becomes the travel to Chir During hi vardnadze is talks with hi; Qian Qichen, mier Li Peng Shanghai fo with China' Xiaoping. Shevardna meet Comm Ziyang, East said. China a for Gorbacht ognizing a t between the t Qian, whe the first Chh hold talks it told Australi; reth Evans or bodian con Hi agenda. Soviet sup sion of Cam and hardest Com] AUSTIN i million in m Corrections l move forwar it’s the only v “I’m carry coming out ( Huntsville, s satisfied that Clements capacity for i a total of $3‘ bonds alreac used, so an implement 1 about bond I The gove flat-time sen penalties fo; cated suppo supervision < PI I 6:01 SI En I