\ 7 Battalion Classifieds • HELP WANTED IMMEDIATE PART-TIME OPPORTUNITIES ENGINEER TRAINING *20,000 Package. s 2,000 Starting Bonus. The 420th Engineers, an Army Reserve unit in the College Station Texas area, has a limited number of openings for Combat Engineer training. If you qualify and complete training in this specialty, you get a $2,000 bonus, "foull also earn a good part-time income for serving usually one weekend a month plus two weeks Annual Training. Tbur total part- time income during a standard enlistment will be over $13,000. If higher education is your goal, you may receive Montgomery GI Bill money for college or approved "Vb/Tech training—up to $5,040. If youU like a big $2,000 bonus, $13,000 in salary, and up to $5,040 for educational expenses, the Army Reserve offers you a $20,000 package you probably won’t find anywhere else for a part-time job. Openings are limited, so call right now: U.S. Army Recruiting Station Post Oak Mall, 1500 Harvey Road College Station, Texas 77840-3751 (409)764-0418 BE ALL YOU CAN BE." ARMY RESERVE COUNSELOR’S BOY’S CAMP WESTERN MASSACHUSETTS. Good Salary, room/board, travel allowance and beautiful modern facilities. Must love kids and have skills in one of these activities; arts & crafts, nature, fencing, overnight hiking, ropes archery, oil water or land sports. Call (914)381 -5983 or write Camp Winadu, 5 Glenn Lane, Mamaro- neck, N.Y. 10543. 12 5ttfn Summer Work For Rent 12 TAMU Students with ranch or construction experience wanted for work. May 15-June 14 in exchange for apt. for Summer. Call 846-1413 or come by 4110 College Main Apt 42. Bryan, TX to apply. 128104/21 National Summer Work Program for College Students. Earn $400. + per week. College Credit. All Majors. Full-timework only. Call before 6:00pm 260-9111. FATBURGER HELP WANTED. CASHIERS, DRIVERS, & COOKS PART-TIME 846-4234. 130t04/13 PART-TIME PROGRAMMER MUST KNOW QUICK BASIC. FLEXIBLE HOURS 693-9378. 13U04/18 Gumby’s Pizza now hiring delivery drivers. Flexible hours Sc good wages- $5-8/hr. Take all your money home the day you earn it. 764-8629 or stop by (Next to Thomas Sweet). 13U04/18 Looking for employment for the summer? What better place to find it than on Galveston Island. Gaido's is looking for a summer waitstaff either for our main res taurant or at our smaller one, Casey’s. Training is pro vided. If you’re interested, come spend the weekend and apply in person either April 15th or 16th between 2 and 4 p.m. If that’s a problem, drop us a line- P.O. Box 3130. Galveston, TX. 77552, Attn; Margaret. See ya’ll soon! 131104/19 Maintenance work Manor East Mall. 9-15 hrs. per week. Call Allison 696-1444. 128t04/14 MAKE BIG $$$$. Quick, easy, legal. Send for informa tion. P.O. Box 8004 College Station, TX. 77844. 128t04/13 Dependable lady wanted 2 hrs., 3 nights a week to do phone surveys. 846-8841. 130t04/14 « MISCELLANEOUS VISA OR MASTERCARD! Even if bankrupt or bad credit! We Guarantee you a card or double your money back. Call (805)682-7555 EXT. M-1054. • NOTICE Enter now for the College Station Biathlon VII 1000 yard swim and a 10k run in the adjacent neighborhood. Saturday, April 22,1989 For more information Call Parks & Recreation at 764-3773. 129ttfn City of College Station Parks & Recreation in Co operation w/ Ellis & Asso ciates announces The Na tional Pool & WaterPark Lifeguard Training course on April 14th, 15th, and 16th. For more information Call Thomas Park Pool at 764-3721. 1 ^ntnA/i ri • PERSONALS * FOR SALE '84 Mitsubishi Station- ES package, 5 spd, excellent condition, must see, owner, $5,500 260-4497. 131104/18 ‘86 Suzuki GS 550 ES Ninja- Style Bike. 6000 miles. Perfect condition. $2000. 696-2283. 13H04/18 Motorcycle 1982 Yamaha Exciter $250. Good condi tion. Best offer. 260-5594. 13H04/18 MOPED FOR SALE: RED 1987 Yamaha Razz, Like New. 693-6491. 13U04/18 Engines: All foreign, Japanese and European, up to 24,000 mile warranty; shipped anywhere. Also rebuild kits with instructions for do-it yourself. Techna-Car 214-484-1258. 128ttfn '83 KAWASAKI GPZ-305. WHITE. GOOD CONDI TION. RUNS GREAT. $850. 260-6348. 125t04/12 PUREST FORM OF TRANSPORTATION Black Ya maha 180z w/windshield 8c basket. Driven by little lady from Pasadena. $1,100. neg. 764-9352. 129t04/13 FOR SALE:Hyundai Super-16 Turbo;8-10 MHZ, 30 MG, Hard Drive, Modem, Panasonic Printer, & Software. $1,150. 846-0948. 129i04/13 White VW Cabriolet, 1986. Bolique Interior. Immacu late Condition. No Body Damage. $10,500. 696-7388 or (214)224-4423. 129t()4/l-) CRAGAR S/S RIMS, 14x6, HARDLY USED. $180. 696-1349. 129t04/13 Senior Boots $200., Sabre $285., Military Clothing. 822-7508. 129t04/14 Kawasaki Ninja 600 ‘86. Excellent Condition. Low Miles. $2,200. Brad 764-6775. 129t04/12 SENIOR BOOTS. 8!4i-9 (B-C) SUPERB SHINE. $300. CALL 774-0396. 126t04/l 2 HP41CV WITH ADVANTAGE PACK. $110. CALL 774-0396. 126t04/12 A Caring Adoption- A loving, happily, married profes sional couple deeply wishes to adopt white newborn. We promise every advantage for your baby. Let us help you through this diffi cult time. Legal & confidential. Expenses paid. Call Phyllis & Michael collect so we can talk 212-473-7251. 131tt1n • FOR SALE REPOSSESSED VA & HUD HOMES available from government from $1. without credit check. You repair. Also tax delinquent foreclosures CALL (805)682-7555 EXT.H-1445 for repo list your area. ii9ttfn SEIZED CARS, trucks, boats, 4wheelers, motorhomes, by FBI, IRS, DEA. Available your area now. Call (805)682-7555 Ext. C-1201. 119ttfn Arcade Pinball Machine, Pioneer Home Stereo System, Boze Speakers, Selmer Omaga Tenor Saxophone, Pro fessional Mode. 764-7810. 130t04/17 April golf Sc tennis specials. Golf clubs re-gripped, $1.95 per club. Raquets strung with tournament nylon string $8. Tri-State Sporting Goods 846-1947i30t04/17 SCHWINN TRAVELER 10-spced. EXCELLENT CONDITION Training/School Use. $195. 696-6641. 129t04/14 • LOST AND FOUND LOST: Men’s gold diamond nugget ring, sentimental value. LARGE REWARD. Michaef764-6746.128t04/13 Found: (4 mo.) black puppy. (Loving and friendly, me dium sized.) Needs a good home. 696-2253 after 8:00pm. 130t04/12 • FOR RENT Riding Horses for rent. Sandy Point Rd. (By Lulac Hall) Call Rudy: 779-7052 or pager# 775-1462 anytime. 79101/20 Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx. 1 Bdrm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $240 Rental assistance available! Cali 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5pm. 4( . 1976 BMW 530i Maroon. 4 speed well maintained. New engine and paint in 1984. $4,995. 713-782-4106. 128t04/13 3bdrm./2bth. mobile home, country setting. 2 acres, lots of trees, available April 1st. $385./mo. + $200. de posit. 693-2128. 120t04/03 • NOTICE 1986 Yamaha Maxim-X, Heingeick Leathers, $2,000. F-l ARAL Call Lou 822-4839. 129t04/17 They are here! Graduation Announcement pick-up has been moved to Student Programs Room 216 9am-8pm Extra Announcements on sale Tuesday April 11 Sam Student Finance Center Rm 217 First Come-First Serve 128104/12 o • ° APARTMENT: 1 bedroom loft, beautiful interior, rea sonable rent! 846-2183. 131104/25 Vasser Court 4-plexes 2 bdrm./lV^b HollyWood-Style, on shuttle bus route, w/d, luxury apts. 846-4384. 129t05/05 SUMMER: FURNISH ED 2-BED 1-BATH DUPLEX FENCED YARD NEAR CAMPUS. $300./Month. CALL EVENINGS 822-2047. 129t04/14 2 BDRM, large rooms, large closets, pool, laundry room. 505 #2 Nagle, Northgate. 846-4206. 127t04/28 Valley View Apartments in Pecan Ridge, 2 bdrm., l l A> bth, rents start at $310./mo. Options include: fenced yard, w/d conn., fireplace. 846-4384. 118t05/04 CreekWood Apts, efficiency w/unique floorplan, study desk, private porch, w/d conn. Rents start at $245./mo. 846-4384. 118t05/04 SUMMER RATE 2 BR, $285.-2 BDRM, LARGE ROOMS, LARGE CLOSE FS, POOL, LAUNDRY ROOM. 505 #2 NAGLE, NORTHGATE. 846-4206. 127t04/28 3 bdrm/2 bth 4-plex with w/d, on shuttle bus roui", starting at $400./mo. Summer rates available. 764-0704 or 696-4384. 116tifn WoodStock Condo for rent (Summer) 2/Bdrm. one Sc W bath w/d unfurnished or.furnished rent negotiable 693-7802. 130t04/17 April Bloom 2-3 bdr. duplex, near ?>huitle. 846-2471. 776-6856. 87tfn A 2bdrm/lVt2 bath luxury 4-plex, w/d, near TAMU. $325./mo. 693-0551, 774-7970. 126ttfn | SERVICES 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 7611/31 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 17110/31 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) ESSAYS & REPORTS 16,278 to choose from—all subjects Order Catalog Today with Visa/MC or COD iKCXCX 800-351-0222 in Calif (213) 477-8226 Or, rush $2.00 to: Essays & Reports 11322 Idaho Ave. /206-SN, Los Angeles, CA 90025 Custom research also available—all levels DON'T PAY RETAIL FOR YOUR NEXT NEW CAR. RJM & ASSOCIATES WILL PROCURE YOUR NEW VEHICLE FOR COST PLUS A PERCENT AGE. CALL 696-0121 FOR DETAILS. > • | , 128tttn GMAT- Need help preparing for MBA? Call us, we have the right stuff. Kaplan 696-PREP 131t04/18 DEFENSIVE DRIVING! GO V A f RAKFIC T ICKET? TICKET DISMISSAL! INSURANCE DISCOUNT! 693-1322. 85ttfr. WORD PROCESSING, RESUMES, AND GRAPHICS. LASER PRINTER. PERFECT" PRINT 822-1430. 841.05/03 WORD PROCESSING/GRAPHICS. Close to campus. Reasonable rates. Laura 693-9248. 128t04/17 GRE-Trying for grad school? Come in and take our free diagnostic. Discounts available. Call Kaplan 696- PREP. 128t04/18 Cal’s Body Shop-Wc do it right the first time! 823- 2610. 32tlfn TYPING- WORD PROCESSING Personal Attention- Excellent Service- Professional Results- 764-2931. i I Q6t0r>/U3 Experienced librarian will do library research for you. Call 272-3348. 128t05/31 Typing, Resumes, T heses, Dissertations, Laser Print ing-Call Notes-n-Quotes for competitive rates 846- 2255. 124t04/14 ON THE DOUBLE Professional Word Processing, laser jet printing. Papers, resume, merge letters. Rush services. 846-3755. 181tfn Typing: Accurate, 95wpm, reliable. Word Processor 7 days a week. 770-4013. 119ttfn C&C Crawfish Farm Locally a raised /nK crawfish V\ Sm Call & Order Now! 1 Six 589-3065 The Battalion 845-2611 Page 6 The Battalion Wednesday, April 12,1989 Safety ed program offers 1-hour credit in drug prevention By Denise Thompson STAFF WRITER In addition to various campus programs aimed at preventing alco hol and drug abuse, the industrial vocation and technical education de partment offers a one-credit class for students interested in learning more. Safety Education 489, Preventing Alcohol and Drug Abuse, is a result of a six-year program with the Texas Commission on Alcohol and Drug Abuse, Dr. Maurice Dennis, coordi nator of the safety education pro gram at Texas A&M said. “We’ve been working with the TCADA for about six years to pre vent alcohol abuse with A&M stu dents,” he said. “And this is just one more direction we’ve gone to try and reach that goal.” Because vast amounts of informa tion are available on alcohol and drug abuse prevention, the safety education program decided to teach it on a more formal basis in Spring 1986. “We were going to sororities and dorms,” he said, “trying to teach them everything about the subject in a 30-minute time period. We devel oped the class so we’d have 15 weeks to really inform the students.” Dennis said the 400 number on the course is misleading because 489 is the number given to any class when it is formed. “Before we can get a regular num ber for the class, we have to keepitat 489 until we develop the curriculum and determine whether we ll have the students necessary to fill a regu lar class,” he said. “So the class has got a 400 number on it, but the cur riculum is no more difficult than a 200-level course.” The course explores the physio logical and psychological effects of alcohol and other drugs on humans, means of preventing problems, rec ognition of problems and sources of assistance. The course outline is broken into 10 objectives and includes legal con siderations,, symptoms and coping with alcohol and drug-related situa tions. Because the course is an elective, students from all majors can register for the course. However, enrollment is limited to promote student inter action, he said. Dennis will teach the class in the fall. For more information call Den nis at 845-3019. Killings (Continued from page 1) death, said Oran Neck, agent in charge for U.S. Customs in Brownsville. The case is being investigated by Customs, the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Mexican federal authorities and lo cal law enforcement agencies on both sides of the border. It is the second drug-related mass killing discovered near the border in less than two weeks. Mexican authorities found the bodies of three women and six men March 29 on an abandoned ranch near Agua Prieta, Sonora, just across the border from Douglas, Ariz. Five were at the bottom of a well, and four, covered with lime to de compose them, were in an earthen septic tank. All nine had been tor tured, mutilated and bound, officials said. On April 1, the bodies of three more men killed in similar fashion were fished from the well. All were believed to he Mexican nationals. I nvestigators said possible motives for the Agua Prieta slayings range from revenge for lost narcotics or drug money to discouraging infor mants to fighting between drug- smuggling factions. At a Tucson news conference on Thursday, Pima County Sheriff Clarence Dupnik termed as “rea sonable speculation” the likelihood that the Agua Prieta deaths were linked to those of five Hispanics.twi from Arizona and three from So nora, found March 27 bound and stabbed in a Tucson shed. Law officers on both sides of the border had been stumped by theKil roy case, with no clues despite an in tensive search, the questioning of nearly 10.Q,people and a $15,000 re ward. Kilroy’s disappearance also was re-enacted for a segment on Fox Television’s America’s Most Wanted program. Wine (Continued from page 1) Research revealed that certain molecules in red grape skins that are released during a processing tech nique affect the amount of quercetin in the wine, Leighton said. After discovering the mutagen, Leighton said, he and other scientists decided more should be learned about it before publicizing the find ing. “It was found that it would com pletely block the action of a whole se ries of carcinogens,” he said, describ ing the substance as having “a Jekyll and Hyde personality.” Cancer cells develop from the “initiation” phase to the “promotion” phase, in which they proliferate over time into a cancerous mass. Querce tin has been found to act on cells in the promotion stage, Leighton said. It also has been determined that the onion family of vegetables con tains high rates of quercetin, a spe cific discovery compared to previous general findings that lots of fruits and vegetables in the diet are linked to lower cancer rates, Leighton said. Furthermore, recently published reports indicate that Chinese people who have eaten large amounts of on ions and garlic have high levels of quercetin and low rates of stomach cancer, according to Leighton. “We have shown that the bacteria in our gut can carry out these molec ular activities,” thus activating anti carcinogens, he said. But Leighton said only if the mol ecules in the gut process the sugar Syphilis (Continued from page 1) except for themselves,” said Dr. Howard Minkoff, a physician at Brooklyn’s Health Science Center. In Dallas County, the number of syphilis cases increased 22 percent in the last three months of 1988 and nearly tripled in the first two months of 1989, said Don Hutcheson, pro gram manager of the disease-inter vention staff of the county’s Health Department. “Since 1982, we had been in steady decline,” Hutcheson said. “E- ven in the first two or three quarters of 1988, it was going down. Then all of a sudden in the last quarter of 1988, we started seeing an increase in syphilis like a lot of places in the United States.” off of the quercetin are the anticarci nogens seen. Research indicates such reactions are occurring in humans, he added. Leighton declined to say whether drinking large quantities of red wine would guard against cancer. “Hav ing a large helping of onion rings might he more beneficial than drink ing a lot of red wine,” he said. lie did say that quercetin’s power as an anticarcinogen outweighs any possible health risks of the mutagen. David Jacobson-K ram, an asso ciate professor of oncology at Johns Hopkins University and director of the Center of Toxicology at Micro biological Associates Inc., said Leigh ton’s study indicates quercetin's and- carcinogenic activity apparently is unrelated to the fact that it is a muta- g en " “So what you have is this chemical is really having a dual effect,” he said. Jacobson-Kram said mutagenic in gredients have been found in a vari ety of alcoholic beverages. “ The real issue is these things are found in very small quantities compared to ethanol,” he said. There currently is debate over whether ethanol, the substance that makes a person intoxicated from drinking alcohol, is a carcinogen, according to Jacobsen-Kram. He also said there is no indication people should drink an abundance of red wine in hopes of fighting off cancer. Ingram said the American Cancer Society encourages moderation in al cohol consumption. House OKs bill against taking officer’s weapon AUSTIN (AP) — Prompted in part by incidents of law enforce ment officers being killed with their own guns, the Texas House tentatively approved a bill Tues day that would make it a felony to take or attempt to take a peace of ficer’s weapon. Concern was expressed about police brutality during debate on the measure, but Rep. Bill Black wood said he planned for an amendment before final House passage that would address such concerns. The Battali SP Wednesdi Agi A&M By Tom Keh SPORTS WRI It was the sj ferentcast. The top-ra now 40-1, den ern in a no header Tues cruised to a pa A&M’s inci best in South tory. TSU fell The Aggie; leads in the games and n< route to 11 -1 a Coach Mark his starters foi he began to sul fourth inning didn’t play an ond game. “Our Tuesd give our pith said. So there was deavor. But it; tended batting T-sl Intramurals: fiercely compel ex-hign school: prowess? Intramurals a chance to pan them a break fr However, he one of the large the country, th< warped this pui Last Monday intramural garr softball team w; playoffs. As I sl about not playii realized that ini competitive tha at A&M. It is not unco team to hold tet rr T] it et is *This ofl include any tim