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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 18, 1989)
Page 6 The Battalion Wednesday, October 18,1989 Battalion Classifieds Speech • FOR RENT EARN $500. TO $1,000 Or MORE WEEKLY STUFFING ENVE LOPES AT HOME NO EXPERIENCE FOR FREE INFORMATION SEND SELF AD DRESSED STAMPED ENVELOPE TO: NATIONAL P.O. BOX 130: WAYNE, Ml 48184. iittfn Attention Houston bound Aggies. Apartments,Townhomes,Condo- s,Homes lease or purchase. Aggies helping Aggies. Call Jim 846-5984.(Class of ’88) Houston area bound Aggies. Free service. sattfn $$ HUNDREDS WEEKLY $$ (P/T) Completing MIP Refund Policies. U.S. GOVERNMENT PROGRAM. CALL 1-713-292-9131, 24 HOUR RE CORDED MESSAGE. Please Have Pen Ready. Cotton Village Apts. Snook, TX. 1 Bdrm. $200., 2 Bdrm. $248. Rental assistance available! Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5pm.i47ttfr 'Hm. NOW HIRING DRIVERS NEEDED EARN UP TO $8.00 AN HOUR APPLY IN PERSON 1103 Anderson #103 4207 WELLBORN Rd. MANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITIES •Growing Aggie Owned Co. •Rapid Advancement •Excellent Training •Part-time to Full-time Sales or Business Background preferred Send resumes to: P.O. Box 9732, College Station, TX. 77840 16t09/27 LITTLE CAESAR S PIZZA Now accepting applications for all positions,all stores, competative wages, apply in person. 3 3tt1 Horse operation seeking partime help cleaning stalls.repairs,horse grooming - 846-8547, after 6p.m. 34t 10/24 Dependable people for Houston Post routes, early morning, $200 to $850 per month 846-291 1,846-1253. 34tl1/14 Kitchen help wanted ,dav and evening shift. N'orthgate area. 846-7275 ' 34U0/24 Market Discover Credit cards on your campus. Flexible hours. Earn as much as $10.00/hour. Only ten posi tions available.Call 1-800-950-8472, ext 3. 34tl0/26 OVERSEAS JOBS.$900-2000 mo. Summer.Yr.round, All Countries,All fields. Free info. Write 1JC, PO Bx 52-TXD4 Corona Del Mar CA, 92625. 29tl 1/2 Drivers needed at Aggie owned Pizza Roni. Full or parttime $3.35 plus 20.5y a mile commision paid daily. Call or come by 764-7664. 2314 South Texas ASTt 10/19 Like new Nissan 200 SX, many extras, low milage. 268- 5817 after 5 or weekends. 3U10/19 Retail store seeking applicant with experience in nee dlework for approximately 20-30 hours a week, flexi ble hours. Apply in person, 809 University Drive East ( behind K- Bob’s). 846-1849. 3D10/19 Drivers needed at Aggie owned Pizza Roni. Full or parttime $3.35 plus 20.5«( a mile commision paid daily. Call or come by 764-7664. 2314 South Texas Ave. 3D10/19 • SERVICES TYPING/RESEARCH You have many things beg ging for your time. Let us help you. Typing: $1. per page; $1.75 next day Access to multiple data bases $5./hour CALL IDIC, INC 693-9864 1 rwna/on 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 ALTERATIONS The Needle Ladies & Men’s clothing Off Southwest Parkway 300 Amherst 764-9603 WORD PROCESSING. Prompt, accurate, light edit ing. Sandv. 846-1565. 34t 10/26 Creative Halloween costumes. Custom made. 776- 1253. 31110/20 SERVICES OX THE DOUBLE Proles laser jet printing. Papers, i t s services. 846-3735. onal Word Processing, me. merge letters. Rush 181 tt In AHMOCmCEMENT Defensive Driving Ticket Dismissal, count. Classes each week. 361-7959. Insurance Dis- 25(10/18 • PERSONALS Apt. complex needs couple to manage. F'ree rent and salary. Training immediately .Ask for Scott or Lauree 846-3569. 31tl0/27 CASA BLANCA APARTMENTS: 2 bdrm, furn. & un- furn. units, SPECIAL PRIVATE BEDROOM DORM PLAN. 4110 College Main. 846-1413, 846-9196. ISOttfn 2B-1.5B duplex and 4-plex units. Options: fenced, FP, WD, big closets, shuttle bus, low utilities. Wyndham 846-4384. 3D11/9 HELP WANTED ADOPTION A lot of love and a future full of op portunity await a special baby. Happily married, financially se cure So. Calif. Cauc. couple eager to share warmth and love. Strictly legal and confidential. Help with birth related expenses. Willing to relocate you to Calif, for the birth. Charlie and Margo (213)390- 2141, our lawyer Joan Flam (818)986-6840. Call collect. 25tio/is MARK DOUGLASS Have an OUTSTANDING DAY!!! 34110/18 PREGNANT'? Let’s help each other. Loving couple wife's a pediatric nurse, seeks to adopt, love, and cher ish baby. Expenses paid. Legal/Confidential. Call Ed and Sally collect 301-655-2848. 25tl0/18 • TRAVEL SE* TER BREAK CRESTED NOVEMBER 22-26 * 4 NIGHT! STEAMS JANUARY 2-12 *5 OR 6 NIGH BRECKEN JANUARY 2-7 * 5 NIGHTS WINTER JANUARY 2-7 * 5 NIGHTS VAIL/BEAVER JANUARY 5-12 *5 OR 7 NIGH 8th ANNUAL COLLEGIATE WINTER SKI BREAKS TOLL FREE INFORMATION ft RESERVATIONS 1-800-321-5911 HI SERVICES PATELLAR TENDONITIS (JUMPER’SKNEE) Patients needed with patellar ten donitis (pain at base of knee cap) to participate in a research study to evaluate a new topical (rub on) anti-inflammatory gel. Previous diagnoses welcome. Eligible volunteers will be com pensated. G & S Studies, Inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 i69«fn STREPTHROAT STUDY’ Volunteers 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 corhpensated. G & S STUDIES, INC. (close to campus) 846-5933 12ttfn If you are having problems with your grades, social life, or have recenilv lost vour job due to alcohol and/or drugs, WE CAN HELP. Call Weslev, at 1-800-621- 8580, or 1-817-445-HELP. 18tl0/23 -r it i in i ’82 Honda Passport.70cc.$375. Good condition. 693- 6006. Price negotiable. 34t 10/20 1986 Yamaha. FZ750. 22,000 highway miles. Must sell. Scott 846-3569. 31U0/20 '80 RX-7 4-speed, NEW engine, new paint, $2995. John, 693-4918. 28UO/13 We Buy-Sell Good Used Furniture. Three Drawer Desk. 30x45. $25. Bargain Place. Across From Chicken Oil. 846-2429. 23t 11/01 RIVA Razz '87 Excellent Condition $450. Helmet,Bas- ket.Cover.846-6155 31111 /2 King size hardwood waterbed w/heater and 6 drawer pedestal. ( $250 neg.)846-5514. 3 It 10/19 TYPING 7 DAYS PER WEEK. WORD PROCESSOR. FAST/ACCURATE. 776-4013. 07tl2/01 Research worker desires informatoin and stories about VIETNAMESE fishing and shrimping activities in Rockport/Fulton. Inquire: P.O. Box 8740, College sta tion 77844. 30tl0/18 Experienced libraian will do library research for you. Call 272-3348. 30tll/12 Professional Word Processing In experienced Ivpist. Carla. 690-0305. 2111 (1/26 IFOR SALE i ■ i i ’85 Honda Spree, low mileage, EXCELLENT condi tion, $450. 846-7834. Ashley. 3H10/19 Typing-Word Processing. Fast, accurate, reasonable. Pick up, delivery - . 764-1 557. Patty 26(10/19 Tvping: Accurate, Prompt. Professional. 15 Years Ex perience. Symbols. Near Campus. 696-5401. 23t 11/01 NEED MONEY FOR COLLEGE/TECH SCHOOL? BEEN TOLD YOU CAN T GET GRANTS? You can, regardless of family income. Easy step by step guide shows how - you can get up to $6,000 PER YEAR in f rant money, (full 10 day money back guarantee) Send 19.95 plus $3.00 S & H to: Midwest Information Serv ices. 1511 N. West Street, Suite #1 Dept. L. Wichita, KS 67203. 3 Ittfn ^0 isssflr INY ADS. BUT REAL HEAVYWEIGHTS WHEN RESULTS REALLY COUNT. _Jgl o matter what you've go to say or sell, our Classi fieds can help you do the big job. Battalion Classified 845-0569 The Battalion Number One in Aggieland (Continued from page 1) sion was chosen by the University Concessions Committee for the same reason. He said while the free speech area is not used frequently, when it is used, it’s primarily by students and their organizations to discuss cam pus issues. Anyone wishing to ex- f iress an opinion is asked to register or a time in the scheduling office on the second floor of Rudder. “It’s a matter of scheduling the space just like the tables in the MSC hallway or around Rudder Fount ain,” he said. Scheduling might be denied if a major event already was scheduled during the same time, Bush said. “If there wasn’t a major event, or anything he would conflict with, then we would schedule the time,” he said. Anyone who wants to register for a free speech time has to fill out a registration form stating his or her name, if an organization is rep resented, the time and date of the speech and the topic. There is no time limit, but the same rules apply to speakers as to those at tables’ selling items. A per son cannot sell items or use the free speech area for more than five con secutive days during a 30-day pe riod. Amplified sound, such as a mu sical group or someone using speakers, is designated between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. He said that listing the topic on the registration form is not required. “The topic, or what it is they in tend to speak about, is purely infor mational,” he said. “If they say they want to speak about nazism, we would not deny it on that basis.” He said that if someone stood up at the fountain and started talking, University Center would not try to prohibit the speaker unless the of fice received numerous complaints “Because it’s a free speech area,all we would do was make him stopuo til he came into the scheduling offitt ] and filled out a form,” Bush said “li there was another event going on | there, we’d tell him to stop and he can schedule the spot for another day. If there was nothing else goinj on, we’d use common sense and just let him continue unless someone | complained.” He said the University wants to uphold the First Amendment. Uni versity Center has received com plaints in the past about opinions that have been expressed, even when the person has gone through the scheduling office, he said. “Our response is, ‘Sorry, but than the free speech area. If you don: like what’s being said, then walk on and don’t listen.’” Sheehy (Continued from page 1) hell with what might happen in 30 years because of what we did today.’” Aside from the attitude problem in China, Sheehy said, things are hurting from an economic stand point. Sheehy, who has gone back to China eight times since 1987 to work on United Nations projects, was in Beijing during the government crack-down on June 4. “Two days after everything broke, we tried to get to the airport. It was like an episode from the ‘Twilight Zone’. The streets were deserted.” Sheehy said the world’s percep tion of China has changed since then, and there’s a potential for more political chaos. “But there’s also potential for chaos in other areas if they continue to try to develop the country like they are agriculturally.” And it’s something Sheehy said he will continue to fight against. He said if he ever did go back to live in China, there would have to be some definite changes. “Before, I was there as an advi ser,” he said. “I don’t want to beat my head against the wall anymore. I’d want to be a part of the decision making. I’d have to have leverage into the system — monitoring the project, having influence where the money goes and how the project is set up.” Although Sheehy, a painfully modest man, said the impact from his work is small, his name is well- known around inner-Mongolia. “When I go back for visits and meet people for the first time, they have heard of my work,” he said. “At least now, going into future projects, it gives me a little more credability than if I was somebody just coming in that had no stake in the matter.” Many of Sheehy’s plans still lie in Asia and he’s far from giving up. Sheehy continues to work on pro jects that are dedicated to improving the fate of the grasslands. And it’s because of this commit ment that Sheehy came to A&M. “I decided to come here because I thought the type of planning system they’re developing has great applica tion on what needs to be done in in ner Mongolia,” he said. Sheehy said another draw to A&M is the “fact that they probably have the largest and most able range science department in the world.” The develompmental work the department has done throughout the world impressed Sheehy enough to agree to teach. “I was a little nervous at first,” he said. “It’s something I’ve never done before, but am becoming comfort able with it.” Somthing else Sheehy is slightly apprehensive about is notoriety. Sheehy’s family and work life was the subject of a television docu mentary called “The Cowboy in Mongolia,” which was shown nation ally by the Public Broadcasting Serv ice earlier this month. Nearlvl $ 190,000 was raised for the film pro duced by Oregon State University. “I appreciate the fact that the wanted to make a film about my life I there,” Sheehy said, “I hopeitwasof interest to some people. Sometime: when I read something about my ex perience, it seems to have a superfi cial gloss. The facts are accurate, but it’s romanticized. It’s like I’m read ing about someone else. “People might see the movie oi read an article and say, ‘how excit ing’ or ‘what a unique experience but what they don’t realize is that# percent of it was boring and print! live —which didn’t bother us — bui I it was a case of using an outhouse and sometimes going weeks without a bath. When my family went there we never thought it as somethingex ceptional. When we left we were I very grateful for the cross-cultural experience.” Andy Duncan, a former newspa per reporter who wrote and directed the film, met Sheehy while he was working on his doctoral thesis at Or egon State. Duncan describes Sheehy in tbt Chronicle of Higher Education Oc tober issue, “Here is this guy who looks like a typical Oregon rancher, but speaks Chinese and has this in credible experience in Mongolia I The more I found out about I the more I thought it sounded like a | National Geographic special.” (Continued from page 1) are believed to be causes of mi graines, Fife said. However, scientists have been able to study the nature of the severe headaches. Migraines begin with the constriction of brain capillaries, which reduces blood flow to the brain, Fife said. Metabolic waste be gins building up, he said. In reaction, the cranial capillaries dilate, Fife said. The brain swells and irritation develops from the buildup of wastes, he said. Hyperbaric oxygen has no effect on tension headaches, which are caused by muscle spasms, but. has been successful in relieving mi graines, Fife said. However, it does not prevent mi graines from returning weeks after treatment, Fife said. Participants are placed in cham bers with a plastic helmet on their heads, Fife said. Then they breathe in pure oxygen until their pain is gone, he said. Fife said because the procedure is experimental, participants are not charged. “At the same time, we don’t have the funds to treat everybody who comes along,” he said. Migraines, which are three times more frequent in women than men, have traditionally been treated by I two methods, Fife said. Drugs, which simply kill the pain, try to constrict the capillaries. Psychological el ements, including biofeedback, try to treat migraines from a mental as pect. Although the oxygen chambers j are expensive, Fife said he believes hyperbaric treatment is worthwhile “If you can stop a migraine with out medicine, there is an advantage I there,” Fife said. “From our evi dence, it looks like it would be the | treatment of choice.” Roussel (Continued from page 3) staff, told him to fly to Phoenix. Rea gan would be announcing Sandra Day O’Connor as the first female Su preme Court justice, and she would need Roussel’s help with the press. Roussel said that as he walked out the door, thinking what terrific news it was. Baker told him that very few people knew. “He told me that if it leaked, they’d know who did it,” he said. Keeping this in mind, Roussel re membered to keep his mouth shut when he encountered George Bush, then vice president, and Helen Thomas, United Press International White House reporter for 30 years. One of the most intense experi ences of his time with Reagan oc curred on a weekend when there wasn’t supposed to be any news, Roussel said. In October 1983, Reagan wanted to go to Augusta, Ga., to play golf. Since this wasn’t very newsworthy, the newspapers and networks sent their backup reporters, Roussel said. Roussel said he and the press corps decided to go buy souvenirs at the pro shop, where they learned two members of the president’s staff were being held hostage inside. Once that crisis subsided, Roussel received a phone call about the 250 U.S. Marines who had just been killed in Lebanon. Because it had turned into a no! so-quiet weekend, the crew headed | back to the White House. “It was 9:30 Monday morning I was standing there just talking wild I Larry (Speakes),” Roussel said. "B Plant, a CBS reporter, came ove: I and looked almost embarrassed. He said they had heard a rumor and be really hated to bother us, but did we know anything about the United States invading Grenada?” Weekends like this were times for I the “Press Secretary’s Prayer,” he said. “Oh dear Lord, help me utte: I words which are gentle and sweet- Words which tomorrow I may have | to eat.” Reserve (Continued from page 3) $18 per barrel, that would mean $6.3 billion into the Texas econ omy.” “We regard this (the recovery pro gram) a win-win situation for the state and the nation,” he said. The economic benefits to Texas are huge, Friedman said. The pro gram decreases necessity to import petroleum thus helping the nation’s balance of payments problem. Friedman said another advantage of utilizing the natural resource is political independence from foreign sources of petroleum and a reliable energy base for national defense. “Here at the University the petro leum recovery research will train multidisciplinary engineers and geo scientists for the future,” Friedman said. The program will also provide re search and data base in the public sector for small companies and inde pendents that currently do no re search yet drill and produce the ma jority of the state’s oil and gas, he said. “Small oil companies and inde pendents will take comfort in com ing to a state university, especially a land grant institution, to ask for ad vice,” Friedman said. Geophysics is used to find the high and low permeability channels and therefore plan the drilling, Friedman said. This is now possible because of “supercomputers” sue! as the cray which was just installei on campus. “Technology is providing us will an opportunity that didn’t exist be fore,” Friedman said. “The Department of Energy sail we can use an oil overcharge refune coming to the state,” Friedman saiii “The refund comes from a penal oil companies paid because itispre sumed that they overcharged us.” Friedman said the recovery pro gram will get the money back into the hands of the people and the pro gram will demostrate how scientist and engineers at the institutions car work together. / It out in The Battalion Classified