Page 8 The Battalion Friday, October 27,1985 Battalion Classifieds m FOR RENT • SERVICES $$ HUNDREDS WEEKLY $$ (P/T) Completing MIP Refund Policies. U.S. GOVERNMENT PROGRAM. CALL 1-713-292-9131, 24 HOUR RE CORDED MESSAGE. Please Have Pen Ready. 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 ESSAYS & REPORTS J(x278 to choose from—all subjects J Order Catalog Today with Visa/MC or COD 800-351-0222 ■UldASLlidF In Calif. f213i 477-8226 •SUPERCUTS• Supercuts is now hir- 1 ing career minded re- 1 ceptionists and styl- 1 ists. < Apply in person at 1519 S. Texas Ave. (Culpepper Plaza) Or, rush $2.00 to: Essays & Reports 11322 Idaho Ave. #2D6-SN, Los Angeles. CA 50025 Custom research also available-all levels Cotton Village Apts. Snook, TX. 1 Bdrm. $200., 2 Bdrm. $248. Rental assistance available! Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5pm.147m ON THE DOUBLE Professional word processing laser jet printing. Papers, resumes, merge letters. Rush services 846-3755 36tn/2 TWO BEDROOM HOUSE C A & H, MITCHELL $325. TWO BEDROOM API. FURNISHED,415 C.MAIN $250. 822-4619 779-3700 36U0/27 2B-1.5B duplex and 4-piex units. Options: fenced, FP, WD, big closets, shuttle bus, low utilities. Wyndham 846-4384. 31111/9 Apt. complex needs couple to manage. Free rent and salary. Training immediately .Ask for Scott or Lauree 846-3569. 3ltlO/27 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. 31 ttfn PRIVATE VOCAL INSTRUCTIONS now abailable. Contact Rena at 823-4345. 38t 10/31 TYPING 7 DAYS PER WEEK. WORD PROCESSOR. FAST/ACCURATE. 776-4013. 07tl2/01 TYPING: Fast, Accurate, Guaranteed. Word proc esser. Janie 776-0595. 36tll/16 Typing: Accurate. Prompt. Professional. 15 Years Ex perience. Symbols. Near Campus. 696-5401. 23tl 1/01 LSAT This is the Last Chance for your Best Chance for the Dec. 2 LSAT Classes Start Oct. 29 Call Today 696-PREP STANLEY H. KAPLAN At Take Kaplan Or Take Your Chances Inmates continue rampage on Camp Hill state prison Police struggle to regain control • HELPWANTE0 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 16109/27 EARN $500.-$1000. Weekly. Simply stuffing envelopes. For more information send self adressed stamped envelope to: MoneyMaker PC Box 8851, College Station, TX. 77844. OVERSEAS JOBS.$900-2000 mo. Summer,Yr.round, All Countries,All fields. Free info. Write IJC, PO Bx 52-TXD4 Corona Del Mar CA, 92625. 29tl1/2 hour. Flexible schedule. Phone 268-8268. Registered Nurse, Medicare Experience, $1500 Hiring Bonus. Call 776-1768 Fulltime position. 39tl 1/8 PROFESSORS/INSTRUCTORS/GRADUATE STU- DENTS with backgrounds in English, language arts.journalism.communication.or other experience in writing, earn $60-72/day reading composition exams. Apply by Oct. 31 to attend Nov. I (1:00-4:00p.m.)qua- lifiying round. Call 764-9765, Writing Evaluation Sys tems, Inc. 39tI0/31 The Houston Chronicle needs male on-campus resi dents to deliver newspapers to dorms. $105/wk, deliver one week; off one week. Calljuiian 693-2323. 38tl0/27 Dependable people for Houston Post routes, earls' morning, $200 to $850 pei month 846-2911,846-1253. 34t 11/14 • SERVICES R-R-R-Ring ‘Hi! I’m Jill Mutschler-Fonte- not, your AT&T Student Campus Manger here at Texas A&M . I would like to tell you how AT&T can help lower your long distance bills. I can also answer any of your long distance question. The best time to reach me is 11:30 to 1:30 (m-f), but you can call anytime. 696-0276 38ttfn 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 76M/31 MIGRAINE HEADACHE STUDY Patients needed with migraine headaches to participate in study with new investigational medication. Must have previous diagnosis of migraines. Eligible patients will be compensated. G & S Studies, Inc. 846-5933 39t11/9 ALLERGY STUDIES DO YOU HAVE??? ALLERGIC RHINITIS Patients needed with runny nose,nasal congestion, sneezing, itchy nose, itchy and watery eyes to participate in a 7 day research study evaluating an over the counter antihistimine. NO BLOOD DRAWN Eliglible volunteers will be compensated G & S Studies, Inc. 846-5933 (CLOSE TO CAMPUS) WORD PROCESSING — Reasonable rates ■ pers, resumes, rush services 764-2931. thesis pa- 37112/6 Need Scholarship for next year? Start the search now. For more information send SASE to free Money Kind ers P.O Box 5163 Bryan ,TX 77805. 39tl I/I xpc all 2 Call 272-3348. NISSAN 1986 1/2 HARDBODY PICKUP, dark blue, A/C, cassette, cloth, carpet, bed-liner,$4800. 696-1335. 39t I 1/2 YAM/.HA RIVA 150.GOOD CONDITION. $600 NEGOTIABLE, Scott 696-1417. LEAVE MESS7WHE27 Red VW Jetta GLI 86’ Great condition $7500; OBO, 696-8509. 38t 10/38 For Sale one ladies yellow gold bridal set. Set consisting of: 1 brilliant cut- .47k. 7 baguettes- .23k. Ring is like new. Appraised at $2495.00. Will sell for $1350.00 ne- goitable. (409)825-8132. 38t 11/7 PIANO FOR SALE Wanted: Responsible party to as sume small monthly payments on piano. See locally. Call credit manager 1-800-447-4266. 38tl 1/2 YAMAHA RIVA 180,GOOD CONDITION. $600 NEGOTIABLE, Scott 696-1417. LEAVE MESSAGE. 37t 10/27 RIVA Razz ’87 Excellent Condition $450. Helmet,Bas ket,Cover.846-6155 3D11/2 We Buy-Sell Good Used Furniture. Three Drawer Desk. 30x45, $25. Bargain Place. Across From Chicken Oil. 846-2429. 23t 11/01 Buy • Sell - Lessons Repairs Rentals Trade Amps Bass Banjo Guitar.. Fiddle.... Mandolin.... Equipment Come See Us At Our NEW LOCATION! 109 Walton Dr.,College Station 409-693-9698 Fender ■ Gibson • Washburn • Alvarez Soundtech ■ DOD • Epiphone ■ Peavy Marin • Heritage • Arion • KMD Diamond bumble bee pin Lost during U of H game Somewhere Between MSC and Kyle Field el evators 845-9600 ADOPTION: Childless So. Cal. couple, band is a lawyer, wife a librarian, seeks Caucasian infant to adopt. Legally allowed ex penses paid. Will relocate you to So. Cai. to give birth if you wish . Call collect Richard and Janet 1 (818) 988-6634; attorney Joan Flam 1 (818) 986-6840, a 24 hour number. 28110/26 CALLIE, (sp?) Please call Scott, from Tenuta show. I don’t bite either! 823 -1431. 38t 10/27 Battalion Classifieds Call 845-0569 Battalion Classified 845-2611 Vwvwwvwwwwwv- CAMP HILL (AP) — Inmates at a state prison went on a rampage for a second night Thursday, taking five people hostage and setting fires a day after 47 people were injured in rioting by 1,200 prisoners, authorities said. State police and fire fighters were struggling to re gain control of the prison at Camp Hill as thick smoke billowed over the complex. The incident started shortly after 7 p.m. John Palakovich, assistant to the prison superinten dent, said there were numerous injuries, but he did not know how many. Local radio stations reported at least 13 people being taken to hospital for treatment. Palakovich said five people had been taken hostage, but he could not say whether they were guards or sup port staff. Inmates milled around the prison yard as flames leaped from at least two buildings and a police heli copter hovered overhead. Earlier, prison authorities said inmates had been locked in their cells and a state of emergency was in ef fect following Wednesday’s rampage, during which four huildino-s wer^ torched. Officials had no immedi ate explanation of how the new violence erupted. Palakovich said state police fired shots in the prison and that fires were burning in the E, F, and H blocks, modular units 1 through 4, and the education building The fires were reported more intense than those set during Wednesday’s outbreak. A television view showed a police officer on top ofa fire truck firing shots up and over the prison. “There’s fire trucks and tons of police,” Scott Hols berg, who lives nearby, said. “It was just like last night. Earlier, Prison Superintendent Robert Freeman said Wednesday’s seven-hour riot may have been caused!): overcrowding and inmates’ anger over policy changes During the uprising, eight guards were held hostage for up to four hours and some guards were beaten Four guards and one inmate were still hospitalized Thursday. Freeman met for an hour Thursday with six of the inmates who helped negotiate an end to the siege. He said inmates were upset by changes in the prison’smed ical care policy and over a decision not to allow families to bring in food during extended family-day visits. Anderson spends 42nd birthday in 5th year of Lebanese captivity BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — Today is another grim birthday for Terry Anderson, his fifth in captivity since gunmen seized him after a game of tennis that had been a brief respite from reporting Lebanon’s civil war. He will be 42. He has not held his daughter, born three months after the Satur day morning he was kidnapped — March 16, 1985. He apparently has not been told both his father and brother died of cancer. The fate of Terry A. Anderson, journalist and non-combatant, chief Middle East correspondent of the Associated Press, appears to be caught up in a power struggle be tween Shiite Moslem radicals and moderates. He was kidnapped in Moslem west Beirut by Islamic Jihad, a group loyal to Iran whose name means Is lamic Holy War. His abductors de mand the release of 15 men impris oned in Kuwait for bombing the U.S. and French embassies in 1983. Islamic Jihad also holds Thomas Sutherland, 57, an American who was acting dean of agriculture at American University of Beirut. Su therland was kidnapped June 9, 1985. Police say Lebanese authorities have no information on the wherea bouts of Anderson or the 15 other Western hostages in Lebanon. Three days ago, Islamic Jihad, made its first statement in a year, re viving an old offer to trade Ander son and Sutherland for their com rades jailed in Kuwait. A copy of the statement delivered to a Western news agency in Beirut was accompanied by a photograph of Anderson similar to one released Nov. 4, 1988, soon after his last birthday. The statement was seen as a re sponse to a declaration Monday by President Hashemi Rafsanjani of Iran that he would use its influence to free the hostages if the United States released Iranian assets worth up to $12 billion that have been fro zen since 1979. Kuwait has refused to free the prisoners, but two members of the group were released in February af ter completing five-year sentences. The United States has said it will not negotiate with terrorists. Anderson and Sutherland are among eight American hostages, most believed held by pro-Iranians. Islamic Jihad issued its statement as the leader of Iran’s revolutionan radicals, former Interior Minister Ali Akbar Mohtashemi, was on a three-week visit to Lebanon. Hemet with prominent Shiites, including leading figures in Hezbollah, be lieved to be the umbrella group for kidnap gangs. It was not clear why Mohtashemi, Rafsanjani’s main political rival, came to Lebanon, but the trip un derlined his power struggle with Rafsanjani. Bush asks for legislation to keep food supply safe WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Bush called for legislation Thursday that would allow danger ous pesticides to be taken off the market more quickly, saying the gov ernment’s ability to ensure a safe food supply was being called into question. But his proposed changes in how pesticides and other chemicals on foods are regulated were criticized immediately by environmentalists and some members of Congress who said provisions of the president’s plan could instead make foods less safe. • While Bush’s proposal to stream line regulation was praised, critics said other provisions of his plan would ease the risk levels used to de termine if a pesticide is to be banned and also would have the government preempt state pesticide-control laws that often are stronger than federal rules. The president, in announcing; the proposed legislation, alluded to widespread publicity earlier this year over the use of Alar on apples and the government’s inability to remove the cancer-causing chemical from the market swiftly. “These stories have fueled the public concern about cancer risks, and more important for us, have called into question the govern ment’s ability to ensure a safest!] of food for our citizens,” said B in brief remarks at a White House photo session with administration officials and members of Congress involved in food safety issues. Bush said he was convinced the] country has “the safest food sup in the world” but that there also are j “valid concerns about the govern ment’s slow and cumbersome proo, ess for removing pesticides from the ) market.” Academic (Continued from page 1) Public lewdness is a Class A misde meanor, punishable by up to one year in jail and/or a $2,000 fine. Indecent exposure, a Class B mis demeanor, occurs when a person ex poses his anus or his genitals to arouse or gratify the sexual desire of any person and is reckless about whether another person is present who will be offended or alarmed by his act. It is punishable by up to six months in jail and/or a $ 1,000 fine. Homosexual conduct, consisting of deviant sexual intercourse be tween people of the same sex, is a Class C misdemeanor punishable by a maximum $200 fine. People sel dom, if ever, are charged with ho mosexual conduct, Wiatt said, be cause if someone witnesses the activity and is alarmed enough to re port it, public lewdness charges probably will be filed. Wiatt said that if public homosex ual activity is reported by a witness, the participants may be charged wilt public lewdness or indecent expo sure. If, however, the witness does not want to press charges, no charges will be be brought. For example, Wiatt said that seve ral months ago, a University em ployee observed three men in a bath room stall. When University police officers arrived, they found two men in the stall. By the time they opened the door, the men were not doing anything illegal. Because the com plainant did not want to get involved and the police had no evidence of il legal activity, Wiatt said, the men were not charged with anything. Si SCOTT Sc WHITE Tl IK Sandstone iCKNTER r-lRSTGTXTtXRS T -Bryan ST. JOSEPH HOSPITAL & HEALTH CENTER Wtt ANNUAL HEALTH RUN 1383 SATURDAY - NOVEMBER 4, 1989 5 K & 10 K ROAD RUN & 1 MILE WALK 9:00a.m. Bentfits to American Heart Association and TAMSA "92 Location ft Court*: All Road Races start & end at the Joe H. Reynolds Medical Sciences Bldg. Ag« Categories: Male and Female: 19 & under. 20-29,30-39,40-49,50 & over. Awards: First, second, and third place trophies for female and male winners in each running event. Must be present to receive award. Entry fee: $8.00 Includes scrub shirt and pocket to all who preregister by Tues. Oct. 25,1989. Deadline: Early entries must be received by Tues. Oct. 25, 1989. late Registration Fee: $10.00 Race Day Registration 7:45 - 8:45 a.m. (includes scrub shirt) Race Materials: Runners may pick up numbers and scrub shirts on race day 7:45 - 8:45 a.m. Race Organizers/Directors: Texas Aggie Medical Student Association/Tony Scazzero For Information Ceil: (409) 845-7086 —J