Battalion Classifieds FOR RENT SERVICES Cotton Village Apt*. Snook, TX. 1 Bdrm. $200., 2 Bdrm. $248. Rental assistance available! Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 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. 11ttfn ROOMMATE WANTED ROOMMATE NEEDED to share 2 bedroom - 1 bath apartment for spring semester rent $ 175. Close to cam pus, on shuttle. Call 696-0508. 51tl 1/16 Roommate needed: Country estate $200 per month plus 1/4 of utilities 845-8667 day or night. 54tl 1/21 HELP WANTED The Houston Chronicle is currently taking applications for route carrier positions. Gas allowance provided with routes earning $400.-$700. per month. If interested, call James at 693-7815 or Julian at 693- 2323. 09t09/29 ute BRAZOS JM BEVERAGES Now Accepting applications for student helpers: 1 .Morning/weekend Stockers 2.Afternoon warehouse helper 3.Campus Representative All jobs partime. Apply in Person only M-F 9a.m.-5p.m. 505 Hwy 2818 Bryan Part Time Software Support Position. Requires experience with MS DOS systems. Hardware experience helpful. Ability to program a plus. ACSI, P.O. Box 3889, LITTLE CAESAR S PIZZA Now accepting applications for all positions,all stores, competative wages, apply in person. 3 3ttfn ACT IN TV COMMERCIALS. HIGH PAY, NO EX PERIENCE ALL AGES ,KIDS, TEENS, YOUNG ADULTS. FAMILIES, MATURE PEOPLE, ANI MALS, ETC. CALL NOW! CHARM STUDIOS 1-800- 837-1700 ext 81 17. 55tll/16 Parttime help wanted at the Grapevine Restaurant. Call 696-3411, Ask for Patsy for more details. 55t 11/17 Fulltime bridal consultant. Bride -N- Formal has an im mediate need for a fulltime bridal consultant. Ideal candidate will be customer service oriented, prior retail experience a must, schedule of 30-37 hours per week and does included Saturdays, hourly plus commision, good company benefits. For more information call Tami. 693-6900. 52tll/17 EXPERIENCED SEAMSTRESS. Position available for seamstress who wants to work in home or in store. Will pay percentage of alterations cost. Must work af ternoons and Thursday evenings each week for fit tings. We pay top dollar for alteration on bridal and evening wear. Call Tami 693-6900 for more informa tion. 52tl 1/17 Campus Reps position — sell well known spring break packages. Earn high $$$ plus trips. 1-800-H1-PADRE. 54tll/17 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 ‘STREP THROAT 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 cojrhpensated. G & S STUDIES, INC. (clos^ to campus) 846-5933 12^ ALLERGY STUDIES DO YOU HAVE??? ALLERGIC RHINITIS Patients needed with runny nose, na sal congestion, sneezing, itch nose, itchy and watery eyes to participate in a seven day research study evaluating an over-the-counterantihistimine. NO BLOOD DRAWN Eligible volunteers will be compen sated G & S Studies, Inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 PATELLAR TENDONITIS (JUNIPER’S KNEE) 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 169ttfn 2B-1.5B duplex and fourplex units. Options: fenced, FP, big closets, low utilities, one semester leases avail able. Wyndham 846-4384. 52ttfn 4-plex nice 2B-lBth 5 min. from campus, $275 plus electric 846-3864. 54tll/20 2BR, 1 1/2 BA, washer/dryer in apt for sublease. $415 month. 764-1848. 54tll/21 ROOMMATE NEEDED SPRING 1990, $150 MONTH, DU PLEX. Call Dawn 693-6943. 55t 11 /17 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 76 ALTERATIONS The Needle Ladies & Men’s clothing Off Southwest Parkway 300 Amherst 764-9603 ON THE DOUBLE Professional word processing laser jet printing. Papers, resumes, merge letters. Rush services 846-3755 1 /o TYPING 7 DAYS PER WEEK. WORD PROCESSOR. FAST/ACCURATE. 776-4013. 07U2/01 WORD PROCESSING: PROFESSIONAL, PRECISE, SPEEDY - LASER/LETTER QUALITY. LISA 846- 8130. 49t 11/21 Professional word processing, light editing. Carla 690- 0305. 48t 11/06 TYPING: Accurate Prompt. Professional, 15 years ex perience. symbols. Near Campus. 696-5401. 45tl2/13 Word processing from $L35/page LASER PRINTER! PERFECT PRIM . 822-1430. 47tl2/08 ANNOUNCEMENT Best Fundraisers On campus! Is your fraternity, sorority or club inter ested in earning $1,000.00plus for a one week, on- campus marketing pro ject? You must be well organized and hard working. Call Lisanne or Ken at (800)592-2121. 55111/17 PERSONALS Adoption: Happily married couple wishes to share love, warmth, security and close family life with white newborn. Expenses paid, legal. Call collect (212) 977- 4221. 50tl 1/10 ADOPTION - Give your newborn the best start in life. A secure home filled with love, happiness, & warmth. Grandparents, cousins. Expenses paidi Call collect. Linda &Gus (516) 543-4441. 50t 11/22 LOST AND FOUND REWARD! Camera lost at Baja Yacht Club 11/10. No Questions asked. 846-2583 55111/17 LOST: $50 REWARD: Male 130 pound Rottweiler, an swers to Amos. Last seen in Wellborn area with black and grey collar. Please call 693-9986 day or 825-3397 night. 53tl 1/20 TRAVEL MOUNTAIN - BIKING IN BIG BEND OVER THANKSGIVING. WHO'S INTERESTED? 846- 664.1. 55tl 1/20 Spring Break ** Cancun with air/South Padre Island. Book NOW for lowest prices, best locations 1-800-HI- PADRE. 54tl 1/21 FOR SALE SHARKBYTE computer systems We have everthing from Turbo XT’s to super fast 386-25 machines. Mono thru super VGA, CAD, printers ‘We specialize in complete systems’ CALL NOW FOR DETAILS 696-9270. Page 8 The Battalion Thursday, November 16,19 Birthmarks can disappear with new laser treatment Experienced librarian will do library research for you. Call 272-3348. 30t 11/12 IBM Compatible PC-XT. Dual Drives 640K, Color Monitor, Panasonic KX- 1091i Printer, Many Pro grams, $900 obo 823-3940. 55U/22 Four tickets to T.U. game, on the track, sell at cost, leave message 846-7056. 55tl 1/22 By Mia B. Moody 1984 Honda Magna 750, Mint condition. Low mileage, $1600 764-9081. 52tll/17 Round trip ticket from Houston to Indianapolis for Thanksgiving, cheap. 52tll/17 Honda CX 500 custom low mileage good condition , with helmet $950 847-7878 or 847-0601. 52tl 1/17 NOTICE WORD PROCESSING — Reasonable rates - thesis pa pers, resumes, rush services 764-2931. 37t 12/6 THE BATT DOES IT DAILY Monday through Friday Of The Battalion Staff A breakthrough in laser treatment has proven effec tive in removing dark purple or dark maroon birth marks called port wine stains. “Before this type of laser was developed, there was no acceptable treatment for port wine stains,” said Dr. Lynne Roberts, an assistant professor at the the Univer sity of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas. In addition to the medical implications, which in clude soft tissue deformity and vascular tumors, port wine stains are unsightly and often cause psychological problems, he said. Because the dye laser affects only the stained area, the risk of scarring, formerly between 50 to 60 percent with other types of laser treatments, is virtually remote, Roberts said. Light energy is absorbed by the red color of the stain and the energy from this absorption is converted to heat. He said they are among the first five health-care in stitutions in the United States to experiment with a tu nable dye argon laser to remove the birthmark. The heat seals the inflamed blood vessels of the birthmark, said Amy Dick, a writer for the office of medical information at the University of Texas South western Medical Center at Dallas. Dick also said 3 out of 10,000 infants are born with port wine stains. Though the operation can be performed on children of any age, anesthesiologists prefer not to let children under three have the operation. The treatment takes four to eight treatments with a two-month wait in between, she said. Refugee advocates predict wave of Central Americans into U.S. HARLINGEPsf (AP) — Refugee advocates are predicting a new wave of Central Americans crossing into South Texas from Mexico, fleeing war and political uncertainty in El Salvador and Nicaragua. Officials with the U.S. Immigra tion and Naturalization Service, however, said Wednesday they have no evidence of a mass exodus from Central America. Intensified fighting in El Salva dor, combined with the end of a cease fire in Nicaragua and uncer tainty over an upcoming election there will send thousands to seek safety in the United States, refugee advocates said. More than 500 have died and 1,000 have been wounded in El Sal vador since leftist anti-government guerrillas launched an offensive over the weekend. Thousands dis placed from the intensified Salvado ran fighting will head to the United States, said Mark Schneider, an at torney with the Proyecto Libertad le gal aid office for Central Americans in Harlingen. ther intimidated and try to leave,” Schneider said. “The war has come out from underground. This is full- fledged war.” Jose Rafael Romero, a Salvadoran seeking political asylum in Har lingen, agreed. “I spoke with my family Saturday on the telephone and the borders were full of people leaving, trying to said. “There’s a lot of uncertainty. I think there’s a feeling that they need to get out before the election.” Fighting since a cease fire ended Nov. 1 between the Nicaraguan gov ernment and Contra rebels also could drive people out of that coun try, she said. INS and Border Patrol officials, however, said they have not received any intelligence reports of large Fhe people who are in the middle at this point are going to be further intimidated and try to leave.” — Mark Schneider, Attorney “The people who are in the mid dle at this point are going to be fur- come here and ask for political asy lum,” Romero said. Immigration attorney Linda Ya- nez, in the border city of Brownsville, said Nicaraguans wary of political violence and uncertainty surrounding the national elections set for February also are leaving again. “A lot of them have been telling me that their families are packing up and getting ready to leave,” Yanez numbers of Central Americans headed their way. “We don’t see any build-up as such into Mexico or along the Mexi can border,” said David Trevino, the Border Patrol’s supervisory intelli gence agent for the sector covering the southernmost tip of Texas. Duke Austin, INS spokesman, said, “No matter what happens in Central America, the advocates pre dict an increase in immigrants.” Boy recants confession of murder Youngster says police forced his admission FORT WORTH (AP)-Al: year-old lx>y charged with rait dering an elementary school! cher testified Wednesday thai police investigator pressuredki to say he committed the slaying The seventh-grader testing outside the jury’s presence doi | ing his trial in the Aug. 28 s bing death of 24-year-old Jt Simpson. Her body was fou* outside her Glen Park Eleir tary School classroom. She k been stabl>ed 17 times. After the boy’s testimony,Sit District Judge Scott Moore rule that his statements to police killed the teacher. I killedtheita cher,” were admissible. Polices the boy made the stateme:! shortly after his arrest. The judge had ruled be(cj the trial that most otht statements the boy madetopoLj could not be admitted becati they were improperly obtained The boy’s attorney Earl 'lj nie” Bates had asked Moore | suppress all the boy’s stater.: to rxilice about Simpson’s killir;|; including the “I killed the ( cher” remark. The Ixiy testified that on Se:Bi 6 jxdice picked him up at sckg without nis parents’ knowlec! and questioned him forabouinf hours alxmt the killing. He said Detective J.D. Roberit told him witnesses saw the I near the schcxil before Simpd was found and that if polices covered his fingerprints nearC portable classrooms he would ! “in trouble.” “He told me that if I didntf and tell the truth and theyfonj out that I had done anything I would never see my pare:!: again,” the boy testified. The boy said he thought R« erts “was trying to put itoniHl trying to accuse me of the killir; . . He just started going oven again and again.” Rocket aborts shortly after takeoff WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGE (AP) — A guidance system malfunction forced a commer cial rocket to abort its flight 30 seconds after it lifted off Wednesday with 12 scientific experi ments packed into its payload. The Consort 2 lifted off from White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico at 8:42 a.m., but mission safety officials terminated thrusts 30 sec onds later, Debbie Bingham, a spokeswoman at White Sands said. Officials were trying to determine whether the abortive action or the malfunction caused the payload to separate from the rocket. “There was a malfunction in the guidance sys tem of the rocket, the F-19, which is the booster phase guidance system,” spokeswoman Monty Marlin said. The two-stage rocket’s suborbital flight was supposed to last 15 minutes, reach 200 miles above Earth and lodge the 1,004-pound payload into seven minutes of very low gravity called mi- crogravity. “Obviously there’s no scientific data that will come out of there because we never reached mi crogravity, but we may be able to see if the (ex periment) hardware works,” said Rick Mould, spokesman for the University of Alabama in Huntsville’s Consortium for Materials Devel opment in Space. Many of the experiments aboard the rocket were contained in apparatus specially designed for the trip. The payload, which was supposed to return to Earth about 60 miles downrange, was retrieved intact about four miles from the launch site. Mould said. Officials were trying to determine if the sec ond stage of the Starfire 1 rocket suffered any damage. It was retrieved from a highway near the launch site. The F-19 guidance system, built by SAAB Space of Sweden, cleared the routine preflight checks, Deke Slayton, president of Space Services Inc., said. A problem with a cable connector that caused problems in the rocket Tuesday was not asso ciated with Wednesday’s malfunction, he said. Houston-based Space Services built the rocket and provided launch services in a $1 million con tract with the University of Alabama. The Consort 2 was the second rocket Space Services to fly for the university consortium. The launch of Consort 1 on March 29 was suc cessful. Walt Pennine, spokesmari$br SSI, saidhei not expect the failure to slow commercial rod launches. “I imagine there will be the usual doulc. Thomases, but you have to remember we've ready had two successes,’ Pennine said. “WI already established that private industry can it. We established that in 1982.” SSI launched the Conestoga 1 in 1982 wii mock payload, becoming the first private 1 company to launch a commercial rocket with; vate funding. Mould said the University of Alabama also! eager to begin work on another launch. “I think the sounding rocket industry, iiii proven industry,” Mould said. “I think it’s OK* the rare times that you have a problem wiiffl sounding rocket. We have flown successful!' fore and I’m sure we’ll be able to fly again ass as possible.” Among the experiments launched with Consort 2 rocket was a Penn State study us chameleon skins. Biochemist Roy Hammersf believed the study could assist research on h loss and muscle degeneration diseases. ‘It’s lit up!’ Pinball attracting new crowd with flashy machines RALEIGH TEN SPEED BIKE. BRAND NEW. OPEN TO REASONABLE OFFERS. 696-4234. 53tl 1/20 PC/XT COMPATIBLE, MONOCHROME, 512K- RAM, 2-360K FLOPPY, MODEM, STAR NX1000 NLQ PRINTER, SOFTWARE,$700.00 STEAL! 822- 0014,KEVIN. 54tl 1/16 Need extra Arkansas and Texas tickets Tor visiting rela tives. 696-7326. 48t 11/22 DALLAS (AP) — Bright red and yellow lights flash as Beth Hanna’s fingers tense, then rapidly push flip per buttons. “Got a million points!” she cries after flipping the ball into a lighted target. The machine emits a lion’s roar. The electronic scoreboard flashes 1,648,500 points. “See that!” Hanna says excitedly. “It’s lit up!” The silver metal ball rolls down and Hanna again, quickly, hits the buttons. But it’s too late. The ball silently glides between the machine’s two flippers. The nemesis of all pinball players — the dreaded drain hole — once again has claimed a ball, abruptly bringing Hanna’s game to an end. “Shoot!” she says. Another day. Another quarter. Actually, Hanna comes to Alad din’s Castle at Red Bird Mall once a week. She’s no pinball wizard; she just plays for fun. She played a lot more often when her husband brought home an old pinball ma chine six years ago. But, she laughs and says, “I burned it up.” Not as in points, she explains, but as in fire. “It just started smoking and stuff,” says Hanna, a cashier at a men’s clothing store. “I had to un plug it.” Hanna is among the thousands of fans across the country fueling a re naissance in the classic arcade game of pinball. It’s a comeback that ar rives 60 years after the modern pin ball game was invented in the base ment of a Chicago apartment building. Until the late 1970s, the ball-and-plunger was king of the hill in the coin-operated arcade market. Then came video. Industry offi cials and arcade owners agree pin- balls were zapped — almost fatally — by the explosion of visually stun- and synthesizer chips, above board ramps and dancing finger puppets. “We have pinball machines that shake, that have belligerent, omi nous voices and musical accompani ment,” Sharpe says. “It’s much more of a total experience.” Among the latest models: — Earthshaker! is the first pinball machine that actually shakes and rat tles when players flip the ball into daredevil motocross race to be; No. 1.” Special feature: a ramp carries the ball up the backboard vertical playing surface. — Taxi has “true-to-charaf electronic reproductions of ! voices of Soviet chief Mikhail&■ chev, Santa Claus and Dracula object: “picking up” famous pa gers. it Before the ’90s are over, you’ll see some amazing creations. But the guiding principle will always be a ball and flippers.” — Roger Sharpe, Marketing director ning video games in the early 1980s. “Pinballs almost disappeared in 1982,” says Roger Sharpe, market ing director at the Chicago-based Williams Electronics Games Inc., the world’s largest pinball manufac turer. Williams was forced to take pin ball back to the drawing board. Its mission? To make the games more competitive with video. In 1984, the company introduced the first of a new generation of razzle-dazzle pin ball games designed to be a feast for the fingers, eyes and ears. Today, wildly colorful and noisy pinball games are loaded with computer earthquake zones. With the right combination, a small board piece shaped like California splits from Nevada and a built-in sound system registers the ensuing rumble. It was designed before the recent Bay Area earthquake. — Elvira and the Party Monsters showcases the buxom and campy television horror queen as players try to spell out E-L-V-I-R-A and light a skull cave for 3 million points. “Boo gie Men” monsters pop up from the playing surface and dance a jig when enough points are scored. — Banzai Run challenges players to defeat the “King of the Hill in a Sounds great, you may say. Only problem is you’ve been good with a spring-lo; plunger and ball. Never fear. N'" I pinball models automatically m themselves to a player’s skills better you are, the harder it gels And as if they weren’t f* enough, holographic images, and extensive multi level fields on pinball machines are around the corner. “Before the are over, you’ll see some a# creations,” Sharpe says. “Bui guiding principle will always ^ ball, or multiple balls, and flippe' At the height of the video c ri pinball’s share of the arcade w. fell to a tiny 5 percent. Today ball machines have wrestled - nearly 35 percent of the $ coin-operated amusement indu i Sharpe says. Video games still h f commanding 45 percent share the 1.5 million pinball games u cades, theaters and restau 1 worldwide “are coming on sttf Sharpe says.