Battalion Classifieds FOR RENT SERVICES 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. 1 ittfn Cotton Village Apts. Snook, TX. 1 Bdmn. $200., 2 Bdrm. $248. Rental assistance available! Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5pm.i47ttfn 4-plex nice 2B-lBth 5 min. from campus, $275 plus electric 846-3864. 54r 11/20 2BR, 1 1/2 BA, washer/dryer in apt for sublease. $415 month. 764-1848. 54tll/21 2B-1.5B duplex and fourplex units. Options: fenced, FP, big closets, low utilities, one semester leases avail able. Wyndham 846-4384. 52ttfn ROOMMATE WANTED Roommate needed: 2bd-2bth Scandia Apt, available NOW! Andy 696-6184. 56tl)/27 Roommate needed for spring. Fenced backyard. $175.00 plus 1/3 bills. Bryan address. Mike or |eff 823- 3862. 56t 11/21 Roommate needed: Country estate $200 per month plus 1/4 of utilities 845-8667 day or night. 54tl 1/21 ROOMMATE NEEDED SPRING 1990, $150 MONTH. DUPLEX. Call Dawn 693-6943. 55tl 1/17 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. 09109/29 IWe BRAZOS BEVERAGES Now Accepting applications tor 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 LITTLE CAESAR S PIZZA Now accepting applications for all positions,all stores, competative wages, apply in person. 3 3ttfn Part Time Software Support Position. Requires experience with MS DOS systems. Hardware experience helpful. Ability to program a plus. ACSI, P.O. Box 3889, Bryan, 77805 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. ' 56tl2/13 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. 52U1/17 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 76m3^ PATELLAR TENDONITIS (JUMPER 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 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 ALTERATIONS 10109/20 The Needle Ladies & Men’s clothing Off Southwest Parkway 300 Amherst 764-9603 WORD PROCESSING. PROFESSIONAL, PRECISE, SPEEDY - LASER/LETTER QUALITY. LISA 846- 8130. 49tl 1/21 Word processing from $l.35/|>age LASER PRINTER! PERFECT PRINT. 822-1430. 47il2/08 WORD PROCESSING — Reasonable rates - thesis pa pers, resumes, rush services 764-2931. 37tl2/6 TYPING: Accurate Prompt, Professional, 15 years ex perience. symbols. Near Campus. 696-5401. 45tl2/13 Experienced librarian will do library research for you. Call 272-3348. 30tll/12 'TYPING 7 DAYS PER WEEK. WORD PROCESSOR. FAST/ACCURATE. 776-4013. 07t 12/01 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. 55t11/17 PERSONALS ADOPTION - Give your newborn the best start in life. A secure home filled with love, happiness, & warmth. Grandparents, cousins. Expenses paid. Call collect. Linda & Gus (516) 543-4441. 50t 1 1/22 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. 50tll/10 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. 52tll/17 Campus Reps position — sell well known spring break packages. Earn high $$$ plus trips. 1-800-HI-PADRE. 54tl 1/17 Parttime help wanted at the Grapevine Restaurant. Call 696-341 I, Ask for Patsy for more details. 55tl 1/17 SERVICES ‘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 compensated. G & S STUDIES, INC. (close to campus) 846-5933 i2t«n 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 ON THE DOUBLE Professional word processing laser jet printing. Papers, resumes, merge letters. Rush services 846-3755 36111/2 Airplane banner towing over Kvle Field $200 plus $3/Character. Hurry for Nov.24. (713)721-6290. 56tl 1/21 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. 53t 11/20 TRAVEL Spring Break ** Cancun with air/South Padre Island. Book NOW for lowest prices, best locations 1-800-HI- PADRE. 54t 11/21 MOUNTAIN - BIKING IN BIG BEND OVER THANKSGIVING. WHO’S INTERESTED? 846- 6641. 55t 11/20 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 693- 9270. LAP FOP Computer. NEC multispeed. 20 Meg H D, 10 MHZ. Like new, all the options you can possibly dream of. Graduating and need money 846-7947. 56tl 1/27 1984 Honda Magna 750, Mint condition. Low mileage, $1600 764-9081. 52t 11/17 Round trip ticket from Houston to Indianapolis for Thanksgiving, cheap. p2tll/17 Honda CX 500 custom low mileage good condition with helmet $950 847-7878 or 847-0601. 52tll/17 IBV1 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 RALEIGH TEN SPEED BIKE. BRAND NEW. OPEN TO REASONABLE OFFERS. 696-4234. 53tl 1/20 NOTICE Professional word processing. light editing. Carla 690- Need extra Arkansas and Tcxastickets lot visiting rela- 0305. 48ill/06 lives. 696-7326. 48t 11/22 The Battalion WORLD & NATION Friday, November 17,1989 U.S. will discuss tariff barriers if Soviets ease immigration laws WASHINGTON (AP) — Com merce Secretary Robert A. Mos- bacher said Thursday a historic eas ing of travel restrictions in the Soviet Union would clear the way for the removal of U.S. tariff barriers “if all conditions are met.” Mosbacher said President Bush would recommend that Congress approve a one-year grant of lower tariffs on Soviet imports after the new Soviet legislation clears Final passage. Mosbacher did not spell out the conditions at a joint news conference with Konstantin F. Katushev, the So viet minister of foreign economic af fairs. Non-Communists given more seats WEST BERLIN (AP) — The East German lead ership agreed Thursday to give more than one-third of the seats in the new Cabinet to non-Communists, who now have only four, sources involved in the negotia tions reported. Sources in the Liberal Democrats, one of four small parties that have been allied with the Communists, said Premier Hans Modrow would reduce the Cabinet from 44 members to 26 or 27 and assign at least 11 ministries to non-Communists. Chancellor Helmut Kohl of West Germany said peo ple of East Germany must decide on German reunifica tion, but the top Kremlin adviser on German affairs ruled it out. team son S Th of a “leading role” that guarantees supremacy to Communist Party. Liberal Democratic sources said late Thursday it*/,■■ Communist Party chief Egon Krenz had agreed tost _|| ' E ort a Cabinet with more than one-third ofthessr C eld by non-Communists. That would allow the ruling party to retain its, nant role while appearing to respond to demandsli ( more democracy. Previous governments have dunfegw ^ carried out the wishes of the ruling Politburo. Non-Communists in the Cabinet still are Univt State , They signed commercial agreements designed to boost U.S. investments in the Soviet Union and to explore a new trade agreement. Moscow nullifed the last accord in 1975, a year after Congress de manded freer Soviet emigration as the price for cutting high import tar iffs. Soviet trade with the United States is hampered by restrictions embodied in a law that allows the f raming of lower tariffs only if the oviet Union permits freer Jewish emigration. T he lowered tarrifs are available to most of the U.S. trading partners under what is known as most-fa vored-nation status. “We want to make clear that we are not beginning negotiation of a trade agreement,” Mosbacher said. “This can come only after the So viets codify their emigration legis lation and after a waiver under the share many of the party’s views, which leaves littlek| that the demands of New Forum and other unoffclL, as No iMe Nikolai Portugalov said in an interview with the So viet news agency Novosti there will be two German states “for the foreseeable future and also in the long term.” Mass emigration and pro-democracy protest have created great pressure for reform in East Germany. The Liberal Democrats have said they will ask Parlia ment on Friday to eliminate the constitutional provision pro-democracy groups will he addressed. New Forum and the others have pressed foncgdnjj. ^ tus and inclusion in government affairs, and are notoH pected to settle for mere redistribution among existcKL, political groups. S/'; Manfred Gerlach, leader of the Liberal Democnjf said he would urge other parliament deputies Frida vote for removal of the “leading role” languageffl the constitutional, which could open the way toankj party system. V Jackson-Vanik amendment becomes possible.” The process, Mosbacher told the news conference, could take one to three months — or even “a lot longer.” He said that congressional restric tions on trade credits — the Steven son amendment — will be main tained. Rep. Charles E. Schumer, D-N.Y., who has pushed for wider Jewish emigration, said in a statement: “The Soviet Union is making real progress. But going all the way to ward granting most-favored-nation status strikes me as premature. . . . There are 600 long-term ‘refuseniks’ who should be freed before we ex tend the carrot.” Anticipating U.S. action to facili tate trade, Soviet Ambassador Yuri V. Dubinin earlier told reporters at the Soviet Embassy, “We are expect ing some positive steps from the U.S. side.” He called the Soviet legisla: I H which is nearing final passage in ■p wr cemher, a breakthrough and tlTrop dence of “new thinking. ’ FU T he legislation establishes iBew right of all Soviet citizens to tn|j ete abroad — permanently or on vpiutl — and reduces or eliminates restrictions in effect now. P exa ■ndr Two-way trade now amountiBech about S3 billion. American pj 1 Gr sales to the Soviet Union accouni JSWC about $2 billion. toud liedi House passes pay raise, revises ethics Le prose Hmv< Louis lit) bat WASHINGTON (AP) — House members voted Thursday to raise their pay by more than $30,000 a year over the next 13 months — to above $ 120,000 a year — while revis ing ethics rules to put new limits on outside earnings. The bill was passed 252 to 174, just 10 months after intense public criticism forced the House to reject a larger pay increase. T he new proposal sped through the House with strong support from the leaders of both parties and an endorsement from President Bush. A slight majority of Republicans vot ing opposed the bill despite Bush’s stance. The Senate was expected to con sider it Friday. “I can understand and sympathize with people in my district who make 15 and 20 and $30,000 a year who would have trouble understanding why this kind of pay level is needed,” House Majority Leader Richard Ge phardt, D-Mo., said. “But,” he told his colleagues, “in your heart and in your mind you know it’s the right thing to do.” Rep. James A. TraFtcant, D-Ohio, took a different view. “I understand the game — we come with ethics reform and we sneak in a pay raise,” he said. The complex 100-page pay and ethics package was announced by Democratic and Republican leaders Wednesday, but copies were not made available to the public until de- • bate was well under way Thursday. Public criticism, some of it galva nized by broadcast talk-show hosts, helped lead to the defeat of a pro posed 51 percent congressional pay raise earlier this year. But there was no time this time. “Without public hearings, without a decent interval of time for the American people to digest it, . . . the House leadership railroaded it through,” complained consumer ad vocate Ralph Nader, who opposes congressional pay increases. But Ann McBride, senior vice president of Common Cause, the self-proclaimed public interest orga nization, hailed the action as “mov ing toward a time when we will have government fully compensated by the public, and not by special inter est influence money.” The bill would increase salaries in the House, for federal judges, and for top executive branch officials by at least 35 percent and often by closer to 40 percent. Senate Majority Leader George How Texans voted. ITh Spotli cnaiK the at WASHINGTON (AP) — Here is how Texans voted in the 252- 174 roll call Thursday by which the House approved a bill in creasing by more than 35 percent the pay for its members and other top government ofFtcials, while revising government ethics rules. A “yes” vote is a vote to pass the bill. • Voting yes were 168 Demo crats and 84 Republicans. • Voting no were 85 Demo crats and 89 Republicans. • X denotes those not voting. • Present denotes those who voted they were “present” at the time of the vote but did not vott “yes” or “no” '>n the issue. There is one vacancy in the 435-member House. •Texas Democrats — An drews, Y; Brooks, X; Bryant, V Bustamante, Y; Chapman, N;Co- leman, N; de la Garza, Y; Frost. Y; Geren, N; Gonzalez, Y; N; Laughlin, N; Leath, Y; Ortiz, Y; Pickle, Y; Sarpalius, N; Sten holm, Y; Wilson, Y. • Texas Republicans - Archer, Y; Armey, N; Bartlett,) Barton, Y’; Combest, N; Deb Y; Fields. N; Smith, Y. Mitchell, D-Maine, said the Senate would consider the bill Friday. How ever, it was not clear what raises or honoraria limits the Senate might in clude for itself. The Senate could give itself a smaller raise, as it did earlier this de cade. Senators were paid less than House members for about six months seven years ago before sen ators approved a catch-up raise. The House bill provides fora percent cost-of-living hike by uary. On Jan. 1, 1991, a 25 pent raise would be given — on top whatever cost-of-living increase given to rank-and-file civil serft at that time. Assuming a 3 percent 1 service raise, House members* now make $89,500 likely would their pay increase to about $125,« Reagan’s records subpoenaed for Poindexter’s WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal judge Thursday approved a subpoena that would compel former Presi dent Reagan to produce diaries and other records by next Wednesday for the Iran-Contra criminal case of John Poindexter. U.S. District Court Judge Harold Greene granted a petition by lawyers for Poindexter, who was Reagan’s national security adviser. They have requested portions of Reagan’s diaries and notes he took at key meetings with Poindexter. In a two-paragraph order, Greene said Poindexter “may serve upon former President Reagan and upon the archivist of the United States the subpoenas . . . sub mitted to the court. “The return date for those subpoenas shall be Nov. 22, 1989,” Greene said. The judge ruled last month that Poindexter is enti tled to subpoena “specific, relevant documents” bearing on the criminal charges against him. “I have no comment,” Theodore Olson, a lawyer for the former president, said in response to Greene’s or der. Earlier this year, U.S. District Court Judge Gerhard Delegation says no WASHINGTON (AP) — Members of the Texas con gressional delegation say NASA can ill-afford the costs of locating a new space station mission at Marshall Space Flight Center in Alabama and are recommending instead that current payload operations be expanded at Johnson Space Center. “This is not the time to be engaged in a political dis tribution of missions,” Sen. Phil Gramm, R-Texas, said Thursday. “We’ve got a job to do, and we’ve got very little money to do it with. And we’ve got to do it right. And by doing it efficiently we do it in Texas.” criminal case Gesell had quashed a suupoena tor ciucumeins sought from Reagan in the case against Oliver North. Poindexter, in support of his request, said he met “daily, frequently alone” with the president during the Iran-Contra affair. The two men, according to Poindexter, talked of the role of Richard Secord as a middleman in the transfer of arms to Iran and also discussed the accuracy of a chronology prepared by North and reviewed by Poin dexter. Poindexter now is accused of lying to Congress in connection with the chronology. The chronology said that no official in the U.S. gov ernment learned before January 1986 that Hawk mis siles had been shipped to Iran in November 1985 with assistance from the CIA. The shipment, overseen by North, who kept Poin dexter apprised of its progress, occurred without the existence of a presidential finding as required by law. Reagan signed a retroactive Finding the month after the Hawks were transported to Iran. to NASA station Gramm and the lexas House delegation have writ ten separate letters to Vice Adm. Richard H. Truly urging him to select JSC over Marshall to ensure fund ing, jobs and a payload planning function at Johnson Space Center. “Through the year 2000, adopting the JSC approach could save NASA up to $250 million — money NASA cannot afford to squander,” the House members, led by Rep. Michael Andrews, told Truly. The issue involves payload planning for the space station, a complex activity once proposed for facilities that would be constructed at Marshall. Seven kids die in school cafeteria Wall collapses in violent storm NEWBURGH, N.Y. (AP)-A» elementary school cafeteria w collapsed early Thursday af ternoon during a wind andrait storm, killing at least six scP children, authorities said. State Trooper Ron Harris c# Firmed the deaths and said i other school children were j tired. Wind toppled a tree and sent i: crashing through the wall of 1 cafeteria where pupils wereea 1 ing about 12:30 p.m. at Ea !l Coldenham Elementary Schod Carole Armstrong, a secretar) 11 ' the Valley Central School Distrid said. The school is close to five mill* west of Newburgh, a city of aW 23,000 people located 60 fflilf* north of New York City. OfFtcials with the State Ei# gency Management Office corf not immediately confirm report 1 that a tornado hit the scW Cary Fryer, a spokesman forO Mario Cuomo, said. The Newburgh area and 1# ropolitan New York were underi tornado watch posted by theNt tional Weather Service for laif parts of the East Coast W Maryland to New England.