Page 10 The Battalion Monday, November 27,1; Battalion Classifieds FOR RENT SERVICES TRAVEL I COTTON VILLAGE APTS Ltd. Snook, TX I 1 bdrm $200 2 Bdrm $248 1 Rental Assistance Available 1 Call 846-8878 ir 774-0773 after 5pm Equal Opportunity Housirig/Handicapped Accessible eottfn | 2 BDRM HOUSE, NO PETS, LARGE YARD, W/D CON. 1906 MILLER $325/mo 693-3418. 60t 12/08 2B-1.5B duplex and fourplex units. Options: fenced, FP, big closets, low utilities, one semester leases avail able. Wyndham 846-4384. 52ttfn TWO BEDROOM FURNISHED APT. BILLS PAID $290. 415 C.MAIN TWO BEDROOM FURNISHED, WATER $250. 779-3700 822-2619. 58tll/27 APARTMENT FOR RENT SPRING LOOP AREA 2 BEDROOM FIREPLACE $460/mo 846-5647 After 5pm. 59t 12/01 ROOMMATE WANTED ROOMMATE NEEDED SPRING 1990 $150 month. Duplex. Call Dawn 693-6943. 60t 12/01 Roommate needed: 2bd-2bth Scandia Apt, available NOW! Andy 696-6184. 56tl 1/27 Female Roommate needed: Spacious Sutter’s Mill 2- bedroom 1 1/2 bath condo with catport. Rent $216/mo plus 1/3 utilities. Call 696-7014. NOW! 59tl2/01 FOR LEASE LOFT APARTMENT - assume lease through May $275 month. Randy 764-9606. 56tl 1/28 HELP WANTED STORE MANAGER Begin a career with real growth potential. Join our growing team of 16 bridal shops in Texas. We are a privately owned organization who promotes from within. Sucessful candidate for our store manager will be enthusiastic, hard working and customer serv ice oriented, retail management experience a definite plus. Com pensation includes pay, bonus in centive plans and commission. Position also offers an excellent benefit package of paid vacation, holidays, major medical,dental and life insurance, profit sharing and retirement plan. For more in formation call 1 -800-688-9336. 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 $1000's weekly stuffing envelopes. Send self-addressed stamped envelope to Maiche Associates, 4331 Lehigh Rd Suite 236 College Park, Md 20740. 60t 12/01 House cleaning person for faculty family, 10-12 hrs/week, schedule flexible. Must be available thru summer call 6-9pm 846-3765. 60t 12/08 PATELLAR TENDONITIS (JUMPER’S KNEE) 1 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 i69ttfn 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 36tn/2 Word processing from $ 1.35/page LASER PRINTER! PERFECT PRINT. 822-1430. 47tl2/08 Professional word processing, liglu editing. Carla 690- 0305. 48tl 1/06 T YPING: Accurate Prompt, Professional, 15 years ex perience. symbols. Near Campus. 696-5401. 45tl2/13 WORD PROCESSING — Reasonable rates - thesis pa pers, resumes, rush services 764-2931. 37t 12/6 Experienced librarian will do library research for you. Call 272-3348. 30tl 1/12 TYPING 7 DAYS PER WEEK. WORD PROCESSOR. FAST/ACCURATE. 776-4013. 07U2/01 WANTED Graduating senior needs 2 pair of west side T.U. tick ets. 696-7326. 60t 12/01 TWO TICKETS TEXAS GAME WESTSIDE 779- 3700. 58t 11/27 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. Yamaha keyboard and/or 4-track recorder, will bargin 847-7309Jeri. 60tl 1/27 Great Fisher component home stereo. lOOwrms, 15"speakers, bargin, graduating 696-1649. 60tl 1/30 MUST SELL! Apple Imagewriter II printer. Excellent condition. Call Alii 696-4105. 60t 11/30 LAPTOP Computer, NEC multispeed, 20 Meg HD, 10 MHZ. Like new, all the options you can possibly dream of. Graduating and need money 846-7947. 56tl 1/27 REGISTERED PERSIAN KITTENS, ALL COLORS. CALL 779-64.18. 58tll/2 24K gold $1200 Diamond Horseshoe ring $875 Call Gayla 268-4591. 59tl 1/30 LIVE OAK RANCH Restuarant. Now hiring wait resses, dishwashers and kitchen help (409) 878-2216. 60t 12/08 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. 56U2/13 ATTENTION - HIRING! Government jobs - your area. $17,840 - $69,485. Call 1-602-838-8885 Ext R 4009. 190t08/31 ATTENTION EARN MONEY TYPING A I HOME! 32,000/yr income potential. Details, (1 >-602-838-8885 Ext. T 4009. 56t 11/23 ATTENTION: EASY WORK, EXCELLENT PAY! Assemble products at home. Details, (1 )-602-838-8885 Ext. W 4009. 56t 11/23 Babysitter wanted. My home. 8am-2pm, $3.25/hour. During break or spring semester. 693-0738. 56tl2/l Farmers market, Northgate is now hiring in store and delivery drivers personnel. Top commission paid, flex- ible/hrs 846-6428 2-5 pm. 59i 12/01 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 co/hpensated. G & S STUDIES, INC. (close to campus) 84S-5933 i2tttn I 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 1 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 76n/3i NEED MONEY? Financial Aid for any student or money back plus $100 Sav ings Bond. Recipients average $1200. Free information 1 -800-733-8322 eonm WORD PROCESSING: PROFESSIONAL, PRECISE, SPEEDY - LASER/LETTER QUALITY. LISA 846- 8130. 49tl 1/21 NOTICE ATTENTION DECEMBER GRADUATING SENIORS If you have ordered a 1990 Aggieland,please stop by the English Annex between 8 and 5 and pay a $4.00 mailing fee along with your forwarding address so your Aggieland can be mailed to you next fall when they ar rive. 56112/6 Yearbook fee’s are refundable in full during the semester in which payment is made. Thereafter no refunds will be made on cancelled orders. Yearbooks must be picked up during academic year in which they are published. Students who will not be on campus when the yearbooks are published, usually in October, must pay a mailing and handling fee. Yearbooks will not be held nor will they be mailed without necessary fees having been paid. 56ti2/o6 You will recieve financial aid or your money back! Guaranteed! Scholarship Consultants 7401 t Louisburg, Raleigh, NC 27604.919-876-7891. THE BATT DOES IT DAILY Monday through Friday RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW! DAYTONA BEACH ^ *129 * 7 NIGHTS SOUTH PADRE ISLAND o*129 5 OR 7 NIGHTS STEAMBOAT *101 2, S OR 7 NIGHTS FORT LAUDERDALE ^ *132 7 NIGHTS HILTON HEAD ISLAND *127 7 NIGHTS CORPUS CHRISTI / MUSTANG ISLAND ^ *99 * 5 OR 7 NIGHTS CALL TOLL FREE TODAY 1-800-321-5911 ‘Depending on break dates and length of stay. LIVE IN JAPAN International Education Services invites ap plications for a one year assignment in Ja pan teaching English language skills in school settings as well as to Japanese Business people from major corporations and government offices. Minimum aca demic requirement is a Bachelors degree; some work experience desirable. Liberal Arts degree holders as well as those with specialized degrees (i.e. management, en gineering, pharaceutical. securities, fi nance, languages, education, etc.) are en couraged to apply. Please submit current resume and cover letter accompanied by a recent photo to: International Education services Shin-taiso Building 10-7 Dogenzaka, 2-chome Shibuya-ku, Tokyo 150 JAPAN Fax Number: (81 )-03-463-7089 Time's Running Out! It's Too Late ' To Get Your Classified Call Battalion Classified 845-2611 FURNITURE SIZZLERS Open Sunday! DAYBED in FACTORY CARTON $49 3 PC. OAK/GLASS DINETTE CfcTO Matching Barstool 15.00 tf STUDENT DESK $85 BRASS & GLASS TABLE $30 BRASS HEADBOARD $33 CUSTOM BUILT BLACK LAQUER COFFEE & END CQ TABLES I BUNK BED ^ O Sturdy & Strong ^ I I Complete w/ Mattress INNER SPRING MATTRESS SPECIAL Twin Size Ech.Pc. 39.50 Full Size Ech.Pc. 49.50 Queen Size Ech.Pc. 69.50 King Size Ech.Pc. 59 50 Sold in Sets Only SOFA, LOVESEAT 70 & CHAIR I f 5 PC. BEDROOM SPECIAL 3> I Oil 4 DRAWER CHEST $35 5 DRAWER CHEST $59 FURNITURE SHACK III “Customer Satisfaction Is EVERYTHING” More For Your Money! mSe Habla Espanol FREE 6 Month Layaway • While quantities Last 1502 S. Texas Avenue, Bryan 822-0200 Tl CIA declassifies account (J of agency’s background Historian blames other departments for problems WASHINGTON (AP) — The State Department, FBI and armed services hampered the Central Intelligence Agency in its infancy by bickering about authority over covert activities and other operations, according to a long-secret CIA history of the spy agency’s early years. The 1,000-page narrative, written in 1953 by histo rian Arthur B. Darling, is the First CIA document to be declassified and transferred to the National Archives for release to the public under the spy agency’s histori cal review program. A copy of it was delivered to President Bush on Wednesday by William Webster, director of the CIA, and Don W. Wilson, archivist of the United States. Webster said other CIA records will be declassified and transferred to the Archives. The declassified version of Darling’s history is ac companied by a note from the CIA’s history staff cau tioning readers that the former Yale history professor, who was the agency’s First historian, had “a definite and sometimes controversial point of view.” “Darling blames the State Department, the FBI, and what he terms the military establishment — especially the heads of the military intelligence services — for much of the hardship which the early CIA (and its pre decessor, the Central Intelligence Group) endured,” the note says. The history staff also said that the late Allen Dulles, when he became director of central intelligence in 1953, “reportedly . . . did not concur with Darling’s con clusions and . . . restricted access to the history.” Darling was the agency’s historian from 1952 to 1954. He died in 1971. He wrote that sniping by the military departments began as soon as the Office of Strategic Services, fore runner of the CIA, was established by President Frank lin D. Roosevelt during World War II. Brig. Gen. John Magruder, deputy director of the OSS, told Darling that career military officers “lowered their horns” against the expert economists, geog raphers, historians and scientists recruited for the new spying network. Darling conceded in his history that the military might have been justified in withholding information because the OSS “deserved part of its reputation for be ing a sieve.” He quoted OSS Chief William J. “Wild Bill” Dono van, however, as saying it was the military men»t: were the “leaky boys.” In any event, Darling wrote, “They are reluctant) this moment in 1953 to give a central civilian agent)u telligence which exposes their capabilities in war. “The result has been interference with the flowij raw materials essential to the realistic estimates wliiti should go to the makers of diplomatic policy and ml tary strategy,” he said. “The Army, Navy and the Department of State wen always glad to use the research and analysis brandid the Office of Strategic Services as a servant,” he wren “They were not willing to accept it as an equal panne in final judgments.” As the war approached an end, Donovan propose: to the president on Nov. 18, 1944, that the OSS I* turned into a permanent central intelligence system. “But this was not to happen,” Darling wrote. "Tli! Federal Bureau of Investigation and the armed seni® accepted the invitation to combat vociferously and a length. . . The Department of State proceeded within own plan, aided and encouraged by the Bureauofiln Budget and the Department of justice.” Donovan’s plan was leaked to the press andledioeii itorials denouncing it as a “superspy system” and a"po lice state” and complaints in Congress that the govern ment envisioned creating a “super-Gestapo.” President Truman disbanded the OSS on Sept.21 1945 and ordered the State Department to takethelei! in developing a postwar intelligence network. lndoin{ so, wrote Darling, he turned aside a Justice Departmer plan to make the FBI the center of the national inlet gence system. On Jan. 24, 1946, he issued a directive creatingtls Central Intelligence Croup. It was prohibited fromiir terfering with “internal security functions.” “Succeeding directors of central intelligence werei: have a merry time with J. Edgar Hoover of the FBI Darling wrote. Hoover even maintained that the FBI needed post abroad, at least in the Western Hemisphere, to protec internal security. He agreed to withdraw his ageiE from Latin America but was “irate” at being required!) do so, Darling said. The Central Intelligence Croup became the Centa j Intelligence Agency in 1947. OPEC ministers put negotiations for new production accord on hold VIENNA, Austria (AP) — OPEC oil ministers Sunday put on hold tough negotiations for a new pro duction accord to give them more time to consider ways of halting overproduction while keeping all the cartel members happy. Lack of agreement by the 13-na tion Organization of Petroleum Ex porting Countries could send crude prices tumbling to as low as $15 a barrel in the first quarter of 1990, said one ministerial source, who spoke on condition of anonymity. Prices could slump even more in the spring — to $ 12 a barrel — if a deal is not worked out for the second quarter, he said. The cartel formally opened its winter strategy session Saturday to try to come up with an arrangement that would halt production cheating by some members. Led by Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates, OPEC is producing more than 23 million barrels a day, according to analysts. Its output ceil ing now is 20.5 million barrels a day. Kuwait and the United Arab Emi rates have increased their flow — and violated their output quotas —to press their demands for larger shares of OPEC’s production pie. If the ministers can solve the two countries’ demands, they seem to feel the output ceiling can be bumped up to 22.5 million barrels a day in the first half of next year without upsetting the market. Prices would hold at about their current levels, they believe. OPEC’s target price is $18 a bar rel. A basket of crudes monitored by the cartel recently was $17.76 a bar rel. West Texas Intermediate, the American benchmark crude, has been trading around $20 a barrel. Middle Eastern brands run several dollars less. The ministerial source said two main ideas have been floated for re solving the problem of Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates, and nei ther was acceptable to all. One, advanced by Saudi Arabia and Iran, calls for letting countries with more oil produce more. Under this idea, all but heavyweights Saudi Arabia, Iran and Iraq would give up some of their shares to Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates, the source said. This idea is not palatable to suB I countries as Algeria, Indonesia an | Nigeria, he said, because suchcout | tries have serious money woes an: | depend more heavily on their li I revenues than others. To givey some barrels would be difficult. The alternative would be fora | members — including the oil giac: I — to contribute some of their snarf j to Kuwait and the United ArabE® I rates. Saudi Arabia’s influential mir * ister, Hisham Nazer, has saidrepea: edly his country will not reducer I quarter share of total output. Iran’s Gholamreza Aqazadehalsl has put his foot down, according11 the source. Officials are taking a look at nl rious scenarios and juggling figns to see if these options could resol> their problems. If not, the ministers have a t Iback” option, said the source. Tiifi could divide any increase in thep: j duction ceiling, say a million barrt I a day, proportionately amongthel I countries. r \ 1: N a t< v I ii v n v b a e I r f l h I ,e r I s a d t a i t t c s c l r c NOW HIRING The Battalion is looking for intelligent, articulate, opinionated non-journalism majors to | be columnists for Spring ’90. I 1 Applications for columnists and all other staff positions can be picked up in i Room 216 Reed McDonald and are due in Room 230 Reed McDonald by 5 , p.m. Monday, Nov. 27. DON’T LET THE FLU GET YOU! To Protect Yourself Against the Flu, Come In For Your Flu Shot Now ONLY $ 12 00 No Appointment Necessary CarePlus^fri MEDICAL/DENTAL CENTER 696-0683 1712 S.W. Parkway (across from Kroger Center) Open 8am-8pm Mon.-Sat. 1pm-8pm Sun.