The Battalion Battalion WORLD & NATION Friday, March 2,1990 Classifieds Quake aftershocks jolt California HELP WANTED FOR SALE SUMMERJOBS COUNSELORS - BOYS CAMP, W. MASS./GIRLS CAMP, MAINE TOP SALARY, RM/BD/LAUNDRY, TRAVEL ALLOWANCE. MUST LOVE KIDS AND HAVE SKILL IN ONE OF THE FOLLOWING ACTIVITIES: AR CHERY, ARTS & CRAFTS, BASE BALL, BASKETBALL, BICYCLING, CHEERLEADING, DANCE, DRAMA, DRUMS, FENCING, GOLF, GUITAR, GYMNASTICS, HOCKEY, HORSE BACK, KARATE, LACROSSSE, NA TURE, NURSES, PHOTOGRAPHY, PIANO, RADIO, ROCKETRY, ROPES, SAILBOARDING, SAILING, SCUBA, SOCCER, TENNIS, TRACK, WSI, WATERSKI, WEIGHTS, WOOD. MEN CALL OR WRITE: CAMP Wl- NADU, 5 GLEN ALNE, MAMARO- NECK, N.Y. 10543 (914)381-5983. WOMEN CALL OR WRITE: CAMP VEGA , P.O. BOX 1771, DUXBURY, MA. 02332 (617)934-6536. WANTED: Highly motivated individual to do full or parttime radio sales work in B/CS for a bet ter than average commis sion. Experience preferred. Good transportation. Call Bob Whitten or Bob Price 825-6484 for appt. SUMMER RESORT Colorado. Rockies Guest Ranch & Fine dining restaurant, Hiring wait resses, housekeepers, grounds keepers, bartenders, musicians, wranglers & guides. Housing plus salary. Send picture & resume to Wit’s End Guest Ranch & Resort, C.R. 500 Bayfeild, Co 81122. r 106TFN 'EARN $5000 + A MONTH Marketing # 1 Health & Fitness Product in the Country! 1-800-TRY-THIS ext. NU-100 TX-1 or 1-800-TOO-DO-IT ext NU TX-1' weekdays. 96ttfn ’86 BMW 325 good condition, $12K. 268-1488; 845- 4074, call Zoghi. • 106i3/2 HONDA AERO 80 RUNS GREAT. LOOKING FOR BEST OFFER. ASK FOR ALBERTO 693-8880. 106t3/8 TANDY 1000 COMPUTER WITH CITIZENS PRINTER FOR SALE. HARDLY BEEN USED. FOR DETAILS CALL ALBERTO 693-8880. 106t3/8 LABRADOR Retriever puppies, chocolate wormed, shots, six weeks Feb. 24. $250 to $300. Excellent blood lines 693-9990. 102t3/2 1986 BUICK REGAL AM-FM RADIO, CRUISE CONTROL696-1383 ANYTIME $5500. 105t3/21 FOR RENT COTTON VILLAGE APTS Ltd. Snook, TX 1 bdrm $200 2 Bdrm $248 Rental Assistance Available Call 846-8878or 774-0773 after 5pm Equal Opportunity Housing/Handicapped Accessible gOttfn PORT ARANSAS Condo for rent all or part of Spring Break. Zbd. Zba, all amenities. On the beach. $ 100/night. 847-8348. 106t3/8 Large Country Home needs roommate $250/month in cludes utilities Call 845-2878 anytime. 104t3/06 Female Roommate needed immediatly. Rent $100 2B- 1 1/2B near shuttle 696-9017. 104t3/6 One 2 bedroom studio apartment. Available immedi ately. Richmond Village C.S. 696-2998. 105t4/4 ROOMMATE WANTED Real Bargins! Two bedroom apartments south of cam pus. $135.00. 696-2038. 10H3/22 Spring Break apartments South Padre Island $500.00 512-761-7035. 102t3/2 Female Roommate Wanted Immediately. 3B-2B, Washer/Dryer, $160 month + utilities. 823-2737. 105tS/7 NOTICE Delta Gamma’s-if you have transfered to TAMU please call 693-3901. 103t3/5 PERSONALS SWM, GRADUATE STUDENT 6’, SLENDER AND FIT SEEKS ENERGETIC, TOMBOYISH FEMALE WHO LIKES THE OUTDOORS, CYCLING, WALKS IN THE PARK, AS WELL AS DANCING TIL THE MORNING LIGHT. BOX 6045 C.S. TX 77844J05t3/7 WORK & PLAY! SUMMER FUN! CRUISE SHIP JOBS, ALL TYPES! NO EXPERIENCE NEC ESSARY! 1-800-926-8447 ext. C-100 Tx-1, weekdays. 96ttfn PH ARMACIST-Director of Pharmacy. The Sandstone Center. Texas Licensure required. Contact Innovative Pharmacy Services, Inc. 7719 Wood Hollow Drive, Suite 200, Austin, TX 78731 or call 512-346-3506. 104t3/20 Waitresses/cashiers needed full or parttime at The Red Bandana on the corner of Hwy 6 and Hwy 21 Apply in person. 105t3/7 Healthy males wanted as semen donors. Help infertile couples. Confidentiality ensured. Ethnic diversity de- sirsable. Ages 18 to 35, excellent compensation. Con tact Fairfax Cryobank 1121 Briarcrest Suite 101 776- 4453. 72t5/4 Part-time Handyman. Epxerience necessary. Truck and tools a must. 20 + hours/week. 823-5469. 105t3/9 SERVICES COLD STUDY Patients needed with sneeezing, runny nose, nasal congestion wa tery or itchy eyes and itchy nose or throat to participate in a 5 day research study evaluating a mar keted medication. NO BLOOD DRAWN. Eligible volunteers will be compensated. G & S studies,inc. 846-5933 (CLOSE TO CAMPUS) Proffessional Word Processing Laser printing for Resumes Reports, Letters and Envelopes Rush service available ON THE DOUBLE 113 COLLEGE MAIN 846-3755 ALTERATIONS The Needle Ladies & Men's clothing Off Southwest Parkway ■ 300 Amherst 764-9608 SWIMMING POOL MANAGERS NEEDED Salary Range $725.00-1,000.00 per month. 30 hours per week. You will lifeguard as well as be in charge of the other life guards. (713)270-5946 Hughes 300-B Helicopter and North American T-6G training and more call Aviation Flight Center 846-5636 or 846-7080, Sam Muse 279-6040. 102ttfn ATTENTION STUDENTS! ENTREPRENEUR, IN STANT CASH! Grams and Loans! GOVERNMENT GUARANTEED! 1-800-926-8447 ext. GL-100 Tx-1, weekdays. 96ttfn IF YOU ARE OVER 18 - BAD CREDIT? NO CREDIT?- Major National Credit Cards! NO ONE RE FUSED! $80.00 Gift Certificate! (Serious Only) CALL NOW! 1-800-Want-IHS ext.CR-100 TX-1. 96ttfn WORD PROCESSING: PROFESSIONAL, PRECISE, SPEEDY - LASAR/LETTER QUALITY LISA 846- 8130. 85t5/40 Experienced librarian will do library research for you. Call 272-3348. 9H3/S0 Cal's Body Shop, 35 vears experience. 10% off tabor to students wiht I D. 1 Phone 823-2610. Wrecks wel comed. 87ttfn Professional word processing, light editing. Carla 690- 0305. 102t3/30 TYPING 7 DAYSAVEEK. WORD PROCESSOR, FAS T/ACCURATE. 776-4013/846-3273. 92t5/4 ’ANTED Enterprising Self-Starters When business starts booming it's time to think about expanding your operation. Adver tising in the Classifieds for the right person to fill the job not only makes good sense, it nets results! When you have an item to sell, a message to get across, a product to buy, a service to advertise...en terprising people use our Classi fieds for fast, economical and effective results! CALiLi 845-2611 The Battalion Small cities begin figuring cost of broken windows, fallen bricks UPLAND, Calif. (AP) — Small cities counted the cost of broken windows and fallen bricks as dozens of aftershocks continued to rattle the re gion Thursday, the day after a strong earthquake jolted much of Southern California. The town of Pomona alone suffered at least $20 million in damages, officials said. Safety inspectors in Los Angeles and neigh boring San Bernardino counties, which nestle against the San Gabriel and San Bernardino mountains, began checking gas and water lines along with older, unreinforced brick and ma sonry buildings. Wednesday’s 3:43 p.m. quake measured 5.5 on the Richter scale and was centered three miles northwest of Upland, 40 miles east of Los An geles. It was the most serious trembler to hit Califor nia since October’s magnitude-7.1 quake in the San Francisco Bay area, which killed 67 people and sparked fears of the massive earthquake pre dicted for the state in coming years. Dozens of aftershocks continued to shake Southern California on Thursday, with the day’s strongest, magnitude 3.0, at 12:55 p.m. “We just had a nice little aftershock,” Clare mont Assistant City Manager Bridget Distelrath said. “We just get big eyes. They’re very short, they don’t last long enough to get under a table.” Immediately after Wednesday’s jolt, there was a 5 percent chance of a larger quake within thret days, based on historical statistics, seismologis Lucile Jones of the U.S. Geological Survey inPs sadena said. But she said that by Thursday, tk probability had dropped to 2 percent or 3 pci cent. Injuries from the quake appeared tobeminoi Cuts, bruises and a few broken bones were tk chief complaints, officials said. State Office of Emergency Services official! said it appeared that Upland, La Verne, Pomoni Ontario and Claremont were most affected, will Pomona, Claremont and La Verne each dedai ing emergencies. American-made tanks utilized by Aoun’s militia in Lebanon BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — Gen. Michel Aoun’s tanks pierced the de fenses of the rival Christian militia in savage fighting Thursday in east Beirut as the showdown entered its second month. Police said at least 14 people were killed and 50 wounded in assaults by Aoun’s American-made M-48 tanks against the urban lines of Samir Gea- gea’s Lebanese Forces militia. By police count, the fight for con trol of the SlO-square-mile Christian enclave has killed 708 people and wounded 1,984 since it broke out Jan. 30. A police spokesman reported mi nor progress by Aoun’s tanks, which advanced over nine hours across the open terrain to the edge of the ur ban area of Nabaa, a pocket held by the Lebanese Forces. The advance shattered a 12-day lull that followed a cease-fire called by a neutral mediation committee. “The tanks are ait the entrances to the narrow alleys” of the densely By police count, the fight for control of the 310- square-mile Christian enclave has killed 708 people and wounded 1,984 since it broke out Jan. 30. populated low-income district, the spokesman said. He said it would be “extremely dangerous” to push the tanks into the slum-like district, where they would be easy targets for Geagea’s experienced street fighters using ar mor-piercing rocket-propelled gre nade launchers. The advance stopped at 2 p.m. af ter the captain commanding the at tack was killed, but the two sides maintained a fierce exchange of howitzer and mortar shells at the rate of about 40 rounds a minute, said the spokesman, who spoke on condition of anonymity. He said Aoun’s tanks had failed to advance along the slopes of Ashra- fiyeh, the militia’s second stronghold in east Beirut. A dozen fires blazed out of con trol in Ashrafiyeh and Nabaa. Smoke billowed from the districts, and the fire department said its en gines were not able to leave their un derground basement centers to com bat the blaze due to the intensity of the clashes. Fire burns restaurant in Cairo hotel CAIRO, Egypt (AP) — Fire broke out in a luxury ho tel’s tent restaurant early Thursday, and wind-whipped flames leaped to the main building, killing 16 people and injuring about 70. At least one American was among the dead. Frantic guests at the six-story Heliopolis Sheraton jumped out windows and clambered down bedsheets that were tied together. Many of the injuries were bro ken bones suffered in falls. U.S. Embassy spokeswoman Marcelle Wahba said one American was killed, but she refused to release any information on the victim. Three Americans were se riously injured, police Brig. Abdel-Rehim el-Kenawy said. The blaze broke out at 1 a.m. and burned for nine hours. By early afternoon, after the last flames had been put out and the smoke extinguished, guests were returning to retrieve belongings. As people carried soggy luggage out of the ruined building, rescue teams were seen carrying out at least four bodies. The hotel northeast of Cairo had no fire alarms or sprinklers, and many guests heard of the fire from other guests. Tourism Minister Fuad Sultan said the blaze started accidentally in the Nubian Tent restaurant — a cotton canvas tent attached to one of the three blocks of the T- shaped hotel. The head of Cairo’s fire brigade, Maj. Gen. Adel Nigm, said such tents are fire hazards and the Sheraton put it up without consulting the fire de partment. Sparks jumped from a clay oven to the ceiling of the tent, igniting flames that quickly spread to the hotel Sultan said. Senate, Bush compromise on pollution WASHINGTON (APj-So? ate leaders and President Bml! compromised Thursday on fu ture air pollution controls forau tomobiles. factories and electric power plants, enhancing chance that a clean air bill will pass this year. The agreement, after mort than three weeks of closed-doot negotiations, was viewed as a mid dle ground likely to attracs enough support to thwart contin uing regional opposition in the looming Seriate debate. Majority Leader George Mitch ell, D-Maine, called the compro mise a "sound and comprehen sive” agreement that will} substantially improve air quality over the next decade. He planned |’ to bring the legislation to the Sen ate floor on Monday. “President Bush is extraordi i narily pleased with the[ agreement,” Roger Porter, the president’s chief domestic polio adviser, said. “It is a milestone,an enormous step forward.’’ Porter said the administration: would attempt to expedite Senate passage and seek a similar agreement in the House, where clean-air legislation remains in committee. J But the compromise is si likely to encounter stiff industn lobbying, largely because of its es timated $20 billion to $40 billion annual cost to the economy. Some senators also have ex pressed concern that the bargain ing weakened provisions in the original Senate hill that would have required stronger auto mobile emission controls. ■ | Jj Soldiers desert from Sandinista forces MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) — Young sol diers have begun to desert from the Sandinista armed forces as the deadline nears for President Daniel Ortega to step down from office, draftees and draftees’ relatives said Thursday. Ortega was defeated in Sunday’s election by Violeta Barrios de Chamorro, who has promised to abolish the draft after she is inaugurated on April 25. Some deserters are apparently plan ning to hide out until that happens. Her office announced meanwhile Thursday that the president-elect will send a special mission to the United States next week to seek economic aid for Nicaragua, ravaged through the years by economic mismanagement and U.S.-imposed sanctions. It said Francisco Mayofga, 41, who has done postgraduate work at Yale, will head the mission. Mayorga has often been mentioned as possible minister of economy after Chamorro takes office for a six-year term. “It will be an exploratory mission to have an initial picture of what’s needed, which we will combine with offers for aid already arriving from Western Europe and Latin American countries,” Mayorga told reporters. He said his team will visit Washington and New York for talks with World Bank, Inter- American Development Bank and International Monetary Fund officials. Although the leftist Sandinistas agreed to give up power to Chamorro and her United National Opposition alliance, they have presented tough demands as transition teams meet to discuss terms. The Sandinistas want the economic structuH they set up left alone; UNO wants to decentrafe the economy, privatize state enterprises and fref* the marketplace. The Sandinistas also want the military strut ture left intact, especially if the U.S.-supporteil Contra guerrillas don’t disband; UNO wants tel depoliticize the military and reduce its size. Both sides want the Contras to disband imme i diately, but Contra leaders say not until Mn I Chamorro is inaugurated. Ortega has insisted on keeping the draft I where soldiers get leftist political indoctrination | alongside military training. Mrs. Chamorros wants “children to go back to school’.’ 1989-1990 AGQIEVIS04 Texas A&M University's Video Yearbook AND TELL OUR CAMERA WHAT’S ON YOUR MIND!! March 7th •1st Floor MSC • 10am-4pm ™ \ Class of '91 &'92 Ball Riverwalk Fiesta Friday, March 2, 1990 At The Ramada Inn $5./person Tickets on sale at the MSC, Duncan & at the door