The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 04, 1990, Image 6

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    V
Battalion Classifieds
ANNOUNCEMENT
ATTENTION MAY
GRADUATES!!!
For those graduates who forgot to order an
nouncements, Extra announcements will go on
sale April 9, 1990 at 8: 00 am. Location will be
MSC Room 217 Student Finance Center. The
sales will be on a first come first serve basis
only. Mastercard/ Visa cards will be accepted.
Noi Phione orders.
124t4/6
HELP WANTED
VISITOR INFORMATION
CENTER
[\n\W be accepting appiications
tor tour guides April 2-13.
For more information stop by
information Center in Rudder
Tower Lobby or call
845-5852.
EXCELLENT WAGES FOR SPARE TIME ASSEM
BLY. EASY WORK AT HOME. EXCEPTIONAL
PAY. NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED. CALL 1-601-388-
8242. 122t4/6
DEILVERY DRIVERS
NEEDED
Apply today .start tomorrow,
flexible hours, all shifts available
cash pay every night, bonuses
paid to top drivers, half price food.
GUMBYS 764-8629
1702 Kyle S. Suite 101
(next to Thomas Sweet)
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
‘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 cofhpensated.
G & S STUDIES, INC.
(closetp campus)
846-5933 isjtttn
SKIN INFECTION STUDY
G&S Studies Inc. is participating in a study
on acute skin infection. If you have one of
the folowing conditions call G&S Studies. El
igible volunteers will be compensated.
'infected blisters 'infected cuts
'infected boils 'infected scrapes
'infected insect bites 'infected earlobes
G&S Studies, Inc.
(close to campus)
846-5933
Manufacturer of top 23 perfumes
in the world is looking for aggres
sive students needing to earn ex
tra money parttime. On campus or
off campus, high achievers call
693-3330.
BEGINNING GERMAN TUTOR
WANTED.
Business professor, spouse, and chil
dren ages 15 and 11, moving to FRG.
Seek tutor to work with us in our home
from now until mid-July. Call Dr. Keim
845-1445 or come by 308 Blocker.
EARN EXTRA $$CASH$$
Giving plasma is safe, easy to do and
very rewarding. You can donate be
tween classes or make donating a fund
raiser for your student organization.
WESTGATE PLASMA CENTER
Call 846-8855 12214/30
Child Care Center in Houston needs
qualified (W.S.I. or Senior Red Cross
Life Saving) swim instructors. Reply
(713)777-7854 or Fun -N- Care Child
Care Center 9450 W. Bellfort Houston,
Texas 77031, Attention Suzanne.
11214/27
Mature persons who must earn their own livelihood.
Pleasant, profitable business. Set your own hours. No
age limit. Phone for appointment. 693-4728. 124t4/10
Grapevine Restaurant is now hiring all shifts. Start now
thru summer. Call and ask for Pasty for appointment
696-3411. 124t4/6
Part-time Handyman. Epxerience necessary. TrucN
and tools a must. 20+ hours/week. 823-5469. 105t3/9
Parttime bookkeeper. Apply in person at Piper’s Chev
ron, Texas at University. 121t4/12
Parttime help. Apply in person at Piper’s Chevron,
Texas at University. 12U4/12
Male Companion/Roommate, Salary plus room. Send
Resume to : 3000 Briarcrest, Suite 406, Bryan, Texas
77802 Attn: Deborah. 115t4/4
Mechanic needed for morning and evening shift. Cer
tification preferred, experience necessary. Apply in
person at 815 University Drive. 12()t4/4
Healthy males wanted as semen donors. Help infertile
couples. Confidentiality ensured. Ethnic diversity dc-
sirsable. Ages 18 to 35, excellent compensation. Con
tact Fairfax Cryobank 1121 Briarcrest Suite 101 776-
4453. 72t5/4
3-C Bar-b-que: waiters, waitresses and line cooks
needed. Apply in person at Culpepper Plaza. Must be
able to work thru summer. 119t4/6
SERVICES
Professional 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
Professional Word Processing, Resumes, Thesis. LA-
SAR PRINTER 822-1430. 108t5/4
TYPING/WORD PROCESSING. Excellent service.
Professional results. Students welcomed. 764-2931.
12115/2
COLLEGE MONEY! Private Scholarships! You recive
a minimun of 8 sources or your money refunded!
Guaranteed! COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIPS LOCA-
TORS, P.O. Box 1881 loplin, MO 64802-1881, 417-
624-0362. 112t4/13
TYPING 7 DAYS/WEEK. WORD PROCESSORTfAS-
T/ACCURATE. 776-4013/846-3273. 92t5/4
prompt,
perience. Near Campus. 696-5401.
WORD PROCESSING: PROFESSIONAL, PRECISE,
SPEEDY - LASAR/LETTER QUALITY LISA 846-
8130. 85t5/40
FOR SALE
Movie Biz Video is offering tempo
rary employment for a female to
promote the movie The little Mer
maid. Costume work is involved.
On weekends Apply in person at
Movie Biz 1673 Briarcrest Drive,
1986 HONDA ELITE 80 - RED *550 OR BEST OF
FER CALL 847-0918 LEAVE MESSAGE. 124t4/10
Scooter-Must Sell! Great condition, low mileage, $450.
Call 696-8840. 124t4/10
’87 YAMAHA RAZZ $375. GOOD CONDITION, 10
SPEED BIKE $50. 846-7639. 124t4/10
Office space, receptionist, copier, fax, near Brazos
County Industrial Park on EM 2818 822-2211 or 776-
5215. 124t5/l
700 sq ft office 1/2 bath, AC & heat. Shop and 2 acres
available 5 minutes from TAMU East College Station
area 822-2211 or 776-5215. 124t5/l
14x40 Morgan Building, insulated, wired, paneling, 2
years old, divider wall and counter, 1/2 bath $6500
822-2211 or 776-5215. 124t5/l
HONDA Cl 101 RAIL BIKE RUNS WELL, $375 764-
6821. 124t4/10
1982 Trans Am, must sell, lots of features, good stereo.
$3495 Call Victor 696-5416. 120t4/4
PIANO FOR SALE. Wanted responsible party to as
sume small monthly payments on piano. See locally 1-
800-447-4266. 122t4/10
1981 Kawasaki lOOOcc, backrest, helmet, runs great.
Best offer 847-5902. 119t4/3
Red Honda Elite ’80. Helmet included. $525, will nego
tiate. Runs fine. 764-9559. 121t4/5
1990 Ninja, Over $7K invested $3299 OBO, also 1982
Ascot excellent condition $850 OBO 846-7011.119t4/5
FOR RENT
4 BEDROOM 2 (1 1/2) BATHS,
great room, ceiling fans, frost free
refrigrator, wet bar, W/D connec
tions, zoned A/C. Annual lease
only. No Pets. Sundance Apts.
696-9638 Sausalito Apts.
693-4242. 12214/13
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 60ttfn
One two bedroom studio apartment. Available imme
diately. Ridgewood Village College Station 696-2998.
2B-2B duplex/ 4plex units, w/d large closets, on shuttle,
new carpets, Summer rates. Wyndham 846-4384.
i 117t4/20
IB-IB efficiency units on shuttle, pool, unique horse
shoe floorplans, private fenced patios, w/d connections.
Wyndham 846-4384. 117t4/20
A 2 bed room 11/2 bath, luxury, W/D, available near
A&M, shuttle. $350 693-0551,764-8051. 119t4/24
/ -Jt..;
A 3 bedroom, 2 hath 4plex with washer/di yet, on shut
tle. Starting at $425. Summer rates available. 764-0704,
696-4384. !14ttfn
SUBLEASE MY ONE BEDROOM HUNTINGTON
APARTMENT FOR THE FIRST SUMMER SES
SION. FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED. 696-6245.
123t4/16
2 BEDROOM 1 1/2 BATH. Walk, bike or shuttle to
A&M. Hot Tub, Pool, Lifestyles Fitness Center. Start-
ingat *360. 696-7380 East Gate Apartments. 122t4/13
ROOMMATE WANTED
Female needed for 2 bedroom 1 bath ’til August 696-
3843. 12St4/9
NOTICE
We’ll display your artwork, no fees, no commission, get
the exposure you deserve. Call Baker 764-8751.124t4/6
LOSE GOLD LINKED BRACELET.
CALL 847-2415 REWARD OFFERED.
IF FOUND
120t4/9
WANTED
Need ride to El Paso Easter for small, clean, quiet dog.
prefer Christian, non-smoker, any age. Will share ex
penses,696-8484, 693-5059. 12St4/9
Page 6
The Battalion
fhe Battal
Wednesday, April 4,
State targets
minority groups
in smoking
campaign
DALLAS (AP) — The Texas De
partment of Health is hoping to be
one of 20 applicants approved for a
nationwide program aimed at reduc
ing smoking among ethnic minori
ties, women and young people.
The American Stop Smoking In
tervention Study for Cancer Preven
tion, or ASSIST, wants to reduce
smoking by 43 percent in seven
years. It is co-sponsored by the Na
tional Cancer Institute and Ameri
can Cancer Society.
“This is a great opportunity for all
of us who have recognized what a
tremendous problem smoking is, but
who haven’t had the resources to
really attack it,” said state Health De
partment spokesman Ron Todd,
coordinator for the Office of Smok
ing and Health. “This would provide
the funding, staff and materials used
to address the smoking problem
comprehensively.”
The Health Department is target
ing Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston and
San Antonio. If selected, the state
will receive a National Cancer Insti
tute grant to cover all expenses,
Todd said.
it
Fhere’s children who
grow up and the only
messages they see day
after day are billboards that
show smoking as
glamorous and associated
with success and good
living, and that’s really not
the case at all.”
Wecfnesd
'The following incidents were reported to the
Texas A&M University Police Department between
March 22 and Friday.
SEXUAL ASSAULT:
• A woman reported that she was sexually as-
sualted by her ex-boyfriend in her Dormitory 2
room. The couple was discussing the renewal of the
relationship when the assault occurred.
Four days later, the woman told two UPD investi
gating officers that she would not file charges
against the man if he would receive counseling for
his action. The man’s attorney agreed to this recom
mendation.
TERRORISTIC THREAT:
• A woman reported that her ex-boyfriend, his
brother, sister and the man’s new fiance have been
making harassing and threatening telephone calls to
her room in Krueger Hall.
CRIMINAL MISCHIEF:
• A man said someone purposefully placed a fin
ishing nail in his bicycle tire causing it to deflate.
• An antenna assembly was pulled out of the
fender of an Isuzu truck parked in Parking Area 42.
• An exterior mirror on a Toyota vehicle was
damaged by a blunt object while the vehicle was
parked in Parking Area 5.
• During foot patrol of campus property, an offi
cer observed a glass window panel had been broken
in the Academic Building. The building proctor was
notified of the damage.
HARASSMENT:
• Three students reported receiving harassing
telephone calls.
BURGLARY OF A VEHICLE:
• A red A&M parking permit was stolen from a
1989 Honda parked in Parking Area 40.
• T-tops, a cassette tape box and 15 tapes were
stolen from a 1985 Ford Mustang parked in Parking
Area 40.
MISDEMEANOR THEFT:
• Seven bicycles were stolen in separate incidents
on campus.
• Four wallets were reported stolen in separate
incidents. Two of the wallets were unsecured.
• A radio antenna was removed from a vehicle in
Parking Area 48.
Rivet-
• A Pincor generator was stolen from the
side Campus.
• A black leather jacket was stolen from a rooraiiij
the Biological Sciences Building.
• Black vinyl doors were removed from a
Jeep CJ7 in Parking Area 48.
• A Liz Claiborne purse, wallet and key chain|
were stolen from a room in Mosher Hall.
• A Panasonic PV-4700 VHS video player ttajl
pried from its mounting and stolen from a room in
the Biological Sciences Building West.
MISDEMEANOR THEFT/PUBLIC INTOXI |
CATION:
• During surveillance of Parking Area 56 an<
cer observed a subject remove a yellow car covet I
from a parked vehicle. The suspect placed thecat
cover in a dark colored vehicle and proceeded to
leave the area. An officer located and identified the
suspect and found the man to be in possession of the
cover. He was incarcerated in the Brazos Countv |
Jail.
CRIMINAL TRESPASS/PUBLIC INTOXICA |
TION:
• While on foot patrol of campus property an of I
fleer observed two intoxicated people walking
around on the outside of the Academic ~
dome area. They were incarcerated in the Brazos |
County Jail for criminal trespass and public intoxica
tion. The matter was referred to Student Affairs.
RECOVERED PROPERTY:
• A wallet reported stolen March 5 was found I
with its contents intact.
ARSON:
• A student was arrested for arson in connection
with the fire damage of A-3 lounge Nov. 11,
The man was jailed in the Brazos County Jail.
FELONY THEFT:
• A man was arrested for stealing a large quantity
of laboratory equipment from the Chemistry Build
ing last year. He was incarcerated in the Brazos
County Jail.
DISORDERLY CONDUCT:
• The Davis-Gary Hall resident director re
quested assistance from a UPD officer to identify a
male visitor in the residence hall. The subject was
identified. Investigation continues.
— Ron Todd,
Health Department
spokesman
Senate approves reform bill
House researches ways to finance education
An ASSIST program goal is to re-
f" -
duce the number of smokers from
27 percent to 15 percent of the pop
ulation by the year 2000, said Joe
Patterson, director of Government
Relations and Special Projects for
the American Cancer Society.
Participants for ASSIST will be
announced in June 1991, Patterson
said.
Todd estimates that there are
16,697 smoking-related deaths in
Texas each year, about 14 percent of
all deaths, at a cost to taxpayers of
$3.3 billion each year.
Black men die from smoking
more than any other group. Eighty-
nine of every 100,000 black men will
die from respiratory cancers and
295 per 100,000 of heart disease,
Todd said.
That compares to 58 deaths from
respiratory cancers and 234 deaths
from heart disease per 100,000
white men, Todd said.
AUSTIN (AP) — School finance battle lines were
drawn Tuesday, when the Texas Senate again ap
proved its $1.2 billion reform bill and Gov. Bill Clem
ents proposed a no-new-taxes plan for next school year
that carves $269.5 million from other parts of the state
budget.
In the House, leaders met privately to write a $450
million bill and began the search for ways to fund it, on
the second day of a second special session on court-or
dered school finance reform.
Mike Toomey, Clements’ chief of staff, said the gov
ernor would sign into law an education funding plan
that shifts money from such areas as the Parks and
Wildlife Department and the Capitol restoration pro
ject and increases fees paid to the state for information
on a driver’s record.
Up to another $172 million could be gained by tem
porarily reducing the state’s contribution to the Tea
cher Retirement System, Toomey told House budget
writers, although the governor’s office is not proposing
that idea. He said the system is so overfunded that re
tirement benefits could be increased simultaneously
with the reduction.
Clements was critical of the Senate’s bill, which is the
same measure senators passed in the 30-day special ses
sion that ended last Wednesday.
“They’re posturing, and that’s all they’re doing,” he
said. “They know that the House will never agree to
that, and I won’t either.”
But Sen. Carl Parker, bill sponsor and Senate Educa
tion Committee chairman, said, “It’s a matter .of us
doing what we thought ought to be done, and
what $ 1.2 billion represents.
“I for one think that he (Clements) ought to have
opportunity to show his commitment against decem
ucation by vetoing a decent bill,” said Parker, D-l
Arthur.
Other lawmakers expressed concern that puttins
little state money into school finance reform could it
increases in local property taxes. The $13.5
year finance system, whicn was ruled unconstitul
by the Texas Supreme Court, relies on state aid,
property taxes and some federal funds.
The court, which found disparities in funding;
able to property-rich and -poor districts, gave law
ers until May 1 to change the system.
Parker’s measure also had its critics in the 31-i
her Senate, including Sen. Bill Ratliff, R-MountPle<
ant. Ratliff unsuccessfully tried to amend the measu
including an attempt to trim its cost to $650 milli
next school year.
“What we’re doing is playing a legislative game
chicken. We ought to send something over there
has some chance of arriving at a compromise with
House,” said Ratliff, one of 10 senators who registerd]
“no” votes against the bill after it passed on a voice volt
Others were Sens. Ken Armbrister, D-Victoria;Ted|
Bivins, R-Amarillo; J.E. “Buster” Brown, R-Lakejad
son; Chet Edwards, D-Waco; O.H. “Ike” Harris,R-D;
las; Don Henderson, R-Houston; John Leedom, R-D;
las; Bob McFarland, R-Arlington; and Bill Sims,
Angelo. Sen. Hugh Parmer, D-Fort Worth, was absent
D-v;
Man shares sailing adventure with students!
AUSTIN (AP) — William Pinkney has a
dream. Part of it is to become the first African-
American man on a solo voyage to sail around
the world via the five great capes.
The other part is to teach minority youngsters
that even if others discourage them, they can
achieve their goals by working hard and making
sacrifices.
The 54-year-old Chicagoan shared his dream
recently with students in the Austin Independent
School District, including those at Pearce Middle
School.
“Does any one of you have a gbal?” he asked
the Pearce teen-agers. Few raised their hands.
“Every goal requires you put something into it.
The only free thing you get is your name. For
your goal to work, you have to study and sacrifice
the time and effort.”
Pinkney, who was an X-ray technician in the
Navy for eight years and has 20 years sailing ex
perience, has spent the past five years laying
plans to circumnavigate the globe.
He lacked the $350,000 needed to finance the
voyage. But he didn’t lack determination. So he
a
Every goal requires you put
something into it. The only free thing
you get is your name. For your goal
to work, you have to study and
sacrifice the time and effort.”
William Pinkney,
voyager
spent countless hours knocking on doors,™
to find corporations to sponsor his ll-monii
odyssey.
He plans to set sail in June from New Yorll
City’s South Street Seaport on a 47-foot cutiti
which will be outfitted with the latest technolop
including a computer tracking system and I
VCR. When Pinkney noted the boat also has as;-
phisticated, built-in stereo system with 250tapti
— his only entertainment onboard — it brougfc
ooohs and aahs from the students.
The boat also will be outfitted with marineri
dio equipment donated by Motorola Inc., whict
sponsored his Austin trip.
Pinkney, who is visiting schools throughom
the country to talk about his upcoming voyage,
will sail to Brazil, then pass through Cape Horn
off South America, then to New Zealand anil
Tasmania, where he plans to stop.
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See Snyde
.. jjjjj
come join
the peaceful
coffeehouse
...it s free
friday, april 6
8:00 p.m. rumours
msc town hall ^