The Battalion J Battalion Classifieds WORLD & NATION 81 The I HELP WANTED 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 boils ‘infected insect bites ‘infected cuts ‘infected scrapes ‘infected earlobes G&S Studies, Inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 SERVICES ALTERATIONS The Needle Ladies & Men's clothing Off Southwest Parkway • 300 Amherst 764-9608 WORD PROCESSING. PROtfSSlONAL, PRECISE, SPEEDY - LASAR/LETTER QUALITY LISA 846- 8130. 85t5/40 SEAT BELT SURVEYORS NEEDED Students needed from the follow ing cities to observe seat belt use for the Texas Transportation Insti tute May 29 - June 8: Abilene, Fort Worth, Houston, Laredo, Lub bock, Midland, San Antonio, Tyler, Waco, and Witchita Falls. 3 days work, $100. plus gas -allowance. Call 845-2736, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. for interview. Ask for Terri or Laurie. 142105/04 Students - need a summer job? Earn $600 to $800 per month as a route carrier for the Houston Chronicle. Job requires working early morning hours and a gas al lowance is provided. If interested call James at 693-7815 or Julian at 693-2323 for an appointment. Central Valley Chemical Inc. is looking for drivers part-time, M-F and Saturday, 7 a.m. -12. Requirements: 1) 21 years of age. 2) Excellent driving record. 3)No D.W.I.’s. 4) No felonies. 5) Class C Drivers Li-, cense. Rate of pay is $5./hour. Work description: Delivery of Agriculture Chemicals to dealers and growers. Please contact Richard Lure or Barrett Blackwell at 272-8470. -142105/04 Carquest has immediate opening for the following position: Parts Counter Trainee Apply in person 402 East University Dr. Equal Opportunity Employer All Applicants will be drug tested BAKER All Shifts The Deluxe Burger Bar/Cafe Eccell Will Train apply at: 104 B Church Street 14015/9 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 2 part-time Optometric assistants needed year round. No experi ence necessary. Typing required. Hours 8:45 to 1:00pm and 1:00 to 5:00pm; M-F. A&M student only. 696-3754. 14114/30 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 Half a day work, General office and house cleaning. 776-0946. 143ttfn Summer help needed. Packers and loaders. Local mov ing company. 779-6333. 143t5/4 Part-time experienced pet shop clerk needed evenings Sc weekends. Call 822-9315 for Appointment. 140t5/4 Wanted part-time A8cM student in fabrication shop call after 6:00pm 778-3646. 140t5/2 Wanted - part-time babysitter for four children in my home, evenings. Education major preferred. 822-9225. 14115/3 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 Liberal Arts student familiar with library needed for research. $5. per hour. Call Ed Schulze (409) 295-5571. 142t05/04 ATTENTION: EASY WORK, EXCELLENT PAY! Assemble products at home. Details, (1 )-602-838-8885 Ext. W 4009. 56l 11/23 Child care in mu home for summer. 7:45 til 5:15 M-F. Must have car. 776-0765. 141t5/3 ATTENTION: POSTAL JOBSI Start $11.41/hourI For application info call (1) 602-838-8885, Ext. M- 4009.6am - 10pm. 7 days. 132ttfn Schlotzsky’s is now accepting applications for part time evening and weekend shifts. Apply in person only, be tween 2-5 pm. 138t5/7 Computer training- word processing spreadsheet, DOF. Reasonable rates. Guaranteed, 846-3535. 138t5/7 SERVICES Typing Services - fast, accurate and inexpensive. Call Notes-n-Quotes at 846-2255. 129t04/30 Professional Word Processing Laser printing for Resumes Reports, Letters and Envelopes Rush service available ON THE DOUBLE 113 COLLEGE MAIN 846-3755 Experienced librarian will do library research for you. Call 272-3348. 91t3/30 TYPINGAVORD PROCESSING. Excellent service. Professional results. Students welcomed. 764-2931. 121t5/2 Word Processing, Desktop Publishing, (newsletters, etc.), Lasar Printing, Journalism Degree, 846-4489. 113t4/30 TYPING 7 DAYSAVEEK. WORD PROCESSOR, FAS T/ACCURATE. 776-4013/846-3273. 92t5/4 WHY LOSE YOUR DEPOSIT? MOVING, SPRING CLEANING, FREE ESTIMATES. SUPPLIES FUR NISHED. REASONABLE 764-8626. 137t5/9 WANTED This Week: Buying better childrens clothing. Nearly New Resale Shop 3811 E 29th, Bryan 846-2543 141t4/30 Want to buy: Senior boots, larger men’s sizes, used but still good, $350 pair 505-989-8419. 140t5/23 PERSONALS ADOPTION: married, caring couple want to adopt in- ~ • 1; will i fant; lots of love and laughter; confidential; will pay medical and legal; CALL ANYTIME- COLLECT'. 412- 855-4193. 127ttfn ADOPT - Picnics, Bar-B-Ques, Brother to hug, small New England Community. Call collect (802)235-2312. Andy and Carolyn. 142t05/02 FOR SALE TYPING: Accurate, prompt, professional, 15 years ex perience. Near campus. 696-5401. 143t5/4 Palm Harbor Repo’s. Several to choose from. MUST SELL THIS MONTH 1-800-880-HOME. 126t5/3 Palm Harbor Buyers. SAVE $$$ THOUSANDS. Buy at the Palm Harbor Factory Model Center 1-800-880- HOME. 126t5/3 For sale couch and cover $75 also coffee table $25, call Sherry. 693-4577. 14U5/3 87 Honda spree with helmet, low miles, good condi tion. $350 696-6101. 14115/2 ARC RED MALE CHOW, 10 MOS. 846-6499. 14U5/1 PLEASE HELP! Must sell my waterbed! Shelved head- board, lining, heater, and mattress. Call Chris, 696- 2773. 142t05/04 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME, 1985, V-8, extras, excel lent condition, 61,000 miles, $4,250. Jim, day 361- 4330; evening 696-6600. 140t5/2 Can you buy Jeeps, Cars, 4 by 4’s seized in drug raids for under $100.00? Call for facts today. 805-641-9533. Dept. 222. 102t2/26 SALE couch love seat, beige pattern, $300. Dining wicker set $40 774-7689 140t5/2 ATTENTION - GOVERNMENT SEIZED VEHI CLES from $100. Fords, Mercedes, Corvettes, Chevys. Surplus Buyers Guide. 1-602-838-8885 Ext. A 4009.’ 7 Ittfn 1988 Yamaha Razz. Excellent condition! New battery. $395, Call 696-8840. 139t5/l 1980 CHEVY MONZA. RUNS. NEEDS ENGINE WORK. $500. 847-1519 Mark. 139t5/l Dark room equipment. Beseller enlarger, light, timer, dryer. 150. 846-0558. 135t5/16 Office space, receptionist, copier, fax, near Brazos County Industrial Park on FM 2818 822-2211 or 776- 5215. 124t5/l 700 sq ft office 1/2 bath, AC & heat. Shop and 2 acres available . r ’ ~ 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 ROOMMATE WANTED Female roommate needed for Fall/Spring 1990-1991, 2B-2B, $125/mo. Including utilities, share room, on shuttle. Plantation Oaks 693-7710. 139t5/l Roommate wanted, walking distance. Summer and/or fall. Non-smoker, $150 mo + dep. Large house 764- 2112,845-1510. 139t5/l FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED. 2B/2B 4-plex, WD, $ 187.50/mo. Debra, 823-4665, 845-1824. 142t05/04 Summer Roommate needed. 2B/2B Polo Club. Cheap rent, low utilities! Call John 696-4389. 142t05/04 FEMALE ROOMMA FE NEEDED. 2B/2B 4-plex, WD, $187.50/mo. Debra, 823-4665, 845-1824. 142t05/04 Summer roommate needed for HOUSTON. Please call Karen 696-5842. 139t5/l 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 60ttfn A 2 Bd/1 1/2 B Studio. W/D, yard, shutde. $250/350. CATS MANAGEMENT 693-1723. 143t5/9 SUMMER ROOM FOR RENT. VERY CLOSE TO CAMPUS 1BD/1B WITH KITCHENETTE $150/mo. ALL BILLS PAID NEGOTIABLE CALL LISA 696- 3423. 143t5/4 Sublease Cripple Crek IB-IB Condo for summer or longer. ALL the amenities for $366/mo. Call 696-8613. 143t5/9 Summer lease of 2 Br studio. Ceiling fan, balconies, rqany trees. Aggieland shuttle bus, $320. Available Ridgewood Village. 696-2998. 143t5/30 1&2 BEDROOM APARTMENTS FOR SUMMER AND FALL RENTAL. PRE-LEASING AVAILABLE. NEW CARPET. SUMMER RATES. CALL TODAY. 764-3024. 136t5/3 Sublease spacious one bedroom apt from May thru Au gust with option to extend lease indefinitely phone: 764-6621 (Plai 764-6621 (Plantation Oaks). Sublease Kent Condos, 2B - 1 1/2 B, shuttle, $400/mo 774-7689 1200sq ft. 140t5/2 Sublease Woodsioi k Condo I in stiintnei. 2 hedi oom. 1 12 hath, washer, dryer. S275 month. Partialis fur nished or unfurnished. 693-1239. 134t4/19 WALK TO CLASS. 2 BDRM.. 1 BA 1 11 AP I .. SMALL QL IET COMPLEX. $210 + BII I S. 696-7266.134t5/l lb-lb best floor plan in town! Private fence patios, sky light, pool, shuttle, low utilities, horseshoe design. Wyndham. 846-4384. 142t06/31 Sublease. $200. savings, 1 BR, Arbor Square, shuttle, summer 5/15/90, 8/15/90. 845-5598. 142t0o/04 Professional Word Processing. Resumes. Thesis. LA SAR PRINTER 822-1430. 108t5/4 Large 2b-lb studio apartment, approximately 3'/i blocks from A&M. Wooded, gas and electric. $350. + FOR RENT don't let your business bomb. Call 845-0569 to advertise TReBattalion Tuesday, May 1,1990 Tue SUBLEASING LARGE 1 BEDROOM APARTMENT FOR FALL SEMESTER. SAUSALITO APART MENTS. ONLY $290/mo. NO HOOK-UP FEES. CALL 696-3134. 140t4/30 NASA repairs telescope GODDARD SPACE FLIGHT CENTER, Md. (AP) — NASA engi neers got the $1.5 billion Hubble Space Telescope working again Monday after freeing a movable an tenna that had jammed after brush ing against an electrical cable. “We are still investigating it to un derstand how did this really happen, why did it happen, why didn’t we catch it?” said Jean Olivier, one of the top NASA officials on the pro ject. “We’re not through with that in vestigation.” By Tuesday evening, the tele scope should be in a condition where calibration and other normal start up work can begin, said Mike Har rington, director of the trouble shooting team. The antenna jammed on Friday when engineers were running it through its paces. Sensing some thing wrong and trying to prevent damage, the telescope’s computer shut down the whole system. The telescope’s two high-gain antennas are designed to transmit science data to two orbiting relay satellites at very high speeds — up to the equivalent of a 30-volume encyclopedia in 42 minutes. “For a while we were puzzled as to the data we were receiving from the spacecraft and therefore lacked a clear understanding physically of what the problem was with the high gains,” Olivier said. “All that has sig nificantly changed.” Detective work by NASA and its contractor teams led to an under standing of the problem. While studying pre-launch photo graphs of the telescope nestled in the cargo bay of space shuttle Dis covery, an engineer noticed that an inch-thick electrical cable on the back of the antenna was slightly out of position. Olivier said the length of the cable was determined by computer simu- 6t We are still investigating it to understand how did this really happen, why did it happen, why didn’t we catch it?” -Jean Olivier, NASA official lations and turned out to be an inch or so too long. The antenna movement could not be tested on Earth because the motors are not powerful enough to move the an tenna in the presence of gravity. From the photographs, engineers decided the too-long loop had shifted over to one side. With that clue, engineers looked over their te lemetry data again and reasoned that counterweights began to nj against the cable when the antei was turned into certain positions One engineer went to a toy stop bought a kit that included pla? ( sticks and joints and built a model the antenna using the kit and a pies of lamp cord. “We determined that there wai, proper motion that we should this antenna through to bring carefully away, in the right direct: so it wouldn’t upset the controlpE. tem,” Olivier said. “We successM did that and we are all relieved know that our theories were to rect.” The antennas, shaped likeadis are at the end of masts and thecal is coiled along the length, termini ing in the loop. One motor cans them to look up and down, 90i grees in each direction. The other- the one that had problems — looi left and right. The antennas send their signal one of two Tracking and Data Ret Satellites orbiting Earth and sto; their information on tape record:- when they are not in communicate with the satellites. Because of Ik said Olivier, the slight limits on (f antenna’s movement to avoid co- tact with the cable will have onli small impact. The first test image from the telescope had been expected by Tuesday but now is delayed untiltl weekend, Harrington said. Official calls HUD ‘political machine’ WASHINGTON (AP) — The Reagan administration’s Depart ment of Housing and Urban De velopment was a “domestic politi cal machine” under Samuel R. Pierce Jr., handing out grants to the well connected, a former HUD official later convicted of bribery told a House subcommit tee Monday. Dubois L. Gilliam, a former deputy assistant secretary under Pierce, disputed the former hous ing secretary’s assertion that he didn’t decide who got federal grants. Pierce himself ordered federal grants in some cases, Gil liam said. former top HUD insider about Pierce’s eight years as secretary. Pierce’s lawyers, who attended the hearing, dismissed Gilliam’s testimony as lacking credibility. Attorney Paul Perito called the testimony “a sordid menu from an admitted felon.” He said Gil liam never accused Pierce of vio lating the law, and that Gilliam was testifying in an effort to win early release from prison. He linked the Reagan White House to the HUD controversy in at least one specific instance, say ing the administration ordered federal money for a New Mexico project that had encountered problems. “We dealt strictly with politics,” he told the panel that has spent more than a year investigating al legations of fraud, mismanage ment, influence peddling and po litical favoritism at HUD. “During the period I was there ... the Department of Housing and Urban Development was the best domestic political machine I have ever seen,” Gilliam said. Pierce also acted to block grants for those in his disfavor, Gilliam said, citing a long-run ning feud between Pierce and Rep. Henry B. Gonzalez, D- Texas. Gilliam said that when Pierce learned that Gonzalez wanted a San Antonio project, the HUD secretary rejected it. Gilliam’s testimony was the first the panel has heard from a Pierce testified before the panel last May, later invoking his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination to avoid fur ther testimony. Three former top aides also refused to testify. Gilliam is serving an 18-month prison sentence after pleading guilty to accepting gratuities and conspiracy to defraud the gov ernment for abuse of HUD pro grams. Testifying under a court-or dered grant of immunity, he de scribed receiving as much as $100,000 in clothes, money, travel and other gratuities from developers and consultants. Gilliam said he did not believe Pierce ever took any illegal gra tuities. Subcommittee Chairman Tom Lantos, D-Calif., called Gilliam “the key missing piece in the jig saw puzzle.” Gilliam’s testimony about the Urban Development Action Grant program raised new allega tions about a program under which grants were to be based on numerical formulas. He said HUD under Pierce considered who outside the agency sup ported projects when deciding which ones got money. Report studies health benefits for retirees WASHINGTON (AP) — Fe» retirees have access to company sponsored health insurance and many of those who do are seeing their benefits shrink as businesses try to control skyrocketing costs,! government report says. “Although seen as a low-cosi employee benefit decades ago, re tiree health coverage has now come a major concern for comp: nies because retiree health cost! have risen and are expected to continue to increase dramaticall) in the future,” the General At counting Office reported. More than 5 million retired Americans are covered by suck health plans, of whom 2 million are under 65, the GAO said. Pri vate health coverage is partic ularly important for younger n tirees because people do not become eligible for Medican health benefits until age 65. The GAO study was conducted at the request of Rep. Edward E Roybal, D-Calif., who chairs tkf House Select Committee on M ing. The mission was to find what was happening to heal coverage for retirees, said Gan Christopherson, the committee: director of health legislation Now that the study has been com pleted, it’s “not as clear that wt know what we want to do,” he said. “At this point, Congress is noi clear it’s going to move forward on this,” he said. “They don’t see a way to move without it costing! lot of money.” The GAO study said retiree health plans are provided by about 4 percent of companies in the United States. bills. Phone 693-8534. NO PETS POTHER’S NOW BUYING ALL BOOKS TAMU • BLINN • STUDY GUIDES • PAPERBACKS • Sell Your Books & Play WHEEL OF FORTUNE 340 GEORGE BUSH DR. 901 HARVEY ROAD ACROSS FROM UNIVERSITY POUCE IN THE WOODSTONE CENTER 1 li L Pla tale Ro An liki the she reg pei wit not tha Sei