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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (July 20, 1990)
L Battalion Classifieds Page 4 The Battalion Friday, July 20, MeLp wanted *25,200. MONEY FOR COLLEGE. The Army can help you earn up to $25,200 for college with the Montgomery GI Bill Plus the Army College Fund. And there’s another way we can help ifiA y° u succeed in college-by offering you learning experiences that will help you k develop the self-confidence and discipline so important to achieving college goals. Here’s how we help you earn money for college. You, as a soldier, contribute $100 a month from your first full twelve months’ pay- checks (for a total of $1,200). Then the government and the Army contribute the rest (up to $9,600 from the government and up to $14,400 from the Army). We can help you get the money and develop the characteristics that will help you achieve success once you enroll. For more infor mation, call your local Army Recruiter. College Station Recruiting Station 1500 Harvey Road, Post Oak Mall College Station, Texas 88840-3751 (409) 764-0418 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 volunteeers will be com pensated. G & S Studies, Inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 SERVICES SINUS HEADACHE STUDY Patients needed with history of SINUS HEADACHES to be treated with one dose of medication while headache is acute- Call for information. Eligible volunteers will be compensated. G&S Studies, Inc. 846-5933 334676/17 ATTENTION AUGUST GRADUATES If you have ordered a 1990 Aggieland and will not be here this fall when they arrive for distribution, please stop by the English Annex between 9 and 4:30 and pay a $5 mailing fee. The Aggielands will be mailed to you when they arrive this fall. 172ttfn Students - need a summer or fall job? Earn $400 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 Julian at 693-2323 for an ap pointment. 174t7/25 TUTORING available for fresh man in Math, English,’ Psyc., Soci., Pols., History. Call U.M.P. Study Program at 846- 7072 for more information. Professional Word Processing Laser printing for Resumes, Reports, Letters and Envelopes. Typist available 7 days a week ON THE DOUBLE 113 COLLEGE MAIN 846-3755 166ttfn Professional couple seeks mature college student to provide summer daycare in our home to one preschooler and two school-age children. Must be able to provide own transportaton. Salary $125 weekly. Call 845-2539 (days, leave message), ^^^^^>r696-379^evenings^^^gg7g^ AGGIE OWNED BUSINESS SEEKS SELF MOTI VATED INDIVIDUAL FOR SALES/MANAGE MENT POSITION PART-TIME OR FULL-TIME. SEND RESUME TO P.O. BOX 9120 COLLEGE STA TION, TX 77840. 174t7/24 Golf/Tennis Coach: Golf and tennis instructor needed for two advanced pupils. Experience required. Lessons twice per week after 5p.m. Call LORETTA 776-0400. 159ttfn Experienced librarian will do library research for you. Call 272-3348. 91t3/30 MISCELLANEOUS WANT A NEW CAR OR TRUCK? DO YOU HAVE A JOB AFTER GRADUATION OR A COSIGNER? COME SEE Fellow Aggie Andy Balberg at QUALITY PONTIAC BUICK CMC TRUCK. 779-1000. 169t8/10 FOR SALE Healthy males wanted as semen donors. Help infertile couples. Confidentiality ensured. Ethnic diversity de sirable. Ages 18 to 35, excellent compensation. Contact Fairfax Cryobank 1121 Braircrest Suite 101, 776-4453. 147ttfn DENTAL ASSISTANT POSITION, Full-time, Excel lent Benefits, Apply 2101 Texas Avenue CS. 175t8/7 INTELLIGENCE JOBS. FBI, CIA, US Customs, DEA, etc. Now Hiring. CaU 1-805-687-6000, ext. K-9531. 170t07/20 Part-time handyman needed 20 + hours/week, tools and truck a must, experience necessary 823-5469. 166t7/12 ROOMMATE WANTED Female Roommate Needed, Non-smoker. 2 BR/2BA Foui plex. Call Dianne. 693-3717. 176t7/26 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 eottfh Mazda ’79 only 83,000 miles. Call 847-5257 after 3:00 pm. 172t7/20 For Sale Rattan Furniture, Two Couches with End Ta ble, One Dining Room Table with Two Chairs $ 150.00. 846-9225. 173t7/24 1985 3B/2B Mobile home, Bryan Park. Assume $251 pmts. 778-0113. 175t8/l FOR SALE: 55 GALLON AQUARIUM INCLUDES ALL ACCESSORIES NEEDED FOR A GREAT SET UP. CALL 696-6245. 175t7/26 Piano For Sale. Wanted: Responsible party to assume small monthly payments on piano. See locally. Call credit manager 1-800-447-4266. 174t7/27 ’82 HONDA PASSPORT MOPED 4000 MILES HEL METS INCLUDED $300 693-9483. 169t7/25 ...Spirit ...Pride and the new Tradition, 1990-1991 AggieVision Kyle Field! Kyle Field! Kyle Field! 2B/2B condo- has an assumable loan. Fur niture, appliances, large closets, fireplace- make this place ready to move into please call. JUDY BRADFORD CENTURY21 BEAL 775-9000 168t7/24 . WALK OR BIKE TO A&M 2B-1B APT., $190. mo. + * BILLS, SEMESTER OR ONE YEAR LEASE AVAIL- ”ABLE. 696-7266. 173t7/27 . Sublease 3 bedroom - 2 bath apartment Pepper Tree 595/month. Call 693-3051. 173t7/24 Subleasing 3B/2B, The Oaks in Bryan by 08-10-90. Ka ren 512-682-8643. ' 172t8/27 SERVICES Resumes, cover letters, re search papers, flyers, etc. For more information about typing call Notes-n-Quotes at 846-2255. 17117/20 BIG BILL? NOT WHEN YOU LIVE AT .• Efficiency, 1, 2 and 3 bedrooms • All bills paid (except electricity) • No city utility deposit • Shuttle bus route • Volleyball Court • Lighted Tennis Courts • Hot tub • 2 Pools • Basketball Courts “New Carpet-New Carpet” Lease Today For Best Selection Now pre-leasing for summer & fall 693-1110 Hours; M-F 8-6 Sat. 10-5, Sun 1-5 PLANTATION OAKS 1501 Harvey Road, C.S. Across from Post Oak Mall AUSTIN (AP) — A fot-ttiet- state lawmaker from Amarillo was sen tenced to three months in jail and ordered to pay nearly $ 11,000 Thursday after pleading guilty to taking state money for legislative trips he never made. Former Rep. Charles J. “Chip” Staniswalis also must perform 400 hours of community service under a plea agreement with the state. He was placed on 10 years probation. “God only knows how sorry I am for doing something so stupid,” said Staniswalis, a Republican, after leav ing the courtroom. He was sen tenced by State District Judge Mace Thurman of Austin. Staniswalis, 41, begins his jail sen tence Monday in Travis County. While in jail, he will perform com munity service as part of a work-re lease program. The type of commu nity service had not been determined. He must pay a $2,000 fine and $8,976 in restitution to the state. The judge said Staniswalis must pay the money at a rate of $ 125 a month, plus another $40 monthly probation supervisory fee. Mike Lynch, the assistant Travis County district attorney who pros ecuted the case, called the plea agreement ‘just and fair.” “I think the fact that we’re talking (about) a public servant with a spe cial position of trust makes us look at it in a little different light than if it was a normal citizen who just hap pened to be charged with theft,” Lynch said. He heads the district at torney’s Public Integrity Unit. Staniswalis pleaded guilty to a fel ony theft charge, for which he could have been sentenced to a maximum 10 years in prison and fined $10,000. He also pleaded guilty to a misde meanor count of tampering with a governmental record, which carries a maximum punishment of one year in jail and a $2,000 fine. As part of the plea agreement, two felony tampering charges against Staniswalis were dropped. Seven false trips were listed in the indictment against Staniswalis. But the restitution covers the cost of 22 trips. Lynch said. The trips, most in 1988, suppos edly were to Austin for state busi ness, but Lynch said Staniswalis actu ally was elsewhere. m nm m u m >tm mmm ' m CfiMic I** ms -to £ P05SIDIL YOU WillDU’T -y-— a fwinq m... Law official IN FULL EF1FE[t //^ &**»*»**}. #4ir»wwM«*/ By Eric V, L©wis pleads guilty, sentenced to jail TMAt was n m m Attorneys consider request to display art in Dallas museum DALLAS (AP) — Attorneys have yet to reach an agreement on whether medieval art treasures that haven’t been publicly displayed for nearly half a cen tury can be put on exhibit at a Dallas museum. The Dallas Museum of Art had proposed to store and exhibit the art until a federal judge decides who owns it. But attorneys representing an East German church, which has sued for the return of the treasures, don’t want the treasures displayed until ownership is decided, the Dallas Times Herald reported Thursday. Attorney Randal Mathis, who represents the heirs of the Texas soldier accused of taking the art from Ger many after World War II, said Wednesday that the lat est proposed custody agreement is “180 degrees oppo site of what I understood the museum was contemplating.” DMA deputy director Emily Sano said Wednesday that she hadn’t read the newest draft of the agreement but had discussed it with Mathis. Calls to Mathis were not immediately returned Thursday. “It is the museum’s strong preference that the objects be displayed,” Sano said. “After all, this is not a storage place. Since we are a public institution, there hastolx; some trade-off.” Sano said the museum still wishes to provide a haven for the artwork, if all parties agree. She said the DMA; has no timetable for the proposed exhibition. A spokesman for the attorneys representing the? church declined to comment on the latest negotiations! regarding the treasures. The church, the Stiftskirche-Domgemeinde off Quedlingburg, East Germany, filed suit in federalcoun in Dallas on June 18 against the heirs and the First Na ! tional Bank of Whitewright, where some of the objects are stored, for the return of the artwork and damages. The suit alleges that Joe T. Meador, the soldier who died in 1980, took golden manuscripts with jeweled bindings; silver, ivory and gold reliquaries; crucifixes antique coins and other small artworks from a Gerraac mine shaft in 1945. Meador is believed to have mailed! the treasures to his hometown of Whitewright, aboutCCl miles north of Dallas. Mathis indicated that he believed the heirs, Jack Mea; dor of Whitewright and Jane Meador Cook of the Dal f las suburb of Mesquite, would agree to the new no-shov j clause. Federal jury rules ‘drug haven’ for sale SAN ANTONIO (AP) — The government has the right to seize and sell a shopping center that po lice claimed was a “drug haven” con doned by the center’s owner, a fed eral court jury ruled. At issue in the case was the Sonny Mitchell Shopping Center, which the U.S. Marshal’s Service seized and fenced off earlier this year. Jurors deliberated less than an hour Wednesday before reaching their verdict. U.S. District Judge Ed Prado, who presided over the civil trial, said he believes it is the first time a jury has determined that property seized in a drug case could be forfeited, or sold off. Federal authorities are looking for investors to buy the $280,000 shopping center owned by Gaylon “Sonny” Mitchell and his wife, Pattie Jean Mitchell. The Mitchells said they were inno cent owners who tried their best to stop drug dealing in the parking lot of the shopping center that housed; grocery store, restaurant, ice house laundromat, liquor store and barbe shop. But evidence at the trial showed] that Mitchell, who operated a grt eery store in the center, was con victed of illegally selling preschptiot drugs to an undercover officer four times. Mitchell, 66, is serving a 10-year term in state prison for those comic tions. Rangers investigate claims of voter fraud TYPING: Accurate, Prompt, Professional, Fifteen years experience. Near Campus, 696-5401. 169t8/22 BEEVILLE (AP) — Texas Rang ers described as “sharpshooters for public corruption,” were going to Bee County Thursday to investigate claims of voter fraud involving el derly Hispanics. Rudy Rodriguez and Ramiro “Ray” Martinez were assigned to probe the vote fraud allegations. Rangers Capt. Jack Dean said both officers began their work in Duval County and have investigated such cases for years. “Their specialty is in public cor ruption,” Dean said. “They are both very knowledgeable in how counties operate.” Bee County Attorney Jose Aliseda in May began looking into voter fraud accusations in at least three Bee County elections — the March Democratic primary, the April run off and May city elections. Most of the charges involve el derly Hispanic voters who Aliseda says may have been pressured by campaign workers into signing ab sentee ballots without filling them in. Bee County Chief Investigator Eddie Hons said the most common allegation in the fraud investigation was that some witnesses who swore they saw voters sign their ballots ac tually were not present. It was unclear what the penalties are for the violations. Officials said the election code does not specify a penalty for falsely swearing to a per son’s signature or mark. Aliseda said he has been threat ened during the investigation and is concerned that elderly Hispanics might be intimidated. The two Texas Rangers now in volved in the probe conducted voter fraud investigations in Duval County in 1974 and returned there in 1982 for another investigation. They also assisted in a massive investigation of official misconduct in Duval County conducted by a state task force in 1975. Hons said he was glad for the Rangers’ help. “We’ve only contacted a small per centage of the voters,” Hons said. “We weren’t making the progress we wanted because we can’t afford to take the investigators off ‘real crimes’ where there are victims to work the voter fraud probe.” Friday ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS: will have a general meeting at noon. Call the C.D.P.E. at 845-0280 for more information. Saturday TEXAS ENVIRONMENTAL ACTION COALITION: will have a field trip to Peaceable Kingdom in Navasota. Spend day(s) helping out at this solar- powered organic farm with farm animals and bees. Caravans leaving at? a.m. from Skaggs parking lot. Call Filo at 823-0969 for more information. Sunday TEXAS ENVIRONMENTAL ACTION COALITION: field trip to Navasota is con tinued. Caravans leave at 7 a.m. from Skaggs parking lot. Call Filo at 823- 0969 for more information. Monday ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS: will have a general meeting at noon. Call the C.D.P.E. at 845-0280 for more information. Tuesday ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS: will have a general meeting at noon. Call the C.D.P.E. at 845-0280 for more information. NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS: will have a general meeting at 8:30 p.m. Call the C.D.P.E. at 845-0280 for more information. /terns for What’s Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald, no later than three business days before the desired run date. We only publish the name and phone number of the contact if you ask us to do so. What’s Up is a Battalion service that lists non-profit events and activities. Submissions are run on a first-come, first-served basis. There is no guarantee an entry will run. IIyou have questions, call the newsroom at 845-3315. fn MERIDIAN You deserve the best... And we’ve got it! Apartment Features include: New carpeting Ceiling Fans Miniblinds All new appliances Frost-free refrigerators 1 and 2 bdrm. floorplans • Completely fenced complex with controlled access • Swimming pool • On-site laundry facilities • Exercise facilities • 1 block from campus Prices Start at $295 CALL 409/696-3177 309 Redmond, College Station, TX 77840 Professionally Managed by The Elliot System a© [n]©T©3 Pick up A&M'S video yearbook at English Annex or 230 RDMC starting Monday from 8:30 - 4:30 AggieVision