I Battalion Classifieds HELP WANTED COMPUTER PROGRAMMER Working on your Masters? We need a part-time computer programmer to work on real time data collection for a medical research experiment conducted by Baylor College of Medicine. Next and objective C experience desired, plus an understanding of I/O in a real time environment. Located in The Woodlands, 20-35 hrs. per wk. Bachelors De gree in related field required. Please contact: Walt Colquitt, (713)363-7982. leitttn MED TECH SCOTT AND WHITE Immediate vacancy for a part-time Med Tech (ASCP registered or eligi ble). Monday-Friday; 2pm-6pn7. Scott and White offers an excellent benefits package / and career opportunities. Apply in person: Scott & White Clinic 1600 University Dr. College Station, TX EOE isittfn 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 SCOTT AND WHITE BRYAN/COLLEGE STATON Immediate vacancy for a part-time File Cfe ‘ Terk to be responsible for filing medical in formation of patients. Monday-Friday, 5pm- 10pm, and be available for work through Summer 1991. Make application in person: Scott and White Clinic 1600 University Dr. College Staton, TX EOE Students - need a summer or fall job? Earn $400 to $800 per month as a route carrier fSrthe 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 Immediate opening for part-time salesperson needed for retail store. Basic computer knowledge necessary. 346-3279. 182t8/8 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 HELP WANTED: Need referees for youth soccer games. Must be U.S.S. F. registereo (1990) or be willing to take 20 hr. instruction course and pass exam for reg istration. Pay rate based on experience and depend ability. For more information, call JERRY CHAT HAM, BRYAN SOCCER REFEREES, 778-6162 after 5:30 p.m. 179t8/3 Now Hiring Instructors for LSA'f, MCAT, SAT, GMAT. Call 1-800-683-1970, KAPLAN Education Center. 178t8/l Local engineering firm seeking full time sales rep., marketing process simulation software. Minimum B.S. degree with strong math and chemistry background. Travel required. Salary plus bonus. Ladies encouraged >.Ca“ ~ to apply. Call ANA at 846-8771. 177t8/2 DENTAL ASSISTANT POSITION, Full-time, Excel lent Benefits, Apply 2101 Texas Avenue CS. 175t8/7 department assistance. Applicants sTiould have clerical skills and good driving record. Reply to Chad Allman 776-7600. 18U8/7 INTELLIGENCE JOBS. CIA, US CUSTOMS, DEA, etc. now hiring. Call (1)805-687-6000 Ext. K-9531. 18U9/19 ATTENTION: GOVERNMENT JOBS - YOUR AREA! $17,840 - $69,485. Call (1) 602-838-8885, Ext. R-4009. 18H8/1 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 3-1 CH&A, Lawn Dinosaur, walk to campus. $550/mo. 846-2474 182t8/10 Unfurnished efficiency $125, 846-2983. Garage Apt. $300, 846-2983. Unfurnished house 2 bd/lb, $325. 846-2983. ISOttfn ROOMMATE WANTED Female to share mobile home $150.00. plus 1/2 utili ties. Close to campus, 693-4006. 182t8/8 Two Female Nonsmokers. House not on shuttle. $250 w/o utilities. Call 268-1319. 180t8/3 Needed female Christian roommate to share 2Bd/2B. The Oaks, $195.00 a month. Call Tamara 696-9480. 18119/7 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 BLTCK GMC TRUCK. 779-1000. 169t8/l0 LOST AND FOUND Help! Lost 35mm Cannon Oneshot Camera with gray case on 7/27. REWARD! 947-1054. 182t8/8 SERVICES 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 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 WORD PROCESSING fast, accurate. Ten year experi ence. Call Barbara 774-0546. 182t9/10 TYPING: Accurate, Prompt, Professional, Fifteen years experience. Near Campus, 696-5401. 169t8/22 Experienced librarian will do library research for you. Call 272-3348. 9U3/30 Computer assistance, training, and education. Leave message. Brad 696-1777. 177t8/S FOR SALE 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 CENTURY 21 BEAL 775-9000 16817/24 Sofa and matching loveseal, coffee table and matching end table, two end table lamps, king size waterbed, 55 gallon aquarium. 696-6245 182t8/8 1987 Honda Elite 50’s Scooter. Excellent Condition. Call 823-0497. 180t8/3 urSer $100.00? Call for facts today. 805-644-9533. Dept. 222. 178ttfn 1982 TOYOTA CEL1CA $2600, EXCELLENT CON DITION. EXTRAS 764-3068. 18U8/7 1985 3B/2B Mobile home, Bryan Park. Assume $251 pmts. 778-0113. 175t8/l Men’s 12-speed Schwinn Supersport, Red, Like New, “50 f $250 693-2818. 1969 TRIUMPH 650, RUNS GOOD, $900. CALL 822-9336, Leave message. 179t8/3 1965 Mustang Coupe, 6-cylinder, rebuilt transmission, brakes, and suspension, stereo, $3,000, 696-0615. < 1 i* -l7«t8/3 HELP WANTED Dependable People Needed for Houston Post routes $200-$800 per month 846-1253, 846-2911. 182i9/28 Optometric Assistant 8:45 to 1:00, Monday thru Friday. No experience necessary. Call 696-3754 for appointment. Pick up your video yearbook at the English Annex or 230 Reed McDonald from 8:30-4:30. OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT ON TARGET! EAST GATE APARTMENTS 693-7380 Casting Call for Auditions for the videotape production of Adventures In Urban Space, will be held: Thursday, August 9 7 - 9 p.m. Biomedical Communications Department Texas A&M University This educational tape is aimed at junior high school students. The script calls for the following roles: Female lead Hispanic boy Black girl Computer voice age: 32-37 age: 12-13 age: 12-13 no age Salaries Negotiable For more information please phone Elton Abbott or Gary Henryson at: 845-1934 Page 4 The Battalion Wednesday, August 1,199(r Highway officials travel winding roads fee Department funds fail to meet outlined plans AUSTIN (AP) — Texas will have to cancel or delay $5 billion worth of highway projects over the next 10 years unless it sets aside more motley to improve roads, the state Highway Commission chairman said Tuesday. Chairman Robert Dedman of Dal las supports a 10-cent increase in the state’s 15-cent-a-gallon gasoline tax to give the Highway Department a cash infusion. The tax increase would raise about $750 million a year for high ways, and another $250 million for education, he said. The department hasn’t begun de ciding what highway projects would be eliminated if funding isn’t suffi cient, Dedman said. “We’re agonizing over what to do,” he said. “We have committed to do $5 billion worth of projects for the rest of this century that we don’t have the funding now to do.” Inflation has taken a bite out of the department’s $2.6 billion annual budget, which comes from state and federal funds, he said. And lawmak ers have used some money pre viously set aside for highways to pay for other state needs. For example, Dedman noted that the Legislature in its scramble to find additional money for schools this summer raised the state fee for moving oversize and overweight items on highways. That new money will go to educa tion, he said, “but we’re the ones that have to go out and fix the potholes and repair the bridges and don’t have the funding to do it.” Dedman’s proposal to increase the gasoline tax has drawn opposition from candidates for state office. Lawmakers just increased the state sales tax and other taxes for public education. But Dedman said he didn’t think he made a mistake by proposing the tax increase in an election year. And he said he would testify for the in crease before the Legislature, which meets in regular session beginning in January. “The conventional wisdom is that the press and the populace are so il literate and gullible that politicians can say I’m going to give you the world with a fence around it before an election, but I’m not going to charge you any taxes to do it,” he said. “I really have a lot more faith in the press and the populace than that,” he said. Of the necessary funding, Ded man said, “I really think that the people will realize that the projects are needed and will do sometnii about it.” ling Highway upgrade offers hope to S. Texas economy AUSTIN (AP) — South Tex ans told the state Highway Com mission Tuesday to boost their economy by upgrading a highway to four lanes between Corpus Christi and the Mexican border. But Highway Commission Chairman Robert Dedman had little hope that the state would commit state resources to the $138.5 million project to widen State Highway 44 and U.S. High way 59 to four lanes between Cor pus Christi and Laredo. “You gentlemen have in your hands the economic destiny of an entire region,” Sen. Carlos Truan, D-Corpus Christi, told the three commissioners. “There is no question that your case is meritorious,” Dedman said, but he said the department already is short about $5 billion for projects it has committed to do over the next 10 years. Truan called the South Texas project a “must.” “We are not just talking about linking the border to the Coastal Bend,” Truan said. “We are in stead addressing the linkup be tween the largest inland port in the United States with the sixth- largest seaport in the land.” Upgrading the highways would link the maquiladora in dustry on the Texas-Mexico bor der to the rest of the world via Corpus Christi’s port, he said. Tne maquiladora industry ij composed of companies with plants on each side of the border. The route currently is four lanes from Corpus Christi to San Diego, and two lanes from San Diego to Laredo. The two roads meet at Freer. The highway widenings would provide “access to the global economy for the products that are assembled and manufactured in the maquiladoras and by the booming industries of Northern Mexico,” Truan said. Webb County Judge Andres Ramos said 366,000 trucks and trailers crossed through Laredo's port last year, a 77 percent in crease in three years. That num ber is expected to climb to 700,000 in three years, he said. Corpus Christi Mayor Betty Turner cited increased tourist traffic since her city’s recent opening of the Texas State Aquarium. And she said more vis itors are expected after the planned opening of a Nueces County dog-racing track in No vember. Big tO ! \V i 11 |{?gh t h Khan J i to twe Kyan’s llete l Medical examiner livens up court room ton as Vn torn CORPUS CHRISTI (AP) — Dr. Joseph Rupp nee slumped back in a chair in his cluttered ofl and contemplated perceptions of his job. “Nothing interests people like death,” Rupp said. “They’re afraid of it, but they sure are inter ested in it.” Every day, corpses are wheeled into Rupp’s of fice. As Nueces County medical examiner, he pokes, prods and explores the bodies. He deter mines a cause and mode of death. When a death is suspicious, he assists law enforcement officers in the investigation. Rupp handles some 1,200 cases a year. After 20 years, the doctor said, he’s about ready to quit. He has plans to retire before the end of this year. Since he came to the Coastal Bend in 1970, Rupp has earned a reputation as a lively and knowledgeable witness in court, where he can be found poking through holes in a skull to show how a bullet entered or demonstrating on him self how the hands of an attacker could snap a neck. Douglas Tinker, a local defense attorney, said Rupp’s testimony in court can be “devastating” to murder defendants. “My tactic is not to ask him anything,” Tinker said, adding that some defense lawyers make the mistake of allowing Rupp to tell the jury things the defendant would rather they not hear. “Most of what he does is give his opinion about how someone died,” Tinker said. “But if you let him, he’ll extend that and give an opinion about how it happened.” An illustration of Tinker’s observation came during the defense lawyer’s most recent coun- room encounter with Rupp. In May, Tinker was defending Michael Bryan, accused of killing a man whom Bryan had nieiin a gay bar. Tinker successfully objected to having Rupps comments heard in front of the jury. Bunk medical examiner testified that the Brvan cast matched a pattern of killings where men whodo not think they are gay but frequent gay bars wind up killing men who make advances toward them The basis of Tinker’s defense of Bryan washii client’s supposed revulsion to a homosexual ad vance, which Rupp suggested Bryan welcomed even encouraged. Bryan was found guilty of murder and sen tenced to 40 years in prison. game. |[ A fte fiyan 1 paved [when applau NATIONAL The University Police Depart ment will celebrate the seventh annual “National Night Out” Tuesday at University Owned Apartments, on University Drive. “National Night Out” is an op portunity for Texas A&M to join thousands of communities across the country in support of safer neighborhoods and to demon strate success of cooperative crime prevention efforts. This event encourages resi dents to turn lights on in their homes, lock the windows and go outside to meet the neighbors. This year’s function will be highlighted by a parade of fire trucks from the Brayton Fireman Training Center. A coloring con test for children will be judged by McDonald’s Hamburglar. Lake plan flooded with debate Associated Press National Park Service rangers ai Lake Meredith and regional official! say they like Rep. Bill Sarpalius’idea to turn the lake into a national recre- The following incidents were reported to the Texas A&M University Police Department between July 17 and Thursday. DRIVING WHILE INTOXICATED/ EVADING ARREST/ RECKLESS DRIVING/ AGGRAVATED ASSAULT WITH MOTOR VEHICLE: • While checking the property of the USD A Tox icology Lab located on F&B Road, an officer de tected a vehicle traveling at a high rate of speed and intiated action to stop the vehicle. The driver ignored the officer’s audible and visual signals to stop. The subsequent pursuit, which ex tended from the A&M campus to College Station and into other parts of Brazos County, resulted in the arrest of two men. The driver of the car was charged with driving while intoxicated, evading arrest, agggravated as sault with a motor vehicle, reckless driving, speeding and running a stop sign. The passenger was charged with public intoxication. Both men were transported to the Brazos County Jail. ASSAULT: • A resident of Davis-Gary Hall reported she was assaulted. The victim said the suspect entered her room and struck her in the face. The two engaged in a shoving match until a resident hall adviser inter vened. DRIVING WHILE INTOXICATED/ UNLAW FUL CARRYING OF WEAPON: • A Bryan man was arrested and charged with driving while intoxicated and unlawful carrying of a weapon. The man was transported to the Brazos County Jail. DRIVING WHILE INTOXICATED: • A Lufkin man was arrested and charged with driving while intoxicated. He was transported to the Brazos County Jail. PUBLIC INTOXICATION: • A College Station man was detected in an intox icated condition and issued a citation for public in toxication. • A San Antonio man was issued a citation for public intoxication in Parking Area 30. BURGLARY OF BUILDING: • A Bryan woman reported an unknown per- son(s) entered a room of the Pavilion and removed an assortment of pens and pencils from her desk. While at her desk, the subject accessed her computer and altered several formulas and ledgers in her data base. THEFT OF SERVICE: • A Bryan man reported he was approached by a subject who stated several of his laundry tokens would not activate the laundry machines at Univer sity Owned Apartments. The Bryan man inspected the tokens and noted they had been invalidated. The other man said he received the tokens from a friend, who allegedly is out of the country. ATTEMPTED MISDEMEANOR THEFT: • An officer was advised an individual had wit nessed two subjects attempting to steal a bicycle from the Moses Hall bike rack. The witness said the sub jects fled upon being observed. The officer pursued the individuals until he lost sight of them near the French Quarter Apartments in College Station. CRIMINAL THEFT: • During checks of campus property, a security officer discovered two double-louvered window sec tions were damaged on the northwest corner of the Doherty Building. CRIMINAL MISCHIEF: • A College Station man reported he was awak ened by a sound outside the Poultry Science Center. He said he checked the building and found nothing that appeared to be disturbed. Later that day, he dis covered the front glass door had been broken. • A College Station man reported he discovered an elevator in the Aerospace Engineering Building had been jammed by someone who pried open the outside doors with his hands while the elevator was in motion. The man informed UPD this interruption of serv ice had occurred seven times since December. • A College Station man reported someone placed a glue-like substance into the door locks of his 1986 Ford Escort. • A College Station man reported he saw three individuals running from the Wisenbaker Engi neering Research Center after he heard something strike and break the southwest window in a room of the building. MISDEMEANOR THEFT: • Three bicycle were stolen from various areas around campus. • A College Station man reported someone en tered a room of Bolton Hall and removed his wallet containing his driver’s license, several credit cards and $208. • An Austin man reported someone removed his wallet from the top of his desk in a room of the Har rington Education Center. The wallet contained his driver’s license and $40. • A Bryan man reported someone entered a room of the Analytical Services Building and re moved $35 from his wallet left on his desk. • Someone entered the custodial supply area of a mechanical room in the Sterling C. Evans Library and removed six gallons of glass and mirror cleaner. • A resident of Walton Hall reported someone entered his room and removed $40. • A College Station woman reported her account ing textbook was stolen from a table in the group study room on the fourth floor of the Sterling C. Evans Library. ation area. But the agency doesn’t. The Texas Panhandle lakeisnota priority with the National ParkSen-jj ice, associate director Denis Galvin] told a House panel Tuesday, And Sarpalius’ proposal to expand the park “is not embodied in any of the planning documents for Lake Mere dith,” Calvin said. He testified before the subconn mittee on national parks and public I lands of the House Committee on | Interior and Insular Affairs. Sarpalius, D-Amarillo, is seeking I $1 million for the lake in the 19911 budget. His bill also orders the gov-1 ernment to create a 5-year devd-j opment plan that includes a visitorsI center and better facilities, and ex f tends the park service’s supervision' indefinitely. The National Park Service has, handled the lake under a 1963; agreement with the Bureau of Land Reclamation, which built the laketo provide drinking water to Panhan die communities. But the park sen ice has been free to pull outofthtj agreement anytime and has donti little to develop the lake. Local park service officials sa]j they’ve been hampered in what the' can do by a lack of money and sup port from agency leaders, Sarpalius and the community leaders said. Community leaders who testified before the subcommittee brushed off Galvin’s opposition. “We think it’s simply a reaction that might be expected from a bu reaucratic agency,” said John Wil Hams, manager of the Canadian River Municipal Water Authority- which regulates the lake’s water level and distribution. The lake and nearby Alibates Na tional Monument draw 1.5 million visitors a year, but most of them am local residents, said Jack King, presi dent of the First National Bank in Borger and a resident of the lake. “This is part of our national heri tage,” King said. “We need to make more people privy to that.” “Wnat is unique about this project is its important historical value,"Sar palius said. For 11,000 years Pre-Columbian Indians dug flint from the Alibate* quarries to make projectile point 1 and tools. Near the lake are 4001oca tions where scientists have found { )roof of Indian occupation, Sarpa ius said. SF R t( ¥/ Awa tion Quir T1 first- Crov expo Fo when coon Arka squa $800 $800 $800 $800 $800 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300