The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 03, 1990, Image 6

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    Battalion Classifieds
HELP 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
ffilk y° u succeed in college-by offering you
learning experiences that will help you
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
SINUS HEADACHE
STUDY
Patients needed with history
of SINUS HEADACHESto 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
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, or James
at 693-7815 for an appointment.
HELP WANTED: Male student needed for Press As
sistant position. Must be able to work between 9a.m. to
1p.m. Please call 845-2697 between 8a.m. and 5p.m.
183ttfn
iR 1
department assistance. Applicants should have clerical
skills and good driving record. Reply to Chad Allman
776-7600. 181t8/7
INTELLIGENCE JOBS: CIA, US CUSTOMS, DEA,
all (
etc. now hirimjj. Call (1)805-687-6000 Ext. K-9531.
18U9/19
DENTAL ASSISTANT POSITION, Full-time, Excel
lent Benefits. Apply 2101 Texas Avenue CS. 175t8/7
HELP WANTED: Need referees for youth soccer
games. Must be U.S.S. F. registered (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
WANTED
College studemt lo teach childen piano-my home. Val,
690-1295. 184t8/8
Used E-flat clarinet for high school student 690-9420.
184t8/31
FOR RENT
COTTON VILLAGE APTS Ltd.
Snook, TX
1 bdrm $200 2 Bdrm $248
Ren tal Assistance Available
Call 846-8878or 774-0773
after 5pm
Equal Opportunity Housing/Handicapped
60ttfn
Accessible
Unfurnished efficiency $125, 846-2983. Garage Apt.
$300. 846-2983. Unfurnished house 2 bd/lb, $325,
846-2983. 180ttfn
ROOMMATE WANTED
Female to share mobile home SI50.00, plus 1/2 utili
ties. Close 10 canikpus, 693-4006.
182t8/8
I wo Female N»o rismokers. 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
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
Experienced librarian will do library research for you.
~all27
Call 272-3348.
Part-time delivery must have own air-conditioned vehi
cle. Two deliTeries daily and one on Sunday. 764-1828.
184t8/10
MISCELLANEOUS
Twirling teacher needed for teenage student ASAP
690-9420. 184t8/31
Part-time job, $4.50 per hour. Shenanigans teen cen
ter, 5th-8th graders. Apply by 8-8-90. City of CS Per
sonnel Office, 1101 Texas Avenue. 184t8/8
Hiring all positions. Apply in person. 3-C Barbeque
1727 South Texas. 184ttfn
LOST AND FOUND
Immediate opening for part-time salesperson needed
for retail store. Basic computer knowledge necessary.
846-3279.
182t8/8
FOR SALE
Dependable People Needed for Houston Post routes
$200-$8«0 per month 846-1253, 846-2911.
182t9/28
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
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 16817/24
1965 Mustang Coupe, 6-cylinder, rebuilt transmission,
brakes, and suspension, stereo, $3,000, 696-0615.
178t8/3
Men’s 12-speed Schwinn Supersport, Red, Like New,
$250 693-2818. 18U8/7
1969 TRIUMPH 650, RUNS GOOD, $900. CALL
822-9336, Leave message. 179t8/3
1982 TOYOTA CEL1CA $2600, EXCELLENT CON
DITION. EXTRAS 764-3068. 18U8/7
1987 Honda Elite 50’s Scooter. Excellent Condition.
Call 823-0497. 180t8/3
Sofa and matching loveseat, coffee table and matching
end table, two end table lamps, king size waterbed, 55
gallon aquarium. 696-6245
182t8/8
Don’t forget
to checkoff
AggieVision
Texas A&M's
video yearbook
Fee Option 23
Page 6
The Battalion
Manuel Gonzalez, a senior aerospace engineering major from
Dallas, attempts to block his opponent’s kick from reaching the
Photo by Sondn Roht
goal. He and a friend were playing a game of one-on-ones
at Anderson Park.
Latest oil spill in Galveston Bay
threatens seafood commerce
HOUSTON (AP) — A fishing ban
that began Thursday in Galveston
Bay, a massive shipping port and the
home to sensitive wildlife marshes,
threatens a multimillion-dollar sea
food industry.
The Texas Department of Health
banned harvesting of all aquatic life
from the bay because of possible
health threats from a 500,000-gallon
oil spill from a tanker-tug collision.
“We’re all just hanging on by our
teeth,” said C.L. Standley, immedi
ate past president of Professional In
volvement of Seafood Concerned
Enterprises. “It’s the w’orst timing
that could have occurred and the
worst place.”
Galveston Bay is the home or
breeding ground to shrimp, crabs,
oysters, speckled sea trout, redfish,
flounder, endangered sea turtles
and other marine life.
It is the nation’s seventh-largest
estuary system and part of the Envi
ronmental Protection Agency’s spe
cial estuary program.
Endangered birds such as piping
plovers and brown pelicans and de
clining species like reddish egrets,
snowy plovers and a number of he
rons, egrets and ibises also live at the
bay.
“We have every major species that
winters in the south in the Galveston
Bay system,” said David Hankla,
field supervisor for the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service. “It’s a special
spot.”
The bay’s commercial fishing in
dustry generates $240 million an
nually, and its recreational fishing
industry generates $170 million an
nually, Hankla said.
Before Saturday’s spill, bay
shrimpers were operating on a lim
ited schedule between the spring
and fall seasons and averaging $200
to $300 a day per boat, Standley
said. Shrimpers were preparing for
the Aug. 15 start of the fall bay sea
son, when boats average $500 to
$1,000 per day, he said.
“Everyone’s very frustrated, very
angry and very scared because a lot
of them have their whole life’s work
on the line,” Standley said.
With Galveston Bay closed, fish
ing boats wall have to move to other
gulf inlets or out to the gulf.
Pilot blamed for tanker collision
Captain claims he was told to lie about accident
TYPING: Accurate, Prompt, Professional, Fifteen
years experience. Near Campus, 696-5401. 169t8/22
WORD PROCESSING fast, accurate. Ten year experi
ence. Call Barbara 774-0546.
182t9/10
Computer assistance, training, and education. Leave
message. Brad 696-1777. 177t8/3
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. 7'79-1000. 169t8/10
Help! Lost 35mm Cannon Oneshot Camera with gray
case on 7/27. REWARD! 847-1054. 182t8/8
HOUSTON (AP) — A Greek tanker captain on
Thursday blamed a pilot for a tanker-barge collision
that started an oil spill into Galveston Bay, and also said
the pilot told him to lie about the accident to authori
ties.
Capt. Nikolos Fioratos testified in the second day of a
federal inquiry into Saturday’s collision between the
tanker Shinoussa and two barges. The wreck resulted in
a 500,000-gallon oil spill into the bay.
Fioratos said Houston pilot Raymond Fincher or
dered the Shinoussa to travel too fast through the chan
nel. Later, Fioratos said Fincher told him to tell authori
ties that the accident happened because the ship
channel was too narrow.
When U.S. Coast Guard Lt. Cmdr. Robert Douville
asked Fioratos whether he thought Fincher was sug
gesting the captain lie, Fioratos said, “That’s correct.”
Pilots are not affiliated with ships but are used to
guide vessels between ports and open seas.
Fioratos said Fincher ordered the Shinoussa to travel
at 14 knots.
“I questioned him, but he requested more and more
speed,” Fioratos said. Although he could have reduced
speeds, Fioratos didn’t want to argue with the pilot. “He
told me he needed the speed to maneuver, so I gave it.”
Fincher, who is not scheduled to testify until Friday,
disputed Fioratos’ claims outside the hearing room. He
said the vessel was traveling “a little over 10 knots.”
Fioratos and his helmsman, Mohammad Haque, both
blamed Fincher for directing the vessel into the oncom
ing barges. But Fincher maintains Haque did not follow
directions and “put the rudder the wrong way at a crit
ical time.”
Douville said,“There is a disagreement about
whether or not the helmsman responded to the order
the pilot had given.”
The collision occurred as the Shinoussa and another
tanker, the Hellespont Faith, passed each other going
in opposite directions in the Houston Ship Channel.
The Shinoussa veered off to the right to avoid getting
caught in waves from the Hellespont, Fioratos said.
Then, Fioratos said, Fincher told the helmsman to
turn back left.
It was then that the Shinoussa crew was able to see
the barges, towed by Apex Towing Co., behind the Hel
lespont Faith, Fioratos said.
Fincher and Fioratos then gave the order to reverse
directions “hard rudder right.”
After the collision, Fioratos said Fincher blamed
helmsman Haque for turning the wrong way.
Collider
gets $3181
from Senal
in
Associated Press
VV.
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budg
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there
the only place funds could beet: year 1
Both Texas senators, Dei!
crat Lloyd Bentsen and Repuli and t
can Phil Gramm, are involved
the summit talks and h*
pledged to push for full fundin;
“Barring some budgetaryq
lapse that affects every progra
we are in good shape on
SSC,” Gramm said.
Gramm called the appropiu
lion “another landmark
building of the most impora;
science project that will be ton
structed anywhere in the worldi
the last quarter of the 20thcei
tury “
quest
Initia
packa
fr<
comp
The Senate appropriation«
the same amount sought by Pm
dent Bush and approved bylii
House. About $169 million v.
be used for construction soutli
Dallas near Waxahachie.
Much of the rest is to complf
tests on superconducting mi
nets, the collider’s main ci
nent.
The magnets will drive proto:,
around a 54-mile undergrom
oval. Scientists make the atom
collide, hoping they break ai
and yield more clues to the iiii
damentals of matter
“Land acquisition, on-site con
struction and basic research a
now proceed on schedule,” B«
sen said in a speech entered is
the record of debate on the bill.
Girls open cafe for summer projec
ODESSA (AP) — For Krystal and
Kessley Baker, opening a restaurant
was this year’s summer project.
The girls, ages 11 and 9, seem to
find something intriguing to do al
most every summer with the help of
their creative gramdmother, Carol
Baker. “We’re quite adventurous,”
Mrs. Baker said.
Past summer projects included
building a train out of appliance
boxes for an imaginary trip to Dis
neyland and staging a wedding. But
this year’s project involved more
than imagination.
The idea was spawned during a
backyard cookout at Gramdma’s last
spring. “One day we were cooking
hot dogs, and we said, ‘Hey, let’s
open a little cafe and invite friends
and family,’ ” explained Krystal.
But like many Baker productions,
the idea went far beyond the inspira-
t £
I wanted them to realize
that you have to follow
rules. You can’t just do
whatever you want. It was
an eye-opening
experience.”
— Carol Baker,
grandmother
tion stage.
“The next time they came over, I
told them we’d have to make plans,”
the grandmother said. “So we drew
up a little blueprint and built a scale
model.”
The building, a small gazebo, was
put together by the girls’ father,
Daniel, but not before getting per
mission from the city. “We went to
City Hall,” said Carol Baker. “I
wanted them to realize that you have
to follow rules. You can’t just do
whatever you want. It was an eye
opening experience.”
The next meeting involved menu
planning and choosing a name for
the restaurant. “We had a list of sev
eral names, including KK’s (for the
girls’ combined initials), but the Ka
leidoscope Kafe won.”
Menu planning followed, accom
panied by a trip to the grocery store
to see how much the venture would
cost. After several more business
meetings, the enterprise hired
neighbor Jennifer Cornell as a wait
ress, made up Kaleidoscope Kafe T-
shirts, and opened its doors for two
days last weekend. It was a roaring
success..
“The first day was a madhous
Krystal said. “If one person tool:
order, they’d put it up and start!
ing it. Then another person wos mer LI
see the order hanging up and s®
fixing it, too. Some people were
ting the same food three times."
By the second day, the girls'oii receiviii|
nizational skills took over. “Wet and his 1
one person take orders, two peo
cook and one person serve the
hies,” Krystal said.
Seating consisted of four card
hies and a smaller table for
“But when the baseball team O' arganiza
we didn’t have enough room,sol
had to sit in the grass,” she S aoint fin
it some
nake ju
here an
However, in true short-order^
style, the longest wait was only
minutes.
The girls viewed the summery ions. I'r
ject as a learning experience as* ^ership.”
as a fun time. [ Velez
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The superconducting su|
collider ended its funding cm globe
through Congress Thursdi
winning $318 million from li
Senate on a voice vote,
Proponents now say the bud}
summit, where administratit
and congressional leadersareir
ing to agree on an overall figu:
for 1991 government spendin|
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Health officials probe retarded man’s
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DALLAS (AP) — State mental health officials
are questioning the Department of Public Safety’s
ruling that a mentally retarded man — found
hanged with his hands tied behind him — died
accidentally in a bizarre sex act.
The DPS report concluded that Tommy Phil
lips, 36, rigged a noose, stuffed a sock in his
mouth and tied his hands behind his back to in
crease his excitement during the act.
Texas Department of Mental Health and Men
tal Retardation officials said Wednesday that
they don’t believe Phillips had the mental capac
ity to undertake the act.
Phillips lived in a state group home when he
was found in the back yard of the Waxahachie-
area home in January. State employees said he
had an IQ of 34, about the mental capacity of a
kindergartner.
“I think that we will question it (the finding),
and if our questions aren’t answered satisfactor
ily, we will pursue whatever options we may have
open,” Mel Hughes, an assistant deputy commis
sioner with MHMR in Austin,said. “I find it hard
to believe that their conclusion is the final one.”
Ellis County Sheriffs Department officers and
the Texas Rangers, which conducted parallel in
vestigations, said they stand by their finding.
Hughes said he told investigators from the
outset that he didn’t believe Phitlips was capable
of setting up the elaborate sexual act. The act in
volves masturbating while restricting oxygen to
the brain. Called sexual asphyxia, it occasionally
causes accidental death when the noose is fash
ioned in such a manner that pressure is not re-
W’ith thei
proper p
leased on the neck, experts say.
Phillips’ hands were tied loosely enough IS
he could reach around his naked body, investii| g on ii|.
tors said.
of a revi
Texas Ranger George Turner, who inve) ^ exec
gated the case, said all that remains to be done
the case is the final paperwork and a consultati
with Phillips’ family.
“There will be no more action that I’m a"
of,” Turner said.
Relatives and some state employees faulted!
Ellis County Sheriff s Department for not ntf State Col
ing an arrest when Phillips was burned in an
tack six months before his death.
meeting
doning t
the alleg;
A cam
Hated at
isted de
Several staff members of the group homei the) four
said they received threatening phone calls i
the death. The group home has since closed.
laliforni,
Officia
tnentorj!