Image provided by: Texas A&M University
About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 31, 1990)
Page 8 The Battalion Wednesday, October31,1990 VVet Classified Ads 845-0569 ANNOUNCEMENTS FOR SALE 4 1st Sport’s Card Show SEIZED CARS, trucks, boats. ever on campus. four wheelers, motor homes, Friday, November 2nd by FBI, IRS, DEA,. Available your 301 Rudder. area now. Call (805)682-7555 For a table or more info, call Greg Cramford 764-9407. Ext. C-1201. SERVICES Professional typing, word proc essing, resume writing and editing services are available at Notes-n-Quotes call 846-2255 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 BURNOUT. STRESS. AND TEST ANXIETY controlled using hypnosis and visualization. Don Arnold. '84. 105 Ottawa St., San Mateo, CA 94401. TYPING. STUDENTS WELCOME. SUPERB SERVICE. SPELL CHECK. LASER PRINTER. 764-2931. WORD PROCESSING: PROFESSIONAL. PRECISE. SPEEDY - LASERWRITER QUALITY. LISA 696-0958. Muriel's Management Plus. 696-1732. Word Processing Services. 707 S. TX. Ave.. Suite 312C. CHILD CARE COLLEGE STUDENT to live in. Room and board in Navasota in exchange for childcare responsibilities. MUST have car. 696-6633, 409-825-7348 after 6 pm. FOR RENT RIDING HORSES FOR RENT Sandy Point Rd. near Bryan Utility Lake. Call 779-7052 anytime. Ask for Rudy. Open 7 days a week. 24 hrs. a day. COTTON VILLAGE APTS Ltd. Snook. TX Ibdrm $200 2 Bdrm $248 Rental Assistance Available Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5 p.m. Equal Opportunity Housing/Handicapped Accessible Two bedroom apartment south of campus, available No vember 1st, $145. 696-2038. Battalion Classified Ads Get Results HELP WANTED Notes-n-Quotes is now hiring graduate students as tutors and notetakers. All subjects needed. Calll 846-2255 SPRING BREAK, Christmas, summer travel FREE. Air couriers needed and cruiseship jobs. Call (805) 682-7555 Ext. S-1026 DAYI Processing Phone Orders. PEOPLE CALL YOU. Call 1-518-271-7000. Ext. A2013A Hrs. INTELLIGENCE JOBS. CIA. U.S. Customs. DEA. etc. Now hiring. CALL (1) 805-687-6000. Ext. F-9531. 1983 Buick Skylark, Automatic Power, AM/FM Cassette, Excellent Condition; Best Otter 846-9486. HORSEFORSALE: 1/2T.B., 1/2 Q.H. gelding 21 mo. old $1500 O.B.O. 589-3004. Plane ticket C.S. to N.Y. for Christmas. $150 or best offer. 847-2360. 1000 MINI-CROSS OR DIET PLUS for only $14.95. Call 1 -800-888-4988. Drafting table w/chair $25, 30x44 inch desk $25. The Bargain Plaice, located across from Chicken Oil, 846- 2429. '86 HONDA SCOOTER FOR SALE. $300 NEG. 764- 9326. 5-BR/3-Bath new 1991 Palm Harbor Doublewide, 2128 square feet. AC and set-up Included. Starting at $39,900. Call now 1-800-B80-HOME. NEW- USED- REPO'S. Why shop anywhere else? We have It aUl, over 50 different floor plans to choose from. Financing available. Call 1-800-880-4663. Gold Star Typing — Anna 775-6695. Call anytime! English Pronuncfadion and Conversation. Individual or group. Private call 693-0795. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES TYPING: ACCURATE. PROMPT, PROFESSIONAL. 16 years experience. Near caimpus. 696-5401. Word Processing: Professional Quality Reports, Term Papers, Resumes, etc. Laser/Letter Quality Printing. Melinda 693-1483. REPOSSED VA & HUD Homes available from government from $1.00 Without credit check. You repair. Also tax delinquent foreclosures. CALL (805) 682-7555 Ext. H-1445 for repo list your area. PERSONALS WORD PROCESSING. Resumes, Graphics, from $1.35/ page. LASER PRINTER, PERFECT PRINT. 822-1430. Pregnant but not ready to parent? We have many loving parents who could give your child a lifetime of cave. You may select your child's adoptive family and even meet them. Consider adoption, the loving option. 24 hour HELP-LINE: 268-5577. ADOPTION: Fulfillourdreamofbecoming parents. Let us give your baby a loving family and promising future. We'll help with expenses. Legal-Confidential. Call collect 914- 962-8888. ADOPTION: Our only way to have a family. Your newborn can be the gift to answer our prayers. Call collect: 201- 721-3439. TRAVEL r mJ i JANUAE^ S T E A M B JANUARY 2-12 • 5, 6 OR 7 NIGHTS BRECKENRI__ JANUARY 2-9 • 5, 6 OR 7 NIGHTS v *7 9th ANNUAL COLLEGIATE WINTER SKI BREAKS TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS 1-800-321-5911 7=^ ^ M‘ke Hays’ Angel Fire / Winter Park FROM ONLY $99 $199 Call For Brochures: 1-800-235-TRIP 847-7054 KAPLAN: Hiring MCAT Instructors. 1-800-683-1970. Judy. * EXTFtA INCOME * Earn $200-$500 weekly mailing greeting cards & novelty gift Items. For more information send a stamped addressed envelope to: Greeting Cards, Inc., P.O. Box 2297, Miami, FL 33261 NOW HIRING WAIT-PERSONS FULL/PART-TIME. DAYS/EVENINGS. APPLY: GOLDEN CORRAL, 700 E. UNIVERSITY, C.S. INTELLIGENCE JOBS. FED. CIA, U.S. Customs, DEA, etc. Now Hiring. Listings. (1) 805-687-6000. Ext. K-9531. Hiring line cooks and prep cooks. Apply In person. 3-C Barbeque, 1727 South Texas. ST COLLEGIATE SKI BREAK .. And definitely the MOST FUN! COMPARE OUR TRIP TO ANY.., THEN GIVE US A GAEL Call: ‘Dlcia+H xtuCuciiotta 1-800-782-7653 Ext. 221 or 512/396-1986 HEALTHY MALES WANTED AS SEMEN DONORS Help infertile couples; confidentiality ensured. Ethnic diversity desirable, ages 18 to 35, excellent compensation. Contact Fairfax Cryobank, 1121 Briarcrest, Suite 101 776-4453 $$ SAVE THOUSANDS $$. Buy your new Palm Harbor Home factory direct. HUGE DISCOUNTS on 2,3.4,5,6, bedroom singlewides and doublewides. Call (512)385- 8766. BARGAIN BARN FLEA MARKET. Furniture, Paint, Plumbing, Electrical, Building material. Glassware. Fri day, Saturday, Sunday 12-6. 2403 North Texas Avenue, Bryan. Wednesday Thursday EPISCOPAL STUDENT CENTER: will have Eucharist and community dinner at the Canterbury House. Call 693-4245 for more information. INDIA ASSOCIATION: general body meeting at 7 p.m. in 203 Zachry. Call Venniat 846-3587 for more information. OPAS STARK SERIES AND DEPT. OF PHIL. AND HUMANITIES: will meet at noon in 402 Academic Bldg. Concert will feature Hsia-Jung Chang, pianist. Call Rebecca at 845-3355. TAMU GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY: will have a meeting at 6 p.m. in 122 O&M. Call Bryan at 847-1772 for more information. MSC OPAS: “LBJ” at 8 p.m. in Rudder Auditorium. Call 845-1234 for more informa tion. SIGMA IOTA EPSILON: general meeting with election of officers at 7 p.m. in' Rudder. Call Teri at 847-4907 for more information. UNITED CAMPUS MINISTRY: will have Aggie supper at A&M Presbyterian Church. Call Mike at 846-1221 for more information. AGGIE BONFIRE: Fightin' Texas Aggie Centerpole raised at 6:03 p.m. at Duncan Field. Call Tom at 764-9026 for more information. WOMEN’S BONFIRE COMMITTEE: will have a meeting at 7 p.m. in 206 MSC. NEWMAN: will have informal mass and creative liturgy at 7:15 p.m. at St. Mary's Student Center. Call 846-5717 for more information. NATIONAL SOCIETY OF BLACK ENGINEERS: general assembly meeting al7 p.m. in 308 Rudder. PLANO HOMETOWN CLUB: will have lunch with other Plano students at 11 a.m. Meet by the cowhide-covered chairs at the south end of the MSC cafete ria. SOCIETY OF MEXICAN-AMERICAN ENGINEERS AND SCIENTISTS: general meeting, T-shirts and membership cards to be handed out at 7 p.m in 102 Zachry. HP calculator to be given away. Call Albert at 696-5923 for more in formation. BUSINESS STUDENT COUNCIL: will have a Blocker Halloween party from 10 to 4 p.m. in the lobby. GEOGRAPHICAL HONOR SOCIETY: short organizational meeting at 7 p.m.in 112 O&M. Call Bryan at 847-1222 for more information. PRIMITIVE BAPTIST FELLOWSHIP: will have worship service at 7 p.m. at the All Faiths Chapel. Call Chris at 847-7000 for more information. AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF AERONAUTICS AND ASTRONAUTICS: Space Shut tie Cmdr. Loren Shriver will discuss space flight at 7 p.m. in 103 Zachry Call Craig at 846-8098 for more information. METHODIST STUDENT CENTER: will have informal worship service at 7 p.m. and • — -Jr a Halloween dance at 8 p.m. at the Methodist Student Center. Call Max at 846-4701 for more information. RIO GRANDE VALLEY HOMETOWN CLUB: general meeting at 8:30 p m in5 Rudder. Call William at 846-9203 for more information. ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS: will have a discussion at noon. Call the C.D.P.E. for more information at 845-0280. MEXICAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION: general meeting at 8:30 p.m. in 502 Rudder i info Call Alex at 696-0098 for more information. NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS: will have a discussion at 8:30 p.m. Call the C.D.P.E. at 845-0280 for more information. S.W.A.P.: Nature vs. Nurture at 8:30 p.m. in 410 Rudder. Call John at847-0996for more information. OCA: will have Aggieland Spooktacular Haunted House from 6 p.m. to midnight on »nd floor off the second f the MSC. Call Christi at 696-1159 for more information. SPEECH COMMUNICATION ASSOCIATION: field trip meeting at 6:30 p m in 164 Blocker. Call 693-5630 for more information. POLITICAL FORUM INSIGHTS COMMITTEE: will have Walter Kamphoefuer to ipnoeruer speak on immigration and bilingualism at noon at the Cashiers' Dining Room. Call 845-1515 for more information. MSC WILEY LECTURE SERIES: Program Symposia “The New Nuclear Threat,' st speakers Dr. Ron Hatchett and Dr. Rudder. uest speakers Dr. Ron Hatchett and Dr. Richard Thomas at 8:30 p.m. in gue 501 CATHOLICS ON THE QUAD: this week's topic: Halloween, from 9 to 10 p.m. in Lounge F. Call 847-2008 for more information. AGGIE PLAYERS: present Gilbert and Sullivans’ “The Mikado” at 8 p.m. in Ruddei Theater. Call 845-1234 for more information. A&M LUTHERAN COLLEGIANS: will have Bible study “Christ and the Single Life” “ - - more information. at 9 p.m. in the Meditation Room at the All Faiths Chapel. Call 693-4514 for STUDENT ACTIVITIES , speaker seminar applications will be available in 208 Pavil ion through Nov. 21. Call 845-1133 for more information. MINORITY LIBERAL ARTS SOCIETY: will have a meeting at 8 p.m. in 226 MSC. Call Paul at 693-7549 for more information. BETA ALPHA PSI: professional meeting with Price Waterhouse at 6:30 p.m. in the at m Hilton. Officer applications due at meeting. MSC COMMITTEE FOR THE AWARENESS OF MEXICAN-AMERICAN CUL TURE: will have Dia de los Muertos at 7 p.m. in 224 MSC. ADULT CHILDREN OF ALCOHOLICS: general discussion at 6 p.m. Call C.P.D.E for more information. REFORMED UNIVERSITY FELLOWSHIP: will meet in 308 Rudder at 7 p.m. for fellowship and Bible study. Call Chris at 776-1185 for more information. ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS: general discussion at noon. Call C.P.D.E. for more information. LUTHERAN STUDENT FELLOWSHIP: will have evening prayer and supper at 6:30 p.m. at the University Lutheran Chapel. Call 846-6687 for more infor mation. NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS: general discussion at 8:30 p.m. Call C.PD.E more information. TEXAS ENVIRONMENTAL ACTION COALITION: will have a Halloween party at 8 p.m. Dress as your favorite environmental disaster. Call Mary at 846-6767 or Filoat) CHILD PLACEMENT CENTER AND AGAPE SOCIAL SERVICES: Birth Pai Support Group meets at 5:30 p.m. at the Child Placement Center, 5051 versity Dr. East #801. Call 268-5577 or 776-2007 for more information. 1847-6560 for more information. METHODIST STUDENT CENTER AND CATHOLIC STUDENT ASSOCIATION: will have a Halloween dance and prizes for costumes at the Catholic Student Association. $2 per person. Call Troy at 847-7946 for more information. EARTH FIRST!: “Greenfire” Wilderness Revival Tour with Scotty Johnson, musi cian and Roger Featherstone, speaker at 8 p.m. in A&M United Melliodisl Church, 417 University Dr. Tickets $3 in advance or $5 at the door. Call Dwight at 693-7383 for more information. items for What's Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 216 Reed McDon ald, no later than three business days before the desired run date. We publish the name and phone number of the contact only if you ask us to do so. What's Up is a Battalion service that lists non-profit events and activities. Submissions are mon 1 >n-pr( first-come, first-served basis, ih nere is no guarantee an entry will run. If you have questions, call the newsroom at 845-3316. WASHINGTON (AP) — The Su- E reme Court began scrutinizing a an on abortion counseling at feder ally subsidized family planning clin ics Tuesday in arguments punc tuated by pointed questions from new Justice David H. Souter and fel low members. Souter voiced doubts about regu lations that bar doctors and family planning counselors from discussing abortion even with women whose Souter voices doubts about regulations barring counseling E regnancies are endangering their ealtl 1th. “You are telling us the physician cannot perform his usual profes sional responsibility,” Souter told So licitor General Kenneth Starr, the Bush administration’s top court room lawyer. “You are telling us the secretary (of Health and Human Services) in effect may preclude pro fessional speech.” Starr, conceding the ban “tilts against abortion,” defended its val idity. Although fueled by the continu ing struggle over abortion, the legal dispute over the regulations centers on free-speech rights. The court must decide whether the regulations comply with a 1970 federal law and, if so, whether they violate the Con stitution. A decision is expected by July. The argument is over information available to the 5 million low-income women who depend on family plan ning clinics and similar health care providers. Last year, some 4,000 family plan ning clinics nationwide received about $140 million in federal assis tance. Enforcement of the regulations, issued by the Reagan administration in 1988, has been blocked virtually everywhere by legal challenges. SPR lobby ied la lidate: None of the justices indicatedanv interest Tuesday in using the case 10 alter the court’s 1973 Roe vs. Wade decision that legalized abortion. Roe vs. Wade was not mentioned at all by Starr or Harvard law proles sor Laurence Tribe, representing^f 0I those who challenged the regula tions. “This is strictly a First Amend ment argument,” Tribe told tie court. Four justices have. criticized tie 1973 ruling, and the court last rear gave states greater leeway to mate abortions more difficult to obtain Souter, whose views on the issueate unknown, is considered a pivotal vote for the future of legalized abor tion. Commerce report fails to dissuade analysts WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. economy grew at a faster-than-expected 1.8 percent rate in the third quarter, the government said Tuesday, but the report failed to dissuade many analysts who believe the economy is entering a recession. The Commerce Department report on the gross national product showed that consumers buying cars and other items had continued to drive the longest peacetime economic expansion in U.S. history through September. Whether the expansion reaches its eighth anniversary in No vember was a matter of debate. “This release contradicts those who believe we are in a recession or are about to enter one,” Commerce Undersecretary Michael R. Darby told reporters. His boss, Commerce Secretary Robert Mosbacher, added in San Antonio, “I hope all the doom-sayers and nay-sayers and cluck-cluckers go back in their holes for a while.” “I believe we’re in a recession,” economist Bruce Steinberg of Merrill Lynch Capital Mar kets in New York said. “I think that most of the things showing strength in the third quarter will be weak in the fourth, particularly consumer spending.” Robert G. Dederick, chief economist for the Northern Trust Co. in Chicago, also believes the economy is declining this quarter. He contended that much of the GNP strength “was concen trated early in the quarter. It is by no means cer tain that it was growing 1.8 when the quarter ended.” Indeed, Michael Boskin, chairman of Bush’s Council of Economic Advisers, said. “While this is pleasant news about the third quar ter, we are concerned about a sluggish fourll quarter and the early part of 1991.” He added that he “was certainly pleased ” will the Federal Reserve’s action Monday in pushing down a key short-term interest rate, a move that might be expected to boost economic growth [ B l T it ai By! on K storr He' brea B feeli I end play son And he s; woui “I Tud arou knov year I) 1 Tael kle gam. Angl show quar heh; Ti offer in A< “I said. mov< that’: into 1 B< [he were retur eninj Holl: conv A&A pass. line; yard aban Ban on abortion counseling argued ^ H ion to Hall and s; an lation erson esubi irscor “Th lould iurlar leserv lie sta if Fan ! oin g ho ertain du ca To The Commerce Department had continued bad news about the housing industryTuesday.lt reported that sales of new homes slumped 6 pen cent in September. ELECT THE EXPERIENCED, CONSERVATIVE JUDGE STEVE SMITH Promote Judge STEVE SMITH Judge - County Court at Law No. 2 Married to the former Becky of ’79 / two children, ages 6 Brimmer, Class and 3 Has heard over 4,000 cases as a municipal judge/13 years of courtroom experience Endorsed by College Republicans, Young ~ Tej Conservatives of Texas and Aggies for Steve Smith Recipient of Charles W. Plum Distinguished Non-Student Service Award from MBA/Law Day speaker Former President - MSC OPAS in 1986 Pd. PoL Ad by Steve Smith Campaign, P.O. Box 9642, CS, TX. Oil earnings statements defend profiteering charge NEW YORK (AP) — The petro leum industry as a whole did not reap a third-quarter windfall from the Persian Gulf crisis, a leading trade group said Tuesday in a de fense of Big Oil against charges of profiteering. something of a mix, ranging double- and triple-digit increases® profits at some companies to double digit decreases at others. “The third-quarter earnings statements released by several oil companies show that oil companies have not gouged the public,” Ameri can Petroleum Institute President Charles J. DiBona said at a press briefing. DiBona said total operating in come was unchanged from the third quarter of 1989 and below the same period in 1988, based on reports from 18 top U.S. petroleum compa nies. Industry earnings were actually Amerada Hess Corp., for exam ple, reported a 440.5 percent in' crease in earnings, based largdjP profits from oil futures trading. “It shows they were able tojudgi the future better than other peoplt DiBona said. In response to the API report, some industry foes still contend^ the companies were taking advan tage of the Gulf crisis, which I with Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait. Christopher Dyson of the Ralpl Nader consumer group, Buyers If- said he believes oil companies wett trying to conceal how well they’tt doing.