Page 6 The Battalion Monday, January 27,1991 1 The Bottalion Classified Ads Phone: 845-0569 / Office: English Annex Help Wanted I Services PATELLAR TENDONITIS (JUMPER’S KNEE) Patients needed with patellar tendonitis (pain at base of knee cap) to participate in a research study to evaluate a new topical (rub on) anti-inflammatory gel. Eligible volunteers will be compensated G&S Studies, Inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 CENTRAL VALLEY CHEMICALS Is looking for drivers part-time 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mon.-Fri., & Sat. 7 a.m. to 12 noon. Requirements are: 1. Must be 21 years old 2. No DWI, no felonies 3. Have Class C driver's license 4. Rate of pay $5.00 per hour Work description: delivery of Agr. Chemicals. Contact Mr. Liere or Mr. Blackwell 409-272-8470 Students need a spring job? Earn $400 to $800 per month as a route carrier for the Houston Chronicle. Job requires working early morning hours, and a gas allowance is provided. Positions start Jan. 7,1991. Immediate openings are also available. If interested, call James at 693-7815 or Julian at 693-2323 for an appointment. Houston Chronicle THE PSYCHOLOGY DEPARTMENT at TAMU is conducting research on group dynamics and needs participants. We will pay $30.00 for 6 hrs over a three week period. If interested, sign up outside Room 409 in the Psychology Building or call 845-0478 and ask for JUDY . if you have any questions. r NEED EXTRA INCOME ^ mi* FOR 1991? Earn $500 - $1000 weekly stuffing envelopes. For details -Rush $1.00 with SASE to: CIH Group Inc. 1019 Lk. Sherwood • Orlando, FL 32818 SHERWOOD HEALTH CARE INC. Openings for Nursing Assistants and part-time dietary aid. No experienced required. Training provided. Apply at 1401 Memorial Dr. Bryan. Phone 776-7521 Equal Opportunity Employer FREE PREGNANCY TESTING • Confidential Counseling Good Samaritan Pregnancy Testing and Counseling 505 University Drive (Behind Nutri-System) 846-2909 COLLEGE MONEY Private Scholarships. You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money refunded I America's Finest! Since 1981. COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP LOCATORS, Box 1881, Joplin, MO 64802-1881.1-800-879-7585 For Lease 2bd/1/1,5ba duplex, W/D connection, yard, garage, $375/ mo. February rent free 696-2547. Female roommate wanted two bedroom one bath studio, $150-f1/2 utilities. Great area. Call 693-1489. Sublease quiet four-plex 2-1,1/2. Bus, W/D tenoed yard. $350.00, 693-0508, 845-5295. For Sale 88 Nissan Maxima GXE maroon auto, fully loaded, car telephone, Immaculate condition, price negotiable. 846- Nkon FG camera conditioned, new, many accessories. $350.00 778-7883. For Rent COTTON VILLAGE APTS Ltd. Snook, TX tbdrm $200 2 Bdrm $248 Rental Assistance Available Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5 p.m. Equal Opportunity Housing/Handicapped Accessible APT. FOR RENT;2B-1 B WALK TO CAMPUS; NO PETS; $210+ BILLS. 696-7266. A 2B/1,1/2Bath, luxury four-plexes. Close to carrpus, shuttle bus, washer/dryer available $350.00. 693-0551, 764-8051. Lost & Found LOST CAT REWARD $100.00; Male neutered 151b. friendly cat with Bryan ID tags. Lost 1/7/91 off Deacon Drive in C.S. Call Wendy 696-7960/845-2548. Black, male , 3 mth. old cat. Appears to be an inside pet. 693-7079. Child Care St Michael's Academy has openings for the spring se mester for children ages infants thru 3 yrs. M-F 8 a.m. - 5:30 p.m Personals White, single 'nak*. 36, green eyes, brown hair seeks partner for Country/Western dandng and nice dinner. Call Pat 774-4604. a/5p.m. Wanted Needed: Garth Brooks tickets. Any concert, must be on the weekend. Must be in pairs. Will pay good price. Call Scott at 2S8-4545. Business CHICK-FIL-A POST OAK MALL NOW INTERVIEWING FOR PART-TIME SCHEDULES. WORK SHIFTS CAN RUN 10-2, 12-6, OR 5:30-CLOSE. APPLY IN MALL MONDAY THRU FRIDAY. Soccer Coaches needed for Bryan Soccer Club. The kids are under eight. For more Information contact Robin Donnellly 589-2379. Needs students who want to earn $100+ per week, 214- 252-1570. INTELLIGENCE JOBS. All branches. US Customs. DEA etc. Now hiring. Call 1-805-962-8000, Ext. K-9531. Earn $108.00 CASH monthly donaling plasma. Safe, hewing Aggie tradition. Most of the thousands of A&M student donors study during their visit. Westgate Plasma Center. 4223 Wellborn Road 846-8855. Earn extra income. Amazing recorded message. 1-800- 732-2834. HOME TYPISTS, PC users needed. $35,000 potential. Details. (1)805-687-6000. HOSPITAL JOBSI To $26.50.hr! Nurses. Technicians, Medics, Housekeeping. Al I skills. (1)605-687-6000. INTELLIGENCE JOBS. All branches. U.S. Customs, DEA,etc. Nowhiring. Call(1)805-687-6000.Ext.K-9531. HOME TYPISTS, PC users needed. $35,000 potential. Details. 1-805-687-6000, Ext. B-9531. INTELLIGENCE JOBS. All branches. U.S. Customs, PEA, etc. Now hiring. Call 1-805-687-6000, Ext. K-9531. Healthy males wanted as semen donors. Help infertile couples. Confidentiality ensured. Ethnic diversity desir able. Ages 18-35, excellent compensation. Contact Fairfax Cryobank, 1121 Briarcrest Suite 101, 776-44S3. Hiring line cooks and prep cooks. Apply in person. 3-C Barbeque, 1727 South Texas. 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 Experienced Ibrarian will dolbrary research for you. Call 272-3348. TYPING in Macintosh computer. Letter-quality printer. Done 24 hrs. or less. 696-3892. Horseback riding lessons. English/Jumping. Safe horses. Experienced instructor. $13,00 each 846-1116. ROBIA'S INTERNATIONAL FOOD MARKET Imported foods from Africa, Asia, Carribean, Cuba, India, Latin Am., Mexico, Middle East, & Spain. 2318 Texas Ave. S - C.S. 696-6196, Across/Disc.Tires Travel FLY FOR LESS AS ACOURIERI Major Airline. Houston to: London $275 roundtrlp, Tokyo $375 roundtrip plus first-time registration fee $50. Call NOW VOYAGER 713- 684-6051,212-431-1616. Going skiing? Luxury townhouse sleet 16 located al Red River, New Mexico, $125-$175 anight (spring break higher), 3 night minimum. 846-8905from 10-6, John, 774- 4842, John or Margo. Wondering which way to turn ... Find it fast TKeBattalion CLASSIFIED 845-0569 Street violence erupts, kills six protesters PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) — Rumors of a plot to free the jailed leader of a Jan. 6 coup attempt pro voked street violence Sunday that left at least six people dead and eight wounded, according to independent radio reports. The dead included four reputed agents of the ousted Duvalier dictatorship lynched by a mob and two protesters shot by soldiers, the reports said. Government and military officials denied there had been an attempt to free coup leader Roger Lafontant and said he and his 15 alleged con spirators remained under heavy guard at the National Penitentiary. Radio reports said the distur bances began before daybreak as slum dwellers erected barricades of flaming tires and debris in many sec tions of Port-au-Prince, capital of this impoverished nation of 6 mil lion. In suburban Carrefour, soldiers opened fire on an unruly crowd, kill- 'ing at least two protesters. Radio Haiti Inter said. At least eight were wounded, Radio Metropole re ported. An earlier report erro neously said eight people were killed in the incident. Radio Antilles said rioters burned a police-fire station in the neighbor hood, but it was unclear whether the burning occurred before or after soldiers fired on the crowd. In a separate incident, a mob lynched four men reputedly linked to the 29-year Duvalier dictatorship, which ended in 1986. President flees, rebels seize control of Somali capital, take over airport NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — Guer rillas on Sunday won apparent con trol of Somalia after a month of fighting forced longtime President Mohamed Siad Barre from his offi cial residence. A Western doctor who just left Mogadishu said rebels had taken over the airport and main radio station. Siad Barre’s whereabouts re mained unknown. Reports from So malia’s capital said he may have fled to Kismayu, south of Mogadishu, one of the few sections of the Horn of Africa nation of 8 million believed still loyal to him. Celebrations broke out Saturday night across Mogadishu after the re bels drove Siad Barre from the pres idential mansion and seized state ra dio; on Sunday the guerrillas tightened their grip by capturing the airport, the last government strong hold, Dr. Marc Gastello Etchejorry said. “The information frpm Mogadi shu is that the fighting has finished,” Etchejorry said. “There is no more shooting. The rebels have an nounced that all of the city is under their control.” There was no independent confir mation of the situation due to wide spread communications problems. The rebel United Somali Con- g ress in their claim, which was roadcast over the formerly govern ment-run Radio Mogadishu, said they seized control of Mogadishu at 8:30 p.m. Saturday. “Last night... the government and the responsibility of the Somali peo ple were taken over by the USC movement,” the rebels said. “We are addressing you from Radio Mogadi shu, the voice of the Somali people.” The broadcast was monitored in Nairobi. Etchejorry, of the humanitarian agency Doctors Without Borders, said that after Saturday’s rebel victo ries the streets filled with people dancing, hugging, kissing and shoot ing guns into the air to celebrate Siad Barre’s downfall. Etchejorry was one of six medics that Doctors Without Borders sent to Mogadishu the past week to treat war casualties. He left the city Sun day morning for the Kenyan coastal city of Mombasa, where Doctors Without Borders is coordinating its Somalia effort. He spoke in a tele phone interview. The rebels, who draw their strength from the large central Ha- wiye clan, have pledged to replace Siad Barre’s government with a mul tiparty democracy, hold free elec tions and allow some form of re gional autonomy for the arid nation’s clan-based people. Tubularman by Boomer Cardinale War increases Army combat medic training SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Army combat medic training has been increased from five to seven days a week at Fort Sam Houston as war rages in the Persian Gulf, officials said. Col. John Mullins, who runs the Joint Read iness Training Command at Fort Sam Houston, said as the possibility of a land war draws closer, full classes of combat medics are being trained in San Antonio and at Marine installations on the East and West coasts. Medics are being trained to treat every injury from chemical burns to bad skin. Troops wounded in Operation Desert Storm would be treated first by a medic or combat life- saver, Mullins said. “The primary object is to resuscitate and keep the patient alive and maintain circulation with fluids,” Mullins said. If the wound is serious, the victim is moved by hand-carried litter or by truck to the next eche lon, which the Army calls the battalion aid sta tion. Or, the soldier is moved to a beachhead evacuation station in the case of the Marines. These aid centers are highly mobile and usually are established a mile or so from combat, Mullins said. At this level, there will be a doctor or a physi cian’s assistant. The goal is to keep the patient al ive for transport to a higher level of care — first to a division-aid station and then to a hospital, where critical lifesaving surgery could be per formed. Modern war is so lethal that advances in medi cal care during the past 25 years will have little effect on the odds of survival for U.S. troops who may he wounded in ground combat, experts say. Studies of 8,000 casualties in the Vietnam War show death iti ground combat generally was so quick that even if there were a hospital next to ev ery foxhole, there was little that medical science could have done to save lives, said Col. Ron Bel lamy, of the Joint Readiness Command at Walter Reed Army Hospital in Washington, D.C. “Eighty percent of those who die in combat will die within seconds,” Bellamy said. Another 10 percent of the fatalities die within minutes, and the final 10 percent will die during evacua tion or treatment. Time to get the books 1990 Aggieland If you ordered a 1990 Aggieland and haven't picked it up, stop by the English Annex between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Yearbooks will not be held and refunds will not be made on books not picked up during the academic year in which they are published. If you did not order a 1990 Aggieland, you may pur chase one for $25, plus tax, at the English Annex. Campus Directory If you ordered a 1990-91 Campus Directory and haven't picked it up, get it in the Student Publications business office, room 230 Reed McDonald Building, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. If you did not order a Campus Directory, you may purchase one for $3, plus tax. Seven slain in unrest; coup foiled JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) — Mourners massed in the black township of Sebokeng on Sun day to bury 39 African National Congress supporters killed in a re cent massacre, and police reported seven people slain in unrest nation wide. Meanwhile, leaders of the nomi nally independent Ciskei homeland said Sunday their military foiled a coup attempt and killed the rebel leader, identified as a former mem her of the ruling Military CouncilJ second alleged rebel leader was wounded in a shootout at a roadb lock leading to the Ciskei capital, Bi sho. The report on seven deaths came two days before a planned meeting of the nation’s most powerful blacl leaders — Nelson Mandela of the ANG and Mangosuthu Butheleziof the Inkatha Freedom Party — con sidered crucial to ending fightinj between rival black groups. Police and the military, concerned about possible violence at the Sebo keng funeral, set up roadblocks on streets leading into the township outside Johannesburg. Aboui 15,000 people gathered in the town ship stadium where coffins weredis played on the field. Youths changed ANC slogans. On Jan. 12, at a funeral vigil not far from the stadium, assailants with AK-47 assault rifles fired into a crowd of ANC mourners and killed at least 39. One of those being bur ied Sunday was ANC activist Mphi keleli Christoffel Nangalembe whose first funeral vigil was th< I scene of the Sebokeng massacre Nangalembe was found strangled near Sebokeng on Jan. 5. Speakers Sunday blamed policf for the massacre, alleging they did ; not provide adequate security. “This f massacre is the direct responsibilit; of the police, and we charge their with criminal negligence in not car tying out their duties,” Thomas Nkobi, a member of the ANC’s Na tional Executive Committee, said Police said they left the Jan. 12 vigil at the ANC’s request. After listening to speakers mourners followed a procession from the stadium to a nearby cemf tery for the burials. Motive for the massacre remains! unclear. Local residents alleged it was car ried out by local gang members re cruited by Inkatha, which denied in volvement.