Page 4 The Battalion Thursday, June 6,1991 The Battalion Classified Ads Phone: 845-0569 / Office: English Annex Services Piano Lessons ^ Sarah Watts Pianist-Teacher Two years ’ Piano Faculty, Baylor University Bryan Studio, over 20years “Serious Students of all Ages” 822-6856 r g 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 COLLEGE MONEY Private Scholarships. You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money refunded! America's Finest! Since 1981. COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP LOCATORS, Box 1881, Joplin, MO 64802-1881.1 -800-879-7485 Help Wanted THE GREENERY Landscape maintenance team member is hiring full and part-time. Interview M-Th from 10 a.m.-11 a.m. 823-7551 1512 Cavitt, Bryan. Tx. THE HOUSTON CHRONICLE needs carrier for several off campus routes. $450-$700 per month. Require working early morning hours. Call James 693-7815 or Julian 693-2323 for an appointment. Optometric Assistant 8:45 a.m. - 1 p.m. M-F Yearround. No experience necessary. Typing required. Call 696-3754 for interview. Babysitter available. Part-time or full-time (preferably at my home) 696-2809. Jobs in Kuwait T ax Free. Construction work ere $75,000.00, Engineering $200,000.00, Oilfield workers $100,000.00. Call 1-800-743-3440 Ext. 609. Part-time help wanted immediately, $6.00/hr. - weekends, Fri. & Sat. afternoons. Call 512-442-3847. Do your homework at home with a TV950 terminal and modem. Phil, 775-3776. Graduate student couple to manage 40 unit apartment complex. Apartment plus salary. Resume to: 1300 Walton Drive, College Station, Texas 77840. 846-9196. GOLF INSTRUCTOR. Golf instructor, familiarwith Coach Ellis teaching technique, to give weekly lessons to two high school age golfers. Call Loretta 776-0400. TENNIS INSTRUCTOR. Tennis instructor wanted to give two (one hour) lessons per week. Call Loretta 776-0400. EXCITING JOBS - CRUISE SHIPS HIRING! info (800) 553-0341, ext. C 1724 MON -SAT. LAW ENFORCMENT JOBS. $17,542-$86,682/yr. Po lice, Sheriff, State Patrol, Correctional Officers. For Info call (1)805-962-8000 Ext. K-9531. , Management trainees needed. Call 693-2539. Office workers : drivers, secretaries wanted fulltime or part-time. 693-0345. SUMMER WORK. $9.90 TO START. INTERNATIONAL FIRM FILLING FULL AND PART-TIME OPENINGS. CONTACT THE PERSONNEL OFFICE NEAREST TO YOUR SUMMER RESIDENCE. SOUTHWEST ZONE PERSONNEL OFFICES: AUSTIN...512-458-9675, DAL LAS...214-991-8920, FT. WORTH...817-377-2533, HOUSTON..713-977-1535, LONGVIEW...903-759-5533. LUBBOCK...806-795-9490, M IDLAN0...915-694-3188. N. HOUSTON...713-440-8000, OKLAHOMA CITY... 405- 848-8721. PLANO...214-422-0016, SAN ANTONIO... 512- 366-1885, TULSA...918-664-4118, WAC0...817-776- 3307. Super Cuts now hiring full or part-time stylist 696-1155. Healthy males wanted as semen donors. Help infertile couples. Confidentiality ensured. Ethnic diversity desir able. Ages 1635, excellent compensation. Contact Fairfax Cryobank, 1121 Briarcrest Suite 101, 776-4453. For Sale Roommate Wanted For Rent COTTON VILLAGE APTS Ltd. Snook, TX fbdrm $200 2 Bdrm $248 Rental Assistance Available Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5 p.m. Equal Opportunity Housing/Handicapped Accessible TYPING in Macintosh computer. Laser writer print-tout, done 24 hre. or less. 696-3892. Northgate One- 2 bedroom apartment, $200-$320. Two bedroom houses, 846-8432; 6965800. A+ VCR REPAIRS AND CLEANING. All models, local pickup and delivery, 10% discount for students. 693- 8694. 1 bedroom efficiency apartment available. Best floor plan In town. Pool, shuttle, private patios, W/D connection, low utilities. Wyndham Management, 8464384. Defensive driving classes, ticket dismissal, insurance discount. AAA, 909 S.W. Parkway, 693-1322. A 2B/1,1/2Bath, luxury four-plex. Near ASM. W/D, shuttle bus $395, 693-0551, 764-8051. Personals TALK LINE Beautiful women wanting to talk to you! 1-900-329-0005 $2.49/min. 10 min. minimum SOFT AS COTTON Talk Live 2.50/min., 10 min/minimum 1-900-454-9995 A DATE TONIGHTI Hear talking personals from local singles waiting to meet you (names & phone numbers included). 1-900-346-3377 $1.95 1st minute. Wanted MUSCLE SPASM STUDY Patients needed with acute (recent) onset of muscle spasms (back pain, etc.) to participate in a consumer use research study with an FDA approved drug. Medical evaluation at no cost to patient. Eligible volunteers will be compensated. G & S STUDIES, INC. 846-5933 Here's a good deal If you want a copy of last year's (1990), award-winning A&JVi yearbook, Aggieland, a limited number of copies are available for $25, plus tax, at the English Annex. Please stop by between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Fire destroys luxury hotel, woman dies WiRRD bv Scott McCullar ©1991 ^ r PRESIPE-A/T MOBLET, coolp you TELL US IW A FEVi WOKR5 HOW 10U FEEL ABOUT GETTING THE BUSH LlBKAKy FOJ? MANILA, Philippines (AP) — Fire broke out tonight in a luxury hotel, and officials said one guest was killed and one fireman was in jured. Hundreds of people were evac uated from the 11-story Hyatt Re gency Hotel in suburban Pa say City. The fire was put out in about 90 minutes. Firemen searching the third floor found a woman, Cecilia Yim of Hong Kong, unconscious in the bathroom. She was rushed to a hospital where she died, said police Col. Oscar Pascual. A fireman was injured when he fell from a ladder during the fire, officials said. Michele Mitshiener, a spokeswoman for the hotel, said the fire started about 11:25 p m. (9:25 a.m. EDT) on the third floor, and that thick smoke filled the hallways of the 265-room hotel. She said the hotel was about 60 percent full. Ph.D by Michael Mogonye ST/ip i T/f//y/CijuTe\ nu please,m>/ . ' ^ Or f > KuTHy Rl/TH f* po V<9l/ Vif/EED A MAJ/lff/ BE NICE mNlBAdlM/SUALU BOLD \ PEACVCE W/MT «* Q3tflU! . k r\Gne HEI&ET..J \VCXI FFEACHZt Moped $500 1987 Riva Jog. 50cc. Basket, trunk. Mandy 845-7809. Corrbination chest of 6 drawers, dressing table $90. Decorator 9 ft. sofa good condition, $150.00. Larrps, tables, other Herns 779-7149. 1986 6SXR 750 Suzuki. Excellent conditions. Call Adrian 764-3068, leave message. Female roommate wanted to share furnished house for summer. 693-5948, 713438-5325. Female roommate needed for summer/fall 3b/2,1/2ba house, garage, WD, utilities paid etc. Call Kim Holland 693-0945. What’s Up Thursday ADULT CHILDREN OF ALCOHOLICS: General discussion at 6 p.m. Call COPE at 845-0280 for more information. GAY AND LESBIAN STUDENT SERVICES: General meeting in 507AB Rudder. Call 847-0321 for more information. CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST: First summer meeting! Everyone welcome at 7:30 p.m. at Rumors. Call Pat Roach for more information. ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS: General discussion at noon. Call CDPE at 845-0280 for more information. Friday LUTHERAN STUDENT FELLOWSHIP: Bible Study at 7:30 o.m. at the Lutheran Student Cen ter. Call Elaine at 846-5645 for more information. ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS: General discussion at noon. Call the CDPE at 845-0280 for more information. STUDENTS OVER TRADITIONAL AGE: Supper Club meeting at 6 p.m. at Fuddruckers. Call 845-1741 for more information. ALPHA KAPPA ALPHA SORORITY INC.: Come out and party with us! It’s a party you won’t forget! Rooms 224 and 225 MSC. COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS: Humana Hospital-Brazos Valley Texas Music Festival Cham ber Music Concerts. Pro Arte String Quartet and Lawrence Wheeler, Viola. 7:30 p.m. in Rudder Theater. Call Rebecca Binder at 845-3355. Items 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 publish the name and phone number of the contact only if you ask us to do so. What’s Up is a Battal ion 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. If you have ques tions, call the newsroom at 645-3316. Elderly smokers run higher risk of death, study says BOSTON (AP) — A new study of elderly smokers provides the strongest evidence yet that it's never too late to quit, its authors say. T think we have the first data to show there is clearly no immunity from the hazards of cigarette smoking at any age," said Dr. Charles H. Hennekens of Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston and a study co-author. The researchers said their find ings are especially important be cause of the dramatic increase in recent years in the number of women over age 65 who smoke. The new report found that over a five-year period, outwardly healthy old people who smoke are twice as likely to die as are those who never smoked. The risk for those who gave up cigarettes falls between the two extremes. The extra deaths among the el derly smokers result from cancer and heart attacks, the major health While the health advantages of giving up cigarettes are well ac cepted for young and middle-age people, the notion that those in their 60s, 70s and beyond benefit has been less clear. In part, this is because few studies have concen trated on the effects of smoking on the elderly, especially women. The new work challenges the widely held belief that by the time smokers reach old age, their habit has already taken its toll, and those who survive this long are somehow immune to the dangers of cigarettes. When you finish reading The Battalion pass it on to a friend but please DON'T LITTER LUNCH SPECIAL 12” 1 ITEM PIZZA ONLY $3.99 May Expire w/out notice. 11:00 a.m -6:00 p.m. ONLY Fast Free Delivery (Limited Area) (10 minute carry out guarantee) We Deliver From: Sunday - Wednesday 11a.m. - 1:30 a.m. Thursday - Saturday 11 a.m. - 2:30 a.m. Ranch Dressing Available Serving TAMU & Surrounding area 1702 Kyle 76-GUMBY VISA XV Nerd House by Tom A. Madison S6T5 A7TACK£D ST TH£ AmT5, A&A/AJ. Gorbachev wants West to send aid hazards of cigarettes. "Older people who smoke can still do their health a lot of good by quitting," said Dr. Andrea Z. La- Croix, who directed the study. "A lot of older people believe that once you've smoked 40 or 50 years, you have nothing to gain from quitting. That's clearly not true." OSLO, Norway (AP) — Mikhail S. Gorbachev said Wednesday in his Nobel Peace lecture that West ern failure to heed his call for eco nomic aid could dash hopes for a peaceful new world order. Gorbachev also said he expected to sign an arms pact soon to slash superpower nuclear arsenals, and rides said the Soviet president sur aides said me boviet pi would play host to President Bush in Moscow in the last week of June. In his most cogent appeal yet for Western aid. Gorbachev said, "To me, it is self-evident that if Soviet perestroika succeeds, there will be a real chance of __ building a new ^ world order." M,w,al1 s - Gorbachev "And if perestroika fails, the prospect of entering a new peace ful period of history will vanish, at least for the foreseeable future," he said, using a Russian word for his reforms. Two hecklers interrupted the Nobel lecture and police said they arrested 30 people who staged street protests against Gorba chev's refusal to allow the Baltic republics to secede. Gorbachev's delivery of the long-delayed Nobel lecture and news of the summit underscored the resurgence of his domestic and international standing after the bloody Baltic crackdown last Jan uary. Gorbachev seemed to have won Bush's backing to be present in London next month when the Group of Seven leading industrial nations meet. A U.S. source said the Soviet leader likely would meet with the Western leaders outside the actual summit. Gorbachev was awarded the sources. Researchers modify TB vaccine NEW YORK (AP) — Research ers have transformed tuberculosis vaccine into a one-shot, multidi sease vaccine that triggered de fenses against AIDS and tetanus in mice, according to studies being published Thursday. The achievement marks an im portant step toward the devel opment of a vaccine that could protect humans against a grab-bag of a dozen or more diseases, the researchers said. The vaccine, once perfected, could be especially useful in the Third World, where medical care is scarce and vaccines are the most cost-effective form of medical care. Thurs< 0 ir The i mapcaus is she an locate th trated sij into the: liands, o: suspendi ter." Soun< game is s eiy new. with a whelm ec enrolling thanks ti Orientati “fish out tothema of the lar nation. Altho Departm Aggie C gram, w merconf unteer ai entation nior Mik But v choose tc mer heal student been an ior the p been one her life. "It's r in the su help stuc transitioi Chosei enthusia coming lected in to attend to prepa idoroe 1990 Nobel Peace Prize in Decem ber for his part in ending the Cold War by concluding arms pacts, al lowing East Europe to shed un popular Communist regimes, and curtailing proxy wars in Asia, Af rica and Latin America. Ethnic, economic and political crises in the Soviet Union had prompted Gorbachev to postpone nis Nobel lecture from its original date of Dec. 10. And the superpower summit, once set for February, was delayed by the Gulf War and lingering dis putes on conventional and nuclear arms. In his Nobel lecture, Gorbachev reaffirmed his commitment to the peaceful solution of domestic So viet problems despite the violence sparked by some aspects of peres troika. But he cautioned Western leaders against expecting the So viet Union to imitate them sla vishly. "Our task is to stay the course while also addressing current ev eryday problems — which are lit erally tearing this policy apart —in such a way as to prevent a social and Mpro^ mer regi Aside: ing fresh: five stud lerence ] iation Le further t toaposi ■"Ou: dents fee might be called the crucial point, when the world community, and above all the states with the great est potential to influence world de velopments, will have to decide on their stance with regard to the So viet Union," Gorbachev said. It is, he said, "futile and danger ous to set conditions, to say: 'We'll understand and believe you as soon as you, the Soviet Union, come completely to resemble us.'" In Washington, State Depart ment deputy spokesman Ricnard Boucher restated the U.S. stance that the Soviets must continue their economic and democratic re forms in order to make best use of their natural and human re- H F F c Ti The wraps u with a "un-cla Sure, it 7 : three w dudesl day the the best around. Ivisi Saturda who've tion b< Americ Trout F: offan-f; cover o: Away" (Lubbo Pol Dog several record, "Thank The with mi and B througl Sisters; splittin