Page 6 The Battalion Wednesday, September 30,15!! t The Battalion Classified Ads Phone: 845-0569 / Office: Room 015 (basement) Reed McDonald Building ’AGGIE’ Private Party Want Ads Business Hours .g* 1 $ 10 for 20 words running 5 days. If your merchan- dlse is priced $ 1000 or less (price must appear In ■nmB ad). This rate applies only to non-commercial / ^ advertisers offering personal possesions for sale. Guaranteed results or you get an additional 5 ■ I! days at no charge. If Item doesn't sell, advertiser must call before 11 a.m. on the day the ad Is 8^^ scheduled to end to qualify for the 5 additional # Insertions at no charge. No refunds will be made If your ad Is cancelled early. 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monday through Friday y/S4* Is! & mmm mmm accepted Help Wanted I For Sale TENSION HEADACHE STUDY Subjects with a history of tension headaches needed to participate in a short research study with a single dose of a marketed medication. NQ BLOOD WORK, Eligible volunteers will be compensated. G & S Studies, Inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 POSTAL JOBS AVAILABLE! Many positions. Great benefits. Call (800) 338-3388. Ext. P-3332. EARN CASH! $110/Mth AND UP Be a plasma donor! Safe and easy procedure provides guaranteed income. Join thousands of A&M students as regular donors. WESTGATE PLASMA CENTER 4223 Welborn Rd. 846-8855 Optometric Assistant M-F. 1:00-5:00 p.m. No experience necessary. Typing required. Call 846-0377 for interview. CLINICAL RESEARCH COORDINATOR - seeking RN, LVN, or Individual with medically related college degree to join local established professional pharmaceutical re search firm. Salaried position. Must be willing to work long hours. Biopharma, Inc. 776-0400. Organist to play two Sunday worship services and Tues day choir practice at A&M Presbyterian Church. Call 846- 5631. Part-time Hardware/Software/Service/Design help needed. Ask for ext. 400 for job description 764-8578. Part-time evening floor maintenance. Weekdays starting wage $5/hr. Call for appointment 823-5031. Full-time professional carpet upholstery fire and water restoration technician. No experience necessary. Will train. Call for appointment. 823-5031. Secretarial work. Write transcripts from video-tapes. Must know how to type, must know a word processor. Demanding work. Well paid. 15-20 hours a week. Call 268-7483 and leave your name and phone number. Starts Immediately. ASSEMBLERS: Excellent income to assemble products from your home. 504-646-1700 DEPT. P777. CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING - Earn $2,000+/month7 world travel (Hawaii, Mexico, the Caribbean, etc.) Holi day, summer and career employment available. No experience necessary. For employment program call 1- 206-545-4155 ext, C5855. $200-5500 WEEKLY. Assemble products at home. Easy! No selling. You're paid direct. Fully Guaranteed. FREE lnformation-24Hour Hotline. 801-379-2900 Copy- right# TX14KDH. Experienced nursery worker needed Sunday mornings and occasional evenings. Apply at St. Paul's UMC 2506 Cavitt. Live in sitter over 18. Up to $825/mo. plus tuition assis- tance 713-789-2360. New Physical Therapy Clinic accepting limited part-time volunteers with possible future employment. Send re- sume picture to P O, Box 3218 Bryan, Texas 77805. Healthy males wanted as semen donors. Help infertile couples. Confidentiality ensured. Ethnic diversity desir able. Ages 18-35, excellent compensation. Contact Fairfax Cryobank, 1121 Brlarcrest Suite 101, 776-4453 Wanted Seeking good flute player for lessons and protecting duets. One hour per week. Fee negotiable. Must provide list of credentials. Call 776-5006 or 845-5280. Wanted...Reliable 1/2 ton truck. Not necessarily pretty. 693-1398. Guitarist neetted ASAP for rock band. Gigs already lined up. Contact Brad 764-6475. Services Professional Typesetting and Layout-Resumes and Pa- pers-Graphics Available. 776-8113. STAR OF THE SEA CATHOLIC BOOKSTORE TAMU Northgate-Upstairs 846-8699. JOY’S Professional Typing, Word Processing, Resume Service, Laser Printer; 764-8538. QUICK MOVING SERVICE FOR APARTMENTS AND DORMS. CALL FOR PRE-ESTIMATE 823-3935, 779- 2796. Typing on MAC Laser prints. 24 hours or less 696-3892. AAA DEFENSIVE DRIVING. Ticket dismissal, insurance discount. Mon-Tue(6-10 p.m.), W-Th. (6-10 p.m.), Fri. (6- 10 p.m.)-Sat. (8-12 noon). Sat. (8-4:30 p.m.). Across the street from University Tower. Walk-ins welcome. $20.00 per class. 411 Texas Ave. South. 693-1322. For Rent Gigantic 2bdrm apartment available now, 3 miles from campus, semester lease okay. 822-5752. SEIZED CARS, trucks, boats, 4 wheelers, motorhomes, by FBI, IRS, DEA. Available your area now. Call (800) 338-3388 Ext., C-1201. DIAMONDS FOR AGGIE RINGS Highest quality, lowest prices 776-3069 For personal appointment Four U2 tickets for sale. Floor seats. Great price. Call Sandy 693-6150. 88 Mazda 323 loaded, runs great, 50K miles, $3,500. Call Sandy 693-6150. 1987 Honda Elite 50 Scooter. 45 mph. $450; includes helmet. Call Stacl at 847-0431. Negotiable. Selling wooden paddles for sororities and fraternities with designs/pattems of your choice. Call Rose Betty at (409) 825-7869. Womens senior boots size 8, excellent condition $300 696-2216. Ask for Pat. 1989 Raider (Montero), 2 dr, 6 cyl., low mileage, black, excellent condition 764-9586 $8,850 Jake. NEED CHEAP CAMCORDER? ONLY $380 W/CASE BOSE AM5II SPEAKERS LIKE NEW $550. CALL 696- 1896 LEAVE MESSAGE. Kenmore washer and dryer $125 each, cash 693-9871. Mary Kay products discounts available 779-1844 USED HOMEsT NEW LISTINGS^ WEEKLY 2500 AND UP, THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY 1-800 880- 2020. NEW 3 BR/2BTH. $195.03 PER MTH. Factory Special includes DELIVERY, SET UP A/C & fully carpeted com plete with drapes. SAVE THOUSANDS!! $19,000 10% DOWN 180 MOS, 10.25% 1-800-880-2020. Large 3BR/2BTH with garden tub, spacious vaulted ceil ings, big kitchen & utility. Free delivery, set up &a/c Only $23,911,10% down 180 mos. 10.25%. Call free at 1 -800- 880-2020. Gorgeous 3BR/2BTH home with shingled roof, hardboard siding, appliances etc. Factory special with full one year warranty. Limited time offer. $25,00010% down 240 mos, .25% 1-800-880-2020. CHEAP! FBI/U.S. SEIZED. 89 MERCEDES $200:86 VW $50. 87 MERCEDES $100; 65 MUS TANG $50; CHOOSE FROM THOUSANDS START ING $25. FREE INFORMATION-24 HOUR HOTLINE. 801-379-2929 COPYRIGHT #TX14KJC. Automobiles 88 NISSAN MAXIMA SE 32K MILES, 6/75 WARRANTY $10,000 846-6460. Computers ATTN. STUDENTS AND STAFF! EDUCATIONAL PRICED SOFTWARE AVAILABLE FROM 3 OFF-CAM PUS UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORES. Adoption ADOPTION We want to give your baby a warm and loving home, excellent education and quality of life. Allowed by law, we will pay for medical ' and legal expenses. Please call collect Doris (915) 585-2099. Loving, professional couple (doctor, full-time mom) ready to share their hearts, devote their lives to your newborn. Confidential/Legal. Allowable expenses paid. Call Nancy collect 0-919-942-9666. Miscellaneous Birth Parent Support Group Cali the Child Placement Center, at 776-1255 for information. First meeting is October 1 at 5:30. BUYING YOUR USED LEVI BLUE JEANS. ADULT SIZES $3-$6. CHRIS 846-6295. Personals MISS SHERI LIVE 1-900-884-9993 $25/CALL ~...... 1-900-454-4722 $2.99 minute/no minimum DIVERSIFIED ENTERPRISES Lake Worth, Florida 18+..7 Travel Ski-in Condos Lift Tickets Panties Bus Ski Rentals from only •229 pin In Can Today! U. 6 Ski 1-800-232-2428 Sales anti distribution of the 1991-92 AggieVision video yearbook now going on at 230 Reed McDonald 8:15 a.m. - 4:45 p.m. Monday - Friday (Please liring student IP) - • ’ Brazil's congress impeaches president THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BRASILIA, Brazil — Lawmak ers on Tuesday impeached Fer nando Collor de Mello, Brazil's first freely elected president in 29 years. Collor is accused of receiv ing millions of dollars from a slush fund run by his former cam paign treasurer. Impeachment became certain after Rep. Paulo Romano cast the 336th vote in favor — meaning two-thirds of the 503-seat Cham ber of Deputies had voted to im peach. The scandal had paralyzed the economy of Latin America's largest nation, which is burdened by huge foreign debt and is strug gling to attract foreign invest ment. Massive anti-Collor rallies have been held for weeks across the country, but Collor remained defiant. Tens of thousands of anti-Col lor demonstrators gathered in front of the congress erupted in cheers as the vote was announced. The vote suspends Collor for up to six months. He will be replaced by Vice President Itamar Franco while the Senate decides whether to remove Collor permanently. Collor, 43, took office in 1990 amid high hopes of ending politi cal corruption and economic stag- nation. Brazil was under militarj rule from 1964 to 1985. There had been fears of rioting if Collor dodged impeachment. Before the vote, more than 13,000 state and city police fannei out around the capital inthecity's largest security buildup. Road blocks were set up outside Col- lor's Brasilia mansion to keep pro testers away. Radio host Limbaugh tries his hand at television THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NEW YORK — Maybe you wouldn't call Rush Limbaugh the most insightful, entertain ing, charismatic commentator ever to grace the airwaves. But you ought to, or so says Limbaugh and the legions heeding his conservative clarion call. Catch him in his midtown Manhattan office, and you find a pleasant, heavyset man picking over newspaper clips while the fax machine within his easy reach grinds out dispatches. Duly prepared, he installs himself come noon in an adjacent studio to agitate his 13 million listeners, more than any other radio personality. Then he heads uptown to tape his 3-week- old syndicated TV show for same-day broad cast on 187 stations. 'TT1 tell you what's IN the news, and what to THINK about it," the 41-year-old, twice-di vorced Limbaugh tells his audience, adding, tongue-in-cheek, that his talent "is on loan from God." Privately he swears that his bombast isa put-on, but in highly convincing fashion does he swoop down on nis targets once he gets on the air, using his self-described "pompous ai rogance" as a blunt weapon against opposing forces. The enemy? Most simply put, it's liberals and libertines. Limbaugh long ago termed feminists "femi- nazis." He has used the sound effect of a vaca um cleaner while discussing abortions.He tweaks Spike Lee's new film by referring toils subject, Malcolm X, as "Malcolm the 10th." Corps Continued from Page 1 not change its usual routine at yell practice. "We're not going to change our posture from before," he said. "We're not going to make it a po lice-controlled event. We don't think it's necessary." Officers are designated to pa trol the stands and outside Kyle Field to deal with intoxicated indi viduals. "Yell practice is supposed to be a rambunctious affair," Wiatt said. "When you get everybody fired up, there's no way to say things will not get carried away. We have arrested drunks and fighters in the past, but we're talking about just a handful of occur rences." If another incident occurs, however, Wiatt said more serious measures will have to be taken. "If it continues we will have to take more drastic action that could curtail yell practice," he said. "All it takes is a couple of people to start something, and then you have chain reactions and then it's 'Here we go again.'" Koldus said rumors of yell practice being eliminated are wrong, but changes could bein order if problems continue. "Depending upon what hap pens, you make changes to accom- modate the problems that you have," he said. "There's no ques tion we will have yell practice as long as students want it because! think traditions are perpetuated by the student body. "It's a matter of working through what the problems are.” Hotels Continued from Page 1 want that." Hathout said the two-night policy will not hurt attendance because many people want to stay two nights anyway. "We have regulars who come in every year (for football games)," Hathout said. "They are loyal to us, and we are loyal to them. After we give our customers first option, we will sell the rest for one night or two. "If you don't sell two nights you lose. This is how we keep our employees employed." Blackenship, however, said most hotels will have 100 percent occupancy with or without the two-night minimum, and there is plenty of year-round business so raising prices has been unnecessary for Holiday Inn. "Football weekends are nice, but we have a very good occupancy," Blackenship said. "Our occupancy is very high without the foot ball. It's not like we wouldn't make it without football." However, smaller hotels need the higher rates and higher occupancy of football week ends to survive slow business periods, said E- Z Travel front desk manager Rickie Hart. E-Z Travel raises its rates from $32 to $63 on foot ball weekends. "It (football weekends) offsets all the times we have these rooms sitting empty," Hart said "It's feast or famine. You have to get it while it's there." Hart said E-Z Travel's occupancy can drop as much as 50 percent during the summer She said the higher rates of the larger hotels will not drive away football fans. "I think they're (larger hotels) pretty secure with what they can get," she said. "They've got die-hard fans that come here every year.” But Linskie warns that A&M fans will only pay so much. "They're going to alienate their customers," Linskie said, "And people ake going to try to find ways around it (renting a room)." J Wednes }oh sta for I nev< whe spor end, w time he and go tinues I the gan he love that we see hirr Mag son is a man an haps th est basl player < any oth eration. foolish finish a John of Fame bereme men wl basketb Hiss much, t part-tin of his pi Wha will be < trying t< should 1 medal s Suga to fight sions. V landed 1 that it v\ turned blind ne Geor ing to a that he c and mer short an retire at wait fivr Little Caesars CHEESEI 2 PIZZAS LOADED WITH 0 EXTRA CHEESE AND UP TO STOPPINGS FREE Crazy Bread' MEDIUM PIZZAS $ft98 PLUS TAX WHFRF Limited time offer: participating locationsonly. no coupon necessary. Promotion expiration date may not match other coupon expiration dates. Free Crazy Bread offer is a four price order. LARGE PIZZAS $11 98 PLUS TAX WHERE APPLIABLE Delivery available on campus! ;-MNll HIM -MINI IMI MM MB MM MB MB «M MB MBB * — I MMMIKhBMBaMr " Otnn OCyjajf mkKa mm 1 III BABY PANIPANI™ & a 32 oz. soft drink i Craxy Eights medium pizza! Pizza! | or pari! pan I pepperonf, mushrooms, green pepper, onions, ham, . bacon, ground beet, Kalian 8 sausage I 8 toppings for $2.49: $8.88 •““•‘“I ^ ^ Not valid wHh any other | Not valid with any other offer, one coupon per offer. One coupon per customer. Carry out only. | cus(orm}r . Carry out only. aesaTS BT-09*30-92 Expires 10*30-92 I, I •1** uok <*MV iwents ** BT-09-30-92 Expires 18-30-92 AGGIE CHOICE BUY ONE ' SANDWICH * GET ONE FREE I £3 25 * Medium '11A9 ^ " “* P ilSL I Large *13.49 One for you... One for a buddy 1 with everything T with one topping Small $ 9.49 Not valid with any other offer. One coupon per customer. Carry out only. Utdei INe, . BT-03-30-92 Expires 10-30-92 | Not valid with any other offer. One coupon per 8 customer. Carry out only. UM* <*«« tw, BT-09-30-92 expires 10-30-92 NORTHGATE 268-0220 University & Stasney COLLEGE STATION 696-0191 SW Parkway & Texas BRYAN 776-7171 1775 Brlarcrest Excuses Continued from Page 2 Another popular option is for students to miss tests be cause they are out of town at the time of the test. Business analysis instruc tor Anne Dillinger had a stu- dent who missed a test, claiming he had to go to a wedding because he couldn't refund his plane ticket. Dillinger said she had a hard time with this situation, but she excused the student any way. Dr. Gordon Carstens, a professor in the Department of Animal Nutrition, had a situation where, three girls called him one hour before the test from Mardi Gras in New Orleans and said they were too drunk to come to College Station to take the test. Carstens permitted them to make up the exam, but he said they were still hangover when they took the exam. Dr. John Boies, a sociology professor, had two students , who claimed to miss 10 days of class because they were sick in Houston at the same time. Boies said that they actual ly missed 13 weeks of class and when he asked them why they hadn't called, the students said they were too sick to get to the phone. He allowed them to make up the exam, and although they failed the test, Boies said one of the students came infer the last two weeks of class, and both of them made a 'D'. Although most students have a choice as to whether or not to go to class, one stu dent said she missed over half the semester txeeause she was kidnapped by interna tional terrorists. Management professor Dr. Richard Woodman had a stu- dent who claimed to have been held hostage most of the semester. When Woodman asked why they let her go she said they meant to kidnap her twin sister. The student told Wood man she was prepared to make up her test because the terrorists had brought her books; however. Woodman said she ended up dropping the course.