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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 22, 1993)
Classified Ads Phone: 845-0569 / Office: Room 015 (basement). Reed McDonald Building AGGIE Want Ads $10 for 20 words running 5 days, if your merchan dise is priced $1000 or less (price must appear in ad). This rate applies only to non-commercial advertisers offering personal possesions for sale. Guaranteed results or you get an additional 5 days at no charge. If Item doesn't sell, advertiser must call before 11 a.m. on the day the ad Is schedule to end to qualify for the 5 additional Insertions at no charge. No refunds will be made If your ad Is cancelled early. Business Hours 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monday through Friday accepted Help Wanted HEALTHY MALES WANTED AS SEMEN DONORS Help infertile couples; confidentially ensured. Ethnic diversity desirable, ages 18 to 35, excellent compensation. Fairfax Cryobank 1121 Briarcrest Dr., Suite 101 Bryan 776-4453 a division of the Genetics & IVF Institute FAIRFAX j S Put AT&T on your resume before you graduate \ 1993 Fall Marketing Opportunities Available AT&T is seeking ambitious, sales-oriented students to participate in our 7-day on- campus marketing program selling AT&T products & services. Hours are flexible with top compensation & bonuses. Must be available 1 - 2 weeks prior to the start of classes. We need: AT&T STUDENT CAMPUS MANAGER To be responsible for overall event imple mentation, daily management & training I of student group. Requires strong lead ership ability. Prior management/sales- related experience a plus. Must be [ available to attend National Training on August 4 - 6, 1993. AT&T ASSISTANT STUDENT CAMPUS MANAGER To manage a group of students on a daily basis and assist with overall event imple mentation. Sales/leadership experience a plus. AT&T STUDENT REP/ CAMPUS GROUP To act as our on-campus representa tives. Must be outgoing and sales oriented. To'find out more about these great opportunities, call 1 800 592-2121, ext. 148, or send resume to CD!, AT&T Recruitment, 1500 Walnut St., 19th fl., Philadelphia, PA 19102. Equal Opportunity Employer COLD RESEARCH STUDY Patients needed with aches and pains associated with the common cold to participate in a cold research study. NO BLOOD DRAWN Eligible volunteers will be compensated for participating in a medication research study. G&S Studies, Inc. (409) 846-5933 (close to campus) Now Hiring Part- Time Instructors! The Princeton Review is looking for energetic, enthusiastic people with top standardized test scores to teach LSAT,GRE,GMAT,MCAT,orSAT courses in College Station. We offer small classes, excellent pay. and a fun work environment! Teaching experience is helpful, but not required. Call John Lopez at 696-9099 for in formation. THE PRINCETON REVIEW We Score More! TPR is noc tffilistod with BTS or Princeton Univ. NEED CASH??? Become a plasma donor and earn $120.00/mo. Friendly, professional staff and a safe, easy procedure provide a guranteed income for the little things you need!!! WESTGATE PLASMA CENTER 4223 Welborn Rd. 846-8855 JOIN THE NEW AGGIE TRADITION!!! JOBS, JOBS, JOBS Telephone fundraising for national charities. No experience necessary. $5-$6 per/hr. to start. Evenings and weekends. For immediate placement call Mary 776-4246 Summer Can .> Counselors, Administrators Staff, Nurses and Lifeguards needed for Girl Scout resident camps near Athens, Texas »nd on Lake Texoma; for more information, call extension )20 at (214) 823-1342 or 1-800-442-2260. EOE. Services TEXT SCANNING Any printed report, document, namelists, etc. scanned into your word processor or DOS text file. Inexpensive & Very Fast!!! Call Us 779-6068 ADULT MOVIES FOR RENT. Delivered to your home. For information send name and address to Midnight Blue Box 6155 Bryan, Texas 77805-6155. TYPING, PROOFREADING. EDITING. English BA, $3/ page. Tasha 774-1279 leave message. Typing on MAC Laser prints. 24 hours or less 696-3892. AAA DEFENSIVE DRIVING. LOTS OF FUN, LAUGH A LOTIIIIMII Ticket dismissal, M-Tu(6-10p.m.), W-Th. (6-10 p.m.), Fri, (6-10p.m.)-Sat.(8-12 noon), Sat. (8-4:30 p.m.) Across from University Tower. Walk-ins welcome $20.00. 411 Tx Ave. So. 846-6117. For Sale 12x48 Mobile Home. 2/1, fenced, storage shed, carport, $5500 846-7308. 89 Bronco II, 5-speed, red and beige, 69,000 miles, $6300 693-7221, 1976 WV Camper. 87,000 miles; good interior; good tires; pull-out stereo. $2,500. Call Bill at 764-8047, Soloflex$300o.b.o. Two pair Lucchese boots neverworn $75 o.b.o. 847-0121. Dalmatian Puppies 4 males, 7wks. old, A.K.C. registered shots, wormed. Males -$200. Contact Jess after 4 p.m. M-F at (409) 696-8404 or (713) 342-1827, Brass bed, queen size, complete with firm orthopedic mattress set, never used, still boxed cost $750. Must sell $200 cash, 713-855-8474. 1 Daybed white iron and brass complete with trundle and mattresses, never used, still boxed cost $850. Must sell $250 cash. 713-855-8474, Six HP Evinrude w/3 gallon tank $425. 845-4111 Brad. THERMOJETICS burns fat. increases energy, ends hun ger $29.95 month. Guaranteed. Call Wendy or Jon 778- 2660, ' Mobile home doublewide; 4bd/2ba;fireplace w/2.5 acres, newroot and carpet,excellentfor4students; tSmin.from campus; 903-597-3541 after 3pm 903-561 -7263. For Rent 2BR Apartment close to TAMU. Carpeted, stove, refrig- erator 696-2038, 3/2 four-plex. College Station - garage, shuttle, $570 693- 0551,764-8051, Rooms For Rent: Fully furnished: All bills paid, close to campus: Short term leases. Equity Real Estate 696- 4464, 2 /I 1/2 luxury 4-plex, washer/dryer C.S., shuttle, near A&M $475 693-0551, 764-8051, FRESHLY RENOVATED HUGE 2bd apartments, 3 1/2 miles from ASM. Semester lease okay. 822-0472. Disc Jockey for afl occasions. Affordable, experienced, Jason Bailey 696-0302. Miscellaneous Absolutely free windshield chip repair special time limited offer. Every crack starts with a chip. Call 846-CHIP. Adoption Doctor and teacher will make dream for your baby come true. Full-time parenting. Best of the city; summers by the beach: your baby rocked to sleep by a cozy fireplace in winter, and by ocean waves in summer. Art, music, the best education, endless love. Call Franny or Stephen collect. (212) 369-2597. YOUR AD SHOULD BE HERE! Call 845-2696 The Battalion International Monday, March 22,1993 The Battalion Page* Refugee describes losses of war the associated press Bosnian woman cries for her kids she had to leave behind 300 SUMMER CAMP POSITIONS in NY, PA. MASS & MAINE. Need skills in: Tennis, WSI/Swimming, Water- skiing, Sailing, Windsurfing. Gymnastics, Equestrian, Base ball, Basketball, Soccer, Hockey. Lacrosse, Canoeing, Fencing, Riflery, Archery, Rocketry, Woodshop, Ceram ics, Fitness, Dance, Piano, Guitar, Ropes/Pioneering, Nurses, Food Service. Upperclassmen Preferred-Arlene- 1-800-443-6428. Applications being taken at Briarcrest Country Club, 1929 Country Club Drive in Bryan for baker and salad maker/ pantry. Competitive pay and customary benefits. NEED EXTRA CASH? Learn legal ways to earn extra income conveniently. FREE BROCHURE. Send Self- Addressed Stamped Envelope to: TPH Enterprises '89. HCR 3 Box 387 Dalhart, TX 79022. ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT - fisheries. Earn $600+/week in canneries or $4,000+/month on fishing boats. Free transportation! Rooms Boardl Over 8,000 openings. No experience necessary. Male or Female. For employment program call 1 -206-545-4155 ext A5855. Messina Hof Wine Cellars have available challenging careers in retail sales. Full-time position. Must be21 and have 3 work references. Apply in person Mon-Fri, 8am- 4:30p.m., Sats.10am-5pm. Directions: 2 mi. East of Hwy. 6 on Hwy. 21. turn right on Wallis Rd. & follow signs. EASY ASSEMBLY any hours, $339.84 week, family of 3 earns $4417.92 monthly. FREE Information -24 Hour Hotline. Copyright# TX044652. NEEDED ASAP: Work 10-15 hrs. a week to make local phone calls tor a Recruiting Company. Will pay $7.00/hr. Call 764-1784 to leave name/phone number. Need Student who reads/writes Russian to do translation. Call 778-0635 between 12noon-5 p.m. Part-time hardware-software design needed. 764-8578 ext. 350. Cruiseline entry level on-board/landside positions avail able. Summer or year round, great pay, transportation paid I 813-229-5478. \ Marketing Healthcare In public weekends only $7.50/hr. plus bonus. Apply at 2005 South TX Ave. Bryan. 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, 776-4453 TUZLA, Bosnia-Herzegovina — As others fought to get on the U.N. trucks leaving besieged Sre brenica, Sabera Bosancic was screaming to stay. But foreign re lief workers didn't understand her words: "Don't tear me away from my family!" Many fellow refugees from the town on Sunday savored their first day in nearly a year in which they did not have to fear dying of starvation or Serb shelling. But Bosancic, among the 673 hustled by U.N. personnel into trucks and driven to Tuzla Satur day, wept while thinking of the two children she had been forced to leave behind. Bosancic, 37, said during the confused evacuation she couldn't find anyone who understood her protest. "I was crying and screaming," the sunken-cheeked woman sobbed. In February, a serb mortar shell shredded her now swollen and discolored left leg. A doctor in a field hospital picked out pieces of shrapnel. There was no anesthesia, and she fainted in pain. Bosancic said she lost word of her husband and two other chil dren last March, a day before armed Serbs came to her village of Nova Kasaba. They had gone to a doctor's ap pointment and never came back. The village folk sought refuge in a forest, where they stayed for a month, begging for food when it appeared safe. "Sometimes we spent a week without a piece of bread," Bosan cic said. "If we found something we gave it to the children and held our stomachs in pain as we watched them wolf it down." Once Serb infantryman opened fire, killing about 50 people, she said. In May, the group moved into Cerska, which fell to the Serbs three weeks ago. As more refugees came, bombed-out houses, storage sheds and stables began to overflow. Serb barrages increased as fall turned to winter. "Sometimes 60 to 65 people died daily, others were crippled,” she said. The mortar round that wound ed her and two children on Feb. 8 killed two other women, she said. She was carried by stretcher to a field hospital in Hrncici near Kon- jevic Polje, also under Serb attack. Bosancic split her daily ration of oats and water with her 17- year-old and 12-year-old daugh ters. Konjevic Polje fell to the Serbs last week. Days earlier, Bosancic and scores of other wounded were moved by stretcher and horse-drawn cart to Srebrenica, past corpses mutilated by shrap nel. She stayed in the overflowing hospital there until the evacuation — without her girls. "Those who could, fought to get on those trucks," she said, eyes red-rimmed. "Why didn' they' take someone else?" "Sometimes we spent a week without a piece of bread. If we found something we gave it to the children and held our stomachs in pain as we watched them wolf it down." -Sabera Bosancic Man screams for assistance after being placed in morgue THE ASSOCIATED PRESS JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - A man who was declared dead after a traffic accident spent two days in a metal box in a mortuary before his cries alerted workers, a newspaper said Sun day. But Sipho William Mdletshe, 24, told the Sun day Times he is heartbroken because his fiance has rejected him, believing he is a zombie. Mdletshe, from the township of Sebokeng south of Johannesburg, was declared dead on March 13 after a traffic accident and taken to a mortuary, .t He was placed in the metal box and remained there for the next 48 hours, drifting in and out of consciousness. Mdletshe told the newspaper he slowly became alert enough to realize he was trapped in a box and began screaming for help. Mortuary workers heard the commotion and freed him. Mdletshe says his fiance, who also was injured in the crash, refuses to believe his story and told nurses at the hospital where she is recuperating that he returned from the dead to haunt her. Pope names two deceased women to sainthood THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Yeltsin Continued from Page 1 More Western governments of fered support for the Russian leader, echoing President Clin ton's statement Saturday that Yeltsin appeared the best hope for reform. The result of the struggle could be a chaotic period of what Rus sians call "dual power," in which two competing authorities claim to run the country and annul each other's decisions. The Supreme Soviet voted 125- 16 to ask Russia's Constitutional Court to review Yeltsin's declara tion of emergency rule. If the court finds Yeltsin violat ed the Constitution, he could be impeached by the full parliament, the Congress of People's Deputies. The Supreme Soviet's resolu tion also asked Russia's chief prosecutor to consider whether any of Yeltsin's advisers bore criminal responsibility for the de claration of emergency rule. Yeltsin did not attend the ses sion. Government officials, speak ing on condition of anony'inity, said the president's mother had died over the weekend in the Siberian city of Yekaterinburg. Russia has been crippled by "dual power" crises twice before: in the summer of 1917 after the czar was overthrown and during Yeltsin's power struggle with then-Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev in 1991. The 1917 deadlock was broken by the Bolshevik Revolution and seizure of power by the Commu nists. The Gorbachev-Yeltsin im passe ended only with the failed hard-line coup of August 1991 and the Soviet collapse four months later. For months, Russia's parlia- The Supreme Soviet voted 125-16 to ask Russia's Constitutional Court to review Yeltsin's declaration of emergency rule. ment has erected obstacles to Yeltsin's free-market reforms and tried to curb his powers. In a nationwide television ad dress Saturday, Yeltsin declared a "special order of government" until a national vote of confidence in his leadership is held April 25. While he stopped short of dis solving parliament, he said presi dential decrees would take prece- # dence over the decisions of the legislature and courts. VATICAN CITY - Pope John Paul II on Sunday canonized a French nun and a Chilean nun, calling the women "daughters of light.' 7 The pope elevated Claudine Thevenet, who founded the Con gregation of the Religious of Je sus and Mary, and Teresa de Je sus de Los Andes, a Carmelite novice who is Chile's first saint. Teresa de Jesus, who was bom Juana Enriqueta Josefina Fernan dez Solar, was beatified by the pope during his trip to Chile in 1987. She died of typhus in 1920, three months short of her 20th birthday and six months short of completing her canonical novi tiate. She was praised by the pope for her spirituality and devotion to god. "This Chilean Carmelite, who with true joy I present as the model of the perennial youth of the Gospel, offers clear testimony of an existence that claims to all men and women of today that in loving, adoring and serving God is the greatness and the joy, the freedom and the ultimate realiza tion of a human being," said John Paul. Thevenet, who was born in 1774, was 15 when she lived through the siege of Lyon by the army and witnessed the execu tion of her two brothers by guil lotine. INTERNATIONAL POSITIONS AVAILABLE United States Peace Corps Film Pr&seniatiQn March 23 • 7:00pm Rudder Tower • Room 502 Information Tables March 23 & 24 • 9:00am-3:00pm Memorial Student Center Interviews,! March 24 • 8:30am-2:30pm Career Center • Student Services Building Room 209 * by Appointment Only. For more information call 845-5499 Currently in high demand are people who qualify for programs in agriculture, education, math, science, nutrition, or health. The Texas A&JVt University Student Publications Board is accepting applications for Editor, The Battalion Summer 1993 The summer'93 editor will serve from May 24,1993,through August 6, 1993. Qual ifications for editor of The Battalion are: Be a Texas A&M student with a minimum 2.0 overall and major GPR at the time of appointment and during the term of office; Have at least one year experience in a responsible editorial position on The Battalion or comparable student newspaper, OR Have at least one year editorial experience on a commercial newspaper, OR Have completed at least 12 hours journalism, including JOUR 203 and 303 (Media Writing I and II), JOLJR 301 (Mass Comm Law) and JOUR 304 (Editing for the Mass Media), or equivalent. Application forms should be picked up and returned t© the Student Publications Manager's office, room 230 Reed McDonald Building. Deadline for submitting application: 5 p.m. Wednesday, March 31, 1993. Applicants will be inter- viewed during the Student Publications Board Meeting be ginning at 3 p.m. Friday, April 2, 1993, in room 327 Reed McDonald.