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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (April 1, 1993)
The Battalion Classified Ads Phone: 845-0569 / Office: Room 015 (basement) Reed McDonald Building J AGGIE 1 Private Party Want Ads < $10 for 20 words running 5 days, if your merchan dise Is priced $ 1000 or less (price must appear In mm ad). This rale applies only to non-commercial O advertisers offering personal possesions for sale. Guaranteed results or you get an additional 5 m 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 0 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 COLD RESEARCH STUDY Patients needed with aches and pains associated with the ' common cold to participate in a cold research.study. 1: . NQJ3LQQCLPRAWN Eligible volunteers will be compensated tor participating in a medication research study. ... YEAST INFECTION STUDY Female patients with symptoms of a yeast infection needed to participate in a research study with a new regimen of over-the-counter medication (cream). Eligible volunteers will be compensated. Call for information. ff):- • V.M - Aw-'. L .. G&S Studies, Inc. (409) 846-5933 (close to campus) NEED CASH??? Become a plasma donor and earn $120.00/mo. Friendly, professional staff and a safe, easy procedure provide a guaranteed income for the little things you need!!! WESTGATE PLASMA CENTER 4223 Welborn Rd. 846-8855 JOIN THE NEW AGGIE TRADITION!!! Landscape Teams interviewing for landscape team members at the Greenery between 2-:30-4 pm, Mon.-Thurs. Drug test required. Call Scott Gilbert, 823-7551. THE GREENERY The Landscape Mgmt. Co. Serving B/CS since 1975 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 ASSEMBLE PRODUCTS AT HOME. Easy Work! Top Pay! 1-800-377-6000 ex2900. $200-$500 WEEKLY Assemble products at home. Easy! No selling. You’re paid direct. Fully Guaranteed. FREE Information-24 Hour Hotline. 801-379-2900 Copyright# TX 044650. Looking for a highly motivated sophomore or Junior to be the Spring Campus Manager for 1993-94 school year. Excellent pay and benefits. Mail or fax resume to: Sprint Manager Program, Collegiate Advantage, 143 Newbury Street Boston, MA 02116 FAX (617) 236-4713. Health Club worker 20-30 hrs. Must be CPR certified. Prefer health majors. Royal Oaks Racquet Club 4455 Carter Creek 846-8838. Tour Guide Applications available March 26-April 9 at the Aggieland Visitor Center, Rudder Tower. Cash for your notes English 319, English 321, History 214. Help a sick fellow Ag 696-0024. SUMMER WORK INTERNSHIP AVAILABLE. Interested in averaging $ 1,833/mo. Must be interested in developing sales or communication skills. All majors. 1-800-888- 5470. Part-time hardware/software design help needed. Call 764-8578 ext. 350. 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. Upper Classmen Preferred-Arlene- 1-800-443-6428. ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT - fisheries. Earn $600+/week in canneries or $4,000+/month on fishing boats. Freadransportation! Room & Board! Over 8,000 openings. No experience necessary. Male or Female. For employment program call 1 -206-545-4155 ext A5855. EASY ASSEMBLY any hours, $339.84 week, family of 3 earns $4417.92 monthly. FREE Information -24 Hour Hotline. 801-379-2900 Copyright# TX044652. Cruiseline entry level on-board/landside positions avail able. Summer or year round, great pay, transportation paid! 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 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 For Lease Sublease 2bd/1 1/2ba apartment for summer, Southwood Valley, on shuttle route, 696-8329. WOODSTOCK CONDO for summer sublease 2-story 2br/2ba only $475 Call 764-7369. Getting married need to sublease 2/2 apartment for summer at The Colony $420/mo. 696-3426. A&M AREA Now Preleasing 2/3 bedroom houses/du plexes ; near shuttle route. Call Greg 693-7270 or 693- 5571. Computers PC AT/286 20MB Harddrive, 5 1/4HD, 3 1/2HD floppy drives, color monitor, some software, $400 (day#)862- 2590, 846-6460. For Sale 1986 Yamaha FZ600 with helmet; great campus transpor- tation $1750 693-8964. Motorcycle for sale 1980 Honda CM 400E, excellent condition $780. Dave 846-7104. 1982 Nissan Sentra. Good condition, one owner; radio & air 696-5927. White Mountain bike w/bike lock, bike rack for car, halo gen lamp, treadmill, trainer, and book rack. Shaun 846- 9348 $325. SAVE$$ Shimano SPD dual-cleat pedals-$90, Shimano SH-M100 racing shoes-$40, less than 200 mites on both. Excellent condition 823-3800. Macintosh SE/30 4MB RAM 80MB H/D $1000. Gordon 845-3919 (DAY) 823-7599 (NIGHT). , , 27ft. Holiday Rambler travel trailer, rear bath, sleeps 4 $3500 775-3697/(713) 377-6957. 18ft. Sunfish $500; Bumperpool table $60; CB-700 snare $40; surfboard hardrack $25; o.b.o. Call John 846-7640. Neon Miller sing $80 693-5767. 90 Toyota Camry DX station wagon, 63,000mi. $7,575 268-1307 or 846-5289. Daybed, white iron/brass, complete w/firm ortho mat tresses and trundle, never used, still boxed. Cost $850.00. Must sell $250. cash 713-855-8474, Brass Bed, queen size, complete w/firm orthopedic mat tress set, never used, still boxed, cost $750.00. Must sell $200.00 cash 713-855-8474. SADDLE PACKAGE: Western saddle, saddle blanket, leather bridle, vinyl halter selling package for $300 or best offer. Kathy 696-5610. ~ 7-piece don rustic furniture $200; coffee table $75; recliner $50; 6-drawer pedestal oak waterbed w'bookcase head- board complete $250. Negotiable 693-2659 1985 Honda 450 cc Night Hawk windshield rack $900. 693-5585 Two HP-14B Business calculators still boxed never been used. Cost $75.00 each, 2 for $140 00 or best offer. Call 696 2174. Sega Genesis core and CD system, brand now with two controllers. 5 CDs. $300 775-0347. 1977 Toyota Corolla asking $700 4 door a/t. 690-0534 any time. For Rent Roomy 1bdrm apartment for summer near ASM new carpet and appliances $364/mo. Call 764-8414. A 3bd/2ba 4-plex with washer/dryer, on shuttle, starting at $525/mo 696-4384 or 764-0704. 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. Call Greg 693-1899. 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 A&M. Semester lease okay. 822-0472. Lost & Found Ring found at AGEC Bldg. 3/26/93. Call if you lost your ring. 847-1698. DJ Disc Jockey for all occasions. Affordable, experienced, Jason Bailey 696-0302. DJ MUSIC!!! Weddings, Parties. Spring Special $25 off. Steve Tunnell 596-2582 or toll free 1-800-303-2582. Miscellaneous Absolutely free windshield chip repair special time limited offer. Every crack starts with a chip. Call 846-CHIP. Sewing SEWING & ALTERATIONS 103 West 26th Downtown Bryan 822-3571 Formats * Weddings STRESS OR ANXIETY affecting your life? Try my guide to Relaxation, Coping with Stress Manual and tape. $17 plus$3ship/hand. Check or money orders. NeilHawthorne P.O. Box 5032, 210 West WMJ Bryant Pkwy. Bryan, Texas 77805-5032. 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 LOT!!!!!!!! Ticket dismissal, M-Tu(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.) Acrossfrom UniversityTower. Walk-ins welcome $20.00. 411 Tx Ave. So. 846-6117. Roommate Wanted House! Looking for two male housemates! Summer & Fall. Non-smoker, nondestructive, peaceful; $170+utili- ties. Located on Lincoln Avenue. Call Dave 696-7119. House summer $ 175/mo. Fall $200/mo. Utilities in cluded, bus route 775 6101 Fundraisers GREEKS & CLUBS RAISE A COOL $ 1000 IN JUST ONE WEEKI PLUS $1000 FOR THE MEMBER WHO CALLS! No obligation. No cost. And a FREE IGLOO COOLER if you qualify. Call 1-800-932-0528, Ext. 65 Page 6 State The Battalion Thursday, April 1,1553 Psychologist says minister incapable of killing wife Secret lover: Railey innocent THE ASSOCIATED PRESS SAN ANTONIO — A ps)'chologist told a spellbound courtroom Wednesday she carried on a secret love affair with a former Dallas minister but insisted that he was incapable of trying to kill his wife. With occasional defiance, the flashy blonde witness recounted details of her long-running romance with Walker Railey before and after the near-strangulation of his wife six years ago. But on cross-examination, when asked if Railey was capable of such violence, Lucy Papillon declared: "l know he's not." And in a bizarre conclusion, prosecutor Howard Wilson failed dramatically to shake her testimony, asking her if "even the best psychologists" make mistakes. "Sometimes, Howard," she said, "but i believe m "My demon has finally gotten the this case I know I m ^ jo correct." upper hand. I am the baddest of "You know that you're correct that he is not the the bad. type to do something. . .?" i nAA7 " "He is incapable," she 1UVV * interrupted. "He is psychologically incapable?" Wilson persisted. "That's what I believe," she said, her dark eyes blazing. "I know The state brought a parade of witnesses Wednesday to show the jury that Railey was in and out of SMU libraries that night but no one saw him there during a critical time gap. The attack on Mrs. Railey occurred between 9:30 p.m. and midnight. Papillon told the jury she spoke with Railey by phone several times that night and that sometime after 7:30 p.m. he visited at her home for 45 minutes. "We just talked . . .," she said. About 11 p.m., she said, Railey called from a library at SMU and asked if he could come over. "I told him I was really tired and it was late. I said no." On cross-examination, lead defense attorney Doug Mulder sought to defuse the suicide issue through his questioning of Papillon, a practicing psychologist now living in California. "Did he ever make a statement to you that if the relationship became public and church members found out about it, he'd kill himself?" Mulder asked. "He said that... I didn't interpret it that he would actually kill himself," Papillon replied. She also insisted that Railey respected his wife -Walker Railey and that he cared deeply for her and his two young written in a suicide note children. r j • j • 7 •» 7 "Do you have any jOUnd in his hospital room reason to believe his wife was aware that you all were I am the lowest of the Papillon's long-awaited testimony was rial 1 the emotional highlight of the 10-day-old trial but jurors also heard for the first time Wednesday the taped telephone calls that could help send Railey to prison for up to 20 years. Peggy Railey survived the April 21, 1987, attack but remains clinically brain dead in a Tyler nursing home. In the most volatile day of the trial, now in its second week, State District Judge Pat McDowell formally overruled vigorous defense efforts to block testimony about Railey's suicide attempt 10 days after the attack. The defense argued that such testimony was irrelevant and prejudicial. "My demon has finally gotten the upper hand," Railey wrote in a suicide note found in his hospital suite the next morning. "I am the baddest of the bad ... I affrthe lowest of the low." The state maintains Railey's infatuation with Papillon prompted the attack on his wife and that he orchestrated a "clumsy attempt" to cover his actions with a phony alibi. Railey, 45, insists he was researching a book that night at Southern Methodist University. g a 8* "No, I do not," she replied. "Did you ever make demands on him or give him any ultimatums or deadlines as regards your relationship?" "No, none." "Did he ever say if you don't divorce your wife or get rid of your wife. I'll not see you anymore?" "No." Under direct questioning by Wilson, Papillon, a Methodist bishop's daughter, said she met Railey in the mid-80s on a church-related television show. She also attended Railey's First United Methodist Church. Papillon, her voice soft but steady, told the jury her relationship with Railey turned sexual in June 1986, some 10 months before the attack on Mrs. Railey. "From June of 1986 until April 1987, did you have sexual relations on a regular basis?" Wilson asked. "Fairly regularly." She said she frequently accompanied Railey on church trips and that they had sexual liaisons in Kansas, California, Georgia, Texas, Arkansas and elsewhere, including Europe. Nighttime launch set for shuttle Discovery THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - NASA will try to send space shuttle Discovery on an atmospheric research mission next week, pushing Columbia's German-sponsored science flight into late April. If all goes well. Discovery would lift off at 1:32 am Tuesday on the eight-day flight A nighttime launch is necessary to catch orbital sunrises anii sunsets at the right spots foi ozone measurements. Columbia was supposed to be the next shuttle up, buta stuck valve caused a main engine shutdown three seconds before liftoff on March 22. NASA said Tuesday that Columbia will be launched no earlier than April 24. The same kind of engine! valve failed in testing or Discovery over the weekend, and NASA replaced the bad component Tuesday Discovery's other engine valve tested fine, said spokesmar George Diller. Diller said engineers haven! yet found a connection between! the two failed valves. A piece of non-metallic debris, slightly more than one-tenth of an inch long, was blamed for Columbia's stuck valve. Both valves were sentfoi analysis to California main engine maker Rocketdyne,i division of Rockwell International. NASA is replacing; Columbia's three main engines with those intended for Endeavour's satellite-retrieval mission. The Endeavour mission has been rescheduled for late May NASA has no plans to change; the dates for the four remaining' shuttle missions for 1993. State News Briefs Perot, congress members meet WASHINGTON (AP) - Former presidential candidate Ross Perot did something unusual Wednesday. He had a meeting with a dozen members of Congress and they all kept it secret until it was over. Perot, a Dallas businessman, met for more than an hour with Republican members of the House Budget Committee, said Bruce Cuthbertson, spokesman for Rep, John Kasicb, R-Ohio. : "There wasn't a single reporter at photographer. Everybody kept it quiet," Cuthbertson said. He said Perot and the Republican . lawmakers discussed President Clinton's budget proposal, alternative budget approaches and the process Washington goes through to put a federal budget together. Execution date insults cop killer HUNTSVILLE (AP) - Convicted cop killer Leonel Herrera said Wednesday he's offended and angered that his next execution date has been set for May 5, Clnco de Mayo, or Mexican Independence Day. "It's an insult," Herrera/in his first interview since he arrived on death row 12 years ago, said Wednesday. "May 5 is considered a big day in Mexico and to all Hispanic people. It's an insult to all Hispanic people in the United States and Mexico and wherever they may be." A judge in Edinburg last week set the execution date for Herrera, 45, of Edinburg, convicted of the Sept. 29, 1981, shooting death of Enrique Carrisalez, a rookie Los Fresnos police officer who had pulled him over for speeding. Herrera pleaded guilty to another killing that took place minutes later when Department of Public Safety Trooper David Rucker stopped Herrera for a traffic violation six miles east of Los Fresnos. Carrisalez lived 16 days after his shooting. Rucker died immediately. Bill requires kids be immunized AUSTIN (AP) - The state House tentatively approved a bill Wednesday that would help ensure all Texas children are immunized against disease. : > The measure, sponsored by Rep. Nancy McDonald, D-El Paso, would require hospitals and physicians to immunize a child under age 18 who has not been vaccinated for diseases such as measles and polio. "I think we're going to see a serious reduction in the number of childhood diseases," said Gov. Ann Richards, who has made the bill one of her top priorities. "J think it's going to have a big impact in the low- income community. "If we're ever going to do anything about health, we've got to get on the preventative side of it and that's what this The measure, which will cost slightly more than $50 million over the next two-year budget period, has already passed the Senate. If the House approves the bill on a final vote, it will return to the Senate for consideration of several House amendments. The bill would exempt children from immunizations if they have a religious conflict. The bill also would relieve doctors and hospitals from liability if the parents refuse to have tneir children immunized. Tthe doctor would not be held liable if the records are not inspected. American Airlines chairman announces plans for layoffs THE ASSOCIATED PRESS DALLAS— American Airlines will lay off 500 pilots, 400 V , maintenance workers and an unknown number of flight attendants and other employees as part of its plan to pull out of unprofitable markets, officials of the carrier said Wednesday. Robert L. Crandall, chairman of the company, told airline employee Wednesday in Chicago that the reductions would take place by the fall, according to The Dallas Morning News' Thursday editions. The Morning News said the layoffs are likely to exceed 2,000 employees, or about 2 percent of the airline's total of 97,535 employees on Jan. 31. "There will be layoffs," American spokesman A1 Becker told The Associated Press. "But there's no timetable yet." The airline announced two weeks ago its plans to ground 28 wide- body jets, reducing the airline's seat capacity by 6 percent. The airline said then that parking those airlines would eliminate 470 pilot jobs, 1,300 flight attendant jobs and many other positions. The company added that it hoped to avoid layoffs through retirements and resignations. "The furloughs are not a direct result of the DC-10 grounding or an) 1 other airplane decision. They're just a result of the overall shrinkage ot the airline," American spokesman John Hotard said. On Monday, Delta Air Lines said it would furlough about 600 pilots beginning in June and would ground 28 airplanes by January. United Airlines said in January it would lay off 2,800 employees and not hire 1,900 that it had planned to add. Like American and Delta, United is also retiring older airplanes ahead of schedule. Medical Continued from Page 1 Arnot outlined four ways to improve the health of the children in America. Arnot encouraged parents to make athletes out of their children. "During the first six years, children develop basic skills," he said "This gives them abilities later in life that improve their self confidence and help them succeed in life." Arnot's second piece of advice was to teach children to "eat to win." "Children need to see the magical quality to food," he said. By seeing foods as medicinal, Arnot believes people will eat better and therefore, perform better. Providing children with a sense of optimism was Arnot's third point. He said optimists are much healthier and heal faster than pes simists. Finally, Arnot talked about giving children a sense of vision. "Children need the vibrant images that they get from books and he roes," he said. Imagery helps in healing, he said. This is why many Americans have turned to alternative medicine specialists for medical aid. "We don't give our children the vision that they need," Arnot said "They need a vision that is free from the economic ties of the traditional American dream." "So few of us take the time to dream of what we can become and more importantly of what our children can become," he said.