Tut: Battalion Classified Ads Phone: 845-0569 / Fax 845-2678 Office: Room 015 (basemenf) Reed McDonald Building < o to ■AGGIE’ Private Party Want Ads $10 for 20 words running 5 days, if your merchandise is priced $1000 or less (price must appear in ad). This rate applies only to non-commercial advertisers offering personal possessions for sale. Guaranteed results or you get an additional 5 days at no charge. If item doesn't sell, advertiser must call before 1 p.m. on the day the ad is scheduled 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 For Rent .a^OOD /> * Large 3 Bedroom/2 Bath * On Shuttle Bus Route Close To A&M Consolidated * Quiet Wooded Setting * Adjacent To Parks * Beginning At $900/Mo. AVAILABLE AUGUST FOR MORE INFORMATION: PINNACLE MANAGEMENT GROUP 409-846-1100 OR 409-268-5029 Aggie Owned & Managed! Large 2 bedroom, great location, shuttle, microwave, intrusion alarm, laundry & swimming - $459/mo. College Court 823-7039, Sonnenblick 691-2062. Save $200 1995-96 Forum lease. Call Travis (806) 585-6512 after 3:00pm. FINDERS KEEPERS. Houses - Duplexes - Condos - Apartments. Call 696-4663. Great Location! 2bdrm-1bth fourplex, 2 blocks from A&M, on northside. Available now. No Pets. $350/mo. 696-7266. Near Treehouse Apartments. 2bdrm-1 1/2bth fourplex, $600/mo. 823-8153, or after 5pm 774-4090. 3bdrm-2bth houses. CH/CA, carpeted, near campus, no pets. Call 690-0085. 2bdrm-2bth fourplex, $515/mo., shuttle stop, W/D con nections. Pets OK. 1104 Autumn Circle. 693-9959. Help Wanted Help Wanted JOCK ITCH STUDY Patient Volunteers needed for research study of new investigational medicine for JOCK ITCH (Skin Fungus). * FREE physical exam, treat ments, study medications & lab tests available for qualified participants. * Patient stipend available for qualified participants. * Ages 12-65 years. * No topical (over-the- counter) treatment in last 2 weeks. For details, Call: G&S Studies, Inc. 846-5933 FEVER BLISTER STUDY Volunteers with a history of recurrent herpes labialis (fever blisters) needed to participate in a research study using an investiga tional topical preparation. Eligible volunteers may receive up to $150. Call NOW for information. G&S Studies, Inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 Blackjack Dealer. Will train. Mon.-Fri. Leave message. Call 778-0167 12-5pm, Grimes County ranch needs student part time. Please call 846-9466. ATHLETE’S FOOT STUDY FREE RENT, utilities & board for female students Requires 7-10hrs/week of work. Call 693-6927. WORK ORDER CLERK- Public Utilities Department. This position will provide support related to the pro cessing of work orders for the department including receiving work requests, tracking, monitoring & main taining accurate records of work orders. Must be pro ficient in the use of personal computers. This position involves extensive public contact with other depart ments as well as outside vendors. Deadline: June 26, 1995. $6.00/hour, Approximately 20-30 hrs/week. Apply to: City of College Station, Human Resources Department, 1101 S. Texas Ave., College Station, TX 77840. EOE. PATIENT VOLUNTEERS NEEDED FOR RESEARCH STUDY OF NEW INVESTIGATIONAL MEDICINE FOR ATHLETE’S FOOT Part-time cleaning. Busy Doctor's Office/Home. Apply at 2005 S. Tex. Ave., Bryan. Tender Years Daycare has two part-time openings. Worker & Housekeeping. 693-3661. Telemarketers wanted promoting the circus. Work evenings that fit your schedule, 6pm-9pm, Mon.-Fri. No weekends. $5.00/hr. 846-8818. Cashier needed for convenience store. Apply in per son at Broach Oil Co., 1700 Kyle, Suite 200, CS. Bookkeeper Needed. Flexible hours. Piper Chevron, comer of University & Texas. Apply within. * Free physical exam, treatments, study medications and lab tests available for qualified partici pants * Patient stipend available for qualified participants * Ages 12 years and above * No topical (prescription or over- the-counter) treatment in the last 2 weeks For Details, call: G&S Studies, Inc. 846-5933 Healthy people needed to help save lives. Approx. 3hrs./wk. at your convenience. $130/mo. Donating plasma is so easy! Call 846-8855 for more info. Employment Opportunity Part-time help needed at Villa Maria Chevron. Experience preferred. Villa Maria at 29th, Bryan. 776- 1261. Part-time telemarketer needed for local insurance agency. Hours: 5pm-9pm Mon.-Thurs., 10am- 2pmSat. Pay: $6.00/hr. 693-6966 for interview. ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT - Students Needed! Fishing Industry. Earn up to $3,000- $6,000+/mo. Room & Board! Transportation! Male or Female. No experience necessary. Call (206) 545- 4155 ext. A58556. The Houston Chronicle is taking applications for imme diate route openings. Pay is based on per paper rate & gas allowance is provided. The route requires work ing early morning hours 7 days a week & earns $600- $900 per month. If interested, call James at 693-7815 or Julian at 693-2323 between 8am-3pm for an appointment. CRUISE SHIPS HIRING - Travel the world while earn ing an excellent income in the Cruise Ship & Land-Tour Industry. Seasonal & full-time employment available. No experience necessary. For info., call 1-206-634- 0468 ext. C58557. Healthy males wanted as semen donors. Help infertile couples. Confidentiality ensured. Ethnic diversity INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT - Earn up to $25- $45/hr. teaching basic conversational English in Japan, Taiwan, or S. Korea. No teaching background or Asian languages required. For info., call (206) 632-1146 ext. '83 Honda Accord - automatic, dependable, 30+ miles/gallon, $1,800. 693-5035. 1987 Mazda RX7 Turbo - 62,000 miles, excellent con dition. 693-4497 Steve. TEE$$$ Not based on financial need. No GPA requirement. For free information, call NATIONAL SCHOLARSHIP SERVICES 1-800-643-4439. '86 Nissan Pick-up - 5 speed. A/C, stereo, $2,500 O.B.O. Call 846-4299. '86 Saab 900 Turbo - 2 door, 5 speed, looks great, needs engine work. Make offer. 764-2952. DJ Music ATTENTION All Studentsll Need scholarships from major corporations? Call 1-800-AID-2-HELP. Register to win Free Money for college. Several finarv cial aid awards available for Fall 1995. Drawing held 08/15/95. To enter drawing, call 1-800-643-4439. Funded by National Scholarship Services. MOBILE DJ. Experienced. Weddings, Parties. Reasonable rates. Will travel. Call The Party Block at 693-6294 FREE FiNANCIAL AIDI Over $6 Billion in private sec tor grants & scholarships is now available. All students are eligible regardless of grades, income, or parent's income. Let us help. Call Student Financial Services: 1-800-263-6495 ext. F58554. Personal MEET YOUR MATCHI 1-900-884-7800 ext. 2740. $2.99/min., must be 18yrs. Procall Co. (602) 954- 7420. Call the Sports/Entertainment Line Today! Sports Fun!!! Scores, Point Spreads and much more!!! 1- 900-526-6000 Ext. 5437. $2.99/min and 18+. Procall Co. (602) 954-7420. DIRTY, LIVE, NASTY TALK, Hot, Steamy & Erotic. 1- 900-435-4SEX (4739). $2.50-$3.99/min., instant cred it, 18+. MINIATURE REVEILLE. Small adult male Sheltie looking for an Aggie home. 774-0110. Dogs, Cats, Puppies & Kittens. 775-5755. ADOPT Animal Shelter. Brazos Real Estate GOV’T FORECLOSED Homes for pennies on $1. Delinquent Tax Repo’s, REO’s. Your Area. Toll Free 1- 800-898-9778 Ext. H-1652 for current listings. Roommates 2bdrm-1 1/2bth fourplex, fireplace, W/D connections, shuttle, $550/mo. 404 Fall Circle. 693-9959. 1 or 2 female roommates needed. Private furnished rooms, private bath, Emerald Forest family. $475/mo. includes food, utilities & W/D. Prefer education major. 1/2bth 2bdrm-1bth, pool, laundry mat, patio/balcony, water & sewer paid, $475/mo. Monterrey Apartments. 268- 0840. Summer Leases Available. Female roommate needed ASAP! 2bdrm-1 apartment, Fall ’95 (yr. +), bus route, $262.50/mo. (pre lease July). 764-6778. WOODED, 4 blocks from campus, large 2bdrm-1bth studio apartment (approximately 930 sq.ft ). Ceiling fan, gas & electric, patio, $495/mo. + bills. No HUD! No Pets! 693-8534. Roommate Needed Immediately!! Own room, $230/mo. + 1/2 bills. Call 693-9689. NEW APARTMENT! 2 People needed for 3 bedroom. Price negotiable. On bus-route. (210) 637-0400. Female to share 2bdrm-2bth duplex, with 2 room mates. W/D available, backyard, near shuttle bus route, 5 minutes from campus, $ 175/mo. + 1/3 bills. 693-7344. Roommate Needed Immediately! 2bdrm-1bth apart ment, $186.25/mo. + bills, close to campus. (713) 781- 9576. ROOMMATE NEEDED! 2bdrm-2bth large contempo rary apartment. Leave message 846-2121 (Sabrina). AUSTIN: Aggie needs roommate, 4bdrm-2bth house, 08/15/95, $340/mo. 693-1851, (512) 459-7849. Services INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS- Visitors. DV-1 Greencard Program, by U.S. Immigration. Legal Services. Tel: (818) 772-7168. 20231 Stagg St., Canoga Park, CA 91306. AAA Defensive Driving. Lot-of-fun, Laugh-a-lotl! Ticket dismissal , insurance discount. M-Tu (6pm- 9pm), Tu (8:30am-3pm), Tu-W (8:30am-11:30am), W- Th (6pm-9pm), Fri (6pm-8pm) & Sat (10am-2:30pm), Sat (8am-2:30pm), Sun (12pm-6pm). Next to Black Eyed Pea. Walk-ins welcome. $20 w/ad = $5 off. Ill Univ. Dr., Ste. 217, 846-6117. Typing Graduate Student with Bachelor’s in English. Editing/ Typing. Reasonable Rates. Call Colleen 862-1685. Strong Office Services. Typing, Presentations & Graphics. Laser Printer Out-put. Fast Service. 694- 2120. Wanted Mature woman to share house. Garage, pool. Private 2bdrm-1bth suite, $650/mo. includes utilities. 696- 1804. Wanted: 100 students. Lose 8-100 lbs. New metabo lism breakthrough. I lost 15 lbs. in 3 weeks. R.N. Assisted. Guaranteed Results. $35 Cost. 1-800-579- 1634. For Sale 9mm Taurus - Semi-automatic, box & 1/2 of ammo., hardly used, $300. Call after 5pm at 691-4679. 1990 Honda NS50 Sportbike. Must sell. Priced low to move! Only $550! Call 823-6111. 1988 Jet Ski 550- Limited . Custom painted. Excellent condition! Must Sell! 823-6111. Used refrigerator - 1.5 feet cube $70. Good condition. Call Gerry 846-2133. LOFT For Sale. Will take best offer. Call Sandy at 779- 1049. $100/0.8.0. Sectional couch with fold-out bed - $100 Or Best Offer. Call Robin at 696-1493. MUST SELL! Sega Genesis and Sega CD, plus two brand new controllers and ten games. $270 flexible. Call 268-8230. 16.5 Trek 800, silver/ indigo fade, $240, ridden four times. Perfect condition. Purple Trek Helmet included, never used. Lisa 693-6916. Wedding gown & veil - size 8, cathedral length, off shoulder, perfect for summer wedding. $700. Call 731-8545. Computers GRADUATION SALE: Complete Computer System - 486 SLC/ 50MHz, 200 Meg HD, 2 Meg RAM, TVGA Monitor, Printer Card, Game Stick, Internal Fax/ Modem. Only $875. Call 846-8126. Macs & Printers for sale/lease from $30/mo. Software, repairs, RAM/HD upgrades. MacResource, 775-7703. Attorney WE DEFEND M.I.P. CHARGES JOHN T. QUINN ATTORNEY (409) 774-8924 (800) 927-3115 Not certified as a specialist in any area. WE DEFEND TRAFFIC TICKETS JOHN T. QUINN ATTORNEY (409) 774-8924 (800) 927-3115 Not certified as a specialist In any area. o w To Place Your Ad In The Battalion Can 845-2696 r t i Vo 0 na\°sW>n9S sensat'ona^ esdaV . -I \ \ sensatfona/sav/ngs Wednesday^ every Wednesday n , THE BATTALION I BaTTALIO- ' 1 coupon page J r~> -1 I 1 1 I The , AU( U _ y°up° n Rage >N i i —i Page 4 • The Battalion Sports Monday • June 19, If ^-TTTT I Call Your Date Now!!! 1-900-988-8700 ext. 4513. $2.99/min., must be 18 yrs. Procall Co. (602) 954- 7420. Felix Garza, U.S. Nut Twice as nice aboard the uss Houston From left: Navy Seaman Jason Atking, Chief Petty Officer James Bryd, Petty Officer 1st Class David Ivon all from Houston, show their support for the Rockets while aboard the submarine the USS Houston. Knoblauch, fan make amends SEATTLE (AP) — Chuck Knoblauch has made up with a teen-age fan who said the Min nesota player roughed him up outside the Twins’ hotel in Seat tle, a spokesman said Sunday. “The kid came to our hotel. Chuck and the kid sat down and apologized to each other. Then Chuck signed a couple of pictures for him. It was all a misunder standing,” Twins media relations director Rob Antony said. Knoblauch, a Houston Bel- laire and Texas A&M product, was booed by Kingdome fans during Saturday night’s 6-4 Seattle Mariners’ victory over Minnesota in the Kingdome. He did not play Friday-night. Seattle police reported the 15- year-old fan admitted yelling an insult at Knoblauch, a second baseman and 1991 American League Rookie of the Year, after Knoblauch refused an autograph request outside the hotel Thurs day night. Bucky Continued from Page 3 team, Richardson expects to find himself in a battle with free agent signee Chris Chandler for the Oilers’ starting job. “From what I’ve heard, and in talking to Oilers’ people, I’m going into camp competing for the starting job,” Richardson said. “With Cody (Carlson) gone, the position is pretty much up for grabs.” Richardson said he is not worried about his future with the team, despite the drafting of McNair, who is viewed as the fu ture of the Oilers’ franchise. “I could have gone to Canada a couple of years back (and played in the CFL), but I want ed to stay in Houston,” Richard son said. “I figure any experi ence I get playing is good experi ence, and I’ll deal with each sit uation as it comes along.” Georgandis Continued from Page 3 The same scenario has de tailed Strawberry’s last few years. He and fellow phenom Dwight Gooden had drug trouble while with the New York Mets in the mid-’80s, but came back to lead their team to glory. After returning home to the Los Angeles Dodgers as a free agent. Strawberry was released when he tested positive for drugs again. He was picked up by San Francisco and helped the Giants overtake the Dodgers in the National League West last year until the strike hit in August. Testing positive again, he was re leased by the Giants, re-re-re- habilitated and signed Sun day by the apparently igno rant Yankees. The repeated comebacks by these players exposes the weakness in baseball’s drug policy — baseball would rather have tainted stars than no stars at all. This policy stems back to the very beginning of base ball’s drug problem, which first reared its head in 1980. That year. Players Associa tion Director Ken Moffet said that as many as 40 percent of major league players might be drug abusers. In a league with 28 teams, that meant ap proximately 315 players could have been breaking the laws of the country and the sport on a regular basis. As the 1980s moved on, players began getting in trou ble with the law and being suspended from the game for drug use. Howe’s first inci dent occurred in 1983 when he was suspended from the Dodgers for using cocaine. The biggest incident oc curred in 1985 when two Pittsburgh-area drug dealers named 17 major league play ers as buyers. Included in the list of names were such star players as Dave Parker and Keith Hernandez. Then-Commissioner Peter Uberroth tried to clean upthf game by forcing all playerste submit to periodic drug tests, but his plan was rejected by the Players Association, which said the issue must be addressed through the collec tive-bargaining procedure. Nevertheless, Uberroth suspended the accused play ers,and forced them to donatf up to 10 percent of their salaries to charities. With all this behind the game, Ube/- roth announced at the begto- ning of the 1986 season that the drug problem was solved. Nine years later, it is clear that he was wrong. Strawberry joins a Yankee team that is dead last in the American League East, a far cry from last year’s pow erhouse that was running away with the division title before the strike. Strawberry may be the player the Yan kees need to turn their seasoi around. He is 33 years old, but still has some of his awe some power and speed that made him the best player in the National League in the late 1980s. That’s all well and good, but the fact remains that Strawberry should not be playing, no more than Howe or the Dallas Mavericks’ Roy Tarpley should. They all broke the rules, made a mock ery of the games they repre sent and then wormed their ways back into them. In life this is not accej nor is it in business. When you throw out the emotion, the camaraderie and every thing else about sports, it is a business. Baseball needs to change its drug policies before any more damage is done. All students, faculty and staff are invited to attend a public bearing to discuss an increase of the ©eneral Use Uee Wednesday, June 21, 1995 3:30-5:30 p.m. MSC Room 292 Office of the President, Texas A&M University da Jl Te Pi w; ar fe th 1” fr A: ss ca la m st si CE n< tt ol Pi L de er: sti th sh th in ar R a tr ty w p< cc te rE tl la w ir tc s< S] a] rt I