Image provided by: Texas A&M University
About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (June 20, 1995)
The Battalion Classified Ads Phone: 845-0569 / Fax 845-26/8 Office. Room 015 (basement) Reed McDonald Building •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. For Rent Come Live With Us At The #1 Address In Town And Enjoy The Most Complete And Innovative Community In Bryan/College Station •Efficiency 1,2 & 3 Bedrooms •2 Pools & Hot Tub •Tennis & Basketball Courts •Sand Volleyball •Private Rooftop Sundeck •3 On-Site Laundry Facilities •24 Hour Maintenance •On Shuttle Bus Route • Planned Activities Hwy 6 Plantation Hi Oaks Harvey Texas A&M ■■ Texas Ave • State of the Art Fitness Center • Computer and Study Center Computer Lab: 18 Workstations HP Laser Printers Fax & Copy Machines Help Desk Dedicated Internet Access Study/Meeting Rooms Lounge w/ Big Screen TV • No City Utility Deposit •Water and Gas Paid 693-1110 Come see us at http://www.poapts.com 1501 Harvey Rd., C.S. across from Post Oak Mall Professionally Managed by B H Management Services, Inc. ^OQDfc * Large 3 Bsdroom/2 Bath * Close To A&M Consolidated * Adjacent To Parks * Beginning At $900/Mo. AVAILABLE AUGUST * On Shuttle Bus Route * Quiet Wooded Setting 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. 2bdrm-2bth fourplex, $515/mo., shuttle stop, W/D con nections. Pets OK. 1104 Autumn Circle. 693-9959. Save $200 1995-96 Forum lease. 585-6512 after 3:00pm. Call Travis (806) 2bdrm-1 1/2bth fourplex, fireplace, W/D connections, shuttle, $550/mo. 404 Fall Circle. 693-9959. FINDERS KEEPERS. Houses - Duplexes - Condos - Apartments. Call 696-4663. 2bdrm-1bth, pool, laundry mat, patio/balcony, water & sewer paid, $475/mo. Monterrey Apartments. 268- 0840. Summer Leases Available. Great Location! 2bdrm-1bth fourplex, 2 blocks from A&M, on northside. Available now. No Pets. $350/mo. 696-7266. 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. 3bdrm-2bth houses. CH/CA, carpeted, near campus, no pets. Call 690-0085. Near Treehouse Apartments. 2bdrm-1 1/2bth fourplex, $600/mo. 823-8153, or after 5pm 774-4090. Adoption Miscellaneous ADOPTION. Childless professional woman with lots of love and security, seeks to adopt white newborn. Attorney involved. Medical/Legal expenses only. Call Patricia 1-800-592-1995. Need financial bid for college? gives details. 776-6400. Recorded message ATTENTION All Students!! Need scholarships from major corporations? Call 1-800-AID-2-HELP. Auto 1987 Mazda RX7 Turbo - 62,000 miles, excellent con dition. 693-4497 Steve. FREE FINANCIAL AID! 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. ‘86 Nissan Pick-up - 5 speed, A/C, stereo, $2,500 O.B.O. Call 846-4299. Personal ‘86 Saab 900 Turbo - 2 door, 5 speed, looks great, needs engine work. Make offer. 764-2952. Computers Call Your Date Nowlll 1-900-988-8700 ext. 4513. $2.99/min., must be 18 yrs. Procall Co. (602) 954- 7420. FREE CD-ROM Sampler, http://www.pht.com/ Huge WWW and FTP site with games, apps, utils, links. Pacific HiTech 1-800-765-8369. MEET YOUR MATCH! 1-900-884-7800 ext. 2740. $2.99/min., must be 18yrs. Procall Co. (602) 954- 7420. 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. Call the Sports/Entertainment Line Today! Sports Funlll Scores, Point Spreads and much morelll 1-900- 526-6000 Ext. 5437. $2.99/min and 18+. Procall Co. (602) 954-7420. Macs & Printers for sale/lease from $30/mo. Software, repairs, RAM/HD upgrades. MacResource, 775-7703. DIRTY, LIVE, NASTY TALK. Hot, Steamy & Erotic. 1- 900-435-4SEX (4739). $2.50-$3.99/min., instant cred it, 18+. DJ Music MOBILE DJ. Experienced. Weddings, Parties. Reasonable rates. Will travel. Call The Party Block at 693-6294. MINIATURE REVEILLE. Small adult male Sheltie look- ing for an Aggie home. 774-0110. Employment Opportunity ADOPT - Dogs, Cats, Puppies & Kittens. Animal Shelter. 775-5755. ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT - Students Neededl Fishing Industry. Earn up to $3,00- $6,000+/mo. Room & Boardl Transportation! Male or Female. No experience necessary. Call (206) 545- 4155 ext. A58556. Roommates Roommate Needed ASAPI $183.33/mo. + 1/3 bills. Duplex with own room & 1 1/2 baths. 693-5143, 846- 6474. 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. 1 or 2 female roommates needed. Private furnished rooms, private bath, Emerald Forest family. $475/mo. includes food, utilities & W/D. Prefer education major 696-1178. 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. J58554. Female roommate needed ASAP! 2bdrm-1 1/2bth apartment, Fall ‘95 (yr. +), bus route, $262.50/mo. (pre- lease July). 764-6778. Roommate Needed Immediately!! $230/mo. + 1/2 bills. Call 693-9689. For Sale NEW APARTMENT! 2 People needed for 3 bedroom Price negotiable. On bus-route. (210) 637-0400 Summer. 9mm Taurus - Semi-automatic, box & 1/2 of ammo., hardly used, $300. Call after 5pm at 691-4679. 1990 Honda NS50 Sportblke. Must sell. Priced low to movel Only $5501 Call 823-6111. 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. 1988 Jet Ski 550-Limited . Custom painted. Excellent oondltlonl Must Sell! 823-6111, Used refrigerator -1.5 feet cube $70, Qood condition. Call aerry 848-2133, Roommate Needed Immediately! 2bdrm-1bth apart ment, $186.25/mo. -t- bills, close to campus. (713) 781 9576, AUdTlKl: Aggie needs roommate, 4bdrm-2bth house 06/16/95, $340/mo. 693-1651, (512) 459-7646. MUST SELL! Sega Genesis and Sega CC, plus two brand new controllers and ten games. $270 flexible. Call 268-8230. Services 16.5 Trek BOO, 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. AAA Defensive Driving. Lot-of-fun, Laugh-a-lotll Ticket dismissal , Insurance discount. M-Tu (6pm-9pm), Tu (8:30am-3pm), Tu-W (8:30am-11:30am), W-Th (6pm- 9pm), Frl (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. 111 Unlv. Dr., Ste. 217. 846-6117. Wanted Typing 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. 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. Lost & Found The Battalion Classified Advertising • Easy • Affordable • Effective Call 845-0569 REWARDI Lost: Male Golden Retriever In Southwood Valley Area. 693-4340 or 776-0169. Business Hours 8 a.m, - 5 p.m. Monday through Friday Help Wanted ATHLETE’S FOOT STUDY PATIENT VOLUNTEERS NEEDED FOR RESEARCH STUDY OF NEW INVESTIGATIONAL MEDICINE FOR ATHLETE S FOOT * 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 FEVER BLISTER STUDY Volunteers with a history of recurrent herpes labi- alis (fever blisters) need ed to participate in a research study using an investigational topical preparation. Eligible vol unteers may receive up to $150 Call NOW tot infoi mation. G&S Studies, Inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 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. * No topical (over-the- counter) treatment in last 2 weeks. For details, Call : G&S Studies, Inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 Blackjack Dealer. Will train. Mon.-Fri. Leave message. Call 778-0167 12-5pm, FREE RENT, utilities & board for female students. Requires 7-10hrs/week of work. Call 693-6927. Tender Years Daycare has two part-time openings. Worker & Housekeeping. 693-3661. Part-time help needed at Villa Maria Chevron. Experience preferred. Villa Maria at 29th, Bryan. 776- 1261. Tutors Einstein’s Tutoring Service Individual & small group tutoring by experienced experts for: ACCT 210,229,230,327, 328, 329 BAN A 303.305 CHEM 101,102 CHEN 204,205 ECON 202,203 FINC 341 PHYS 201,202,218 MATH 102,131,141,142,151, 152,304,423,433 STAT 211,302,303 Call Chris at 696-4131. Page 4 • The Battalion Grimes County ranch needs student part time. Please call 846-9466. 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. Part-time cleaning. Busy Doctor’s Office/Home. Apply at 2005 S. Tex. Ave., Bryan. 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, corner of University & Texas. Apply within. Healthy people needed to help save lives. Approx. 3hrs./wk. at your convenience. $130/mo. Donating plasma is so easyl Call 846-8855 for more info. Part-time telemarketer needed for local insurance agency. Hours: 5pm-9pm Mon.-Thurs., 10am-2pm Sat. Pay: $6.00/hr. 693-6966 for interview. 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. Healthy males wanted as semen donors. Help infertile couples. Confidentiality ensured. Ethnic diversity desirable. Ages 18-35, excellent compensation. Contact Fairfax Cryobank, 1121 Brlarcrest Suite #101, (409) 776-4453. i M\ It happens when you advertise in The Battalion Call 845-2696 Sports Tuesday • June 20, Two Aggies named All-Stan q Quinton James and Waseem Ali will join the SWC touring team. Staff and Wire Reports Two Texas A&M basketball players, sophomore guards Waseem Ali and Quinton James, will represent the Aggies on the Southwest Conference All-Star team which will tour Mexico this summer. The team, which will be coached by A&M Head Coach Tony Barone, will play a series of games in several Mexican cities between Aug. 5-13. “This will be a great educa tional experience for everybody involved,” Barone said. “It is a rare opportunity to visit another country and also gain valuable basketball experience. We are all excited about the trip and pleased that the Mexican Bas ketball Federation invited us.” Ali, a six-foot-four-inch guard from San Antonio aver aged 2.5 points and 1.4 re bounds per game for A&M in the 1994-95 season. Ali was used by Barone as a defensive stopper in several games. James averaged 2.3 points and 1.3 rebounds per game dur ing his freshman year after playing at Rich Central High School in Matteson, Ill. Former A&M Assistant Coach Porter Moser and current Assis tant Coach Kevin Hurley will ac company the team on the trip, along with SWC Associate Com missioner Bill Foster and Texas Christian Trainer Chris Hall. It will be the conference’s first all-star team to travel in ternationally since the summer of 1992 when the SWC sent a team to Australia. There is at least one player from each SWC school on the team. The leading scorer on the team is Texas Tech’s Jason Sass er, a junior who averaged 20' points per game in the 19941 season and was named to afire team, All-SWC performer. Other double-digit poii scorers on the team are tt: University of Houston’s Kir; Ford, Rice’s Shaun I go ant Baylor’s Brian Skinner. In addition to playing sever al exhibition games, the cm ference players and coachti will also conduct a eeriest basketball clinics for aret youths in some of the citiei that they visit in Mexico, Shooting Hoops South of the border !■ Here is the list of players chosen to represent the Southwest Conference on an All-Star team that will travel Mexico Aug. 5-13 Mama Ali,Waseem Ford, Kirk Igo, Shaun James,Quinton Mathews,Troy Perryman,Brandy Polk, J.J. Sasser,Jason Skinner,Brian Waits,Byron SQhft.Ql HeioM A&M Guard 6-4 Houston Forward 6-7 Rice Center 6-10 A&M Guard 6-5 SMU Guard 6-2 Texas Guard 6-2 Rice Guard 6-4 Texas Tech Forward 6-7 Baylor Center 6-9 TCU Center 6-9 Devils play with a capital C D’ □ New Jersey's tough, defensive style has given it a 1-0 lead over Detroit in the Stanley Cup finals. Lemieux said. "We’ve beaten a lot of good teams the playoffs." How they've done It has stirred cmisiderat debate. DETROIT (AP) — Forget the neutral-zone trap. The New Jersey Devils’ patient, offense-from-de- fense system is more of a mental trap. It messes with the minds of opposing players, gets them to second-guess their own roles. It happened to Boston, it happened to Pitts burgh, it happened to Philadelphia. And it hap pened to the Detroit Red Wings in Game 1 of the Stan ley Cup finals. The Red Wings, who had a season-low 17 shots in losing 2-1, are determined not to let it happen again when the best-of-7 series resumes Tues day night. "We've got to get back to playing the way we know we can, the way we should." — Paul Coffey Detroit Red Wings forward Detroit coach Scotty Bowman accused^ Jersey’s players of snatching sticks fromk players’ hands. “I don’t think so,” Devils defenseman Bruce Dr ver said. “I can name more than a few teams tk hold sticks a lot more than ours does.” “Despite what Bruce Driver says — and I’ll gin him the tape when the series is over — they do very discreetly,” Bowman sal: “Instead of crying about it," have to combat it. I told or team, Tf a player has his bar on your stick ... let the refetr know it.’” Devils coach Jacque Lemaire has complained to tl NHL that opponents hat done the same to his playe “I’m not trying to take anything away from them, but we did a terrible job,” Detroit’s Paul Coffey said. “We’ve got to get back to playing the way we know we can, the way we should. Be cause if we play the way we did in that last game, we’re going to lose in four straight.” Four straight losses? The mighty Red Wings? “Detroit’s a good team,” New Jersey’s Claude throughout the playoffs. “Now I just laugh at it,” he said. “Because they would call all the holding and grabbing this series, we’d be playing 3-on-3 the whole time Stick-stealing is only one of the complain' that critics have about New Jersey’s system. The Devils like to bottle up opponents betwF the blue lines, wait for turnovers and strike quid ly when given the opportunity. Riley lukewarm toward Heats coaching offer □ The former Knicks' coach is at the top of Mi ami's list of candidates. MIAMI (AP) — The Miami Heat want Pat Riley as their coach, even if it means waiting a year to get him. Riley, who resigned Thurs day as coach of the New York Knicks, has yet to indicate whether he’s interested in Mi ami’s vacancy. And with a year remaining on his Knicks con tract, it’s uncertain whether New York will let Riley work elsewhere in 1995-96. Nonetheless, the Heat put their coaching search on hold Monday. “On our original list of people, Pat had been the name at the top of the list,” Heat execu tive vice president Dave Wohl said. “Right now, we don’t have per mission to talk to him, but we felt it was impor tant enough to take time to monitor and investigate and see if there was a possibility to do something.” The Knicks might refuse to release Riley until his contract expires. In that case, Wohl would consider coaching the Heat himself for a year, then turn the job over to Riley. “It’s a scenario we look at,” Wohl said. Riley, who is vacationing in Europe, stepped down as coach because he said the team was n’t willing to give him authority over personnel decisions. The Knicks, who had offered him a five-year contract extension worth $15 million, said the split was over money. Until Riley resigned, Miami was on the verge of hiring Uni versity of Cincinnati coach Bob ^5^ MUkMIi HEAT Huggins. When Wohl hesitated in closing that deal, Huggins decided to accept a contract ex tension at Cincinnati. “He didn’t feel he could wait,” Wohl said, “and I under stood that.” Riley, 50, has a career win ning percentage of .717, com pared with the Heat’s all-time .357. Riley has 137 playoff vic tories; the Heat have two. So the reason for Miami’s in terest in Riley is obvious. Wohl suspects that Riley also has an interest in Miami. “I know Pat,” said Wohl, an assistant to Riley with the Los Angeles Lakers from 1982 to 1985. “It’s my feeling that a lot of things we have here are things he likes. We’re not a team about ready to take a slide. He knows we were an under achieving team. “If you look at the possible situations in our league, our situation is more outstanding than most of them.” Miami went 32-50 this past year. Wohl, hired last February by new managing partner Micky Arison with a mandate to turn around the franchise, first fired coach Kevin Lough- ery and last month fired inter im coach Alvin Gentry. Riley may want part owner ship, and Wohl said he would be willing to surrender final authority on personnel mat ters. But Wohl ruled out giving the Knicks, who are without a selection in next week’s draft, a pick as compensa tion for hiring their for mer coach. “We don’t feel we’re in a po sition as a club to give away possible assets,” Wohl said. Fi nancial compensation could be an alternative. Haley, Lett will testify at Williams’ trial McKINNEY (AP). — De. las Cowboys defensive line men Charles Haley and Lee: Lett were ordered Monday! answer a grand jury’s que; tions into an alleged sexn: assault Involving teamma: Erik Williams. A Collin County Jtidf Verla Sue Holland ruled the a list of questions submits by the grand jury lookin; into the case against theo: fensive tackle is valid an: must he answered. The panel is scheduled: reconvene Tuesday, whenii : expected to hear from Hak and Lett. Last week, the pa received copies of question they would be asked, indufe how often they had m' Williams with the gir whether they had everses them in n sexual situation, an: what the girl had told thr about herself and her life. The players’ attorneys f: gued that some of the qir tions appeared to be a lie. ing expedition. “We want the questions! be limited to certain item' and they’ve now been limits to that, so Mr. Lett will ba^ no problem answeriri them,” said Lett’s a borne: Jay Rosenberg. Assistant District Atto: ney Linda Britton saidtbf because the order is limito to the specific list of que : tions, another hearing mif r be needed if tho grand jur chose to probe further. “If the grand jury felt the answers to those que ! tions resulted in a need ask another question, I st pose we could go throb this whole process one i# time/’ she said. c Oi T | his mer vidr sure neec troductio He is I Captain i the 29-ye lot whose down ove bian miss He wa: hiding be drinking generally praying t The ot few, if an E. Rutlec down wh In this North Vi^ His es O’Grady’ Rutled Vietnam ] mous Hai tinely bes Ti Editorials of the edi the opini Texas AS faculty or and lette Contact submittin Th F Pub! A&M h money can prc pensive Unf Legist abando gravate financi $6.7 m ty’s sta The tion ha increas comper neglige posal is many r suffer f The planm studen the ge per se semesl For hours, $210 p ( The and otl signifii versity accomr increas Eve opinio shoulc schedi minis June 2 Alt! seems up for Unive limit 1 mum f cutbac penses If a ting pr es or L afford in the then s1 Th< would ways: mainh The L cut ha ing cri most c cial p Univei Bu1 I