Page 4 Wednesday, May 30,; Xhe Battalion if ied To place a classified ad: Phone: 845-0569 / Fax: 845-2678 Office: Room 015 (basement) Reed McDonald Building Business Hours 8 a.m.,- 5 p.m. Monday through Friday Insertion deadline: 1 p.m. prior business day VISA Private Party Want Ads $10 for 20 words running 5 days, if your merchandise is priced $1,000 or less (price must appear in afl).lhis . or yr rate applies only to non-commercial advertisers offering personal possessions for sale. Guaranteed resilts ftr you get an additional 5 days at no charge. If item doesn’t sell, advertiser must call before 1 p.m. on the dayfthe ad is scheduled to end to qualify for the 5 additional insertions at no charge. No refunds will be made if yoyr ad is cancelled early. AUTO FOR RENT 1995 Mitsubishi Galant. Auto, 60k, a/c, power windows. Call 694-8614. BED AND BREAKFAST Pre-leasing for Aug., near new 3bdrm/2bth Rock Hollow Duplexes, fenced, minutes to A&M, no pets, $1000/mo. 846-5722. Brazos Bottom Plantation Home available for A&M events (home games, parents weekend, graduation), weddings, weekend get-aways. For information/ reservations call Rebecca Sicilio Lewis,'70. 979-696-0091. Very nice 2bdrm/1.5bth, Manuel Drive, w/d includ ed. Also, 3bdrm/2bth duplex. Cathy 268-1074. Walking distance to campus, alarm system, 2bdrm/1 bth, $600/mo. Call (979)229-7882. FOR SALE DJ MUSIC •"Party Block Mobile DJ**- Peter Block, profes sional/ experienced. Specializing in Weddings, TAMU functions, lights/smoke. Mobile to any where. Book early!! 596-2522. http://www.party- blockdj.com 1997 Mobile Home, convenient to campus, set up in quiet park. 822-8136. 3bdrm/2bth 16x84 trailer. Excellent condition. Assume note. Contact Brian 775-4882 or 324- 2001. FOR RENT HELP WANTED 1-2/bedroom apartments. Some with w/d, some near campus. $175-$325/mo. 696-2038. 3bdrm/2bth duplex, W/D included, close to cam pus, 690-9466. **Shift Supervisors &Cashiers** wanted. Flexible time around summer Stall class sched ules. Accepting applications at Burger King, 1719-TX. Ave., Culpepper Plaza. 3bdrm/2bth duplex. Excellent location, Dexter @ SW Pkwy. Full-size W/D. Available mid-August. $1095/mo. 846-7454. 10hrs./wk., $6/hr. Yard work, new house clean up. 1st summer session only. 846-6211. 4bdrm/2bth home on 1-acre land in Bryan, $1200/mo., deposit required. Please call (979)693-1488. 4bdrm/4bth for lease at University Place, $1400/mo., w/d, in fall, 764-6910 Becca. A Great Way to Earn $20 TODAY! Donate your blood plasma to help save kids' lives. Earn $20 Cash (for approx. 2-hours). Call or stop by: Nabi Biomedical Center, 2701 Morgan Ave. #400, Corpus Christi, 361-883-5106. Fees & donation times may vary. www.nabi.com AggieApartment.com Summer leases available. Pre-leasing now. 693-1906. B/CS 1,2,3 bedrooms available. Great locations, All Prices. Summit Properties, 979-777-3371. Bryan, New duplexes for lease. Ready for August, 2bdrm/2bth with w/d connections, fenced backyard, energy efficient, next to Freeway, $700/mo. 219-1131 or 589-2087. Administrative Assistant: Record maintenance, appointment scheduling, prescription refills. College degree or extensive experience required. Excellent Pay and benefits. Fax resume to (979)776-4260 or apply in person at 2706 Osier Blvd. in Bryan. (979)776-7895. Aggieland Rent-A-Wreck, part-time rental agent, flexible hours, auto rental experience is a plus. 696-0296. Country Living. 2bdrm/1bth mobile home on 1- acre, w/barn and access to fishing lake. Pets ok. $475/mo. 279-5430. Computer Draftsman, COGO a must, help set up CAD. 255-9416. CS 3bdrm/3bth duplex, 1300sqft., all appl., fenced yd. Available Aug., $1200, no pets. 604-B Southwest Parkway West. (206)937-3777. Earn extra income by cleaning offices M-F, after 5p.m. 823-5031. CS: Large 2/2.5, w/d connections, patio, prelease fall, $900/mo. 690-3771. Full-time surgical assistant needed for oral sur geon's office. This position is for permanent employment, ryot for summer only. Please call 776-7101 for information. CS: Spacious 3/2, all appliances &w/d, prelease \a\\, Vt AZSImo. 690-3771. Garage apartment, located on Plantation grounds, w/d, pool. Call 696-0091. New 3bdrm/2bth Duplexes available in August. W/D, yard maintenance included. On A&M shut tle route. Call 324-2887 or 693-6699. Rents start at $380. 3bdrms $845. 693-1906. AggieApartment.com OPTOMETRIC ASSISTANT 8:30am-1:00pm M-F & Sat. 9:30am-1:00pm Typing Required No Experience Necessary Catl 846-0377 STREP THROAT ^ STUDY Are you experiencing the ' tollowing symptoms? Sore and Scratchy Throat/ Pain on Swallowing/ Redness of Tonsils/ Swollen Lymph Nodes/Fever Sciman Biomedical Research is seeking individuals 18 years of age and older to participate in a research study with an investi gational oral antibiotic. If quali fied, your participation will last up to 28 days and you will be compensated up to $200. For more information, please call Sciman Biomedical Research 776-1417 SINUS INFECTION STUDY Are you experiencing the following symptoms? Facial Pain/ Pressure/ Tightness Facial Congestion/ Fullness Tooth Pain/ Earache/ Headache/ Sore Throat Cough/ Bad Breath/ Fever Sciman Biomedical Research is seeking individuals 16 years of age and older to participate in a research study with an investiga tional oral antibiotic. If qualified, your participation will last up to 24 days and you will be compensated up to $500. y For more information, please call Sciman Biomedical Research 776-1417 OL Newsday Crossword ACROSS 1 Frolic 5 Comme il (fittingly: Fr.) 9 Paris subway 14 Fencing gear 15 Stopovers 16 Homeric epic 17 Moving vehicles 18 Icelandic poetry 19 Recess 20 A lap for Endeavour 23 Commercials, e.g. 24 Ancient epoch 28 Helpful tasks 32 Singer Horne 34 Type of snake 35 Expert 36 Quixote’s targets 38 Lug 39 18-wheelers 40 Secure 41 It sweeps right along 43 Eye color 44 The Hairy (O’Neill play) 45 Charged atoms 46 City conduits 47 Royal seating 49 Anecdote collection 50 Place for ponies 57 Facing the pitcher 60 Legacy recipient 61 King Kong actress 62 Word form for "seed" 63 High-fashion mag 64 Unconvincing, as an excuse 65 Goldfinger’s first name 66 Falstaff quaffs 67 Downhill racer DOWN 1 Tach reading 2 Moonfish 3 Diner handout 4 Mouse, to some 5 Rural sights 6 Llama habitat 7 Open, as a tie 8 Autocrat 9 Telejournalist’s need 10 Jet set 11 Tac Dough 12 College cheer 13 Keats creation 21 Dainty dessert 22 Ties up 25 On fire 26 Tee user 27 Art stands 28 Wealthy political contributor 29 Film producer Zukor 30 Governor, at times 31 Oil cartel 32 Sketches 33 Oklahoma city 36 Gradually withdraw rocATODc cvwnirATP « onrm qtami pv kipwuanj Answer to previous puzzle G3DBQK3 5/30/01 HELP WANTED Grad Student to teach real estate classes. Teaching certificate not required. E-mail resume to susan @ century21 bcs.com 37 Vidi 39 Blacksmith, often 42 Of motion 43 Listen to 46 Night noises 48 Muscat citizen 49 Spry 51 South American bird 52 Say “Hey!" 53 Temple athletes 54 Russian river 55 Handle, to a CBer 56 Recolored 57 _ Khan 58 Capote nickname 59 Duffy’s Tavern, for one House help needed for family, cleaning, laundry, *etc. Approx. 20-30 hrs/wk, flexible schedule. Must have references & transportation. Looking for year round worker, not just summer. Non- smokers only. $7.50/hr. 690-7890. HELP WANTED Up m * Summer Work. Be part of the B/CS^xpansion of NexGen Communications with our college mar keting teams. Flexible schedules, valuable expe rience, paid vacation and rapid advancement. $730+/mo PT, $1699+/mo FT. 821-2901. LOST & FOUND Household cleaning help needed for summer/ fall/ spring terms. Reasonable pay. Call Andrew 764- 3975 day/ 764-4022 evening. Lost: Grey &White Siberian Husky puppy on 5/28, Cash Reward! 693-9199. MOTORCYCLE Kind, loving, thoughtful attendants needed for church nursery (Infants- 6yr). Nursery is open Sunday mornings. The attendant positions will begin in June/ July. Pay is $6/hr w/yearly increas es. Please pick-up application M-F, 10am-5pm at St.Francis Episcopal Church, 1101 Rock Prairie Road, CS. (979)696-1491. Applications are due Friday 6/8. 1992 Kawasaki KLR250 Enduro. Water cooled, excellent shape. Cheap, fun transportation. PETS Marketing majors needed for sales! Must be enthusiastic and hard worker. Good pay. Plus scholarships. Call Wintergate Marketing, 764- 5902. Ask for Rick. Adopt: Puppies, Kittens, Cats, Dogs. Many pure breeds! Occasional birds, snakes, rabbits & oth ers. Brazos Animal Shelter- 775-5755. Medical office now hiring: Injectionist, Medical Technician, Lab Technician. Great experience for student applying for medical school. Salary com- mencery with experience. Fax resume to (979)776-4260, or apply in person at 2706 Osier Blvd., Bryan. (979)776-7895. Ever dreamed of becoming a professional dog trainer? Triple Crown Academy offers the most extensive certification programs in the nation. Located in greater Austin, Texas. Triple Crown Academy Is part of the largest dog training and behavior event center in the world. On-site hous ing, career counseling, student financing and job placement available. Visit online at www.school- fordogtrainers.com or call 512-759-2275. Our graduates are the most demanded in the industry. Now hiring substitutes for A&M United Methodist Weekday School. Come by 417 University Drive or call 846-1762. ROOMMATES P/T Office Assistant. Must have phone &comput- er skills. Call 693-7653. Roommate needed, 3bdrm/2bth duplex, great room, w/d, $300 month, move-in nego. Call FULL CIRCLE by Daniel R. Stark Edited by Stanley Newman Part time job helping handicapped. Male student preferred. $270/mo., lOhrs/wk. 846-3376. SERVICES Seniors and Graduate Students, Notes-N- Quotes is currently hiring notetakers for Summer I and Summer II. Apply at 701 University Drive, directly across from the Blocker building on the A&M campus or call 846-2255. Summer work, pole and instrument man for sur vey crew. 255-9416. AAA Texas Defensive Driving. Lots-of-fun Laugh-a-lotM Ticket dismissal/insurance discount M-T(6pm-9pm), W-Th(6pm-9pm), Fri.&Sat. Fri(6pm-8pm) &Sat(10am-2:30pm), Sat(8am 2:30pm). Inside BankofAmerica. Walk-ins wel come. $25/cash. Lowest price allowed by law 111-Univ. Dr„ Ste.217. 846-6117. Show-up THE AGGIE OUTREACH PROGRAM The Association^ OF FORMER STUDENTS Contact Former Students to ask for their support of student scholarships & other student programs. Earn $6.00/hr PLUS Bonuses! (No shifts Fri. & Sat.) Work flexible hours while developing communication & negotiation skills. Stop by the Clayton Williams, Jr. Alumni Center for an application, call 845-0425, or check out our website: www.AggieNetw’ork.com for more information. Aqqie, A/etu/otfc/ DO YOU HAVE DIABETES? N Are you or a family member or friend suffering from diabetes? If s<^ you or Jnc they may qualify for a research drug study currently being condacted at Sciman Biomedical Research. This 33 week study requires 6 or 7 visits. Qualified participants will receive physician assessments, lab testing and study medication at no cost and will be compensated up to $500. If you are between the ages of 18 and 75, in good general health, anc) are not currently using insulin, pioglitazone, rosiglitazone or any investigational drug to control your blood sugar, you may qualify for this clinical research stddy. For more information, please call Sciman Biomedical Research 776-1417 .rt( ) In J br Menstrual Cramp Study Females, ages 18-50, having regular menstrual cycles needed to participate in a research study comparing the effectiveness of a wearable, heated menstrual patch to Tylenol for uncomplicated menstrual cramps. Eligible volunteers will be compensated for time and travel. Call for more information. J&S Studies, Inc. c The Physicians Centre . . 3201 University Drive East, Suite 475, Bryan 979-774-5933 A ... ments. after-school care and walks In the Advertisers Who Want High Visibility And High Impact Are Finding It In An Interesting Place. not ay The Battalion The power of newspaper to reach a wide segment of your market is a powerful tool, indeed. Couple that power with the natural interest your customers have in the,newspaper and what you’ve got is, well, results. / Big-time results. Because when people turn through the pages of a newspaper they’ve turned their attention to finding information, entertainment and prices. So, if you’re looking for customers, we know a place Aj where your customers are looking for you. In the newspaper. alaies.from down/ , -last po« =,wn Eisosssr yam v w*»^ _New : Hampshire to overdo scheduling care too ant to do too yclur child," ncan said. "I me kids Phoe- that you can’t date with, ft] re ad up every /eek with , r lessons, ac. ttorltiK.” the mUlertiur lildren may > inded candt. for the Ivy school of the! But for may , the Bctiw unrealistic d up bumu d Susan Net ithor of "Do Teen-/ Hand 11. Anxiety & IX >ut. . The symj> Irst identir, cades ago > red baby hot i now showii.«. their children, shifting” ma alk among pa butSeia man. man. thett! children jvardrive;. to Environmentalists in throat*iFlorida: Indiana re- West Virginia, angered y locals, celvea 1 million tons of'Cover proposals . for * " out-of-state gar-’ -s, is- huge >- 'dflOs, pushed yy’r. mostly ft 'W. t(tt- 'egislatic— %5$Iew Je A -* , ‘‘Of*-' : dalls .... — "Hurried Child Sym drome.”. ’ lot of parents ajr , saying •Well, I’ve got the fast , track TRe Battalion 845-2696 THE BATTALION Taiwan's leader will not chang plans for speec HOUSTON (AP) — Amid threats of protests, Taiwanese President Chen Shui-bian plans to deliver a personal mes sage to supporters of his coun try’s independence. Part of a showdown between pro-independence supporters and opponents is expected to be at Enron Field during a Hous ton Astros game. Protesters organized by the Greater Houston Supporting One China Alliance plan to con front Chen’s supporters, many described as advocates of Tai wan’s independence, outside a Katy Freeway restaurant where he is scheduled to dine Sunday with House Majority Whip Tom DeLay, R-Sugar Land. Opponents also say they plan to tell DeLay that his mistake of receiving Chen has cost him fu ture support among the Chinese community. Both groups are buying tick ets to block hundreds of seats, for the Astros game that night, to make their feelings known about the Taiwanese head of state. Chen was scheduled to attend the Astros game with DeLay. But supporters of Chen re portedly are planning for a small aircraft to hover above the ball ,or most I neigh bor- ids and bdivisions i Police investigat field have hired an airplane:: with a welcoming bannerai the stadium. Despite a protest lent: ceived from the One Chin; liance, DeLay’s office told Houston Chronicle he will change his plans. The c represents more than lOSross nese organizations in ■nerica, Greater Houston area. Brd signs do Members of the allian nothing started to run a tull-paget»rc than adver* tisement in local ChinesMe or notilv pa^ guage newspapers to pro upcoming ga rap" urge all Chinese to o:wrpus Christi, Chen’s scheduled trip in Ming forced to i_ ton Saturday and Sunda signs ordered by- Chen supporters ha J. Manuel Banal- been meeting weekly toTi enty-one sex gize their activities to pMrpus Christi, for a possible confro: paobation, have near the Doubletree Hc Mly required t<» Post Oak, where Chen sign in front of t: staying. *J§ At reads “Dan Taiwan has been regrAx Offender Li Chinese officials as a n plkce a bumper province after defeating cai with a simile tionalist party KuomkAThe ordinanc army that fled to Ta fru offenders fr- 1949, and vows to reclair topless bars or i_ land, then a province. B net, which unfa fied China also has been: their rights as c of the nationalist party, A Since the ore has long hoped to reel offenders has at: mainland, pt/c. two have 1 f Am their hoir* Ad property ve Aender’s father Aeatened. [The judge’s • ^ • these scarlet-le man's confessiofer - 1 "1 garded nearby to armed robbeivM^:::!: around the wc stances. His lawyer saidt the offenders; least one robbery, NomUcasts,' the rulin suaded the victims to k provides them load stolen goods intote sary rehabilita ’ Thirty-one of the crir._ Tt nder cum ficers say, were arme i u |g es possess beries of golf-equipmen: such as Edwin Watts, Pr j Discount Stores, Las Golf and Nevada Bob’s! man told investigators* robbery became his wave “That’s all his job was Texas Ranger Sgt. | Welch. “He would doiti-l > r / DALLAS (AP) — Confes sions to dozens of heists by a convicted robber now serving a federal prison sentence are be ing reviewed by law officers. They say John Orville Nor man frustrated investigators by successfully pulling off heists at golf shops and other business es around the country and then disappearing. The Texas Rangers and FBI, following a lengthy investiga tion and cooperation by other law enforcement agencies, are moving closer to solving more than five dozen crimes they say Norman has admitted com pleting in Texas and through out the United States. The scope of confessed heists puts Norman beyond the activities of a normal bandit, his attorney said. “In my judgment, he’s one of the last true gangsters of this part of the country, and now he’s retired,” said attorney George Milner III. Norman, 59, is serving two consecutive life sentences in a federal prison after pleading guilty last year to federal armed robbery and federal weapons charges in connection with a heist at an Ennis golf shop. Norman’s attorney and in vestigators said the suspect, who used the Dallas area as his home base, admitted during a series of interviews to being one of North Texas’ most pro lific armed robbers, confessing to 65 crimes across the country. Of those, 28 were Texas rob beries. Norman described hand cuffing his victims in many in- tt I yV s sc ^ He's oneof bad the lost true gangsters o\ sigh is breat this part oftli 1 1 gestud /1 ( give up thel century, and uhir sleep m now he's b ^ eak - Man ’ retired.’’ schedule of full-time jol lliowever, tl George MMqliestioned petition and Health the country — Orlando, j on their wo anapolis, Memphis. He' cbncernedi place and then leave tou- j!residents m Welch and FBI ; mistakes th Agent Ron Watson hkjAtients. ered details and attempt as a j r [ independently verify r I cent scrn irbout the crimes Noni«| f l ance t he committed since tk studies hav Investigators at 22 IBW , , ~ ... enough sle n d r!/* Txri 11 nnv . , r health prol Of conn Track Continued from Page 3 victory in the 200-meter clinched the title for die Aggies. The women’s team finished fourth for the second year in a row, tallying 88.2 points to trail Kansas State, Nebraska and Texas. “We had one of our strongest conference meets ever,” said as sociate head coach Ed Macinkiewicz. “I am so proud of the way die girls went out there and competed each day.” Three Aggies won their events, highlighted by senior Christina Ohaeri’s defense ot her fices nationwide will no" clear the unsolved cases. “As near as we canl we’re going to clear 62f P c ’ es P eclt of Norman’s robberies, a semi-ref son said. Hfrort shou . gNN repc number or 100-meter hurdles crown states that time of 13.09 seconds.! 1 Sleep Disc time was actually matched! v L on cos , mor teammate Chamifa' ,1 and but edged out the winiifr H r • . to finish. Carter *|M> 1 ltlsw , d . outstanding perfoniian«y ilsLS j 1 hurdles by taking first pi- .y-' lUs am ' the long jump with a peA§ an y P eo best distance of 21 feet. b ^Hth ant inches. Senior MeshelH caused by took another first by winn:' A recer hammer throw widi a disk Chicago l 190 feet, 3 inches. sleep loss Both the men and wc to perfort teams will compete i processin NCAA Outdoor OmB onships in Eugene, Ore May 30 to June 2.