ghsu_beeper_1996_v6n

Transcription

ghsu_beeper_1996_v6n
TRAINOR* DONNA J
LIBRARY
AB-120
4400
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MEDICAL COLLEGE OF GEORGIA
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1996
VOLUME 6, NUMBER 1
8 MCG Specialties Rank First in State
The Medical College of
Georgia Hospital and
Clinics delivers the best
care in the state in eight
medical specialties, according to U.S. News and World
Report.
The national news magazine reviewed the specialty
services of more than 1,000
hospitals from every state in
the nation and 10 metropolitan areas. The rankings
were published in America's
Best Hospitals, compiled by
the editors of the magazine
in conjunction with the
National Opinion Research
Center at the University of
Chicago.
Sixteen specialties were
ranked in Georgia. The specialties in which MCG
ranks first in the state are
AIDS, cancer, endocrinology, geriatrics, gynecology,
neurology, orthopedics and
otolaryngology. MCG ranks
second in the specialties of
gastroenterology, rheuma-
tology and urology; Atlanta's
Emory University Hospital
ranks first in those areas,
according to the survey.
"The showing of the
Medical College of Georgia
Hospital and Clinics in this
survey is evidence of the
growing recognition of our
outstanding reputation as a
healthcare provider not only
in Georgia and the
Southeast, but the nation as
a whole," said Patricia
Findling-Sodomka,
Executive Director of the
hospital.
Keep New Year's Resolutions Small, Attainable
INGRID HEGGOY
January is a time many
people decide what they
want to do better in the
coming year. But it also is
an important time to look
at what you did well during the previous year,
according to a Medical
College of Georgia therapist.
"Give yourself an honest appraisal of those
things you did well, rather
than just focusing on those
things you didn't accomplish," said Joseph
Fournier, Assistant
Clinical Professor of
Psychiatry and Health
Behavior and an individual, family and group therapist at MCG.
He suggests making
Division of Institutional Relations
Medical College of Georgia
Augusta, Georgia 30912
two lists: one of things you
want to accomplish in the
coming year and a second
of things you did well in the
last year. "It helps to
remember to focus on the
positive, not only on the
negative aspects of what
you have done and in which
direction you would like to
move," Mr. Fournier said.
It also helps to set small,
attainable goals rather than
major changes you're
unlikely to stick with,
according to Mr. Fournier.
Try to set specific, positive
goals and give yourself a
time frame.
For example, if last year
you resolved to lose 20
pounds, this year try
resolving to eat fruit rather
U.S. Postage
PAID
Permit No. 210
Augusta, GA
Non-Profit Org.
that sweets for dessert five
times a week. Rather than
resolving to exercise more,
decide to park your car one
block farther away from
your office and walk.
Instead of resolving not to
let stress get to you, try
allocating 15 minutes of
your lunch hour for relaxation.
"New Year's resolutions,
if you decide to make them,
aren't generally a good way
to go about making major
changes in yourself or your
habits," Mr. Fournier said.
"They can be useful steps
toward future goals down
the road.
"If you resolve to
change a little habit, rather
than to make sweeping
lifestyle changes, you're
more likely to succeed," he
said. Think of resolutions
as stepping stones toward a
larger, long-term goal. For
instance, if your goal is to
keep in better touch with
friends who don't live nearby, your resolution might
be to write one quick note
each week. Then you might
find, at the end of the year,
that it wasn't too difficult to
follow through with your
resolution, because you've
given yourself not just a
vague statement, but specific steps to take."
Also, if you didn't succeed with last year's resolution, don't just make the
same one again. "That's
just reinforcing failure, and
MLK Program Slated Jan. 12
GLENN HUDSON
Augusta College, in conjunction with the Medical
College of Georgia and
Paine College, will host the
schools' annual Martin
Luther King Day celebration Jan. 12 at noon in the
Augusta College
Performing Arts Theater.
This year's featured
speaker will be Dr. Joseph
P Silver, Assistant Vice
Chancellor for Academic
Affairs for the University
System of Georgia Board of
Regents.
In the past, the ceremony was held on a Sunday,
but this year was moved to
Friday to enable more students to attend. The public
is invited to attend this
event, which is hosted by
Augusta College, MCG and
Paine College on a rotating
basis.
the key to making resolutions a useful step is to
keep them positively
focused and reachable,"
Mr. Fournier said. Instead,
if you feel it is still an area
you want to improve, try
looking at why you weren't
successful last year and
find a way to increase your
chances of success in the
coming year.
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1996
Beeper Classified Advertising Form
Name
Check one:
MCG Employee
MCG Student
MCG retiree
Family member of MCG
employee/student/retiree
MEDICAL COLLEGE OF GEORGIA
Dr. Gallup Named Liaison
TONIBAKER
Family member's name
MCG address (if applicable).
MCG extension (if applicable)
Home address ______
) ______________
Home phone (
Category of ad (leave blank if unsure) ________
Ad: (write one word per line, including home phone number)
PAGE 2
Dr. Donald G. Gallup
Dr. Donald G. Gallup,
Chief of the Section of
Gynecologic Oncology at
the Medical College of
Georgia, has been appointed to a second three-year
term as liaison from the
American College of
Obstetricians and
Gynecologists to the
American College of
Surgeons.
In March, he was elected Secretary/Treasurer of
the Society of Gynecologic
Surgeons after a previous
term "as Assistant
Secretary/Treasurer. Dr.
Gallup also is a member of
the Society of Gynecologic
Oncologists' Education
Committee and Program
Committee. He is a healthcare partner on the Breast
and Cervix Coalition for the
state of Georgia and a member of the American College
of Surgeons' Commission
on Cancer and Chairman of
the Quality of Life
Committee of the
Gynecologic Oncology
Group.
Dr. Gallup has been an
MCG faculty member since
1984 and section Chief since
1988.
MCG Turns Hollywood to Promote
Research Ethics
CHRISTINE HURLEY DERSIO
Division of Institutional Relations
Medical College of Georgia
Augusta, Georgia 30912
Paniel R. Pearson Christine Hurley Deriso
Publisher
Editor
lisa M. McArdle
Assistant Publisher
Phil Jones, Jeff Mabon
Photography
Beeper is published biweekly by Graphic Advertising, a private firm
in no way connected with the Medical College of Georgia. Opinions
expressed by the writers herein are their own and are not considered
an official expression by the Medical College of Georgia. The appearance of advertisements in this publication, to include inserts, does not
constitute an endorsement by the Medical College of Georgia of the
products or services advertised.
News and photos are provided by the Division of Institution
Relations. Direct correspondence about news to MCG Beeper, FI-1050.
(706) 721-2124
MEDICAL COLLEGE: President, Francis J. Tedesco, M.D.;
VP, University Advancement, Dr. James B. Osborne; Director,
Marketing & Public Relations, George H. Foster.
Direct display advertising inquiries to
GRAPHIC ADVERTISING
PO BOX 397 AUGUSTA, GA 30903-0397
(7O6) 86O-5455
POSTMASTER: Please send address changes and forwarding requests to:
. * , , r .., .,. .. Oiv4s4onal-onnst4tutkHiaI.ftelations ~ -.-.'. .V. ...
Medical College of Georgia. FI-105U, Augusta, GA 30912
If you happened to overhear someone yelling,
"Lights, camera, action!" on
campus recently, it wasn't
your imagination. The cameras, actors, producer,
director and other trappings
of Tinseltown that descended on campus Dec. 2-13
were all in town for a good
cause: spreading the word
of research ethics nationwide.
MCG was selected as the
site to film a series of videotapes on research ethics
that will be distributed to
research-affiliated institutions nationwide this spring.
The series is produced by
New York-based film producers Amram Nowak and
Manya Starr, a husbandand-wife team, of Amram
Nowak Associates. The nonprofit project is sponsored
by the American
Association for the
Advancement of Science
with funding from 17
National Institutes of Health
institutes and centers.
MCG's involvement in
the project can be traced
largely to Dr. Lowell M.
Greenbaum and his longstanding commitment to
research ethics. Dr.
Greenbaum, recently
retired Dean of the School
of Graduate Studies and
. Yicfi.President'far. « v. v. \ .'.
Research, developed and
teaches a class on scientific
communication and ethics
at MCG.
. Dr. Greenbaum,
Professor Emeritus in the
Department of
Pharmacology and
Toxicology, has long realized that issues involving
research ethics come in
shades of gray far more
often than in black and
white. He wants
"We try to
educate
students and
faculty that
their
professional
reputations
are always
at stake,"
researchers to be prepared
for potential mine fields that
could sabotage both their
careers and the public trust.
"Research brings on the
pressure for promotion,
which comes by way of publications, research grant
Dr. Greenbaum said. "In
addition, we have our egos.
We want to be nationally
recognized, internationally
recognized. So when things
aren't going in the direction
you wish, some people can't
handle it and result to fabricating experiments, falsifying data and even plagiarizing."
But whereas many academic institutions once covered up such misconduct for
the sake of their own reputations, the climate is completely different today.
"MCG, for instance, is very
forthright about exposing
misconduct," Dr.
Greenbaum said. "We try to
educate students and faculty
that their professional reputations are always at stake,
and any kind of accusation
has an affect on the future
of their career."
Of course, society as a
whole is the biggest loser if
researchers compromise
their ethics, Dr. Greenbaum
stressed. "The consequence
of fraud is not only lack of
public confidence, but the
great expense of moving
people in the wrong direction to continue research."
Public suspicion of scientists also translates into
reduced research funding.
And at its worst, compro-
., PLwse. see,"Ethics,"paga 3.
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1996
MEDICAL COLLEGE OF GEORGIA
PAGE 3
...Ethics
mised ethics in the field of
biomedical research can
actually mean a matter of
life and death.
But can integrity be
taught? Dr. Greenbaum has
great confidence in the
overall character of the scientific community, but he
noted that even highly principled people face ethical
dilemmas in the research
environment. Dr.
Greenbaum wants
researchers to be prepared.
In addition to developing
the ethics course, Dr.
Greenbaum also wrote and
directed a series of miniplays in 1992 dealing with
ethical dilemmas in
research. He cast the roles
with students and faculty,
had them videotaped by
MCG's Television Services,
then presented the plays to
research-affiliated segments
of campus. As he hoped, the
stories provoked considerable debate, deliberation
and introspection.
They also caught the eye
of AmramNowak
Associates, which envisioned a much larger audience for Dr. Greenbaum's
message.
"My husband and I
became very interested in
research ethics after a case
in which a woman in a lab
fudged results to make her
look good," Ms. Starr said.
"The whole issue of ethics
and pure science research
was interesting to us, and
we thought it would be of
general interest." She and
her husband approached
the American Association
for the Advancement of
Science, which endorsed
the project and got the ball
rolling.
The couple then contacted Dr. Greenbaum, and
MCG administrators agreed
to have the videotapes produced on campus.
"I think it was a natural
coming-together," said Dr.
Barry D. Goldstein, MCG
Vice President for
Academic Affairs. "Dr.
Greenbaum is quite well-
Science, and we're very
pleased they decided to do
the work here."
MCG donated a temporary office for the crew, lab
space and other areas on
campus for videotaping and
the services of MCG's
Division of Health
Communications, including
Television Services. Actors
were hired throughout the
Southeast; some 150 audi-
known across the country
for his efforts in promoting
research ethics. I think it's
good for MCG to be associated with any effort to promote research ethics, and
this will be another mechanism to do that.The series
will be widely distributed
through the marketing
mechanisms of the
American Association for
the Advancement of
tioned for 25 parts. MCG
graduate students were
recruited as extras.
Ms. Starr wrote the
scripts, collaborating with
scientists from throughout
the country to assure relevance and authenticity.
"Through our discussions, I got an idea of the
Please see "Ethics,"page 4
"Where all your health science needs are met."
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MEDICAL COLLEGE OF GEORGIA
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1996
PAGE 4
Dr. Mellor to Discuss Immunogenetic Research
TONI BAKER
Deans' Symposia Jan. 16.
The lecture begins at
4:30 p.m. in the first-floor
auditorium of the MCG
School of Dentistry building.
Dr. Mellor, who joined
the MCG faculty in August
from the National Institute
for Medical Research in
London, will discuss his
studies of the body's
Dr. Andrew L. Mellor,
Professor of Molecular
Biology and Eminent
Scholar Chair in
Immunogenetics at the
Medical College of Georgia,
will discuss "Immunology of
Self Awareness: Analyzing
the Role of T-Cells in
Tolerance, Transplantation
and Pregnancy Using
Transgenic Mice" at the
immune system using
genetically altered mice as a
model. "We are interested
in understanding the fundamental ways in which the
immune system works, how
it is able to recognize so
many things, but also does
not respond to things displayed on our own cells and
tissues," Dr. Mellor said.
"When things go wrong in
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the immune system, it can
lead to failure to recognize
foreign agents such as
viruses or, conversely, the
ability to respond, in a
sense, too well by destroying our own tissues. Our
goal is to understand why
things go wrong, so that we
can better manipulate the
immune system and better
ensure that it responds
appropriately."
Dr. Mellor earned his
undergraduate and master's
degrees from the University
of Cambridge's Churchill
College and his doctorate
from the University of
London's King's College.
He began a postdoctoral fellowship in the Division of
Gene Structure and
Expression of the National
Institute for Medical
Research and completed it
Please see "Research,"
page 5
... Ethics
different kinds of problems
of the greatest interest things like fudging data,"
Ms. Starr said. "Then I
invented characters and stories that would best bring
the issues to life. I wanted-it
to be interesting, recognizable to real scientists and
hitting the crucial issues."
She also purposely wrote
unresolved ethical conflicts
into the scripts to trigger
thought and discussion.
The project went wonderfully smoothly, she said,
notwithstanding a few
prickly details, such as
noisy equipment in labs
used for sets and actors
with less-than-flexible
schedules.
"Most of these actors
have regular jobs, and we've
had to do lots of accommodating," she said. "I'm used
to New York, where actors
say, 'Any time, any where,
as long as you need me,'"
Ms. Starr said with a laugh.
Dr. Greenbaum stresses
that the videotapes are
unlikely to prompt applause.
"Nobody sees these things
and comes away happy," he
said. "It's not something
people want to hear goes on
in this profession. But I
believe if people understand
the pressures of research
and the consequences of
misconduct, we will have
prevented a number of individuals from going astray."
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PAGE 5
MEDICAL COLLEGE OF GEORGIA
WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 3. 1996
Newsbriefs
Dentistry will celebrate
Children's Dental Health
Month during February by
hosting students from
Hillcrest Elementary School
Feb. 6 at 9:30 a.m. for an
educational tour of the
school.
BEEPER DEADLINE
The deadline for the Jan.
17 edition of the Beeper is
Jan. 8 at noon. The deadline
for the Jan. 31 edition of the
Beeper is Jan. 22 at noon.
Please contact the editor
(ext. 1-2124) at least a week
in advance to request photography coverage of an
event. No classified advertising will be accepted over the
phone. To ensure that the
Beeper arrives at your correct address, please contact
the records section of the
personnel department if
your campus address has
changed.
BLOOD DONATION
The MCG Blood Donor
Room always anticipates a
blood shortage during the
holiday season and encourages everyone able to
donate blood to do so. The
Blood Donor Room will
place a paper snowflake on
its door for every blood
donor through Jan. 15. The
Blood Donor Room, located
on the first floor of MCG
Hospital by the Harper
DENTAL HEALTH
The MCG School of
... Research
at Biogen Research Corporation in Cambridge, Mass.
Dr. Mellor joined the United Kingdom's Medical
Research Council as a staff scientist in 1984 and transferred to the Laboratory of Molecular Immunology in
1987. He has authored or co-authored 60 publications, 40
in refereed journals.
The MCG Deans' Symposia disseminates new information in science and healthcare and enables the MCG
community to meet those responsible for that information.
Sponsors are the Deans of MCG's Schools of Allied
Health Sciences, Dentistry, Graduate Studies, Medicine
and Nursing.
Street entrance, is open
weekdays from 8:30 a.m. to
5 p.m. For more information, call ext. 1-3694.
VENDING AREA
Auxiliary Services has
equipped the third floor of
MCG's Carl T. Sanders
Research and Education
Building with a vending
area complete with food and
drink machines, microwave
oven, overhead lamps and
booths. The division plans
to renovate and modernize
the library vending area
soon.
are available from the
Curriculum Office, CB-1818.
Completed applications
must be received in the
office by noon Jan. 26. For
more information, call
Patricia Cooksey, ext. 19416.
TRAINING CLASSES
MCG training and education classes for January are
"New Employee
Orientation," Jan. 8 and 22,
free; "Violence in the
Workplace," Jan. 10, free;
"Forklift and Stockpicker
Certification Training," Jan.
11, free; "The Exceptional
Assistant," Jan. 17, $90;
"Stress Management," Jan.
18, free;
"Management/Supervisory
Briefings," Jan. 23, free;
"Consumer
Beware/Consumer Credit
Counseling," Jan. 24, free;
"Office Ergonomics," Jan.
24, $10; "EEO/AA
Guidelines," Jan. 25 and 26,
free, and "Safety Training
Updates," Jan. 30, free. For
more information, call Pam
Stewart, ext 1-3196.
RELOCATION
The Department of
Medical Photography has
moved from the Dugas
Building to BC-129
(Auditoria Center).
GRANT
APPLICATIONS
Biomedical Research
Support Grant applications
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PAGE 6
MEDICAL COLLEGE OF GEORGIA
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1996
Classifieds
Ads must be submitted on
the official Beeper classified
advertising form or by email. The Beeper office cannot provide extra copies of
the form. No classifieds will
be accepted over the phone
or by voice mail. Any
changes to ads or requests
for withdrawals (prior to
Editor's Note: Beeper classifieds are free to MCG
employees, students and
retirees and their families.
Ads will run in the three editions following submission,
space permitting, then must
be re-submitted to be continued. Deadlines are published
in the Newsbriefs section.
three-time run) must be submitted in writing and will
not be accepted over the
phone or by voice mail. Ads
may not include an MCG
extension. Absolutely no commercial advertising will be
accepted. Ads may be delivered to Christine Deriso via
campus mail (FI-1050), fax
The moment I walked in
the door, I felt like family.
Many an owner could
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a Saturn technician
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Friday night) just to
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(CDERISO) or in person
(the front desk of the Alumni
Center). Ads that do not
meet these requirements will
be discarded upon receipt
with no notification to the
sender.
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For rent: House w/LR, DR,
kit, 2BRw/BALR could
double as BR. W/D, references, off-street parking,
$650/mo. Arlene, 737-8696.
Lovely brick ranch w/double garage, landscaped
yard, fenced rear yard,
Boulder Creek, Martinez,
3BR, 2BA, Irg. great rm.,
DR, Irg. kit. $86,900. 8633980.
For rent: 2BR, 1BA house,
quiet neighborhood, close
to Regency Mall. 2205 Ward
Please see "Classifieds,"
page 7
WBLLARD MURPHY
637 Broad Street
Downtown Augusta
722-4888
"GoxlNeiglibor Service?'
AUTOLIFE'HEALTH
HOME-SMALL BUSINESS
State Farm Insurance Companies
Home Offices: Bloomington, Illinois ,
Ijke a good neighbor, State Farm is there
DENTAL
OPPORTUNITIES
Active small town 25-year-old dental practice
now leasing space. For more information
contact Linda or Vie Ford at:
ELBERTON FAMILY DENTAL CENTER
(706) 546-9517
#2 Professional <«. Elberton,GA 30635
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1996
MEDICAL COLLEGE OF GEORGIA
PAGE 7
Classifieds
Ave. $375/mo. 798-1229
nights or Iv. msg.
House for rent: New, avail.
Jan. 1,1BR, 1BA, 40 min.
from MCG in Appling, private residence, horse barn
avail., well-behaved pets
OK, $300/mo. 706-541-0647.
1BR furnished apt. 8 min. to
MCG, $450 includes water,
garbage, elec., cable. 2780581-.
1BR cottage, W/D hookup,
8 min. to MCG, $325/mo.
278-1867.
3BR, 2BA house for rent,
North Augusta, central
H/A, dishwasher, refrigerator w/icemaker, 1 BR has
private entrance, bath, 3
miles to MCG, $600/mo.
2794427.
For rent: 3BR, 2BA house in
Goshen. Formal LR and DR,
den w/FP, 2-car attached
garage, kit. w/refrigerator,
dishwasher, stove, garbage
disposal. $750/mo. 7224497.
LOST/FOUND
For rent: Country duplex,
exclusive area, very private,
boating, fishing on scenic
lake, cathedral ceiling, FP,
2BR, lots of storage, walk-in
closet. $500/mo. 855-0968.
Cute Hill cottage, 1BR, 1BA,
equipped kit, heat, air,
W/D, unfurnished, offstreet
parking, 2607 Clifton St.,
$395/mo. Lisa, 722-7574
days, 7374117 nights.
Doctor's house, Deerwood,
4BR, 2.5BA, 2-car garage
w/storage rm., open floor
plan, newly redecorated,
hrdwd. firs, in DR, greatroom, hallways. 3/4 acre,
landscaped, vegetable garden, Riverside school district. $174,000. Gail, 8689435.
VACATION RENTALS
2BR condo in Sapphire
Valley, N.C., near
Highlands, skiing weather
permitting, 2nd wk. in Jan.
$250. 855-0503.
Lost: Class ring. Blue topaz,
North Auguta High School,
'Amie' and '1992' engraved
on outside. 2 diamonds on
side, 10K gold. Lost Nov. 22
in Annex or parking lot.
Reward. 803-278-3461.
PETS
AKC registered cocker
spaniel puppies, male and
female, 5 wks. old, $150
each. 556-6189.
Puppies (mother is long-hair
black lab). 706-796-2784.
'91 Ford Explorer Sport
Free! Black and brown
tabby, female, spayed, has
claws, updated vaccines (995), answers to Minnie. 706733-2664 evenings.
Bj
PURCHASE
DON'T MISS OUT!
HOMES, LAND, COMMERCIAL
& INVESTMENT PROPERTIES.
WHEN IT COUNTS, CALL STEVE.
OFF EVERY
/f\ SERVICE WE
PERFORM
' WITH YOUR MCG ID
ROTATE & BALANCE
$19.95
4 TIRES
MAGS EXTRA
RECOMMENDED EVERY 5-7,000 MILES
FOR SAFETY & MAXIMUM TIRE LIFE • WITH COUPON
COUPON EXPIRES 01/12/96
———(SAVE YOUR TIRES!)———
WHEEL ALIGNMENT
THRUST ANGLE $34.95
4-WHEEL $44.95
6 MONTHS/6,000 MILE WARRANTY
MOST VEHICLES • REAR SHIMS EXTRA • WITH COUPON
COUPON EXPIRES 01/12/96
Continued on page 8
OFFICE: 868-1000
HOME: 855-0576
EVERYDAY SAVINGS FOR MCG PERSONNEL:
^
'67 VW Bug, great cond.,
best offer over $2,500. 863-
STEVE POPWELL
VEHICLES
'88 Plymouth Caravelle, 4dr., auto, A/C, stereo, P/S,
P/B, cruise, new belts,
63.4K miles, looks/runs
great, $2,450 OBO. 706-4810575.
'84 Pontiac Phoenix, brown, 2dn, auto, power steering, A/C,
AM/FM stereo, 67,000 miles,
runs and looks great, $1,799
OBO. 706854-1813 after 7 p.m
DIANCHARDAND (ALHOUN
617 15th STREET
across from the MCG ANNEX
5% TIRE
'89 Acura Integra RS, hatchback, 5-spd., cassette, A/C,
85K, mechanically perfect,
$5,700. 738-5783.
'94 Toyota Corolla DX, aqua
blue, 4 dr., auto, A/C,
AM/FM cassette, dual
airbags, power
steering/windows/locks,
factory extended warranty
to 100K, exc. cond., $12,200
OBO. 821-7164, Iv. msg.
WaUTire
OFF EVERY
4X4, all power, very low
miles, new brakes, black,
exc. cond., $13,500. 706-7333486.
'86 Toyota van, dual A/C,
power steering, tilt wheel,
nice stereo, new tires,
$2,500 OBO. '87 Ford LTD,
body only, gd. cond., $95
OBO. Older-model 15-ft.
Sportscraft boat, w/t windshield, no motor, $45 OBO.
706-554-0419.
"These- days, who has
the time, to make a
separate trip somewhere
for car maintenance? I
certainly don'l. I trust
(WallfTire to do honest
and dependabk worf(.
The convenience of
getting a ride, to work^
and having my car
ready to go at the end
of the day is fantastic!"
OIL CHANGE BRAKES DRAIN-N-FILL RADIATOR
PT. SAFETY INSPECTION
© FRONT OR REAR 35INCLUDES
$11.95
1 GAL. ANTIFREEZE
$59.95
$24.95
TUNE UP
FUEL INJECTION CLEANING
4 CYL....$29.95
6 CYL....S39.95
$39.95
UP TO 5 QTS KENDALL MOTOR OIL, FILTER, LUBE
WITH COUPON • EXPIRES 01/12/96
WITH COUPON
EXPIRES 01/12/96
TURN DRUMS OR ROTORS • REPLACE
PADS OR SHOES • METALLIC EXTRA •
MOST CARS • SEE STORE FOR DETAILS
WITH COUPON • EXPIRES 01/12/96
8 CYL....S49.95
WITH COUPON • EXPIRES 01/12/96
• NO PAYMENT FOR 90 DAYS
• WO INTEREST
• NO ANNUAL FEE
SEE STORE FOR DETAILS
MOST CARS • WITH COUPON
EXPIRES 01/12/96
Wall Tire at your service!
COUPONS GOOD ON MOST CARS • NOT VALID WITH OTHER COUPONS OR SPECIALS • SHOP SUPPLIES & DISPOSAL FEES MAY APPLY
WtrnMtrcnAV
IAMIIAPV3
PAGES
MEDICAL COLLEGE OF GEORGIA
IQQfi
... Classified*
4270 10 a.m to 10 p.m.
$14,300. 65O0456, Iv. msg.
"84 Nissan pickup truck,
runs well, $1,000 OBO.
737-0458.
MISCELLANEOUS
'90 BMW 325, bronze, 2dr., sunrf., exc. cond., 1
owner, 49,000 miles,
Macintosh LC computer
w/12" color monitor,
Stylewriter printer. Software
includes Quicken,
Microsoft Works, Print
Shop, After Dark, Kid Fix,
Carmen San Diego, other
games. $600. 860-4285.
Distributors needed for
health and environmental
products. Great supplemental income or career option.
Call 651-8644
CONGRATULATIONS
Mary Darr
Mary Darr found her
name hidden in the
page 7 ad for
La
Maison
in the December
"Pip pip, I say,
20 edition of the
it does indeed pay
Beeper. Mary
to read the
won $50 and a
Beeper!"
$5 Taco Bell
gift certificate.
Congratulations!
Keep your
Will your name be in
peeled!
eyes
this issue?
I. Find the hidden name of a randomly selected
MCG student or employee concealed within one
of the ads in this issue. 2. IF THE NAME YOU
FIND IS YOUR OWN, call the Beeper advertising office (860-5455) by noon this Friday to win.
3. If the name you find is NOT yours, do not call
us. We'll call you! Memorize the name or write it
down: if you can tell the roving Hidden Name
Prize Patrol the correct name for this issue, you
win! 4. All hidden name winners must be
employed by or enrolled at MCG at the time of
winning. 5. In the event more than one person
shares the same hidden name (if there are two
John Smiths, for example), the first person to
claim the prize is the sole winner. 6. Prizes
awarded to winners may vary from issue to issue.
7. An MCG photo ID may be required to claim
some prizes.
WE GLADLY ACCEPT OUR COMPETITOR'S COUPONS!
BURGERS
& WINGS
WE DELIVER
''Sandwich Shop"
6" SUB • CHIPS • 15 oz DRINK
1BAG
YOUR CHOICE OF SUB Nos. 1 -5:
HAM & CHEESE
BOLOGNA & CHEESE
HAM, SALAMI & CHEESE
SALAMI, CHEESE & PEPPERONI
OR TURKEY, CHEESE & HAM
ASSORTED CHIPS
& SOFT DRINKS,
ICED TEA &
LEMONADE
$099
^^ +TAX
Royal Doulton Stanwyck
china, four 5-piece settings,
12" platter. Used once.
$350. Gorham stainless flatware, Golden Melon Bud,
four 5-piece settings, 2 serving spoons, 1 butter. Never
used, $150 OBO. 736-2960.
Remington 700 ADL rifle,
30-06 cal., bolt action, open
sights, sling, gun chap, less
than 30 rounds fired, like
new, exc. deer rifle, $325.
1955 Spanish Mauser rifle,
8mm cal., bolt action, open
sights, rugged, adequate
deer rifle, $80. 738-7484.
Orlando vacation, 1 mite to
Disney, 2 heated pools, lakefront, tennis, club house, 1,546
sq. ft,, 3BR.3BAW/D, fully
equipped kit, balcony, sleeps 8.
$275/nt or $l,500/wk. 731-9838.
SERVICES
Childcare in my home, 3rd
shift. 736-6396 leave message.
Lose up to 30 Ibs in 3 mos.
with new herbal diet
tablets. Dr. recommended.
Guaranteed. From $36.50.
R
Call (303) 480-5753
Let me make one thing perfectly clear - your water!
For about 2 cents a gallon
you can enjoy better-thanbottled quality water. Call
651-8644
Need Internet Access?
Complete Internet access
for $12/mo. (50 hours)
MAC, MS-WIN 3.X.95,
OS/2. Call CSRA Internet
Services, 868-0707 .
Get your house cleaned by
an honest, experienced
hardworker. Excellent references. For free estimate
call Lynn (706) 556-9846
Nanny needed: 2 residents seek
experienced nanny to care for 4month-old boy in our home.
Flexible hours needed; some
overnights required. 854-8677.
Needed ASAP: babysitter in
my home M-F 1-6,
Tuesdays 1-8, to care for 5month-old and after-schooler. Arlene, 790-7047 after
6:30 p.m. or any time weekends.
for your children:
A Westminster education!
CALL 724-7772
WALTON WAY JUST OFF 15TH ST
1/2 DOZEN
WINGS
Savory and Delicious!
with bleu cheese and celery, and
your choice of hot, medium, mild or
teriyaki sauce
WITH A 15 OZ.
SOFT DRINK
$199
I
+TAX
153± WALTON WAY AND 2516 PEACH ORCHARD ROAD
We offer a college preparatory education in a
Christian setting featuring individual attention,
excellent academics, athletics, and arts.
Now accepting applications for 1996-97,
prekindergarten through grade twelve.
WESTMINSTER SCHOOLS OF AUGUSTA
3067 Wheeler Road Phone (706) 731-5260
SACS Accredited»Member NAIS
Nondiscriminatory Admissions Policy