Battalion Classifieds Page AFThe Battalion/Wednesday, August 6,1986 NOTIC€ If you still haven’t picked up your 84-85 Aggieland, you can still do so by coming to the English Annex Monday thru Friday, 8:30 - 4:30. Bring your school I.D. or a drivers license. i84«n If you ordered an 85-86 Aggieland but will not be here next fall you can pay $3.50 and we will mail it to you. Come by the En glish Annex M-F, 8:30 - 4:30. A&M student swinging to break recor FOR ft€NT • POOL •CLl'B BOOM • 3-LAl'NDHY ROOMS •LARCESTORAGE •24 HR EMERGENCY ■ MAINTENANCE $210 ON SUMMER LEASES ONLY. LIMITED ON EFFICIENCY AND 1 BEDROOMS. ALL BILLS PAID! Starting at $260 jS&k country place 3902 COLLEGE MAIN apartments 846-0515 822-7321 Newly Remodeled Newly Redecorated y Large 1 bedrooms from $245. idroom, 2 baths as low as $335. any leasing specials available On site staff Deck Security Room Laundry Facilites Shuttle Large Closets 3200 Pinfeather, Bryan Professionally managed by Chatham Enterprises 185t8/27 ,uul three bed- I llll CH/.TIC IW a amwai. a «.av» rooms, with washer and dryer connections. Eire place, tc-iling fans, and fenced yards. 84<)-2471. 846-8730, 603-1627. University Rentals. I’.O. Drawer CT. College Station. 77840. Efficiency. All bills paid. $175. 2 Bdrm. house, 4402 Poplar. $325. 2 Bdrm. apts. $200. & up. 779-3700. K 187t8/12 FOR snu Cushman 3-wheel pickup, make offer. Mornings and after five. 696-3171. 184t8/6 Ladies Schwinn 10-speed, $150. or best offer. New, 1- 825-3513 after 6 p.m. 187t8/12 scRvices ON THE DOUBLE All kinds of typing at reasonable rates. Dis sertations, theses, term papers, resumes. Typing and copying at one stop. On The Double 331 University Dr. 846-3755 iset Mobil Town Mobile Home Park 400 Ehlinger Dr. Bryan 822-5358 Spaces $110. 2 Bdrm homes $150. and up Bus - Poo! - Private 2 miles north of Skaggs off College Avenue Recent sports injury to wrist, knee or ankle? Severe enough pain to remain on study up to 10 days and 5 visits? Volunteers will be paid for their time and cooperation. G & S Studies, Inc. 846-5933 „„ TYPING: Accurate, East, Reliable, Word Processing. 7 davs a w eek. 776-4013. 188t8/13 Word Processing: Proposals, dissertations, theses, manuscripts, reports, newsletters, term papers, re sumes. letters, 764-6614. 179t8/6 H€IP UURNTCD THE HOUSTON CHRONICLE Has immediate openings for route carriers and/or sales solicitor posi tions. Carrier positions require working early morning hours deliv ering papers and can earn $400. to $600. per month plus gas allow ance. Call Andy at 693-7815 or Ju lian at 693-2323 for an appoint ment. 181tfn FREE SERVICE! Let Student Apartment Locators help you find the right apartment, condo, duplex, or house and, re ceive a FREE PHONE ANSWERING MACHINE. Come by 403 B University Dr. W. in Northgate, or call 846-1087. 18718/8 By Suzie Brawley Reporter With the mercury reaching near record highs in Bryan-College Sta tion this summer, it would be nice to spend the afternoons swinging in a hammock. But mornings, af ternoons and nights for 10 consec utive days? J.D. Joyce, 19, of Bryan plans to swing for 240 hours straight to raise money to fight multiple sclerosis and at the same time break the Guinness world record for swinging in a ham mock. If successful he will tie the Guiness record today at 10 p.m. ness record, but . . . the main thing is to raise the money,” Joyce said. He said he first got the idea to raise the money when his sister-in- law, Darbie Joyce of Dallas, was diag nosed as having multiple sclerosis, a degenerative disease that affects the central nervous system. Joyce, a sophomore business ad ministration major at Texas A&M, began swinging July 29 and hopes to raise $10,000 before he calls it quits Aug. 15. “I would like to break the Guin- TVPIN'G: Accurate & Fast, call after 1:00. nnvtime weekends. 776-401.3. 172t8/2 Typing. Editing, and Library Research Assistance. Call for details. 779-8376. 167t9/3 Expert Ty ping. Word I’rocessing. Resumes. Accurate. East. 1‘ERFECT PRINT. 822-1430. 159t8/27 Typing, Word Processing for Dissertations, Thesis, and Term Papers. 693-1598. 187t8/15 On campus tunitnission sales yvork. 693-9984. High coiuinisMim possible. I75tln WALK TO CAMPUS! 2 Bedroom fourplex from $275.00. 690-2140. 690-0066. 185t8/27 Lot Rent: Condo. I Bdrui.. 1 Bath, bus mute. (214)495-2123. y/d. niicroyvave. 17918/15 PERSONALS SlL’)U. .‘S Bclim. 2 Ba. T-plex. neai 1 AML’. Appliances, gut age. H46-6211. 179i8/27 Nice. I.AR<;E. Bdrm house. Ciaiage. fenced sard. 3 minutes f rom campus.off Texas. S430. mo. 696-6637. 18318/7 Room in lovelv home, near campus. Private entrance, hath. 846-0919 after 6:00. 187t8/8 Sell or lease condo in Woodstock. 2 Bdrm.. furnished, bus route, pool. S450./mo. (713)376-7115. 182t8/12 Call Battalion Classified 845-2611 Joyce has raised about $2,300 so far, but said he is confident he’ll make his $10,000 goal. He set up the hammock and a large shade tent behind JD’s Old- Time Sno-Cones, the business he op erates during the summer. Joyce has been operating the snow cone stand for three years. He said he has received a lot of support from his customers as well as from his family and friends. His cousin Ken King and friend Roland Tieh will be working for half price at the snow cone stand while Joyce spends his days and nights swinging. “I’ve spent about $500 setting up this event, and I’m not going to take any of that out of the donations I’ve received,” Joyce said. “All the money will go for MS research.” Although Joyce can take a break for five minutes each hour, he said he is accumulating his break time in case any problems occur during his attempt to break the eight day and four hour record. He needs to have enough time to make repairs in case something breaks, he said. He swings the hammock, which is suspended between two poles, by tugging one of the ropes strung through pulleys on either side. One of the problems Joyce faces is getting enough rest during the 240- hour event. “If I give the rope a good, hard tug, the hammock will keep swr* ing for about two to five ininuit Joyce said. “I’ll be able todozeofl: little and when the hammockco close to stopping, someone can my name, and I II give it anoil tug.” He said two adult observers be present at all times to makes® he keeps the hammock swings since he must do it himself witL. help. He said he needs morevolu teer observers and that anyoneime ested can sign up for an hourai, time. He said there are a feweniti slots toward the end of the week Donations can he made to Suit: ing for Multiple Sclerosis, 360(1! Texas Ave., Brvan, 77802. People interested in volunteei time to be official observers mav 846-9748 between 5 p.m. and9a to sign up for a time slot. Libertarians praise budget deficit AUSTIN (AP) — The state’s $3.5 billion budget deficit is a “Godsend” because it will give lawmakers the chance to reduce the size of Texas government, the gubernatorial can didate of the Libertarian Party said Tuesday. “It is a golden opportunity to re duce the size of government, 1 ” Theresa Doyle, a San Antonio travel agent, told a news conference Tues day at which the party announced its November candidates. William Howell, a Dallas book keeper, said he was running for lieu tenant governor on the platform of abolishing the position. “Eight other states don’t have this office and don’t need it,” he said. George Meeks, a San Antonio businessman who said he spent 14 months in federal jails because of tax protests, challenged incumbent Democratic Comptroller Bob Bul lock to debate. Meeks claimed Bullock had vio lated the U.S. Constitution by ac cepting “pieces of paper” instead of the legal tender of gold and silver in payment of state debts. The party announced that it had completed its ballot drive by submit ting more than 39,000 signatures of voters to the secretary of state on July 17. The check of the petition is due to be completed Sept. 10. Study: White males more prone to heart disease CHICAGO (AP) — White males may be naturally more susceptible to coronary heart disease than black males or women of either race, a long-term study by researchers at Louisiana State University suggests. The difference is in the way cer tain proteins that either promote or prevent the buildup of cholesterol in the bloodstream behave in growing bodies, according to the study di rected by Dr. Gerald Berenson. While all children experienced a drop in both types of proteins — and total cholesterol levels — in early adolescence, white boys experienced an inordinate drop in the level of the proteins that prevent cholesterol buildup, Berenson said in a tele phone interview Tuesday. Researchers gathered data on about 8,000 subjects, one-third of them black and two-thirds white, in the 15-year project, which is still un der way. The subjects, living in Bo- galusa, La., ranged in age from early infancy to 26 years, Berenson said. The project is the first large-sam ple study to use measurements of apolipoproteins, a protein compo nent, according to Pediatrics, the journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics, which reported the find ings in its August issue. The study also is unusual in using childhood data to suggest a hered itary link among apolipoproteins, cholesterol and coronary heart dis ease, said Howard Lewis, a spokes man for the American Heart Asso- white men are more prone to coro nary heart disease than other groups, Berenson said. “But most of our attention to heart disease looks at end-stage, cri sis medicine,” he said. “We’re looking at the early natural history where it begins.” He said researchers found the be ginnings of coronary heart disease in children as young as 3 years old, with black children actually showing more cholesterol in their blood ves sels and arteries. Coronary heart dis ease is a result of artherosclerosis, the blockage of arteries by choles terol, Berenson said. ciation. Researchers have long known that Women of both races tend to de velop heart problems more slowly than men, he said. White's speech to House, Senate to be beamed statewide ■ s i RA 1 Ip) — i urnphant ■ what lit cle match I Then tl htive calle 7(l-minutt ileclia ap] his son ai ■iitum O' I “It did ■cEnroe, since mid ■ ad Gill tourname a flow. P ■ere." ■ With li I ing, Met ■used sab ■nmd vii ■ugoslas i haematic AUSTIN (AP) — Gov. Mari] White’s speech to a joint ineeiin; of the House and Senate todai opening day of the 30-day speca I legislative session, will lie beaniec to television stations across Test at White’s expense. The speech, expected to ux about 30 minutes, will begin a; noon, two hours after the Legis lature formally convenes for ikt i| u [ ts 0 [ special session called to closetkT recomnu state’s $3.5 billion budget deft HOLS ommittc Houston ihanges s athlet Imphasis raduate The c< Ann Arnold, press secretary. Idmissioi and finar I But scl llose the ition of I Houston I The t\ t he governor! Tuesday said While’s remarks will lie offered live, via saitellite, to station! around Texas. The costs are be ing picked up by the governin'■ered by of ficeholder account, which is ■his veai made up of private donations. football ] j [eceived White paid about 51,600 Iasi /eluding 1 month to offer TV stations his3- minute speech July 17, when he announced the date for thespe cial session. _ Berest!om A.E.B. lias a position for Golf Course Su- perintencleiit/Ground Maintenance, L'A-9, Regular full time. Salats $21,804. per annum. First closing.date is close of business das 8 August 86. Position is open until filled. For more information come to Civilian Per sonnel office. Bergstrom Air Force Base. Tx. 186t8/8 STRETCH Your Dollars! WATCH FOR BARGAINS IN THE BATTALION!! GOVERNMENT’ JOBS. S16.()40-$59.230/yr. Now hir ing. Call 805-687-6000 ext. R-9531 for current federal list. . 167t8/14 Pan time Dental Assistant Position. Experience nec essary. Applv 2101 T exas Avenue. C.S. 179t8/8 Part Time: Apply at Pipers Gulf Service Station, Texas Avenue at University Drive. 182t8/7 Dcspciatelv seeking name and number of beautiful blonde diivei of white Ford Escort with New Jersey plates. 846-3340 evenings. 183t8// Battalion Classifieds Call 845-2611 US, NEW DEADLINE! Faculty advisors and students should make sure that their stu dent organizations are participat ing in 4r MSC OPEN HOUSE 4 4-8 p.m. Sept, 7, 1986 MSC Open House is the four hour showcase of over 200 student or ganizations. It traditionally has been the best way to recruit new members. Make sure your group is registered before the August deadline. Applications are avail' able in room 216 of the MSC. fc seconc Tuesday football. |vas blea! A coi tnvner Tr< I T()I lino’s players ory of J>laque |Vorld ( His r he lege < H is t Jhis quit l.ihiade h I Irev |wo U. British For mor e information, call Ruth Frank Open House Chairman or Terry Marsa' program advisor, at 845-1515. 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