Battalion Classifieds Page 6/The Battalion/Monday, October 6, 1986 wmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmrmmmmmmmmmmmmmammaBBmmmmmmmmmmmmm World and Nation NOTIC€ FOR snie 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- men t- 181tfn THIS IS YOUR LAST CHANCE! There’s not much time left to pick up your ’84-’85 Aggieland. 8:30 - 4:30, M - F, in the English Annex. Bring an I.D. or Driver’s License. 24tfn ratraiu'lla's Resale Furniture & F.tc. Bed's, dinettes, touches, odd chairs, frame pictures &• draperies. 1411 San Jacinto 822-4716 ot 822-0226. 25tl0/tfn Honda Interceptor 700, '85. 1800 miles, $2750. or best offer. 696-6225. 26t 10/10 Nice Home! Come see 12x60 two bedroom. Oak For est. Pool, fenced. $4300. 825-2755 collect. 22U0/6 LOOK! A FREE PROGRAM, NO PURCHASE RE QUIRED! IBM COMPATIBLES FROM $595. COM PUTERS, E EC. 693-7599. 22t 10/6 New Surgical Scrub Suits. For Free Information Write: Becky Lynn’s Fashions, 78 Lisa Ave., Kenner, La. 70065. 18H0/7 1982 Honda CB 900 Custom. Good condition, must sell. $ 1500.. will negotiate. 693-2833. 25t 10/9 Honda Accord LX, 1985, 18,000 miles, $8,000. or best offer. PJ at 776-0614 or 845-7826. 23H0/9 100 Watt Bass Amp with two 15" Cabinets. Best offer. 764-7256. 23tl0/7 Mtirrav 10 Speed A I B. Good condition, $90. Call 696- 8240 after 6P.M. 25U0/7 *NEW *COMIC ’BOOKS!! DC. MARVEL, AIL TI TLES. SOME IN DEPENDENTS AT 10—155f OFF COVER PRICE. CALL JESSE FOR INFO. 846- 3068. • 22t 10/6 AixM Winter Ski Weeks to Steamboat, Vail or Keystone with five or seven nights deluxe lodging, lift tickets, mountain picnic, parties, ski race, more, from $142.' Hurry, call Suntilase Tours for more information toll free 1-800-321-5911 TODAY! 2D10/24 '81 YAMAHA 185. Excellent condition with two hel mets. $449.95 negotiable. 846-4692. Call Toni. 23U0/7 TRRV€L FOR fl€NT Extended Special: Cotton Vil lage Apartments, Snook, TX. 1 Bedroom, $150. 2 Bedroom, $200. Call 846-8878 or 774- 0773 after 5 p.m. 8t10 /2i ROOMMATES NEEDED ALL BILLS PAID 693-6716 2t9/ufn l X.- 2 Btltm. Furnished Apts. North Gate C.S. 1st sit eel. A/C.. no pels. (1) 825-27(11. 189tfn Clean one bedroom apartment; quiet neighborhood, water paid. $225/month. Call 823-7011 (776-2116 weekends) Bryan. 22tl0/6 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 TYPING, Word Processing, Bank Statements Bal anced. 696-4446. 26t 10/14 Chaparral Specialties Auto and Transmission Repair. Qtialiiv work, reasonable prices. 823-2886. 600 Wash- mgton St.. Bryan. 26H0/10 TYPING: Accurate, East, Reliable, Word Processing. 7 clays a week. 776-4013. 26U0/6 Help Available - Engrg. Mechanics, Thermo, Math. 846-3147/272-8889. 26tl0/10 Expert Tvping. Word Processing. Resumes. From $1.35 per page. PER EEC I PRINT, 822-1430. 16t 11/26 l YPING B\ WANDA Am kind, am length Rea sonable rates. 690-1 I 13. 20t 10/9 WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu scripts, reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614.9t 10/8 SOS WORD PROCESSING. Bold face, Greek symbols, Underlining, Equations, Boxes, Lines, and Tables for your every need. Speed and Quality with our Word- perfect software and Letter Perfect printer. Chimney Hill Business Park, 268-2777. 10tl0/23 PROFESSORS EXAM FILES for Engineering, Chem- istiv. Calculus. Physics at University Bookstore & Lou- 1 jot's. 3t 11/4 Word Processing. $1.25 per page, discount for large jobs. Call 693-5541 after 5. 24H0/8 H€IP UUflNT€D BURGER KING •Flexible Hours •Excellent Training Program •Opportunity For Advancement Apply 1719 Texas Ave. Culpepper Plaza College Station No Phone Calls Please, EOE M/F/V 25110/6 OFFICIALS WANTED: Anyone interested in officiat ing Intramural Volleyball and Flickcrball should at tend an orientation meeting on Monday. Oct. 6 at 6 P.M. in 174 Read. 26U0/6 GOVERNMENT JOBS. #16.1)40- S.V.1.230, vt. Now hii ing. C.til 805-687-6000 ext. R-9531 lot current led- eiallisl. 194110/15 Full time typist needed. Experience in Word Proc essing. Evenings. 846-3755. 25t 10/16 WANTED INJURY STUDY Recent injury with pain to any muscle or joint. Volunteers in terested in participating in in vestigative drug studies will be paid well for their time and co operation. G & S STUDIES, INC. 846-5933 ns/so Serious Musicians for rock/fusion band/original material guitarist, drummqr, keyboardist needed. 764- 7256. 23U0/7 Guitar Teacher. Part time for theory and technique on accoustic and electric. Keyboard Center, 764-0006 for appointment. 23tll/ll / LOST AND FOUND Gold Lions-Head Ring lost. Worth more to me than to you. Please call 696-8983. 26t 10/10 ’87 SPRING/SUMMER “1'ravel Companions Connec tions.’’ New! Exclusive directory of pertinent informa tion on 10,000 seeking vacation/travel - sharing nation wide. Rush $1.00, postage and handling for complete details and personal data/order form now. T.C.C., P.O. Box 39356. St. Louis. MO 63139. 23tl0/7 Problem Pregnancy? we listen, we care, we help Free pregnancy tests concerned counselors Brazos Valley Crisis Pregnancy Service We’re local! 1301jMemorial Dr. 24 hr. Hotline 823-CARE Auto Service “Auto Repair At Its Best” General Repairs on Most Cars & Light Trucks Domestic & Foreign OPEN MON-FRI 7:30-5:3C ONE DA Y SERyiCE IN MOST CASES CALL FOR APPOINTMENT Just one mile north of A&M On the Shuttle Bus Route 111 Royal, Bryan Across S. College From Tom's B-B-Q 846-5344 Environmental Design and Architecture Supplies • Balsa wood • Lawn • Shrubs • Dirt • Trees • Lichen • Sand We are alw'ays pleased to special order. Keysers Hobbies & Crafts 9-6 Mon-Sat 2021 Townshire 823-0916 STRETCH Your Dollars! WATCH FOR BARGAINS IN THE BATTALION!! Soviet dissident flies to U.S., freedom after internal exile NEW YORK (AP) — Soviet dissi dent Yuri Orlov, freed from nearly a decade of internal exile in the deal that allowed an American reporter to leave Moscow, arrived Sunday in the United States and pledged to continue the human rights work that led to his banishment. “I’m very glad I have begun a free life,” Orlov said, speaking through an interpreter at a brief meeting with reporters after he and his wife, Irina, arrived at John F. Kennedy International Airport about 2:30 p.m. EDT. “I can say whatever I want freely,” he said. “Now, I can speak my mind about how the Soviet Union should develop.” Orlov, 62, has been in poor health but said he felt well. He said he felt “very complicated” about his release to the West. “I’ve left my homeland, I’ve left my native culture, close friends, and this is not easy,” he said. Mentioning other dissidents still exiled in the Soviet Union, Orlov said, “I probably feel guilty in regard to them. Why am I herfe and they are there?” He said he was carrying a “parole letter” that will satisfy immigration authorities, because Orlov had no U.S. visa. Mrs. Orlov was issued a visa Friday. The dissident’s three sons from a former marriage, Alexander, Lev and Dmitri, visited their father for 40 minutes Saturday at Lefortovo Prison in Moscow, Alexander told reporters at the airport. “He looked much like he used to look, except that he has no teeth left,” Alexander said. He said at the prison, they talked “mostly about our family, and the possibility that we will not see each other again.” Orlov, a physicist, had been exiled to Kobyia in the Siberian Arctic since 1984, when he completed a seven- year labor camp sentence for a con viction of anti-Soviet agitation and propaganda. The charges stemmed from his human rights activities in the 1970s. He was co-founder of an unoffi cial group that monitored Soviet compliance with the Helsinki Final Act. Before his arrest, Orlov was one of the Soviet Union’s best-known dissidents. As for his plans in the United States, Orlov said, “I promise not only to engage in scientific research but to go on defending the rights of Soviet people. I will continue to ex press my views.” The Orlovs’ departure for the United States was allowed under a superpower agreement under which American reporter Nicholas Dani- loff and Soviet U.N. employee Gen nadiy Zakharov were allowed to re turn to their home countries. Zakharov was arrested in New York Aug. 23 on spy charges, and Dani- loff was arrested in Moscow on spy charges a week later. The United States insisted Dani- loff was set up in retaliation for Zak harov’s arrest. Mrs. Orlov, 40, bid a half-dozen friends a tearful farewell before dis appearing beyond the customs ter minal. She said Saturday she was worried about leaving her sick mother and hoped to be able to return to visit her. U.S. Charge d’Affaires Richard Combs accompanied the Orlovs on their trip. S. African ambassador nominee needs determination, peers say WASHINGTON (AP) — The day he was sworn in as ambassador to Li beria, Edward J. Perkins was under doctors’ orders to stay in a wheel chair because of recent knee sur gery. Instead, Perkins,, visibly in pain, took the oath leaning on a cane. Admiring fellow foreign service officers who recall that scene in July 1985 say the 6-foot-3 diplomat will need the same strength, grit and de termination in the new job set for him: President Reagan’s envoy to South Africa. For Perkins, the challenge of serv ing as American ambassador to the white-ruled country at a time of mounting violence there and uncer tainty in the direction of U.S. policy toward Pretoria is heightened be cause he is black. His nomination came the same week that Congress overrode a pres idential veto and imposed economic sanctions against South Africa. Perkins is being thrust into public scrutiny after a lifetime of quiet serv ice in the trenches of the U.S. for eign policy bureaucracy. The concern among some blacks, as voiced on Friday by Rev. Jesse Jackson after he unsuccessfully urged Perkins to turn down the job, is that the Reagan administration does not want to confront the South African government in a substantive way so it has opted for a symbolic gesture. “I talked to a black friend of Ed’s who thinks he’s going to get eaten up,” said Arthur Naparstek, a pro fessor who taught the diplomat at the University of Southern Califor nia, where Perkins received a doc torate in public administration. “I think he’s taking the job in South Africa because he believes in the process of diplomacy and that it can work,” Naparstek said. Perkins, who was nominated by Reagan last week and is awaiting confirmation by the Senate, is a 58- year-old Oregonian who broke into the realm of pure diplomacy in 1978 as political counselor at the U.S. em bassy in Ghana. He was appointed deputy chief of mission in Liberia in 1981, served as the director of the office of West Af rican affairs in Washington and went back to Liberia in July 1985 . Iceland seeks Soviet decision on talks site REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP)- Icelandic officials on Sunday made known their growing impa tience with the Soviets for failing to say if they accept the hall pro posed for the Reagan-Gorbachev meeting in Reykjavik. The officials said that with Ice land’s meager technical resources stretched to the limit, they ur gently needed an answer on whetner Moscow accepts the Hofdi, a Reykjavik bayside house, as the meeting place. A Soviet spokesman said he was aware of this impatience and hoped an answer would be forth coming by Monday. The Iceland officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the Soviets were asked to de cide three days ago whether the Hofdi suits them. With the sum mit less than a week away, it would be extremely difficult to come up with an alternative ve nue, they said. The Hofdi, a picturesque two- story building in white clapboard, serves as the mayor’s banquet hall and was sealed off to the public last week. The American advance party in Reykjavik, which has accepted the Hofdi as the site, has been studying security needs and con sidering whether neighboring of fice buildings will have to be va cated. Plans for media coverage are being made, including setting up viewing stands outside the building. But preparations cannot move into high gear until the Soviets formally accept the site, the Ice landic officials said. Vladimir Morozov, deputy di rector of the Soviet Foreign Min istry’s information division and spokesman for the Soviet advance party in Reykjavik, said “mainly some technical problems” were delaying the reply. He said he hoped for an answer “if not to night, then by all means tomor row (Monday) morning.” The Icelandic officials said they were fairly sure the delay stemmed from the cumbersome Soviet bureaucracy. AXfe'rc looking for the best to put in our bag! Texas A&M University Oct. 13 -Informational Meeting 7 p.m.-8:30 p.m. Rudder Tower Oct. 14 & 15-Interviews 9 a.m. Placement Ctr SIGN UP IN PLACEMENT OFFICE