Battalion Classifieds Page 6/The Battalion/Thursday, October 23, 1986 World and Nation S€flV1C€S 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 With Mary Kay Try Before You Buy So you never buy the wrong product or shade again. For a complimentary facial, call for an appointment. Inde pendent Beauty Consultant, M. Cyn- 36110/24 Expert Typing, Word Processing, Resumes. From SI .35 pet page. PERFEC T PRIM , 822-1430. 16t 11/26 TYPING BY WANDA. Am kind, am length. Rea sonable i atev 696-1 I 13. 3<H 10/23 Piano lessons in your home. Experienced teacher, rea sonable rates; must be near campus. Call Lisa 846- 7626. 35t 10/23 WORD PROCESSING: Dissei tat ions, theses, manu- xi i ipt\. lepoits. lei m papeis. resumes. 764-6614. 29t 1 1/5 *ROI KSSORS EXAM EILES lot Enpiiu-iiinn. G1>«'m- Mt\. Calculus. I*1»\sics at ITiivorsiiv Hunkxtnri' & Lm»- h.iV 3lll/4 FOR SRt€ Kawisaki Ninja - 600 R. 1986. Blue, 2,000 miles with extras. (iall 846-8823. 39t 11/5 *84 Riva 125 Yamaha Scooter. With locking trunk, bas ket. and wind screen. $950. Call 696-0771. 39t 10/24 GOLF CLL’BS. MacGregor Pio Models w/ bag. Used, S150. 764-7290. 39t 10/23 White laquer Scandinavian bunkbed set $300, two matching white desks $200, two matching three- drawer chests $200, total set $600. l-279-250735tl0/24 PRO PART'S. 3.VJI S. IVxas. Bivan. 84(>-(>(>(>ti. ITntxi Mullins. 89.95. Headers. S 19.95. Wheels, t iles, and 1 tilth Caihuielois. 29110/29 1983 Honda Aero 50, Low mileage and runs great $300,696-9389. 38tl0/27 1985 Honda Spree - Low Mileage - Storage Area - Basket $400. 1-588-1460. 36U0/24 1981 Yamaha 650 Special II. $700 runs well. Great for campus. 693-2584 mornings/eveings. 36tl0/24 UJRNTCD CASH for gold, silver, old coins, diamonds Full Jewelry Repair Large Stock of Diamonds Gold Chains TEXAS COIN EXCHANGE 404 University Dr. 846-8916 3202-A Texas Ave. (across from El Cfwco.Bryan) 779-7662 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 1t9/30 H€IP UUflNT€D HEY AGS! Get Involved In Politics And Earn Money Too. Republican Candidate Needs Workers Nov. 1 - 4 Call 764-1986 for details. 38t 10/22 THE HOUSTON CHRONICLE Has immediate openings for route carriers. Carrier positions require working early morning hours delivering papers and can earn $400. to $600. per month plus gas allowance. Call Andy at 693-7815 or Julian at 693-2323 for an appointment. 38tu(l FORfl€NT 1 & 2 Bclrni. Furnished Apts. North Gate Cl.S. Isi street. A/G, no pets. (1) 825-2761. 189tln 2 bdrm, 1 bath house. $250/month, w/d connection. 2 blocks from campus. 696-2883/days; 693-7404/eve- nings. 38t 10/28 Reagan approves tax overhaul Ri ‘to keep America competitive’ in 3 bdrm, 2 bath, on fenced 3 acres. $500/month &r deposit. 822-3519. Very nice. 38t 10/28 1 -bdrm furnished apartment. Wish to sublet ASAP. $3()0/month (neg.). Call 846-0515 Ask about #1102. 36t 10/24 Need female roommate for 2-bdrm 1-bath. $112.50/mo. 822-3091. 35tl0/23 Part-time help. Grapevine personality. Call 696-3411. 39tfn HELP WAN FED IMMEDIATELY to work ap proximately 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Friday assisting in presswork for The Battalion. Work is dirty, but no experience required; $3.35/hour as student worker. If you’re interested, dependable and available during that time any of the days, call 845-2646 or stop in Room 230 Reed McDonald Building and check with Don Johnson. 38tufn NOTICC Proctor & Gamble sales orientation. Reception at Holiday Inn- College Station. Oct. 27 7 p.m.-9 p.m. Refreshments will be served. DEFENSIVE DRIVING, TICKET DISMISSAL, YOU'LL LOVEOUR FUN CLASS! 693-1322.35112/17 WASHINGTON (AP) — With the stroke of several pens and a renewed vow to oppose tax increases. Presi dent Reagan signed into law on Wednesday a far-reaching tax over haul that he termed a victory for fairness and nothing short of a revo lution. “I feel like we’ve just played the World Series of tax reform,†Reagan said after, using a fistful of pens to pul his name to the 879-page bill printed on artificial parchment. “And the American people won.†“This is a tax code designed to take us into a future of technological invention and economic achieve ment, one that will keep America competitive and growing into the 21st Century,†Reagan (old an ap plauding crowd of aides, a dozen members of Congress and scores of corporate officials invited to the cer emonies on the sunny South Lawn of the White House. He praised members of Congress and of his administration who led the fight for the bill, which he termed “the most sweeping overhaul of the tax code in our nation’s his tory.†He mentioned the two chief authors of the measure, Sen. Bob Packwood, R-Ore., who did not at tend, arid Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, D-III., who did. The new tax plan, which Reagan put at the top of his second-term agenda, is patterned after the one he sent to Congress May 19, 1985: sig nificantly lower tax rates and a tax base broadened by elimination or re duction of several deductions and exclusions. Most provisions take effect next Jan. 1, although many will he phased in gradually. The new law will cut taxes by an average of 6.1 percent for three-quarters of Americans and raise taxes on corporations by $120 billion over the next five years. By 1988 the top individual tax rate will be cut to 33 percent from the pre sent 50 percent; the 40 percent max imum corporate rate will drop to 34 percent. The Tax Reform Act of 1986 will affect every person who pays a fed eral income tax and sweep onto the tax rolls many wealthy investors and profitable corporations that have been able to legally avoid the Initi- nal Revenue Service through jut ( ions use of deductions. More than 20 million couples a: individuals, including several mil dle-income families whose ratem will not make up for lost deduclio;: will lace lax increases in 1981 je beyond. Some deductions beingcumilt asateam ate the same ones favored bv mii dle-income families: Individual ft tirement Accounts, sales taxes,® sinner interest, medical expense, union dues and — for thosetsit don’t itemize — charitable gifts. On the other hand, thelawgnf uallv i .rises the SI,080 person^ exemption to $2,000 and subsiat tiallx boosts the standard deduct! : You step fro jany mon Vou ball team Back outs wht Back . The 1 Itheir rei outhwe 10-15, L Rice, wh B5-11 an< 3000 GOVERNMENT JOBS List $ 16,040 - $59,230/yr. Now Hiring. Call 805-687-6000 Ext. R-9531. 3402/16 LOST FIND FOUND A&M 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.! Hurrv, call Sunchase Tours for more information toll free 1-800-321-5911 TODAY! 21tlO/24 S€flVIC€S 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 Hilt Business Park, 268-2777. TYPING: Accurate, fast, reliable. Word Processing. 7 days a week. 776-4013. 39ll<>/23 lass announces execution of man accused of spying I Obvioi Livens w performs Editing/Proofreading. Dissertations, theses, ail longet manuscripts. L.L. Carlisle - 696-3657. 39tl 1/26 /V\ISC€llflN€OUS John Lyons Horse Training Clinic. Brazos County Ro deo Arena. Nov. 1-4. For info, call Jana - 589-3026, Donna - 779-8659. ‘ 39tll/3 PREGNANT? Child Placement Center offers free counseling to help you cope with your unplanned preg nancy. Call 696-5577 MOSCOW (AP) — The official Soviet news agency T ass on Wednes day announced the execution of a Soviet man who was accused of working for the CIA and reportedly was turned in to the KGB by Ameri can defector Edward Lee Howard, a former CIA employee. Lass did not say when the Soviet, Adolf Tolkachev, was executed. Spy trials and executions are not always reported by the Soviet press, and when they are, the reports sometimes come long after the trials take place. The announcement of Tolka- chev’s execution came during a pe riod of heightened Soviet-U.S. ten sion over a series of diplomatic expulsions. A military tribunal convicted Tol kachev of “high treason in the form of spying,†Tass said. The agency said Tolkachev was executed after an appeal was turned down. Executions in the Soviet Union normally are carried out by firing squad. Pass described Tolkachev as “a staff worker of a Moscow research institute.†It said he was arrested by the KGB, the Soviet secret police, and “exposed ... as an agent of U.S. intelligence.†The agency did not say when Tol kachev was arrested or when he was put on trial. “It was established in the course of the investigation that Tolkachev, in pursuit of selfish ends and on ac count of his hostile attitude toward the Soviet state, had maintained es pionage contacts with U.S. intelli gence agents who had been in Mos cow under the guise of LI.S. Embassy personnel.†Tass said. It did not list the charges against Tolkachev. The Los Angeles Times, quoting unidentified sources, reported from Washington earlier this year that Tolkachev had been executed be cause of information provided by Howard, who defected to the Soviet Union in August. The newspaper said Howard sold the KGB the names of the CIA’s en tire Moscow network. “He wiped out Moscow station,†a U.S. official was quoted as saying. World Briefs Surgeon General offers advice on AIDS Of- WASHINGTON (AP feting a prescription for avoi dance of AIDS, the surgeon gen eral counseled Americans Wednesday to disdain “casual sex" and begin sex education for children as early as the third grade. Dr. C. Everett Koop, rele til,- ini-r#* ixiiwr i ienev syndrome, said thedisfast ilready has killed 15,000 people isinut a report lem of acquit President Reagan had asM Koop to put together a reportn- plaining the disease. In his re jmm t, the surgeon generalsaided- iiiation and so-called "safe set' arc ke\ weapons against AIDS- unlil vaccines and effectivetreai- merits are developed. This Givens sa I “That the South I “Even them, nof | In the But looki had to g( They knev whipping I The A; points an< Meese launches new porn campaign WASHINGTC AP) >ld a news conferen tornev General Edwin Meese oi n will implement most of tht Wednesday launched a nation i- recommendations made in wide campaign against hard-cor e by the Attorney General's C pornography, creating a tas k mission on Pornography. force of prosecutors in the Justic e An anti-smut unitolatle; Department so that the SB billiot n half-dozen feiler.il attornevs smut industry can fie “pursuet tl liegin work within 30davsiti with a vengeance and prosecutei tl Justice Department’s criming to the hilt.†1 B()ST< lomered added am pitching held off Wednesd World Set Suicide survivor urges choice of life Ker AN FRANCISCC ineth Baldwin kn was a horrible mist a I merit his hands slippe railing and he piling Golden Gate Bridge. But hit k gave Balds other chance, and tlu heat 100-1 odds of sr AP he’s “thrilled to be alive’ urges others who are com plating suit ide to give lifeanc chance. More than 1,200 people an lievrd to have gone over br idge’s edge since it opene 1937, according to the Califo Hi vli wav Patrol. Nineteen live I Carter’ scoring as the fourtl Barter A pitched in Hosed Nc Survey shows money is main cause of family quarrels NEW YORK (AP) — Money is the leading cause of family arguments in America, people are borrowing record amounts to maintain living standards, and a third of U.S. adults believe their sex lives could improve if they were wealthier, according to a survey released Wednesday. “Americans and Their Money 1986,†spon sored by Money magazine, also found that 80 percent of those surveyed prefer U.S.-made goods but believe foreign products are more eco nomical, 54 percent favor import taxes to protect domestic manufacturers, and only 19 percent support the sweeping new tax law. Cither findings in the 262-page national sur vey: 45 percent of those surveyed were dissatis fied with their financial situation; more people think President Reagan’s policies have hurt than helped this past year; one in 10 households has no savings; and women were only about half as likely as men to understand common financial terms, such as “Dow Jones Industrial Average." The annual survey was released at a news con ference by Money magazine, a monthly owned by Time Inc. It was done by Lieberman Research Inc., .i New York-based txillster that hi dm ted the survey since its inception in I9f While the proportion of debtors in the rose slightly, from 70 |K*rcent in 1985to tent this year, the average amount the' jumped nearly 22 percent, from J3W 1 540,000, mostly from consumer borrow! survey found. Results of the survey were based on two interviews, with a 2 percent to 3 nercentn of error for the questionnaire and 4 percei peti ent for the telephone interview. ET YESTERDAYS Daily Drink & Lunch Specials Billiards & Darts Near Luby’s / House dress code 846-2625 Marines** 1 Wre looking for a few good 846-8891/9036 Earn $480. weekly - $60. per hundred envelopes stuffed. Guaranteed. Homeworkers needed for com pany project stuffing envelopes and assembling materi als. Send stamped, self-addressed envelope to JBK- Mailco, P.O. Box 2p-24 Castaic, California 91310. 37t 10/31 Salesperson wanted: to sell t-shirts and party favors. Call or write to Bill; 4027 Guadalupe; Austin, TX 78751.(512)452-8495. 37t 10/28 Sell roses in nightclubs. Salary plus commission. 822- 7606 after 5 p.m. 38U0/23 $100 reward for trombone lost near east Kyle during 'Tech game. No questions asked. Todd 846-7443. 35t 10/30 CIGARETTE PAPER RETAILER You are authorized to aclasou'i? for redemption ot this coupon Wewtl'frtvt you 504 plus 8® handling providing i the consumer have complied with ItieWiC'' otter Void where prohibited, taxed or resMt7 law Good only in US A Cash valueIM<^ consumer must pay any sales tax AnyoK’-t constitutes fraud Mail coupon to Reput/t fe Co., PO Box 730335, El Paso, TX 799/3 coupon per purchase 7^063 IDOOI]