Page 8/The Battalion/Monday, December 8, 1986 Battalion Classifieds • WANTED • HEUPWANTED $20 $20 $20 $20 $20 $20 $20 $20 $20 $20 FEVER STUDY We need to test 4 new thermometers. If you have a temperature over 100°, and have taken no pain medication (aspirin or tylenol), and could use $20 for a short visit call us at 776-6236. $20 $20 $20 $20 $20 $20 $20 $20 $20 $20 68112/17 Patients with “acute diarrhea” (less than 48 hours duration) needed to evaluate potential over-the-counter medication for diarrhea. Volunteers will be paid for time and cooper ation. G & S Studies, Inc. 846-5933 FOR RENT SPECIAL! Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx. 1 Bdrm.: $150./2 Bdrm.: $175. Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5 p.m. 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 ♦ mm FOR RENT 2nd Semester Special! 2 Bdrm. apt $245./mo. Available Now & Dec. 15 Casa Blanca Apts. 846-1413 • SERVICES 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 Room in older home with 3 other female students. Fur nished. W/D, $175./mo. In cludes utilities. South edge of campus within sight of Presi dent’s home and Duncan Hall. Call Laura at 696-8643 after 5 p.m. 822-7321 Newly Remodeled Newly Redecorated Very Large 1 bedrooms from $200. 2 Bedroom, 2 Baths as low as $335. Many Leasing Specials Available! Pool On site staff Sun Deck Security Club Room Laundry Facilites Near Shuttle Large Closets 3200 Pinfeather Professionally managed by Chatham Enterprises 6511/30 • FOR SALE Rangoon red ‘65 Mustang. 14,000 miles on rebuilt V8- 289 motor. Call 846-7856 evenings. 69tl2/12 ABSOLUTELY INCREDIBLE! IBM—PC/XT COM- PATIBLE: TWO 360KB DRIVES. 640KB—RAM, 8/4.77MHZ TURBO, PHOENIX BIOS, KEYBOARD, MONITOR, SOFTWARE: $649. COMPUTERS, ETC. 693-7599. 67U2/10 Aggie Senior Boots for sale. Size 12. $225. Call Ted, 822-3629. 67U2/17 Unset diamond. l/3rd carat. Flawless. $650. 260-6106 or 846-6703 mornings. 67tl2/10 '86 FORD F-150, PS/PB, AM-FM Cassette, bed tool box, big 6 cyl, 4000 miles, standard, factory warranty, buy it for the payoff of $8990., &- if your car runs, I will give you $2000. cash for it. 1-817-829-2445, 1-817-829- 1481, (waco area). 66U2/9 Country Living. 14’x 60’. '77 Sandepoint. 2 Bdrm., 1 bath, on wooded, Vi acre, rented lot. 10 minutes from Vet. School. Good condition. 690-0421. 66t 12/17 Coastal Hay, fertilized. $1.65 per bale. Delivery avail able. Call 845-4921. 68U2/10 3 Seat Sofa, neutral colored Broyhill with oak trim. Ex cellent condition. $300. 693-2058 after 5 p.m. 68t 12/15 Yamaha Maxim 400. Very low mileage. Inquire at 260- 1587. 66U2/9 2nd Semester Private Room - Dorm Plan 2 Persons Per Apt. All Bills Paid / Furnished $170,/Per Month Per Person Casa Blanca 4110 College Main/846-1413 close to campus-quiet-convienient • NOTICE We’re looking tor a fraternity, sorority or large student organization that would like to make $500. to $1,000. + for a one-week long on-campus marketing project. No sales involved. Group must be organized and hard working. Interested? To apply call Andrew at (800)592-2121. 67U2/8 DEFENSIVE. DRIVING, TICKET DISMISSAL, YOU’LL LOVE OUR FUN CLASS! 693-1322.35t 12/17 • TRAVEL Well kept 2 Bdrm., duplex. l l /2 miles from campus. 1- 273-2479. 66tl2/8 Spring Break ’87. Beach and ski breaks available now! South Padre Island, Daytorla Beach, Steamboat Springs, Miami Beach/Fort Lauderdale, Mustang Is land/Port Aransas, Galveston Island and Fort Walton Beach. Call Sunchase Tours Central Spring Break toll free hot line today for information and reservations, 1- 800-321-5911. 64t 12/12 TOTAL MOVE IN $40.00 No Rent Until January ’87 On A 9 Month or 1 Year Lease! Plus, 15 sessions at Total Tan paid for by Country Place Apts. * Only 8 Blocks From Campus! country place apartments 3902 College Main 846-0515 a compass management property 2 Bdrm., large apt. Garage. 415 S. Springs, $300. 413 Nagle, $280. Efficiency $ 180. 779-3700. 67U2/10 5 Bdrm., 2 Bath house, 307 C. Main $500. - apts. near univesity $165. up. 693-0122. 779-3700. 67U2/10 Sublet large efficiency. 550 sq. ft., $275./mo., free de posit. Ceiling fan, newly remodeled. 693-1653.67t 12/17 Sublease 2 Bdrm, 1 Via bath, new carpet, ceiling fan, mi crowave. 696-3253. 67112/10 Preleasing for Spring. Neat Hilton. 2/3 bedroom du plexes. 846-2471 or 693-1627. 50U2/17 Sublease large 2 Bdrm., 2 bath. Near shuttle, pool, laundry. $325./mo. 696-3706. 66tl2/9 Duplex near campus. Jan - May oi future lease. 2 bdrm. 1 bath, fenced yard. No pets. $250. rent. $150. deposit. Call 846-1274, leave message. 67U2/17 Large, nice house - 3 Bdrms., natural wood floors, ga rage, fenced yard. Pets o.k. 5 minutes from campus, off Texas, $450. 696-6657. 66t 12/9 Condo - fireplace, 2 bdrm., 2 bath, private, backyard, w/d conn., clng. fan, 696-9262 after 5 p.m. 65tl2/15 House - very nice. 3 bdrm., 2 bath, living room, den, fenced yard, pets o.k. On Dominik near campus. $495. 696-6657. 66U2/9 CHRISTMAS BREAK EMPLOYMENT Students from Dallas, Ft. Worth, Corpus Christ!, Tyler, and Brownsville needed to observe seat belt use during Christmas Break. 3 Days, $100. Call Julie, 845-5815 69t12yi2 OUTDOOR TRIP LEADERS WANTED to lead day and week end adventure trips. Outdoor skills, first aid certification re quired. For more information call Patsy Greiner, 845-7826. 69t12/17 The Houston Chronicle Has immediate openings for holi day season & spring route car riers. 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 Julian at 693-2323 for an appointment. 67tfn WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu scripts, reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614. 69tl2/15 TYPING: Accurate, 95 WPM. Reliable. Word Proc essor. 7 Days A Week. 776-4013. 69tl2/9 STUDENT TYPING - 20 YEARS experience. East, accurate, reasonable, gnat aineed. 693-8537. 4 1112/17 TYPING BY WANDA. Any kind, any length. Rea sonable rates. 690-1113. 67tfn Typing/Word Processing. Fast. Accurate, Guaranteed. Papers - Dissertations. Call Diana. 764-2772. 66t 12/17 Typing and Word Processing. Thesis. Dissertations, Reports. Reasonable Rates. 693-1598. 62U2/12 GOVERNME/NT JOBS! Now hiring in your area, both skilled and unskilled. For list of jobs and application call (615)859-8155 ext. 8155. 69t 12/8 3000 GOVERNMENT JOBS List $ 16,040 - $59,230/yr. Now Hiring. Call 805-687-6000 Ext. R-9531. 34H2/16 Ideal hours. Sell Eagle subscriptions by phone Monday thru Thursday, 5-8 pm hourly plus commission. Call Shannon at 776-4444 ext. 365. 65tl2/8 ♦ ROOMMATE WANTED Two female roommates. $175./mo. All bills paid. Near Dexter & Jersey. Call Christec or Audrey, 764-1072. 67U2/8 • LOST AND FOCIND Lost Yellow Cat. University Oaks and Munson area. (Large Kitten) 693-8882. 69tl2/12 FOUND, Near Fish lot 2 weeks ago; “Cross” writing in strument. 845-1308. 68tl2/8 “My career in medicine began at only 16, giving vaccinations in the Amazon jungle.” Deborah Berman Nashua, NH Work. Share. Save lives. If you can meet the challenge, your summer in Latin America can bring a lifetime of rewards. To be an Amigos volunteer, write: Amigos de las Americas, 5618 Star Lane, Houston, Texas 77057. Or call: 1-800-231-7796. In Texas, call: 1-800-392-4580. STRETCH Your Dollars! WATCH FOR BARGAINS IN THE BATTALION!! Perot risks $7.5 million in interview DETROIT (AP) — Computer magnate H. Ross Perot, risking slightly more than 1 percent of the $700 million he received for his General Motors Corp. stock, Sunday publicly labeled the automaker as stagnant and uncompetitive. “I just don’t want to be a part of an organization that’s closing plants, laying people off,” Perot said during an interview on the ABC-TV pro gram “Today’s Business.” “I want to be part of an organiza tion that’s growing, dynamic and creating jobs,” Perot said in the in terview, which was taped for broad cast on Sunday. Perot granted the TV interview despite a clause in his buyout agreement with GM that contained a $7.5 million penalty if he further criticized the No. 1 automaker. Perot alluded to the no-criticism clause, saying a fund drive was being created to cover the penalty if it was imposed. “Tom Peters, the author who wrote ‘In Search of Excellence,’ is raising an anti-hushmail fund, so L can speak out,” Perot said. GM had not decided whether to invoke the no-criticism penalty against Perot, the automaker’s chief spokesman said Sunday. The no-criticism clause included a provision that GM complaints lie heard by an arbitration panel consis ting of one person named by Perot, a second named by GM Chairman Roger B. Smith and a third selected by the two chosen arbitrators, GM spokesman Clifford Merriott said. The third arbitrator had not been chosen by Sunday, Merriott said, adding that the panel was created to handle any possible violation of the clause, not just the ABC broadcast. Perot became GM’s largest share holder when GM acquired his Elec tronic Data Systems Corp. in 1984 and he served on GM’s board of di rectors. In the “Today’s Business” inter view, Perot said he did not seek Smith’s ouster as GM chairman. GM has announced several plant closings and indefinite layoffs that are expected to eliminate more than 30,000jobs. Slouch By Jim Earle “And then he asked if I thought he ought to buy a textbook for the course. ” Tree farms sprout in Louisiana fores! in time for holidat ■ I PORT VINCENT, I^i. (AP) - Not all that long ago, if Louisiana city folks wanted a real Christmas tree, the choice was limited to those stacked in lots along the highway. But as more and more Christmas tree farms sprout up in the state, more and more people are packing the kids into the car and driving into the country to choose their own green, growing pine. “It’s a happy business,” Carolyn Antle, 39, says. “We work all year long wondering, ‘What are we doing this for?’ then for three weeks we know.” Antle runs Antic’s Pine Patch in Port Vincent with her husband, Jerry, 49, and their sons, aged 12 and 14. Antic’s is among 89 choose-and- cut tree farms listed as members ol the Louisiana-Mississippi Christmas Tree Association, which has head quarters in Starkville, Miss. Ten years ago, about 97 pm ol the natural trees sold in Lwi were trucked in Irom mu ofsa says A Lien Main, a forester witis LSI Extension Service. Now, he says, Louisiana a farms are a $4 million busines<:! state expects to market ab 200,000 trees this season, hesak 50,000 wholesale and therestkri or at choosc-your-own ope& like the Amies’. Three-quarters of Ixuiisiaiu* dents live within 50 miles ofoki these farms — close enoughfi family trip, says Hob Milkanca I .SC Extension Serviceforesier Mrs. Antle says, “It’sataosilJ time lot me. I don’t workoulsiki home. But I’ll be in the fieldiwf three days a week ai lean.S times of the year we’ll beoulll every day.” Jewish students return to beliefs in crash course at rabbi college MORRIS TOWNSHIP, N J. (AP) — Moshe Isenberg has let his black beard get bushy. He wears a black hat and a black jacket, and has im mersed himself in Hasidic study, prayer and life. The 34-year-old former Yale doc toral student isn’t studying to be a rabbi. He is one of about 100 stu dents at the Rabbinical College of America taking a crash course in Ha sidic Judaism. “And when we’re through here, we will return to our chosen profes sions,” Isenberg said. “But we will return as better-educated Jews.” Started in 1972 as an alternative to traditional Hasidic study, the pro gram in which Isenberg is enrolled — New Directions — is a sort of catch-up program for men who want to return to the Orthodox fold.' It condenses into two or three years what usually is taught in 12. The college also offers an accred ited four-year ordination program for rabbis. But school officials say New Directions is the only such pro gram in the nation. Rabbi Israel Gordon, director of administration, called the program “our feather in our cap.” The Rabbinical College of Amer ica, founded 30 years ago in Newark with only a dozen students, has grown to 300 students from 24 states and 10 countries, school officials say. In 1981, the college moved from a two-story house to its current site, a former reform school for Catholic girls. As the college grew, it became an important part of the international Lubavitch Movement, a sect of Ha sidic Judaism. Hasidism was founded in the 18th century in Poland by a group of mystics to bring Judaism closer to the ordinary person, not just the well-educated, and to enrich the emotional content. Like other Or thodox Jews, Hasidic followers be lieve in strict obedience to Jewish laws and customs found in the Scrip tures and the Talmud, a 1,500-year- old collection of Judaic law andfl losophy. School officials said that I most New Directions studentst from non-observant household: program is designed to merse them in the structumil and rigorous studies of the 4 nary. Students pay $6,500 a yearii j ition, financing their sic:j through financial aid, scholars^ and savings. Most are single; get help from working wives, can stay in the program as lo they wish, but most stay two todii years. While the schedule leaves! time for outside activities,mand dents said they have not lif estyle too constricting. “I’m sure it’s not muchdifc from a Wall Street lawyerwh in 14-hour days," Isenberg! “We’re here because we want®| here.” Gold Coin Jewelry We carry a complete line of Gold Coin Jewelry and also buy, sell and trade rare coins. The perfect gift this holiday season. Lay-away Now for Christmas < A. ii J 404 University Dr. College Station • 846-8905 3202A Texas Ave. Bryan 779-7662