The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 16, 1987, Image 4

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    Page 4/The Battalion/Wednesday, January 16, 1987
Battalion Classifieds
* FOR RENT
it-? r&TZWF*
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
65t1/30
NOW IS YOUR CHANCE TO
LIVE IN
OAK FOREST MOBILE
HOME PARK
A Few Lots Are Available
Call Now !
693-5206
301 KrenekTap Rd.
College Station
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
49t11/19
2nd Semester Special!
2 Bdrm. apt. $245./mo.
Available Now!
Casa Blanca Apts.
846-1413
SPECIAL!
Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx.
1 Bdrm.: $150. / 2 Bdrm.: $175.
Call 846-8878 or
774-0773 after 5 p.m.
V. Iking distance to campus and only $230. 2 Bdrm., 1
!‘ Ji, newly painted with carpet. 308 Wellborn Rd.
816-9077. 78tl/30
2Va bdrm, 2 bath townhoiise, dose to campus.
$400./month. (713)440-0264. 78tl/22
Near TAMU, nice brick, 3 br., 2 bath, LR/DR, den,
> itral beat-cool, fence, pets o.k. $475. month. 696-
6637. 78tl/23
ROOMMATE WANTED
Share house with 3 other univer
sity female undergraduates.
Across Jersey from bonfire area,
within sight of Duncan Hall.
$175./mo., furnished, including
utilities & laundry. Call 696-5286.
7711/14
Female roommate needed. Private bedroom 8c bath.
$165. plus utilities. 846-1534 evenings. 78tl/20
# FOR SALE
Is it true you can buy Jeeps for $44. through the U.S.
government? Get the facts today! Call 1-312-742-1 142
ext. 8390. 77U/14
* NOTICE
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 46t11/26
INCREDIBLE INFORMATION!!!
Earn up to $600. per week & drive
a new Mercedes without cost. Call
615/292-6900 ext. M161
HELP WANTED
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
Fleetwood Mobile Home. Perfect for students. Now -
; ■ : rational, home later. 14 x 80, 3 bdrm., 2 bath, pro
fessionally refurbished, new carpet, vinyl, paint. Lo
cated between nice quiet neighbors in Bryan Trailer
Park. If you’re looking for an above average used
home - tliis one’s for you! Bryan - 822-7548, Houston -
(713)946-4667. 78tl/22
\&M students. Townhouse, 4 blocks from campus. 2
BR & loft, 2 baths, $400./mo. (713)440-0264. 75tl/20
1 Bdrm., furnished apt, bills paid. 415 Main. Two bed
room apts, furnished, $250. Efficiency, bills paid, $175.
779-3700. ' 74tl/14
Hunter's Creek Stable - New management, excellent
facilities, within College Station city limits. 693-6482,
696-1905. ' 77t2/10
• HELP WANTED
Earn $6. to $8. per hour.
Domino’s Pizza is now hiring
drivers. Must have own car
and insurance. Full and part-
time. Flexible hours. Apply 2
p.m. to 5 p.m. at 4407 S.
Texas Ave. 7 «,i/pr
Seeking Actors, Dancers, Singers
& Technicians for paid positions
with “TEXAS” Musical Drama.
On Saturday, January 24, audition
at University of Texas in Austin,
noon to 4 (Dancers at 3), Ballet
Room #1172 in Drama Building.
Performances outdoors in Palo
Duro Canyon near Amarillo,
Texas, June 10 - Aug. 22, 1987.
Rehearsals begin May 17. More
information, call 806-655-2181 in
Canyon.
College coed to assist professor’s wife with baby and
home care, 6 to 8 hours per week. 696-74 14. 78tl/2 1
> SERVICES
UNLIMITED
UNCONDITIONAL
TYPING
student material
any number of projects/pages
FOR ONE FULL YEAR
FAST PROFESSIONAL QUALITY
24 HOUR TURN AROUND
GUARANTEED
OR YOUR MONEY BACK
ACT NOW!
OFFER EXPIRES UPON RECEIPT
OR FIRST 1000 CUSTOMERS
Jim Coy, SC-4, Dept, USS TISDALE
FFG-27, FPO San Francisco, CA.
96679-1483
Name
Address
City State-Zip—-—
7811/14
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
The
Battalion
Division of Student Publications
Department of Journalism
Texas A&M University
College Station, Texas 77843
SALES OFFICE
ENGLISH ANNEX
Ross Street, Campus
PHONE: 409-845-2696 or 7
BUSINESS OFFICE
Room 230 Reed McDonald Building
Ross and Ireland Streets, Campus
PHONE: 409-845-2611
LOCAL DISPLAY AD RATES
Monday*
Tuesday
At Ease
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
$5.39 if less than 50 inches $5.67
$5 11 from 50 to less than too $5 38
$4 85 from 100 to less than 250 $5 11
$4.69 from 250 to less than 500 $4.94
$4.32 from 500 to less than 750 $4.55
$3 77 from 750 to less than 1,000 $3.97
$3 25 from 1,000 to less than 2,000 $3.42
$2.72 2,000 or more $2.86
'Back to School edition Monday, Sept. 1, 1986, will be
charged at higher rate.
Special rates for officially recognized Texas A&M
Campus organizations.
Classified Display: $5 70 per column inch.
Classified (regular): 30 cents per word with minimum
charge of $3 for each day. If ad runs consecutive days, to
tal charges will be reduced 10 percent for each added day
up to maximum of 40 percent deduction for 5 days or
more.
Color: Only spot color available. Charge for each time
run. in addition lo column inch charges: $50 if in At Ease
or on Monday or Tuesday (with exception of Back to
School issue which is charged at higher rate): $90 if ad
runs Wednesday, Thursday or Friday. Color limited to ads
60 inches or larger.
Inserts: Pre printed material will be inserted into only non
mail copies of The Battalion, and will be charged at $50
per 1,000 copies, or $45 per 1,000 if 15,000 or more are
inserted. (Special reduced rate is available on most Fri
days for first customer.) Minimum inserting order is 5.000.
Delivery of inserts must be one week in advance, properly
bundled, boxed or stacked on skids. If insert has unusual
folding or is unusual shape, size or stock, sample must be
submitted before final acceptance, and will be rejected if
mechanical inserting is impossible.
Reverses and double burns: $10 each in addition to
other charges.
Collector
returns gear
to TV hero
Waldo
by Kevin Thor
BEAUMONT (AP) — Two re
volvers, holsters, a sterling silver
buckle and silver bullets belonging
to the actor who played the Lone
Ranger on television have been lo
cated and will be returned, a Beau
mont lawyer said Tuesday.
The gear was bought by a collec
tor who didn’t realize it was reported
missing by Clayton Moore after a
Christmas Eve flight from Houston
to Los Angeles, attorney Lum Haw
thorn said.
The equipment was packed in a
suitcase that didn’t arrive in Los An
geles.
WHILE THE LITTLE BUG6£*S
APE IN COLORADO RPEAKINC,
THEIR LEGS, THE FACULTY
CONTINUES THEIR DEBATE
OVER THE CORE CURRICULUM...
PLATO.
PROTONS.
PLATO.
PROTONS.
I
PLATO'
I
PROTONS
TfiST£5 L n
G, fit AP Rlli <
[
The collector, who wished to re
main anonymous, asked the lawyer
to return the memorabilia after he
found out the actor was looking for
them, Hawthorn said.
Moore will receive his belongings
today by Lederal Express, Hawthorn
said.
Researcher: Lavender seen
provides aid for alertness
Chun King Restaurant is now hiring part time waitper-
sons and busboys. Please apply in person. 1673 Briar-
crest Drive at Ardan Center. 774-1 157. 78tl/19
Experienced telephone solicitors needed. Good hourly
wages. Evening hours preferred. Please call Ray. 693-
2323. 78t/ufn
2 Aggies to work weekends on ranch in exchange for
rent in C.S. apartment. 696-7414, 845-3012. 78tl/19
2 coeds to share apartment in exchange for accounting
and/or babysitting and light housekeeping work; apart
ment provided is near TAMU. 696-7414, 845-3012.
78tl/19
2 Aggies to work apartment maintenance in exchange
for free rent. 696-7414 or 845-3012. 78tl/l9
“We’ve had a lot of fun with them
in the office,” he said. “Everybody’s
been strapping them on and playing
like the Lone Ranger.”
He said the silver bullets are in
scribed, “Lone Ranger 45.”
“They don’t fit his gun,” the law
yer said.
Los Angeles officials confirmed
the equipment was Moore’s after the
lawyer described it Tuesday.
Moore, who still plays the Lone
Ranger at special appearances, did
not return telephone calls by the As
sociated Press to his home.
But authorities told Hawthorn
that Moore had received many calls
from hucksters offering to send
Moore what they said was the miss
ing gear — for a price.
By Polly Bell
Reporter
Throw away those Vivarin boxes.
Trash the NoDoz. Now there is a
better solution — the smell of laven
der.
During the first two years of a
five-year study, Dr. Gary Schwartz, a
professor of psychology and psy
chiatry at Yale University, has exam
ined physiological and psychological
responses of 40 Yale students to four
fragrances: eucalyptus, lavender,
lemongrass and peppermint.
Through this study, Schwartz has
found the smell of lavender in
creases alertness.
Lavender scored highest in the
students’ evaluation of the fra
grances that made them alert, al
though the students also reported
the lavender smell made them feel
tense, Schwartz says.
Eucalyptus also induces alertness,
he says, but not as much as lavender.
The fragrances were tested in
very strong concentrations, he says.
“The effects of different fra
grances vary as a function of their
concentrations,” Schwartz says, "so
what may he pleasant smelling at one
concentration becomes unpleasant
at another concentration.’’
Even those subjects who didn't
like the smell of lavender and who
tried to avoid it with shallow breath
ing found that it made them feel
alert, he says.
But not all the fragrances tested
were stimulants, Schwartz says. The
peppermint fragrance, for example,
is relaxing, he says.
“Even though we associate pep
permint with being stimulating,
when they (students) smelled the
peppermint, they felt relaxed,” he
says.
Schwartz says this is just one of
many studies he has done. The study
of the effects of fragrance on emo
tions is called aroma science.
One of the reasons Schwara
ducts this research is because;
one of the least understoodofj
human senses, he savs.
"It turns out the senseohu
directh connected totheeir
centers of the brain,” Schwara
“so we re trying to undersiai:
emotions of the brain. Studiir;
grance is just a good tool font
Another reason for the ret
he says, concerns the potential
cations of f ragrance to healths
“Since ancient times, dill
kinds oi f ragrances havesupp
had healing powers, but scieoi::
search of this kind has neve
documented," Schwartz says./
may l>e more things to discoie
we’ve failed to realize.”
Schwartz savs he now is do:
search on the spiced apple an
found its scent reduces sue
high blood pressure.
Entrepreneurs mix learning, profits
Student businesses going strong
By Kristin Theodorsen
Reporter
An education is essential for many
students to realize their dreams of
owning a business, but some ambi
tious students enhance their educa
tion by creating enterprises while
still in school.
Alejandro Botello, a senior indus
trial distribution major from Mexico
City, started his own business to get
something more out of his educa
tion. Botello says it began when he
brought a model airplane from Mex
ico and his friends wanted one.
have suffered, but he’s obsessed with
what he’s doing.
“It’s like gambling,” he says. “I
just can’t stop buying merchandise. I
tell myself I won’t buy any for a
while, but then a dealer calls and
makes me an offer I just can’t refu
se.”
Since Botello enjoys his business
so much, it takes puoyity over
school. &...->■•
“Sometimes I start losing interest
in school because I really don’t learn
anything practical,” Botello says. “If
will tell you he's not going to lx* suc
cessful if he’s only doing it for the
money,” Knowles says. “Money is
definitely an incentive, but the main
reason is the feeling you’re working
for yourself . You’re your own boss.
“You get to take full credit for all
the good things that go on, but then
again, you also have to take the
blame for the bad things.”
Financing a new business can be a
problem, Knowles says, and the time
involved is worse.
“I looked through a trade mag
azine and saw that the same airplane
was worth $25,” Botello says. “So, I
bought some in Mexico for a dollar
(each) and started selling them for
$3. They were a big hit.”
Botello’s initial investment was
minimal.
“I started out with $20,” he says,
“and whatever I made from that, 1
just invested again.”
Botello since has expanded his
product line to include T-shirts,
plastic model robots and Japanese
animation books.
Botello works out of his apart
ment, which is cluttered with stacked
boxes of merchandise, and makes
much of his money by setting up
booths at science fiction conventions,
he says.
But Botello says money isn’t the
reason he started his own business.
“The money I make just goes to
buy more stuff to sell,” he says. “I
really just do it for kicks.”
Because his business is very time-
consuming, Botello says his grades
“Almost any entrepreneur usually will tell you he’s not
going to be successful if he’s only doing it for the
money. Money is definitely an incentive, but the main
reason is the feeling you’re working for yourself. ’’
Bryan Knowles
you memorize something from a
book, you’ll probably forget it the
next semester. But if you just re
member the basics from a class, you
apply those basics in real situations.”
After he graduates, Botello says,
he’ll probably work at his father’s
neon sign shop in Mexico.
“I’d really like to continue what
I’m doing after I graduate,” Botello
says, “but in order to make money
doing this, you have to sell very high
volumes of merchandise.”
Bryan Knowles, publicity chair
man for Entrepreneurship and New
Ventures, a Texas A&M club, says
many students have successful busi
nesses while still in school.
“Almost any entrepreneur usually
“Grades always suffer a little bit,”
Knowles says, “but like they say,
‘The other education is also impor
tant.’ ”
Entrepreneurs have a feeling of
accomplishment, he says.
“I would rather walk into work ev
ery day and say, T own this, it’s mine
and all these people work for me,’ ”
Knowles says, “than to walk into
work every day and say, ‘Yeah, this is
where I work.’
“1 think entrepreneurship is more
of a personality than anything.”
Shawn Hoelzel, a senior account
ing major from Dallas, got his start
in entrepreneurship when he had
his own lawn maintenance business
in high school.
In 1982, Hoelzel and four
people pooled their moneyafc
aled the Dixie Rose Co. The in
tial investment was about Jl/'i
says.
“After the first week,”
says, “it (the operation) pretn
paid for itself.
Hoelzel and his associates
brid tea roses over thetelephs
fore each home football garat
vertisements are placed
campus and in The Battalimi'
before each game, he says.
Hoelzel and his partnersei
swer t he phone and take«
about 25 hours a week, he says
“The business is pretty mud
f ree because we take the oi
advance,” he says, “so we
good idea whether we’re going;
good or not.”
In 1983, Hoelzel and hisbi
branched out and started a
nursery in Dallas.
Hoelzel suggests students
ested in having their own bus
should start one up while the
still in school.
“It’s better to start pram
while you have such a big man
he says.
It’s also important to make
nections in school and to gel
people to promote ideas, hesass
But it’s tough to stay interest
school when a business is sue#
Hoelzel says.
“Since I have two successful
nesses,” he says, “I kindofba«
attitude, ‘Why should I goon
school?’ but I want that dept'
know I’m going to work form 1
but I want it for the satisfaction
SCHULMAN THEATRES
2.50 ADMISSION
1. Any Show Before 3 PM
2. Tuesday - All Seats
3. Mon-Wed - Local Students With
Current ID’s.
4. Thurs. - KORA “Over 30 Nlte”
•DENOTES DOLBY STEREO
PLAZA 3
226 Southwest Pkwy 693-2457 |
"MOSQUITO COAST pg £^1
THE GOLDEN CHILD pg-is ]
THREE AMIGOS pg siaof
MANOR EAST 3
Manor East Mall 823-8300
LITTLE SHOP pg-13 7 30
OF HORRORS 9 40
*LADY AND g 7 10
THE TRAMP 9 00
‘STAR TREK IV «
SCHULMAN 6
, 2002 E. 29th 775-2463
‘KING KONG LIVES pg-i 3 HU
CROCODILE DUNDEE pg-is IU
KKYS 105 Presents
$ DOLLAR DAYS $
This Week’s Features Are:
PEGGY SUE GOT MARRIED pg 13
COLOR OF MONEY r IU
SOUL MAN pg 13 £31
TOP GUN r
Pearls! Pearls! Pearls!
Give that someone special
something special this
holiday season.
0 carry
complete line of
bracelets, earrings
and necklaces
Lay-away Now for Christmas
yr-r
< <
404 University Dr.
College Station
846-8905
3202A Texas Ave.
Bryan
779-7662
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