Page S/The Battalion/Tuesday, December 8, 1987 World and Nation • FOR RENT Looking for a quiet place to live? Townshire Manor Apts. 401 Lake-Bryan 822-7178 or 268-8620 Professionally managed by On-Line Property Managers. Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx. 1 Bdrm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $248 Rental assistance available! Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5pm. • FOR SALE 1976 Datsun Truck $500. Good condition. Call 696- 8383 price firm. 66112/9 TAKE OVER 5 ACRES. NO DOWN. $49./mo. Beauti ful trees. GREAT HUNTING. Owner: (818) 363- 7906. 65U2/9 COMPUTERS ETC. 693-7599. LOWEST PRICES EVER! EBM-PC/XT COMPATIBLES: 640KB-RAM, 2-360KB DRIVES, TURBO, KEYBOARD, MON ITOR: $ 599. PC/AT SYSTEMS: $899. 1 tfn Aggie Throw Quilts. Taking Limited Orders For Christmas Delivery. $43.95. 779-3550, 696-2038. 62tl2/10 1982 Ford Granada. 4 door, low mileage. Family car, extremely well cared for. $3750. 845-5803, 778-1235. 49U2/8 • WANTED Stanford University Professor and wife. Happily mar ried for many years. Anxious to adopt newborn infant. Personal meeting welcome. Lawful and proper preg nancy related expenses paid. Couple approved by Cali fornia adoption authorities in advance of placement. State supervised adoption procedures. Please call col lect Terri and Michael Fayer (415) 328-8723. 68tl2/l 1 Treehouse Village furnished 1-1. Sublease $465./mo. Call 845-7773 or 693-5102. 69tl2/ll 2 Bdrm, 1 Bath large windows & tall trees. $410./mo. Normandy Square Apts, in Northgate. 764-7314. 69tfn 3-2 Duplex for rent. 693-4335. Carport, washer/dryer connection. Call anytime. 69t 12/11 Sublease Efficiency Apartment. All bills paid except electricity. Call 764-1633. 69tl2/l 1 Have.Condo Qality @ Apt. Prices. 2-2 1000 sq. ft. Close to University. $335./mo. 693-1254 or 845-2244 after 1pm. 69tl2/l 1 2-1'/It apt. @ Peppertree $375./mo. Unfurnished. Free cable. Call Patti 696-5408. 69tl2/l 1 Sublease Treehouse Village Apt. Skip the waiting list. $300. 696-4392. 67U2/10 Walk to A&M (Northgate). 2 Br/1 Bath, $250-285./mo. Call 776-2300, wkends 1-279-2967. 67U/21 One bedroom, quiet, wooded, convenient area. Half month free. 846-6473 evenings. 65tl2/4 3-2 Apt. in Tanglewood. $485./mo. All Bills Paid. 693- 7401. 65tl2/8 Pre-leasing 3 BR/2 BA Duplex near Hilton. 846- 2471/776-6856 63t/indef. Rooms for Rent, ( all Mrs. Thomas 696-1072.63t/12/l 1 A Luxury Fourplex, 2-lki, appliances, washer/dryer, ct. heat/air. $325./mo. 303 Manuel Dr. 696-0551, 696- 0632. 46tfn Luxury 4-plex Apartments. Available for Dec. or Jan. move in. Call WYNDHAM 846-4384. $350./mo. 68t 12/11 • HELP WANTED SEMESTER BREAK WORK Earn $500 to $1,000 between se mesters in your hometwon, Dallas- Ft. Worth, Houston, Austin, Waco, San Antonio. Flexible hours. Full or part time. All majors considered. Ex cellent work reference. Apply: T.M.S. Enterprises Rudder Tower: Mon., Dec. 7, Rm 507 Tues., Dec. 8, Rm 704 10am, 12pm, 2pm, 4pm ONLY La Quinta Inn, 607 Texas Ave. Mon., Tues., Dec. 7,8. 8pm only (No Phone Calls) 67ti2/e CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING. M/F | Summer & Carer Opportunities (Will Train). Excellent pay plus world travel. Hawaii, Ba hamas, Caribbean, etc. CALL NOW: 206-736-0775 Ext. 466H i9ttn Need students to work during Xmas vacation to assist with research project. Must type and be familiar with computer $3.35 hr. 846-7224 or 845-4611 69tl2/8 Graduate students needed for notetaking for spring se mester. Must type & be dependable. Excellent oppor tunity for T.A.’s. Please call 846-2255 or come by 112 Nagle for interview. 67tl2/l 1 I 8c 2 bdrm. apt. A/C 8c Heat. Wall to Wall carpet. 512 & 515 Northgate / First St. 409-825-2761. No Pets. I40tfn • ROOMMATE WANTED Searching for a new roomate 3-2 House $125. a month 823-0340 after 5p.m. 63t/12/ll Roommate Wanted: Furnished, two bedroom, iVtz bath townhome. 846-9579. $187.50/mo. 66tl2/9 Roommate Wanted. 2 bedroom, iVlz bath. $165./mo. Phone 696-1312 after 1pm. 66tl2/l 1 m PERSONALS Regular Part-Time: Need dependable persons to work 3-4 hours daily, late afternoons in dispatching office. Figure transport trailer loadings for food manufactur ing plant. Contact Mr. Ronn Weatherford 778-6600. 67tl2/10 Babysitters Needed Jan. 4 1:00 p.m.-5:30 p.m. Week days. Infant and two children after school,nonsmoker- ,reliable transportation 690-0146. Leave message.67tl2/ll Now hiring cashiers part-time mornings & afternoons. Farm Patch Produce Market. Call and ask for Lisa. 779-7209. 66tl2/ll C Programmer, full-time. Assembler, expert systmes, and knowledge of Naval Warfare helpful. 1805 Briar Oaks, Suite B, Bryan, Tx 77802. 62tl2/10 Looking For Guy Who Returned Lost ECON203 Note- # SERVICES book With Turtle. 764-9738. 68tl2/l 1 mmmtmrnmmmmammMmtm ♦ NOTICE $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 HEADACHES We would like to treat your tension headache with Tyle nol or Advil and pay you $40. CALL PAULL RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL 776-6236 23110/2 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 WANTED: Individuals with fre quent aches & pains (arthritis, burcitis, joint pain, headaches, long term sports injuries) who reg ularly take over-the-counter pain medication to participate in an at home study. $40 incentive for those chosen to participate. Please call: Pauil Research International 776-6236 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 • TRAVEL TYPING, EDITING, WRITING. Articles, papers, newsletters. Words Worth. 690-1553. 69l 1/21 TYPING: Accurate, 95 WPM. Reliable. Word Proc essor. 7 days a week. 776-4013. 69U2/8 TYPING AND WORD PROCESSING. FAST, REA SONABLE, QUICK TURNAROUND AVAILABLE. 693-1598. , 5D12/11 Experienced librarian will do library research for you. Call 272-3348. 67tl2/10 WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu scripts, reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614. 49t 12/8 Typing, Word Processing. Reasonable rates. Call Ber tha 696-3785. 52U2/9 VXfcSATILE WORD PROCESSING - BEST PRICES. FREE CORRECTIONS. RESUMES, THESES, PA PERS, GRAPHICS, EQUATIONS, ETC. LASER QUALITY. 696-2052. 163tfn DEFENSIVE DRIVING TICKET DISMISSAL, IN SURANCE DISCOUNT. CLASSES EVERY WEEK!! 693-1322. 24tl2/16 Typing, Word Processing, Resumes. Guaranteed error free, from $1.35/page. PERFECT PRINT. 822-1430. 42tl2/9 * AmOONCEMENT New Credit Card!!! No one refused!! Also information on receiving Visa, Mastercard with no credit check. For details call: 602-248-0770 Extension 505. 69t 12/8 ♦ LOST AMDFOUND Lost 8mm pearl earring between Health Center & U.P.D. Sentimental Value. REWARD! 696-1960, 845- 5221. 69t 12/11 Spring Break '88 trips available now! Your choice: South Padre Island; North Padre/Mustang Island; Gal veston Island. Texas. Daytona Beach; Fort Walton Beach; Miami Beach; Orlando/Disney World, Florida. Hilton Head, South Carolina or sking at Steamboat, Colorado. All the most wanted destinations at discount prices. Cal! toll free for complete Sunchase Tours Sev enth Annual Spring Break Bash color brochure and reservations today. 1-800-321-5911 63t 12/11 LAST CALL FOR SKIERS: Additional space added on Sunchase ToursvSixth Annual Collegiate Winter Ski Breaks to Steamboat, Vail, Breckenridge or Winter Park from only $154 including five or seven nights lodging, lifts, picnics, parties and races. Over 4,000 participating so far! Call toll free for full color bro chure and reservations 1-800-321-5911 TODAY! 68U/20 • FOR SALE EMERALD FOREST, $97,900 •Spacious 4 bdrm., Corner Lot '* Ener 9y Efficient, Family Mf. Home John Clark 268-7629 R5*WfiKB-CS Realty Across from Hilton 49t11/9 MUST SELL! New apt, size washer/dryer. CHEAP! Graduating 846-5967. 67tl2/10 ROUND TRIP AIRLINE TICKET. HOUSTON TO ST. LOUIS. LEAVE 12/23, BACK 12/31. $50. BOB K., 845-6424. 67U2/5 Honda Aero 125 Scooter. Asking $600. Call Andy at 693-7683. 67tl2/10 R.T. Continental plane ticket. Houston/L. A.X. Dec. 19- 30th.; $24 n Rhonda 825-7213/845-1468. 67U2/8 Call Battalion Classified 845-2611 Three-term senator announces retirement caused by ‘burnout’ WASHINGTON (AP) — Senate Budget Committee Chairman Law- ton Chiles of Florida announced Monday he will retire because of job “burnout,” becoming the third Sen ate committee chairman to an nounce he will not run for re-elec tion in 1988. “I just wasn’t looking forward to another six years in the Senate,” Chiles said at a news conference. “Maybe at some stage there is a little burnout.” The three-term senator said he wasn’t worried about competition in WASHINGTON (AP) —The Su preme Court said Monday it will consider killing a lawsuit that seeks to strip the Roman Catholic Church of its tax-exempt status because of the church’s anti-abortion lobbying. The justices agreed to decide whether “pro-choice” organizations and individuals have the proper le gal standing to sue the federal gov ernment over the church’s tax status. Monday’s action spares, for now, the U.S. Catholic Conference and the National Conference of Catholic Bishops from having to pay $100,000 a day in contempt-of-court fines for not surrendering informa tion sought in the suit. In the Catholic Church case, a MOSCOW (AP) — Thousands of Soviets are streaming to the United States to settle or visit relatives who emigrated in the 1970s, creating an 11-hour workday for officials at the U.S. Consulate and opening up new channels of contact between the su perpowers. The increase in the number of So viets going to the United States is part of an overall shift in Kremlin emigration policies in the months leading up to this week’s U.S.-Soviet summit meeting. Thousands of Jews, ethnic Germans, Armenians and others have left permanently or for visits to the West this year. Jewish emigration, a hot political issue in the West, is nowhere near his re-election campaign, and his health remained good despite open- heart surgery two years ago. “I think our campaign was in very good shape,” Chiles said. “It was the next six years that I was concerned about, not the campaign.” Chiles, 57, is the youngest of the three Democratic senators not seek ing re-election, all of them commit tee chairmen. The others are Sens. John Stennis, 86, of Mississippi, head of the Appropriations Com mittee, and William Proxmire, 72, of 1980 lawsuit seeks to force the gov ernment. to revoke the church’s tax- exempt status, assess millions in back taxes and order that money donated to the church not be claimed as char itable tax deductions. The suit says the government, by not forcing church compliance with the federal tax code’s limits on the political efforts of tax-exempt groups, is giving the church a sub sidy unavailable to pro-choice groups that are not tax-exempt. The suit originally named the church and its various agencies as defendants, but they were dropped from the case in 1982. U.S. District Judge Robert L. Car ter in New York City ruled, how- the peak reached in 1979, when more than 51,000 Soviet Jews left for Israel or other Western nations. However, emigration and private trips are up sharply from 1986, when only 914 Jews and 698 ethnic Germans emigrated all year and only 500 Soviets, most of them offi cials, made it to the United States each month. At the U.S. Embassy, the boom in emigration and visitor applications means the consulate, usually de serted on most weekday afternoons, is jammed with Armenians and other Soviets. “It’s like the Metro out there,” U.S. Consul-General Max Robinson said, gesturing to the consulate’s Wisconsin, chairman of the Banking Committee. Republicans Paul Trible of Vir ginia, Dan Evans of Washington and Robert Stafford of Vermont also have announced plans to leave the Senate. Chiles had already raised $1.3 million for his re-election campaign in spite of a $100 limit on contribu tions to his campaign, Dennis Beal, Chiles’ budget spokesman, said. The campaign was already looking at ways to return the unspent money, he said. ever, that the church was in civil con tempt after it refused to supply certain records to those suing the government. Lawyers for the church and its agencies contend they should not be held in contempt because the under lying lawsuit is flawed. But the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last June rejected the church’s arguments that the pro- choice groups and individuals who sued lack the proper legal standing to do so. Monsignor Daniel F. Hoye, gen eral secretary of the National Con ference of Catholic Bishops, said Monday he considered the Supreme Court action an encouraging sign. main room but referring to the busy Moscow subway. Each day the applicants arrive by the dozens, sometimes hundreds, to present their Soviet documents au thorizing the visit. Piles of visa application forms in Russian and extra chairs have ap peared to cope with the flow of Sovi ets. This week, a team of six experts from Washington is on hand to com puterize the consulate files “because we’re so busy,” Robinson said. The consular staff generally start work at 8:30 a.m. and are often around until 7:30 p.m. to process visa applications, he said. With Chiles out of the race, seve ral Democrats were expected to con sider bids for their party’s nomi nation, including Rep. Buddy MacKay, who unsuccessfully ran for the Senate in 1980, and Rep. Bill Nelson. On the GOP side, Rep. Connie Mack had already entered the race against Chiles. After Mack came for ward recently and said he had smoked marijuana, Chiles admitted he too had tried the drug. Chiles entered the U.S. Senate in 1971, after earlier serving 12 years in the Florida legislature. He won the 1980 statewide election after touring the state on foot, and be coming known as “Walkin’ Lawton.” Chiles took over the chairmanship of the budget committee this year, after toiling for six years in the mi nority when the Republicans con trolled the Senate. Cniles, a moder ate, proposed reducing the deficit with tax increases and spending cuts. But he was frustrated by months of stalemate, and then he partici pated in the four weeks of closed- door talks that produced a budget pact with the White House. Tumbling oil prices worry OPEC NEW YORK (AP) — A glut of supplies with no place to go, to gether with worries that this week’s OPEC meeting could make matters worse, sent oil prices broadly lower Monday. On the New York Mercantile exchange, contracts for January delivery of West Texas Interme diate, the benchmark U.S. crude oil, closed at $18.25 per 42-gallon barrel, down 49 cents from Fri day. Among refined products, con tracts for wholesale heating oil tumbled by 1.33 cents a gallon, to 54.93 cents a gallon, while whole sale unleaded gasoline closed at 46.84 cents a gallon, down 1.11 cents. “It was just a general lack of buying,” said Madison Galbraith, senior energy specialist at Merrill Lynch Energy Futures. John O’Dea, manager of inter national energy futures at Dean Witter Reynolds Inc. also said lack of demand “was the major criterion.” Court may halt lawsuit allow church to stay tax-exempt Soviet emigration increases Banks may have lowest earnings since ’34 WASHINGTON (AP) — The na tion’s banks earned a record $5.8 bil lion last summer but still may end the year with the lowest overall earn ings since 1934, the government’s Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said Monday. FDIC Chairman L. William Seid- man blamed the prognosis on con tinued economic problems in Texas and other oil-industry states, com bined with large write-offs taken in the April-June quarter to cover Latin-American loan losses. Separately, the Federal Home Loan Bank Board said 10 percent of the nation’s approximately 3,000 savings and loan institutions are now insolvent, with about one-third of these insolvencies occuring in Texas alone. The nation’s savings and loans lost $1.6 billion in the July-September quarter, a slight improvement from the previous quarter, the regulatory agency said. Meanwhile, commercial bank fail ures this year have already climbed to a record 173, and may reach 200 by year’s end, Seidman said. He said nine banks failed last week alone, the record for a one- week period. There were 144 bank failures last year. Seidman said the number of bank failures would narrow next year, but not by as much as originally ex pected — largely because of contin ued bank failures in the Southwest. “Clearly, the economy in the Southwest is not improving,” he told a news confernce. “Right now, we do not see any recovery in the figures. Oil prices have gone down and there’s great uncertainty on where they will go in the future.” The FDIC said the rebound in profits in the third quarter followed a record loss of $10.6 billion in the second quarter. “Banking profits are on a roller coaster this year,” Seidman said. He said the upswing was due in part to higher interest rates, which boosted yields to banks on loans and investment securities; and in part be cause major banks put fewer dollars into reserves during the period. The large sums put in reserve in the second quarter as a hedge against anticipated later losses on Latin American loans “substantially reduced the the need for these banks to add to reserves during the third quarter,” the FDIC said. Despite the continued bleak out look for the Southwest, the overall profitability of small banks, partic ularly in the Midwest, has been im proving this year in a reflection of a better farm economy. Also, the October stock market plunge “has resulted in an increase in bank deposits,” the FDIC said. It did not specify to what extent. In response to questions, Seidman said it is still too early to tell what overall impact the stock market col lapse will have on the banking sys tem. In a separate report Monday, the Federal Home Loan Bank Board said the 3,178 savings and loan insti tutions it insures suffered net losses in the third quarter of $ 1.6 billion — up from losses of $1.8 billion in the second quarter. The board said 934 S&Ls lost as total of $3.1 billion in the third quar ter. Of this group, 318 were insol vent and posted net losses of $2.3 billion. Insolvent Texas S&rLs accounted for 61 percent of the losses. “The impact of Texas on industry earnings underscores the urgency the bank board attaches to complet ing a study now under way to deal with the troubled (savings and loans) in that state,” said James R. Barth, the board’s chief economist. With the insolvent S&Ls sub tracted from the totals, the industry showed net earnings of $713 million in the third quarter, compared with second-quarter earnings of $582 mil lion. The bank board has closed or otherwise liquidated 28 insolvent S&Ls and plans to take similar action against 16 more before the end of the year, Barth said. He said the board plans to close an average of one insolvent savings and loan a week in 1988. 817 South Texas Avenue across from Eastgate, next to Red Lobster in College Station $49 Puts You On The Right Side Of The Tracks. It’s two minutes until your class starts in Kleberg and you’re stuck in Blocker—on the wrong side of the tracks. Scooter Brown's can get you there on a Honda Spree for only $49.00 per month. It's the scooter leasing plan Aggies have been waiting for! The Spree is easy to operate with an automatic transmission, electric start and incredible gas mileage—over 100 mpg. Eliminate your parking problems and get to class with time to burn. Call Scooter Brown’s today at 693-7360.