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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 9, 1987)
Page 8/The Battalion/Wednesday, December 9,1987 Battalion Classifieds • FORREJ1T 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. THE GOLDEN RULE Fall or Spring Openings for Men and Women Christian-like, non-smoking Telephones in Deluxe Apts. UTILITIES AND CABLE PAID Free Laundry, Storage, Bus CALL/ASK: 693-5560 After 4pm $150./mo. Share B/B, $250./mo. Own B/B 3t9/4 ESSAYS & REPORTS 16,278 to choose from—all subjects Order Catalog Today with Visa/MC or COD KHZm 800-351-0222 ■aFiMTUlW In Calif. 12131477-8226 Or, rush $2.00 »o Assays & Reports 11322 Idal^Ava. ,r?06-SN. Los Angolas, CA 90025 Cus"'/' research at. 'i syllable—all levels Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx. 1 Bdrm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $248 Rental assistance available! Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5pm. Pre-leasing ? 2471 /770-6856 2 BA Duplex near Hilton. 846- 63t/indef. Rooms for Rent. < all Mrs. Thomas 696-1072.63t/l2/11 Sublease Treeho $300. 696-4392. Walk to A&M (Northgate). 2 Br/1 Bath, $250-285./mo. (Jail 776-2300, wkends 1-279-2967. 67tl/21 1 Sc 2 bdrm. apt. A/C 8c Heat. Wall to Wall carpet. 512 & 515 Northgate / First St. 409-825-2761. No Pets. 140tfn * NOTICE ACUTE DIARRHEA STUHY Persons with acute, uncom plicated diarrhea needed to evaluate medication being considered for over-the- counter sale. G&S Studies, Inc. 846-5933 $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: Pauli Research International 776-6236 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $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 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40 f MtSCELLANEOaS , Cute black cat needs a home. Call 693-0165 after 5pm. 70U2/10 • PERSONALS • TRAVEL 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! 68tl/20 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. Call toll free for complete Sunchase Tours Sev enth Annual Spring Break Bash color brochure and reservations today. 1-800-321-5911 63tl2/l 1 • FORSALE NEW LISTING, $59,900 •Fixer-upper, behind Luby’s fjfcvu •Huge lot, great potential wzHy •Financing available •Call John Clark 268-7629 3-CS Realty Acrocc from Hilton 48111 /6 TAKE OVER 5 ACRES. NO DOWN. $49./mo. Beauti ful trees. GREAT HUNTING. Owner: (818) 363- 7906. 65112/9 Aggie Throw Quilts. Taking Limited Orders For Christmas Delivery. $43.95. 779-3550, 696-2038. 62tl 2/10 COMPUTER'S ETC. 693-7599. LOWEST PRICES EVER! EBM-PC/XT COMPATIBLES: 640KB-RAM, 2-360KB DRIVES, TURBO, KEYBOARD, MON ITOR: $599. PC/AT SYSTEMS: $899. Itfn 1976 Datsun Truck $500. Good condition. Call 696- 8383 price firm. 66112/9 MUSI SELL! New apt. size washer/dryer. CHEAP! Graduating 846-5967. 67tJ 2/10 Village Apt. Skip the waiting list. 67tl2/10 BOUND TRIP AIRLINE TICKET. HOUSTON TO ST. LOUIS. LEAVE 12/23, BACK 12/31 $50. BOB K., 845-6424. 67tl2/5 Honda Aero 125 Scooter. Asking $600 Call Andy at 693-7683. 67tl2/10 * WANTED innm i One bedroom, quiet, wooded, convenient area. Half month free. 846-6473 evenings. 65112/4 Luxury 4-plex Apartments. Available for Dec. or Jan. move in. Call WYNDHAM 846-4384. $350./mo. 68tl2/l 1 Treehouse Village furnished 1-1. Sublease $465./mo. Call 845-7773 or 693-5102. 69U2/11 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. 69tl2/l 1 Sublease Efficiency Apartment. All bills paid except electricity. Call 764-1633. 69tl2/ll 2-1apt. @ Peppertree $375./mo. Unfurnished. Free cable. Call Patti 696-5408. 69tl2/l 1 ♦ ROOMMATE WANTED Male 4-2 house, Bryan $132.50./mo. + Vi utilities. 823- 0384 ask for Darrin. 70tl2/l 1 FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED to share 1-1 apart ment for spring. January rent paid. 696-3861 Missy. 70tl2/l 1 Female neded to share 2-2 apt. Close to campus. 764- 9698. 70tl2/ll Roommate Wanted: Furnished, two bedroom, 1 Vz bath townhome. 846-9579. $187.50/mo. 66tl2/9 Roommate Wanted. 2 bedroom, iVi bath. $165./mo. Phone 696-1312 after 1pm. 66tl2/ll Searching for a new roomate 3-2 House $125. a month 823-0340 after 5p.m. 63t/12/ll Cotton Tickets Wanted 4 together or 2-2 will add extra $30. for your time & effort Sc reimburse phone call. (713)645-0923 Art or Pam. 70tl2/ll 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 Payer (415) ^8-8723. 68tl2/l 1 • HELP WANTED OPPORTUNITY for MARRIED STUDENT Manage & maintain mobile home park & rent houses Housing & Salary negotiable For info, call 693-2339 70112/11 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 i9tfn COUNSELORS - Girls camp in Maine. Good sal., room 8c bd., travel allowance, beautiful modern facility, must love children & be able to teach one of the following: Tennis, W.S.I., Sailing, Waterski, Softball, Basketball, Soccer, LaCrosse, A&C, Photography, Horseback, Dance, Piano, Drama, Ropes, Camp Craft, Gymnastics. Call or write: Camp Vega, Box 1771, Duxbury, Mass. 02332. (617) 934-6536. 64tl2/2 WANTED: BASKETBALL OFFICIALS. Anyone in terested in officiating Intramural Basketball should at tend an orientation meeting on Mon. Jan. 18, 1988 at 6pm in 164 Read. For more information, contact Mike at 845-7826. 66tl2/4 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 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 C Programmer, full-time. Assembler, expert systmes, and knowledge of Naval Warfare helpful. 1805 Briar Oaks, Suite B, Bryan, Tx 77802. 62tl2/10 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/ll Now hiring cashiers part-time mornings & afternoons. Farm Patch Produce Market. Call and ask for Lisa. 779-7209. 66tl2/ll 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 PliiiiiiWil COUSNELORS - Boys camp in Berkshire Mts., West. Mass. Good sal., room & bd., travel allowance, beauti ful modern facility, must love children & be able to teach one of the following: Tennis, W.S.I., Sailing, Wa terski, Baseball, Basketball, Soccer, LaCrosse, Wood, A&C, Rocketry, Photography, Archery, Pioneering, Ropes, Piano, Drama. Call or write: Camp Winadu, 5 Glen La., Mamaroneck, NY 10543. (914) 381-5983. 64tl2/2 VEtlSATILE WORD PROCESSING - BEST PRICES. .TREE 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 Experienced librarian will do library research for you Call 272-3348. 67U2/10 TYPING AND WORD PROCESSING. FAST, REA SONABLE, QUICK TURNAROUND AVAILABLE. 693-1598. 5H12/11 Typing, Word Processing. Reasonable rates. Call Ber tha 696-3785. 52tl2/9 TYPING, EDITING, WRITING. Articles, papers, newsletters. Words Worth. 690-1553. 69tl/21 * SERVICES ANGIE - HAPPY ANNIVERSAY. YOU ARE. THE WILDEST. I LOVE YOU - KEETCHSTA. 70U2/9 Looking For Guy Who Returned Lost ECON203 Note book With Turtle. 764-9738. 68t 12/11 # LOST AMD FOUND |- r STUDY SPECIAL auGoff any fudge or pop-corn purchase (2? o Ask about , ^c>) ft'-”*;v ^' Christmas specialties! CULPEPPER PLAZA V^CORN College Station, Texas 77840 409-693-7221 AMERICAS #1 MUSICAL Winner of 7 Tony Awards including Best Musical MUSIC BY ANDREW LLOYD WEBBER BASED ON OLD POSSUM S BOOK OF PRACTICAL CATS BY T S ELIOT April 14 & 15 Tickets available at Dillards Ticketron and the MSC Box Office 845-1234 VISA & MasterCard accepted. Cali Battalion Classified 845-2611 Survey shows oil prices fluctuating with cycles Typing, Word Processing, Resumes. Guaranteed error free, from $ 1.35/page. PERFECT PRINT. 822-1430. 42U2/9 Lost 8mm pearl earring between Health Center & U.P.D. Sentimental Value. REWARD! 696-1960, 845- 5221. 69t 12/11 HOUSTON (AP) — World oil prices continue to depend on cycles, uncertain behavior and a vulnerable management system established by OPEC after last year’s price collapse, according to an annual survey re leased Tuesday. “The industry is operating in the midst of the most uncertain and vol atile situation in the Middle East since the early 1980s, making the ge opolitics once again a pivotal but un predictable ingredient for the direc tion and level of the future of oil prices and the stablility of oil sup ply,” a World Oil Trends survey by Arthur Andersen & Co. and Cam bridge Energy Research Associates said. The joint analysis of the industry by Andersen, a nationwide account ing firm, and Cambridge, an energy research firm, was released a day be fore OPEC members met in Vienna, Austria for their second ministerial conference of 1987. Twelve of the oil producing states have said they hope to keep prices at $18 per barrel. Iran alone has been pushing for a $2 per barrel increase. The Andersen-Cambridge survey concludes that prices should remain around $18 ana then increase. “But new surprises may be in store,” the survey says. “One must not forget that the world oil industry is an industry in which, during much of its history, there often has been a manager or a management group — sometimes weak, sometimes strong.” The survey describes the $18 price as not an economic price but a olitical price and one that could not e supported in a free market. “The free market, left to itself, would push prices lower, at least short term,” said Joseph Stanislaw, Cambridge managing director for Europe and the Middle East. Daniel Yergin, Cambridge presi dent, said the 1986 price collapse — during which oil prices tumbled to below $10 per barrel — and the sub sequent rebound to $18 did not alter key fundamentals of supply and de mand to the extent industry experts might have expected. “Increases in non-OPEC produc tion elsewhere have more than made up for the declines in the United States,” Yergin said. “This has im portant economic and geopolitical implications, including strong in creases in U.S. oil imports ” At the same time, however, the survey cautions that the full effects of the price collapse may notyetbe known because forecasting methods now used were developed during times of relatively high and stable prices. “The response to the fall in prices could occur with a considerable time lag, just as the responses to the price increases of the 1970’s took a num ber of years to show their full vigor,” the survey report said. According to the survey, what has remained constant is a gap between world production and capadty. Officials say man took police car, tried to kill sheriff HANKAMER (AP) — A man who was handcuffed after he was stopped for a traffic violation was ac cused of taking over the controls of a police car and trying to run down a deputy sheriff, officials said Tues day. James Lee Palmer, 31, of Monroe, La., was charged with attempted capital murder in connection with the incident, a Chambers County spokesman who asked not to be identified said. Police said Palmer was in the back seat of a patrol car with his arms handcuffed behind his back when he managed to slip his arms under his feet and took control of the car early Monday. A companion, who re mained in the back seat, ducked for cover. Palmer also is charged with unau thorized use of a vehicle and posses sion of a controlled substance, the county spokesman said Tuesday. Bond for all three charges was set at $380,000, she said. Palmer, who was shot in the leg by a deputy as he attempted to flee, was in good condition at a local hospital, the spokesman said. Palmer’s two companions remain in jail Tuesday on bonds of $100,000 each, the spokesman said. Otha Ray Moore, 30, was held on a charge of possession of a controlled substance and Willie Lee Wallace, 33, was held on a charge of possession of cocaine. Moore and Wallace are also from Monroe, La. The men were stopped for a traf fic violation on Interstate 10 near Farm Road 1724 about 12:30 a.m. Monday, according to Chambers County sheriffs officials. Deputy Jon Hernandez said he discovered a small amount of co caine during a search of Palmer. Drug dogs searching the car recov ered $15,000 cash and an additional small quantity of cocaine and mari juana, he said. Officials call hazing likely in fraternity SAN MARCOS (AP) -Offi cials at Southwest Texas State University say they have found evidence of serious hazing by members of a second campus fra ternity. John Garrison, dean of stu dents, said he wouldn’t comment on the case until an investigation is completed. “W e’re pretty sure we have a hazing case,” he said. “I feel like we have enough information now to indicate that a violation has oc curred.” The alleged hazing, involving the Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity chapter, occurred in a “series of incidents” involving pledge activ ities this fall semester, Garrison said. Disciplinary action is being considered against both the fra ternity and individual members, Garrison said. John Denton, a Tau Kappa Ep silon member, said university of ficials informed the fraternity that it would be told of discipi- nary action. “It wasn’t a big, bad incident, but any incident is a bad incident these days,” he said. Last month, the university sus pended the Kappa Sigma frater nity after a pleage was found at 4 a.m. in a rural area, shirtless in 42-degree weather, covered with oil and wearing burlap shorts. Garrison said that the Tau Kappa Epsilon incidents under investigation are “at least as se rious, or more serious” than that. Elementary students participate in experiment banning television WHITE SETTLEMENT (AP) — Ricky Shelhorse confessed to his diary that he wanted to die at the begin ning of his week without television. Teacher Lisa Baker, seeking to get the students inter ested in other things, pulled the plug on fifth-grade classes for one excruciating week. The 70 North Elementary School students strained to refrain from watching a single television program. At 12:44 p.m. Monday, the video-starved students chanted “TEE-vee, TEE-vee,” as the 25-year-old tea cher turned on the tube. Baker said she organized the mass abstinence to stir the students out of a passive existence, promote read ing, stimulate creativity and imagination, and to give families a chance to get reacquainted. The results: students seemed more attentive in class, they handed in unprecedented numbers of extra-credit assignments, romped outdoors and rediscovered household pets. “Kids have been writing that they’ve had better fam ily ties,” Baker said. “That makes me feel good. But then some of them also said their family was right on the edge. They were about sick of each other.” Students kept accounts of their experiences in ajour- nal, and their writings revealed siblings fought more and one mother stormed out of the house while her husband guarded the tube and turned up the volume. Six children decided not to join their 70 classmates. “I’d rather not torture myself,” 11-year-old Quentin Solomon said. “I’m just hooked on it.” At the beginning of the week, Baker’s students hummed a funeral dirge to a television set veiled in black. Baker said the experiment, even if unsuccessful, would show students how important television was to their lives. “It was frightening,” she said. “I told the kids to be gin with, ‘I’m not down on TV. It can do some good things. It can be educational.’ But I think that they are consumed by it and they fall into the temptation to just sit.” One mother pasted a sign over the family’s main tele vision that said, “Go outside and play.”