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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (June 26, 1985)
n i m ^ not pre- W plan to 501 with a must pass m by the * a degr« 3y the en- Uhematks m in 152 stated base 11 of e summer n unity are mg safety ation. For Ockert at itest i one of 25 gn for Af- ie contest. rk icquirinj no opet [ 45 m3’ an stod aseo of! rs. about 237.3 5 outstanding, of the war- 1 a 22 perceni ent, D f negotiating terrorist is al’ is the June H ht 847 when >favy man, tage crisis W in only here- iations. ir side in Lei’ our cool an3 around 1 try any m3 1 ’ aeeds to ae said. Having an affair? Call the Padre Cafe. We cater. 764-8064 Wednesday, June 26, 1985AThe Battalion/Page 5 Stage Center presents Bus Stop 8:00 p.m. June 27-29 at the Allen Academy Auditorium, 1200 Ursuline in Bryan. Admission $3.50 with Student I.D. For more ticket information call 693-0050. Why Bother With Electricity Bills? At the VIKING... One check pays all your housing expenses, including top maintenance service, all electric kitchens, pool, lighted tennis courts, and security guard. Compare our summer rates today As low as $248 BILLS PAID 1601 Holleman, College Station, Texas 713/693-6716 r*» . •• * •* * ** • • ••.•••• •••,•«» /:* • %•. v. : \V : • . AD*** * * * m * 0 • * **.••• V # • a—- :? vV- ’ ** * •* * •«.* **.••• * '* “ i * • * .. • *1 .'V; * *1 - ■ mAlftAPE \ ~ J Restaurant J and Club RESTAURANT 4004 Harvey Rd. 308 N. Main College Station, Tx. Bryan, Texas Coupon Tuesday thr u Thursday Jose s 5:00-9:45 Zarape o:00-8;45 2 for 1 Special Buy one dinner and get the second dinner of equal or less value FREE Not good with any other special or coupon Please present coupon when ordering Expire'* S/ZBttS At) gulk'd meats. Fajitas. Seafood awl Alcohol not inc}i«k'd •.Tuesday-Sunday ’ - 11:00 a.m.-9:45 p.m.* . , •*.* Closed Monday . ' * * •*. .'.’.Jose’s. '• 7** *. * . ■ MIllDmUllUUllllUlWlllllllll t ‘ ^ -j & fem • f ifeglfaf j v’ T - T" T i;-r rlb=.. ; » X h‘ * Save a Bundle! 1. No Electricity Deposit 2. Affordable Rates ^ * 2 Bd from $385 * 1 Bd from $315 * Pool * Tennis Courts * Laundry Room * Clubroom * Large Floorplans * Furnished Available * 2 Blks from Campus * On Shuttle Bus 401 Anderson 693-6505 The Battalion SPREADING THE NEWS Since 1078 Classified PORTS iiiil Stars shoot into USFL playoffs Defending champs peak at right time Associated Press Though they lost more games this season than they did in their first two years combined, the Baltimore Stars may be the team to fear when the USFL playoffs start this week end. The defending USFL champion Stars, 35-6 during their first two years in Philadelphia, finished this season at 10-7-1 and are seeded sixth among the league’s eight playoff teams. But they’ve won five of their last six games, heading into their playoff opener next Monday at New Jersey, and seem to have regained their missing offense. “We’re playing better than we have ail year,” Stars’ Coach Jim Mora said. “If we are peaking, we couldn’t do it at a better time.” The USFL playoff format was set Monday night when Oakland beat Houston 31-21 in the league’s final regular-season game. The seventh-seeded Gamblers, without injured quarterback Jim Kelly, will open the quarterfinal round Saturday at second-seeded Birmingham. Third-seeded Denver will be at fifth-seeded Memphis and eighth-seeded Tampa Bay will play at top-seeded Oakland Sunday, fol lowed by Monday night’s contest be tween the fourth-seeded Generals and the sixth-seeded Stars. But the real seedings .for the play offs have more to do with atten dance than records for the finan cially trouble’d USFL, which dropped from an average atten dance of 27,115 in 1984 to 24,452 this year. League officials say they want to “maximize” the potential revenue from the playoffs by draw ing larger crowds. Denver, for example, is seeded third and Memphis fifth because Denver qualified for the playoffs by finishing second in the Western Conference and Memphis qualified as a wild-card team from the East. TANK MFNAMLAKA* by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds Rozier tells Oilers’ fans he’s not Earl Campbell Associated Press HOUSTON — The Houston Oil ers of the National Football League have replaced a former Heisman Trophy winner with another by lur ing running back Mike Rozier away from the United States Football League with a four-year, $2.25 mil lion contract. But Rozier said Tuesday he hopes the Oilers don’t expect him to re place running back Earl Campbell, who was traded to the New Orleans Saints last year. “I’m just Mike Rozier. I’m not Earl Campbell and I hope everybody doesn’t think I’m going to fill Earl’s shoes,” Rozier told Houston radio station KIKK in a telephone inter view from Philadelphia. Monday, one day after scoring four touchdowns in the Jacksonville Bull’s final regular season game, Ro- zier’s agent, Art Wilkinson, an nounced that his client would jump leagues and join the Oilers. “This is a chance for him to put a few more critics to bed,” Wilkinson said. “It’s a chance for him to be come the first player in pro football history to put together two 1,000- yard seasons in the same calendar year.” Rozier, who set rushing records and won the 1983 Heisman Trophy while at the University of Nebraska, gained 1,361 yards this year in- the USFL with Jacksonville, which tried BARN Largest Selection Lowest Prices in The Bra zos Valley HOURS: M-SAT. 9:30-6 2.5 Miles east of the Brazos Center on FM 1179 (Briarcrest Dr.) In Bryan, Tx. 822-0247 Mike Rozier during his 1983 Heisman year at Nebraska. to retain Rozier with an offer that in cluded $1 million in real estate. Houston obtained NFL rights to the former All-American in a sup plemental draft of USFL players in June 1984. Negotiations between Wilkinson and Oilers General Manager Ladd Herzeg broke off in August with a four-year, $3.2 million deal on the table. Rozier signed wdth Jackson ville in February. Wilkinson said that he and Rozier walked away three times and said they weren’t coming back. But on each occasion, Rozier played well in the next game, “and we got the call the following week,” Wilkinson said. Rozier is expected to be in Hous ton later this week for a physical ex amination and to read over the con tract, Herzeg said. According to the terms of the proposal, Rozier would be paid in full over the life of the contract. “Lm very pleased because Mike’s a talented player who is coming of f a great season with Jacksonville, but I’m going to be cautious until his sig nature is on a contract,” Herzeg said. Rozier, 24, of Camden, N.J., won the Heisman, Maxwell and Walter Camp trophies in 1983, when he set -Nebraska and Big Eight Conference rushing records. He then signed with the Pittsburgh Maulers of the USFL and played with them in 1984 under a personal service contract with team owner Edward DeBartolo Sr. He blamed ankle problems for his sub-par season with the Maulers, who folded after the 1984 season. The Oilers finished 23rd among the 28 NFL teams in rushing last sea son, and Coach Hugh Campbell is trying to beef up Houston’s attack. FISH RICHARD’S/ HALF CENTURY HOUSE] —introduces— for a limited time The Dinner Club Membership includes • 12 Free Meals • Monthly Mailout with Unadvertised Specials Free Champagne on your Anniversary • Free Slice of Cheesecake on your Birthday Enjoy the dining experience that is FISH RICHARD’S and ask about the Dinner Club. Lunch Poor Richard’s Revenge Dinner M—F 11:30-2:30 M—F 4:30-6:30 Mon-Sat 5-10:30 “If You Haven’t Been to FISH RICHARD’S Lately, You Haven’t Been to FISH RICHARD’S.” Let Down Your Hair at STON E WOOD VILLAGE tTUOlO APAftTMCMTS . $285 IB IB as low as $360 2B IB Drop by ISOS DARTMOUTH for your personal tour (behind POST OAK VII LACE) 693-0077 ^ 9am-6pm MON-FRI 10am-5pm SAT 1pm-5pm SUN s> ls3_Eff ffill i • r-ir- . - 1 IT i , •■H i' J ri V * Pool * Laundry Facilities * On Shuttle Bus Route