Clocks «dd CoijLCCTfHiKLCS New Location 707 Texas Ave. 108 Bldg. A Across from the campus 693-7004 new Howard & Miller Clocks Sold and Services Antique clocks, Glassware & Furniture repair of pendulum type clocks Page 18CThe Battalion/ Thursday, September 4,1985 PIZZA BY THE SLICE GREAT WHEhi YOU'RE IN A HURRY f 303WUNIVERSITY- 846-1616 Our experienced instructors, low course cost, and ideal training environment will ensure a friendly, professional, and affordable flight training program for you. BRING THIS AD WHEN YOU ENROLL AND GET YOUR FIRST FLIGHT FREE Please call for reservations. 779-6120 Coulter Field Airport; 2 miles east of Bryan on Hiway 21 HUGHtS avianon SCHULMAN’S PALACE THEATRE presents STAGE CENTER’S VAUDEVILLE REVIEW 2 hours of frolicing, fun and laughter 8:00 pm - Sept. 12,13,14,19, 20, 21 Main Street, Downtown Bryan Students with I.D. only $3.50 For Ticket information call 693-0050 CONTACT LENSES $79 00 1 pr.* - daily wear soft lenses $99 00 1 pr.* - extended wear soft lenses $119 00 1 pr.* - tinted soft lenses 696-3754 CALL FOR APPOINTMENT OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY CHARLES C. SCHROEPPEL,O.D.,P.C. DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY 707 SOUTH TEXAS AVE-SUITE 101D COLLEGE STATION,TEXAS 77840 - 1 block South of Texas & University Dr. * EYE EXAM AND CARE KIT NOT INCLUDED ! Battalion Classified 845-2611 Ags’ QB remains a mystery Sherrill doesn't want to aid Tide's preparation By PETE HERNDON Sports Writer The biggest news at Texas A&M's pre-game press conference Tuesday was not what was said, but what wasn’t said. Texas A&M Head Football Coach Jackie Sherrill said his coaching staff decided Sunday not to tell the me dia, or Alabama, who the starting quarterback will be for the season opener Saturday. Sherrill wants to make the Crim son Tide’s defensive coaches do a little extra homework by making them worry about both Craig Stump and Kevin Murray. “They (Alabama) have to go back to 1983 to see Murray on Film,” Sherrill said. “They can say they won’t make any adjustments, but that’s not really true.” Sherrill said that, as far as the Ag gies are concerned, the quarterback situation is “not a big deal” because everyone knows that both Stump and Murray can and will play. “In-house everybody knows what’s going on,” he said. “It’s the out-of-house people that have to keep guessing. But if you guys (sports writers) can give me a good reason for telling you who it is, I’ll do it.” Since no one could give that rea son, Sherrill asked reporters not to try to coax any information out of the A&M players. Even though Sherrill wouldn’t talk much about the ’85-86 Aggie quarterbacks, he didn’t mind talking about the Alabama quarterbacks he played with some twenty years ago. Sherrill said he got his start in coaching, although he didn’t know it at the time, when he was a fullback at Alabama. “We were playing Georgia Tech my sophomore year with (Joe) Na- math at quarterback,” Sherrill said. “It was third and goal on the half- yard-line and he (Namath) called a slant, but I told him to run a (quar terback) sneak and he did.” Namath scored on the play and ’Bama went on to win. Though he may have helped Na math, he wasn’t quite so nice to for mer NFL All-Pro quarterback Ken Stabler. When Stabler was a freshman at ’Bama, Sherrill took Stabler to a bar ber shop to get an “A” shaved on his head. Sherrill noticed a two-foot curb across the street that had accu mulated a large pool of water from a rainstorm. Moments later, Sherrill quipped, Stabler was lying “belly-up” in the water, flailing his arms and legs and doing a fairly good “dying roach im itation.” “I’m a dying roach,” the future All-American quarterback yelled, “I’m a dying roach!” But it didn’t take long for Stabler to figure that he would get tired of Battalion File Photo Texas A&M fans will be left wondering who the Aggies’ starting quarterback will be until the first ray (above) is battling Craig Stump for the job. T to being a “dying roach” before Sherrill would get tired of laughing. So, Stabler finally just lied still. ing for Alabama’s legendary coach Paul “Bear” Bryant, he and Perkins have a lot in common. “I’m a dead roach, damn it,’ Stabler panted. Sherrill’s inspiration to tell this story seemed to stem from Alabama Head Football Coach Ray Perkins’ remark that Sherrill was “footloose and fancy free” during their college football days together at ’Bama. “You had to have certain qualities, r you didn’t make it,” Sherrill said, Terriner to Bryant’s four-hour “Right now they’re in their ’8f 85, '86 overlap years and we’re our ’85, ’86, ’8/ overlap. So thereii the point now that we should be net year.” reternng to Bryant’s practice sessions, “Football had to be important to you. Winning had to be important to you.” But the Aggies need this games! bad as the Title does. “He (Perkins) was already mar ried and had started a family,” Sher rill said. “He didn’t get his share of the finer things in (college) life.” _ _. r .fl ... And the importance of winnirq this game, for both Alabama ant A&M, cannot be understated. Even though a coach with a na tional championship to his credi shouldn’t need to prove anythingu anyone, Saturday’s game willbespt cial for Sherrill. But Sherrill said that, after play- “Believe it or not,” Sherrill said, “this is a bigger game for Alabama than it is for us. If they lose, it’ll tear down everything they’ve done. “He (Bryant) had a gjreat respect — and you could tell it — for hi players that went off and did some thing,” Sherrill said. Still one and counting for Reds’ Rose Associated Press CINCINNATI- The chase goes In his first opportunity to break Ty Cobb’s 57-year-old mark of 4,191 ifei lifetime hits, FJete Rose came up empty Tuesday night. He went 0- for-4 against San Diego. “I wasn’t nervous,” said Rose, the Cincinnati Reds player-manager. “I’ve made more outs than anyone. I wasn’t nervous. I might have been trying too hard.” Rose tied Cobb last Sunday in Chi cago, going 2-for-5. He did not play in the opener of a 10-game home- stand Monday night against San Diego because the Padres threw a left-hander, Dave Dravecky. But, on Tuesday night, before a packed house of 51,045 at Riverf ront Stadium, Rose took his place in the lineup at first base against Padres right-hander LaMarr Hoyt. Hoyt had not pitched since Aug. 18 because of arm trouble, but he got Rose out three times. And rookie right-hander Lance McCullers got him the final time in the game, in the eighth inning, when Rose lined out hard to the gap in left-center with a runner on second. “The only time I swung the bat good was tne last time I got up,” Rose said. “If it had stayed straight, it might have been a base hit in the gap, but it hooked back toward the fielder and made it an easy play.” McCullers, who was making only his 11th major leagqe appearance since being called up Aug. 9, said he got behind Rose in the count, 1-0, then came back with a fastballonll outside part of the plate. “I was scared at first because thought it might carry,” McCullen said. “The pitch was down andawaj and he hit it good.” In his first at-bat, Rose popped the shortstop. He Hied out lazily left the second time up, thei blooped another one to the short stop. It was the fifth time in hi nine games Rose has gone without! hit, and he is now hitless in his las six at-bats. IS YOUR VISION 20/20? come and see if it is. A&M CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP MONTHLY RALLY Wednesday September 11,1985 7:30 p.m. Room 101 Soil and Crop Sciences Building TANI N fc T1 Dalla umm Wl Be “scatt ing w Batta Th in my not to It i most | happ< who v Du terbac ones, they l their i Wh pro 1 many, tion: quarte who w end of OK down in the i Rog boys. Dali gets j who ca name , boys’ R dium. i Heism; val Aca Chai Cardin “Che know, HR tha lart. I guy t Hart Kn<