4 Battalion Classifieds Page 8/The Battalion/Monday, September 23, 1985 r^m^ntsr" FOR RENT casa 6el sol PRELEASING SUMMER & FALL 2 Blocks from Campus Church across the street* 2 blocks from stores* 2 blocks from nite life on University Pool Jacuzzi Large Party Room Open 7 days a week Mon.-Sat. 8:30-5:30 Sun. 1:00-5:00 Basketball Goals On Premise Security On Premise Maintenance 401 Stasney College Station 696-3455 Brand new 3 bdrm., 2 bath brick home. $550./mo. 778- 0089,693-1322. 13t9/25 HELP WANTED Beautiful 3 bdrm., 1 bath home. $475/mo. 778-0089 or 693-1322. Big yard. 13t9/25 Afternoon help needed at nursery school. 12-5:30, M- F. 846-5571. 13t9/25 HELP WANTED Landscaping work, $4.25. Flexible hours. Brazos Ven tures. 846-6060. 7t9/24 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 FALL WEED ALLERGIC STUDENTS If you are male, 18 years of age or older, and have a\- lergy symptoms in the fall, you are needed to participate in a 16 day allergy medication study. $200 incentive for those chosen to participate. For more information call 776-0411 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 Now hiring for: CREW/ALL SHIFTS * Flexible Hours * Meal Discounts LATE NIGHT CLOSING TEAMS * 11 p.m.-6 a.m. DINING ROOM HOSTESSES Apply in Person 2-5 p.m. weekdays 3216 Texas Ave./Bryan 202 Southwest Pkwy./College Station The Houston Chronicle is taking applications for carriers, on imme diate route openings. Earn $400. to $700. per month plus transpor tation allowance. Please call Ju lian at 693-2323 or Andy at 693- 7815. 719/18 \ggn-ssive and ciithusiasiit person to work on phones !i\r da\s a week. Honrs live to eight. Phone 76-4-9528. ask lor Sharon. ‘Ht9/20 Needed: I’.u l-iiine emplmee lor tiuiintetiiiiue odd/jobs and Hanoi work. 1 lours flexible. S5./lir. I’ll. 69ni: Oik* gold chain with medallions. Tlmrsdav night around Ttvehonsr pool. Reward. Please t all S2:lHK!WsL'> ROOMMATE WANTED Female roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom apt. Rent $132.50 month and half of all bills. Call Kathy at 696-2510. 13t9/25 WANTED BASEBALL CARDS TO BUY. 764-7983. 10t9/27 SERVICES BOOKKEEPER, ACCOUNTANT WANTED Accts. Receivable & Payable, Payroll, General Ledger. Must have 2 years bookkeeping experience or college degree. Call for Interview. 823-0088 HOME COOKED DINNERS Choose from 2-3 main courses Monday-Friday 5-7 Phone: 696-2381 1-5 11t9/2 ON THE DOUBLE All kinds of typing at reasonable rates. Dissertations, theses, term papers, resumes. Typing and copying at one stop. ON THE DOUBLE 331 University Drive. 846-3755. 91 tin AIRPLANE BANNER TOWING Home football games - Kyle Field. Call Alan Taylor (713)721-6290. Derry Air, Inc., Houston, Texas. ,93,30 Sherrill says distraction may be with Ags to stay By TRAVIS TINGLE Sports Editor The in-house investigation of charges against Texas A&M quarterback Kevin Murray won’t stop being a distraction to the Ag gies in coming weeks Coach Jackie Sherrill said Saturday night after A&M’s 31-17 win over Northeast Louisiana. “There’s no question that the distraction part is really going to get bigger and bigger and big ger,” Sherrill said during a can did interview with seven report ers who jammed into a small office in the Aggie dressing room. “A good football team has to get through all that,” Sherrill said. “There’s nothing you can do about it. You just have to live with it and go about your business. “I didn’t have the time this week to put my arm around them (the players) and get them all fired up. The players prepared and won this one (against NLU) by themselves.” Sherrill centered most of his comments, some off-the-record, on the questions still surrounding charges that surfaced Tuesday on Dallas’ WFAA-TV that Murray received a car and cash from prominent Aggie alumnus Rod Dockery. Sherrill indicated that A&M must take certain actions before the NCAA and the Southwest Conference pick up where the in- house investigation leaves off. “We need to establish the rea son behind the sources (the for mer employees of the leasing company, Pelco Inc., which Dock ery owns) — their motives, their credibility,” he said. “You’ve got a soap opera here ... “We need to establish the facts. We’re going to get all the infor mation and give it to the NCAA I I l A&M Coach Jackie Sherrill because they’re not going to talk to all the people involved (with Murray’s situation). “I question — big question — the way it was handled (by WFAA).” Two days after WFAA-TV’s “handled” Murray on camera, showing him a lease agreement for a car with his signature on it, TCU Coach Jim Wacker’s sus- h pended six of his own players for the same type of violations ray is being accused of. The six players, one of whicli was All-America tailback Ken neth Davis, admitted to takint cash payments from an Hornea Frog booster. The money was ac cepted while the players were be ing recruited by TCU’s previous coach, F.A. Dry, now an assistam under Grant Teaff at Baylor. The TCU situation, coupled with the 3-year probation already placed on the SMU football pro gram, prompted Dallas Morning News sports columnist Rands Galloway to ask Sherrill quilt frankly, “what’s happening to the Southwest Conference?” “It’s (the SWC) not any differ ent than any other conference.! know, because I’ve been-in and coached-in just about every one,’ Sherrill said. “We’re (the SWC) one of the cleanest. “People think, ‘Oh my god! What are we going to do aboui college athletics? Well, it’s a Im better than it was when 1 was playing 20 years ago (at Ala bama). Sherrill clarified by saying thai teams put on probation during the ’40s, ’50s and ’60s, could only expect to see “a few lines" appear in the newspapers. Today, he said, NCAA rule vi olations make front page new for weeks on end. Sherrill said the extensive cov erage stems from a bigger and more compicated problem. Ht said that just because an athlete has been trained for 15 yean of his life to play football in from of 70,000 people, doesn’t make him a celebrity. “We’ve made personalities oui of all these kids,” he said, “andl say 'kids’ because they are. Wt make personalities out of these kids before they have a chance to become a person." 5 I > Plumbing repairs, small, large jobs. Licensed, afforda- 'ble. 823-7723, 779-6197. 9t9/26 l.clter i|iialm word processing. Win |>a\ inorer $1.50 page. 696-9149. 1419/26 Expert Typing, Word Processing, Resumes. All work error free. PERFECT PRINT. 822-1430. 10U2/6 Typing for theses, dissertations, term papers. Will transcribe dictation. Reasonable rales. 693-159812t 10/8 Reds edge past Astros, 6-5: Rangers rout Mariners, 6-0 Professional Academic Typist/Word Processor. $1.25/ ds/page; Volume rates. 764-6600. 7t9/24 Associated Press Word Processing. Call Cindy. 779-4935. lOt 10/4 Word processing: large or small. ABEL SERVICE. 100 W. Brookside. 846-2235. 12t9/20 Educational Editing. Professional editing and proof reading Ph.1). degree, 12+ rears professional exix-ii- 119/30 elite. 764-7937. HOUSTON — Dave Concepcion smashed two hits and drove in three runs, including a game-win ning ninth-inning RBI, to lift the Cincinnati Reds to a 6-5 victory over the Houston Astros Sunday night. SPECIAL NOTICE WE THE PEOPLE A no-nonsense newsletter on controversial current events. Each issue will detail a single topic, providing behind-the- scenes background information on specific popular events not available from any other source. For a free copy of the first issue: Myth or Menace, please send a self-addressed stamped envelope to: Wm. H. Clark, P.O. Box 9677, College Station Tx. 77840. There will be no parking on the lot know as the mud lot. This will only be for a short period. Any cars that are there after 6a.m., September 24, 1985, shall be towed away at the owners expense. 1519/27 With the scored tied 5-5, Con cepcion hit a sacrifice fly to right field, scoring Dave Parker from third with the winning run. Parker had doubled and moved to third on Eric Davis’ sacrifice bunt. Ted Power (7-4) was the winner for the Astros and Bill Dawley (4-3) took the loss for the Reds. Houston took a 2-0 lead in the first after loading the bases on Phil Garner’s fielder’s choice, Jose Cruz’s ground-rule double and an intentional walk to Jerry Mumph- rey. Glenn Davis then bounced a two-run single into center. Defensive driving. Insurance discount, ticket deferral, call: 8a.m.- 5p.m. Mon-Fri. 693-1322. 13tl2/18 The Reds tied the score in the fourth when Nick Esasky reached on an infield single and pinch-run ner Max Venable moved to second on Buddy Bell’s single. Concepcion drove in Venable with a single and Bell scored from third on Bo Diaz’s sacrifice fly. Advertise an item in the Battalion. Cincinnati moved ahead 4-2 in the fifth on RBI singles by Parker and Concepcion. Houston rallied for three runs in the fifth after Craig Reynolds sin gled, moved to second when Gar ner walked, and scored on a single Other Sunday games: (Home team in capitals) AMERICAN LEAGUE Milwaukee 2, TORONTO 1 New York 5, BALTIMORE 4 BOSTON 6, Detroit 2 CHICAGO 7, Oakland 5 Minnesota 7, KANSAS CITY 2 CALIFORNIA 10, Cleveland 9 NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh 5, N.Y. METS 3 Chicago 9, PHILADELPHIA 2 ST. LOUIS 6, Montreal 5 Los Angeles 5, SAN FRANCISCO 3 Atlanta 7, SAN DIEGO 5 the sixth. A single by Ron 0«ii and walks to Eddie MilnerandPc, Rose loaded the bases. Astros liever Frank DiPino walked pine- hitter Tony Perez to force in Os ter. Rangers 6, Mariners0 ARLINGTON — Mike Mi- scattered six hits and struck om while Pete O'Brien went 3-for-3, cuding a homer, and drove inti® runs Sunday night as the If Rangers beat the Seattle Marinen 0. Mason (8-13) pitched his fi complete game of the season fori Rangers to get the win. Mas walked one and his 11 strike) were a career-high. O’Brien hit a solo home run, 19th of the season, in the firstiniK off Frank Wills (4-9), who took! loss for the Mariners. The Rangers scored twice ini third on a sacrifice fly by Curtisi 1 kerson and a run-scoring sii O’Brien. Gary Ward led off the fourth*! a single and scored on Duane Wai er’s double. Walker later scored Geno Petralli’s sacrifice fly. by Cruz. Jerry Mumphrey then doubled to bring home Garner and Cruz. The Reds tied the score 5-5 in O’Brien added a sacrifice the seventh. O’Brien drove in Stf Buechele, who had singled, r to second when Wilkerson was a pitch and took third on agrouH out. ’84 Chevy pick-up camper, tape stereo, 846-406B.+ 9/27 '77 Kawasaki K-Z400, excellent condition, new paint, seat and tire, $575, 268-0902. 15 + 9/27 Yamaha '82SECA400. Good condition. 268-0805 eve nings. 12t9/24 TRIUMPH TR7, 1977. A/C. AM/FM Stero, low mile age, 5-Speed. $3395. Call Scott 260-4959. 12t9/27 IBM-PC owners: Increase your power with 8087 nu meric coprocessor. Installed and tested. $100. 268- 5878. 13t9/25 CONTACT LENSES $79 00 pr.* - daily wear soft lenses $99°“ 1 pr.* - extended wear soft lenses $119°" 1 pr.* - tinted soft lenses 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 + FISH RICHARDS HALF CENTURY HOUSE 1 Invites you to experience the casual elegance that is Fish Richards, and enjoy ROAST PRIME RIB OF BEEF for $3 off regular menu price on Mondays and Tuesdays. Lunch Poor Richards Revenge Dinner Mon-Fri Mon-Fri Mon-Sat 11:30-2:30 4:30-6:30 5:00-10:30 PIANO BAR NIGHTLY Featuring Jim Williams and Dave Ellis 5:00-6:30 and 8:00-10:00 801 Welborn Rd., College Station 696-4118 < pr< dai col onl thi: hal pie a g a fen insi fuq get con I wh< con “Bi sen of - the: Dul bac wei: celli thei and agr< lins. rusl A&l com E hea dow B rouj A&I dow “1 gooc Hav end A said, we’ll man O mas One 1 plac thin the Julit viett giat< A&I Sum C last ’ setti: TCI nals SI ■ I