Page 8/The Battalion/Tuesday, January 21,1986 Battalion Classifieds NCAA puts Baylor on probation TANK MCNAMARA’ WANTED Cough Study Males and Females 18 years of age or older to partici pate in a clinical trial to determine the effectiveness of a over-the-counter cough reducing medication. Monitary incentive: $100. For more information call 776-0411. 78tfn STUDY I Recent injury to wrist, knee or ankle? Severe enough pain to remain on study up to 10 days and 5 visits? STUDY II Recent injury with pain to any muscle or joint? One-dose (4 hours) in-house study. STUDY III Recent untreated in jury to muscle or bone. Study of 2 day duration with only 2 visits required. Volunteers interested in participating in investigative drug studies will be paid for their time and cooperation. G&S Studies, inc. 846-5933 77 CASH for gold, silver, old coins, diamonds Full Jewelry Repair Large Stock of Diamonds Gold Chains TEXAS COIN EXCHANGE 404 University Or. 846-8916 3202-A Texas Ave. (across from El Chico,Br/an) 779-7662 OFFICIAL NOTICE GRANTS & SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE Students interested in applying for Grants & Scholarships from private foundations & endowments thru a na tional scholarship system write: Grants & Scholarships, 6427 Hillcroft- Suite 1054, Houston Tx. 77081. 7812 /3 SERVICES LEARN ENGLISH FREE Vocabulary, grammer, reading and conversation. No charge. (NOT college course tutoring.) Evening classes. Call 846-8902. FOR RENT BABYSITTER - close to TAMU! Married student. Apartments. Call 846r0121. 78t 1/22 Sliort/long forms and small businesses. Start $5.00, call 693-0940. 78t2/7 casa 6el sol Spring Special Now Preleasing 2 Blocks from Campus Church across the street«2 blocks from stores»2 blocks from nite life on University Pool Basketball Goals Jacuzzi On Premise Security Large Party Room On Premise Maintenance -Fri. 8:30-5:30 pen Sat, or Sun. 401 Stasne 6! sy College Sta 96-3455 tlon Furnished private bedroom for rent in house with other fe male students. $157. per month, February thru May. Other space available after May. All utilities paid. Free washer and dryer. In first block South of bonfire area. 696- 5286. If no answer, phone 696-7000. Ask for Mrs. Lan caster. Apartment efficiency for rent. Walking distance to campus. 1 BR, 1 LR, $230. Bills paid. Near park. Male student only. Call after 6 p.m. 693-4485. 78tl/24 2 bdrm. apartments near campus. $230.-$255. 779- 3550,696-2038. 77t2/3 One Itetiroom apartment. $325./tno. All bills paid. Pool, sauna, laundry facilities. Must see to appreciate. Call Sara. 693-6716. 54t 1/24 FOR RENT own room in fully furnished five room house. Walking distance, non-smoking. $150. monthly. Billy, 845-8681, 696-0477. 77tl/27 Furnished or unfurnished apartments two blocks from university. Two bedroom $250./up. Three bedroom house. $325. Efficiency apartment, $175. 779-3700, 846-2800,693-2705. 77tl/24 HELP WANTED ON THE DOUBLE All kinds of typing at reasonable rates. Dissertations, theses, term papers, re sumes. Typing and copying at one stop. ON THE DOUBLE 331 University Drive. 846-3755 m NEED MUSIC FOR A PARTY? Get professional service cheaper from a disc jockey. Call Barry at 693-0760. 78ti/g4 Guitar lessons and classes. Classical/folk style for fun. 846-9655. 78tl/24 Typing/Proofreading/Mailing Services. Jane Kalinet, CPS, 4010 Stillmeadow, 822-7488. 78t3/14 Gay roommate referrals. For information on this and other G.S.S. Service please cal! Gayline, 775-1797, Sun. -Fri., 6-10:30 p.m. 78U/21 Houston Chronicle looking for early morning paper delivery route people. $400-$700. monthly. Call Julian at 693-2323 or Andy at 693-7815. A part time job that meets your schedule and your expectations! $3.75/hour plus bonus. Must be: On your own; -18t24 - have earned less than $1800. in the last 6 months. Call 779-1707, ext. 30. 78m24 Casino's Pizza now hiring delivery drivers and in-store personnel. Apply at 2314 S. Texas or call 696-9669. 7811/24 Responsible student to pick-up and care for children after school. Call 696-3523 after 5:30. 78U/24 Hart time student help needed. Computer science ma jor with some knowledge in finance. Only students who' are at least a Junior with at least a 3.5 GPA and are ex tremely ambitious need apply. 846-4761. 78tl/24 FOR SALE 1984 Honda Spree. $360. 696-6348. Piano for sale. Wanted: responsible party to assume Se< small monthly payments on piano, credit manager. 1-800-447-4266. ice locally. Call 78tl/29 SCHULMAN 6 2002 E. 29th 77S-2A63 KISS OF THE SPIDER WOMAN (R) 7:15-9:50 BLACK MOON RISING (R) 7:20-9:45 BACKWOODS MASSACRE (R) 7:20-9:55 HEAD OFFICE (PG-13) 7:20-9:35 CLUE (PG) 7:25-9:40 | ♦JAGGED. EDGE 7:15-9:40 ! 1 PL AZA 3 226 SOUTHWEST PKWY. 693-2457 ♦YOUNG SHERLOCK HOLMES (PG-13) 7:20-9:40 ♦THE COLOR PURPLE (PG-13) 7:05-9:55 ♦OUT OF AFRICA (PG) 8:30 MANOR EAST MALL 823-8300 ♦A CHORUS LINE (PG-13) 7:25-9:45 ♦BACK TO THE FUTURE (PG) 7:15-9:35 101 DALMATIONS (G) 7:30-9:15 •Dolby Stereo 82 HONDA PRELUDE. Excellent condition. Blue/Beige, Automatic. Air, cassette, new battery, brakes and radial tires. One year old. Custom fit car cover. 56,000 miles. $6,700. Call 693-2609 after 5 P.M. 78tl/24 1983 BMW 528E. AH power. Sunroof, 5-speed. Excel lent condition. $14,950. 696-9750. j, 78U/24 1984 Nissan Sport. P/U, air, am/fm, sunroof, 5 speed, low mileage. 5900. 779-8855. 78tl/31 LOST AND FOUND $50. reward. Return of egg chair used at Manor East Mall. Call Pat 696-1444. 78fl/24 ROOMMATE WANTED FEMALE ROOMATE NEEDED. Call 268-4176 after 5 p.m. 78tl/22 Recruiting violations hamper Bear cagers Associated Press MISSION, Kan. — The NCAA Committee on Infractions an nounced Monday that the Baylor University men’s basketball program had been placed on probation for re cruiting violations. The action prohibits the men’s basketball team from partic ipating in Na tional Collegiate 1 Athletic Associa tion champion ship competition or in any other any other postseason play during the 1985-86 academic year. In addition, only two new basket ball recruits will be permitted to re ceive initial athletics-related finan cial aid for the 1986-87 academic year. The university’s basketball pro gram will be limited to a total of 13 scholarships during the 1986-87 and 1987-88 academic years, a reduction of two from current levels. Without the sanctions, the Bears would have been able to sign four players in each of the next two years. Two players offered scholarships last spring did not attend Baylor, ac counting for the two unused grants. Only two current players, junior Mark Buchanan and freshman Ste phan Hafford, are not on athletic scholarships. Iba could put either or both on scholarship. Nine current or former basketball team members were involved in the violations found in the case, and the seven who remained on the team were declared ineligible for varying periods during the 1985-86 season. Baylor currently has 13 players on scholarship. The team’s only seniors, guard Carlos Briggs and forward Edwin Mitchell, were dismissed by head coach. Gene Iba two. weeks ago for reasons he said were unrelated to the NCAA probe. Both players, who had been sus pended in December by the NCAA, plan to remain in school and their scholarships could not be trans ferred even if they were to leave Baylor. The NCAA said the investigation of the Baylor case followed public statements in 1 February 1985 by a former member of the team that in dicated a former Baylor head bas ketball coach had given him a check for $172 for personal expenses. The committee said it had sus pended one year of a two-year post season penalty and a one-year tele vision sanction because of cooperation from Baylor. The NCAA cited self-disclosure of viola tions, early action to disassociate the coaching staff members involved in the case and assistance provided by current members of the basketball team. The NCAA cited 30 specific viola tions including ethical conduct, ex tra benefits to enrolled student-ath letes, recruiting inducements, excessive recruiting contacts, im proper automobile and airline trans portation, and certification of com pliance with NCAA rules. A Waco Tribune-Herald source said seven players received a total of $2,000 casn, airline tickets for trips home during the holidays and the use of an automobile. One player was given rent money for a month, while several members of the team were taken on dove hunts and fishing trips, the source said. Another source said two Baylor boosters and a member of the coach ing staff picked up Briggs and Mid dleton at Dallas-Fort Worth Interna tional Airport, bought them lunch and drove them to Waco when the two visited Baylor on a recruiting trip. Baylor could play in the South west Conference postseason tourna ment since the NCAA does not con sider a conference tournament to be a postseason event. The Bears must finish in the top eight of the SWC to qualify for the tournament, but are now 0-6 and last in the conference. ON-LINE PROPERTY MANAGERS Properties Throughout Bryan & College Station FREE LOCATOR SERVICE Apartments-Duplexes Condos-Fourplexes Warehouse Space Availble 779-8620 775-6459 Nights & Weekends “The Sign of Good Management” Call Battalion Classified 845-2611 by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds GOOP LOfTP, MAN), IaJCU AAVG TO QD tUTMOOT INJ-PEFTM on) -rue veiGueof&i Super Bowl XX Bears, Patriots owe success to '83 NFL draff Associated Press NEW ORLEANS — Forget that the calendar says 1986. The groundwork for Sunday’s Super Bowl meeting between the Chi cago Bears and New England Pa triots was laid in a New York ho tel ballroom on April 26, 1983. That was the date of the 1983 draft and a quick look at the ros ters of the Bears and the Patriots shows its impact. When the Bears take the field in the Superdome Sunday, six of their 22 starters will be players who were chosen that day. Left tackle Jim Covert and wide receiver Willie Gault were taken on the first round; left cor- nerback Mike Richardson on the second; strong safety Dave Duer- son on the fourth, and defensive end Richard Dent and left guard Mark Bortz on the eighth. An other starter, wide receiver Den nis McKinnon, went undrafted, but made the team later that year as a free agent. The Patriots picked up five Su per Bowl starters the same day. Their first pick was quar terback Tony Eason, one of six quarterbacks taken in the first round that day. They got right tackle Steve Moore and wide receiver Stephen Starring on the third; running back Craig James on the seventh, left cornerback Ronnie Lippett on the eighth, and Johnnie Rem- bert, who alternates at inside line backer, on the fourth. James, New England’s leading rusher, was a bonus. Projected as a first-round pick, he signed with the Washington Federals of the United States Football League be fore the draft and was allowed to pass all the way through the first six rounds. Between the days of the Monsters of the Midway that ended with the 1963 NFL championship team and 1975, when Walter Payton came along, Chicago’s first-round picks were distinguished by mediocrity. For every Gale Sayers and Dick Butkus, both No. Is in 1965, Chi cago’s top choices included such forgettable names as Joe Moore (1971); Craig Clemons (1973) and Dave Gallagher (1974). But the tide turned in 1975, when Chicago took Payton, of Jackson State, with the fourth pick of the draft. Payton simply became the leading rusher in NFL history and ran for 1,551 yards this season at age 34. More blue-chippers followed Payton as Chicago’s top picks. There was defensive lineman Dan Hampton in 1979, line backer Otis Wilson in 1980, of fensive tackle Keith Van Horne in 1981, when All-Pro middle linebacker Mike Singletary was taken No. 2, quarterback Jim Mc Mahon in 1982, Covert and Gault in 1983, linebacker Wilber Mar shall in 1984 and defensive tackle William Perry in 1985. That seems to be the result of Chicago’s willingness to take a chance. “Coming out of college, I was 6-5, 225 and a lot of people thought I would be too small," says Dent, who beefed up to 255 and became an All-Pro two years after his eighth-round selection. The Patriots never shared Chi cago’s reputation for mediocre top picks. The rap on them was the inability to mold those blue- chippers into a team with better than an 8-8 or 9-7 mark. Since Raymond Berry took over as coach midway through last sea son, things began taking on a more positive look. “I give the credit for what we’ve done to Raymond and his staff,” says Dick Steinberg, the Patriots’ director of personnel and one of the most respected tal ent scouts in the NFL. New England’s core included such first-rounders as guard John Hannah (1973), center Pete Brock (1976), right cornerback Raymond Clayborn and wide re ceiver Stanley Morgan (1977), safety Roland James (1980) and tackle Brian Holloway (1981). Bears quiet as mice as they leave Chicago Associated Press CHICAGO — The Chicago Bears slipped quietly out of town Monday en route to New Orleans, poised to party, but promising to puncture the New England Patriots’ debut in the Super Bowl. “Cinderella? What’s that?” defensive coordinator Buddy Ryan said of suggestions that New England, originally a wild-card entry, had reached the Super Bowl by accident. The Bears left aboard a chartered flight, short-cir cuiting any send-off parties by keeping their point of departure from O’Hare International Airport a well- guarded secret. Only about 10 fans cracked the security at O’Hare to find the Bears boarding at a cargo depot. “A lot of people are over there,” Bill Sonntag, 30, of Wood Dale, Ill., said, pointing towards the O’Hare passenger terminals, “and they’re very disappointed. But Duanne Lynn, 32, of Glenview, Ill., may have expressed his hometown’s sentiments better than any crowd. “I’ve been watching the Bears for about 15 years and it’s been a real dry spell,” Lynn said. “It’s kind of strange seeing that plane with a Chicago team getting on it, going for the big one. ig th /oel ella” success story, said, “They Delong here. They won three (playoff) games on the road.” The Bears’ defensive unit appeared more intent in praising their opponents than burying them. “That team is hungry and dangerous,” warned line backer Mike Singletary, the defensive signal-caller and the key figure in the Bears’ two playoff shutouts. “We’re not invincible,” linebacker Otis Wilson said. “Tony (Eason, the Patriots’ quarterback) has ma tured a great deal,” safety Gary Fencik said. But try as they might, the Bears’ defenders couldn't hide the statistics that make the Patriots the Cinderella choice Sunday. The Bears waltzed through the National Football League regular season with a 15-1 record, boasting both the NFL’s top defense and top rushing attack. They scored 456 points and gave up a league-low 198 this season. New England closed strongly for an 11-5 record, then won three American Football Conference playoff games on the road. The Patriots scored 362 points and allowed 290. Both teams are making their first appearances in the Super Bowl. Fans mob Pats before trip to New Orleans Associated Press WARWICK, R.I. — More than 10,000 New Englanders swarmed T.F. Green State Airport Monday and wished the New England Pa triots well on their maiden Super Bowl journey, a trip to New Or leans for a clash with the Chicago Bears. Fans began lining up early Monday at the airport, and by the time the Patriots arrived at 3:25 E .m. for their charter flight — an our behind schedule — they were massed behind ropes and barrels that kept them off the tar mac. “We appreciate you being here,” said offensive guard John Hannah, speaking to the crowd atop a flatbed truck. “You’ve been behind us all the way and now we’re going to beat the Bears.” Police estimated the crowd at 10,000 to 15,000. Many of the fans appeared to be school-age children, who had the day off throughout New England be cause of the Martin Luther King holiday. Four Patriots spoke to the crowd after team members and their families arrived aboard team buses from Patriots’ head quarters at Foxboro, Mass. “We’re going to take them apart,” offensive tackle Brian Holloway said of the Bears. Mario Silva, 15, of Warwick, said he gave the Patriots “a fairly good chance” of beating the Bears. “They were underdogs in their last three games and they played tough and won. I think they can do it again.” Many of the fans carried signs such as “Skin The Bears” and “Berry the Bears,” referring to Patriots Coach Raymond Berry. Several also carried stuffed bears. About 200 state, Warwick and Providence police, along with the National Guard, helped control the crowd. A crowd of 20,000 fans greeted the Patriots Jan. 12 when they ar rived home after their third play off upset, a 31-14 victory over the Miami Dolphins in the Orange Bowl. Hundreds of fans broke through a police line and swarmed the airport tarmac after the Miami game and surrounded the Patriots’ charter flight. Hours: M-Th 9-11 p.m. Fri.-Sat 9-6 p.m. Sun 12:30-11 p.m. Get An Early Start On Your Spring Break Tan! A single 30-Minute session in a TAN- U Solaire Tanning Bed is Like Spend ing 3-4 Hours in The Sun TAJVU 104 Old College Main at Northgate Walk-ins are welcome. Call 846-9779 for an appointment.