CarePlus> NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED • Headache • Sprains • Sore Throat •Cuts • Sunburn • Broken Bones DISCOUNT TO students, faculty and staff 1712 S.W. Parkway 8 a.m.-8 p.m. Everyday (across from Kroger Center) 696-0683 Tour de France Special FREE lllS accessory package ^^Pijpcirchase of ISS^very pike. We carry: MIYATA BIANCHI SPECIALIZED HUNTER We service all makes Professional Sales & Service 846-BIKE I 10 College Main 0 w c^oud iV\es( Vi 1 v.° NX ’ t0 o\ Apartments ^ 1101 Southwest Parkway V N^ V Parkway College Station, Texas 77840 693-0804 We’re Fun, pooLiL. We’re Cheap and We Corel m TENNIS 1st 2>0 Families COURT to sign a lease by July 23rd, get September FKJEE Call US> Today, The Cajun and The Cowgirl CONTACT LENSES 00 $79 $79 ONLY QUALITY NAME BRANDS (Bausch & Lomb, Clba, Barnes-Hinds-Hydrocurve) Summer Sale pr.*-std. daily wear soft lenses (regularly $79 00 ) pr.*-std. extended wear soft lenses (regularly $99 00 ) pr.*-std. tinted soft lenses (regularly $99 00 ) 00 00 CALL FOR APPOINTMENT "EYE EXAM AND CARE KIT NOT INCLUDED OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY SALE ENDS AUG. 15, 1986 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. COOL GIVE BLOOD! THE BLOOD CENTER at Wadley Date: July 14. is, 16.17 Time:_ 11:00 a.m. — 7:00 p.m. Place: MSC Fountain & “A” Lounge-Corps Area Page 6/The Battalion/Thursday, July 17, 1986 Sports U.S. boxer says motivation gone? after Goodwill disqualification MOSCOW (AP) — American boxer Harvey Richards, disqualified from the Goodwill Games by a Soviet referee, said Wednesday that he had lost his motivation to fight. “The action has caused a lot of mental anguish and pressure,” said Richards, a light heavy weight from Springfield, Ill., w'ho will be 23 next Tuesday. “Even if I do get the chance to box, I don’t really have any feeling of motivation now. “It’s taken away anything to fight for.” Richards’ disqualification, by referee Yuri Frolov, came at 2:09 of the second round of his quarterfinal bout Tuesday, after he hit Nils Hausgaard Madsen of Denmark with a low blow. Immediately after the verdict, the American team filed a five-part protest to the International Amateur Boxing Association, claiming that Fro lov should not have stopped the bout. Omar Greene, a manager of the U.S. team, said the protest stated in part that “the rules were not applied properly ... That both boxers were ready to continue fighting ... That no one was incapacitated ... And that the foul was not deliberate or intentional.” The IABA said it would announce its decision today, one hour before the start of the comple tion of the semifinal bouts. Richards went through his regular training routine Wednesday. “His attitude was good,” Sanders said. “We told him to keep his hopes up, to be prepared for a decision either wav.” While the boxing controversy continued to be the center of attention, six gold medals were de cided Wednesday, four in tennis and two in judo. The only American gold medalist was Caro line Kuhlman, a University of Southern Califor nia junior, who beat Beverly Bowes, a University of Texas senior, 6-4, 7-5, for the women’s singles tennis title. The Soviet Union collected five golds for a to tal of 71 and 160 medals overall. The United States’ gold in tennis boosted its gold total to 35 and 105 medals overall. With Richards out of the boxing tournament, the U.S. team, weakened before the games when the Pentagon refused to let nine military fighters compete, still had 10 boxers remaining. Flyweight Arthur Johnson already has reached Saturday’s finals, while bantamweight Bernard Price, lightweight Romallis Fllis, light ■g.W' ■des, ipen cl he LPG welterweight Roy Jones, light iniddleweigtayjnner chael Moorei and Mylon Watkins, milHr ho weights Parker White and Foren/.o WrigklhS $27: heavvweight Michael Simon and super 1. weight Filbert Pierce will he in semifinal: “I stil riuu sday. he clou Simon and Writthi weir Ian- suIniiu lx the hai red fighters. Hdes 1 he Soviet Union's Andrei Chesnoh i ()I11 tured the men’s singles tennis title, deftf eteran ‘ Marian \ ajda of (./et hoslovakia 6-3,6-2,l>iBLadl Soviets s \ i ■ 11. M i. i I’.n kin micnko aiuCF 3 '*’' Savchenko took ih<- women’s doii^». n 1 championship with a 6-3, 6-3 victoryowtjR 111 ^’ Budarova and Marcela Shuharsk.i o! C/n ’Tki,, In judo. Soviets swept the golds, with Go,>He sta Verichev pinning Steven Conen of the Ui^Brrite States ai 3 minutes. 7 seconds, for a lO-Ow^fct b in the < >\ei 95- kd< >gram I inal, and ViktorPodBg fbi hi\i dec isioning Bald/hinniam Odcho: tour in l Mongolia in the 95 kilogram final. Mj ric | 1 he unbeaten l nited Stales men's utms gol team m<>|(< l< >i c i his one. Imlmi; ure( this veai s homers. Whitakerhasji e [g)- out. lint it usually turns out that it is someone else." Whitaker, who came into the game with 12 regular-season hom ers. hit a two-run shot to right field in the second inning off National League starter Dwight Gooden of the New York Mets. White, with 10 homers coming into the All-Star Game, hit his with two out in the sev enth. and it proved to be the win ning run when the National League- scored twice in the eighth. The victory was the first for the AL in an NL park since 1962 at Wriglev Field in Chicago. The victory was a credit to the two second basemen who helped the AL finally fulfill its power potential. The American League came into the game with a rosier that had hit a to tal of 266 home runs to 192 lot the Nationals. With a similai team last season, the AL failed to hit a single home run in losing at Minneapolis' Horn etdome. In losing 3-1 in 1984. the AL was out-homered 2-1, getting one from George Brett while the NL had hornets from Gary Garter and Dale Murphy. Both Whitaker and White, how ever. said this particular power dis play should not have come as sue h a great shock. "We don’t go up there looking for singles." Whitaker said. "Both Frank and 1 have the tvpe of swings that 85 in hb 10 majoi league sea»|j, ea Inn he had a career-high 21 in IHiq (in Whin s ( .ii rn has been simihn.’ w | 1() 1 I 9 m Ins II seasons bill a ni C01( | high 22 in '8.*>. Both plavers hit 0-2 pitches,!'®, laket I lom Gooden and White I S 0li Mike S< ott of I louston. the “We had a couple ol had pin men on 0-2. and that was it, NLMana are < W hiten Herzog ol St. Louis v hinc “W e tiied to come hack, bill it aid guv s pitched well." W hitakei credits former hitting coach Gates Brown willn'11 succ ess he has had. “He always® me to nev er let die pitcher getalitE v on and alway s u v to hit r pitch." Whitakei said. “Don’tbei| fensive on 0-2. I followed hisatM pi cm l v good tonight.” TheMostR)pular SwivelingRocker SinceElvis. With all due respect to The King. Pier 1 presents the Taipei Swivel Rocker. Which comes to us from Taiwan. Where long sec tions of solid rattan are bent by hand, and tightly’ tied together, then covered with a glossy; long last ing walnut finish. Even though this swiveling rocker never made an appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show; we think it'll be a really big hit in your own home. Cushion included $179.99. Pier 1 imports Associate Store Manor East Mall (adjacent to Clothworld) Texas Avenue at Villa Maria-Bryan, Texas 10 am to 7 pm Weekdays-10 am to 6 pm-Sat. M 779-8771 ■ L j It's Coming! KINKO'S ANNUAL 2'M COPY SALE Battalion Classifieds Call 845-2611 IS BACK! The hottest spot in town playing the best TOP 40 and New Wave Mvisic Monday-Friday NO COVER e X?9 F p ri „f X COLLEGE STATION HILTON and Conference Center 801 University Drive East • 693-7500 SA wake prob leagn to be Wedi “It and s the I; H< by p tliat thing ball. were T and i prett “Rigl the 1 for n Poster designed by Felicia Gardner, a student at H. Grady Spruce High School.