GLENWOOD APTS
1 BDRM at $240.00
2011 LaBrisa 779-3220
Close to A&M 2 blocks S.
of V. Maria off 2818
THEATRE GUIDE
Plitt fhformatiaiT '
r 846-6 7t4f " •
SCHULMAN THEATRii
2.50 ADMISSION
1. Any Show Before 3PM
2. Tuesday - All Seats
3. Mon-Wed - Local Students
With Current ID’s.
Page 6/The BattalionThursday, August 14, 1986
Cinema III
Skaggs Center846-67T4
Aliens (R)
1:00 4:00 7:00 9:55
Nothing in Common (PG)
1:45 4:15 7:30 9:45
About Last Night (R)
2:15 4:45 7:15 9:30
Post Oak III
Post Oak Mall 764-0616
Ferris Bueller (PG13)
1:10 3:20 5:30 7:40 9:50
Legal Eagles (PG)
1:00 3:10 5:20 7:30 9:40
Howard The Duck (PG)
1:00 3:05 5:10 7:20 9:30
•DENOTES DOLBY STEREO
PLAZA 3
"U
| 226 Southwest Pkwy
693-2457
j*KARATE KID II r«
2:30 7:15
4:50 5:35
l*T0P GUN ra
2:45 7:25
5:00 0:45
|a FINE MESS ps
2:50 7:35
5:05 9:50
MANOR EAST 3 1
Manor East Mall
823-8300
RUTHLESS PEOPLE r
HEARTBURNr
JiSSS
‘FLIGHT OF THE
NAVIGATOR pa
2:15 7:15
4:45 9:35
SCHULMAN 6
2002 E. 29th
775-2463
ONE CRAZY SUMMER p«
2:40*7:20
5:00 9:40
BACK TO SCHOOL po-u
7:30 0:50
FRIDAY THE
13tfi VI r-
2:35 7:35
4:55 9:55
THE GREAT MOUSE
DETECTIVE o
2:10 5:30
3:50
TRANSF0RMERS:Tha Movie re
2:10 5:30
3:50 7:15
$ DOLLAR DAYS $
Schulman Theatres & KKYS 105 proudly
announce the beginning of “Dollar Days' .
Each week we will offer movies for admis-
â–  sion of just $1.00. All movies will be shown at
â–  Schulman 6 Theatres. This week we are
â–  showing the following:
I LABYRINTH r
2:30
5:00 9:35
|OUT OF ROUNDS r
7:25 9:45
Loupot’s Means a
Maximum Trade-In Deal
Ole’ Army Lou is paying cash for used books Aqai i
Bring your summer school books back and get cash
Keep the cash, but reserve your fall semester books
before September 1 and get a free Aggie t-shirt Then
just drop by Northgate when you get back in town and
pick up your books without waiting in line or digging
through class lists and piles of books. Loupot’s means
more cash for used books.
â–¡ â–¡ â–¡ â–¡
"We cafe about Aggies - just
as we have for over 50 years.
Thank you for your business."
Sports
Walker agrees to 5-year
contract with Cowboys
Schramm's
longshot pq
big dividend
THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. (AP)
— Becoming the highest-paid mem
ber of the Dallas Cowboys ever, run
ning back Herschel Walker agreed
Wednesday to a five-year contract
and said he was looking forward to
joining Tony Dorsett in the back-
field.
But Dorsett, upon finding out
about Walker’s salary, estimated at
about $1 million annually, said he
would consider asking for a trade.
“If they are paying another run
ning back more, I don’t want to be
here,” said Dorsett, a 10-year vet
eran whose contract was renego
tiated last summer. “I will ask for a
trade, yes.”
Dorsett, who makes about
$450,000 per season, said “I’m un
happy about it no doubt, who
wouldn’t be? I’m on the verge of
passing Jim Brown to become the
second all-time leading rusher in
NFL history and you’re going to
bring in a guy who has not contrib
uted one yard to (the team’s) success
and you are going to pay him twice
as much as you pay me. I’m defi
nitely upset.”
Earlier, Dorsett said it would be a
“dream” to be in the same backfield
with Walker.
Walker, unaware of Dorsett’s re
action, said he was hoping to be in
shape to play in Dallas’ final exhibi
tion game.
“I hope I can play by the last pre
season game,” said Walker, who was
listed at the bottom of the depth
chart at tailback behind Dorsett and
Robert Lavette. “I want to be 100
percent when I play. Of course,
Herschel Walker
when I do play is up to Coach (Tom)
Landry.”
Walker, a fifth-round NFL draft
gamble by Dallas in 1985, admitted
“I’m very far behind. But I’ll work
hard.”
Walker, 24, the 1982 Heisman
Trophy winner who set a profes
sional football rushing record for
one season with 2,411 yards,
reached a handshake agreement at
dawn with the Cowboys after a 22-
hour bargaining session between
agent Peter Johnson and club presi
dent Tex Schramm.
He watched karate movies during
the negotations.
“A handshake is good enough,”
said Walker, who perhaps was the
most heralded player in the USFL as
a member of the New Jersey Gener
als.
“I feel honored to join the Cow
boys because they are a class team”
Walker said. “I don’t know what I
can contribute this year because I
have a lot of catching up to do. I al
ways put my life in the Lord’s hands.
I prayed and asked the Lord to get
everything over with. I wanted to
play football. I think the Lord works
in mysterious ways.”
An elated Schramm said, “This is
a great milestone for this team. I feel
just like I did the day we traded for
Tony Dorsett. We have us a great
football player.”
Walker, who said he was eager to
get his NFL career started, flew to
New Jersey to wrap up personal
business. He will return to training
camp on Friday and make his first
appearance wearing his familiar No.
34 on a Cowboys’jersey.
Team officials said he would be in
uniform for Saturday night’s presea
son game against the Los Angeles
Raiders, but would not play.
Walker said he couldn’t wait to
team with Dorsett, the NFL’s third
all-time leading rusher.
“It would be an honor to play with
him because Tony has a lot of class,”
Walker said, “just look at what he
has accomplisiied. I’ve always ad
mired Tony. We’re not going to
have any problems. We both want to
win.”
Landry said he would not change
the Cowboys’ offense, but would
“adjust it to Walker’s talents. Of
course, he will have to start out at the
bottom of the depth chart.”
Walker was released from a per
sonal services contract by Generals’
owner Donald Trump, who took the
action after the USFL decided to de
lay play until at least the fall of 1987.
DALLAS (AP) — “The Big[
rito,” as some Dallas Cowboys’sij
ers call him, likes to play
longshots.
Tex Schramm is the first toi
into his pocket
to take a shot at
a high-odds
horse if he
Sports
Analysis
finds someone about to visit a ml
track.
But no gamble the club pm:::®, 1 e
ever made paid off at the parirmr! B ,)al
windows like his Herschel Wall] LUr
dice roll in the 1985 NFL draft. f culs 1
As the middle rounds began 'B| ex<l
year, Schramm kept thinkinga[Jj vm1 '
Walker, the 1982 Heisman Troji| ^
winner who w as the star of their â– 
bled USFL- and the NewJersevGt:ffi ms
era Is. ''
“There w’ere still some good
ers around but I kept thinkingwS 1 *’ 8
it might he like some day tohavel Sl
on tire same team with Tony Dr®
sett,” Schramm said. “It washivgK^W
to make. I had to decide if it
worth it.”
Schramm had taken someribfa
in the 1984 draft by selecting Ob
pian Carl Lewis in the 12th rous
The Cowboys had traded wide;:|
ceiver Butch Johnson to the Hi.
ton Oilers for a fifth-round pid;|
1985 and didn't w.mt it tobeware: â– 
“1 decided to gamble,” Schramii p
“I was worried some other ter
rht pick Walker,
Schramm said he didn’t ree l
V\
SWC awaits ruling on Prop. 48
By Tom Tagliabue
Sports Writer
Proposition 48, an NCAA mea
sure designed to insure that only
qualified student athletes be ad
mitted to collegiate athletic pro
grams, may cost some qualified ath
letes a year of eligibility unless the
NCAA agrees to an appeal made by
the Southwest Conference.
Dutch Baughman, Associate Di
rector of the SWC, told The Battal
ion Wednesday the NCAA should
reveal by the end of the week
whether or not athletes, who took
and passed the Scholastic Aptitude
Test (SAT) or American College
Test (ACT) entrance exams on re
sidual testing dates rather than na
tional testing dates, will be eligible to
play their freshman year.
“When the first interpretation (of
Prop. 48) came out, it said the tests
had to be taken on national dates
and no residual tests,” Baughman
explained. “Well, we had never seen
residual tests and we didn’t know
what it was. So we called the NCAA
and they told us (a residual test) was
a test taken on a campus. Well, the
national tests are taken on a campus,
too!”
Baughman said the SAT and
ACT offices told him residual tests
are offered on different dates than
the national tests and must meet
three conditions in order to be ac
cepted by the colleges.
Those three conditions are:
• The tests must be open to the
public.
• Tests must be administered un
der normal testing conditions.
• Tests must be administered by
the authorized testing personnel.
Since February, all nine SWC
schools operated under the interpre
tation that residual tests were accep
table until the July 2 NCAA News
refuted that interpretation.
Texas A&M Athletic Counselor
Don Hunt said no A&M athletes
have been affected by the residual
testing problem. However, recruit
Percy Waddle of Columbus was
ruled ineligible because he did not
meet the minimum SAT score of
700 set by Prop. 48.
very many needles at the timdiBen;
what many considered his folly, iplm
"I imagine there are a lot of pci liam
pie in the NFL today askingtiiHhie
question now why they didn't titKake
him in the fourth round,” Schrarl
said. “Now, what we were hopini
might happen has happened."
Walker agreed to a five-yearcot
tract to become a member of ti
Cowboys on Wednesday, repone:|ast(
for $ 1 million a year. Bvsti
Cowboys’ owner H.R. “Bmp A
Bright called it the dub’s mostirtpioii
terful move since SchrammobtaiKi app
Dorsett f rom Seattle in a 1977tra!t||Sup
for a No. 1 draft pick.
“It was one ot the most imap
and skillful acts performed
live
professional sport' | ^
t(
C
anybody in
Bright said.
Schramm has a bold track recotii
on taking such longshots.
Another of his coups involved
quarterback Roger Stauback
Schramm tabbed him in the
round of the 1964 draft although he!
had five years of military service fat
ing him after graduating from tie
Naval Academy.
It’s not like Schramm hasn'ttakes
a chance before.
“You can look bad," SchranB
said. “That’s why they call it a gam
ble.”
Maryland to alter schedule
COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) —
The University of Maryland will
cancel or reschedule all seven of its
fall semester basketball games to
ease academic pressures on athletes,
university Chancellor John B.
Slaughter said Wednesday.
Practice also will be limited before
and during final exams.
Long and David Gregg, have been
indicted on cocaine possession and
obstruction of justice charges in con
nection with the Bias death.
Slaughter characterized the
schedule change as an emergency
action to ensure that athletes are
given a chance to succeed academi
cally.
“The worst thing we could do
would be nothing,” Slaughter told a
news conference. “I think it will
prove to be tremendously benefi
cial.”
Slaughter said basketball players
have been under a great deal of
stress since the cocaine-related death
of All-American Ten Bias on June
19.
The rescheduling and cancella
tions will cost the university between
$75,000 and $100,000 from lost gate
receipts, according to Athletic Direc
tor Dick Dull.
“We will try to put as many games
as possible in the winter break,” Dull
said. The fall semester ends on Dec.
19.
The chancellor also announced a
restructuring of the athletic depart
ment academic counseling program
to place a greater emphasis on class
room performance.
Two of Bias’ teammates, Terry
“I think the pressures they (the
athletes) should have on them
should be on the academic level, not
the athletic level,” Dull said. “If
we’re competitive, fine. If we’re not
competitive, we’ll deal with that as
well.”
Major League Baseball
illi
mmmm
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
w
L
Pet.
GB
w
L
Pet.
Boston
66
47
.580
—
New York
75
37
.670
New York
64
52
.552
3Y2
Montreal
56
54
.509
Detroit
61
53
.539
5
Philadelphia
55
57
.491
Baltimore
61
53
.540
5Y2
St. Louis
55
57
491
Toronto
60
56
.520
m
Chicago
50
63
.442
Cleveland
58
56
.509
8V2
Pittsburgh
45
66
.405
Milwaukee
56
57
.495
10
West Division
West Division
California
62
51
.549
—
Houston
64
50
.560
Texas
60
54
.530
2y 2
San Francisco
60
54
.526
Kansas City
51
63
.450
1116
Los Angeles
56
58
.490
Chicago
50
62
.446
11V2
Cincinnati
53
59
.473
Oakland
52
65
.444
12
Atlanta
53
60
.470
Minnesota
49
64
.434
13
San Diego
53
60
.470
Seattle
49
67
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1416
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Wednesday's Games
Texas 5, Milwaukee 4,12 innings
Oakland 4, Seattle 1
New York 4, Cleveland 0
Detroit 5, Chicago 2
Baltimore 7, Toronto 6
Boston 5, Kansas City 2
Minnesota at California, (n)
Wednesday’s Games
Los Angeles 5, Houston 3
Chicago 9, Pittsburgh 8
St. Louis 6, Montreal 2
Philadelphia 8. New York 4
Cincinnati 8, San Francisco 6
Atlanta 8, San Diego 7
AGGIES HELPING AGGIES
Along with a full range of services,
including savings, checking, auto
loans, personal loans and special
services. The Texas Aggie Credit
Union will make Guaranteed Stu
dent loans to students attending
Texas A&M University. We’re here
to help you complete your valuable
and necessary education. We are
member owned and run and we are
Aggies Helping Aggies.
TEXAS AGGIE CREDIT UNION
301 Dominik Dr
College Station
696-1440
NCUA
9 a.m.-6 p.m.
Mon.-Fri.
9 a.m.-noon Sat.
CONTACT LENSES
ONLY QUALITY NAME BRANDS
(Bausch & Lomb, Clba, Barnes-HInds-Hydrocurve)
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$99
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STD..
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00
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00
STD.
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FOR APPOINTMENT
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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 off Texas & University Dr.