Page 16/The Battalion/Friday, April 10, 1987 THERE’S A HEW FABRIC CARE OH HARVEY ROAD. TAKE THIS AD ALOHG & WATCH IT STRETCH YOUR mOHEY. WE’VE GOT: Convenience Full service for all your cleaning needs. 7-6 M-F, and 8-4 Sat. Location Post Oak Square close to Post Oak Mall. 1100 Harvey Road, Suite A Quality 91 Years of experience, with professional expertise in alterations and a multitude of services to make your life easier and your clothes nicer. Value Fabric Care Dry Cleaners, excellent prices with the care your clothes need. THE DEAL: The following specials, in celebration of our newest store, are good in all College Station Fabric Care Cleaners locations until the end of May: 1100 Harvey Road (Post Oak Square) 2418 S. Texas Ave. (Parkway Kroger Center) 505 University Drive (formerly College Station Cleaners) Men’s/Women’s jeans or pants $1.89 ea. Men’s/Women’s two piece suit or plain dress (dry cleaned) $4.25 Three sweaters (dry cleaned) $4.89 Three pants, Men/Women’s (unlined, dry cleaned) $4.89 m "Your Professional Launderer and Dry Cleaner" Bryan/College Station THE NEW LOCATION: 1100 Harvey Road, Suite A College Station 696-2366 Texas Basket Co. NOW OPEN SUNDAYS! 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Come By and See Our New Selection of Beautiful Blooming Flowers and Outdoor Plants THE TEXAS BASKET CO. 102 Johnson Navasota, Texas 409/825-8030 Report Warped by Scott McCul DIDN’T MAKE A 4.0? FORGET NAMES EASILY? ARE YOU A SLOW READER? An entire field of research is devoted to memori zation and effective reading techniques. We have summarized the very best, the most practi cal aspects of the research onto two of our most popular cassette tapes (developed and narrated by learning specialist Dr. Timothy Rampey of the American Technological University). We be lieve this information can so influence your abil ity to memorize and learn that the tapes are worth far more than they cost. Tear this ad out now. It will not appear again this semester. -Clip Here- 15 Memory Techniques $6.95 each Effective Reading A$6.95 each We pay postage & handling. FREE TAPE When both cassettes are ordered, Tape #1 from the Vocabulary Builder Series will be sent free—over 100 words you may not know (but should). Obtain the benefits of a superior vo cabulary via cassette tape instruction and drills. Vocabulary Builder Tape #1 may be order sep arately for $6.95 Send check or money order to: Learning Resources 111 W. Avenue M Suite 145 Temple, TX 76501 Allow 2-3 weeks for delivery. Name- City & State- Zip Code (Continued from page 1) to the public, such as the texts of the student athletic handbook, the A&M staff manual and the University reg ulations manual In addition, 18 pages on the poli cies of Cain Hall, the athletic dormi tory, are included. Six of those pages are diagrams of Cain Hall’s fire evac uation routes. The in-house investigation was handled by two former A&M stu dents — Arno W. Krebs Jr. and Ot way B. Denny Jr. Both are members of the Houston law firm Fulbright & Jaworski. University officials had little to say about the report. Jackie Sherrill, head football coach and athletic director, declined comment when asked about it as he watched his team practice Thursday at Kyle Field. John Keith, A&M sports informa tion director, said, “When told it would be released, Jackie said he hasn’t seen the report, he can’t com ment on what he hasn’t seen and he’s not really concerned about it right now.” On Wednesday, Jeff Alford, asso ciate director of A&M’s Office of Public Information, said the Univer sity’s position was to release the re port “and let everyone draw their own conclusions.” Vandiver’s 119-word written statement, in addition to citing the reason for the deletions, said A&M “will cooperate with the NCAA in any inquiry of Texas A&M Univer sity athletics.” But both Keith and Lane Ste phenson, director of the Office of Public Information, reiterated that A&M has never been notified that any NCAA investigation is going on. “Before you’re under investiga tion the president gets a letter from the NCAA,” Keith said. “But we haven’t received a letter.” At least one player said he hoped the release of the report would end the controversy surrounding the football program. “I think maybe once this report ? ;ets out — and the media sees it and inds nothing in it — maybe every body will be off us,” quarterback Craig Stump said. Regardless, Stump said, the re port doesn’t worry his teammates. “You can’t let it get to you,” he said. “It’s something that you have no control over as a player. We really don’t worry about it.” im fgaR (■73/e 3 of £esf afessetffaster eizr Dillards