The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 06, 1987, Image 6

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Classifieds
« FORREIST • SERVICES
THE COLDEN RULE
0 'Pirr.pr , H'or Fall SP r,r '~
Openings for Women, Chris-
tianiike, 1 mok.ii^,
Telephones in, ^xe Apts
UTILITIES AND CABLE PAID
Free Laundry, storage, Bus
CALL/ASK: 693-5560 TODAY!
$150./mo. Share B/B, $250./mo. Own B/B
SUMMER SPECIAL: $240
134t4/1 7
Special! Only 30 more days!
Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx.
1 Bdrm.; $15072 Bdrm.: $175.
Call 846-8878 or
774-0773 after 5p.m. 187tfn
One Bedroom Apartments. Close to campus. Fur
nished, Quiet. $225-$275. 846-1413, 696-7414.
189t8/13
4 Bdrm, 2 Bath house, on Carter Creek $600./mo. Call
846-5517. 180t8/6
CI STOMl/.F. VOL K Al’AR I Ml-.M . Choose Irom
ceiling fans, mini-hlinds. wallpaper, leiiciiigoi washer.
Quiet area in K. Bryan. 2 Br start at S295./tno. V> oil
3t<l months rent. 776-2300. wkends 1-279-2967.
186t8/31
GUARANTEED
STUDENT
LOANS
Attention Students &
Parents:
$100,000,000 NOW
AVAILABLE
$54,000 maximum loan
available per student
INTEREST FREE WHILE IN
SCHOOL
Take 15 years to Repay Starting 6
months after Graduation at an 8% in
terest rate
We make comittments for each and
every year that you are in school!
APPLY NOW
to reserve your loan amount!
Call for information:
FIRST VENTURE GROUP
696-6601
TYPING: Accurate, 95 WPM, Reliable. Word Proc
essor. 7 days a week. 776-4013. 189t8/6
VERSATILE WORD PROCESSING - BES T PRICES.
FREE CORRECTIONS. RESUMES, 1HESES, PA
PERS, GRAPHICS, EQUATIONS, ETC. LASER
QUALITY. 696-2052. 163tfn
WALK TO AX.M: 2 Bedroom. 1 Bath Koitrplexes.
S275.mo. 776-2300. wkends 1-279-2967. 186t9/4
1 & 2 bdrm. apt. A/C & Heat. Wall to Wall carpet. 512
& 515 Northgate / First St. 409-825-2761. No Pets.
140tfn
WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu
scripts, reports, term papers, resumes. 764-6614.
179t8/19
TYPING: By Wanda. Forms, papers, and word proc
essing. 690-1113. 179t8/4
Southwood Manor. Airline Dr. Southwood Valley 2
bdrm. apts. $270 to $325 large apts., ceiling fans, on
shuttle. 696-1096. 187t8/31
STUDENT TYPING - 20 years experience. Fast, ac
curate, reasonable, guaranteed. 693-8537. 183t8/14
Bunk house 1 bdrm, 1 bath, two miles from campus.
Availiable immediately. $270./mo. all bills paid. 776-
8552. 187t8/14
TYPING, WORD PROCESSING, QUICK TURN
AROUND AVAILABLE. REASONABLE RALES.
693-1598. 184t8/14
Country Living Convenient to Campus, Two Bed
room, One Bath Duplex, Furnished or unfurnished.
Pets O.K., Stables Nearby. 823-8903 or (846-1051 for
LB) 178t8/31
Two bedroom, one bath studio near Villa Maria and
2818. W/D connections. Water, garbage, sewage paid.
$350. pet month. 846-4783 or 846-5186. 188t9/l)
• NOTICE
DON’T WAIT! ENROLL NOW!
FEVER BLISTER STUDY!
If you have at least 2 fever blisters
a year and would be interested in
trying a new medication, call for
information regarding study. You
must be enrolled before your next
fever blister. Compensation for
volunteers.
G&S STUDIES, INC.
846-5933
ACUTE DIARRHEA
STUDY
Persons with acute, uncom
plicated diarrhea needed to
evaluate medication being
considered for over-the-
counter sale.
G&S Studies, Inc.
846-5933
15316/3
$100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100
HIGH FEVER
Wanted patients with fever to
participate in a one day study
to be treated with an over-
the-counter medication. No
blood collected.
Call Pauli Research
International
776-6236 176 ,„
$200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200
WANTED
Male individuals 18-45 yrs. old
with mild wheezing or short
ness of breath, ex-asthma or
coughing with exercise to
participate in a one day study.
$200 incentive for those cho
sen.
776-6236
■ w 160tfn
• WANTED
MALE AKITA TO SIRE CC-11 BREED AKITA. 693-
5573 or 512-991-2484. 187t8/7
• SERVICES
MINOR MECHANIC ON THE MOVE
Prices: Oil change $15
Tune-up $25 4-cyl $30 6-cyl
$35 8-cyl
Other repairs depend upon the
car due to difficulty in installation.
Free Estimates. 25% Discount if
you supply the parts.
Call us @ 846-3474
“We’ll Come To You” 188t8/7
SPECIAL BARGAIN!
Your personal scientific 12 page
Astrology profile, only $10. Send
today:
Zodiac-D, 400 Woods, Teaneck
NJ 07666 (include birth info.)
18317/28
DEFENSIVE DRIVING TICKET DISMISSAL. IN
SURANCE DISCOUNT, YOU'LL LOVE IT!!! 693-
1322. 170t8/14
Typing: Fast, Reliable, Guaranteed! Overnight service
available. John 846-0564. 188t8/0
TYPING - EAS E. ACCURATE, REASONABLE. 10
years Aggie Typing Expel iencc. Cindy 693-2271.
18818/14
• HELP WANTED
Help Wanted
Artist needed 20 hours/week.
For more information call
P.J. 845-7826
18518/7
Job Opportunity for student couple. Need manager
For 20 unit apartment complex. Paid apartments, utili
ties, and salary. 846-1413, 696-7414. 189t8/13
NOW HIRING DELIVERY DRIVERS, COOKS &
COUNTER HELP. APPLY IN PERSON 2-4pm AT
PESO EXCHANGE IN CULPEPPER PLAZA.189t8/I3
Central Texas Medical Center Positions Available in:
Full or Part-time Physical Therapists, Respiratory
Therapists, Medical Tchnologists, RN’s. (409) 279-
3434. 189t8/7
Part-time Help Wanted. Apply at Piper’s Gulf. Univer
sity and Texas Avenue. 183t8/7
Wanted Now Man Friday. Errand Running for Profes
sor should be able to drive stick shift car. Call Mrs.
Bockris 774-0902. !88t8/6
♦ FOR SALE
HOT VW BUG. NEW RACING ENGINE. NEW
BRAKES. JOHN 764-8171,846-4210. 189t8/13
2 Twin/Bed. 1 Computer desk, sofa, dresser, head-
board. 764-8354. 189t8/l 1
1984 KAWASAKI NINJA 900 + EXTRAS. EXCEL
LENT' CON DITION. $2800. 696-1511. 185t8/6
NINJA 600R MUST SALE 1986 3,000 MILES. 693-
5884. 187t8/7
Rossignol F5 Competition 190 Snow Skis, Salamon
Bindings $150. 696-1897. 187t8/7
Cheap auto parts, used. Pic-A-Part, Inc. 78 and older.
3505 Old Kurten Road, Bryan. I02tfn
COMPUT ERS, ET'G. 693-7599. LOWEST PRICES
EVER! IBM-PC/XT COMPATIBLES: 640KB-RAM,
2-360KB DRIVES. TURBO, KEYBOARD MON-
IFOR: $649. PC/AT SYSTEMS: $1249. 161t8/14
WOODBROOK CONDO Poolside, 2 Bdrm, 2M> Bath,
fireplace, $59,500. 764-0765. 18U8/7
$050
» PITCHER OF BEER
6 Daily Lunch Specials
Served with Chips & Hot Sauce
FREE
TACO BAR
10 PM to ll p "
(One Hour)
MTV & Sports in Aggie Room
Approved Checks-Credit Cards
3109 Texas Ave., Bryan
823-7470
IN THE
Page 6/The Battalion/Thursday, August 6,1987
Sports
platt
Walter Pay
dor
ates
UT to hire assistant dealing with
compliance of NCAA regulations
AUSTIN (AP) — The men’s Ath
letics Council at the University of
Texas voted Wednesday to hire a
special assistant to make sure the
school and UT athletes stay in com
pliance with National Collegiate
Athletic Association regulations.
Hiring of the assistant is part of
UT’s effort to reduce its two-year
NCAA football probation from two
years to one.
Athletic Director DeLoss Dodds
said school president William Cun
ningham had promised the NCAA
infractions committee a person
would be hired to handle compli
ance and serve as financial adviser to
UT athletes.
Dodds said he would start inter
views soon and hopes to have the
new employee workine by Sept. 1.
The salary would depend on the
employee’s experience, Dodds said.
“We’re looking for someone who
knows all the NCAA rules, who un
derstands compliance and all the pa
perwork involved,” Dodds said.
“This assistant will have the ability
to walk over to the president’s office
and say, ‘You’ve got a problem.’”
If UT fulfills 13 remedial steps or
dered by Cunningham to the satis
faction of the NCAA, the NCAA will
reduce the school’s football proba
tion to just one year.
Dodds said the assistant would
talk to high school athletes, parents
and ex-students to make certain
NCAA rules are being followed — in
recruiting as well as after the athlete
enrolls in the university.
Council chairman Tom Morgan
said the council wants to head off vi
olations before athletes “even come
close to violations.”
Dodds said the new assistant also
would prepare the compliance re
view required by the NCAA every
five years.
UT football coach David McWil
liams said he would welcome such an
addition to the staff.
“If nothing else, it’ll give me a per
son to go talk to,” McWilliams said.
“Hopefully, it’ll prevent it (abuses
that led to the probation sentence)
from happening again.”
In other action Wednesday, the
council voted 9 percent bonuses for
baseball and track coaches as a re
ward for high finishes in NCAA
ward tor high finishes in
competitive championships.
The baseball team finisht
finished third
in the College World Series, and the
Longhorn track team finished sec
ond in the NCAA.
its that tl
as a player,
«“He’s g<
4 fresh mer ebacker
‘Everyb
. | ■ >|i las' year. 1
ineligible ! kte w "
Perry.
this seasofc'-
■iver Dei
From Staff and WireRer Bears 198,
Four incoming freshmaiH “I think
ball players at Texas A&M .go* )( I year
ineligible to play this fall I come back
they fell short of Eroposi:
entrance examination rej
ments, Coach Jackie Sherr
nounced Wednesday.
The players, all wide ret
are Cornelius Patterson.
Point, Miss.; Steve Lofton
Alto; Shane Garrett, C a re long go
La.; and Kary Vincentfrou^The diet
Arthur. Rose Bowl
All four have decided it Calif ornia "
at A&M and could becom and now M
ble to play in 1988, 1 to find a jc
added. Rllas Cov
The freshmen willrepoi quarterbacl
day, with practices schedejpHe’s got
begin Tuesday. Mlluer ahe
— rookie f
THOUS
| The gloi
Rite — beL
Cowboys’ Sherrard
suffers a broken leg
THOUSAND OAKS, Calif.
(AP) —Dallas Cowboys wide re
ceiver Mike Sherrard broke his
leg during a scrimmage with the
San Diego Chargers Wednesday
and apparently is lost to the NFL
for the season.
team
Sherrard, a first-round draft
pick in 1986 who caught 48
passes, fell during a passing drill.
Team doctors said he had a com
pound fractured fibula of the
right leg.
On the pass pattern, Sherrard
stumbled while being pursued by
Chargers cornerback Carl Braz-
ley. The injury was sustained
when his left leg crossed over his
right leg.
The Cowboys had built their
1987 passing game around the
fleet Sherrard and had released
wide receiver Tony Hill before
camp began.
Sherrard was rushed to a
nearby hospital after the incident
at about 6 p.m.
- “It was a very freak, sad thing
to happen. It apparently is a se
rious fracture,” said club Presi
dent Tex Schramm.
“Mike said he did it. He said
the defensive back kicked his an
kle and then he got tangled in his
own two legs,” Schramm said.
Schramm said Sherrard, a for
mer UCLA star probably would
not have a chance to play this sea
son.
“It’s a tremendous loss. Mike
was one of the cornerstones of
our offense in the off-season pe
riod. We had everything built
around him,” Schramm said.
“We hated to see it happen. He
was in his second year with a
bright and brilliant future and
for it to happen is a crime.”
Dallas Coach Tom Landry had
predicted before the season be
gan that Sherrard would be in the
Pro Bowl after this year.
“He is a Pro Bowl type of
E layer and you could just see him
eep getting better,” Landry said
before camp.
An obviously upset Schramm
said, “Of all people, well, the sea
son goes on I guess ...”
Carlson helps Oilen
triumph in scrimmcti
|His foot!
over.
■“I’ll just t
seven-year
ever happe:
■The left-
hild the NC
SEATTLE (AP) — Rookie quar
terback Cody Carlson threw two
long touchdown passes for the
Houston Oilers Wednesday in a
scrimmage against Seattle, outscor-
ing the Seahawks three touchdowns
to two.
Carlson, a third-round draft
choice from Baylor, passed 40 yards
to rookie wide receiver Curtis Dun
can and 47 yards to second-year vet
eran Ernest Givins for scores.
Chuck Banks, a second-year full
back, gave Houston its third touch
down on a 5-yard run.
Rookie quarterback Sammy Garza
passed for both of Seattle’s touch
downs.
Duncan, a lOth-round draft
choice from Northwestern, beat vet
eran cornerback Kerry Justin for the
first touchdown of the 100-play
scrimmage. Givins, who starred as a
rookie at wide receiver for the Oilers
last season with 61 receptions for
1,062 yards, took the ball away from
rookie cornerback David Hollis at
the goalline for the scrimmage’s sec
ond TD.
The Seahawks scored their first
Cowboys’ Rohrer comes to terms;
Noonan only remaining holdout
THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. (AP)
— With the return of free spirit line
backer Jeff Rohrer, there is only one
missing Dallas Cowboy — first-
round draft pick Danny Noonan of
Nebraska.
Holdout Rohrer came to an
agreement 10 minutes before mid
night Tuesday and got a two-year
contract. He’ll make $220,000 the
first year and $240,000 the second
year.
Rohrer, who missed five days of
training camp, was fined $5,000. He
handled his own negotiations with
Joe Bailey, a vice president with the
Cowboys.
Rohrer, the second-leading
tackier on the NFL team in 1986,
said “I’m very happy and I just wish
it hadn’t come down to all the name
calling.”
The six-year veteran left camp last
Thursday when he found out his
$192,000 salary for his option year
was less than the money made by
Dallas’ other starting linebackers,
Eugene Lockhart and Mike Heg-
man.
He still won’t make as much as
they do.
“We both have a deal we can live
with,” Rohrer said.“I wanted to be
here and I wanted to play. I’m ready
to hit somebody. We took the bull by
the horns, cut out all the stuff, and
did the deal.”
After Rohrer reported on Thurs
day, he was notified he was subject to
the “Riggins rule.”
It’s a rule for players who report
to camp and leave. A player who
stays away from camp five days after
he first reports is subject to being
placed on a reserve roster where he
can’t go to any other team in the
NFL.
“It was sort of a do-or-die situa
tion tonight for me and the Cow
boys,” Rohrer said late Wednesday.
“I wanted to play for the Cowboys.
They could nave waived me. I’m
glad it worked out. We were mired
down in a lot of nonsense.”
Pennison confident that he can
walk away with starting center position
SAN ANGELO (AP) —The Hous
ton Oilers have replaced a walkout
with a walkon at the starting center
position but that’s nothing new for
Jay Pennison.
Pennison, who became the Oiler
starter when Jim Romano walked
out of camp last week, has been bat
tling football rejection throughout
his career.
He was a walkon at Nicholls State
before he became a 12th-round pick
of the USFL Jacksonville Bulls.
Pennison was cut by the Bulls and
then cut by the Washington
Redskins before he re-signed with
the Bulls for one season before the
league folded.
His aggressive approach to the
game plus Romano’s angry walkout
last week has put Pennison into the
starting center job.
“In a way it’s a relief, but I don’t
want to say there’s no pressure,”
Pennison said after Romano’s depar
ture. “I still have to go out there and
prove that I can handle the job. It’s a
different feeling, knowing that I’m
the first team guy. It gives me more
confidence.”
Romano had been a starter for the
Oilers since the 10th game of the
1984 season, but his injury gave Pen
nison a chance, Oiler Coach Jerry
Glanville said.
“Unfortunately for Romano, he*
had the injury and we found out that
someone else could play,” Glanville
K YESTERDAYS
Daily Drink & Lunch Specials
Billiards & Darts
Near Luby's / House dress code
Battalion
Classified 845-2611
CASH
for gold, silver,
old coins, diamonds
Full Jewelry Repair
Large Stock of
Diamonds
Gold Chains
TEXAS COIN
EXCHANGE
404 University Dr.
846-8916
3202-A Texas Ave.
(across from El Chico,Bryan)
779-7662
interceptioi
the NFL.
jgjfception
touchdown after the secondlR nt
touchdown pass on a 23-vai
from Garza to rookie widen
Louis Clark. Another Seatilc
fullback Tony Burse, hadai
run, the longest scrimmar
day, on the Seahawks' fint
down drive.
Garza, a fifth-round dial
from Texas-El Paso, threwi
touchdown pass to secondys
receiver Danny Greene (d
the Banks’ scoring run.
A crowd of 12,488 tliat|i
and $4 per ticket turned i
watch the teams scrimmage
PG/
pro
The tot
fo
PALM
la. (AP) ■
reens, o
lentially s
150 pros
Kingdome for the secondui^inn..I ch;
row. A crowd’ of abou;
watched the scrimmage in: ^year’s
dome last year. gievents, ge
Nat
Warren Moon, Houstons: ■roblems
quarterback, played in theft k
mage, but Dave Krieg, Seaiij
ular quarterback, did not.
The Oilers flew to Seatilf
scrimmage Wednesday mom
immediately flew backtotlis
anizers.
Chief a:
—Greei
mong otl
—Prob
which hav
ing headquarters in San j devise wh
I < vis. .if u-r the petili' tion pl.m
|ales. A ca
jaily adm
Twins' Niel#ani n 2,«
The P(
gets 10-da
suspension
STi
You:
IL
said.
Pennison appeared ready to take
Romano’s job even if he hadn’t left
camp, demanding to be traded.
“I don’t think Romano was happy
with the way he was playing and I
think he saw that Pennison was mak
ing the blocks,” Glanville said.
Pennison says he’s already feeling
right at home in the middle of the
line.
“I get along real well with the two
guards on each side of me, the com
munication is real good,” Pennison
said. “Last year we had a lot of guys
swinging in and out.
“This year everything is positive.
If we can get a good group of five
and stick together, we’ll be all right.”
NEW YORK (AP) — P®
Niekro of the Minnesota!*:
suspended for lOdaysbyAf
League President Bobbv ■
Wednesday for defacing a:
in a game Monday nig
California Angels.
Niekro, who was ejectd
sandpaper and an emeryb f
found in his back pantsi
ing the fourth inning of tilt]
11-3 victory, is the first pi®
suspended for such a violawl
Gaylord Perry in 1982.
Niekro had said the BAT]
and emery board’s present!*
nothing new and he used A
manicure his fingernails, l
“I’ll be honest with you,l| :
carry two things out there*'
an emery board and a small j
sandpaper,” Niekro said:
umpires searched him 1
mound at Anaheim Stadium,
“I’ve done that eversincei|
throwing the knuckleball.
knuckleball pitcher, 1 sal
have to file my nails be(d
nings, so I carry an eirf
with me to the mound.”
Brown would not comiuf?
ther than a two-paragraphsj
issued announcing the suspe
The suspension wasL-
port by the umpiring crew.f
tion of five baseballs thn
Niekro, the sandpaper and
board and a videotape of tlif
Merhige said.