The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 11, 1987, Image 9

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-
DECEMBER GRADUATES!!!
Graduation Announcement
Orders Pick-Up
MSC STUDENT PROGRAMS
RM 216 M
Tues. Nov. 10
Fri. Nov. 13
9am - 7pm
extra announcments on sale - Student
Finance Center Rm 217-Friday, Nov. 13,
Sam. First come first serve.
THE GOLDEN RULE
Fall or Spring Openings for
Women
Christian-like, non-smoking
Telephones in Deluxe Apts.
UTILITIES AND CABLE PAID
Free Laundry, Storage, Bus
CALL/ASK: 693-5560 After 4pm
$150./mo. Share B/B, $250./mo.
Own B/B 3t9/4
Cotton Village Apts.,
Snook, Tx.
1 Bdrm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $248
Rental assistance available!
Call 846-8878 or 774-0773
after 5pm. 4tf
SINUSITIS STUDY
DIAGNOSIS - Acute Sinusitis? If
you have sinus infection you may
volunteer and participate in a
short study, be compensated for
time and cooperation and have
disease treated (all cases treated
to resolution).
G&S Studies, Inc.
846-5933 ^
$125 $125 $125 $125
WANTED: Patients with fre
quently occurring heartburn
to participate in a 4 week study
using currently available medi
cation. $125 incentive paid to
those chosen to participate.
Call Pauli Research
International
776-6236 38tfn
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SKIN INFECTION STUDY
DIAGNOSIS OF ABCESS OR
CELLULITIS? Patients needed
with skin infections such as ac
cesses, impetigo, traumatic
wound infections and burns.
Make money compensatory for
time and cooperation. All disease
treated to resolution.
G&S STUDIES, Inc.
846-5933
$40 $40 $40 $40 $40
WANTED: Individuals with fre
quent aches & pains (arthritis,
burcitis, joint pain, headaches,
long term sports injuries) who reg
ularly take over-the-counter pain
medication to participate in an at
home study. $40 incentive for
those chosen to participate.
Please call:
Pauil Research International
776-6236
$40 $40 $40 $40 $40
DON’T WAIT! ENROLL I^OW!
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
TEMPERATURE STUDY
WANTED: Patients with elevated
temperature to participate in a
short at-home study to evaluate
currently available over-the-coun
ter fever reducres. No blood taken.
$75 offered to those chosen to
particcipate.
Call Pauli Research
776-6236. 1tfn
ACUTE DIARRHEA
STUHY
Persons with acute, uncom
plicated diarrhea needed to
evaluate medication being
considered for over-the-
counter sale.
G&S Studies, Inc.
846-5933
$40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40
HEADACHES
We would like to treat your
tension headache with Tyle
nol or Advil and pay you $40.
CALL PAULL RESEARCH
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• SERVICES
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ALLERGY STUDY
WANTED: Patients 18-60 yrs.
with known or suspect Fall Weed
Allergies/Hayfever to participate
in a short allergy study. $100 in
centive paid to those chosen to
participate.
Call Pauli Research Interna
tional 776-6236
$100 $100 $100 $100 $100
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ULCER STUDY
We are looking for people who
have been recently diagnosed to
have one or more stomach ulcers
to participate in a 6 week to 1 year
study. $250 to $350 offered to
those chosen to participate.
Call Pauli Research
International at
776-6236. 1Hn
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do. You try to balance yourself up,
but yet have one strong point, and
that’s the throwing game to set up
the other. We’re not there yet.
Q: Can you assess Bucky Rich
ardson’s performance to date?
A: Sure. I think he’s been a guy
who has a lot of confidence in his
ability, which overflows to our play
ers, because our players believe that
he’s going to make something hap
pen on offense some kind of way be
cause he has a lot of confidence. I
think he has done a lot of things for
us because we were searching for a
guy to come to the front and be a
leader. I think he has done that.
I think he is a tough individual,
and I’m talking about his strengths
as far as, . . . he really believes in the
“rah-rah” game, and he fires our
guys up. I think he’s done that for
us. I think he’s done everything
we’ve asked him to do without any
work to the point that we’ve taken
the pressures of reading the cover
ages and all those things off of him.
He’s done a great job for us, and I’d
have to say that he’s been excep
tional for us in the last three games
that he’s played in.
Q: Did you expect him to come
along as fast as he has?
A: No. . . . Two things we were
hoping — we were hoping that a guy
like Kevin Murray would be our
starter, and a Lance Pavlas could be
brought up gradually to the point
where the pressure of the game
wouldn’t be on him. Secondly, we
thought we could red-shirt Bucky
Richardson a year so that he could
have fun in school for a year, learn
the ropes, gradually learn how to
throw the football because he was a
wishbone quarterback. Those two
things were what we were hoping
for.
When Murray decided to go pro
and not play his last year, then all of
a sudden the pressure of the game
went to an 18-year-old young man
named Pavlas. We tried to do some
things he couldn’t handle — the
reading the defenses, the coverages.
Then we had some injuries, and he
couldn’t handle those things, so we
had to go to the other thing. Then
Richardson came along and gave us
the option guy, the second plug that
we needed was a guy to run the op
tion, and he did that for us. . ..
Q: A few weeks ago you told me
you thought Lance Pavlas was the
quarterback of the future.
A: I still do. . . . What I’m saying is
he’s good enough to play. And as
soon as he learns that there’s other'
people surrounding him that are
going to help him, as soon as he
learns how to read coverages and be
relaxed in the game and throw the
ball with confidence — that’s 90 per
cent of it, throw the ball with confi
dence — then he’s going to be a
really good quarterback.
Richardson’s gonna be a good
quarterback because he’s already got
the toughness in him, now he’s got to
learn how to throw. So there’s two
different kind of guys: one can
throw the ball, but he’s got to have
more confidence in what he’s doing;
the other one’s got to learn how to
do it. So we’re fortunate that we’re
going to have two good ones here
from now on.
Q: What about Craig Stump? He
was everybody’s No. 1 quarterback
before the season.
A: I think the great thing about
Craig is . . . two things. I think he’s a
coach on the sideline. I think Craig
didn’t give us the strength in the arm
that we were hoping he would have,
but he’s a coach on the sideline. He
helps our young guys. He coaches
them. . . . And I told him, “There’s a
lot of guys in your position that
would have quit. There’s a lot of
guys in your position that would
have felt that things were not fair.”
But he’s an exceptional person be
cause he wants to be a part of this
club to the point that he has taken a
guy like Bucky Richardson under his
wing and has told him the do’s and
don’ts of what to expect in the game,
and that’s a plus for him. And I
would say that without him, we’d be
a step backwards. I mean that. He
may not be playing a down but he’s
done more on the sidelines than,
probably, playing because he’s taken
a guy like Bucky and controlled him
on the sidelines after' a series. And
that’s a great thing to say about a
young guy. And he’s going into
coaching and I hope someday he can
going to coach for me, because he’s
that kind of guy.
In Thursday’s issue, Amedee will
discuss A&M recruiting.
Or, rush $2.00 to: Essays & Reports
11322 Idaho Ave. #206-SN, Los Angeles, CA 90025
Custom research also available—all levels
EDITING & WRITING. Articles, newsletters, scripts.
Words Worth. 696-4623. 51tl 1/18
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WORD PROCESSING - Theses, papers, dissertations.
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TYPING BY WANDA. Forms, papers, and word proc
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Rozier in alcohol rehabilitotion
near Houston, reports TV station
HOUSTON (AP) — Houston Oil
ers running back Mike Rozier is un
dergoing treatment after checking
himself into an alcohol abuse treat
ment center, a Houston television
station reported Tuesday.
Rozier, the 1983 Heisman Trophy
winner at Nebraska and the Oilers
leading ground gainer this season,
was at the Orchard Creek Hospital
in Rosenberg, west of Houston, tele
vision station KHOU reported.
A woman who answered the tele
phone at the hospital said it was
against hospital policy to identify pa
tients. She refused to identify herself
and hung up. The hospital deals
with patients suffering from alco
holic, chemical dependency and psy
chiatric difficulties.
Oilers spokesman Chip Namias
said he had no comment on the
broadcast report.
“He (Rozier) definitely has an in
jured foot. He has had an injured
foot for a couple of weeks,” Namias
said as to why Rozier missed Sun
day’s 27-20 Houston loss at San
Francisco.
The Oilers were off Tuesday and
would resume practicing Wednes
day, he said.
“Tomorrow we’ll see what kind of
shape he’s in and how he’s feeling,”
to determine if Rozier will play in
Sunday’s game at Pittsburgh, Nam
ias said.
Rozier ranks fourth in the AFC
with 417 yards rushing on 86 carries
and two touchdowns.
The team announced last week
that Rozier, 26, would be sidelined
because of a bad foot but was ex
pected to be ready the game at Pitts
burgh.
• TOR SALE
Irish have tough schedule ahead;
Aggies climb up one spot in poil
prepared at this point in the season
for teams
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__ fiOOdC •Two ponds. Perfect
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mmn B-CS Realty
Across from Hilton 51t11/11
mm ori ~S>ound
Guitar Instructor needed. 1315 Texas Avenue, Bryan.
Call 822-2334. 49tll/13
Babysitter Needed Every Other Week. M-F 2:30am-
8:15am. Call Dani 846-2267 3pm-9pm. Must be ma
ture, reliable female. 49tll/13
ATTENTION GREEKS! NATIONAL GREEK
WEEK VACATION PROMOTERS WANTED. Earn
high commissions, free carribbean vacations and air
line tickets! Meet people and gain recognition on your
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I COMPACT DISCS!
Thousands available starting at $8.99! We specialize
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Send $4 for 14,500 disc catalog or write for ordering
Information and prices. Orders shipped PROMPTLY!
Plane ticket College Station - New York City, leaves
12/16 returns 1/13. Dion 764-9068. 47tl 1/11
1982 Ford Granada. 4 door, low mileage. Family car,
extremely well cared for. $3750. 845-5803, 778-1235.
49U2/8
HP 28C $160. All manuals included. Call Glenna 822-
4745. 49tl 1/13
Mobil Home. 3/2. Central A/H. Acre. Fenced. Sheds.
Trees. Near TAMU. Sell $31,500. Lease $350.
(713)688-9100 days (713)688-6363 evenings. Leonard.
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Cheap auto parts, used. Pic-A-Part, Inc. 78 and older.
3505 Old Kurten Road, Bryan. 23tfn
PASSPORT RADAR DETECTOR, Like new $175.
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COMPUTER’S ETC. 693-7599. LOWEST PRICES
EVER! EBM-PC/XT COMPATIBLES: 640KB-RAM,
2-360KB DRIVES, TURBO, KEYBOARD, MON
ITOR: $599. PC/AT SYSTEMS: $899. Ufn
The Bargain Place 3600AA Old College. Road. We buy
or sell new and used furniture. 846-2429 or 778-7064.
44tl2/l
Violin prodigy needed, small fine fiddle, bows, case.
Reasonable. 825-3318. 51tll/16
Plane ticket C/S to Hartford Ct. Cheap. Call Mary 845-
9163. 51tll/17
Rhonda the Honda! 1975 Honda CL360. Runs, needs
improvements. $150. 696-0442. 51tl 1/17
Wanted: Responsible party to assume small monthly
payments on piano. See locally. Call credit manager 1-
800-447-4266. 48tll/17
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) —
Notre Dame finds itself staring
down the barrel of a season-ending
schedule that could dampen the
good feeling stemming from the Ir
ish’s continued climb in the Asso
ciated Press college football poll.
Notre Dame vaulted from ninth
to seventh in the rankings an
nounced Tuesday after rallying to
beat Boston College 32-25 Saturday.
Texas A&M moved up a notch to
19th while Arkansas, the Aggies’ op
ponent this Saturday in a crucial
Southwest Conference game at Kyle
Field, moved into the 20th spot after
a three-week absence.
UCLA, Syracuse and Georgia
joined the Irish in moving up two
places while Oklahoma, Nebraska,
Miami and Florida State again held
onto the first four positions.
The Irish, 7-1, face a final three
games that will test the talents of
Coach Lou Holtz and top players
such as All-American flanker Tim
Brown.
“We’ve talked all season about the
difficulty of these last three games
against Alabama, Penn State and Mi
ami,” said Holtz. “But if you’re a
good football team, you should be
cliche, but people remember what
you do in November.”
Holtz has deliberately kept a
damper on emotional playing, de
spite the temptation to get charged
up against tough opponents, in or
der to avoid a letdown before the
next game.
Oklahoma’s 29-10 victory over
No. 12 Oklahoma State cost the
Sooners the services of quarterback
Jamelle Holieway and fullback Ly-
dell Carr for the rest of the season. It
did, however, earn the Sooners 36 of
60 first-place votes and 1,164 of a
possible 1,200 points from a nation
wide panel of sports writers and
sportscasters.
Nebraska, which has been second
to Oklahoma in every poll this sea
son, defeated Iowa State 42-3 and
received 15 first-place ballots for
1,137 points. Last week, Oklahoma
led 38-15 in first-place votes and
1,173-1,137 in points.
The other nine first-place votes
and 1,111 points went to Miami of
Florida, which is No. 3 for the sev
enth consecutive week after defeat
ing Miami of Ohio 54-3. Last week,
the Hurricanes had seven first-place
votes and 1,108 points.
Oklahoma two weeks ago led Ne
braska 40-13 in first-place votes and
1,176-1,134 in points. The previous
week, it was 42-12 and 1,179-1,134.
Florida State, following its 34-6
rout of No. 6 Auburn, received
1,021 points. The Tigers fell to 12th
place.
Louisiana State also suffered its
first setback this season, losing to Al
abama 22-10, and fell to 10th from
fifth place.
UCLA moved up from seventh to
fifth with 943 points by defeating
Oregon State 52-17, Syracuse
jumped from eighth to sixth with
902 points by downing Navy 34-10.
Georgia rose from a lOth-place tie
with Clemson to eighth with 694
points by beating Florida 23-10.
Clemson, a 13-10 winner over
North Carolina, is ninth with 646
points and LSU rounds out the Top
Ten with 632 points.
The Second Ten consists of Ala
bama, Auburn, Michigan State,
South Carolina, Penn State, Indiana,
Oklahoma State, Tennessee, Texas
A&M and Arkansas.
Walker may start Sunday
for Pokes against Patriots
Ski Colorado this January. 5 nights lodging, 4 day lift
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IRVING (AP) — Herschel Walker
could start at tailback for the Dallas
Cowboys against New England on
Sunday, but the first-team quar
terback will still be Danny White,
Coach Tom Landry said Tuesday.
Landry reiterated that he would
yank White out of a game if he
thought the team was playing well
and the quarterback wasn’t.
“If the quarterback is the only one
playing poorly then you make a
change,” Landry said. “Danny White
has a lot of courage and is tough
mentally. He has overcome a lot. But
I will make a change in a game if I
don’t see him throw better.”
He said backup quarterback Steve
Pelluer looks sharper in practice.
“Steve looks better than this sum
mer,” Landry said. “I’m anxious to
see what he can do. But I think
White can still win football games for
us.”
Landry has undergone a heavy
round of criticism for his use of
Walker and Tony Dorsett and for
staying with White.
He said Tuesday that Walker
“could possibly start against New En
gland but it would depend on what
formation we are in.”
Walker started at wide receiver
and Tony Dorsett at tailback in a 27-
17 loss to Detroit on Sunday and the
also
spi
played half the game at tailback.
Both players have expressed un
happiness with the way they are be
ing used. Walker said he doesn’t un
derstand his role, and Dorsett said
Landry “needs to settle on one run
ning back to deliver the mail.”
“I have to do what’s best for the
team and it’s only natural that every
runner wants to be the No. 1 tail
back,” Landry said. “But we have to
use the talent we have.”
He denied that Dorsett, who has
rushed for 3 and 24 yards in his last
two games, has lost a step.
“Tony is not a big, strong back like
Herschel and has to explode to day
light,” Landry said. “Herschel can
break tackles to get his yards but
Tony isn’t that strong.”
Landry said he doesn’t think the
Cowboys are an effective running
team with Walker at fullback and
Dorsett at tailback.
But he predicted the running
game would improve. “We are run
ning a different type offense this
year with zone blocking. We are not
in a groove and it can make a back
look bad. Duane Thomas used to
look a lot like Dorsett has been
looking because they are the kind of
runners who take their time looking
for the blocks.”
In Tuesday’s analysis (Cotton
Bowl chase a four-team race) a
mistake was made in tabulating
A&M’s chances to go to the Cot
ton Bowl in case of losses.
The Aggies can lose to Texas
Christian and still go if they win
the rest of their games and if
Texas beats TCU and then loses
to Baylor.
The three-way tie between
A&M, Arkansas and UT would
send the Aggies to the bowl since
they would have beaten each of
the other teams.
A&M can wrap up a Cotton
Bowl berth before the game
against Texas, and thus could
lose to the Longhorns, if TCU
and Baylor each beat UT and
A&M wins its games against the
Razorbacks and Horned Frogs.
In such a case, the Aggies
would be in a tie with TCU and
Arkansas, having beaten them
both.
Two of our readers called the
error to our attention Tuesday,
and the sports staff appreciates
the correction.
The Battalion regrets the er
ror.