■ FACTORY Call 76-GUMBY bb JTHE DEAL 12” one-item pizza &Trhik $5. 25 plus tax 2 For 1 $7 9 5 * > S* / • plus tax two 12 one-item pizzas other offers. Expires 9-30-88 Contact Lenses Only Quality Name Brands (Bausch & Lomb, Ciba, Barnes-Hinds-Hydrocurve) * 7Q 00 P r - *'STD. DAILY WEAR SOFT * ^ LENSES ^ QQ 00 P r - *-STD. EXTENDED WEAR SOFT LENSES $ QQ 00 P r - *-STD. TINTED SOFT LENSES ^ ** DAILY WEAR OR EXTENDED WEAR SAME DAY DELIVERY ON MOST LENSES Call 696-3754 For Appointment CHARLES C. SCHROEPPEL, O.D., P.C. DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY * Eye exam & care kit not Included m 707 South Texas Ave., Suite 101D College Station, Texas 77840 1 block South of Texas & University See the light at the end of the week... Campus Crusade for Christ' It’s worth checking out! Friday 7:30 p.m. Harrington 108 Clip and Save' University Tire & Service Center 3818 S. College Ave. 846-1738 (5 blocks North of Skaggs) [Present Coupons Thru Oct. 8,1988j FRONT OR REAR BRAKE JOB $54.95 EACH New brake pads surface rotors, repack wheel bearings, inspect master cylinder & brake hoses, bleed system, add new fluid, road test (American cars single piston system. Extra $12.00 for semi-metallic pads). FRONT END ALIGNMENT $16.95 Adjust caster, camber, steering, and toe settings as needed. Small trucks and vans slightly higher. COMPUTER BALANCE 4 regular wheels, Custom wheels extra $16.99 ENGINE TUNE UP For Electronic Ignition Others $10 More $28. 00 $34. 00 $39. 00 4 Cyl. 6 Cyl. 8 Cyl. Includes: Replace Spark Plugs, check Rotor, Dist. Cap. & Adj. Garb. & Timing When Possible. (Most Cars and Light Trucks). Page 8/The Battalion/Friday, September 23, 1988 Battalion Football Picks Doug Walker Assistant Sports Editor Cray Plxley Assistant Sports Editor Jeff Miller Sports Writer Jerry Bolz Sports Writer d.p. Cartoonist Hal L. Hammons Sports Editor Reveille Texas A&M at OSU Aggies by 6 Aggies by 6 Aggies by 1 Cowboys by 4 Aggies by 7 Aggies by 4 Aggies by 6 North Texas at Texas Horns by 3 Horns by 14 Horns by 14 Horns by 10 Horns by 1 Horns by 17 Eagles by 1 Baylor at Texas Tech Bears by 3 Bears by 10 Baylor by 4 Bears by 4 Bears by 14 Bears by 5 Bears by 5 Boston College at TCU Eagles by 10 Eagles by? Eagles by 7 Eagles by 3 Frogs by 1 Eagles by 7 Eagles by 9 Rice at Southwestern La. Cajuns by 7 Owls by 10 Cajuns by 7 Owls by 7 Owls by 1 Owls by 9 Owls by 2 Oklahoma at USC Trojans by 3 Trojans by 3 Trojans by 3 Sooners by 7 Sooners by 3 Sooners by 6 Sooners by? Mich. State at Fla. State Seminoles by 14 Seminoles by 3 Seminoles by 10 Seminoles by 10 Seminoles by 14 Seminoles by 11 Seminoles by 18 Georgia at S. Carolina Bulldogs by 2 Bulldogs by 1 Gamecocks by 3 Gamecocks by 4 Gamecocks by 3 Gamecocks by 2 Dogs by 6 LSU at Ohio State Tigers by 7 Tigers by 7 Buckeyes by 7 Tigers by 6 Tigers by 7 Tigers by 14 Buckeyes byl Pitt at West Virginia UWV by 9 Panthers by 6 Panthers by 3 UWV by 4 UWV by 1 Panthers by 4 UWV by 3 Falcons at Cowboys Cowboys by 7 Falcons by 4 Cowboys by 4 Cowboys by 10 Cowboys by 3 Cowboys by 6 Falcons by4 Patriots at Oilers Oilers by 10 Oilers by 7 Oilers by 3 Oilers by 3 Oilers by 3 Oilers by 17 Oilers by 12 Record 8-3 (.727) 8-3 (.727) 9-2 (.818) 8-3 (.727) 7-4 (.636) 5-6 (.454) 5-6 (.454) Overall 29-7 (.806re) 28-8 (.778) 28-8 (.778) 27-9 (.750) 26-10 (.722) 23-13 (.639) 20-16 (.556) Holieway: Sooners may have to pass) to win high-scoring game with USC Associated Press Jamelle Holieway, the con summate wishbone quarterback, says Oklahoma may take to the air Satur day when the third-ranked Sooners face No. 5 Southern California in the Los Angeles Coliseum. “We have to put points on the board, and the only way to do that is to throw the ball,” he said. “I believe it’s going to be a high-scoring game.” The Sooners, 2-0, have lost their past two meetings with the Trojans, 2-0, and have scored only seven points in the last six quarters against USC. Holieway has attempted 10 passes this year in victories over North Car olina and Arizona, completing five for 134 yards and one touchdown. The Sooners rank fifth in the na tion in rushing with 328 yards a game while the Trojan defense is 12th best against the run. USC coach Larry Smith realizes the game will loom large in the na tional rankings. He is also aware that a West Coast team hasn’t captured the national championship since USC won in 1972. “This is a big game for national prestige,” he said. In other games involving Top 20 teams, Wisconsin visits No. 1 Miami, Fla.; Tennessee is at No. 4 Auburn; No. 6 Georgia travels to No. 14 South Carolina; No. 7 LSU plays at Ohio State; No. 8 Notre Dame hosts Purdue; Michigan State faces No. 9 Florida State; and Arizona State meets No. 10 Nebraska. Also, No. 11 West Virginia is at No. 16 Pitt; No. 12 Clemson travels to Georgia Tech; Vanderbilt visits No. 13 Alabama; No. 15 Penn State hosts Rugters; San Jose State is at No. 17 Washington; Texas A&M faces No. 18 Oklahoma State; Wake Forest travels to No. 19 Michigan; and Mississippi State plays at No. 20 Florida. Columbia, losers of 42 games in a row, plays Lafayette, 2-0, in New York. The Lions bowed to Harvard, 41-7, in their first game and have not won since a 21-18 victory over Yale on Oct. 15, 1983. On the other hand, the top-rated Hurricanes, 2-0, have won 34 con secutive regular-season games, in cluding a thrilling 31-30 come-from- behind victory last week over Michi- S an -. . Miami coach Jimmy Johnson is grateful for the chance to play the winless Badgers — 42-point under dogs — after two games against na- ily “I think it’s a little bit of a relief not going into another week of hype and emotion,” he said, hoping to move his team closer to the record of 45 straight victories, set by Okla homa from 1953-57. Junior quarterback Steve Walsh said this week he might skip his se nior year for the chance to play in the NFL. But Walsh said his main concern these days is bringing a sec ond national title to Coral Gables. South Carolina quarterback Todd Ellis, who has thrown for 712yards) and five touchdowns in the Carat cocks’ three victories this season, is I expected to continue his aerial as sault against Georgia, 3-0. The Bulldogs gave up moretk| 700 passings yards against Tennesj see and Mississippi State, promptinjl Coach Vince Dooley to say, “I'msuit| South Carolina is licking their chopj — particularly the quarterback an:I ends — as they look at our pasttej tory this year.” Williams, Schroeder in ironic injury shuffle Associated Press up< the Olympics (Continued from page 7) of producing a time like that,’ id. “I can’t swim a 4:03.” she Evans’ time was fast enough to win a gold medal in the men’s 400 freestyle in any Olympics before 1972. She still has one more event, the 800 freestyle, and she owns the world record in that, too. The boxing controversy, or Battle of Byun, if you will, began after South Korean fighter Byun Jong-il lost a 4-1 decision to Alexandar Hristov of Bulgaria. The Korean had been penalized two points for head butting, perhaps costing him the fight. When the decision was an nounced, one Korean coach entered the ring, gesturing angrily at Walker, and then another came in, followed by a score of other boxing officials and Koreans. A chair and a bottle were thrown, and it took doz ens of police to clear the ring of all but Byun. Almost totally lost in the boxing brouhaha was Kennedy McKinney’s first-round knockout, giving the U.S. team its fourth victory in a row. McKinney, of Killeen, was a heavy favorite over Erick-Giovanni Perez of Guatemala in the 119-pound class, and it was brutally evident. Mc Kinney knocked Perez down with a right hand only seconds into the fight, then floored him with another right midway through the round. The fight ended at 1:31 of the round. “Obviously, he didn’t have too many boxing skills,” McKinney said. “It’s better to get them easy like that. By the time I reach the finals, I’ll be fresh and I’ll win the gold.” Bulgarian weightlifter Mitko Grablev became the first medal-win ner to be disqualified at these Games for drugs, losing his world-record victory in the 56-kilogram division when his urinalysis showed the banned diuretic furosemide.. The U.S. men’s volleyball contin ued defense of its Olympic championship, battling back to beat Argentina 11-15, 11-15, 15-4, 17-15, 15-7 and better its record to 3-0. MVP Doug Williams of the Wash ington Redskins and Jay Schroeder gets to start. “I’m excited, no question about it,” the 27-year-old Schroeder said. “It’s an opportunity and it’s up to me to take advantage.” Mark Rypien is also bubbling with enthusiasm over the chance to direct a high-powered offense and prove to his teammates that he can get the job done. “They’ll have to see what Mark Rypien is made of. Of course, I’m excited — and nervous,” he said. Once upon a time, Williams, Sch roeder and Rypien were teammates on the Redskins. Their fortunes now are intertwined in a web of irony. Schroeder’s stock rose when he took over for the injured Joe Theis- mann and went 27-8 as a starter. Williams, a one-time star in Tampa Bay before jumping to the USFL, got his chance last year when Sch roeder was injured and led Wash ington to the NFL title. Rypien, the 26-year-old third- string, waited. He played in presea son games but never saw action in a regular season contest. But his talent impressed Coach Joe Gibbs enough to deal the un happy Schroeder away on Sept. 5 to the Los Angeles Raiders. On Wednesday, after Williams complained of abdominal pains dur ing the team practice, Gibbs spoke to Rypien. “He said, ‘Be intense and watch whaf s going on,’ ” Rypien said. Rypien had better be a quick learner — he’ll start on Sunday for the NFC East-leading Redskins, 2-1, against the Phoenix Cardinals, because Williams will be outatleasil one month following an appendec ) tomy. “For him, this is terrible,” Rypier,I said. “For me, I guess it’s timetopuil up or shut up.” Meanwhile, Schroeder — an Pro in 1986 when he threw formortl than 4,000 yards — will havetheopl portunity to show the Raiders, 1-2, he was worth the price ofstaroffen sive tackle Jim Lachey and twoi' picks. Clip and Save| The Battalion is now accepting applications for the following positions: Columnist Entertainment Writer Staff Writer At Ease Writer Applications are available in Room 216 RDMC and are due no later than 5 p.m.Wed.,Sept.28. ELECT Justice Bob Thoma: Chief Justice OF THE 10th COURT OF APPEALS ..experience is the difference, i BATTALION CLASSIFIED PULLS! • f T ’?-J tailMBMi 1 l" t 'SHI# 1 Wi %f. L< As “This is the right time. I hadt to get used to the people here, the system, and now it’s up to me I he said while preparing for MondaJ night’s game in Denver against! 1-2 Broncos. In other NFL games this week) end, Atlanta visits Dallas; theBearij are in Green Bay; Cleveland fact!j the Bengals in Cincinnati inanAFCj Central battle; winless Indianapolis! hosts Miami; New England travelsto| Houston; and the surprising J play the Lions in the Silverdome. Also, the Vikings play in Philadd I phia; Pittsburgh hosts undefeaieil Buffalo; Tampa Bay faces New Or ) leans in the Superdome; theChargj ers are in Kansas City; the 49ersvisii| Seattle in an interconference chup; and the Rams play at the Ned York Giants. The Browns and Bengals meeti'| Cincinnati in the season’s first “B tie of Ohio.” “This is probably the biggestgamt of the year for us to this point," s Bengals quarterback boomer Esiaj son, who leads the NFL with nint| touchdown passes. P] ir a* lv< Pol. adv. pd. by Comm, to E lact Judge Bob Thomai Chief Justice ffil q Karl May, Tree*., 5400 Bosque. Waco, Tx. 76710. 1-10