Battalion Classifieds HELP WANTED The Psychology Department at TAMU is conducting research on group dynamics and we need participants. We will pay you $30 for 6 hrs. over a 3 week period. Sign up outside room 348. If you have questions call 845-4992 and ask for Dawna. If you have done this before please do not re- apply. CLERK for law office; prefer word perfect and some account ing experience; 20 hours per week; afternoons. Send resume to P.O. Box 7619, College Sta tion, Texas 77844. 170t07/18 age or sex, prefer student. Call John 845-0487 SERVICES FREE PREGNANCY TESTING •Confidential Counseling Good Samaritan Pregnancy Testing and Counseling 505 University Drive (Behind Franks Bar & Grill) 846-2909 a Resumes, cover letters, re search papers, flyers, etc. For more information about typing call Notes-n-Quotes at 846-2255. 1 71 t7/or Professional Word Processing Laser printing for Resumes, Reports, Letters and Envelopes. Typist available 7 days a week ON THE DOUBLE 113 COLLEGE MAIN 846-3755 166ttfn Experienced librarian will do library research for you. EDITING - $2 PER PAGE ENGLISH INSTRUC TION— $8 PER HOUR CALL 696-3082. 169t7/17 TYPING: Accurate, Prompt, Professional, Fifteen years experience. Near Campus, 696-5401. I69t8/22 WORD PROCESSING: PROFESSIONAL, PRECISE, SPEEDY-LASAR/LETTER QUALITY LISA 846- 8130. 1527/13 FOR SALE ’81 SUBARU 2 DOOR HATCHBACK, 75,000 MILES, AM/FM TAPE, 4 SPEED, GOOD CONDI TION 823-2672. 17H7/13 ’82 HONDA PASSPORT MOPED 4000 MILES HEL METS INCLUDED $300 693-9483. 169t7/25 1987 Yamaha Fazer 700. Bought new 2/89. Only 1600 — sferable miles. Bike is in showroom condition. Transf warranty, $3250. Call David 696-0104. I62t7/13 FOR RENT COTTON VILLAGE APTS Ltd. Snook, TX 1 bdrm $200 2 Bdrm $248 Rental Assistance Available Call 846-8878or 774-0773 after 5pm Equal Opportunity Housing/Handicapped Accessible 60tt f n Kyle Field! Kyle Field! Kyle Field! 2B/2B condo- has an assumable loan. Fur niture, appliances, large closets, fireplace- make this place ready to move into please call. JUDY BRADFORD CENTURY 21 BEAL 775-9000 168t7/24 API FOR SUMMER AND/OR FALL LEASE START ING AT $190 AND BILLS. 2B-1B; TWO BLOCKS FROM CAMPUS. 696-7266. 152t7/12 Sublease 1-1, ASAP. Close to campus, quiet area, shut tle, deposit $100, rent $185 summer, $310 fall. #268- 8110:845-6205. 166t7/12 MISCELLANEOUS WANT A NEW CAR OR TRUCK? DO YOU HAVE A JOB AFTER GRADUATION OR A COSIGNER? COME SEE Fellow Aggie Andy Balberg at QUALITY PON MAC BUICK GMC TRUCK. 7'79-1000. 169t8/10 TRAVEL FLY FOR LESS AS A COURIER! Major Airline Hous- fir: ton to London roundtrip $350 plus first-time registra tion fee $50 . Call NOW VOYAGER (212)431-1616. 169ttfn ROOMMATE WANTED Non-smoking, 2b, $125, now-fall, near campus 845- 1827, 268-7744 Chen. 17U7/19 OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT ON TARGET! EAST GATE APARTMENTS 693-7380 LOADED WITH BARGAINS ANDERSON PLACE 693-2347 Call today The Battalion SPORTS Thursday, July 12,1990 Sports Editor Clay Rasmussen 845-2688 The 6 \ Th LeMond moves into contention on Tour American moves Registered lethal weapons? in Tour de France Graduate student needs subject for psychological test ing. Will take approximately four hours of your time, but you benefit by learning more about yourself. Any ‘ t. Caf ’ ■ ■ 17U7/19 GoltTTennis Coach: Golf and tennis instructor needed lor two advanced pupils. Experience required. Lessons twice per week after 5p.m. Call LORETTA 776-0400. 159ttfn Two experienced childcare workers for church nurs- ei v, approx 7 hours. Sunday' - a m. & p.m., Wednesday - p in. Call 779-7608. ' 166t7/13 Come by Today! Offering Summer Rates • 2 Bedroom - One Bath • 24 Emergency Maintenance • Water & Sewer Paid • On Shuttle • Fireplaces • Washer-Dryer Connections • 1034 sq. feet 119-3631 1009 A Vada Dr. Bryn (REST CREE jpe C APARTMENTS ) K Healthy males wanted as semen donors. Help infertile couples. Confidentiality ensured. Ethnic diversity de sirable. Ages 18 to 35, excellent compensation. Contact Fairfax Cryobank 1121 Braircrest Suite 101, 776-4453. 147ttfn Part-time handyman needed 20 + hours/week, tools and truck a must, experience necessary 823-5469. 166t7/12 INTELLIGENCE JOBS. FBI, CIA, US Customs, DEA, etc. Now Hiring. Call 1-805-687-6000, ext. K-9531. 170t07/20 7\ 4Iom AdcfUan Enc. •Medical & Hospital Expenses •Personal & Confidential -Counseling /•Alternative to Abortion Housing and Related Expenses We take time to Care Telephone Answered 24 Hrs 1 -800-468-6895 Licensed by State of Texas ‘Distinctive Style! ctutu&v&e W 1001 Harvey Rd 693-4242 811 Harvey Rd 696-9638 Varied amenity packages! Near shopping, entertainment, and much, much more! BIG BILL? NOT WHEN YOU LIVE AT • Efficiency, 1, 2 and 3 bedrooms • All bills paid (except electricity) • No city utility deposit • Shuttle bus route • Volleyball Court • Lighted Tennis Courts • Hot tub • 2 Pools • Basketball Courts “New Carpet-New Carpet” Lease Today For Best Selection Now pre-leasing for summer & fall 693-1110 Hours: M-F 8-6 Sat. 10-5, Sun 1-5 PLANTATION OIKS 1501 Harvey Road, C.S. Across from Post Oak Mall p— Follow the AGGIES to Hawaii! $390 Roundtrip airfare from College Station Only lO seats remain Tuesday, August 28- Simday, September 2 S46-1T02 AGGIE LAND TRAVEL AggieVision option 23 Texas A&M v s video yearbook L’ALPE D’HUEZ, France (AP) — Two-time champion Greg LeMond moved into contention Wednesday with a strong mountain ride and sec ond-place finish in the 11th stage of the Tour de France. Italian Gianni Bugno edged LeM ond in the final sprint to take the 113-mile leg from Mont Blanc to 1’Alpe d’Huez, but LeMond’s power ful showing moved him to third in the overall standings. Ronan Pensec remains the overall leader, 1 minute, 28 seconds ahead of Italian Claudio Chiappucci and 9:04 in front of ‘Z’ teammate LeM ond. The stage was marked by the three most difficult climbs so far on the Tour, the last of which was up the 6,100-foot peak, 1’Alpe d’Huez. On the final climb, LeMond, Bugno, Pedro Delgado and Eric Breukink led before 1988 winner Delgado dropped into the pack with two miles to go. LeMond launched into the final sprint and appeared to have it won until Bugno came on in the final yards. LeMond, who hurt his wrist when he fell at a food station earlier in the day, had difficulty preparing for the final sprint. “I had trouble braking and I went wide around the final curve,” LeM ond said. “That may have cost me the stage.” LeMond was leading when he al most went into a barrier going into the final straightaway. Although he stayed ahead of Bugno for the mo ment, he lost momentum and Bugno came on at the finish. The injury doesn’t appear to be serious and LeMond said he was re ady for Thursday’s 20-mile time trial. Pensec, who took the overall lead from Canadian Steve Bauer in the 10th stage, was having trouble at the bottom of the final hill. However, with the help of teammate Robert Millar, he was able to get closer to the leaders and reduced the deficit to a handful of seconds. They're back... English soccer reinstated LONDON (AP) — Its stadiums are shabby, its fans remain rowdy and it still can’t produce a tennis player good enough to get past the second round at Wimbledon. Forget all that. England was back on top of the sports neap Tuesday, at least in its own provincial eyes. Fans could fill themselves with pride along with beer at the local pub as, within dVa hours on a typ ically cloudy summer day, two events restored the nation so long asso ciated with the downside of sport to No. 1. First, the European soccer feder ation, UEFA, voted to readmit En glish clubs into two of its three conti nental tournaments next year. The clubs were banned in 1985 after English fans rampaged through a Belgian stadium, killea 39 people. “We are back!” read the inch-high headline on the Evening Standard, London’s afternoon newspaper, and fans were snapping up copies. Soccer ana government officials were quick to praise the move. “We see today’s decision as the dawning of a new era for English football and we deeply welcome it,” said British sports minister Colin Moynihan. Photo by Sondra Robbias Shane Stewart (right), a criminal justice major from Midland, spars with Chinese Fighting Art instructor Jerry McGlade. Then, just as the country was )d 1 drinking in that dram of good news came a double shot: England had won a big cricket series on home soil for the first time in five years. NCAA sweetens contract Devon Malcolm, a young bowler first mentioned as a budding super- star during a series in the West In dies last winter, led England to a 114-run victory over New Zealand at Edgbaston, near Birmingham. Malcolm is a pace bowler, the equivalent of a fastball pitcher. His feat of taking five of the 10 New Zea land wickets — including bowling newly knighted Richard Hadlee for just 13 runs — could be compared with a pitcher striking out 13 batters and capping it by getting Jose Can seco looking at a changeup on 3- and-2. ig Go devisk poration interrupted its television news headlines in the afternoon to announce, “England has just won the Test with New Zealand.” OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — The NCAA’s budget subcommittee approved on Wednesday broad recommendations for distributing SI bil lion from a seven-year television contract with CBS that would de-em phasize schools playing tournament games for money. The NCAA wifi distribute about $115 million to members during the 1990-91 budget year, said Judy Sweet, director of athletics at the Univer sity of California-San Diego and chairwoman of the special committee that developed the plan. Some $70 million to $75 million will be shared among Division I mem bers according to a distribution formula that has two parts, she said. That compares to $36 million annually shared in the past. Sweet said the first pool is a conference’s performance in the Division 1 men’s basketball tournament. The second is a broad-based program that will include the institution’s sports sponsorships and the number of grants- in-aid it provides. Sweet and NCAA executive director Dick Schultz said the amount indi vidual institutions will receive has not been determined. But according to the formula, the increase in revenue institutions will get through their con ferences will range from 58 to 200 percent. Schultz said that according to tbe new basketball tournament pool, flat payments for progression through the tournament will no longer be used. Instead, the revenue from the tournament will be based on a conference’s performance in the tournament over a six-year rolling average beginning with the 1985-90 period. Shares will go to conferences for distribution to institutions. LO that g royalt ways i son h nest r His dinne esty C Moth' Th were the ' nearl; little, some don s< “Sc Wyatt “Ai echoe her of Chun Wil and , who c troubl Queei weekl weeks “It [propr Iner h Ags, Packers unite to benefit former teammate From Staff and Wire Reports imp, m g< tournament is scheduled for late July to help former Texas A&M All-American Lee Roy Caffey, who suffers from stomach cancer. Caffey, who played for the Green Bay Packers from 1964 to 1969 and was selected All-Pro in 1966, has been fighting cancer with surgery and a four month hospital stay, former Packer tea mmate Donny Anderson said. “He used to tell us in the Packer dressing rooms that he was tougher than any two men we knew,” Anderson said. “Now I believe it.” The benefit tournament, scheduled for July 23 at Dallas’ Royal Oaks Country Club, will feature celebrity captains such as Southern Methodist Athletic Di rector Forrest Gregg and former Packer Ray Nitchske. A&M Athletic Director John David Crow and head football Coach R.C. Slocum are scheduled to play as well, but were unavail able for comment. “We’re calling on all the old Packers, Aggies, the 12th Man Club and any fans or friends to play,” Anderson said. Ryan just another rancher in Alvin her h | versa! “Id I much never think Queei start ( conve wome 1 most < ant | back f; In Iduced mothe land v\ was sa ness f | proble ALVIN, Texas (AP) — You won’t find any buildings named for this small town’s hero. There are no bill boards touting his celebrity, few bumper stickers, and there’s never been a parade in his honor. The four-block street named after him doesn’t even have any street signs. Nolan Ryan, and Alvin, Texas, wouldn’t have it any other way. Ryan, the unassuming, aw shucks Texas country boy who, at age 43, throws no-hitters through back pain and holds baseball’s all-time strike out record, went into the All-Star breakjust four wins short of the 300- victory milestone. He grew up in and still lives in Al vin, an unassuming, aw shucks kind of country town which now finds it self caught between hs frontier past and the urban sprawl of Houston, 20 miles away. If a town can reflect a man’s per sonality, or perhaps more accurately a man can reflect a town’s personal ity, then Alvin, Texas, population close to 20,000, and Nolan Ryan are very much alike. It’s a town where the churches outnumber the lawyers in the Yellow Pages, 24-21. In gosh-golly Alvin, City Hall is one of the few two-story structures, many of the downtown stores are boarded up and the Wal- Mart out on the highway bypass thrives. And Alvin’s a town where the peo ple, and the businesses, seem to al ways be on a first-name basis. There’s Ken’s Auto Repair, Clem’s Paint and Body, Jerry’s Ap- t6 When he comes in here, he’s just like another person. Making a big deal out of him might spoil that.” —Joe Saladino, Restaurant owner pliances, Scotty’s Florist, Jodie’s Hair Center, Robert’s Cafe, Ted’s Phillips 66, Barbara’s Hair Masters, Frank’s Furniture and Jim’s Jewelry. At Joe’s Bar-B-Q, run oy Ryan’s high school chum Joe Saladino, you won’t find a Nolan Ryan Over-The- Plate Special on the menu, because to folks in Alvin, Nolan’s just a neighbor. “I thought about putting him on the menu, but it just wouldn’t seem right,” Saladino said. “When he comes in here, he’s just like another person. He’ll sit at this table and we’ll say, ‘Howya doing? How’s your cows?”’ “Making a big deal out of him might spoil that.” Elsewhere, everyone’s making a big deal of Nolan Ryan now. Fans mob him at Arlington Stadium and on the road. President Bush calls him up for golf dates. He ducks in and out of hotel back doors. Collec- To Ryan, not being a big deal i: Alvin is one of the attractions of stai ing in his hometown. When lie'i home, he works his ranch and fit quents his children’s athletic con tests, sitting in the bleachers without being hounded for autographs. “It’s the town I grew up in. I'm very comfortable there. It’s certainli not the most attractive place to livtj but I’m comfortable there," said Ryan, 7-4 for the Texas Rangers thii year. “It’s flat prairie-land. There! nothing pretty about it. When peo pie see it they wonder why I stayed there. But it’s home. That’s the beJ way to explain it,” he said. For years Alvin has resisted pres sure from Ryan’s teams and fans fa celebrations honoring accomplish ments, such as this season’s record! sixth no-hitter or last season’s 5,( strike-out mark. tors say his autograph, baseball cards emorahilk and other memorabilia have soared in value the last two years. Texas Re publicans want him to run for office. But now there is talk of a Now Ryan Day, and there are committeel studying a Nolan Ryan Museum! which in typical unassuming, lotij key fashion may be combined with! community center, police static: and jail. “We’re trying to come up will something to recognize him,” said one of Ryan best hometown friends Carl Getjes, a director of the Nolar Ryan Historical Foundation. “It’s not that we don’t love and re spect the guy, we do. Wejust wantm clo it where everyone feels comfort able, most importantly Nolan, Gerjes said. THE* GKAPEVfoTE, 201 Live Oak College Station, TX 77840 BehindLa Quinta 696-3411 rp Catering to Colligate Computer Needs Buy-Sell Quality Used Systems At Discount Prices (409) 696-2967 IMMIGRATION WORK VISAS LABOR CERTIFICATIONS PERMANENT RESIDENCE ALL OTHER IMMIGRATION MAfTERS BARBARA HINES, pc Attorney at Law Board Certified Immigration and Nationality Law Texas Board of Legal Specialization 1005 E. 40th (512)452-0201 AUSTIN, TX 78751 i i