THE BATT/ MONDAY, MARC Lunch C. K. Krumbottz serves of sandwiches, burgers, s super salad bar Join u 2 p.m. Mon. through Fri. Our super I spread of n and get V* p VISA 815 Harvey Roac CS. Sams WE’RE LO POWER F MONTH FC HAVE DEC YOU CAN WRITE: WE’LL 1 NOT INTE GINEERtf A U.S. N/> DePaul ready for showdown United Press International MISSION, Kan. — Ray Meyer took DePaul to the Final Four of the NCAA basketball tournament last March for the first time in his 37-year tenure as head coach of the Blue De mons. But the venerable Meyer will probably have a tougher time reaching the Final Four in 1980 even though DePaul is a better team this year than last. That’s because the Blue Demons are again plotted in the West Regional and face a possi ble rematch with UCLA in their opening round game. DePaul has a 26-1 record, a No. 1 national ranking and a forward the NBA would love to have — 6-foot-7 sophomore Mark Aguirre. But the Blue Demons have incur red the wrath of mighty UCLA in two straight meetings. DePaul whip ped UCLA in the title game of the West Regional last March, 95-91, and then beat up on the Bruins in a rematch last December in the in UCLA’s own Pauley Pavilion, 99-94. DePaul and UCLA were two of 25 teams awarded at-large berths Sun day for the 42nd annual tournament, which will have its largest field ever at 48 teams. Play begins Thursday night with subregional games at Greensboro, N.C. (East); West Lafayette, Ind. (Mideast); Lincoln, Neb. (Midwest) and Ogden, Utah (West). The only snag in a possible De- Paul-UCLA rematch is Old Domin ion, the ECAC South representa tive. The Bruins meet the Monarchs in a subregional game at Tempe, Ariz., Friday night with the winner advancing against DePaul, the top- seeded team in the West, Sunday. 'It is, of course, difficult to beat the same team twice in a single sea son, Meyer said. “Your players have confidence that they can win on a neutral court after beating the same team on the road earlier in the year. Of course, UCLA has to beat a fine Old Dominion team. “We beat Marquette in the regu lar season and had to beat them again in the playoffs. One thing, you can count on UCLA being sky-high for us. If you can get over that first round game, then it sometimes gets easier. We ll be ready.” Other teams awarded the top seeds were Syracuse in the East, Kentucky in the Mideast and LSU in the Midwest. The Midwest appears to be the blockbuster regional this year with four teams ranked in the Top 10: No. 4 Louisville, No. 6 LSU and No. 9 co-holders North Carolina and Mis souri as well as No. 15 Notre Dame, No. 18 Texas A&M and Missouri Val ley champion Bradley. The expanded field, up from the 40 teams of last year and the 32 of two years ago, allowed the NCAA to lift the lid on the number of representa tives each conference could send. The previous ceiling had been two. The chief beneficiary this year was the ACC with five teams: Duke, North Carolina, North Carolina State, Maryland and Clemson. The Big Ten and Pac-10 had four teams apiece and the Southeast and Metro conferences two apiece; At-large invitations were ex tended to Syracuse, Marquette, Iowa, North Carolina State, George town, Tennessee and Maryland in the East; Florida State, Washington State, Purdue, Virginia Tech, St. John’s and Kentucky in the Mideast; Alcorn State, South Alabama, Notre Dame, North Carolina, Arkansas and Missouri in the Midwest; and DePaul, UCLA, Arizona State, Clemson, Utah State and Ohio State in the West. All-tourney team picked United Press International DALLAS — Texas A&M’s David Britton was named the most valuable player of the Southwest Conference basketball tournament, but Arkan sas U.S. Reed received the most votes for the all-tournament team announced Monday. Reed was named on 47 of the 65 ballots submitted by sports writers and broadcasters who covered the tournament. Texas A&M captured the tourney title with a 52-50 deci sion over Arkansas Saturday night. Joining Reed on the first team were Texas’ Ron Baxter (42 votes), Britton (41 1 /2), Texas A&M’s Rynn Wright (38), Arkansas’ Keith Hilliard (14) and Texas A&M’s Vernon Smith (14). Conference officials said 23 play ers received at least one vote. The second team consisted of Arkansas Scott Hastings, Texas' Tech’s Jeff Taylor, Texas’ LaSalle Thompson, Texas A&M’s David Goff and Hous ton’s Rob Williams. ^ I O “ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED’’ PRE-LEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL SEMES| BEGINNING MARCH 1, 1980 On Shuttlebus Route Two Beautiful Swimming pj Unitt Furnished & Unfurnished Efficiency, 1, 2, & 3 Bedroom Apartments Tennis Courts (Lighted) ibcTONI - 24 Hr. Professional Maintenance Party/Meeting Room with$|T? Servlce Health Spas, Including SaJ ,rL nee< Men & Women laid Reaga |feJohn Ai Service Families Welcome Pets permitted Men & Women Three Laundry Rooms Basketball/Volleyball Court he last of t ntial prima ien. Edwai Rental office open Monday through Fridays; to,lisbatt Saturday 10-5 693-1110 1501 Hwy. 30 MEMBER OF BETTER BUSINESS BUREAU the Massac SundiJSidcnt Car w nt. ,693'l;leagan’s '\ Hr, decic the tally fre l|ods near t Vernon Smith, Rudy Woods and Rynn Wright hold up the first-place trophy they earned in San Antonio Saturday night after defeating Arkansas 52-50 for the championship game in the S WC Tournament. Staff photo by Lynn Blanco. Rice coach heads for A&M United Press International HOUSTON — Rice football coach Mike Rader has resigned after only five weeks on the job, apparently to accept a similar position in the Texas A&M athletic department, Rice head coach Ray Alborn said Monday. The sudden resignation caused the Owls to postpone the start of spring football practice a week to March 17. Alborn hired Rader from West Virginia after Owls offensive coordi nator Ted Unbehagen left to join the A&M coaching staff of Tom Wilson. Rader was involved in the Owls pre paration to install the veer offense this spring. NIT playoffs start tonight United Press International NEW YORK — Pepperdine and Long Beach State, a pair of success ful West Coast Athletic Conference rivals, will square off today in the first game of basketball’s National In vitation Tournament. St. Peter’s, the top defensive team in the country, will meet the Univer sity of Connecticut in one of seven games on Wednesday. The remain der of the 32-team field will play on Thursday and Friday. The University of Texas-El Paso, with a 19-7 mark, will visit Wichita State, with a 17-11 record, on Thursday. Also on Thursday, Nebraska, 18- 12, goes up against Michigan, 15-12, on Michigan’s home court. ALTERATIONS IN THE GRAND TRADITION OF OLD TEXAS WHERE MOTHER TAUGHT DAUGHTER THE FINE ART OF SEWING SO HELEN MARIE TAUGHT EDITH MARIE THE SECRETS OF SEWING AND ALTERATIONS DON'T GIVE UP — WPLL MAKE IT FIT!" AT WELCH'S CLEANERS WE NOT ONLY SERVE AS AN EXCELLENT DRY CLEANERS BUT WE SPE CIALIZE IN ALTERING HARD TO FIT EVENING DRESSES. TAPERED SHIRTS, JEAN HEMS. WATCH POCKETS. ETC (WE RE JUST A FEW BLOCKS NORTH OF FED MART.) WELCH’S CLEANERS 3819 E. 29th (TOWN & COUNTRY SHOPPING CENTER) BEER GARDEN Appearing Live This Week WEDNESDAY- THURSDAY »ten miN utes late’ pursed a FRIDAY-’IS by) SATURDAftSI CALVER BELL 4410 College Main T.J.’s PROUDLY PRESENTS $2.00 ULift QP u sl v super Preside.. revisic lystem w< ) - f 2 0 +V.2 0, + S -2„0,+D,v ! 0 1 JUNIORS - SENIORS - GRADS IF THIS CATCHES YOUR EYE YOU MAY QUALIFY TO EARN $725 PER MONTH DURING YOUR LAST 12 MONTHS OF STUDY. 'You’re t; ese jobs ■angement Miller : thought tl eyour owr irk. Biller wa w Joint mey Rek gksible foi Pabout I e main eai Ipe com. gsonnel m jig, develc Asked wl gler said. The comi ith change iRules anc illor Fran! Ill “contin reen the a “I think \ ps,” Mill St to Not! ijersity : eaction pany’s against This s I dom sai Besid WE’RE LOOKING FOR PEOPLE WITH A YEAR OF CALCULUS AND PHYSICS TO TRAIN IN THE NUCLEAR POWER FIELD AFTER GRADUATION AND WE’RE WILLING TO PAY YOU A SALARY OF *$725* PER MONTH FOR UP TO 12 MONTHS DURING YOUR LAST YEAR IN SCHOOL FOR YOUR SERVICES. IF YOU HAVE DECENT GRADES, DON’T RULE YOURSELF OUT BECAUSE OF YOUR MAJOR. GO AHEAD SEE IF YOU CAN QUALIFY. CALL THE NUCLEAR PROGRAMS MANAGER AT *214-767-7602* COLLECT OR WRITE: WED. MARCH 5th 8-12 p.m. Admission: $ 6 $ 5 per person with A&M ID Advance tickets will be sold at TJ.’s and at Music Express. Ticket stubsw® worth $1.00 off all list price albums at Music Express. NUCLEAR PROGRAMS MANAGER 1499 REGAL ROW SUITE 501 DALLAS, TEXAS 75247 ESTABLISHED IN 1974 WE’LL BE INTERVIEWING AT YOUR PLACEMENT CENTER ON: MARCH 24 THRU 28th NOT INTERESTED IN NUCLEAR POWER? WE’LL BE INTERVIEWING FOR CIVIL ENGINEERING, EN GINEERING DUTY, SURFACE WARFARE, AVIATION MAINTENANCE, ETC., ALSO. SIGN UP TODAY FOR A U.S. NAVY INTERVIEW. . . 707 COMPLEX COLLEGE STATION 696-0388 Fresl nore sa row.” “It c< ary \] “It’s ervice Tease, or Ka: Mouse ‘GT finance basic f dial ou get inf Gra< upseti plain a ‘It’s r< got. T! of that The first si the P week. F.E dent, ings t quire, ing te and i ceder our r< If i monf lege 5 party one-j Th Pay? vice, or 96