Page 12/The Battalion/Thursday, January 9, 1984 CHAMPS $ 10.oo OFF NIKE BROOKS TIGER • INCLUDING NIKE “DOUBLE TEAM HI “AIR FORCE I” & LEDGENDS .ntn iT^TT 1 " 1 iinim M nun iiiiniinui BY THE FOUNTAIN IN POST OAK MALL 764-0651 TANK MCNAMARA by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds A&M signees Last shot doesn’t fall as Hogs drop Aggies By BILL ROBINSON Assistant sports editor Texas A&M went one-for- two on shots at the buzzer last night. Unfortunately for the Aggies, the one miss came at the end of the game giving Arkan sas a 59-58 victory. It was the Aggies’ fourth con secutive setback in Southwest Conference action andthe sec ond straight one-point decision. But this game could easily have gone the other way. Doesn't Your Car Need Some Shades, Too? Glass tinting by Master's Auto Glass 1605 Cavitt 775-4513 Trucks $75 - $90 Most Cars Under $140 A Doug Lee layup rolled across the rim and into the hands of Arkansas center Joe Kleine as time ran out ending a remarkable comeback attempt. Coach Shelby Metcalf was pleased with the team’s perfor mance. “Our guys played real tough all night,’’ Metcalf said. “It was a great comeback. We just missed a couple of shots that could have won the game for us.’’ But the Aggies did make a few shots toward the end that brought the 3,329 fans in G. Rollie White Coliseum to their feet. A&M trailed by eight points when Kleine slammed the ball in with just over four minutes remaining, but it was all Aggies from there on. Kenny Brown scored five of his 12 points in the closing min utes of the game, including a 30-foot jumper; A1 Pulliam stuffed in a shot that was hang ing on the rim, and Darnell Wil liams hit a 16-footer with 20 sec onds left to pull the Aggies within to one. Todd Holloway then fouled Scott Rose on the in-bounds play, fouling out with 13 sec onds remaining. Arkansas called a time-out to sort out strategy for the free-throws — allowing Metcalf to do the same. “We put Doug on one side and Kenny on the other,” Met calf said. “I told Darnell to go to the hoop and if he got into trou ble he was supposed to go to one of them. He made a tre mendous pass. This Desk Can Reach Mach 2. Some desk jobs are more exciting than others. As a Navy pilot or flight officer, your desk can be a sophis ticated combination of supersonic jet air craft and advanced electronic equipment. But you can handle it. Because Navy flight training gives you the navigation, aerodynamics and other technical know-how you need. In return, Navy aviation demands something of you as an officer: Leadership. Your path to leadership starts with officer training that’s among the most making authority. In the air, and on the ground, you have management responsi bility from the begin ning, And your responsibility grows as you gain experience. demanding in the military. It’s intensive leadership and professional schooling combined with rigorous Navy flight training. And it’s all geared to prepare you and other college , graduates for the unique challenge of Navy aviation. The program is tough but rewarding. One important reward for Navy officers is decision- NAVY OPPORTUNITY INFORMATION CENTER P.O. Box 5000, Clifton, NJ 07015 □ Please send me more information about becom ing a member of the Naval Aviation Tteam. (0A) Name. First (Please Print) Address. City- Age- .State. —tCollege/University. :):Year in College- AMajor/Minor No company can give you this kind of leadership responsibility this fast. And nothing beats the sheer excitement of Navy flying. The salary is exciting, too. Right away, you’ll earn about $18,300 a year. That’s better than the average corpora tion will pay you just out of college. And with regular Navy promotions and other pay increases, your annual salary will soar to $31,100 after four years. That’s on top of a full package of benefits and privileges. Before you settle down to an earth- bound desk job, reach for the sky. Reach for the coupon. Find out what it takes to be part of the Naval Aviation Tfeam. You could have a desk that flies at twice the speed of sound. W 343 Last -Apt. -Zip- .♦GPA Phone Number- (Area Code) Best Time to Call This is for general recruitment information. You do not have to furnish any of the information requested. Of course, the more we know, the more we can help to determine the kinds of Navy posi tions for which you qualify. Navy Officers Get Responsibility Fast. “I sure thought Doug’s (shot) was going to go.” It didn’t, though, and A&M’s 1. Tony Jones, wr, 6-1, 175, Houston Sam Houstoi 2. Calvin Whitfield, ol, 6-3, 260, Dickinson 3. Shane Dybala, til, 6-6, 245, Van Vleck 4. Sammy O’Brienl, til, 6-4, 240, Aliel Elsik 5. L.B. Moon, ol, 6-6, 205, Jenks, Okla. 6. Mark Motley, qb, 6-3, 205, Ore City 7. Terrence Brooks, db, 6-1, 180, Dallas 8. O’Neil Gilbert, dl, 6-3, 221, Monroe, La. 9. Trace McGuire, ol, 6-5, 225, Nederland 10. Tony Thompson, wr, 6-2, 180, HoustonLamar 11. Junior Fontenot, ol, 6-3, 230, Lafayette, La. 12. Chris Hanks, dl, 6-5, 250, Lafayette, La. 13. John Roper, lb, 6-2, 205, Houston Yates 14. Tim Landrum, db, 6-1, 185, Plano 15. Melvin Collins, rb, 6-0, 208, I emple 16. Jimmy Shelby, lb, 6-1, 210, Italy 17. Brent Smith, rb, 6-2. 205, LaPorte 18. Junior Bowie, rb, 6-1, 195, Borger 19. Alex Morris, rb, 6-2, 180, Arlington Houston 20. Chris Ford, db, 6-3, 185, Angleton 21. Troy Neel, lb, 6-3, 210, Brazoswood 22. Tim Brown, db, 6-1, 180, LaPorte 23. Layne Polocheck, lb, 6-3, 215, HoustonSt.Thoi 24. Matt Gurley, lb, 6-0, 190, Arlington Lamar 25. Guy Broom, ol, 6-6, 255, Galveston O’Connell 26. Damon McDaniel, ol, 6-5, 255, Corpus Chrisli 27. Dana Batiste, lb, 6-2, 210, Spring 28. Scott Maham, 6-4, 240, Austin Re; cor Vol 7 record dropped to 11-11, 4-7 in SWC play. The Razorbacks are 17-4, 8-1, and are still hanging hot on the heels of league-lead ing Houston. Arkansas coach Eddie Sutton commented on the victory. “We’re happy we won the game,” said Arkansas coach Ed die Sutton. “We were fortunate we won. We made a Jot of mis takes and our inability to hit free throws gave them a chance to win.” But the season is far from over and Metcalf says the team will improve with time. “It takes time — it just doesn’t happen (right away),” Metcalf said, snapping his fin gers for emphasis. “We’re young and we’re try ing,” he said. “You can’t buy ex perience.” And you can’t buy a healthy roster either. The Aggies have been decimated by the flu over the past few weeks, so staying within one point of the Razor- backs in the first game with ev eryone back may have been a shock. The flu epidemic hit the team so hard that Metcalf was forced to miss a team practice for the first time in his career. Williams scored 12 points to join Holloway and Brown as the third Aggie in double figures. Winston Crite had eight points, including two dunks; Jimmie Gilbert had two points, and Pulliam came off the bench to score six points. For the Razorbacks,Alvin Robertson scored 18 before fouling out, Kleine added 14 and Leroy Sutton had 10. skaters! as close as lovers by 1 United Press International SARAJEVO, Yugoslavia — 1 hey are Britain’s little sweet hearts on ice, second only to Prince Charles and Princess Di in popularity, with an image so sanitized of passion that seeing I orvill and Dean skate at the Olympics is a shock. When Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean lie up their ice skates, even a hackneyed piece of skate music like Ravel’s “Bolero” becomes a revelation, a darn steamy one for two peo ple in their mid-20s who claim they’ve never had an affair — with each other, or anybody else for that matter. Yet Torvill and Dean move in such unison on ice that they ap pear to flow from one spirit, like finely tuned lovers. That is, of course, why they are three-time winners of the World Ice Da n c i n g Championship and are on tar get for a gold medal, if not a string of almost-unheard-of perfect 6 scores, when the Olympic ice dancing competi tion finishes — appropriately enough — on Valentine’s Day. “We spend more time to gether than a normal married man and wife,” the 25-year-old Dean observed Tuesday. “Our day together is probably eight to 10 hours long. We find we have to get on well. After all, we DEFENSIVE DRIVING COURSE Feb. 13 & 14 RAMADA INN Pre-register by phone; 693-8178/846-1904 FEE $20 Ticket Deferral and 10% Insurance Discount 2for1 GYMS 764-8544 * COED CONDITIONING FLOOR ★ NAUTILUS, FREE WTS., ICARIAN * STEAM, SAUNA, WHIRLPOOL * PRIVATE LOCKER, SHOWERS, DRESSING FACILITIES a OPEN 24 HOURS * 6 DAYS WEEKLY • SUNDAYS • 20 MIN. TANNING BEDS • OVER 50 AEROBIC CLASSES WKLY. have each other fori |The rece II, which! into the l< Irtze to hit lused at It page to inpus bu tdnal Scie Damage v irmitories, id at least t id Hart ha ne full exti only pany. “We have adapted to other’s ways. On the ice,lb if Jayne’s eyelid is in ihevi place. 1 can just feel it.” The ex-policeman and 26-year-old partner, bolhli Nottingham, England, 1 been together eight yAyfeknov slowly transforming theirM |( | ents hav on-ice personalities intoari Water da ing twosome, nevei coma dctonimc leave ice dancing conveie broken i alone. 0,000 and For instance, even onc»i j|plant d before they perform then The $60, minute free dance renditios tsn t Bolero for an Olympic md E Medical they are still makingchang R on $ ass , the lifts and flourishes-fi« 1( j en t a ffai all — supposedly remo« j sno ti e g ; “weak spots" identified at r damage European championships udentsnee Budapest three weeks agod mbursed they received a record 11 sea la | p r0 p ei of 6 from the judges. The twosome adaiM claim they will not chpnglE ' dance because of a lodged by Moscow’s so- Iron Lady, Tatyana farast the trainer of Torvill Dean’s Soviet competitors Natalya Bestemianova and) | 1 | 1 drei Bukin. . , 1/JL i She claimed some of M and D moves were illegal- eluding one in which Do hand goes above the show line — a move banned nt dancing. T he experts M Torvill and Dean. Technically “Bolero is most demanding program two have ever done. Thew Unite BEIRUT lacks agaii tees fuei eked reb banese pi svconcess close together, with their aiffmem. and legs intertwining as ^ „ down the ice, that.lb «ks, sai< coordination must be absolw JPpeDel perfect. On the ice, itis an ™ s ’“ and wonderful partnership Nv,) cl “Non-skaters can never trooper derstand it, but in skating,"* /• - (, ngc you’re with someone alll jvily f can have artherm ^ that’s more tj 1 n Embass brother and sister nn .. not husband and wi{e ’ ju: j 11 couple’s coach, Betty Calla Wngdov “Chris and Jayne are verys ^ ports c ble in that they knew any j he < of relationship could sour l'f 0 p e skating relationship- , . -A lot is written about lljWanes. that they are a nice <» &*. winter than white. Y ,, 1 thing is, it's all true. Ther I*tacked not really any skeletons in 1 closet. They really are a couple.” OFF THE CUFF V, Today everybody is keep I, with the Joneses-they the first to go broke. f Re or the Se r 1 'Johr best way Wf 7 Unite One of life’s greatest my is what a nudist does w keys after locking his c Now we know always greener on tn side. It’s because the bors have no kids. As you grow older, yo 1 you stand for more aha 1 less. Male elephant aS 4 “Wow! A perfect ^ 382!” id!l=AV1in=I 0 Severn "We si Vttnei pram %t c I'ears if tj. Pot o n a Coding ""note o, This vn 'o of fi jttlpo Ton c fen# ^ose 0 f -25 h can’ 0t her a] MERITS? DOWNTOWN BRYAN Althou ; ode wl jAd on , ^ here e defi c j