The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 16, 1985, Image 10

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    TEXAS ASM UNIVERSITY
SYMPHONIC BAND
IT'S REGISTRATION TIME AGAIN - PLAN AHEAD
— membership by audition each September
— instrumentation set for 75
— activities include concerts and a spring trip
— rehearsals twice a week
— open to all students
Begun in 1973, the Symphonic Band offers students at Texas A&M University
the opportunity to play their instruments with others from across Texas and the
nation. Rehearsing twice weekly, Tuesday and Thursday, from 12:30-1:45 p.m.,
the band allows students to play in a group while concentrating on their major
Tield of study.
For additional information, call or visit:
HEAR THE
SYMPHONIC BAND
APRIL 23
MSC FLAG ROOM
12:30
Bill J. Dean
Director Symphonic Band
E. V. Adams Band Bldg.
College Station, Texas 77843
Phone: 845-3529
Page 10/The Battalion/Tuesday, April 16,1985
Wanted
A
Fun-loving Students in search of the
fine arts. Become a member of MSC
OPAS -The opera and performing arts
society.
Pick up an application at an
orientation session.
-April 15 or 17
-401 Rudder
-7 p.m.
V
If unable to attend call
Jody 260-3563
Mike 260-7069
Jr
SUBMIT
TO
" L
'
l ,
competition open to FULL-TIME STUDENTS only
CATEGORIES: Fabric Art, Collage, Pastel, Drawings,
Paintings, and None of the Above( no photo
entries will be taken).
Entries will be accepted in the MSC
11am until 3pm on April 22-26. The
$4.00 per piece.
JUDGING DATE: April 27, 1935.
For More Information, Call 845-1515
4‘r MSC VISUAL
Gallery from
ENTRY FEE IS
A RTS
Plant your ad in The Battalion Classified
and harvest the RESULTS!
Phone 845-2611
for help in
placing your ad.
A&M’s Gaye Lynn Gensler tries to hit a
drop volley at the net during her singles
match against Rice at the Omar Smith Ten-
Photo bi
nis Center Monday. The Aggie women losi
to the Owls 7-2, dropping their Southwest
Conference record to 2-4, 26-20 overall.
Shaky Aggie netters
drop match to Owls
By MARYBETH ROHSNER
Sports Writer
The Texas A&M women’s tennis team was defeated by the Rice Owls
yesterday in dual-match play, 7-2.
The Aggies’ only victories were in the No. 2 and No. 5 singles spots
and the No. 2 doubles spot.
Nandini Rangarajan was the only Aggie to win every match in both
singles and doubles.
“I was feeling kinda shaky in the beginning,” Rangarajan said of her
First match against Rice’s Eileen Cureri. Rangarajan managed to "shake
off the shakies” to defeat Cureri 7-5, 6-1.
Junior Helen Christiaanse took the other Ag singles victory when she
defeated Rice’s Lori Cronk, 6-3, 6-1.
Though the team got off to a great start early in the season, recent
injuries on the team have slowed down the Lady Ags.
“It’s kinda been wearing everybody down,’’ Rangarajan said.
The team’s tight schedule is also taking its toll on the players.
“A couple of days to improve our game would be nice,” Rangarajan
said. "But all the teams have tough schedules in the spring.”
The women will host Texas Tech Friday and Houston Saturday at
the Omar Smith Tennis Center. The Ags will be looking for a little re
venge Friday after the 5-4 Red Raiders’ victory last weekend at the New
Mexico State Tournament.
“We’re pretty psyched,” Rangarajan said. "We definitely don’t want
to lose to them again.”
A&M’s Nandini Rangarajan
Augusta National Golf Course use
'Strange' way of evening the scon
By HAL BOCK
Associated Press Sports Writer
AUGUSTA, Ga. — The majestic
beauty of Augusta National Golf
Course can be deceiving.
The sprawling green carpet of
grass seems to stretch as far as the
eye can see. The sedate clubhouse
comes straight out of antebellum
America.
It is just lovely, unless you have to
play 18 holes of golf over it. Then it
can turn ugly, its shifting winds and
lineoleum-slick greens playing horri
ble tricks with tee shots, approaches,
chips and putts. And just when you
think you ve got it conquered, it
humbles you.
Ask Curtis Strange.
On the threshhold of the greatest
comeback in modern tournament
golf history, Strange saw it slip away
at the Masters Sunday, buried in an
avalanche of back nine bogeys as Au
gusta National abruptly snubbed
him like a jilted sweetheart.
And he has no rational explana
tion for it.
Strange had seen this capricious
course’s nasty side in the opening
round when he shot an 80. It is
hardly what you’d expect from the
professional tour’s leading money
winner, playing in one of the game’s
most prestigious tournaments.
He was embarrassed, but to his
credit, he did not surrender. Intel
lectually, he knew he was out of the
hunt because you simply don’t re
cover from that kind of round in
tournament golf. Pure pride
brought him back for Fridays sec
ond round and a near-record 65
kept him around for the weekend.
When he shot a 68 Saturday, he
was one stroke off the lead, in posi
tion to write golf history. It had been
74 years since a player shot HO in a
major championsnip in this country
and still won.
The momentum was goinj
way and hardly anyone wass
prised when he came charging!
the green jac ket, symbolic oil r
championship, on Sunday. ^
He took tne lead on the foil
hole with his second birdie oil
round and alter nine holes,
in front by four strokes.
Then Augusta National goto®
There are two par 5 holes on |
back nine of this course —f
and 15 — and the pros oftenatnl
them lor birdies. That’s whatl'|
Germany’s Bernhard Langer \
Sunday.
Curtis Strange attacked l
wound up wet for his trc
ball twice landing in the wateili
guards those holes. The mysten
it, Strange said, was that 1
good shots.
That is the mystery of Augi
National.
d.C MSC HOSPITALITY COMMITTEE
nc
CONGRATULATIONS ON A WONDERFUL YEAR!
Dawn Aberwald
Lori Choyce
Kay Martha Gary
Stephanie Kimbell
Paul Pirkle
Michelle Stanfield
Mike Anthony
Dennis Cloud
Susan Gaughan
Tammy Knox
Anne Plant
Kamela Steel
Tracey Baber
Carolyn Coffey
Pat Gibbons
Tracy Komfuehrer
Perri Postma
Jerry Stein
Xyanna Batto
Lisa Collins
Pamela Gibson
Lily Ann Le
Carrie Powell
Mamie Swerdlin
Bonne Bejarano
Kim Connor
Kristi Gill
Carla Luna
David Premo
Alan Talbert
Ashley Bell
Shellie Craig
Shawn Gillespie
Debbie Macpherson
Gordon Prigoff
Christy Talley
Lisa Benge
Carla Crawford
Carrie Gladwell
Renea Martin
Gay Pryor
Karen Thallman
Nancy Blanco
Ann Creager
Amy Glynn
Ken Mays
Paul Ramirez
Pam Thallman
Linda Blank
Jennifer Culbertson
Debbie Goode
Cathleen McClintock
Lisa Raney
Ram Thiagarajan
Robin Blumhardt
Pauline Cura
Jennifer Grant
Eva McGee
Scott Reagan
Jack Todd
Andy Bock
Kimberly Davis
Ronnie Hallenberger
David McSwain
Troy Rhodes
Jeana Townsend
Bridget Bonier
Sylvia Davis
Linda Hamilton
Chris Montemayor
Laura Riesz
Reisha Tucker
Keith Boone
Shelley Deifik
Martha Hansen
Tammy Moss
Michelle Robinson
Velda Vela
Kimberly Bray
Michelle DeVoe
Kristin Harbeck
Janet Mousa
Dodie Rodger
Pat Walker
Steve Bridges
Carolyn Duke
Jim Hart
Halah Moustafa
Pete Romer
Kim Wallace
Ann Brimberry
Adrianne Dunbar
Martha Hays
Michael Mulcahy
Franny Ross
Andy Walston
Kara Brown
Betsy Dunks
Ann Henning
Lauren Mulkey
Marty Roos
Christine Ward
Jill Burden
Andy Ellard
Laura Hinton
Mike Muzyka
Keta Roth
Gil Warrick
Anne Butler
Juliann Elliott
Julia Hodge
Norman Naylor
Sharon Rouse
Joy Watson
Jeanie Buzard
Bob Eubanks
Jamie Hopmann
Brad Nehring
Elizabeth Rutz
Virginia Watson
Meg Cadigan
Lynne Falkner
Traci Hutton
Rhonda Newman
Mark Sandlin
Wendy Wayne
Lynn Carey
Christi Fletcher
Joe Isenhart
David Nilsen
Robert Sawey
DeAnne Weatherford
Charles Carrington
Michelle Fluitt
Yvette Jacquet
Kimberly Nunley
Scott Saxe
Cindy Webb
Elizabeth Castro
Teri Fogle
Leigh Jones
Julie Owen
De Lyce Schroeder
Sandy Wesch
Lisa Caudle
Harry Fontenot
Heather Johnson
Miriam Page
David Schwarzbach
Jennie White
Kathy Cawthra
Jane Ford
Kathy Kane
Lisa Parotti
Patti Srivner
Kathy Wueste
Karla Cheathan
GinaChesak
Karen Chen
Georgena Chism
Monica Franklin
Kelvin Friedel
Eddie Garcia
Olga Perez-Garia
Jayanthi Kasiraj
Lisa Kastensmidt
Stacey Kelly
Mark Kemp
Kishor Patel
Caudia Peng
Melanie Person
Annette Peterson
Melanie Sessions
Dawne Shippee
Jeff Smith
Barry Sowerwine
f
Spring Perm
Special
April 1-20
womens
men
reg. $45 NOW $35
reg. $40 NOW $30
reg. $35 NOW $25
* We also offer $8 haircuts to all students
w/ ID...everyday that we’re open!
■
Something Else Hair Salon
404 University Drive 693-9877
Walk-Ins Welcome
M-F 8:30 a.m.-7:00 p.m. Sat. 8 a.m.-4 p.m,