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Ave. 775-1500 me POST OAK VILLAGE STlaiA y NO APPOINTMENTS Qmt PHONE 696-9808 Cut & Blow Dry $10.00 Perms from $17 50 to $45 00 HOURS Monday thru Saturday 8:00 to 8:30 Sunday 12:00 to 5:00 last perm 6:00 last perm 2:30 Free Tutoring For Freshman Courses Check the tutoring file by the cub icles 5&9 on the 2nd floor of the Pavillion sponsored by: Phi Eta Sigma Alpha Lambda Delta The Boot Barn ^ JUSTIN ROPERS $79 00 Largest Selection Lowest Price in The Brazos Valley 2.5 Miles East of Brazos Center on FM 1179 (Briarcest Dr.) Mon.-Sat 9:30-6:00 822-0247 CONTACT LENSES $79 00 ' pr.* - daily wear soft lenses $99"° ' pr.* - extended wear soft lenses $119” ' pr.* - tinted soft lenses CALL696- FOR APPOINTMENT OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY CHARLES C. SCHROEPPEL y O.D.,P.C. DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY 707 SOUTH TEXAS AVE-SUITE 101D COLLEGE STATION,TEXAS 77840 ^ 1 block South of Texas & University Dr. 55! * EYE EXAM AND CARE KIT NOT INCLUDED Michigan climbs to No. 2 spot Associated Press Iowa remained No. 1 in the Asso ciated Press college football poll Monday, but Michigan edged ahead of Oklahoma to set up a 1-2 show down this Saturday, while surprising Army cracked the rankings for the first time in 23 years. Iowa is No. 1 for the third week in a row after defeating Wisconsin 23- 13. Michigan, which’ blanked Michi gan State 31-0, exchanged places with Oklahoma. The Sooners slipped from second to third despite a 14-7 victory over Texas that knocked the Longhorns out of the Top Twenty. Southern Methodist, a 21-14 loser to Baylor, was the only other team to fall out of the rankings. Florida State fell to 13th and Ok lahoma State dropped to 12th. Meanwhile, Arkansas climbed from sixth to fourth and Florida rose from seventh to tilth by defeating Tennessee 17-10. AP Top 20 Poll The Fop 20 teams in the Asso ciated Press college football poll, with first-place votes in paren theses and season record: 1. Iowa (27) — 5-0-0 2. Michigan (20) —5-0-0 3. Oklahoma (12) — 3-0-0 4. Arkansas — 5-0-0 5. Florida—4-0-1 6. Penn State (1) — 5-0-0 7. Nebraska — 4-1 -0 S. Auburn — 4-1 -0 9. Brigham Young — 5-1 -0 10. Air Force — 6-0-0 11. Ohio State —4-1-0 12. Oklahoma State — 4-1 -0 13. Florida State — 4-1 -0 14. Baylor — 5-1-0 15. Alabama — 4-1-0 16. Georgia — 4-1 -0 17. LSU —3-1-0 18. UCLA —4-1-1 19. Army —5-0-0 20. Tennessee — 2-1-1 Others receiving votes: Texas, Miami (Fla.), Arizona, Minnesota, Texas A&M, Washington, SMU, Maryland, Bowling Green, Colo rado, Georgia Lech, Kentucky, Pittsburgh, Purdue, USC. TANK MCNAMARA* Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds Aggie netters to finish rain-delayed tourney By KEN SURY .Spoils Writer The Texas A&M women’s tennis team will meet some Familiar net op ponents as it Finishes a tournament today at A&M — itself. Rain showers Sundav evening t in short the doubles semifinal matches ol the Houston Fall Festival (HIT) Tournament and left three Aggie tandems to come home to the Omar Smith Tennis Center and play each other For the 11 I F championship. A&M’s Kim Labuschagne and Ka ren Marshall, who entered the tour nament as the No. 4 seeded doubles team, have nlread) made it to championship match, even though thev only played live games of their semifinal match and w ere losing. Labuschagne and Marshall were behind 3-2 in the first set ol their match against Rice University's Lori Kronk and Wendv Wood. But then the rain began to fall, anti Rite, de ciding they could not reschedule the match, opted to def ault instead. “1 wish we could have finished,” Labuschagne said Monday, "It would have been a good match. We've (Labuschagne and Marshall) had a lot of slow stints, but then usually pla> well anti take the later sets." The other two Aggie doubles teams were also in action when the skies opened up. Vanne Akagi and Gave Lynne Gensler, seeded No. I and last year's tourney's champion, had just won their first set against Fellow Ags Kel lie Dorman and Helen Christiaanse. (i-1. and Intel served the first point of Vanne Akagi the second set when their match had to Ik* stopped. So that leaves the three doubles teams, familiar to playing each other in practice, to fight it out for (he HIT championship here, starting about 2 p.m.— w eather permitting. Marshall said it will not Ik* an easy Final match against either Akagi- Gensler or Dorman-Christiaanse, es- peciallv since they're teammates. Dorman said, “We’ll have to ex clude the fact that we are playing our teammates and treat it as any other match." Labuschagne added, “We'll go on the court with ihe same attitude we always have. It wouldn't change our attitude even if it was Chris (Evert- I.lovd) and Martina (Navratilova) we had to play." I he tandems of Akagi-Gensler and Dorman-Christiaanse will pick up their semifinal match >vhcre (hey left oi l Sundav. Kim Labuschagne '■ I hat’s going to he one interest ing match?’ Christiaanse said. “Al though they’re our teammates, this is a tournament and you have to try to lx* serious alxuit it." Gensler said that although she and Akagi won the First set, "We can't hold back. They’re talented and they could Ixxit anybody." Akagi also said she doesn’t like plaving her teammates. "We practice against each other, so it s hard to go all out, hut it is a tournament.” In the tourney’s singles action, which were concluded, Akagi lost the championship match b-2,6-1,to No, l seed Wood of Rice, but Akagi said the match was closer than the score indicated^ “I think I played pretty well,"the third-seeded Akagi said. "We (Akagi and Wood) must have had at least eight deuce games. It was the cruaal |X)iiilsthat I didn’t make." OF YOUR FUTURE. Whether you’re on the bridge of and satisfaction you’ve always An excellent starting salary with a 200-million-dollar Navy dreamed of. a chance to earn up to as much as destroyer, an officer on a nuclear And as a Navy officer, you’ll $.‘53,500 after four years with reg- sub, or piloting a Navy F-14 be in a position of decision- ular promotions and increases. Tomcat, you'll be in charge. And making authority. With expert Even more w ith bonuses, moving up fast. management and technical After four years of college. At 22, you’ll be well on your training behind you to help you you'll Ik* on your way. Get there way in a career that provides the get the job done right. fast in the Navy. Set* your Navy kind of excitement, responsibility I he rewards are right, too. recruiter or call 800-327-NAVY. NAVY OFFICERS GET RESPONSIBILITY FAST.