wmmmmmmmusmmmPage e/The Battalion/Monday, October 28, 1985 Battalion Classifieds SSS WANTED $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 Asthmatic males or females to partici pate in a 10 day trial of a safe and effec tive over-the-counter asthma prepera- tion. $100. incentive. Call 776-0411. $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 24tufn FOR RENT HELP WANTED Are you cramped in your dorm? Call Casa Blanca Apts, today & ask about their free rent program. For more infor mation call 846-1413. RECEPTIONIST Dental Receptionist. Top pay, benefits. Experience with people a must. Send Resume to: Box 4463 Bryan, Tx. 77805 - 1 TQM A O'S mill UK. 11.1111 SJli-llTTIl. I' I hith Us iKinh I II 110-0‘JlW. Large two bedroom mobil home. CA/H with washer- /dryer. Huge tree shaded lot. Horse facility available. $275. $100. deposit. Convenient to campus. 693-5592 or 693-0973. 40tl0/31 OFFICIAL NOTICE PART TIME BASIC PROGRAMMER Good opportunity for part time pro grammer for 3 months. Must know Basic and Pick operating System. Call Lisa: 779-1933. 40t10/28 ATTENTION GRADUATING SENIORS If you have ordered a 1986 Aggieland and will not be attending A&M next fall and wish to have it mailed to you, please stop by the En glish Annex and pay a $3.50 mailing fee along with your forwarding ad dress so your Aggieland can be mailed to you next fall when they ar rive. 33112/18 hornet in B-CS area. Flexible Kotin. Mutt tiave transportation. 695-1954. Sciilot/sky*s is now a< t epting applications lor p.n t time evening and weekend shifts. Apply in person only 1**- tween 2:00 and 5:00 p.tn. 55t 10/51 Experienced cook for day 8c evening shifts. Apply in I E. University Drive. 5Ht 11/5 person at Cetiare. 404 1 Defensive driving. Instfrancc discount, tkket deferral, call: 8a.m.- 5p.m. Mon-Fri. 693-1322 1302/18 ('rood with Babies? Care for 6 month old in »nv home 8- 5. M-K. Transportation needed. 690-0570. 3700/26 Need students and Pros for phone tales. Fast selling products. High earnings. Two shifts: 10-3 P M.. 4-9 P.M. Call 268-5801. John. Close to campus. 4000/30 SERVICES ON THE DOUBLE All kinds of typing at reasonable rates. Dissertations, theses, term papers, resumes. Typing and copying at one stop. ON THE DOUBLE 331 University Drive. 846-3755. 9itin Tv ping lor tlu*\ev driven at inn*, term p.i|M.*iv Will trails* t iln* dictation, reasonable rates. IV93-1598.31111/4 Expert Typing. Word Processing, Resumes. All work error free PERFECT PRINT. 822-1430. 1002/6 AGGIELAND REFUND POLICY Yearbook fees are refundable in full during the semester in which payment is made. Thereafter no refunds will be made on cancelled orders. Yearbooks must be picked up within 90 days from time of arrival as an nounced in The Battalion. Students who will not be on campus when the yearbooks are published, usually in September, must pay a mailing and handel- ing fee. Yearbooks will not be held, nor will the be mailed without the necessary fees having been paid. 33ti2/i8 DIRECTORY REFUND POLICY Directory fees are refundable in full during the semester in which payment is made. Thereafter no refunds will be made on cancelled orders. Directories must be picked up during the aca demic year in which they are pub- Word PriH.x*ssing: Proposals, dissertations, theses, i nan 11.scripts, reports, newsletter, term papers, re sumes. letters. 764-6614. 36111/1.. STUDENT TYPING. 20 years experience. Accurate, reasonable, and guaranteed. 693-8537. 36(12/12 WORD PROCESSING. 10% discount with this ad. Quality typing at student prices. 775-3911. 38t 10/31 FOR SALE Cutlass Supreme, 1976. Work car. $1,000.00 or best of fer. 260-4796 or 693-3225. 40t 10/31 iunaha 76 RD-400, $700. RD-200, $300. Both run ell. 846-1200. 37t 10/26 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY $10. $360. weekly/up mailing circulars! No quotas! Sincerely interested rush self-addressed envelope: Suc cess. P 6. Box 470CEG, Woodstock, II. 60098. 21tll/8 ROOMMATE WANTED VSet* ACTION murr ADS Roommate needed imnicadiately. 2 BR/1 BA house. Close to campus. $ 120./mo. Troy: 696-6087 anytime. 39t 10/28 L Advertise an item in the Battalion. Cali 845-2611 Sports Ags’ intensity wavers in win Bryant Toney keep A&M out of Rice threshei WORDS...TO Go. Professional word processing at rea sonable prices. 696-2962, anytime. 40t 12/9 By KEN SURY Sports Writer HOUSTON — In Saturday’s 43- 28 win over Rice, Texas A&M’s in tensity throughout the game fluc tuated like the New York Stock Ex change. However, A&M’s Anthony Toney and Domingo Bryant kept the Ag gies from a severe Southwest Con ference market crash. Toney led A&M’s rushing attack with 1 lo yards on 25 carries. That’s only 20 yards shy of Rice’s entire rushing output for the game — and it had 20 more carries. “1 felt we were running real good,” Toney said. “We had run the plays that we had practiced all week. They (Rice) were doing the things that we practiced against, so we were ready for them. We were running hard, but good blocking helps too.” Toney said the offensive line, es pecially Doug Williams, Louis Cheek, Randy Dausin and Matt Wil son, opened up a lot of holes for him to run through. Even the tight ends threw some key blocks, he said. “Yeah, they were throwing some good blocks when they tried to string the play out,” Toney said. “They were holding their men pretty good at the line of scrimmage and we were getting some good yards on our in side game." While Toney helped move the Aggie offense toward and across the goal line, Bryant did some goal-line crossing himself as he took one of his three interceptions into the endzone for an A&M score. With 8:06 left in the third quarter, Rice quarterback John Roper tried to hit wide receiver Darrell Goolsby in the flat. The toss was a little high, and as Goolsby tried to get a handle on the ball, Bryant took it away and streaked 49 yards down the sideline for the score. “The interception for a touch- down was the second of my career,” Bryant said. “It feels even better than the first one. We both had a chance for the ball, I just stayed after it and the sideline was wide open.” The Aggies had only a 29-19 lead at halftime, and lost four fumbles in the second half, but the A&M de fense forced four Rice turnovers. In addition to Bryant's touchdown, he and free safety Kip Corrington each picked off a Roper pass within A&M’s 25-yard line, while line backer Johnny Holland recovered a fumble at the A&M 33 in the last quarter. Even with the good defensive play, T oney said he felt there was a loss in A&M’s offensive intensity be tween the two halves. “Well the first half was good, (but) the second half I didn’t think we played as intense,” Toney said. “We naa the turnovers — the misses be tween the handoffs. “For me it’s a real letdown. I know when we had that fumble between me and Kevin I felt bail about that because we came away with no points instead of at least a field goal, which would have caused them to have to score at least another touch down. Instead of that happening, they get the ball back, they drive down, and they score. And they’re up and we’re down because of the mistakes we made.” After Toney heard how SMU manhandled Texas, he commented, “(It) didn’t seem like too much fun for Texas.” The Aggies will face the Mustangs this Saturday in Kyle Field, and To ney said the team will need to play more consistent and not make the | KANSA sir- City R< lie-hit phi completed shocking c and won champions Louis Care seventh gai ■ The Ca tneii 3-1 le with their in the final B What ha est seventh in more th; smoke ere; The Cardii John I nch through th uj) in a 1 stitches af ti oh an elect; ■ The de. 1 Rinds of | Motley, wt and drove boni, who City's three afid the Reorge Bn ■ The Ro with six rui itlg which dhjar and nfere ejeett Don Denki a [critical D that fuele ■nth-innii Enisecutiv pit( Ires to bei g brou erupted to ■ While t cimeback .game — re ||n deficit playof fs bit vantages it ntils faded i ■ After lea with a .264 season, the the World of 13 runs. I Part of woes proba absence ol Vince Cole Louis hittir to the your staff of the Photo by JOHN MAKLU Texas A&M fullback Anthony Toney (25) follows the blocking of right tackle Doug Williams as Rice defensive tackle Angus Davis (96) dosesin. The Aggies shut down the Owls 43-28 Saturday. mistakes they committed against Rice. “We’ll have to play well both halves — not just one half — if we’re going to win,” Toney said. “We can’t afford to slow up in the second half (like last year’s loss to SMLI in Dal las).” Bryant said other than keeping themselves in the thick of the SWC race, there’s another incentive to beat SMU. “It will be kind of like revenge be cause we haven’t beaten SMU since I’ve been at Texas A&M,” Bryant said. “We came close two years in a row (losses of 28-20 in ’84 and 10-7 in ’83), but they managed to pull it out some kind of way.” And what about the A&M defense against the SMU offense? “I think we’II just play our regular package on SMU,” Bryant said. “I don’t think we’ll do anything differ ent. W’e’ll just treat them the way we’ve been treating other teams this year.” Ag spikers set to ho$l injury-plagued Owls j°y< The last time the Texas A&M volleyball team played Rice,iten- , ed one of its best days of the season. Not only did the Aggies stomp Rice 15-5, 15-6, 15-2 at Autt) Court in only 46 minutes, but they ascended to No. 10 on the NCAA Top 20 poll. Today the Aggies won’t he able to duplicate that Oct. Mdaysince the polls aren’t announced until Tuesday. However, the No. 16Ags (17-4, 3-1 in SWC) do have a chance to In-st their scores against Rice T he Owls come calling tonight at 7:30 in G. Rollie White Col- iseum. It will lie the Ags’ first home game since Oct. 16. “It will be nice to play at home for a change,” A&M CoachTemT Condon said. “With the Dunn I lall gu ys, we always have an advantage playing at home.” The Aggies’ “7th Man” should he there in force since all fanswitli an A&M volleyball fan shirt will be admitted f ree. Speaking of shirts, the Owls have plenty. All they need are a fett I good players to fill them. Four Rice players are out with injuries. “They’re just real hurt right now,” Condon said. “With all the in juries they have, they’re playing with a lot of young players.” GO FROM COLLEGE TO THE ARMY WITHOUT MISSING A BEAT. The hardest thing about break ing into professional music is—well, break ing into professional music. So if you’re looking for an oppor tunity to turn your musical talent into a full-time perform ing career, take a good look at the Army. If s not all parades and John Philip Sousa. Army bands rock, waltz and boogie as well as march, and they perform before concert au diences as well as spectators. With an average of 40 performances a month, there’s also the opportunity for travel— not only across America, but possibly abroad. Most important, you can expect a first-rate pro fessional environment from your instructors, facilities and fellow musicians. The Army has educational programs that can help you pay for off- duty instruc tion, and if you qual ify, even help you repay your read music, performing in the Army ak.'” could be your big break. Write: Chief, Army Bands Office, Fort Benjamin Harrison, IN 46216-5005. Or call toU free 1-800-USA-ARMY. COffttfXANrX* Somewhere, tomehow, tomeone l 7 M 3o/9 F « Arnold Schujoncneggcr rST€V€N SPie.8€RG Presents JZFUTUxr Mon-Frl 7:45/9-55 1 5|h Sm CHUCK H0RRIS ;>”* '‘. c ' l ° . wmmi h™- 'Si&iil..® M on-Frl 7:15/9:30 PosEOaR 3 In the Mall ' JESSICA UNOF. ED HARRIS ’^SWEEX.? Mon-Frl 7:45/10:00 f TkR ,[: WHICH DO YOU TRUST... JAGGtD OR YOUR IVIDLNCE?_ “' J EDGE MorvFrI 7 30 Mon-Frl 7:00-9:30 ■wui wwM, '*0* 0PIM ■ J loealaa al ]2t SowlhwMl P«wY.|tMiA4(l'M -Ml Show Sal. & Sun All Stilt (T Cf] -XORA Family Mila-Mon.ScnuimiM -KTAM family NitfrTuet. Mf lil’PluiM -Students w»in cur rani i0 !6 AiM.Sl'iwjC. Aryan H»gn 4 AAM Con»otia»t» r MANOR EAflUl M«wr Ul M- * W. Z-A$-l:«5-r !5-9»44 JAME FOfIDA AMME BANCROFT MEG TILLY Agnes of Qod Sal. A j1 M*a.hUWJ The word ofo^^T did moke a diHt^ SISSY SPAOH Mai &•*. A Smm. 2;2S-«:S»*7.15<*JS Mm*M. TilMiii wwv. orrve sro*:40 VW Frt 7:2*-*40 wc. xcxzrzz® Maa.4iUJ$MI Silveraflo - ^ " 4 ^ nde of youflife.# ^ SCHL LMA.N 6 2U02 East 2!tih W- A W. 2iJe-«:S$-7 JO-9-.J3 kW-Frt. 7:je-VJJ Cvtirr Momi tx moon rvAi.. rrcAMt mcx iJmja BULLET Sal. A .Saa, M«..Frt. 1-J$M C «' DOUAUFUnjA* w a s«m. 2:ZS-7:M a 4•1. /> Vm. fc’WVJH’ Maa.-frC SmL. A $•». 2:ia*3»7:2»4i«f 7 \ BEVERLY HILLS Sat A Saa. | ’MaaTil MM* [ PEE WEE'S , BIGADVENW S 0 N Y Fr« fede rally -insu red student loans. If you can sight- ARMY BAND. BEAUYOUCANBE. Call Battalion Classified 845-2611