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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 16, 1985)
Battalion Classifieds FOR RENT HELP WANTED ROOMMATE WANTED new! G L One and V2 blocks from campus 2 BDRM/1 BATH 3 BDRM/2 BATH Limited Time Special Rates $399. $575. •Fully Furnished •Washer/Dryer •Covered Parking 402 Nagle at Northgate (Off University Drive Behind Skaggs) 846-8960 PEPPER TREE APARTMENTS Landmark Properties, Inc. • Shuttle bus • Free cable tv • Partyroom • Swimming pool • Laundry facilities • 1-2-3 bedrooms • 6 different floor plans • Lots of closet space • Excellent maintenance crew • Convenient to shopping areas 693-5731 Hours: 9 to 6 Mon. - Fri. Also Open Sat. 2701 Longmire Drive College Station 55111-15 2 Ixlnn. tor lease spring semester. Fireplace, w/d hnnk- tips, <)tn-2735. 74U2/18 2 & 3 bdrm. house. Some near campus. $300. - $450. Suzelte at 095-1414. ' 74U/15 Condo for sale or rent. 1 Bdrm.. 1 Mi hath, studio type. Good location. Woodbrook Condos. 764-1951. 71t 1/8 Carltomedics. Inc. Staie-Of-Thc-Arl-Mamilacturing. CatlxiMedics, an internationally respected mamilac- utrer of sophisticated components for medical implant devices, has an opening for the following position: Pro totype F.ngineci . Assists Prototype Manager in devel opment of prototypes, including materials selection, tooling and fixtures. Reottires Mechanical/-Material Engineering degree and Background in machining- /tooling ol dose tolerame parts. (Preferred RfLl) inter est ratiter than production.) CarlxiMedics is located in the beautiful Texas hill country and can offer a com petitive salary, extensive benefit package and reloca tion expenses. Please forward resumes to our person nel department nr call collect: Carol Vaughn, C.ARliOMT.niCS, INC., 1300-B East Anderson Lane, Austin. 'Texas 78752. (512) 837-1741. (»9t 12/18 2 bedroom, 2M2 bath Woodbrook Condominium for rent. On shuttle, fully furnished including microwave, w/d, dishes, fireplace, etc. 4 beds. Call Julie, 260-4069 or (214)348-6462. 7IU2/18 One bedroom apartment. $325.'mo. All bills paid. Pool, sauna, lannths facililies. Musi see to appm iale. Call Sara. 695-1)7 Hi. 54t I AM 3 bedroom, 2 bath home near campus. All appliances, fenced. $495./mo. 696-0700, 776-0738. 71tl2/18 ttan'uin at 8250. Attraetive 2 bed i .(I, in, apt . in 4-plex. 1.7 miles Irom campus. Waslw .-i-Alrvt •r connection. dishwasher . (lispo? iitl. Call 69.8-7761 or 775- ■52'; ro. 70t 12/18 \V\ \|>l :) In-ill-. >om. 2 lialh 887.5 1 he dm om. leneed 1 x Mist - S.150 \e;n AWE IV<-<-mlx-i free. 1 [198 -.5286. 05t!n Northgate fourplex - walk to campus. 2 bedroom, start- ing at $275. 690- 2140, 690-0066. 7211/15 ( ripple ( i i-i-k #: 1 tip lor sublease (Jan, - M av). No tie- |>o.sii requi ml 6;i6-96*l6or 60:1-1681. AI an. 78t 12/18 I I RS I M< )M II 1 REE REM oi $265 (■< >r 5 month Last-. Itmi iislicd. 1 Ixlnn.. 1 bail). mile from campus. 0%-:l5l2. 7Stl2/!8 \ t-i >ni<U-t ils: (\v< i bedroom, one 1 >ath 6 mn plc\cs near Ml MllCMlI W 1) , lonnenions. wait •I . sev vav* e paid. Call 776-0255 .64112/18 WclU-Ut-t Cmitl two bedroom 1 h allvtvn 10,1 1 1/2 bath. A.mms 1 000 m |. h. 1 psiairs w.i isllet ,$• < liver, deck. near shnitle. !K39i i. 698-4750. 696- 1660. 64t 12/18 Sli.icU. Ii-ll ict-d. 1. ni 12. ()ak Forest . n\ 56. 2 bedroom. ne« I hall) and kin hen. eentral ait/heal, slot age build ing. appliauees with washtt N duel. $89(10. linanee. 095-5200 ot t oilet I 800-793-9491 (Hi 1/20 TREE REN I I N I II. JANl ARV. $300 eash drawing. Targe, dean, 2-he(hiioin apartments. 4 blocks front campus. Rent $300. 840-7506. Spine &: Bovett69t 12/18 Must lease my 2 bedroom lor spring semester. Bill paid. $479., $431. through August. Near tennis court and pool. Call Nancy. 693-6710. 69112/18 HELP WANTED “STUDENTS” EARN EXTRA MONEY selling Eagle subscriptions door to door. Work on your own time. Positions available for January. Good commission rates. Call Charlie, 776-4444 #366. 69112/9 Part-time Position Open Austin office of national student travel/edu cational exchange organization is looking for highly motivated student with interna tionalist outlook to handle marketing of prod ucts and programs on TAMU campus. Good experience, interesting spot for the right in dividual. Salary open, some possible travel benefits. Send letter and resume to: Personnel Department Council Travel/CIEE 1904 Guadalupe #6 Austin, TX 78705 72112/18 Houston Chronicle looking for early morning paper delivery route people. $400-$700. monthly. Call Julian at 693-2323 or Andy at 693-7815. 65tfn PERMANENT PART TIME reliable people needed to take Inventory starting Jan. $4.50/hr. Interviews 12/17. 6:00 P.M.. La Quinta Inn, Rm. 201. 74tl2/10 Accounting grad, student lot busy doctoi ..nice part- time |xisition. Apply. 1775 Briamest Dr. ai E. 29th St. 08tfn NEED A HOLIDAY JOB? Work your hours in your hometown or here in town. Call 693-6025 or 693-5958 to make appointment. 73112 18 Warm and loving woman needed io care lor diree small diildren of piolessional couple in Nashua. N il. (4.*> miles noidi ol Bosion). (>ne vear eommiiment. Rel- erenees re(|uired. I i.msporiaiion io New llampsliiie provided. Call ((>03)882-1‘J H. 73(12/18 Student worker positions open for Battalion Distribu tion. Apply at 230 Reed McDonald, 845-2611. 7It 12/18 I’art time help, (hapexine personality. Call (M>- H11 (>(>Hii Male student aide needed to clean nursery school dailv, 846-5571. 72tfn Full time' cnmputnr programmer needed during Christmas Itnlidavs Lotus/SYMPMONY "\\ hi/". $0.(X) hr. S40-02II. 70112/16 OFFICIAL NOTICE 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 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.33112/18 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- LOST AND FOUND Female; i /di vei ; on on-smoker; own bedroom, bath; washer- shuttle route; $ 175. and hills; 693-5181. 74tl2/18 Ktxtiiimaie needed: share rnom in apartmeni. $99. month. Neva. 693-2184. 73(12 18 Male roommaic wanted lor 2 bedroom eondotninium. S223.mo.. no utilities, ( ripple ( reek. |im or Mike. 696-0491. 73t 12 18 Koomatc Set in. 696 needed in an e\ecllcni situation - cheap. 1658. 67t 12 18 Koonnnat 5 463 or C e needed. ()wtl room & hath. ( all Ri( k\. 696- 12)895-214 1. 73t 12/18 Female r« shuttle bu outmate lot spring semester 2 Ixlnn.. 2 hath, s. $217.50. 764-7243. . 73t 12/18 SERVICES ON THE DOUBLE All kinds of typing at reasonable r£t„3. Dissertations, theses, term papers, resumes. Typing and copying at one stop. ON THE DOUBLE 331 University Drive. 846-3755.gmn TYPING - WORD PROCESSING Fast and Dependable Personalized Service We understand form and style. Beginningour sixth year *■ AUTOMATED CLERICAL SERVICES 110 Lincoln, C.S. 693-1070 Word Processing: Pro|>osals. dissertations, theses. 11 lam (scripts, reixnts. newsletters, term pa|>crs. re sumes, letters. 7(>4-(>(>14. (>8tl2/l(> TYPING, WORD PROCESSING. Resumes, reports, dissertations, thesis. Executive Services. 696-3785. 72U2/18 Defensive driving. Insurance discount, ticket deferral, call: 8a.m.- 5p.m. Mon-Fri. 693-1322. 13tl2/18 II vou are paling out ol stale tuition, and want to pay in state & make some money, call 779-1532 & leave name. ntimlKT. 73t 12/18 Tvpiim. Itescaivh papeis. reports, laliieutfon I’uits. ete Nrai earn)ms 696-091 I 65(12. 1(S FOR SALE 2 twin beds, mattress, box springs, 8c frames. $75. per set. Sofa, $ 100. Chair, $50. Negotiable. 764-1951. 7ltl/8 Cotton Bowl tickets for sale. Best offer. (214)227-2704. 74112/18 14 x 72 mobile home. 3 bdrm./2 ha. in quiet Bryan park. 3 miles from campus. (713)472-6750. 74tl2/18 HAZELT1NE 1420 computer terminal. Commerci quality/features. Perfect condition, asking $375.00 84< 9512 7 It 12/1 Manual typewriter, bicycle, student desk and chair, twin box springs and mattress. 846-3954. 72tl2/I8 Schwinn Supersport, 23” frame. Outstanding condi tion, asking 1140.00. 846-9512. 7M2/17 Emerald rings, 0.2 and 0.3 karats. 18k gold certified. Call 696-1067 or 696-0617. v 72H2/18 1080 Bonneville. 1082 Reliant-K Station Wagon. Both verv clean, excellent condition. Your choice $3450. 775-4040. 845-3385. 73t 1/15 PERSONALS ADOPTION Happily married, well educated couple with one adopted child wish to adopt infant. Confidential. Expenses paid. Call collect: (201)545-9047. 73t1/20 Lost senior ting Dec. 2, north campus area. Call Cris, 696-1199. 74U2/18 Diamond necklace. Lost Monday, 12/9. Sentimental va lue. Reward offered, call 260-5453, 72U2/18 WANTED Cotton Bow I'layoll. NC. I tickets Wanted Soullnvest Conference \ \ f inal I. Bin. Sell. (71:1)78:1.6558. 67t 12/18 In the Heart of the Brazos Valley / 37,000 students / 9,300 faculty/staff / Only 25# a word / Free at 28 locations The Battalion Reed McDonald Building Texas A&M University College Station, Texas 77843 (409)845-2611 9 OUT OF 10 PUPPIES PREFER THE BATTALION Page 8/The Battalion/Monday, December 16,1985 TANK MCNAMARA by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds Ags get needed spark, but No. 5 ’Jackets next Winston Crite By KEN SURY Assistant Sports Editor Texas A&M’s strong second half in its 81-75 win over Oral Roberts Saturday night in Tulsa, Okla., may be the spark the team will need when it faces No. 5 Georgia T ech Friday in the opening round of the Gator Bowl Basketball Tournament. “They (the A&M players) are really looking forward to playing Georgia Tech,” A&M Assistant Coach John Thornton said. “Like all players, they want to play the best (teams). And it’s going to be a great challenge. Hopefully, we’ll give them a good game, hut they are a great team.” The Aggies, now 5-3, didn't face a ranked team Saturday, but found themselves in trouble at halftime with the ORU Titans, who led 40-33. “They (the Titans) kept getting the second shot and hitting it,” Thornton said of the Aggies’ poor first-half rebounding. “And their outside men were getting the open shots and making them.” But A&M turned things around quickly as the team changed their defensive alignment at the start of the second half, bringing two men up on the outside guards and leav ing three to play a zone defense un der the basket. “We turned the tables on them when we did that,” Thornton said. “They had us in foul trouble in the first half, but then we started to put them in foul trouble by changing de fenses. It really got them rattled.” Thornton said team play won the game for the Aggies. “The guys hung together,” Thornton said. “They had the re solve to make the difference in the second half. It’s always tough to come back, especially on the road, but they gave it a good shot and did it.” A&M shot a blistering 68 percent from the Field and 82 percent from the free-throw line in the second half to take control of the game. “Every free throw was crucial,” Thornton said. “Hitting them really showed our confidence and maturi ty” Don Marbury, T odd Holloway, Winston Crite and Jimmie Gilbert poured in 44 of the 48 second half points for A&M. Marbury hit 19 of his game-leading 32 points in the fi nal 20 minutes. “Don did an outstanding job of hilling baskets,” Thornton said. “He was consistent with the points and played good defense too.” Holloway had six points at inter mission, hut added 11 in the second period, most of those points coming from a seven-for-eight free-throw performance. “He (Holloway) was a dutch free- thrower,” Thornton said. “As the point guard, he’s the guy who’s got the pressure on him all the time. He did a super job of handling the bas ketball. “He got the ball into the people underneath and we were really un der control with our offensive game. Our first half we had nine turnovers, Todd Holloway but only two in the second. Todd played a very heady second half of basketball.” Crite finished with 12 points, eight in the second half, before foul ing out with 2:54 left in the game. Gilbert scored 11 points for the game. “That was as good a half as we played all year,” T hornton said. But it's going to take more than just one half of good basketball to compete with Cieorgia Tech and in All-America guard, Mark Price. Thornton said if the Ags are healthy, it could make a difference. Game preparations will be ham pered by this week’s final exams,bul Thornton said A&M will enter Fri day's match ready to face the chal lenge. The Aggies and the YellowJad- ets are scheduled for a 7 p.m. tipofl Friday. Southern Mississippi and Jacksonville play at 9 p.m. Dec. 27 and 28 the Ags are in New Orleans for the Sugar Bowl Tourna ment. A&M's first opponent is Pitts burgh. Southern Louisiana and T ennessee also are in the tourney. Lady Ags’ road show bombs By DOUG HALL Sports Writer Five games into her second season, Texas A&M Wom en’s Basketball Coach Lynn Hickey and her Lady Aggies, a team stocked with young talent, owned an impressive 4- 1 record. Unfortunately for Hickey and her Ags, the good times, seemed to have gone on vacation at the same time they began a tough three-game road trip. Friday night in Baton Rouge, La., exactly one week af ter getting bombed 93-62 by No. 17 Oklahoma, the Ags suffered their second loss to a nationally ranked team. This time it was No. 13 Louisiana State who adminis tered a 72-54 lashing. “It’s a tough time for the girls to go through,” Hickey said. “But we have to be realistic and impress upon them that we’re in a learning stage. We just ask them to go out and compete.” Before the game with LSU, Hickey said the Lady Ags would need at least four people to score in double figures and have two people pull down 10 or more rebounds. She got neither. Paula Crutcher finished the game with 18 points and nine rebounds. The next highest Aggie scorer, Lisa Lan gston, contributed only eight points and grabbed fourre- bounds. Langston, A&M’s career scoring leader, is aver aging 15.5 points and six boards. LSU, however, took Hickey’s advice to heart. Four Ti gers, led by 16-poim performances from center Alishi Jones and forward Natalie Randall, finished in double figures. “We played really well the first 10 minutes of the game,” Hickey said. “Bui there was a Five-minute span in there were we went cold. Against a team like LSU ill really hard to catch up.” One of the Lady Ags biggest problems this season has come from a weak inside game. Against LSU, who had three players 6-foot-2 or better, A&M was outre- bounded 38-31. “We are still having problems with our centers, Hickey admitted. “Lisa Jordan (stress fracture in fool| and Nette Garrett (shin splints) are both hurt. That hurt us because we can’t keep them on the floor very long." A&M finishes its three-game trip Thursday night against Louisiana Tech, who earlier this season was ranked No. 4 in the nation but has since fallen to seventh “Tech is another challenge,” Hickey said. “Maybethe) don’t have the speed of LSU, but they do have the size underneath.” Aggie spikers lose to No. 8 'Homs (continued from page 7) when current seniors Brinkman and Beakley were freshmen. In the last regular season match of this year, A&M came close to upset ting UT by winning the first two games, but then folding in the next three. That Nov. 20 match gave the Ags confidence they could beat the Longhorns. So Friday night’s match promised to be one of the closest in the 12-year series between the two schools. But it didn’t take long for promise to turn into disappointment, prov ing that the third time’s not always a charm. “Maybe we tried too hard,” Brink- man said. “Maybe we were too loose and too confident .” Brinkman and Beakley were espe cially disappointed because they ended their collegiate careers against the team that had prevented them from Southwest Conference Championships for the past four years. “It’s a pretty sad way to go out,” Brinkman said. “1 wish our team Bike Closeout!! ; $?Bicycles, accessories and equipment at or ijfeicost! • Unicycle $50 • Tires $3 to $5 each • Seats from $3 • Tubes $1 each • Steel wheels for 10 speed - $10 EVERYTHING GOES!! A1 Lock & Cycle 3811 East 29th Street Town & Country Center Bryan, Texas $ ¥ s I %5 : ¥ could have given them a better fight. It was one of the worst games we've played.” For the other 11 Aggies, they'll have a long time to think about the three losses to the 'Horns this year, the 26-8 record, the No. 19 ranking that got as high as No. 10 and the first round NCAA win over Texas- Arlington that put them among the top 16 teams in the country. And they’ll also have a long time to think about the could-have- been’s, would-have-been's and should-have- been’s. CRIPPLE CREEK FOR $300! • SWIMMING POOL • TENNIS COURTS . HOT TUB 904 UNIVERSITY OAKS III 764-8682 846-03)1 764-OS04 MODELS OPEN DAILY DEVELOPED BY STANFORD ASSOCIATES, INC. D< Pellu Sunda (Home PITTSBUI Buffalo 24 WASHINC Cincinnati! Green Bay DETROIT INDIANA Tampa Bay ATLANTA Minnesota SAN FRAh New Orlea SAN DIEG Philadelph LA. RAM.' St. Louis L LA. RAID Seattle 3 Mondf New Engl; at MIAMI Saturd; Chicago f N.Y.JETf DENVER Kansas Cii