The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 14, 1986, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    An Urban Law School hi the
Seat of State Government
MISSISSIPPI COLLEGE
THE LA W SCHOOL
For information contact:
Nancy McLendon
Admissions
151 E. Griffith St.
Jackson, MS 39201
(601) 353-3907
:
Styling for Men
& Women
$5 OFF Perms
(regular $35)
$2 OFF Haircuts
(regular $10)
with this coupon
Open M-F 9-6 Sat. 9-2
268-2051
Located in the Lower Level Memorial Student Center
exp. 12/20/86
upm
ICC
GALLERY
1SSAN
10% Student Discount
Discount is on all parts & labor on Nissan
Products only. We will also offer 10% dis
count on labor only on all non-Nissan
products.
Student I.D. must be presented at
time workorder is written up.
We now have rental units available for service customers
1214 Tx. Ave. 775-1500
All New
Buffet
EB’S
ELI
ALLYOUCANEAT
for just $4 95
sandwichs, salads, and fountain drinks
Mon., Tues., and Wed. only
5-8pm
404 University 696-DEBS
Buy 1 and
Receive 1
Pizza Of Next
Size Smaller
FREE!!
DELIVERS PIZZA) Same No. of Toppings. Dine in
& Pick Up Orders Only. Please
Tell Phone Person You Have
Not valid during any other special offer. Coupon. Expires 12/31/86.
16” Cheese Breadsticks
with Ranch Dressing or Pizza Sauce
Plus 2-16 oz. drinks
$7.00 Delivered
Northgate/Campus Texas Ave.
846-3768 Expires 10/18/86 696-0234
★ TODAY ★
AND EVERY TUESDAY
AT PUTT THEATRES
THEATRE GUIDE
ANY FILM
ALL LOCATIONS
POST OAK THREE
CINEMA THREE
ALIENS
7:05 9:40
I0« L * M I
-rri mo* RASTAH A TRMTAH RELEASE
'-I3|<aGDi o l9MTrtS*»P’k*M,lK. AJRI*tata<o.d
7:35 9:40
AN ADVENTURE IN COMEDY!
WHOOPI GOLDBERG
JOMPIN’ jack
FLASH ^
TWENTIETH CENTURY-FOX l£5J
Til DOLBY STEREO |
7:30 9:45
toUHfc 8ft/* lot. All K>ghu
7:30 9:35
An amazing secret.
The Boy Who
Could Fly jpg]
|I1 1 [DOLBY STEREOl"
7:00 9:30
7:25 9:35
Tuesday, October 14, 1986/The Battalion/Page 9
A&M Sports
Club Update
ARCHERY hosted a tournament this weekend near the Zachry
parking lots. In the men’s division after the two-day tournament, A&M
took the top three places in the following order: Gary Boecker, first;
Tommy Thompson, second; Rick Stonebraker, third.
In the women’s division, Texas’ Jessica Schumacher grabbed first,
Terry Quinn placed second on an open basis and A&M’s Kathy Craig
finished third.
POLO men’s team went 1-1 in an intercollegiate tournament Satur
day at the indoor facilities of the Retama Polo Center near San Antonio.
A&M lost to Texas Tech 7-8, but came back to beat Texas 6-1.
RIFLERY hosted the Aggie Invitational last weekend and its two
teams took first and second place out of a 10-team field from Texas and
Louisiana. The University of Texas at Arlington finished third.
Individually for A&M in the .22-caliber rifle meet, Vinnie Pestilli
took first with 1156 points of a possible 1200. Mike Moore grabbed sec
ond with 1152 and Annette Tyler and Chris Fedun tied for third at
1145.
The team competed at the Sam Houston State Invitational on Fri
day and also took first. The top three finishers were Pestilli, Fedun and
Moore.
The Aggies also finished first as a junior team (20 years and
younger) at the Texas State High-Power Rifle Match in San Antonio
Sunday. A&M took the top spots with Mike Kurzy in first, Donna Good-
loe in second and Allen Ludwig in third,
This weekend the seventh-ranked Aggies go to Colorado Springs,
Colo, in a four-team competition with the Air Force Academy (ranked
10th), the University of Texas at El Paso and Wyoming.
RODEO competed in the National Intercollegiate Rodeo Associa
tion Rodeo in Uvalde this weekend. There are two types of competi
tion: long-go, which is the preliminary action in an event; and short-go,
in which the top 10 individuals from long-go action compete.
The placing for A&M was as follows (by event, long-go placing,
short-go placing and average of the two): Tate Christensen, tie-down
calf roping (8th, 3rd, 3rd); Anita Balch, barrel racing (6th, 3rd, 4th);
Rebecca Powers, goat tying (8th, 5th, 6th); Renee Blackwell, breakaway
racing (6th, 4th, 4th).
MEN’S RUGBY played Southwest Texas State University this week
end. SWTSU’s A side beat A&M’s A squad 20-4, but the Aggie B side
beat SWTSU 22-6 behind Tim Cone’s three tries.
This weekend the team travels to San Antonio to play the San Anto
nio club.
MEN’S SOCCER hosts Baylor at 10 a.m. Saturday on the Zachry
field.
WOMEN’S SOCCER fought to a 1-1 tie Saturday with the Univer
sity of Missouri at St. Louis on the A&M drill field. Pam Patack scored
for the Aggies.
A&M, 4-5-1, will host Missouri Rolla Saturday at 2 p.m.
ULTIMATE FRISBEE hosted the Aggie Ultimate Experience this
weekend with eight men’s teams and three women’s teams. The A&M
women’s team went 1-1 in the round-robin tournament, while the men
were 0-3 in its four-team pool.
Baseball to be added
to ’92 Olympic Games
LAUSANNE, Switzerland (AP) —
Baseball was added to the Olympics
beginning in 1992 on Monday, while
the top officials of the Games said
they had reached the limit on the
number of sports they were willing
to move to try to avoid a North Ko
rean boycott in 1988.
Teams from at least six nations
will determine gold, silver and
bronze medals in baseball, a demon
stration sport in Los Angeles in
1984, Vitaly Smirnov, chairman of
the International Olympic Commit
tee’s program commission, an
nounced.
“Baseball is part of the Olympics,
from 1992 on,” Smirnov said.
He said the IOC’s 91st session
asked for a complete review of possi
ble eligibility dilemmas with profes
sional players and agreed that the
tournament might have to be played
on converted soecer fields if the host
city doesn’t have baseball diamonds.
An IOC member from the Soviet
Union, Smirnov also mentioned that
his country’s Sports Ministry earlier
this month had agreed to recognize
and promote America’s national pas
time.
Japan beat the United States for
the demonstration gold medal in
baseball two years ago.
For 1988 in Seoul, he said, the
IOC had voted to add men’s and
women’s events in 50-meter freestyle
swimming and team archery, while
dropping the open judo class. This
will bring the total number of events
in the next Summer Games to 237,
16 more than in Los Angeles.
Smirnov said the committee had
rejected proposals to add three
other new medal sports in 1992 —
bowling, women’s modern pentath
lon and roller skating.
It will give further consideration,
he added, to the proposed addition
of women’s softball, water skiing,
martial arts and lightweight rowing,
as well as all possible medal additions
to the Winter Games.
While the size of future Olympics
grew, the fate of the 1988 Games
again was thrown into the shadow of
a possible North Korean walkout.
The 86-member IOC unani
mously endorsed a stand taken last
month by its Executive Board, giving
Pyongyang until one year before the
Games to formally accept the propo
sal to move table tennis, archery and
parts of soccer and cycling from
Seoul to the north.
If no written agreement is re
ceived by Sept. 17, 1987, “then
North Korea might decide not to
take part in the Olympic Games,”
Michele Verdier, the IOC spokeswo
man, said.
Politically inspired boycotts have
hit each of the last three Summer
Games — in Montreal in 1976, Mos
cow in 1980 and Los Angeles in
1984.
Beautiful Roses
Red-Yellow-Pink
i^d. 00
per dozen
Buy 1 dozen and get the second dozen at
half price
To order call 696-8872 before Friday
THE DIXIE ROSE COMPANY
Roses will be available for pickup from 2:00-6:00 p.m.
Friday, Oct. 17 in front of Sbissa Dining Hall and in
front of the Commons.
Roses are sold for all home football games.
Sponsored A «,
byENVE v O
NEED
MONEY???
Sell your BOOKS
at
University Book Stores
Northgate & Culpepper Plaza
Regular
Haircuts
$5
MSC Barbershop
Lower Lever MSC
846-0629
Shoe Shines
Hours:
8 a.m.-5 p.m. M-F
£siiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiimmiiiiiiii!Byi^mmPi
" Specializing in
| STANDARD and ;i|
| AUTOMATIC trans-i 1
| missions, CLUTCH,*: |
| adjustments, and ;|
^ replacements ^
| (Both foreign and domesticj 5
1215 Tx. Ave.
| (at the bend in Tx. Ave.)i |
Bryan 779-2626
| Under New Ownership^ |
5iiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiniiuiiniiiiiiiiiiimammlEl
707 TEXAS • 2305 CAVITT
COPY
CENTER
707 Texas • 693-COPY
2 6 7 9,
2305 Cavltt • 823-COPY
We Honor Competitors’ Coupons!’
707 TEXAS • 2305 CAVITT
DEFENSIVE DRIVING CLASS
Oct. 17,18 and Oct. 24,25
Register at University Plus (MSC Basement)
Call 845-1631 for more information on these or
other classes
MSC Great Issues
General Meeting T0P | CS: ECONOMICS
Tues., Oct. 14th PROGRAM
7:30 pm 604 Rudder TEXAS SERIES
New Members Welcome
Dress to Kill
Discover the unearthly costume
accessories in our Halloween
Boo Bazaar. Ghoul Jewels, Head
Haunters, Tails of the Dark and more
devilish delights to turn your
Halloween into haunting fun.
Candies & Treats, Too!
STARSHIP'
C <nARSHIP=^\
Manor East Mall Culpepper Plaza
822-2092 693-3002
ZIPS '87
Join us for our next
CLASS
MEETING-
Tuesday, Oct. 14
510 judder
& '30 pm