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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 1, 1986)
<ZMSC CAMERA s ; Slide Presentation & Print Exhibition S 5 last general meeting of the semester MONDAY, DEC. 1 ^ REDDER ' : PP (see video display for room number^ MEWMIMBEJiS WELCOME! HEY OFF CAMPUS AGS! If your lease ends in December^ be sure to give your Page lOAThe Battalion/Monday, December 1, 1986 Lady Ags nip Georgia State to take seventh in tourney Freshman guard Lisa Herner canned two free throws with 10 sec onds remaining to lead the Texas A&M Lady Aggie basketball team to its first victory of the season with a 69-68 win Sunday over Georgia State. It was the third and final game for the Lady Aggies in the Southern In vitational Tournament in Atlanta as they picked up seventh place with the win. The Lady Aggies dropped decisions to South Alabama in Fri day’s opening round and to Gram- bling in double overtime Saturday. Sophomore guard Donna Roper led the Lady Aggies with 18 points Sunday. She also had a team-high seven rebounds and Five assists in the contest. Center Lisa Jordan added 15 points and forward Paula Crutcher put in 11 for the Lady Ag gies. A&M also received help off the bench from Nette Garrett, who had Five steals in the game. “It’s nice to get that first win,” A&M Coach Lynn Hickey said. She added that the weekend was tough on the players off the court because their luggage was lost and they had to change motels to Find nicer ac commodations in a better section of town. “Our problem has been we haven’t been playing with confiden ce,” Hickey said. “We pulled to- 1 Lisa Herner gether today and pulled off a tight one.” Hickey also said she was disap pointed with the ofFiciating for the tournament. “We’ve been ripped off in all three games,” she said. In A&M’s two previous games: South Alabama 82, A&M 64 The Lady Aggies were outshot and outrebounded by the Lady Jaguars as they dropped their season opener in Friday’s First round of the tourna ment. A&M shot just 37 percent from the floor (23 of 62 shots) and South Alabama used a 50-35 rebounding advantage to tame the Lady Aggis For A&M, forwards Evelyn ers and Crutcher each scored points, while Roper pitched in| South Alabama, led byguardDer. Adams’ 16 points, had four plait in double Figures. Grumbling 92, A&M 90(201 1 )espite holding a 41-28 leadaik time, the Lady Aggies couldn’tli off All-America candidate \(, Can rie and G rambling as theyloj double overtime Saturday. Currie scored 21 of her31 pa m the second half of regulation ii while teammate LeChandra Lai scored 19 of her 28 points in thef: half to keep the game within read A&M held the lead undl 4 minutes and eight seconds werti in the second half as Curries®! to put Grambling up 69-68. Moj Smith hit the game winnerai A&M’s Rosalind B lowii turned-B ball over with 10 seconds left-3 32nd turnover by the Lady Aggie the game. The Lady Aggies also tj plagued by fouls as Crutcher,San ers, Jordan and Tamara Jada fouled out of the game. Leadinn Lady Aggies in scoring was Ity with a career-high 25 points.Gm Beth Young had 15, sixofnii came in the overtime periods. Arnsparger unsure about future apartment manager a 30 DAY WRITTEN NOTICE OF YOUR INTENT TO VACATE THE APARTMENT. COME BY THE OFF CAMPUS CENTER LOCATED in Puryear Hall or call 845-1741 if you have any QUESTIONS. Sponsored by the Off Campus Aggies and the Off Campus Center. IS PEACE POSSIBLE? “THE HUMAN RACE, AS A DISTINCT, ORGANIC UNIT, HAS PASSED THROUGH EVOLUTIONARY STAGES ANALOGOUS TO THE STAGES OF ITS INDIVIDUAL MEM BERS, AND IS NOW IN THE CULMINATING PERIOD OF ITS TURBLENT ADOLESCENE APPROACHING ITS LONG-AWAITED COMING OF AGE.” -FROM THE PROMISE OF WORLD PEACE FOR YOUR FREE COPY OF “THE PROMISE OF WORLD PEACE” STOP BY THE BAHAI CLUB’S TABLE AT THE MSC FROM DECEMBER 2 5, 1986 TAMU BAHAI CLUB mmm OYSTER BAR ~L>GsCUf, £>fieC4CU Mo+u&cuf, Ocean Debris $5 95 'ItteAdcuf, All You Can Eat $4 50 WedtteAdcuf, Mountain Oysters, Fried Shimp & Oyster Combo $5 20 Fried Flounder $4 25 Fried Oysters $5 45 Happy Hour 3-6 Oysters 2 75 per dozen 85$ Corona’s All Week "A taste of the Gulf with the Northgate View" North gate 846-3497 Battalion Classified 845-2611 ii fitt BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — Bill Arnsparger, announcing his resig nation after leading LSU to a No. 5 rating, the Southeastern Conference championship and a Sugar Bowl berth, kept the mystery going Sun day as he sidestepped questions about his future. Arnsparger, 59, has led LSU to a 26-7-2 mark in three years, includ ing three bowl berths. This season, the Tigers — picked for the middle of the SEC pack last August — wound up with a 9-2 re cord and the conference crown. Arnsparger has been wooed by the University of Florida for the ath letic director’s job and has expressed interest in the same post at LSU, which recently became vacant with the pressured resignation of Bob Brodhead. One thing is for sure, Arnsparger said at his Sunday news conference, “I’m not going to another coaching job.” Heralded for years as the de fensive genius for the Miami Dol phins, Arnsparger came to LSU to pick up a program that had almost dropped to the bottom, losing more SEC games than any Tiger team in decades in 1983. Last summer, as Arnsparger and Brodhead apparently came to log gerheads on the football program, the coach went to Florida to inter view for the AD job. He came back to say that he had withdrawn his name, and LSU Chancellor James Wharton announced that Arnsparger would have more con trol over the football program. Asked Sunday if he is still in the running for the Florida job, Arnsparger said, “I can’t answer that.” Will he apply for the LSU job as athletic director? “That is one of my options,” re plied Arnsparger. He declined to say who he favors as his successor, although reports are that he is pushing Mike Archer, the defensive coordinator who joined LSU after being defensive backfield coach of Miami’s 1983 na tional champsionship squad. “1 hope to l>e back nextstM whatever my capactiy,” Archtrs after Saturday’s 37-17 victory« Tulane. “If it’s head coach,fine not, I can accept that.” Also mentioned prominenilo successor have been Tulane Gs Mack Brown and Southm: Louisiana’s Nelson Stokelv, *1 i. < UK < qu.ti n i backed theTigen RG Arnsparger, in < o.u lung forH 1 years, served a'- an assistant(oKj for Tulane. Kentucky, Ohio! and Miami of Ohio beforejoii the Baltimore Colts as an assistac; Ag volleyball team gets bid The Texas A&M volleyball team will travel to Athens, Ga., to face the University of Georgia Friday at 7:30 p.m. in the first round of the NCAA tournament it was announced Sunday. “We’re very pleased to get the bid,” A&M Coach A1 Givens said. “If we play well as a team, and I underscore ‘team,’ we should do well.” The Aggies Finished the year with a 23-13 record and second behind Texas in the Southwest Conference with a 7-3 mark. A&M enters the tournament as the fifth seed in the region right behind Georgia. Texas is the No. 1 seed in the region. A&M beat Georgia earlier a the year in the Oklahoma Tour nament at Norman, Okla. In other games involving tea® from the South region,Texasul host Duke, Southwest TexasStatt will travel to the University of Texas at Arlington, and LSL3l| host Arizona. “We felt secure we were to get a bid,” Givens said, “i tough going to their place ami playing because there will be a bij Georgia crowd on hand, but out team plays well in front of any crowd.” 1 presents „«1986 Christmas Craft Festival December 2 & 3 9:00-5:00 Rudder Fountain Mall Quality handcrafted items at affordable prices! Jewelry Stained Glass Pottery Photography Woodwork ...and more SMILE FOR YOUR FAMILY’S GENERAL DENTAL CARE $ 29 00 CLEANING, EXAM & X-RAYS 'Call For Appointment Dental Insurance Accepted • Emergency Walk Ins Welcome Evening Appointments Available • Nitrous Oxide Available Complete Family Dental Care • On Shuttle Bus Route hbi ^(Anderson Bus) CarePlus^rft MEDICAL/DENTAL CENTER 696-9578 Dan Lawson, D.D.S., 171 2 S W - Parkway M-F 10 a.m.-8 p.m (across from Kroger Center) Sat. 9 a.m.-1 p.m