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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 28, 1987)
Page 10/The Battalion/Monday, September 28, 1987 CLASSICAL BALLET CLASSES Taught by an experienced instructor at the best dance studio in B/CS •evening classes •men welcome •children's classes available •family discounts available •small classes 696-1177 TAMMY Attention, CBA Fast Track-ers! We can tell you how to get on it! Come to Info Nite for CBA Fellows Program, Tuesday, Sept. 29, 7-8:30 PM, 102 Blocker. p*••••••••••••••*••• Auto Service ‘Auto Repair At Its Best’ General Repairs on Most Cars & Light Trucks American! & Import OPEN MON-FRI 7:30-5:30 846-5344 Just one mile north of A&M On the Shuttle Bus Route lllRoyal, Bryan Across S. College From Tom’s B-B-Q 1CT HEWLETT WC/iM PACKARD calculators Buy an HP-41 Advanced Programmable Calculator NOW and get the HP-41 Advantage module FREE! HP-41CV $ 135 Buy an HP-12C Financial Calculator NOW and get paid $10! HP-12C $ 75 Jim Leder V/TNTURE £l,ntcrpriscs 696-546-7 AGGIE SPECIAL Thursday & Saturday 00 all single shot drinks & canned beer I $2 00 off admission with coupon Hall of Fame FM 2818 North of Villa Maria, Bryan 822-2222 18,19, & 20 year olds welcome Contact Lenses Only Quality Name Brands (Bausch & Lomb, Ciba, Barnes-HInds-Hydrocurve) *$79 00 -STD. DAILY WEAR SOFT LENSES $99. 00 -STD. EXTENDED WEAR SOFT LENSES $99.' 00 -STD. TINTED SOFT LENSES DAILY WEAR OR EXTENDED WEAR Call 696-3754 For Appointment Same day delivery on most soft contact lenses ★Eye exam and care kit not included CHARLES C. SCHROEPPEL, O.D., P.C. DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY 707 South Texas Ave., Suite 101D College Station, Texas 77840 1 block South of Texas & University A new Location Buy one Pizza ... Get one FREE! Buy any Size Original Round Pizza at regular price and get the identical pizza free with this coupon! AT A CONVENIENT LITTLE CAESARS NEAR YOU! Biyan College Station Northgate 29th & Briarcrest Texas Ave Coming Soon 776-7171 & SW Parkway 268-0220 696-0191 FREE BUY ONE PIZZA... GET ONE FREE I Buy any size Original Round Pizza at regular price, get identical pizza FREEI Carry out only. Prices vary depending on size Sf toppings. Expires: 11-2-87 B-M-9-28 Save $6 18 TWO LARGE PIZZAS $11" plus tax 10 Toppings Reg. $18 17 Valicl 'rith cou pon at particl- Qood Mon-Wed Only paling Little Toppings Include pepper-^- aesars - One onl ham, bacoa grouncfoupon per beef, sausage, mushroom£ ustomer - green pepper, onions. Expires 11-2-87 B-M-9-28 1984 Uttle Caesar Enterprises. Inc Carpenter hurls Aggies to 5-1 mark By Anthony Wilson Sports Writer Julie Carpenter pitched all six of the Texas A&M softball team’s games this weekend in the Aggie Fall Invitational and won Five of them, four by shutout. “Julie Carpenter got pressed into service and got to pitch every inning, throw every practice and throw ev ery game. I’m just proud of her,” Coach Bob Brock said. “I think Julie did an excellent job. “I think she gave up one good solid hit of any consequence and that was in the Sam Houston game in the first inning. And we’re talking about six games later.” Carpenter, however, was not quite as enthusiastic over her perfor mance. “For early in the season, pitching all of the games, it was tough,” Car penter said. “There was nothing else I could do. I was the only pitcher. I can’t say I did a super job.” Official standings weren’t kept in the tournament, which was held at Bee Creek Park. Brock said the pur pose of the tournament was to give the team and younger players a chance to play together. “We don’t really emphasize win ning the tournament,” Brock said. “It’s just a real relaxed tournament. It’s just to get the team to play as a team, try a lot of extra things and what have you. It’s just really kind of for the freshmen. “It’s been kind of anti-climatic in a way because our freshman pitcher (Catherine Stedman) hurt herself, so she hasn’t been able to show what she can do.” On Saturday, the Lady Aggies won their first three games of the tournament, defeating the Ranger IQI shov By Assista LITTLE R( iaturday’s Mi ere, one of i an a full page ame, quoting ably were “in Of the nearh hirty peopli ntervie wed ■hich includec outhwest Con erence coache tic directors es, only tw'o isting Hurrica: Oh well, so i jentimentality. Using the st acre quarterb; test in the see f Miami top-g urricanes ami offense in th defense that lops in the SWC Texas A&M’s Rhonda Halbert slides in for a run against Ranger Junior A&M went 5-1 in the tourney, losing only to Sam Houston State in the final Photo by JayJwe College Saturday in Bee Creek Part game, which was plagued by rain, Junior College first squad 14-2, Ste phen F. Austin University 3-0 and the Ranger second squad 11-0. On Sunday morning, A&M faced Southwest Texas State University. The Lady Aggies mustered three runs on only five hits as Carpenter pitched her third straight shutout of the tournament. In the second inning, catcher Erika Eriksson doubled home Stacey Crainer, \yho had singled, to score A&M’s first run. In the third inning, right fielder Renee Blaha walked and scored on an error by the short stop on a ball hit by Liz Mizera. A&M scored its last run of the game when Mizera walked, advanced to second base on a sacrifice by Erin Newkirk, moved to third on Carrie Heightley’s single and scored on a sacrifice fly to left field by Zina Ochoa. A&M beat the University of Texas at Arlington 8-0 in their second game Sunday. Julie Smith, Height- ley and Blaha scored in the first in ning. That trio also scored in the sec ond when Mizera cleared the bases with a triple to left field. Mizera then scored on a single by Newkirk. Cat' penter once again pitched a shutom allowing four hits and strikingoui three. In the final game, A&M lost Sam Houston State University 2-1 rainy weather. T he Lady Aggieso hit the SHSU, but unlike the Lady Kats, were unable to capitalize oi their opponent’s mistakes. Although Carpenter gave upi two hits, she blamed the loss on weather. “I haven’t thrown in the rain in long time,” she said. Meanwhile, lex-bone offe ernoon mired unior tailback iWC pre-seasoi as' only points iard run in the ites. At the day’s lad mustered ( ense, with 80 LSU defeats Ags in volleyball tourney By Tammy Hedgpeth Sports Writer The Texas A&M women’s vol leyball team came out on the short end this weekend as it placed third in the Texas A&M Invitational Friday and Saturday in G. Rollie White Coliseum. A&M to take second place. A&M had a slow day by losing not only to NMS but also LSU. SWC Bear From The The Southv )rry Septembei or a n a t i lampionship. Arkansas wa: lished conferer utchered the 1 ock on Saturd The tournament consisted of three other teams — Louisiana State, New Mexico State and North Carolina, with LSU captur ing the first place trophy. NMS finished second and North Caro lina rolled in fourth. Friday, LSU defeated NMS in five games 7-15, 15-13,15-13, 7- 15, 15-4. Senior Simone DePaula led the offense for LSU with 14 kills on 37 attempts while sopho more Monica deMello Freitas paced the defense with 17 digs. Friday night, the Lady Aggies overpowered the North Carolina Tar Heels in four games 16-14, 17-15, 14-16, 15-7. LSU knocked out A&M 15-13, 15-6, 16-4 in the final match of the tournament for the first place standing. Even though the Fight ing Tigers came out ahead, LSU Coach Scott Luster was not pleased. “I’m pleased that we won,” Luster said. “I’m not pleased with our overall play. We’re still kind of in a ‘hump time’ and we’re struggling. We’re still trying to get together and play good ball. But it feels good to come in and play two out of three decent matches. This was probably one of the best tournaments that we’ve gone to.” A&M Coach A1 Givens was not pleased either. The Lady Aggies had a slow start but bounced back quickly. The offense was powered by ju nior Cheri Steensma who re corded 23 kills on 44 attempts for an attack percentage of .522. Sophomore Yvonne Van Brandt kept the defense alive with 20 digs. In Saturday’s competition NMS recorded two victories by defeating North Carolina and “I was real disappointed in the way we played overall,” Givens said. “We are not playing very well right now and what that’s a function of I’m not real sure. That’s something we are going to have to determine quickly. We take ourselves out of matches by making service errors. “There are some individual ef forts out there, but there is not a unified team e^ort. What that’s a function of I do not know. It could be a lot of things —just the chemistry of the court.” orst whipping iem47-0in 195 The 10th ran umiliated on |at Miami playe v tic-tac-toe o ard in the four Miami free sa ibbed it in, sayi Southwest Cc :r, bring on the [The Hogs wei led to play Wr lockers droppe The bad news | travel to Miam xt year. The SWC did ark with foui eakopposition. Texas A&M, w inked Washing led to a 27-14 In Mississippi; toid McWillian irn victory with n State; Hou: Photo by JayJmmer Outside attacker Michelle Whitwell returns a New Mexico State shot in Saturday’s match. A&M won that match but later lost to LSU. U.S. team loses second consecutive Ryder Cup From The A NEW YORK i tike claimed its unday, appareni iking them up coaches contir ■liking players ames next weeke Tampa Bay 1 ugh Culverhous FL's executive DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) — Seve Bal lesteros of Spain won the match that blunted a belated rally by the U.S. team and provided Europe with its first victory on American soil in the Ryder Cup golf competition Sunday. Ballesteros’ 2 and 1 decision over American leading money winner Curtis Strange gave the Europeans an unbeatable lead after Sunday’s matches at the Muirfield Village Golf Club course. The final score, with each match worth one point, was Europe 15, U.S. 13. It marked the Europeans’ second consecutive victory and their first in the United States in the biennial matches that began in 1927. The Americans, five points be hind going into Sunday’s final 12 singles matches, needed to win nine points — and almost did it. Their rally, however, ended on the par-4 18th hole of the course that American captain Jack Nicklaus designed at Muirfield Village. In the critical early going, Dan Pohl, Larry Mize and Ben Crenshaw each lost one-half point with a bogey or worse on the 18th. It was enough to turn the tide. Pohl, in the second match of the day, was tied with Howard Clark of England going to the 18th. But Pohl was short in two, dumped his third ppeared unlikely into a bunker and made doubleb) :heduled for Su gey. He lost the hole, the half-poi« etween Denver for a tie and the match, 1-up. mg >r Monday •ayed. Mize, the Masters champion,« Unkm boss Ge 1-up going to the 18th. Buthedroi into trouble, had to take a drop and eventually made Torrance’s par-4 won the hole an lat there would salvaged a half point from a mai the Europeans appeared to to lost. os Angeles to ho (g with represe est Coast NFL t along the Raider: Coach Don Sh «A HECKI mor That’s how much money you’ve spent building your wardrobe. Remember, in dry cleaning: “you get what your pay for.” Bring your garments to us for professional spotting, cleaning, and finishing care. ^ / Villa Maria /CEEANERS ! / ■‘Quality (Service" Hours: Mon-Fri 7:30-6:00 710 Villa Maria Road Sat. 8:00-12:00 822-3937 GO TEXAS TUDENT ERNMENT AM UNIVERSITY ins, meanw, placement garni 0, Iphisticated” as Aching, and son 'at “scabs” could 'ilgthe strike. Chicago Bears t >*■■■■■ Volunteers In Public Schools Don’t miss the orientation for becoming a volun teer at the next External Affairs Meeting. P as com Monday, Sept.28, 8:30 502 Rudder Cjct if^VclvU' hmmmm