RANDY SIMS
Bar-B-Que House
FAMILY PAK
Indues 1 lb. of beef, 1
pint of beans, 1 pint of
SPECIAL-TO GO
potato salad, 4 pieces of
garlic bread, sauce.
$9.99
pickles and onions.
(Feeds 3-4 people).
Monday thru Thursday
4:00 p.m.-8:00 p.m.
3824 Texas Ave., Bryan
846-8016
Page 14AThe Battalion/Monday, February 1, 1988
K-State halts
Jayhawks’
home streak
FLU TREATMENT IS HERE
A study using the new drug Rimandatine
” ’ ’ ' ~ ■ * Health ^ '
is available at the Beutel
If you have Flu Symptoms
Center
- Fever
- Muscle Aches
- Chills
- Sore Throat
Come to the health center within the first 24 hours
of illness and ask for the Flu Doctors (Day or Night-
Flu Docs don’t sleep)
You may win a paid vacation ($160.00) in the Health Center
Dr John Quarles 845-3678
you SEft/lOUS
**BOUT
LMO SCHOOL ?
xr so.
THE SOCXETtJ
HA.S JUST yOU NEED I
WITH OUR NEETTNUS, EXEED TRXPS, WORKSHOPS
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WHERE yOU W.*NT TO EE.
NEXT MEETING: EEB. 2
301 RUDDER 8:30 m
EOR NT)RE XNEORrt^TXON
C*4LL ROyCE 846-9111
From the Associated Press
The winning streaks are over for
Kansas and Purdue, but the victories
keep coming for Brigham Young.
Kansas State ended Kansas’ 55-
game home-court winning streak
Saturday, while Indiana halted sec
ond-ranked Purdue’s 16-game vic
tory string. No. 7 BYU remained the
nation’s only major undefeated
team, improving its record to 15-0
with a victory over Air Force.
Mitch Richmond scored 35 points
as Kansas State beat Kansas 72-61 at
Lawrence. It was the Jayhawks’ First
home loss since Feb. 22, 1984, when
they were beaten by Oklahoma.
“We’ve had some unbelievable vic
tories in that streak,” Kansas Coach
Larry Brown said. “It’s time to start
over.”
Senior Dean Garrett scored a ca
reer-high 31 points, including the
winning basket with five seconds
left, as Indiana downed Purdue 82-
79 at Bloomington. Purdue entered
the game with the longest major-col
lege winning streak in the country.
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At Provo, Utah, Michael Smith
scored 23 points as Brigham Young
defeated Air Force 95-75. All Five
BYU starters scored at least 14
points.
“I. like everything about BYU,”
Air Force Coach Reggie Minton
said. “Their inside guys score and
get the writeups, but it’s the guards
that do the things needed to win and
so far nobody’s beaten them.”
In other Top 20 games Saturday,
top-ranked Arizona beat No. 13 Illi
nois 78-70; No. 3 North Carolina
edged Georgia Tech 73-71; No. 4
Nevada-Las Vegas beat Pacific 92-
67; No. 10 Oklahoma beat No. 12
Iowa State 96-91; No. 1 1 Pittsburgh
defeated Boston College 73-67, and
Vanderbilt beat No. 14 Florida 92-
65.
Also, No. 15 Georgetown nipped
Connecticut 60-59; No. 16 Iowa
routed Minnesota 76-51; New Mex
ico topped No. 18 Texas-El Paso 70-
69; Providence beat No. 19 Villa-
nova 82-76 in overtime, and South
Carolina beat No. 20 Southern Mis
sissippi 97-78.
On Sunday, No. 6 Temple
downed Rhode Island 77-70, No. 17
Syracuse routed No. 8 Michigan 89-
71, and No. 9 Kentucky beat Notre
Dame 78-69. No. 6 Duke did not
play over the weekend.
No. 1 Arizona 78, No. 13 Illinois 70
Tom Tolbert scored 20 points as
Arizona improved its record to 20-1.
Illinois. 14-6, led twice earlv in the
game, but a 3-pointer by Steve Kerr
put Arizona ahead for good 11-10.
The Illini trailed by only Five points
with 4:56 left, but Arizona surged to
a 73-63 lead with 1:26 remaining.
Kerr scored 17 points. Illinois was
led by Lowell Hamilton, who scored
all of his 21 points in the second half.
Indiana 82, No. 2 Purdue 79
Purdue, which rallied from a 21-
point First-half deFicit, had a chance
to win after Garrett put Indiana
ahead 80-79 with a short jumper.
But Tony Jones was called for travel
ing with two seconds left and In
diana scored at the buzzer.
The Boilermakers fell to 17-2
overall and 6-1 in the Big 10 Confer
ence, while Indiana improved to 1 1-
6 and 3-4.
No. 3 North Carolina 73, Georgia
Tech 71
Jeff Lebo scored North Carolina’s
last 15 points with five 3-point field
goals, sparking the Tar Heels over
the visiting Yellow Jackets in the At
lantic Coast Conference.
The Tar Heels, 15-3 overall and
4-2 in the league, held a six-point
halftime lead behind J.R. Reid’s 15
points. But the Yellow Jackets held
Reid to two baskets in the second
half, and rallied for a 64-58 lead
with 4:22 left before Lebo went on
his 3-point binge.
No. 4 Nevada-Las Vegas 92, Pacific
67
Clint Rossum scored 17 points
and Karl James had 16 for Nevada-
Las Vegas in the Pacific Coast Ath
letic Association game.
The Runnin’ Rebels, 19-1 and 8-1
in the PCAA, outscored the Tigers
20-6 in the last six minutes of the
half for a 49-29 halftime lead. Domi
ngo Rosario scored 24 points for Pa
cific.
No. 6 Temple 77, Rhode Island 70
Senior Tim Perry scored a career-
high 27 points as visiting Temple
snapped Rhode Island’s 10-game
winning streak.
Temple, 16-1 overall and 10-0 in
the Atlantic 10, has never lost to
Rhode Island in 22 meetings. Rhode
Island, which fell to 7-2 in the
ference, was led by Kenny Gr<
18 points.
No. 7 BYU 95, Air Force 75
The Cougars broke open the
game with a 7-0 run at the start of
the second half that gave them a 56-
38 lead.
BYU improved to 15-0 overall
and 6-0 in the Western Athletic Con
ference, while Air Force dropped to
8-10 and 2-6.
No. 17 Syracuse 89, No. 8 Michigan
71
Rony Seikaly equaled his career
high with 33 points as Syracuse took
command early in the second half
against Michigan.
FJ, fell behind:
play, but dost:
Michigan, 1
with 16:01 to
gap to til-58 with 10
Grant scored nine of his 22pai
that span. But Syracuse®
spondee! with 11 straight pci,:
went on to rout the Wolvenjj
the nationally televised game
No. 9 Kentucky 78, Notre Dam
Kentucky, 14-3, foughtofi j
ond-half rally by Notre Darj
Rex Chapman’s three-poimi
with 1:18 left.
Notre Dame, 12-5, trailed ]
points before cutting the de:
67-65 on David Rivers’ 3-poirl
ket with 1:51 to go. Chaptna: t
tered with his three-point ph i
the Fighting Irish could getn«
than 72-69 on Rivers' two
F.d Davender led Kehttich
23 points, and Rivers scored!!
Notre Dame.
lAAcDorugci's
DRIVE-THRU
WINDOW
MCDONALD’S
INTRAMURAL HIGHLIGHTS
At University Drive
Post Oak Mall
Hwy 21
Texas and S.W. Parkway
T-SHIRT DESIGN CONTEST
This contest is to determine a potential design for
the Intramural-Recreational Sports All-University
Champion T-Shirt. All entries must be received
no later than 5:30 PM, Tuesday, March 22. Each
participant may enter up to 3 designs. All entries
become the property of Texas A&M Intramural-
Recreational Sports Department. Drawings
should be no larger than 12" by 12". All entries
must be black ink on white paper. Color recom
mendations may be made as well but will not be
considered in judging. (Colors must be limited to
2 on the design). The winner will be notified by
Mon, April 18 and will be awarded a $50.00 prize.
For more information , contact Tom Reber, 845-
7826.
rm
K i
Epjr-£
The first All-University Champi- i
ons of 1988 have already been de- |
termined with the completion of ;?
the 3-On-3 Basketball Tournament I
Wednesday night. The champions in ji
the four divisions are as follows.
Men's A - Lakers
Men's B - We're Bad |
iSMSSfS;
CoRec - Happy Feet
03
Women's - D.T. II
DRIVING RANGE
The Driving Range located at the Intramural Sports Center is now open for opera
tion Mon-Thu, 4 PM - 6 PM and Fri - Sun, 2 PM - 6 PM. Individuals with student ID
or TAM U Recreational ID may purchase a large bucket of balls for $3.00 and a small
bucket of balls for $1.50. Without an ID individuals may purchase a large bucket of
balls for $4.00 and a small bucket for $2.00. Club rental is also available. For more
information, contact the IM-Rec Sports Office, 159 Read, or call 845-7826.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
McDonald’s Intramural Highlights is sponsored in
the Battalion by your local McDonald’s Restau
rants at University Drive, Manor East Mall, Hwy
21, Texas Avenue and Post Oak Mall. Stories are
written by P.J. Miller, graphics are by Paul Irwin
and photos are by Mark Figart and Sarah Cowan.
FOOTNOTES
•Basketball league play begins tonight, Mon, Feb
1 .Teams that have not picked up their schedules
may do so in the IM-Rec Sports Office, 159 Read
Bldg.
•Sport Club Meeting, Tue, Feb 2, 7 PM,162 Read.
•Racquetball Singles schedules will be posted
after 3 PM on the bulletin board outside the IM-
Rec Sports Office.
•Team Bowling Captain’s Meeting will be held on
Thu, Feb 4 at 5 PM in 167 Read Bldg. All team
captains should attend.
•Soccer Playoffs will be posted on Mon, Feb 8 after
3 PM on the bulletin board across from Racquet
ball Court #2. Play begins on Tue, Feb 9.
-Men's Lacrosse vs. Rice, Feb 6, 1PM, Drill Field.
-Men’s USVBA Volleyball Tournament, Feb 6 9:30
AM-7 PM, Read Bldg.
BACKPACKING
SAM HOUSTON NATIONAL
FOREST
FEBRUARY 19-21
ENTRIES CLOSE: TUE., FEB 2
Registration for this trip is from czp ryn nn
Feb 1-15 in the IM-Rec Sports Uo lUL IUJ.
Sports
Office, 159 Read. The fee is
$35 with A&M ID and $40
without ID. This fee includes
rental of camping gear and
backpacks, food, maps and
experienced guides. This trip is
geared toward the beginner
and intermediate backpacker.
For more information, please
call Patsy at 845-7826.
LiftAmerica and
Special Olympics
LiftAmerica is a program in which individuals solicit pledges for their performances in the LiftAmerica event. The
event consists of a bench press competition in which men will press 135 lbs and women will press 55 lbs. Pledges
are based on the number of repetitions at these weights. LiftAmerica collects all the money through the mail.
Participants are not responsible for collecting any money. The event is to be held on March 1 in room 268 G.
Rollie White beginning at 6 PM. Interested individuals should come by the Intramural-Recreational Sports Office
to enter and receive their pledge packets. For more info on the program, contact James Welford in the IM-Rec
Sports Office orcall him at 845-7826. In addition to benefiting Special Olympics, individuals will receive incentive
awards based on the actual dollar amount collected by LiftAmerica from their pledges.
quetballs, wooden racquets, metal racquets#
out guards or black soled shoes will be a
TEAM BOWLING: ENTRY FEE: All league games
and the first round of playoffs must be paid at the
time of entry. Entry fee is $20.00 per
learn.COMPETITION: Classes A, B and C will be
offered in Men's and Women's Residence Hall and
Independent, and CoRec. TEAMS: There are 4
members per team. CoRec teams consist of 2
males and 2 females. ELIGIBILITY: One TAMU
Bowling Club member per team. Any team with a
bowling club member must play in Class A. TEAM
CAPTAIN'S MEETING: Will be held on Thu, Feb
4,5 PM in 164 Read Bldg. Schedules will be avail
able at this time.
RACQUETBALL SINGLES: ENTRY FEE: None.
PLAY BEGINS: Tue, Feb 9. COMPETITION:
Classes A, B and C will be offered in Men’s and
Women’s Residence Hall and Independent divi
sions. All tournaments are single elimination.
RULES: IRA rules will apply. Matches consist of 2
games to 15 points and an 11 point tie-breaker, if
necessary. SCHEDULES: Will be posted after 3
PM, Thu, Feb 4 on the bulletin boards outside the
Intramural-Recreational Sports Office.
EQUIPMENT: A\\ participants must supply a new
can of balls and their own racquet. No black rac-
ENTRIES OPEN: MON, FEB 1
ENTRIES CLOSE: TUE, FEB 9
WALLYBALL: ENTRIES OPEN: Mon,
ENTRIES CLOSE: Tues, Feb 9. ENTRYfft
$20.00 per team. PLA Y BEGINS: Mon, Feb'i
TEAM CAPTAIN’S MEETING : Thurs, Febll
5:00 PM in 164 Read Bldg. COMPETITIti
Classes A, B, & C will be offered in W
Women’s, & CoRec.
SLAM DUNK: ENTRIES OPEN: Mon, F
ENTRIES CLOSE: Tues, Feb
PRELIMINARIES: Wed, Feb 10 at 7:30 PM,
Floor, G. Rollie White. FINALS: Sat, Feb 13
halftime of the A&M-Baylor Men’s baskets
game. RULES: Available at the IM-REC
159 Read.
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