The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 18, 1988, Image 10

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Page 10/The Battalion/Thursday, February 18, 1988
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Skaggs Center
29th St. Emporium
FLU TREATMENT IS HERE
A study using the new drug Rimandatine
is available at the Beutel Plealth Center
If you have Flu Symptoms
NHjHCI
H — C — CH 3
- 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
WE ARE
EXPANDING
SinnJb nflftnrWnn'nnT I %3S
TO BETTER SERVE
fYSYID IWTPIUnR'FDC
The following departments are moving
to new offices directly adjacent to our
current location:
Customer Service
Loan Department
New Accounts
In the coming weeks we will be adding
new services and looking tor even more
ways to better serve our members.
Thanks to our members we are growing
for the future based on a proud past
All our ottices will be closed on Monday,
February 15, 1988 tor President's Day, but,
on Tuesday, February 16, you will find us
in our new location. Our teller operations,
bookeeping and collections department
will remain in their present locations.
Ask About Our New Preferred
Membership Package
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301 Dorrunik Dr College Station. TX 77840 (409)696-1440
Insured by National Credit Union Administration (NCUA)
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Razorbacks burn Aggies | u
on Tim Scott’s 18 points
JEW Y
I. the 1
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (AP) —
Tim Scott scored 18 points and Ron
Huery added 15 to lead the Arkan
sas Razorbacks to a 79-58 victory
over Texas A&M in Southwest Con
ference basketball Wednesday.
Arkansas, 18-5 overall and 9-3 in
the Southwest Conference, shot 65
percent from the Field in the first
half. The Razorbacks, who never
trailed in the game, led 53-31 at half
time. Texas A&M, now 13-12 overall
and 5-6 in the SWC, never cut the
deficit to less than 22 points in the
second half and trailed by as many as
29.
The Razorbacks hit 22 of 34 Field
goal attempts in the First half and
out-rebounded Texas A&M 21-10.
Huery scored 13 of his 15 points in
the First half. Scott and Andrew
Lang had 1 1 points each at intermis
sion.
Lang Finished with 13 points, nine
blink
rebounds and three blocked i|jj n W
Larry Marks added
seven rebounds. Texas A&Mivai
by James McGhee’s 12 points,
was the only Aggie who scortjl
double figures. r
V m
\&M defeated ArlsHwas
Texas
74-67 in College Station on Jan
Arkansas had only nineturnov
the game. The Razorbacksoi
bounded Texas A&M 37-25.
Igw;
Iasi <ln
|s de
th,
Student service fees used to help
extramural sports with expenses |
I
f
kag
in n
peiitivi
was
By Carol Goswick
Reporter
After reading their semester fee
slips, students often ask, “What does
this $65 for ‘Student Service Lees’ go
toward?”
One answer is the Extramural
Sports Club Program directed by
Paula Opal.
“I supervise 30 clubs that rep
resent Texas A&M University while
competing around the state and very
often nationally,” Opal said.
The clubs include individual
sports such as archery, cycling and
fencing, and team sports such as la
crosse, polo and rugby. Opal said
any student interested in a particular
sport may join provided they have
the desire to develop skills necessary
to participate.
Many of the clubs have competed
in state and regional championships
“I used to he a loner, hut being on
the team allows me to shoot with
other people and really get to know
my teammates — especially when we
travel together,” he said.
Stonebraker said that as a club
member he not only has the chance
to compete and represent A&M, but
he also enjoys helping other archers
improve their shooting abilities.
“1 am able to give something back
to the sport,” he said.
Like archery, most of the clubs
must travel to compete, so the extra
mural program tries to lessen the Fi
nancial demands by allotting money
for each club’s needs through a por
tion of student service fees.
Representatives from each club
Fill out forms requesting specific
amounts of money for their respec
tive sport. Jeannine Von Stultz, pres
ident of the women’s rugby club said
its request was based on a consensus
bile
Ihim $
be N;
lalk
and some have gone on to win na- of the officers,
tional titles. “It’s pretty simple for our club be-
Last year Texas A&M’s wrestling cause we need most of the money for
team won the Texas collegiate gas and hotel rooms when we go
championship and the polo team once or twice a month to compete,”
placed First at the regional cham- she said.
pionships. The National Intercolle- Von Stultz said the team oct asion-
giate Men’s Weightlifting ally needs new rugby halls, hut the
Championship was won by A&M’s majority of the $1100 received this
team, and the women’s handball year is used for traveling,
team was second only to one at its Unlike women’s rugby, the polo
national championship competition, club uses most of its funding for
In the rarely publicized sport of equipment. Michael Ross, president
archery, 37-year-old Rick Stone- of the club, said the team’s costs are
braker is a master. He won First
place in the Indoor and Outdoor
National Archery Championships
and the Individual Male
Championship.
Ranked No. 1 in the nation,
Stonebraker is an archery All-Amer
ican and has been a member of the
Texas A&M Target Archers extra
mural club for two years.
pretty much fixed.
“It takes a lot of time, effort and
money to take care of and feed the
horses,” he said.
Students must pay $60 to join the
club. If a student does not have a
horse, he must pay an additional
$115 to use the club’s horses, Ross
said.
After budget request forms are
completed, each club represent—
meets with the five-member sB 10 ^
mural budget committee to pit® 111 a ^ r
his needs. The elected studen
mil tee sends its recommendai
C )pal of how much moneyisn
to operate each club.
Opal presents the extraniiiral||y\ |0L
gram’s budget proposal toiklBhilly
dent Government finance r nepl the
tee chaired l>\ Doug BaraSthat
Baumann said this comniiiletjBos dei
\icus the piogram’s requesti»arly.
with that of 16 other otMami not
It decides how the studentmRsh g<
fee revenue ol approxima |ji(l for
million should be divided
services such as the A.P
Health Center, MSC, com
serv ices and The Battalion.
"As a committee we try to
mine how much the organii
need to operate and providedi
service for the students,"
said.
The committee’s recomnt
tion is sent to Dr. John Koldm
president for student senice>,4
then to President FrankE. Wit
foi his rev isi< ins, Baumann said. _
Mm 1 exas A&M Boanl.Bli;
gents makes the final budiy.^J
sion,” Baumann said.
Opal said the biggest benrii
being an extramural clubarei
nancial resources, priorityfoni
campus f acilites and assistance
the University. The sports do
quire time and a certainamomi
dedication, Opal said, but
members feel it is worth it.
loyant
leadii
“Sports
awardei
iHERb
jpwden,
\ Higl
isional
bn $55,
Hercedes
jce.
Jut the
ive up tf
Club of the Year- ,
d in May to the club wit rj mui
, ■8 Sum
most success in 1 mid raising, par
pation and competition, Opals
The < lub receives $100 for its a®
plishments.
th Koi
o ma
Bowc
;es anc
Soviet Olympic athletes
their style to fit image of
l-enimt
change
‘glasnosfl
leOlymp
3uta cl
hat n
CALGARY, Alberta (AP) — So
viet sportsmen in the age of glasnost
perform just as powerfully as their
predecessors, but at these Winter
Olympics they are less dour, less
churlish and considerably less likely
to look out of it.
Which is why one department
store prints a full-page ad in the dai
lies, and by doing so in the Cyrillic
alphabet, promotes itself, in effect,
as the official Olympic outlet for
bluejeans.
“Special Offer 1988 Olympics,”
Id-"
not
ets of
said,
don’i
the ad screams in large, bold-fate
type.
“Mark’s Work Wearhouse ap
plauds the new Soviet spirit of glas
nost and perestroika. Show your of
ficial Soviet Olympic team
identification” the ad says, “for a 25
percent discount on up to six pairs
of Levi’s.”
This is the first Olympics since So
viet leader Mikhail Gorbachev made
glasnost (openness) and perestroika
(reforms) part of official Soviet pol
icy. But the 118-member Soviet ath-
Graphic by Susan C. Akin
letic delegation, as well as team otli-
cials and media in Calgary remain a
curious blend of past and present.
In Soviet media guides, handsome
photographs of athletes are set off
by biographical sketches that fall
only a little short of the standards
one finds in the best American ex
amples.
In the same books, however, the
coaches are accorded pictures but
not bios, as though they had no past.
On Tuesday, Canadian cross-
: mone
country coach Murray Hall nj nttogc
i he issue of blood doping on Wowdei
heels of a t y pica I lv domination he was 12
viet performance — 1-2-4 in® hangi
men’s 30-kilometer; four of ibf cade,
five plat ings in the women’slO-UBflowevt
Displaying increasing ®Bwden’s
savvy, Soviet team officials'Mir years
mum, allowing the Intema®®He box
Olympic Committee to den) Manama
charges for them. Bn was
Their restraint was a farcM Gln.es set
1956 at Cortina d’ Ampezzo, bT
when two Soviet speed skaters'|
world-record times one day
they set them in Olympictrials«n fact,
team official Sergei Sentfthe 16-17
moaned: {Gloves toi
“Every time we set a new rsBnpetitk
somebody tries to find a hairin*s recon
soup.” Reporters had a field Bn was 2
with that line. ■Bovvdet
In private, one knowledgeawBst few n
viet sportsman expressed pnffgroup anc
the new side Soviet athletf-'Wopped i
showing at these Games, pwith 18 kn
and comfortable in the widfBHe is r
limelight. jlhind H
ing the pa
ddlewe
lafighti
happy hour
friday 2-6
movie rental
over 2,000 titles
$1.99
$2“' off
all LP’s and
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all CD’s
$13.98 and up
all books
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