Page 10/The Battalion/Wednesday, February 24, 1988 Auto Service “Auto Repair At Its Best” Complete Auto Service, Dometic & Imports 111 Royal 846-5344 Bryan across S. College from Tom's BBC Oi, rmanclu (pSdtiare trynancty <^A/uare , v T tp a. rim evils • Large Bedrooms, Windows & Closets • On Site Manager • Swimming Pool • Preleasing • 2 & 3 bedrooms • Close to Campus 846-4206 501 Nagle, College Station Lotus 1-2-3 One-week classes for students who want, to learn this popular spreadsheet program Cost $35.00 Sterling C. Evans Library Learning Resources Department Room 604 845-2316 Feb. 29-Mar. 4, Mar. 28-Apr. 1, Apr. 18-22, 5-7 4-6 2-4 STUDY ABROAD Be an Exchange Student Study in Mexico, Scotland or Germany for TAMU credit! Find out how YOU can be chosen Informational Meeting Wednesday, February 24, 2:00-3:30 251 Bizzell West PECHUGA MONTEREY $5. 50 “Grilled chicken breast with sauteed mush rooms, onions, and peppers. Topped with melted Monterey Jack cheese, Spanish rice, frijoles ranchero and guacamole.” 3109 S. Texas Ave. • Bryan • 823-7470 Don’t Worry when an accident or sudden illness occurs CarePlus is open when you need them 7 days a week with affordable medical care. Faculty, staff & students receive a 10% discount CarePlus- ^ FAMILY MEDICAL CENTER and Pharmacy 696-0683 1712 Southwest Pkwy • C.S Open 8 to 8 Every Day It was destined from the beginning Team USA had too much going against it for Olympic glorfl Instead of having their names on the back of their jerseys, members of the United States Olympic hockey team should have had “Doomed” embroidered on them. A fast, yet careless of fense, poor defensive skills, poor organizatio nal skills, poor coach ing and all- around poor play killed a good team with realistic hopes of ad vancing to the medal the pre-Olympic exhibition season, playing mostly college teams. How ever, interspersed with those college tilts were battles with a few National Hockey League teams, other Olym pic teams and a series of games with a Soviet team not up to par with the true Soviet national team. The team did all this in six months, during which adjustments were made, and players were both added or cut. In fact, the final cut for the team was not made until two weeks before the Winter Games, hardly enough time for the finished product to come together. rarely accommodated writers and rarely gave honest answers. “What kind of a system do you play under?” one foreign correspon dent asked Peterson. “There was ab solutely no organization on the ice.” Peterson curtly replied, “I’m not going to answer that. It’s a stupid question. Obviously we spent the past six months doing nothing.” Soviet Olympic team that is rently marauding through Pools, the Olympic hockey tourna® The Canadians came out on against the Soviets more times not. including some very one- wins. Well, not exactly nothing, Dave. But close. Actually, the Americans formed very well during thees tion season. They just fell, when the wins startedcountk Loyd Brumfield round at Sports viewpoint Alas, those hopes were dashed when the tired U.S. team succumbed 4-1 to West Germany last Sunday. During the exhibition season, the United States defeated the West Germans nine times. The U.S. played 60 games during Some fans and reporters were grumbling before the Games began, saying there was no way a team led by Dave Peterson, a life-long high- school coach, could advance very far in the Games. Apparently they were right. Peterson was cut to pieces by re porters and critics alike, being ac cused of fostering a “Bobby Knight” atmosphere among the team. He Team USA played more than 60 games in the interim after tryouts and before the Games, but the com petition wasn’t exactly top-caliber. The college teams on the schedule were not the quality of say, the Uni versities of Minnesota or Maine, and the team didn’t play against many of the quality NHL players around, ei ther. Token wins over patsies like tria and Norway were guaram even though the team against both of them at some pi but the tradition and winning cies of Czechoslovakia and theSfl Union were just too mudi, feam USA fell against txxhjJ half -hearted comebacks. n j Canada, on the other hand, played a rough exhibition schedule, including a series of games with the Sadly, even if the U.S. things right it still might noti been enough against the an memory of Team USA’s ing 1980 campaign. That mi imloi tuuatelv, will neverbetoi OH ’) - due* 18 c nat ;aniz lerati kdo ngli |tu sa More gold Nykanen gets second CALGARY, Alberta (AP) — Fly ing Finn Matti Nykanen and Frank- Peter Roetsch of East Germany be came double gold medalists Tues- 1 day, and the Winter Olympics were a Soviet bloc party again. The beer from Bonnie Blair’s vic tory bash hadn’t even gone flat be fore America’s day of glory turned into another day of gold for the East. Only the volatile Matti Nukes, as he is called, could slow down the So viets. Nykanen, who already won the 70-meter jump, added the 90-meter title with a hill-record jump of 118.5 meters in the First round and be came the Games’ first double jump ing gold medalist since the event was split in 1964. “I knew I’d won after the first jump,” said Nykanen, who won the 90-meter jump at Sarajevo four years ago. Roetsch won the 10-kilometer bi athlon, staging the Games’ First indi vidual sweep of biathlon events, while Soviets Valeri Medvedtsev and Sergei Tchepikov finished 2-3. Roetsch won the 20-kilometer biath lon Saturday. “After the relay, we’ll drink much more beer,” Roetsch said, looking forward to the prospect of a third gold medal. “Hopefully, we’ll have a reason to celebrate.” The Soviets now have a leading 20 medals, and East Germany has 15. The two countries are tied with seven gold and have won 35 of 84 medals offered so far. Speed skater Karen Kania of East Germany, a bronze medalist to Blair’s gold in the 500 meters Mon- Spurs draftee must make career choice SAN ANTONIO (AP) — San Antonio Spurs center David Rob inson will have to decide whether to petition the new Navy secre tary for an early release of his two-year commitment, said club chairman Angelo Drossos. Robinson, the 7-foot-1 All- America center who signed an eight-year, $24 million contract with the Spurs last November, currently is attending classes at the Navy’s Givil Engineering Corps school in Port Hueneme, Calif. When released, he will return to his permanent assignment at Kings Bay, Ga., Naval Base. Drossos said he was deluged with telephone calls after Navy Secretary James Webb resigned Monday. Webb had ruled that Robinson would not be allowed to play in the NBA until the 1989-90 season because of a two-year com mitment to the Navy. “Eve had calls all day about Da vid,” Drossos told the San Anto nio Express-News. “It all depends on David and who they name as secretary. I have not had any con versations with him, so I don’t know what he plans to do. “My First desire is for him to play for San Antonio when he can,” Drossos said. “My second desire is for him to play in the Olympics and do well, although that will not tell how good of a pro center he will be.” Robinson, who could not be reached for comment Monday, has said repeatedly he wants to fulFill his Navy commitment. But Bob Bass, the Spurs vice president in charge of basketball operations, agreed with Drossos. “That is his enlistment and his commitment,” Bass said. “It will all be up to David Robinson and his people.” day night, was entered in the 3,000. One more medal and she will be come the most successful speed skater in Olympic history with seven medals spanning three Games. “I remember the First time I skated behind her,” Blair said. “I thought I was skating behind a male skater.” Natalia Bestemianova and Andrei Bukin of the Soviet Union entered Tuesday night’s ice dance freestyle with a commanding lead in an event that promised at least two more So viet medals. Meanwhile, America’s best hope in the biathlon, Josh Thompson of Gunnison, Colo., was a disappoint ment again, unable to add to the U.S. medal count that Blair pushed to four when she won the 500-meter. Thompson, who was 25th in the 20 kilometers, was 27th on Tuesday after missing Five targets. “I can’t remember two races I’ve had so bad back-to-back,” Thomp son said. “I don’t remember the last time I’ve missed so many (targets), and I don’t want to, either.” US women skaters not talking to media |ny 8 Iclan law ; bk, h icoi pea Ighbc |ups. CALGARY, Alberta (AP) — You can Find Katarina Witt and the Soviet skaters. You just can’t talk to them. The American women Figure skaters are around, too. But Debi Thomas, Caryn Kadavy and Jill Trenary aren’t talking either. On the eve of the compulsories in Olympic Figure skating, para noia has struck. The people who are in charge of the various skat ing delegations are sheltering the athletes and their coaches. The gag rule is in effect. “I’d love to talk to you but I can’t right now,” Alex McGowan, Thomas’ usually loquacious coach, said Tuesday. “We’ve been told not to.” McGowan promised he would be available later in the day, but a U.S. team official frowned when he said it. Kadavy just shrugged when asked a question and said, simply, “Sorry.” Trenary smiled as she left the practice arena but also de clined to answer questions. Thomas was nowhere to lx* found after Finishing practice. Not that she would have spoken, either — she was the only mem ber of the team who declined to talk upon arriving at Calgary two weeks ago. What’s going on? When East Germany’s Witt or the Soviets have practices closed to outsiders, it’s pretty much accepted. That’s how they operate. For the Americans to clam up is unusual. “Arrangements have been made for'them to speak to lit media only at specific time!,' team leader Joan Gruberinsistei When told that McGowanaml Carlo Fassi, who train? both Hi davy and Trenary, had agreed sjxeak at the school figures put- tice, Gruber said, "That’s changed.” Why the sudden unsvillic to be interviewed, particulat since the men. pairs and dana competitors all talked “I don’t know,” saidMcGo*: who didn't look particulai happy about it. “I’ll be glad total to you later, when they said w can.” Witt talked to the media once, at a heavily attended tien conference where she was chant ing and one person tried it charm her with a marriage pi posal. T homas also was coopt alive at a news conferenceh( for die three U.S. women. “It’s getting to the time what training gets really grueling, Thomas said then, which miglit explain, in part, the reluctance it make the skaters available Thomas won her second U.S| crown in early January. The If world champion is considered™ main challenger to three-tiffi world winner Witt, the If ()lympic gold medalist The 20-year-old from Sa |ose, Calif., said before the Ob pics that she isn’t letting the in tensity of the Games get to although the recent behavior# U.S. team officials indicates ill® gotten to them. J il| lok’t ocr; re th * H V\l Record-shattering speed skater becoming this Olympics’ Retton CALGARY, Alberta (AP) — America may have just found itself a new sweetheart: Bonnie Blair. The speed skater boosted the U.S. gold-medal count and spirits at the Winter Olympics, racing away in the 500 meters in world-record time. And just as America fell for a pint-sized gymnast named Mary Lou Retton four years ago, her agent is hoping the nation is ready for an other fling, this time with the freckle-faced Blair. Jim Fink, from Blair’s hometown of Champaign, Ill., couldn’t put a dollar value on Monday night’s per formance — she won the race in 39.10 seconds, hopped atop the medals podium and cried as she sang the national anthem. “She’s got everything that Mary Lou Retton had,” he said at a news conference Tuesday. “I hate myself for making that reference but that’s the nearest one we have. “She was the small person who went out and beat the big person, the David-and-Goliath type of thing. She is very personable and accessi ble.” SPEED SKATING Blair, 23, is close to complebl deal with DisneyWorld, FinT whose campaign slogan is T Blair, a woman and a winner “Let them play with that M while on Madison Avenue,"hes adding that Blair also has euA 1 ment possibilities with food, I cosmetics and women's companies. Blair’s blistering timeedi] 39.12-second mark put upjusl utes earlier by East Christa Rothenburger who two pairs earlier. Geriwj Graphic by Susan C. Akin That’s pretty much what they said about Retton, who won the women’s all-around gymnastics gold medal at the 1984 Los Angeles Games. “Sure, it would be nice to get a little something out of it, but it’s not something I’m relying on or going to base the rest of my life on,” Blair said. “I want to go to school, get my self a degree and get a job later in life.” “She sure made me night,” Fink said with a Blair is the youngest child large skating family. She h® brothers and sisters who were ers, as were her father and motl 11 Her brother, Rob, was a f raternity brother of pro ha player Jack Sikma, who is Bonnie’s sponsors. Rob feu about a year ago he hadabi mor. “Every since a year ago then hasn’t changed,” Blairsaid. OlKI Wy I Suprc cantl) paroc it ove evanp again I publi: Th I mous lawsu targei I as dif An [said j spoof j tectio [ Amer Th j phon ; Falwe count ginia gettin ttions Sm page taken Let H. R« Falwe eral a some they i tion. Ag women’s tennis team opens SWC play against No. 12 Horns The Texas A&M women’s tennis team will open Southwest Confer ence play today against its toughest opponent of the season, 12th- ranked Texas at 1 p.m. at the Omar Smith Tennis Center. Las Vegas against the University of California-Irvine and the University of Nevada-Las Vegas. The Lady Ag gies lost to the University of the Pa cific in a match last Friday. Ann Grousbeck, the preseasor player in the nation. A&M Coach Bobby Kleined^ the team is ready for the maid 1 The Lady Aggies will take a 7-1 spring mark into the match, while the Lady Longhorns bring in a 4-0 season mark, including wins over SWC teams Rice, Arkansas and Bay lor. A&M’s Cindy Churchwell went undefeated over the weekend, giv ing her a 7-1 record for the year. Cindy Crawford and Susan Williams have 6-2 records, and the doubles team of Churchwell and Derryn Haygarth is 5-1. “We’re really excited abo match,” he said. “We've looking forward to it fora and even though were vot ed in it, we’ve got a lot of deuce going in to it arei' 1 ! A&M is coming off dual wins in UT is led by senior All-America After the UT match, Afc'l* play host to Baylor at l:30p urelay at the Tennis Center. “C politi an ir ■t wh pose juror said, const TF news “It talk First speec Paul Profe “E Partii tely," tvas i fully Hal c; Bu and callec agree