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Come see us today! Bridal EWutique Park Place Plaza Texas Ave. S. at Southwest Pkwy. Member National Bridal Service Can’t deduct your IRA this year? There are Alternatives for Tax Deferred Growth and Tax Free Income. For your IRA alternative Call 260-9629 Allan Dunlap Denise Fries Royce Overstreet George Lambert Virginia Andrews Julie Boldt 111 East University Suite 210, C.S. When you want bright, vivid color prints the very next day... Bring your film to us! • High-quality film developing featuring next-day service. • Member of the KODAK COLOR WATCH™ System. 1 We use only Kodak paper, Kodak chemicals, and Kodak’s TECHNET™ center for computerized quality control. 10% Aggie Discount (with TAMU ID) l CNC Photo across from campus next to Red Lobster ress M-F 9-5:30 696-0034 don’t read this our readers are curious people. tell them about yourself. advertise in at ease 845-2611 is hiring 2 students with editing experience to work on our video staff. Applications are available in Student Publications Office, 230 Reed McDonald or at the Aggievision table in the MSC from March 7-11 from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Applications are due noon on Friday March 11 at either of the above loca tions. For more information contact: Greg Keith: 696-3454 Office: 845-0293 PRE ST. PATRICK’S DAY CELEBRATION Thursday March 1 Oth featuring GREEN BEER! Party Begins Here at 8 a.m. 3410 South College 823-1294 Page 12/The Battalion/Tuesday, March 8, 1988 Rockets, Mavs prove to be Ba pretenders to L.A.’s crown By The Dallas Mavericks, who warmed up for Sunday’s game in Reunion Arena against the Los An geles Lakers were the hottest club in the NBA. In fact, never in the history of the franchise had the Mavericks had a fever quite like this one, winning 11 games straight. The Mavs boasted the second best record in the NBA, and led the league in re bounding, while hold ing down the league’s No. 2 spot in defense. Reunion was just cooling off from Friday Curtis L. Culberson Sports viewpoint bringing down Maverick fever seve ral degrees. Just a few weeks ago Houston fans had that same we’re-gonna-beat-the- Lakers feeling only to be dissap- pointed. The improved Sampsonless Rock ets had more firepower, but not enough to stop the NBA’s dominat ing force from the West Coast. Since December, I have said the Lakers will repeat as NBA cham pions. Each time I make this claim I am accosted by some Maverick fan or a Rocket rowdy who claims this time the home team was going to knock off Magic and friends. Others who love their Texas hoopsters, but realize the supremacy of tne Lakers, try to appeal to my emotions. “Hey, don’t you like the under dogs?” “You traitor, root for the home night’s game when the Mavericks launched the Rockets to defeat in an emotional win for the Mavs. Dallas fans, if not all Texas basket ball fans, were teetering in anticipa tion of the showdwon with the Lakers. The Mavs were sizzling, they were at home and everyone has been say ing how Dallas has all the tools to beat the Lakers. Many even predict the Mavericks will be the team to knock the Lakers out of the playoffs. Right. The Lakers on Sunday showed Americans and Texas basketball fans once again why they are the World Champions and why they will repeat again this year. L.A. stuffed the Dallas 108-97 team. “Aren’t you tired of the Lakers?” They cite these and many other reasons why I shouldn’t be such an avid fan of Los Angeles. I usually support the home team and I’ve never considered myselg a fair weather fan. cian to figure out who you shoi put your money on. • 2. I do like the underdogs sometimes. I’m rooting for the Ai g ies in the SWC post-season basksj all tourney. I rooted for TeamUSl in the Olympics and I pulled for intramural team in the Class Bpi offs. Unfortunately, all the hurnfj just led or probably will leadtodi! pointment. • 3. And speaking of dissappon ment, I was a diehard Dallas Coi boys fan, pulling for them to the game. I cheered, I bet money then 1 cursed and went broke. Cej tainly, the Mavericks and the ets aren’t doing as bad as theCci boys but their cnances of beating Lakers in the playoffs are about good as the Danny White’s chanttj of winning the MVP. • 4. I hate the Boston Celtisl The Lakers have proven they hai the team to beat them. And haven’t totally forgiven the Rocki for choking against them in the IS! championship series. • 5. The Laker Girls. Need | Since it Ko, badi wound tl Olympics ctator ly rece catch o ompetm •sport. About lional ba the Te beet for compe prence [lonthly. university orts. JCl lov In a li After some deep thought I mused my Lakermania was the result of personal taste and a series of psycho logical traumas: • LI barely broke even with my roomate on this season football wa gers. Like most college students, I’m a little short of cash and I need to make the basketball season betting as lucrative as possible. The Lakers have won 80 percent of their games — you don’t need to be a mathemati- more. Besides, the I-akers don't onk win, they look good doing it. They'll is nothing quite like the poetic hai 3artlcl P a mony in a Laker fastbreak. Hi! l ext V e look-off by Magic and then the It hind-the-back pass followed by ii Appio Woi thv momn-i stuf 1 is basketball; 'l' 1 111 its best. ; :oach in i Anyone who’s want to root fot big winner this spring, I inviteyouit join me in a dose of Lakermania.Ft those of you who are still hopingt( Mavericks or the Rockets will win all, I’ll be the first to tell you, “Itok you so." Tech ends season of frustration, posts worst SWC record since ’57 “We u itudents iey said, ■nore pa lad a lat lion.” Mond; yard dasl The a 10 iquare m he corne Each s yards. Partici an back orner. They LUBBOCK (AP) — A season’s worth of frustration showed when Texas Tech Coach Gerald Myers was slapped with two technical fouls within seconds of one another. For several minutes during the season-ending game Sunday against Arkansas, Myers protested vocife rously a charging call against senior forward Greg Crowe. Arkansas scored four points off the resulting foul shots en route to putting a dis mal ending on a disasterous regular season for the Red Raiders. With an overall record of 9-18, Tech posted its worst record since 1962-63, when the Raiders went 6- 17. Tech’s 4-12 seventh-place confer ence finish was another worst-ever milestone: its poorest SWC mark since the Red Raiders joined the league in 1957. And for the first time ever, the Raiders failed to win a single game on an opponent’s home court. After such a forgettable season, Myers said Monday he knows what ails his program: “I figured that out a long time ago. We’ve just got to work on recruiting.” Under Myers, Tech has had only one other losing season, an 11-20 year in which just eight players fin ished the season. Myers became the third-winning- est coach in conference history this season, winning his 300th. But it took him five games to get from No. 299 to No. 300, which came Feb. 20 in a 68-58 victory over Texas Chris tian. The Raiders made four more out ings after that, but failed to add to Myers’ win column. “They’re down but they don’t get down as far as just quitting and giv ing up,” Myers said of his team, which has only one senior. The season isn’t likely to end on an upbeat note as the Raiders face 21-9 Baylor, which beat Tech by 60 points in two meetings this season,e| the first round of the SWC tourmj ment Friday. “We’re probably playing tht| toughest team we could drawinBavi lor as far as us matching up witll Baylor,” Myers said. “Baylor isjustl team we haven’t been able to plaf well against." The Bears handed Tech itswonl loss in the history of the schooil March 2, a 91-49 walloping thal eclipsed a 102-65 drubbing by Ne>| Mexico in 1974. The worst the Raiders had beeiS beaten by an SWC opponent was! points, by Rice in 1959 and againlnl T exas A&M in 1960. As the season wore on, seemed to grow despondent. After; four-point loss to Houston Feb. II he said: “Maybe we’ve both been fail ures — they’ve (the players) beer failures as students, I’ve been a f ure as a teacher. “That about what it amounts to. t an an] ,er. Next, o the ne nd the isite rig Masse- ion aboi Speed or, he sa “Mem! ney can i sunders hem,” M Beaumont may get CBA basketball team BEAUMONT (AP) — Three years ago, a Houston businessman who tried to bring a Continental Basketball Association team to Beau mont failed because he couldn’t match his ambition to the realities of finance. Beaumont nearly got that CBA team for the 1985-86 season, a re markable feat during one of the city’s worst experiences — the invest ment loss to ESM Government Secu- basketball. You’d be in a unique class,” Drucker said. “Having a CBA franchise would make you highly visible. The track record of pro sports is that they are ’ magnets for other businesses,” Drucker said. He said Beaumont is a good mar ket and he is impressed by the ef forts of John Gorman, the city’s con vention facilities director. rities. Much has changed since then. Beaumont has recovered about three-fourths of its investment money. Citizens met recently in a second economic summit in which they heard promises for the future because people today dared to dream. The CBA again is knocking on the door. Its former commissioner, James Drucker of Philadelphia, owns an inactive franchise and wants to place one in a city for the 1988-89 season. He doesn’t need investors as much as he needs an enthusiastic community involvement in the team. That translates into advance sales of 2,000 season tickets for the team, which would play 27 home games in the Civic Center. At an average $7 price for one ticket, or $189 for season tickets, it multiplies to $378,000 worth of com mitment to bring the CBA to Beau mont. Drucker has visited other cities and narrowed his list to five so far — Fayetteville, N.C.; Salina, Kan.; Al bany, Ga.; Cedar Rapids, Iowa; and Fargo N.D. He said he can include Beaumont if its residents are interested. “I think the time is right for low- cost entertainment that appeals to the masses,” Gorman said. He said the city can bring promo tional and administrative support to the effort and provide the team with a “developmental lease” for the arena, which he described as “better- than-usual” rental rate. Gorman said the effort to bring a CBA team to Beaumont is worth while because the Civic Center could make money, Beaumont would get national exposure on the ESPN tele vision network, and convention- goers in Beaumont would have an other attraction. “We need to find people to partic ipate. We’d be ready to go to work on selling season tickets right away. We could make a doggone serious run at it,” Gorman said. The CBA plays in 12 cities and the league sends many of its players — more than any three college confer ences, according to its literature —to the National Basketball Association, which plays in 23 cities. “That’s 35 cities with professional When the effort three years ago failed, the city had already taken or ders for about 250 season tickets, and Gorman still has the names and addresses of people who received re funds. Beaumont Mayor Maury Meyers said a key consideration for both sides is profit, as well as giving the franchise the greatest chance for success. “At this point, I’m anxious to visit with him (Drucker),” Meyers said. Gorman said he didn’t think a CBA team would detract from the Lamar University basketball pro gram and that it might help it be cause “like businesses create more business.” Sacramento fires Russell after bad start SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Bill Russell was relieved ofhis coaching duties with the Sacra mento Kings Monday and re placed by assistant coach Jerry Reynolds, a move aimed at “chan ging the direction of this club,” the team’s ownership announced Russell, 54, who has a seven- year contract with the team, was transferred to the Kings’ front of fice, where he will serve as vice president in charge of basketball operations, said Gregg Lukenbill, general managing partner and part owner of the club. The action was part of a sha- keup of the team’s top manage ment which also resulted in a re duced title for the man who brought Russell to Sacramento, former team president Joe Axel- son. When Russell was named coach of the Kings last year, it was with the understanding he would be on the bench for 2-4 years and then move to the front office. But Russell said Monday, Lu kenbill initiated the change. Rus sell said the two discussed the problems with the team and agreed it was time for a change. The 17-41 Kings have the fourth worst record in the NBA, ahead of only the Golden State Warriors, the New Jersey Nets and the Los Angeles Clippers, and tied with the Phoenix Suns. “Every time we lost a game, it was a real hard kick in the stom ach,” Russell said, flanked by Reynolds and Lukenbill at an Arco Arena news conference. “I don’t sleep after we lose and, you know, I’ve had a lot of sleep less nights,” he added. Russell said his new duties will allow him to “spend a lot of time looking at other teams, looking at the college ranks for possible players.”