2 Large Pizzas ^ f\9g Page 10/The Battalion/Wednesday, April 20, 1988 16” one topping + tax O A&M sweeps UTA in doubleheader Large 16” Pizza one topping 99 + tax Small Pizza 12” Two topping 89 tax FREE DELIVERY 846-0379 Northgate NEW FLU STUDY We Are Taking Blood Samples ($5.00) to Deter mine Eligibility for a Summer Flu Study Tuesday - Friday, April 19-22, 1988 Come To: Beutel Health Center, Room 03, Basement 9:00 AM-4:00 PM (Until 2:00 PM on Friday) or Commons Lounge: Tues, Wed, Thurs April 19-22, 1988 9:30 AM-6:00 PM Dr. John Quarles 845-3678 Life in the fast lane> It’s who you know. It’s what you drive. It’s how you dress. It’s where you live. It' you want to be in the fast lane at A&M, you have to move in the right eircle. Parkway Cirele. Parkway Circle gives you huge 2 and 3 bedroom floorplans, two full baths, private patios, washer/dryer connections, Ppojj, hot tub, clubhouse with t'ireplace, shuttle bus and manicured grounds. Why keep up with the Joneses when you can pass them? Move in the right circle. Parkway Circle. \ \ / PARKWAY CIRCLE 401 Soullmosi IVukwav 696-6909 Southwest Parkway Presents Another Promotional Video April 18-22 in MSC Presale available for completed video due in July ' f< §? IP* 8 GOOD BULL! i© Texas A&M University Presents an Aggievision Production Produced by Greg Keith Artistic Direction by Yollie Lopez and Sean Smith Screenwriter Robert Dowdy Secretary Almaz Smith Videography by Stacey Bott, Craig Sutherland and Steve White Editors Kyle Tilton, Kevan Higgins, Eric Trenk, Hui Sung Choe and Rowland Williams By Curtis L. Culberson Assistant Sports Editor Shortstop Liz Mizera went 5-for-6 including a scoreboard-crashing home run to lead the Texas A&M softball team to a sweep against the University of Texas-Arlington in a doubleheader Tuesday at the Lady Aggie Softball Field. After a scoreless six and a half in nings in the First game, Mizera led off the bottom of the sixth with a rip per that sailed high over left field fence, ricocheting off the new scoreboard for the only score of the game. ing out fired up and drawing first blood in the second game when Lady Mav catcher Delana Lightfoot hit a double off of Carpenter. An A&M error coupled with and inten tional walk of UTA right fielder Al isha Miller, two sacrifices and a Laura Watton single, brought in Miller for UTA’s only score of the day. , P 11 - help the Lady Aggies stymie a late comeback effort by the Lady Maver icks to gain a 4-1 victory to complete the sweep. The Lady Aggies improve to 33- 12 on'the season and 11-3 at home, while the Lady Mavs drop to 30-22. A&M got three runs in the third off a walk, Barbara Kajs’ and Mize- ra’s singles and a UTA error to slow down the Lady Mavs. The Lady Ags had eight runs in the game but had the same problem of putting things together they had in the first. A&M hit well in both games in cluding seven hits in the first game, but the Lady Aggies couldn’t man age to bring runners home, leaving six runners on base. Mizera, who is hitting .321, went 3-for-3 — getting a single in the first inning and an other one in the fourth. Left fielder Zina Ochoa singled off of Lady Mav pitcher Debby Day in the fifth with one out. Right fielder Tory Parks followed with a single of her own after third base- man Rhonda Halbert struck out. A&M had five errors in the game and got sloppy in the last three in nings to help fuel a Lady Mav comeback. But Carpenter’s pitching stopped the Lady Mavs, especially in the top of the sixth when she faced the bases loaded on at least three occasions and struck out batters twice. “She really reached back and won the game for us,” A&M Coach Bob Brock said. “She must have pitched her best pitch 10 times in a row in the sixth inning.” Carpenter got both wins and im proves to 30-12 and Day drops to 26- 17. The Lady Aggies go on the road /ill fa The Lady Mavs had five hits with one error and, like the Lady Ags, just couldn’t seem to put things to gether for scores. UTA seemed ready to avenge the A&M victory in the first game, com- where they will face Sam Houston State in Huntsville today and Lous- iana Tech Saturday. “Both of teams are really tough and they have the home field advan tage,” Brock said. “We can’t afford to make the mental mistakes we made today against them.” Kenya tradition continues with Hussein win BOSTON (AP) — Ibrahim Hus sein, now in a class of great Kenyan distance runners, lifted his country’s hope for its first Olympic gold medal in the marathon. He did it with a classic finishing kick Monday, outdueling Juma Ikangaa of Tanzania in the 92nd Boston Marathon and winning by one second in the race’s closest finish ever. The triumph was not only a per sonal one, but one for the small Afri can country, which in recent years has provided much financial help for its athletes, mainly for the track and field competitors. “There has been a heavy invest ment in our runners, because we recognized we need to do it for our country,” Robert Ouko, secretary of the Kenyan track and field feder ation, said after Hussein’s dramatic yiCCOietOH Applications are now being accepted for Video Jockeys To do brief on-camera narration segments for the video yearbook! A variety of personalities are needed to represent different aspects of Texas A&M. Interviews will be held on a continuing process, so apply no! and Student Home Video Aggievision will have a special segment for^select home videos showing differ ent aspects of student life and student organizations. Please submit original tape with title, subject matter, name and telephone #. Both applications may be picked up and returned at our table in the MSC from 10am-3pm or the Student Publicatiens Office-, rm 230 Reed McDonald. For more info, call 845-0293 (office) or 696*3454 (Greg Ketth).. victory. “When they win, they win for our country. We have taken a lot of time to convince our investors in Kenya it is good for the country. We are proud of our nation.” Hussein’s triumph, the first by an African in the Boston Marathon, vaulted him into the all-time elite of Kenyan distance runners, including Kip Keino, Henry Rono, Ben Jip- cho, Mike Boit, Naftali Temu and Amos Biwott. Kenyans won nine medals in the 1968 Mexico City Olympics, includ ing golds by Keino in the 1,500 me ters, Biwott in the 3,000-meter stee plechase and Temu in the 10,000 meters. Now, they are confident of doing well again at Seoul. Their hopes are based on last year’s World Track and Field Cham pionships at Rome and last month’s World Cross-Country Champion ships at Auckland, New Zealand. In the Cross-Country Champion ships, Kenyans swept the first four places. A&M’s Stacey Craincr holds up at second during bleheader sweep of UT-Arlington at the Lady Aggie Mackenzie, Hickerson make all-conference golf squad Texas A&M golfers Roy Macken zie and Neil Hickerson were named to the 1988 All-Southwest Confer ence team by the conference coaches Tuesday. Mackenzie led A&M with a 73.19 stroke average this season and fin ished seventh at the SW’C tourna ment last weekend. Hickerson E laced.third in the tournament and ad a 73.26 average this year. A&M Coach Bob Ellis said, “Neil and Roy have been our team leaders on and off the course all season, and I’m pleased that the conference coaches recognized them. They both have played fairly consistently this year, and they’ve worked extremely hard.” Arkansas led the poll with three representatives. Texas and confer ence-champion Southern Methodist each had two team members on the team. Roy Mackenzie Neil flickers Bruins can’t reverse losing mf \ From the Associated Press The Boston Bruins can only hope that returning to the Montreal Fo rum Wednesday is not another re play of “The Haunting.” breaks. There aren’t any The Bruins, who haven’t beaten the Montreal Canadiens in their past 18 Stanley Cup playoff series, were true to form Monday night, losing to Montreal 5-2 in the opener of their seven-game NHL. quarter-final se ries. Not only did they lose, but a Quebec-wide power failure in the first period left the game to be played with emergency generators lighting the ice. Boston Coach Terry O’Reilly at tributed the problems in the Adams Division final to the way his team played, not gremlins. “No ghosts,” O’Reilly said. “I don’t know if it was opening night jitters or what. We’ll have to make our own excuses.” In the other game Wednesday night, the Washington Capitals will take a 1-0 lead into their game at the Capital Centre with the New jersey Devils. The Capitals celebrated their first appearance in the Patrick Divi sion finals with a 3-1 victory over Devils Monday night. Meanwhile, the other Stanley Cup quarter-final series began Tuesday with Edmonton at Calgary and St. Louis at Detroit. The Bruins will be facing a lot of history Thursday night. Not only have they lost 1 8 straight series to Montreal dating back to 1943, but they are 2-21 against the Canadiens in their last 23 playoff games. Moreover, they got just 22 shots at Montreal goaltender Brian Hay ward. But Montreal remains watj ticularly after barely edgint Bruins in the regularseasonsti* 3 with one tie. “They can’t be too happ'. Mike Me PI tee. whose short-hi goal with nine minutesgonei#' day night’s game gave theCae a 2-0 lead. “I think they'll pis ter, but if we play our have to adjust to us.” The Devils, who advaned beating the New York 1 only their second playoffseriti 14-year history in Kansas Cm. 1 / rado and New Jersey, hadm# fense than Boston. ButPeiePtf turned away 33 of 34 shotslok the Devils away. “We had guys right into New Jersey’s Ken Daneyko “But he stands his ground."tj hit him in the pads.” *7 conviser- miller W®- K*' GET THE CONVISER CONFIDENCE’ • Course Materials Include 5 Textbooks • 3 Month Format • Payment Plan Available/Major Credit Cards • Exam Techniques Clinic Get Your Xerox Copies The Professionals Copy She 76% PASS RATE □ Enclosed is $75.(X), enroll me at the TAMU Student (with current I.D.) discount tuition of $595.00 (Reg. tuition is $895.00) □ i would like more Information about your course. Name: — Word processing and laser printing • Resumes • Reports • Papers • Theses and Dissertation! 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