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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 4, 1988)
Don’t Draw Yourself Into A Comer! Let us create your illustrations suitable for publication and presentation. © Books (Monographs and Textbooks) ® Journals and Magazines • Research Reports • Dissertations and Theses ® Transparencies & PMT's ® Poster Sessions Cartographies * Room 712 O&M Building 845-7144 M-F 8-5 * The people who brought you "The Roads of Texas" atlas BIG po £23 4:43 7:23 8:30 *WH0 FRAMED ROGER RABBIT po 2:18 4:43 7:08 8:33 SWEET HEARTS DANCE po 230 4:30 7:18 8:40 r SURDAy BRUHCH Buffet $4.95 An Array of Salads; Fresh Fruit and Melon Muffins & Biscuits Egg Specialties, Sausage, Bacon Potatoes, French Toast and More 607 Texas Ave • 696-1427 • Across from Texas A&M r * CHUN KING/| ’I ^ OMINFSF RFSTAIIRANT J CHINESE RESTAURANT ALL YOU CAN EAT LUNCH BUFFET Sun-Fri 11:30-1:30 $4 75 pe Sun. Evenings BUFFET 5:00-8:00 per person $4 $2 DINNER SPECIALS 50 Chosen from our most popular items Served w/soup, rice, & egg roll I rrj A* g5 Daily Lunch Specials Different Special Each Day We serve beer & wine 1673 Briarcrest Drive At Ardan Crossing A cross from Steak & Ale 774-1157 Open 7 Days a Week Lunch 11-2 Dinner 5-10 Notes -N- Quotes 846-2255 112 Nagle St. FREE PARKING Laser Printing - Typing Services Word Processing«Resumes*Theses Dissertations*Research Papers*Flyers Printing From Any IBM or Compatible PC-DOS'MS-DOS^SVa or 3V? Diskc on HP Laser Jet Printing Styles Available Courier Times ROMAN BOLD Courier BOLD Times ROMAN Itulic Times ROMAN Proportional Helvetica BOLD Page 10 The Battalion Friday, November 4,1988 12th Man Scoreboard Sailing team second in TAMU Invitational A&M’s Sailing Team hosted the Texas A&M Fall Invitational last weekend and came out of the water with a second place finish. The women’s A division was won by Texas with A&M taking second behind skipper Rosalyn Walker. In women’s B division, the Aggies came in second again, this time with skipper Sandy Cantner. Baylor won the division. Mens junior varsity sailed three teams and took second, third and fourth, again bowing to Texas. The second-place team was skippered by Pan* Puscell. In the sailboard division, A&M’s Mark Zuteck, who last week earned an invitation to the national competi tion, came in second behind an SMU sailor. The Aggies are sending a team to Tulane this weekend for the Loui siana school’s fall invitational tourna ment. Nine teams from Texas, Lous- iana and Alabama will compete. The top two teams qualify for the Sugar Bowl Regatta held at the end of De cember. Lacrosse team slams opponents in Fall tourney The Lacrosse Club split four games in their annual Fall tournament last weekend. Saturday, A&M defeated Baylor 12-4 in their first game and then lost to defending champion Texas Tech 5- 4 after trailing 5-1. On Sunday, the Aggies lost 7-5 to TCU and came back to beat a team of University of Texas and Austin club players 7-4. No tournament winner was decided. It was an exciting weekend with 10 ''-'mis showing up, including Loir Lacrosse siana State, Oklahoma State and Sam Houston State. There were also a re ported seven ambulance calls to take care of a rash of injuries. Two Aggies sustained injuries, one with a broken leg and another with a broken foot. The team is off this weekend but is looking forward to matches with SHSU and Texas the following two weeks. Aggie surfing team hangs 10 at state meet Aggie surfers competed in a meet recently in which four of the club’s six members placed among the lead ers in their respective events, club spokesman Hank Townsend said. A&M was led by a pair of fourth- place finishes by Stephen Bilby and Monique Long in the finals of the men’s and women’s divisions. Kelly Francis was sixth in the quarterfinals of the men’s competi tion. Rifle team guns down The Aggie rifle team finished third at a meet at the University of Texas at Arlington last weekend. The Aggies were represented by a four-man team at the half-course match in which each participant could get a high score of 600 points, Head Coach Capt. Mark Winzeler said. New Mexico won the team title with a total of 2,187 points while fin- ''hing slightly ahead of West Texas 1 2th Ma n Sports In the men’s masters competition. Hank Townsend took sixth in the semi-finals to round up a strong showing by the Aggies. The surfers competed in 57 six- man heats in the event which was sponsored by the Texas Gulf Surfing Association. rivals at UTA event 1 2th Man Sports State (2,146) and A&M (2,113). A&M’s Ron Roberts was third in the individual competition. Other A&M competitors were Joe Lyons, Wayne Merrifield and Kathy Trewin. The Aggies’ next match is in Cin cinnati, Ohio, November 10-13. LA opens defense of title in Dallas DALLAS (AP) — The Los Angeles Lakers open defense of their NBA title tonight against a team that stretched them to the limit last year before losing in the seventh game of the Western Con ference finals. The Dallas Mavericks host the Lakers in a 7 p.m. nationally televised matchup in Reunion Arena. The Lakers got off to an 8-0 start last year, best in club history on the way to a 62-20 record and their seventh consec utive Pacific Division title. Los Angeles then became the first team to repeat as league champions since the 1969 Boston Celtics. The game against Dallas will start a difficult early season schedule which puts the Lakers on the road for 17 of their first 24 games. Lakers’ coach Pat Riley said the club’s mission isn’t complete with back-to-back titles. “Repeating as NBA champions was a marvelous feat, something many said couldn’t be done, but we’d be cheating ourselves if we were merely satisfied with the feat,” Riley said. “The chal lenge now is to go on. ” It will be the start of 41-year-old Ka- reem Abdul Jabbar’s 20th and final sea son in the NBA. Dallas coach John MacLeod said the Mavs believe they can derail the Lakers. “Our guys are thinking like winners and we want to be just like the Lakers,” MacLeod said.‘The experience of the conference finals is very important to our development. “There were no players in our locker room after game seven patting them selves on the back for extending the Lakers. We wanted to win. This group is becoming mentally tough, and winning four road games in the playoffs is an in dication of that.” The Mavs have a combined total of 108 wins the last two seasons, a figure surpassed only by the Lakers and the Boston Celtics. The Mavs led the NBA in rebounding with an average of 46.8 caroms per game. Teaff (Continued from page 9) out on that football field, you’ve got to compete,” Teaff said. The losses that hurt the most, he said, were 17-10 to Texas in 1985 and 31-30 to Texas A&M in 1986, losses that blocked Baylor’s path to the Cotton Bowl. Teaff describes himself as a “hard- nosed” coach who does a good job eval uating and recruiting players and putting them at positions where they can excel. He is considered an SWC pioneer in the extensive use of small, speedy receivers who ran track and played football. In support of a Baylor quarterback who was booed, Teaff said such specta tors could jump off the top of Baylor Sta dium for all he cared. One fan said he suggested the same high dive when his short-yardage offense was criticized in later years. To loosen up his 1978 team after it had gone 2-8 and was facing Texas in the season finale, Teaff stuffed a dead worm in his mouth and chomped on it several times. Teaff recalled in “Winning” — one of two books he has had published — that defensive tackle Gary Don John son’s eyes “seemed to glaze over.” Teaff said the “worm story.” which gets half a page in Baylor’s football me dia guide, was misinterpreted as an at tempt to fire up his team. “It was not a motivational thing ... it was to let them laugh and turn loose and go out and play football,’^ he said. The Bears responded With a 38-14 thrashing of the favored Longhorns. Teaff has heard talk that Baylor, with its Baptist affiliation, should become the “Notre Dame of the South,” because Texas has so many Baptists. “Unfortunately, most of the top Ag gies and most of the top UTeps (Texas), and most of the top everybody, except Southern Methodist and Texas Christian, are all Baptists,” he said. “If I could get all the great Baptist athletes, hey, you’ve got something.” What Baylor does have, he said, are the poorest facilities of any school in the SWC. “Our weight room is about the size of most high schools’ (weight rooms),” which convinced him, he said, to ask for an $8 million project that in cludes a new training room, dressing rooms, coaches’ offices and VIP seating. As dean of SWC football coaches, Teaff said the conference is the most competitive he can imagine — indeed, some teams even “hate each other.” He also said NCAA penalities against several schools — Baylor was not among them — have been painful and embarrassing. But he said, “We have a group of coaches and administrators in this league that I think are second to none. There’s a camaraderie that I haven’t seen in a long time.” * Recruiting last year, Teaff said he found fewer violations “by a thousand percent, and it will get better each and every year. ” ; In four or five years, he said, the SWC “will be at a pinnacle, where it deserves to be.” “We’re on the verge of restoring our selves to being not only one of the lead ers from an athletic standpoint but from a standpoint of true leadership in college athletics,” Teaff said. && - ?--3* —■'NOV. 4 , ccfc BRfNtoS ianpiDQ TH of y Niff/ B ONFIRE UDDY When your hardworking BONFIRE BUDDY comes off stack at midnight, he’ll be mighty hungry for a DoubleDave's Great Pizza. So buy him a Bonfire Buddy Gift Certificate. attalic Footbal icks He can use it whenever he needs it. DoulileDavv s I’ix/.i Chosen “Best Pizza in Aggielanrl 2 years running by the Battalion staff." :12<> .leisev SI 696-DAVE 2111 Jmwrsilv 268-DAVE (*ivok 846-DAVE y Ptzxa works J la. Tech at Texas > Houston at Texas t !ii‘ Irkansas at Baylo lexasTech at TCI Hlce at Notre Dam lorlda St. at S. Ca SU at Alabama ICLA at Oregon ieorglaat Florida Indiana at Illinois fcowboys at Giant TS0\ Fashionable Look Sale Save $35 On Fashion Frames And Give Your Face A New Name. || Barry Switzc Slllwater, Okh ■Oklahoma’s ■44 is the besl ■d-fiddle to C liids the nation $35 off a complete pair of glasses. Now save $35 on a complete pair of glasses when you select from our tagged collection of fashion frames. Or get $25 off any other pair of glasses. The biggest names in eye wear are now on sale at TSO: Sophia Loren, Christian Dior, Liz Claiborne and more. Just clip out this coupon and take it to your nearest TSO r ro/~\ TEXAS STATE OPTICAL JLOVy at participating TSO’s. Complete glasses include frames and lenses. Cou pon must be presented at time of order. Doctor’s prescription required. N’o other discounts apply. Affordable Eyewear. iai\v-n iu yuui ncaicoi i ovz. -j--. \ r ‘1 T V uiov-v/umo apjm. Offer expires November 20 from A Family f )\ LXxtors. ,\\ ul inium purchase, $75j 779-2786 216 N. Main Bryan 764-0010 Post Oak Mall College Station ■ With 1.476 ; yaul effort agai Rt zier’s Big 8 ■cord. Sander: ■ “Barry Sant ■y,” the othe down.” ■ Oklahoma k ■d 28-4-4 in S ■ Oklahoma S Kint average. Hg just 13.1 pi Rtint favorites Bury S. The p c i988P*a.»He#Sr MICHOL O'CONNOR Last week’s ^■ason, 311-1 geek's score v •too. The only candidate with law enforcement experience. •Endorsed by 11 sheriffs, 10 district attorneys, and 10 county attorneys in this 14-county district. •Prosecuted criminals as a federal and state prosecutor. •Received Prosecutor's Award from United States Department of the Treasury. • 15 years experience as trial and appeals lawyer. •Overwhelmingly preferred by lawyers in 3 judicial polls; in the latest poll by 62.7%. •Endorsed by The Houston Chronicle. MICHOL O'CONNOR -for JUDGE, 1st COURT OF APPEALS PLACE ONE Pd. Pol. Adv. by O'Connor Campaign, Wm. C. Lipscomb, Treas., P.O. Box 25237, Houston, TX 77265 Call Battalion Classified 845-2611 R Cou Political