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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 6, 1989)
The Battalion Battalion Classifieds SPORTS 8 ♦ HELP WANTED $25,200 PAYS FOR A LOT OF COLLEGE. In the Army, we’ll train you in a valuable skill, and help you earn up to $25,200 to pay for almost any college or an approved vocational/technical training program of your choice. If money for advanced education is on your mind, the Montgomery GI Bill Plus the Army College Fund could be a big help in making your plans. Talk it over with your local Army Recruiter. College Station Recruiting Station Post Oak Mall, 1500 Harvey Road College Station, Texas 77840-3751 (409) 764-0418 ARMY. BE ALL YOU CAN BL Make up to $1,000 in one week! Student organiza tions, fraternities, sororities needed for 1 week market ing project right on campus. Must be organized and motivated. Call 1-800-950-8472. ext. 150. THE GREENERY Landscape Maintenance Team member Full-time or Part-time Interview Mon-Thurs from Sam - 9am 823-7551 1512 Cavitt, Bryan COUNSELORS - Boys camp in Berkshire Mts., West Mass. Good sal ary, room & board, travel allowance, beautiful modern facility, must love children and beable to teach one of the following: Tennis, W.S.I., Sailing, Water Ski, Baseball, Basketball, Soc cer, LaCrosse, Wood, A&C, Rocketry, Photography, Archery, Pioneering, Ropes, Piano, Drama. Call or write: Camp Winadu, 5 Glen La., Mamaroneck, NY 10543. (914)381-5983. 7 OVERSEAS AND CRUISESHIPS EMPLOYMENT. Many positions. Work month-home month. Call (805) 682-7555 EXT.S-1026. 94103/10 NEW ENGLAND BROTHER/SISTER CAMPS- (mass.) Mah-kee-nac for boys/Danbee for girls. Coun selor positions for Program Specialists: All team sports, especially Baseball, Basketball, Field Hockey, Soccer and Volleyball; 25 Tennis openings; also archery, ri- flery and bildng; other openings include Performing Arts, Fine Arts, Yearbook, Photography, cooking, sew ing, RollerSkating, Rocketry, Ropes, Camp Craft; All waterfront activities (swimming, skiing, sailing, wind surfing, canoeing/Kayak). Inquire J&D camping (Boys) 190 Linden Ave. Glen Ridge, NJ 07028; Action camp ing (Girls) 263 Main Road, Montville, NJ 07045. Phone (Boys) 201-429-8522; (Girls) 201-316-6660. 97t02/21 HIRING NOW: Need 20 housewives 8c students for office work. Hourly pay plus company benefits. Apply at 1700 S. Kyle, Suite 170 in the Culpepper Office Park, College Station. 107t03/10 Al’s Formal wear has an immediate position available for a part-time sales associate. Flexible schedule, great for students. Some retail background a plus. Call 693- 0947 for an interview. 105t03/06 Part-time secretary wanted to assist our property man ager an accountant. Ideal candidate will have secre tarial plus word processing experience. Good oral an written communication skills. Property management or real estate background helpful. Submit resume and cover letter to P.O. Box 4453 Bryan, Texas 77805. 103ttfn $300. a day! Process phone orders. People call you. 713-495-4676. 104t3/10 • SERVICES TYPING N TUTORING Typing (by word processor) $.75 per page $1. per page for rush jobs Tutoring: $2.50 per hour Subjects: College of Liberal Arts College of Education Statistics Questions? Call IDIC 696-9789 and leave a message. , nQ , n0/00 URINARY TRACT INFECTION STUDY If you PRESENTLY have the following signs and symptoms call to see if you are el igible to participate in a new Urinary Tract Infection Study. Eligible volunteers will be compensated. • PAINFUL URINATION • FREQUENT URINATION • LOW BACK PAIN G&S studies, Inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 171 “STREP THROAT STUDY” Volunteers needed for streptococcal tonsillitis/pharyngitis study * Fever (100.4 or more) * Pharyngeal pain (Sore Throat) * Difficulty swallowing Rapid strep test will be done to con firm. Volunteers will be compensated. G&S Studies, Inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 SKIN INFECTION STUDY G&S Studies, Inc. is participating in a study on acute skin infection. If you have one of the following conditions call G&S Studies. Eligible volunteers will be compensated. * infected blisters * infected cuts * infected boils * infected scrapes * infected insect bites (“road rash”) G&S Studies, Inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 76 WOMEN NEEDED FOR A NEW LOW-DOSE ORAL CONTRA CEPTIVE PILL STUDY. ELIGIBLEWOMEN PARTICIPATING IN THE 6 MONTH STUDY WILL RECEIVE THE FOLLOWING FREE: •oral contraceptives for 6 months •complete physical •blood work •pap smear •close medical supervision Volunteers will be compensated. For more information call: 846-5933 G&S studies, inc. (close to campus) ON THE DOUBLE Professional Word Processing, laser jet printing. Papers, resume, merge letters. Rush services. 846-3755. 181tfn Continental Express Airlines is accepting applications for a part-time Campus Sales Representative. The suc cessful candidate will possess excellent communication skills and be a self starter. Travel benefits included. Send resume and letter to Kristi Hansman, 17340 Chanute, Houston, TX 77032. 104t3/10 COLLEGE MONEY - Private scholarships. You will re ceive financial aid, GUARANTEED. Federally ap proved program. Scholarships, 7401T Louisburg, Ra leigh, NC 27604. (919)876-7891. 104t2/28 Cal’s Body Shop-We do it right the first timef 823- 2610. 32ttfn Ride wanted from Carlos to A&M. Will pay gas. 845- 1163. 107t03/08 Experienced librarian will do library research for you. Call 272-3348. ' 103t04/04 POSITION OPEN- FAST GROWING AGGIE OWNED COMPANY SEEKS HARD WORKING IN DIVIDUAL FOR RETAIL SALES/MANAGEMENT POSITION. ANY DEGREE, WILL TRAIN. WILL CONSIDER PART-TIME TILL MAY, FULL TIME AFTER. SALARY + BONUS. SEND RESUME TO: P. O. Box 9732 College Station, TX 77842. 105t03/06 TYPING- WORD PROCESSING- Personal Attention- Excellent Service- Professional Results- 764-2931. 106t05/03 DEFENSIVE DRIVING! GOT A TRAFFIC TICKET? TICKET DISMISSAL! INSURANCE DISCOUNT! 693-1322. 85ttfn Typing: Accurate, 95wpm, reliable. Word Processor. 7days a week. 776-4013. 27tl2/07 WORD PROCESSING, RESUMES, AND GRAPHICS. LASER PRINTER. PERFECT PRINT. 822-1430. 84t05/03 GRE- Need help preparing for grad school? Call Kap lan at 696-PREP. 106t03/07 WE BUY TRAILERS-STOCK, UTILITY, HORSE, CARGO. COUNTRY CABIN. 776-8005. 100t03/06 * HOTiCE Lesbian and Bisexual Women’s Support/Discussion Group Now Forming. Open to undergraduates, grads, & faculty. For Information 693-3107 <* TRAVEL mjaassaMMwMMi SPRING BREAK 89 CHANCE!H SOUTH PADRE ISLAND tram s 149“ STEAMBOAT ,ron,*213' DAYTONA BEACH trom s 118‘ MUSTANG ISLAND ^*136' HILTON HEAD ISLAND trorn'IDT DON'T WAIT 'TIL IT'S TOO LATE! CALL TOLL FHEE TODAY 1-800-321‘5911 "Depending on break dates and length ot stay « FOR RENT Cotton Village Apts., Snook, Tx. 1 Bdrm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $240 Rental assistance available! Call 846-8878 or 774-0773 after 5pm. April Bloom 2-3 bdr. duplex, near shuttle. 846-2471, 776-6856. 87tfn IBdrm. efficiency. Stackable space for w/d., fenced pa tio, pool, built-in study area. 846-4384. 83t03/07 2 Bdrm, large rooms, large closets, pool, laundry room. 505 Nagle, Northgate. 846-4206. 107t03/31 • ROOMMATE WANTED $125. own room, restored stone home, private, quiet. Susan after 5:00 268-3223. 109t03/07 • MISCELLANEOUS VISA OR MASTERCARD! Even if bankrupt or bad credit! We Guarantee you a card or double your money back. Call (805) 682-7555 EXT. M-1054. 109ttfn SEIZED CARS, trucks, boats, 4wheelers, motorhomes, by FBI, IRS, DEA. Available your area now. Call (805) 682-7555 Ext. C-1201. 109ttfn REPOSSESSED VA & HUD HOMES available from government from $1. without credit check. You repair. Also tax delinquent foreclosures. Call (805) 682-7555 EXT. H-1445 for repo list your area. 109ttfn .62 Karat marquise diamond soliatare in heavy banded eold setting. Very high quality 693-2569. $1,100. 109t03/10 ’86 Suzuki GS 550 ES, Ninja-style bike. 6,000 miles, perfect condition. $2000. 696-2283. 109t03/I0 LADIES JUSTIN ROPER BOOTS 6!/zA ‘JUST BRO KEN IN’$4o. 690-0069. 109t03/08 IBM XT’S, 8 MHz, 1 year warranty, 512 RAM, 360k Drive, Mono-Monitor, Keyboard, MS-DOS. $670. Call for ATS. McCartney 260-4679. 107t03/08 Hewlett-Packard 4ICV, Crd. Rdr., & printer. Ret. $725. Must sell. $350. or best offer. 696-0328 or 693- 2110. 107t03/07 1985 HONDA AERO-50 Scooter. Excellent condition. Helmet included. $450. 693-3708. • 106t03/07 ’84 Kawasaki GPZ750. NEW TIRES. RECENT TUNE- UP. GOOD CONDITION. $1,250. 696-5803. 105t03/06 ‘87. Honda Elite 80. Low Miles, Good Condition. Will Finance. 846-4608/696-8210. 108t03/09 SEC- Monday, March 6,1989 Ags smash Horns 106-89 Suber’s 27 keys rout By Tom Kehoe SPORTS WRITER The hot just get hotter. Led by Lynn Suber’s career high 27 points, Texas A&:M blew out Texas 106-89 before a sellout crowd at G. Rollie White Coliseum. Suber came off the bench and had 24 of his points in the second half. The victory brought the Aggies to an even 8-8 in the Southwest Con ference and 15-13 for the season. It also gave coach Shelby Metcalf his 23rd winnning season. Texas dropped to a half game be hind Arkansas for the conference ti tle. Although A&:M hit the century mark for the second time this sea son, Metcalf felt the key to the game was his team’s defensive effort. “We played very good defense,” Metcalf said. Indeed they did. Conference scor ing leader Travis Mays missed on all Aggie Update 1 Score:A&M 106, Texas 87. Record: 15-13; 8-8 in the SWC. StandingrFifth. Next game:Friday vs. Houston mrnmm five of his field goal attempts in the first half. He ended with 21 points, most of which came after A&M had an insurmountable lead. Texas for ward Alvin Heggs was held to only six buckets on 16 attempts for the game. He could only manage four points from the field in the second half. Guard David Williams said that Heggs’ poor performance could be attributed to more than poor shoot ing mechanics. “I think it was intimidation mostly,” Williams said. The Longhorns snot 43.7 percent for the game and a poor 31.4 per cent in the first half. Texas’ poor performance was contrasted by A&M. Photo by Jay Janne Texas guard Lance Blanks charges into Aggie forward Doug Dennis during the first half of A&M’s 106-87 win over Texas Saturday night at G. Rollie White Coliseum. Free hotel pass with roundtrip Europe Air and Eurail pass. Raiubow Tours, 720 N. Post Oak Rd., Suite 100, Houston, Texas 77024. (713)681-2733. 109ttfn SPRING BREAK ‘89 in South Padre Island, Texas- Condominium lodging still available. Don’t delay your plans any longerl Call Mark today at 1 -800-258-9191. 100t03/07 In addition to Suber, four other Aggies hit for double figures. Don ald Thompson had 22 points, 18 in the first half. Thompson appeared to be on his way to a career-high night but he picked up his fourth foul with 15:18 reamining in the game and was relegated to the bench. A&M shot 50.6 percent for the game and controlled the boards, outrebounding Texas 53-43 for the game. The game opened with A&M con trolling the tip. Thompson fouled Heggs, who sunk one free throw to give Texas their only lead of the game TO. The teams traded scores until Ricks banked in a ten-footer and Texas’ Winn Shepard got a fol low tip that brought the score to 10-7 before the first television timeout. After the timeout Milton scored on three drives but the Horns’ Lance Blanks had a tip-in and a three-point play to keep Texas close, 20-16. Guard Tony Milton had 18 points before picking up his fifth foul with 24 seconds to go. Freddie Ricks had 15 points and David Williams con tributed 12. After two more TV timeouts the Aggies put together a 13-2 run that put them up at the half by a 49-30 margin. In the second half the teams traded buckets as Texas tried in vain to reduce the Aggies’ lead. It wasn’t until 9:11 remaining that A&M again hit a spurt, outscoring lexai 10-0 at one point, that gave thei their biggest lead 82-51. Sube caught fire hitting five consecutive free throws in the stretch including technical foul called on Shepard. Texas responded with two straight baskets before Suber tool over from the field canning three consecutive field goals including! 25-foot three-pointer. With 3:26 to go and A&M up92- 75, Texas called the first of two timeouts that signalled Coach Fenders had not yet given up. After the timeout the Horm switched to a furious press, hoping to force turnovers that could spark rally- But the A&M backcourt passed over and weaved through the pres and Texas was forced to foul and hope the Aggies couldn’t hit flora the line. H owever, A&M did hit their free throws down the stretch and the clock wound down to a 106-89 Aggie win. Texas holds off Lady Aggies Davis leads Lady Longhorn attack with 36 By Stan Golaboff SPORTS WRITER The Texas A&M women’s basket ball team lost to the University of Texas 78-70 Saturday in G. Rollie White Coliseum. Texas forward Clarissa Davis commented before the game that she thought the first meeting of the two teams in Austin last month was boring. A&M used that comment and some good teamwork to almost beat Texas for the first time in 11 years. “I was a little insulted by Clarissa’s comment and we didn’t want her to Lady Ag Update • Score:No.9 Texas 78, A&M 70. • Record: 16-11; 8-8 in the SWC. • Standing:Fifth. • Next gamerWednesday vs. Hous ton be bored,” A&M Head Coach Lynn Hickey said. “I was definitely not bored,” Davis said. “I think it was a very exciting game.” The game was a closely fought match with the biggest lead by either team being eight points. “I thought it was a great game for both teams,” Texas Head Coach Jody Conradt said. “It helped show case women’s basketball and the SWC.” Despite losing, A&M was in rela tive high spirits after the game. “The best thing to come out of the game would have been to win,” Hickey said. “But we were able to show our players and Texas that we are just as good as them.” “We wanted to win,” A&M senior Donna Roper said. “But if we lost, we didn’t want to lose by 20. We are disappointed we didn’t win, but we are happy about the way we played.” A&M (16-11 overall and 8-8 in SWC) took the lead early and led un til 13 minutes left in the first half. A&M led 8-2 after three minutes be fore being outscored 12-6 over the next four minutes. Texas (23-4 overall and 16-0 in SWC) used a 7-2 run to take a seven point lead with 10 minutes left. Then the 2,591 fans got involved in the game. “You have to give the Aggies cred it,” Conradt said. “If there is one thing they know how to do, it’s yell.” With the crowd yelling, A&M went on a 12-5 run to tie the score at 26. Texas had brought eight busloads of fans from Austin, but the Aggies out-yelled them. “I’m glad I could look up and see some orange in the stands,” Conradt said. “Because from the sound of things, I didin’t think we had anyone cheering for us,” Conradt said. “The crowd was definitely a factor in the game, and it really helped us get going,” Hickey said. During the 12-5 run, freshman LaTanya Irving had six of her 14 points and sophomore Louise Mad ison had 4 points. Tied at 26, both teams went to their All-Americans. Roper scored six of A&M’s last eight points of the half and Davis scored seven of Texas’ last 11 points. Roper had 12 points at halftime and Davis had 18. Texas led at halftime 37-34. A&M picked up the pace in the second half and regained the lead (38-37) with two minutes gone. UT regained the lead and was leading 45-42 with 13 minutes left, when Hickey went to her bench for some instant offense. Hickey sent in sophomore Wendy Jennings, who promptly threw up two straight three pointers and A&M went on an 8-2 run to reclaim the lead at 50-47. “I knew after 1 hit the first oneto be ready for Donna to pass me the ball and 1 just put them up." Jen nings said. A&M kept the lead until sixanda half minutes left in the game. IT used two three pointers by Lyssa Mc Bride to tie the game and retook the lead when Susan Anderson hit two free throws to make it 61-59. A&M was able to tie the gameal 68 with three minutes left, but An derson helped fuel a 10-2 run to ice the win, /8-70. Anderson scored ■-eight of the last 10 T exas points. Texas’ run was fueled by missed free throws by Lisa Jordon and Ir ving and a steal by McBride late in the game. “It took me the whole game to fig ure out where A&M was passing the ball,” McBride said. “But I was able to get to the ball before they were." “I should have made those free throws at the end,” Jordon said. “1’1 probably shoot 100 tomorrow. It was just a breakdown in concentration. Despite the breakdown, Hicke) was pleased with her team’s concen tration. “Overall I was happy with theiref- fort,” Hickey said. “We showed pen pie we can play with Texas. For 33 minutes and 30 seconds, I thought we were going to win, which is im provement over the normal 10 min utes you think you can beat T exas.” Leading scorers in the game were Davis with 32 for Texas and Roper with 24 for A&M. Anderson had 12 points and both Amy Claborn and McBride had Id for Texas. A&M got 14 from Irving and 10 from Jordon. The game marked the end of the regular season for both teams, with Texas finishing as SWC champions and A&M finishing fifth. A&M’s next game will he against Houston on Wednesday in the first round of the SWC Tournament in Dallas. The winner plays Texas Thursday. N- A str starter appear; the top team its verdict Michig; Field. The for con: the stai was, on road tri Swee outing I eight at record lowed £ earned) showed allow at base via Cent; by stopj ninth. Sweet innings one out dermoe solo hoi field wa 2. Chip followec chase Sv Sweet Pc Satur Station. 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