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Ask for details today where computers are sold on campus. „ 0L Apple Pays Half MicroComputerCenter Computer Sales and Supplies Located at the MSC inside the Texas A&M Bookstore Monday thru Friday 7:45a.m. - 6:00p.m. Saturday 9:00a.m. - 5:00p.m. (409) 845-4081 © 1989Apple Computer Inc. Apple, tlx Apple logo, and Macintosh an registered trademarks oj Apple Computer. Inc. Certain restrictions apply. All rebates subject to strict compliance uith the Term and Conditions ofOx Apple Pays Half' Program Guulelines. availablefrom \vur authorized Apple reseller Ojjer void where prohibited by law. Page 8 The Battalion Monday, March 20,198§ Hogs stop Aggies in SWC tourney he Batt: Monday By Doug Walker SPORTS EDITOR Texas A&M, the hottest team in the Southwest Conference, wasn’t hot enough in the SWC Post-Season Classic to stop the steamrolling Ar kansas Razorbacks. The resurgent Aggies, winners of eight of nine games entering the semifinal matchup with the Razor- backs, watched their season come to an abrupt end in a 94-84 loss March 11 in Reunion Arena in Dallas. A&M finished a rollercoaster sea son with a record of 16-14 while the A&M basketball • Scores:A&M 82, Houston 70, in SWC Post-Season Tournament quar ter-finals. Arkansas 94, A&M 84, in the SWC semi-finals. • Final record: 16-14. Razorbacks moved to 23-6. Arkansas eventually won the tournament and advanced to the second round of the NCAA’s Midwest Region before ending the year with a loss to Louis ville Saturday. Aggie Head Coach Shelby Metcalf finished with his 23rd winning sea son in his 26-year coaching career. He was understandably proud of his team, which finished strong after a terrible mid-season slump. “I’m very proud of this ballclub because they’ve come so far,” Met calf said. “This team will be very dear to me forever. I thought it was a heck of a ball game. We gave great effort.”, The Aggies had advanced to the SWC semifinals by defeating Hous ton 82-70 one night earlier. Arkansas moved on to meet Texas in the SWC tournament title game and swamped the Longhorns (100- 76) for the championship. Arkansas’ pressure defense and A&M foul trouble combined to doom any Aggie upset hopes in the semifinals. A&M battled gamely be fore succumbing before a sell-out crowd of 16,240. Senior forward Donald Thomp son closed his Aggie career by lead ing A&M in scoring with 23 points and added 13 rebounds while earn ing a spot on the all-tournament team. “Down the stretch (Arkansas) made the key plays,” Thompson said. “They did what it took to win the game. They wanted it more than we did.” Guard Tony Milton scored 19, re serve forward Doug Dennis ended his Aggie career with 14 and guard Lynn Suber had 13 points. Arkansas forward Lenzie Howell, the tournament’s most valuable player, led the Hogs with 31 points and 12 rebounds while guard Keith Wilson, Arkansas’ only senior, added 25 points. NCAA (Continued from page 7) Thompson said the Hoyas should have lost. “We didn’t play as well as we would have liked here, and that’s at tributed to the game with Princeton, it was such a strain,” Thompson said. Now, Georgetown, 28-4, goes to the regional semifinals Friday night in East Rutherford, N.J., against 19th-ranked North Carolina State. No. 19 N.C. State 102, No. 14 Iowa 96, 20T Rodney Monroe scored a career- high 40 points for N.C. State, includ ing 11 in the second overtime, and hit baskets that tied the score at the end of regulation and the first over time at Providence. Monroe gave Iowa the lead for good at 86-85 with a 3-pointer with 4:00 left in the sec ond overtime. His three-point play made it 91-87 with 3:06 to play, and he hit another 3-pointer with 1:18 Thompson felt Wilson was thekev to the game for Arkansas. “Keith Wilson is probably one of the best guards in the conference since Kato (Armstrong of Southem Methodist) left. He is their go-toguy in tough situations. He came out anil responded.” Wilson picked up the scoring load for the Razorbacks when the Aggies made a couple of rallies in the sec ond half. Four Aggies fouled out of the game as the quicker Hogs simply wore A&M down. Arkansas con verted 22 Aggie turnovers into 23 points and finished the game with the biggest lead of the game. The Hogs converted 1 1 of 13 free throws down the stretch to keep the Aggies at hay. Forward David Williams joined Freddie Ricks, Milton and Dennisin fouling out as A&M ended the night with only two starters, Thompson and forward Ray Little, able to play. “The refs did a good job,” Milton said. “(The ref erees) didn’t beat us, Arkansas beat us. We lost to a good team.” Metcalf also refused to blame the loss on the officiating. “I think that overall, that crew (of ficials) is alright,” Metcalf said. “I think that everything in the confer ence is on the way up. “We got beat by a great ball dub and it was a great basketball game." A&M held leads of 4-1 and 25-22 in the first half before Arkansas nosed in front by 48-43 at the half. T he Hogs used 14 Aggie turn overs to get their fast break going and converted the miscues into H points in the opening period. A&M got as close as two points twice in the final half before Arkan sas got Dennis and Ricks to foul out. A&M rallied from a 69-. r )‘.i (Iclicn to move to within 75-73 on a Milton jumper with 7:44 to go and trailed 77-75 at the 6:54 mark when he con verted both ends of a one-and-one 50 seconds later. A&M’s last gasp came with slightly under thre minutes to go. Trailing 84-80. the Aggies threw the ball out of bounds on the offen sive end. Suber hit a driving 10-foot jumper to pull A&M within 86-82, but the Hogs hit their free throws during the final 1:23 and sealed the win. Arkansas won the rebounding battle (39-37) and outshot A&M -18.5 percent to 47,5 percent. A&M dominated Houston early in the second half of their quarter-final game to race to a 82-70 win over the Cougars. Houston’s Craig Upchurch stole the show with 29 points but A&M used 24 points from Thompson to go with Suber’s 12 off the bench to defeat the Cougars. A&M controlled the defensive hoards and won the reboundingbya 44-36 margin. WC By Cray P It is a The sound adiojars y voice of tl rods you warm bed. For som< ng radio s work or cl: nustc, ne\ norning D ntothe dre No matt out of bed, o be alreat left for a 94-89 lead. No. 10 Michigan 91, S. Alabama : • 82 Glen Rice scored 36 points, and he and Terry Mills helped the Wol verines overcome a 57-51 deficit with four minutes gone in the sec- ond half, ending South Alabama’s 11-game winning streak in a South east Regional game at Atlanta. Mills had 24 points. Mills’ three-point play with 2:17 left broke an 80-80 tie, and Rice fol lowed with a 3-pointer 45 seconds later. No. 11 Seton Hall 87, Evansville 73 Andrew Gaze hit a 3-pointer that gave Seton Hall a 77-73 lead, and Gerald Greene followed with a layup as the Pirates reached the West Re gional semifinals for the first time as Seton Hall heat the Aces at Tucson. [ENTERTAII o prepare ahead. Who art working bt and with su Early me gin at 6 a.i Most DJs shows roll c to work. While tf sound like: schedule t< morning sh ter by disc j early hours to sleep in show is th broadcastin Why? ■ “The 6-1 tened to tii W.W.W. 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