BOTHER’S BOOKSTORES ^ Page 8 The Battalion Tuesday, December 5,1S THE PRICE IS RIGHT AT ROTHER’S SELL YOUR BOOKS NOW No. 9 LSU routs Lamar; Jackson nets 30 TANK MCNAMARA® by Jeff Millar & Bill Hindi 340 Jersey 901 Harvey Marines looking for a far good men and vnmten. 1 st LT. Mark Abelson 846-9036/8891 DEFENSIVE DRIVING CLASS TICKET DISMISSAL—INSURANCE DISCOUNT December 8, 9 (6-10 p.m. & 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.) 845-1631 FOREIGIV STUDENTS * Ship your household goods and autombiles by ocean or air with the most experienced and reliable international moving company in Texas. * Major home appliance export dealer 220 Volt 50 Cvele * 20 years of specialized handling Serving all parts of the world. * Move with the international moving specialist. * Special rates for students Moving and packing international,inc. 2303 Nance P.O Box 2882 Houston, Tx. 77020 Houston, Tx. 713-222-8886 ^ 77001 BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — Ninth-ranked Louisiana State went to a man-to-man defense with about six minutes to go in the first half, broke open a close game and rolled to a 116-76 victory over Lamar Mon day behind the 30 points of Chris Jackson. LSU (3-1) led 28-25 when the Ti gers switched out of the zone they had used from the tip-off. Lamar got just seven more points before in termission and only two — on a pair of free throws by Victor Trahan —in the final 4:32. Jackson had 18 of his points in the final 6:40 of the first half as LSU opened a 60-32 halftime lead. Lamar (1-4) hit 13 3-point shots, including a school-record eight by David Jones. Shaquille O’Neal had 24 points for LSU. Maurice Williamson had 15, Vernel Singleton 12 and Wayne Sims 10. Jones led Lamar scoring with 28 points and Daryl Reed had 10. Lamar cut LSU’s lead to 74-57 on a 3-point goal by Duane Prichett with 12:04 left in the game. But Wil liamson and O’Neal led a surge that put LSU back on top 85-59 with 7:38 left. C Qpoo 3 , THE AVERAGE FIGHT CF?t>VUP COMEt* TO e^GKl AG MUCH A& TO G£E THE fight, go iMGreAP of am UrOPERCARp we'pE- HAVING FiGHT- FAKJG' Ct-OTHiNG-ANP-ACCeSSORlEG PRELIMINARIES*.... vf* —o 00 VOO P0KA& _ O 0 oO fT«>«r**.ro *oc^K- MV ummK UHNk UHNk 3 AG VOO CAN f*O#0l,Y HEAR,THE EPPlE MORPHY ACTA UkE CONTEST 15* JU*T GETTING ONPER ULVW. t'm gonna Kick MO' ^iuys^/HiND6 Aggies host Centenary tonigl; By Clay Rasmussen Of The Battalion Staff The Texas A&M men’s basketball team will open its home schedule to night against Centenary in G. Rollie White Coliseum. Tip off is sched uled for 7:30 p.m. The Aggies return home after playing in two straight tournaments. A&M finished fifth in the Great Alaskan Shootout in Anchorage and took third place in the Jowers Jam boree in San Marcos. The Aggies are 2-3 in tournament play while the Gents are 2-2. To night’s game will be both teams sea son openers. A&M Coach Shelby Metcalf is pleased with the performance of the Aggies despite a grueling five-game road trip. “Basically, I’ve been happy with our effort in all our games except the Pan-American loss,” Metcalf said. A&M was blown away by Pan- American in the Jowers Jamboree 97-79. “I guess we were a little tired in that one,” Metcalf said. “We’ve opened this season with five straight road games. “I wouldn’t recommend that to anyone. The Aggies will meet the CtE,,, for the 23rd time. A&M holdsadsBy sive 17-5 series lead, but losttoC(« )[e tenary last year, 80-77, in the (ML. , tury Cellunet Classic. H lU The Cents are led by fmi-v^ coach Tommy Vardeman. Still\i : B t a calf said the Aggies can’t afforilH"! take Centenary Tightly. M le( “I don’t know much aboutCef 1 " nary, but they beat us Metcalf said. “They have thes« S i team back this year. * ■ un Jid t “ I heir top player, Larry RoM \i ; son, will charm you with his smiltMi| )( well as with his play." rTH • * * Tijerina (Continued from page 7) Spark Some Interest! Use the Battalion Classifieds. Call 845-2611 But we’ve gotten better. I guess next semester will be just as hectic as my first day was. Probably even more, what with other journalists and all calling the office to ask my opinion on sports subjects. After my sports meeting, I had to go through a rigorous photo session with Fred| our photo editor. New mugshot for today’s column. Much better than the fall’s raccoon-eyes shot. Oh yeah, in all the excitement of the new position, I forgot to thank some of the little people who helped me get here: Floyd “Punk” Rogers, my high school biology teacher who kicked me off the golf team; JJ Rains, who taught me how to smile and express myself; Marjorie “Lady” Walraven, who introduced me to journalism; Scot Walker, who hired me; Anthony Wilson, who was always there for me personally as well as professionally; and you, love — u know who u r. Let me add: After all my success, I’m still a simpleton. Gee, I bet everybody’s dying to see who did and didn’t make that list. Maybe I’ll save it for another column. Our 23,000 readers really will dig that. There’s been so much talk about whether I’ll jump ship next fall and work for a bigger newspaper. No way. My blood bleeds maroon. Take that, Dallas Times-Herald. Take your lousy sports editorial job offer and shove it. I sit back. It’s 3 a.m. Work is finished. My eyes are bloodshot, and I’ve got two chapters of statistics to read. I hope every day is as glorious as this. By god, it will he. — THE END. There it was. My first 24 hours. The Sports Editor’s Diary. I hope A&M cared as much as I did on Andre’s exciting day in front of the televisioh. Triple yuck. Lady Aggies host Soonei as Hickey eyes 200th win By Vince Snyder Of The Battalion Staff 65-54, in a first-round gameani then lost to Iowa State, 75-70,ii the tournament’s consolatioi The Texas A&M Lady Aggies hope to continue their home win ning streak tonight, as they host the University of Oklahoma in G. Rollie White Coliseum. Tipoff is scheduled for 5:30 p.m. The Lady Aggies stand 3-2 on the year, but are a perfect 3-0 at home. The visiting Sooners enter Tuesday’s game with a 2-2 record after suffering a loss to Sam Houston State, 90-86, in OU’s game An season opener. A&M is comming off its first road trip of the year. The two losses came during the Ute-Rain- bow Classic at the University of Utah. The Lady Aggies fell to UCLA, A&M victory on Tuesdai will give Lady Aggie Head Goad Lynn Hickey her 200th wind her collegiate coaching career According to the NCAA, Hidev ranks 54th among the winninees active Division I women's basb ball coaches in the nation. “We were definitely diap pointed that we didn’t get atta one win last weekend,” Hitifi said. “We didn’t play real id, but those were quality teamstai gocxl basketball conferences tint we were playing. “Oklahoma will be anothti tough game for us. We will hart to play hard from the beginning cl ma' An and make better shot selections’ 12: The Fraternity of Volkswagen •Mo Brendan 'Ben" Maxcy '81 Rabbit Introducing seven members of the Delta Tau Delta Fraternity and their Volkswagens. We caught up with these brothers—University of Maine chapter— and snapped this photo before the snow came. "Up here, winter is not a season to be taken lightly" explained fraternity President Andrew "Gappy" Pelletier. "A lot of people drive Volkswagens. They've got front wheel drive and they're dependable. Especially when it's cold." Brother Wick Gartley agreed, "I don't know how you happened to pick our fraternity. Seems like everyone up here drives a Volkswagen." "I love my Vee Dub," offered Ben Maxcy. "I've got 135,000 miles on it and it's still running great." Andrew Michaud, the newest Delt, had his mind on more important matters. "How's my car look? If you drive a Volkswagen, you might be selected to appear in an ad like the one above. Send your story and a photo to: Volkswagen Testimonials* 187 S. Woodward, Suite 200* Birmingham, Ml 48009