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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 19, 1990)
Peace Corps at MSC March 20,1990 Time: 9-12:30 p.m. Stop by or call our TAMU office 845-1496 Campus Rep. Ron Ziehm Page 12 The Battalion Monday, March 19,1990 March Madness living up to name; Texas ASM Flying Club Presents Mr. Fred Zimring “Pilots Rights and Aviation Law” March 20 7:30 P.M. Rudder 302 Eveiyone Welcome! For more information call Mary Walters 847-0042 arles Aggies Get Ready For Spring Break With These Specials From Charles & Sue’s Haircuts Reg $475 Now $3.50 Perms Reg. $27.50 Now $19.95 Long Hair Extra Specialty Wraps Excluded 1711 Briarcrest Dr. (across from Oxford Street) 776-4375 AGGIE SPECIAL 12" medium original style pizza with 1 item $5.49 • o 5 < Expires 4/30/90 Tax not included in price. One coupon per pizza. ® Limited delivery areas ensure safe driving. 260-9020 4407 S. Texas 693-2335 1504 Holleman 822-7373 Townshire Shopping Center m * • o S< m IT’S TIME FOR DOMINO’S PIZZA" Don’t Worry when an accident or sudden illness occurs CarePlus is open when you need them 7 days a week with affordable medical eare. Faculty, staff & Students receive a 10% discount CarePlus^ FAMILY MEDICAL CENTER and Pharmacy 696-0683 1712 Southwest Pkwy • C.S. Open 8 to 8 Every Day Top seeds falling Associated Press Goodbye Michigan, Purdue and Georgetown. So long Terry Hol land. See ya Big Eight. Welcome back UCLA. Hello again, Duke. Join the party, Loyola Marymount. It was another wild and wacky day at the NCAA tournament Sunday as eight more teams advanced to the fi nal 16. Defending champion Michigan was blown out 149-115 by Loyola Marymount, a team determined to win it all for its late star, Hank Gath ers. The game featured seven tour nament records, including most total points and most points by one team. UCLA, which used to win the tournament all the time under John Wooden, made the “Sweet Sixteen” for the First time in a decade by beat ing Kansas 71-70. The loss knocked the powerful Big Eight, which had three No. 1 teams this season, out of the tournament. Purdue and Georgetown, big names from big conferences, were eliminated by a teams from lightly regarded leagues. Xavier, from the Midwestern Collegiate Conference, beat Big East beast Georgetown 74- 71. Texas, from the Southwest Con ference, edged Purdue 73-72, leav ing only two of the Big Ten’s seven entries left in the tournament. Syracuse ended Holland’s coach ing career by beating Virginia 63-61 and Duke reached the Final 16 for the fifth straight year with a 76-72 victory over St. John’s. Georgia Tech, North Carolina, Clemson and Duke had given the ACC a spotless record in the tourna ment. But Virginia couldn’t give the conference a fifth team in the Sweet 16 and a sweet present for Holland, who is leaving to become athletic di rector at Davidson. The regional semifinal pairings are Duke-UCLA in the East, Syra- cuse-Minnesota in the Southeast, Texas-Xavier in the Midwest and Loyola vs. the Alabama-Arizona win ner in the West. The East and Midwest games will be played Thursday, with the South east and West contests on Eriday. East No. 15 Duke 76, St. John’s 72 At Atlanta, Robert Brickey made a tiebreaking basket with 32 seconds left and added two free throws with nine seconds remaining to lift Duke. Brickey gave Duke a 74-72 lead when he grabbed an air ball by Alaa Abdelnaby and dropped it in the basket. After Greg “Boo” Harvey came down and missed a 15-footer for St. John’s, Brickey was fouled and added the clinching free throws. “It’s a game we won. St. John’s didn’t lose it,” Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski said. Duke improved to 26-8, while St. John’s finished 24-10. UCLA 71, No. 5 Kansas 70 Freshman Tracy Murray hit two free throws with nine seconds left, sending UCLA to the final 16 for the first time since losing the title game in 1980. Trevor Wilson gave UCLA a 69- 68 lead on a layup, but Kevin Prit chard put Kansas back in front on a pair of free throws with 29 seconds left. After Murray was fouled, Kansas called two consecutive time outs in an attempt to rattle him. “I wasn’t really that calm,” Murray said. “I was a little nervous.” The Bruins (22-10) improved their record against Kansas to 8-0. The Jayhawks, who were ranked No. 1 for much of the season, finished 30-5. Southeast No. 6 Syracuse 63, Virginia 61 At Richmond, Va., Derrick Cole man stopped a furious Virginia rally with a game-saving block on the final play. As 6-foot-5 Bryant Stith tried to score underneath with four seconds left, 6-10 Coleman swatted the ball toward midcourt and time expired as players dove after it. “We had our big fella right there,” Syracuse’s Stephen Thompson said. “He just came up with the big play.” No. 25 Xavier, Ohio 74, No. 8 Georgetown 71 Unheralded Xavier, led by Derek Strong’s 19 points and 12 rebounds, survived a second-half rally to reach the final 16 for the first time. The Ohio school built an 18-point lead late in the first half, then wilted against Georgetown’s press before holding on for the victory. The Hoyas (24-7) tied it at 68 on a 3-pointer by David Edwards with 3:18 remaining. But Xavier (28-4) came back to take the lead for good, 72-70, on a rebound basket by fresh man Aaron Williams with 1:35 left. Xavier fouled Edwards twice in the final eight sefconds, but he missed the front end of the one-and- one both times. “We practiced giving a foul all week,” Xavier coach Pete Gillen said. “We took a chance, but we didn’t want to give them a shot to tie it.” Edwards led Georgetown with 19 points. West No. 21 Loyola Marymount 149, No. 13 Michigan 115 At Long Beach, Calif., Loyola Marymount routed Michigan with a record-setting scoring performance. The Lions (25-5), playing two weeks after Gathers’ sudden death, used their stifling press and a bar rage of 3-pointers to beat the taller Wolverines. Michigan finished the season 23- 8. Settlement (Continued from page 9) revenue sharing and pay-for-perfor- mance plans, but the union refused to consider those ideas, prompting Vincent to take them off the table on Feb. 13. As talks continued, the players continued to press on arbitration. In the settlement to 1985’s two-day strike, the union agreed to move back the requirement for arbitration from two years to three years. Play ers claimed they did it because own ers pleaded financial distress. Own ers claimed it was a tradeoff for pension money and other things. The journey to spring training started right away as the New York Mets sent trucks loaded with equip ment in New Jersey for Port St. Lu cie, Fla. Vincent, who became commis sioner last September following the death of A. Bartlett Giamatti, sought to play a conciliatory role in the talks. At times, he had to reconcile his owners more than he had to rec oncile the two sides. Sweep (Continued from page 9) bouncer back to the mound. The Aggies answered with two runs in the second. Rollen led off with a single and moved to second on left fielder Chad Broussard’s sin gle. Thomas moved them over with a sacrifice bunt and Marshall walked to load the bases. Rollen scored on Wood’s squeeze bunt and Broussard scored on a wild pitch by Tiger starter Steve Powers. A&M took a 4-2 lead in the fourth inning. With one out, Broussard doubled when his fly ball was lost by right fielder Rich Reisdorf. Thomas followed with a walk and moved to third on Marshall’s RBI single to right field. Thomas scored when Wood’s grounder was misplayed by the shortstop. Missouri chased Robertson three batters into the fifth inning. Bo Si- berz came on for the Aggies and was shelled for three more hits as the Ti gers scored four runs on five hits in the inning. A&M scored single runs in the sixth and seventh innings to send the game into extra innings. In the sixth, Thomas singled and moved to sec ond on and scored on Holt’s grounder over the second base bag. Missouri threatened in the sev enth, but Johnson went to Freuden- berg, who ended the rally and domi nated the Tigers the rest of the way. In the seventh, Pyle reached on a bunt single and moved to second on Witte’s bunt. Pyle scored on Rollen’s single to left. In the eighth, Thomas walked and moved to third on a bunt and a grounttout. Holt was intentionally walked to set the stage for Pyle’s homer over the right field wall that gave A&M a 9-6 win. The runs were harder to come by in the nightcap. The game was scoreless until the Tigers scored two in the fourth off lefthanded starter Pat Sweet. Dou bles by Reisdorf and Mondrella sandwiched around a Darnel Hawk ins single did the damage. It seemed that the two runs would be enough for Tiger starter Chuck Fletcher. He allowed the Aggies only three hits through the first six in nings. But A&M rallied to tie the game 2-2, in the seventh. Broussard led off with a double and moved to third two outs later. Pinch hitter Scott Daniels walked and moved to second when Holt’s single scored Broussard. Daniels scored on Thomas’ single to tie the game. Freudenberg entered with one on and one out in the eighth. A throw ing error by third baseman Travis Williams moved runners to second and third. Mark Adair lifted a fly to center field, and Reisdorf tried to score on it. But Holt’s throw was right on target and nailed him at the plate. That set the stage for Bernet’s single in the ninth. “I knew the throw was on line when I let it go,” Holt said. TRAINING [he TRAINING THAT WORKS! Specializing in: ♦ WordPerfect ♦ Microsoft Werd ♦ dBase IIP'' ♦ Lotus 1-2-3 ♦ MS-Doss DON'T SHORT-CHANGE YOURSELF A degree alone is not enough. Knowledge of business i cation software is indispenable in today’s automated k ness environment. Get a head-start on tomorrow! Call: day for more information and scheduling. Space is limitdl ivists ©MANPOWER* Office Automation Training Center 505 University Drive East 846-3535 lorth< ronte IRS Electronic Filing FAST REFUNDS Normal refunds take 6 to 8 weeks. ELECTRONIC FILING it generally takes TWO WEEKS for DIRECT DEPOSIT to your bank and THREE WEEKS for a PAPER CHECK. teir c |ious, learb' Litf |ver b lectio parch kiblic BASELINE SERVICES, INC. Data Processing Electronic Transmission of Tax Returns In Kinko’s Copy Center, 509 University Dr. Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-9 p.m. 846-4370 ackei G< ur < to Mi o MSC Political Forum JAPAN: Trade war or Fair Competition? Featuring: Dr. Lawrence C. Wolken Texas A&M Finance Department I tary _ capit tary befoi mam renoi pend At viet 1 chev sayin the I to th there “W logue Sund electi sia ar Unio Wednesday, March 21, 1990 7:00p.m., 158 Blocker Free Admission Reception to Follow j.t nr A1 100,( strate rally capiu demc civil c ation ordei erty ; ernm Th on tel anian popu sion. conce nativ< c&miriLiL Our Menu Wines Glass 1/2 Litre Moreau Blanc 2.50 Fetter Gewurztraminer 2.50 Fiesporter Michelsberg 2.50 White Zinfandel 2.50 Pinot Noir 2.75 6.25 6.25 6.25 6.25 6.75 Fried Cheese Sticks. Fried Mushrooms... Shrimp Ceviche Appetizers splitti prorn to mij All You Can Eat Soup All You Can Eat Salad All You Can Eat Soup And Salad.... Soup and Half-Sandwich (Chicken Salad or Ham and Cheese) Soups and Salads Chicken Salad Ham and Cheese Hamburger and French Fries Cheeseburger and French Fries.. Sandwiches Tacos Polio A La Mexicana . Carne Guisada Beef.. Taco Salad 4.50 Beef or charbroiled chicken with lettuce, cheese, sour cream, guacamole, and pico de gallo. Entrees Folio A La Parrilla j4).93 Charbroiled breast of chicken seasoned with salt, pepper, garlic butter, bellpepper, and onion. Served with Spanish rice, refried beans, and tortillas. Folio A La Mexicana Diced chicken breast cooked in fresh tomato, onion, and jalapeno sauce. Served with Spanish rice, refried beans and tortillas. 'charbnnted Sirloin Strip served Mexican style with fresh tomato, onion, andjafapeno sauce or American style with french fries and Texas toast. Carne Cuisada — Diced roastbeef cooked in fresh tomato, onion and jalapeno sauce. Sewed with Spanish rice, refried beans and tortillas. Chicken Fried Steak ... .4 25 Steak dinner topped with cream graiy, served with french f ries and Texas toast. With two steaks 5.75 Fajitas By The Found J4 ^ Served with refried beans, pico de gallo, guacamolie, sour cream, grilled onions and eight tortillas Fajitas by The Half-Found 9.25 Served same as above with six tortillas Filete De Huachinango A La Veracruzana 8.93 Filet of Red Snapper broiled and topped with a tangy cream sauce. Served with Spanish rice and refried beans. Camaron Frito 6.23 Fried jumbo Gulf Shrimp served with tarter or red sauce, french fries and Texas toast. Camaron Sonora Salad size shrimp cooked in fresh tomato, rice, refried beans and tortillas. ..5.95 ndjalapeno sauce. Served wih Spanish r Valid Saturday thro Tlnasday 5 • 8:40 pm ■ £ for 1 Sfrecud. Buy vne dinner and «et die.second dinner of equal or less value I Ntrvf' v*rwcl wrr* Iv c i'll t..V" I FREE. Nor good wrth any other special or covpon Wease present coupon when j ordering. Afoohol not included. Dme-ln Oniy | 218 N. Bryan Downtown Bryan 823-60‘l9 Open 1 I - 8:45 Monday thru Saturday Closed Sundays - 1