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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 13, 1992)
hursday, February 13, 1992 The Battalion Page 5 alias hands Boston second straight defeat DALLAS (AP) - Herb illiams scored 11 of his 23 points during a decisive third-quarter run Wednesday night as the Dal las Mavericks broke an eight- ame losing streak with a 108-100 ictory over the Boston Celtics. Williams hit all five of his bhots in the third quarter, includ ing three baskets in the final 1:05, to give Dallas an 83-66 advantage. The Mavericks had lost 19 of their previous 20 games and had (won only once since Christmas. Derek Harper also scored 23 for Dallas while Reggie Lewis led the Celtics with 24 points. The loss was the Celtics' sec ond in two games of a six-game road trip. Boston lost at San Anto nio, 100-84 on Tuesday night. The Celtics used a 7-2 run capped by Rick Fox's dunk to pull to within 92-82 with 6:52 to play. But Dallas then went on a 6-2 spurt, including Harper's three- point play, to push the lead to 98- 84. Dallas expanded a six-point halftime lead to 76-59, opening the third quarter with a 17-6 run. Randy White led the spurt with seven points, including a three- point play with 9:39 left in the quarter to bump Dallas' lead to 66- 57. Dallas led at halftime, 59-53, behind Rolando Blackman's 14 points and 12 from Rodney Mc Cray. Blackman finished with 18 points. The Mavericks, who normally run a plodding half-court offense, were able to fastbreak against the Celtics, who seemed tired playing their second game in as many nights. Rookie Mike luzzolino came off the bench to hit three-of-four 3- pointers and add three assists in 17 minutes. OLLEIS/ TheBalta but have not gainst TSU. ing •ortunitv niss freshmar ohnson. Jok n g almost! °re he broke, be Aggies hav, e in the sevei issed. Baron; 'uld have bee: ent if Johnso; ss ues I don' ally cognizan: ason," he said, han a big man 'n wasthedif- us beat™ 1SMU. Wed ' teams with ameplan for I be based on ■alegy. -S the other i what you're /" he said. s to runk that's wta We would y pressured be ready to hem." ions ;ation inside Chri; etween i ?d free or and drinks • local resta ided playei s, transport enefits. d to discu; ies that , but he said im had stood two years of •am that cat of investigi; lation," sad Lady Aggies lose again to Mustangs Continued from Page 3 At halftime, the Aggies were down by five points, 28-23, be hind the scoring of Yolanda Brown, who scored eight of her team-high 10 points in the first half. But in the second half, the Lady Aggies shot 34 percent, making nine of 26 shots from the field and failing on two tries from three-point range. For the game, A&M shot 38 percent from the field and shot 55 percent from the free-throw line. "It was a very disappointing evening," Hickey said. "I think you have to give SMU a lot of credit. They did a lot of really good things to us defensively. Holding a team to 62 points is not bad, but it was a game of de fense and errors and you can't have 27 turnovers. "The thing that (kept it close) was that they had 26 turnovers." SMU shot 48 percent from the field for the game and 73 percent from the free throw line. Missy Parker led the Lady Mustangs with 15 points and Amy Sever son added 14 points and three as- KARL STOLLEIS/The Battalion A&M's Yolanda Brown and SMU's Vicki Waltersheid fight for a rebound in the Aggies' 62-49 loss Wednesday at the Coliseum. sists. SMU point guard Suzanne McAnally led all players with 11 assists. A&M's next game is against the University of Texas on Satur day night. Tipoff is set for 7:30 at G. Rollie White Coliseum. "We have to play hard as a team," Hickey said. "Our de fense hasn't been that poor. We just have to execute our offense a little better. "We've got to keep our confi dence up." A&M wins 2 Continued from Page 3 ‘oT about some of our pitchers tonight, and some of them showed some improvement," he said. "And any time you can win games and improve at the same time, then that is a big plus." Johnson also said that the Ag gie bats were quite a bit more ac tive than in the Rice series last weekend. "We're not totally hooked up to where we need to be, but I think we're doing a lot better," he said. "We did a better job with two strikes, and a couple of guys had some hitting success with two strikes, and that's something we really like to see." Just being able to get two games in before going to Tucson, Johnson said, was a blessing the Aggies weren't sure they were go ing to get. "The most critical thing for us was to get to play/" he said. "I felt like we would be back to square one if the rain didn't let us get these games in before going to Ari zona, so it was critical that we got to play, and to win made it that much better." 12th Man Notebook TEXAS A&M HANDBALL TEAM: The handball team contin ued its dominance over the University of Texas at the Southwest Collegiate Handball Tournament in Austin on Jan. 31-Feb. 2. A&M won all eight divisions offered in the tournament, four Men's and four Women's events. Sal Santa Ana woon the Men's "Open" division; Vern Hegwood won "B"; Casey Clark won "C" and Scott Cooner won the "Con tenders" division. Sharon Baylor won the Women's "Open" event; Katie Hutche son won "B"; Anna Gonzalez won "C" and Jennifer Bellomy won the "Contenders" division. The Combined Men's and Women's Team will defend their fourtli consecutive National Championship in Chicago from Feb. 20-24. Members of the team accompanying Lance Lowry will be the players listed above as well as Betsy Boswell, Kim Harris, Terry Santa Ana, Teri Slusarek, Audrea Stork, Cassie Tijerina, Chris Uren. Others include Tim Poskey, Matt Jackson, Jeff Swoboda, John Reider, Emmett Myatt, Ricky Cole, Dusty Davis, Shane Rothenberg- er, Colin Errington, John Tomme, Chip Abernathy and Eric Fields. AGGIE FOOTBALL WALK-ONS: A meeting concerning the 12th Man kickoff coverage team and walk-on football players will be held at the Kyle Field training room on Wednesday, Feb. 19 at 4 p.m. Interested individuals should wear appropriate workout attire to the meeting. The 12th Man Notebook will run every Thursday in The Battalion. Submissions can be picked up in Room 013, Reed McDonald, and are due by 5 p.m. Wednesday. The Notebook is a service available to non-profit organizations at Texas A&M and in the Bryan-College Station area. Questions? Call 845-2665. Iness is s are of other jht note, - is lake Me national seball ans that ial. ng is f° r hrough nedu- ind theirs), game ill bean forget. Turowm Mr. Bill's Passes; Time Mon 2/17 Tues 2/18 Wed 2/19 Thurs 2/20 Physics 201 6p.m. - 8p.m. Chp. 6 Chp. 6 & 7 Chp. 7 Chp. 8 Chem 102 8p.m. - 10p.m. Chp. 16 Chp. 17 Chp. 18 Test II Review Physics 202 10p.m. - 12a.m. Chp. 28 Chp. 29 Chp. 30 Chp. 31 Other Passes Sat 2/15 Sun 2/16 Mon 2/17 Tue 2/18 Wed 2/19 Thur 2/20 Genetics 301 CH 1&2 2-5 p.m. Genetics 301 CH3&4 2-5 p.m. Math 142 Review IV 5-7 p.m. Math 151 Test Review 5-7 p.m. Math 251 Practice Test 8-10 p.m. Acct. 230 Old exam 7-9 p.m. Genetics 301 CH 4 & 23 7-9 p.m. Genetic 301 Exam I Test Review Math 152/161 Practice test 0 p.m. - 12 a.m. Math 251 Review IV 9-11 p.m. Econ 202 Pt. 1 Ail Sect. Ch. 1-5 9-11 p.m. Econ 202 Pt. 2 All Sect. Ch. 1-5 9-11 p.m. Econ 202 Old exam 7-9 p.m. Math 308 Review IV 11 p.m.-l a.m. Econ 203 pt. 1 Gillette Ch. 5-8 11 p.m. -1 a.m. Econ 203 pt. 2 Gillette Ch. 5-8 11 p.m. - 1 a.m. Econ 203 Old exam 9-11 p.m. C All Classes $3.50/Hr, y C For More Info, call 260-2660) Are\buAn Explorer? 500 years ago, doing business globally was a simple thing. All you had to do was navigate uncharted waters, watch out for sea dragons, and hope not to sail off the end of the earth. Today, it’s a bit more complicated. If you know what you want but aren’t sure how to get there why not let Sprint chart a career for you. As part of a Fortune 200 company with sales over $8 billion, we’ve navigated our way to the edge of today’s Information Services world. Why don’t you come on over and explore what Sprint has to offer. We’ll be interviewing on campus February 20 Contact your Planning and Placement office for more infor mation on Dallas opportunities. Sprint on Softrvmro for students, fnculty si ml stuff* 'Tfota s4(MitCa6£e( I.D. required i 1 g] Loins 1-2-:! r , [5] Lotus ,1 -2-3‘ for Maci ntosh The most powerful spreadsheet program • Powerful, graphical, easy-to-use • True 3-D worksheet capabilities —£ • Edit text, data or formulas in cell .• Includes Adobe Type Manager® and 13 fonts • Full file formatting, macro and keystroke compatibility with all 1-2-3 versions • Reads, writes Microsoft® Excel files • Supports System 7 • Requires any Macintosh computer, 2MB RAM (system 6) or 3 MB RAM (system 7) ALDUS Aldus SuperPaint 3.0 for Macintosh An inexpensive, easy-to-use graphics program that combines full color paint and drawing features with image control for both the novice and experienced Macintosh users. con a^V'm l’sic S (3 F f W A R E CODA Software Coda Music Prose for Macintosh Professional software for music transcription, scoring, playback, part extrac tion and publishing. Coda Finale for Windows (dual media) A step above music Prose 2.1 allowing up to 128 staves! O Digital Research DR DOS 6.0 for 3.5" and 5.25 The most advanced, fully compatible operating system available. Maximizes the capacity and speed of your hard disk. Requires IBM PC or PS/2-compatible PC using Intel 8086/8088, 80286, 386 or i486 microprocessor, 512K RAM (1Mb recommend ed), two floppy disk drives or one floppy and one hard drive. ^TDK TDK Diskettes in 10 Packs D5DD 3.5" SPECIAL! Includes a coupon for two FREE color disks! University Bookstores Northgate - Plaza - Village 3 Off-Campus Stores to Serve You MON-THUR 8:00am - 8:00pm FRI 8:00am-6:00pm SAT 9:00am - 6:00pm SUN 11:00am - 5:00pm Sate Dates Feb. 17 - 22. 1992