Image provided by: Texas A&M University
About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (June 22, 1995)
Page 4 • The Battalion r* O RT s Thursday • June 22,1| The Battalion Classified Ads Phone: 845-0569/Fax 845-2678 Office: Room 015 (basement) Reed McDonak i Building ‘AGGIE* Private Party Want Ads $10 for 20 words running 5 days, if your merchandise is priced $1000 or less (price must appear in ad). This rate applies only to non-commercial advertisers offering personal possessions for sale. Guaranteed results or you get an additional 5 days at no charge. If item doesn't sell, advertiser must call before 1 p.m. on the day the ad is scheduled to end to qualify for the 5 additional Insertions at no charge. No refunds will be made if your ad is cancelled early. Business Hours 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monday through Friday BUI! SSL mis^ For Rent Help Wanted Come Live With Us At The #1 Address In Town And Enjoy The Most Complete And Innovative Community In Bryan/College Station •Efficiency 1,2 & 3 Bedrooms •2 Pools & Hot Tub •Tennis & Basketball Courts •Sand Volleyball •Private Rooftop Sundeck •3 On-Site Laundry Facilities •24 Hour Maintenance •On Shuttle Bus Route • Planned Activities Hwy 6 Plantation H Oaks Harvey Texas A&MBB Texas Ave •State of the Art Fitness Center • Computer and Study Center Computer Lab: 18 Workstations HP Laser Printers Fax & Copy Machines Help Desk Dedicated Internet Access Study/Meeting Rooms Lounge w/ Big Screen TV •No City Utility Deposit •Water and Gas Paid 693-1110 15} Equal Housir>g Opportunity Come see us at http://ivzvw.poapts.com 1501 Harvey Rd., C.S. across from Post Oak Mall Professionally Managed by B H Management Services, Inc. JOCK ITCH STUDY Patient volunteers needed for research study of new investigational medicine for JOCK ITCH (Skin Fungus). * FREE physical exam, treat ments, study medications & lab tests available for qualified participants. * Patient stipend available for qualified participants. * No topical (over-the- counter) treatment in last 2 weeks. For details, Call : G&S Studies, Inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 FEVER BLISTER STUDY Rodman trade rumors continui □ Spurs officials will not comment on the forward's future in San Antonio. SAN ANTONIO (AP) — As Spurs executives work on off-season player moves and the up coming NBA draft, they can’t escape league wide speculation about the future of forward Dennis Rodman. The eccentric 34-year-old who leads the NBA in rebounding has said he wouldn’t mind playing for Miami or the Los Angeles Lakers if he is not with San Antonio. Reports have surfaced that several teams are interested in him. Spurs officials won’t comment on any of it. "Dennis Rodman is not a topic for interviews,” said Spurs general manager Gregg Popovich, who, along with coach Bob Hill, scoffed at the na tional media attention paid to Rodman’s antics during the NBA playoffs. Rodman’s tardiness, absences and a playoff game exchange with Hill drew disciplinary ac tion from Spurs management last season. The Spurs protected Rodman in the expansion draft. Popovich wouldn’t comment on whether he favors trading Rodman, who makes $2.4 million per year. “At this point, we’re going to do exactly what is best for the basketball team,” he said, "(re gardless of) who it involves.” Among the teams reportedly interested in Rodman are the Los Angeles Lakers; the Philadelphia 76ers; the Houston Rockets; the Phoenix Suns, who reportedly would offer Dan Majerle, Wayman Tisdale and a No. 1 draft pick; and the Denver Nuggets, who would offer Bryant Stith or Rodney Rogers. San Antonio's Dennis Rodman wrestles a loosek| away from Utah's Karl Malone. ^OQD m t * Large 3 Bedroom/2 Bath * On Shuttle Bus Route * Close To A&M Consolidated * Quiet Wooded Setting * Adjacent To Parks * Beginning At $900/Mo. AVAILABLE AUGUST FOR MORE INFORMATION: PINNACLE MANAGEMENT GROUP 409-846-1100 OR 409-268-5029 Aggie Owned & Managed! Large 2 bedroom, great location, shuttle, microwave, intrusion alarm, laundry & swimming - $459/mo. College Court 823-7039, Sonnenblick 691-2062. 2bdrm-1 1/2bth fourplex, fireplace, W/D connections, shuttle, $550/mo. 404 Fall Circle. 693-9959. Save $200 1995-96 Forum lease. Call Travis (806) 585-6512 after 3:00pm. FINDERS KEEPERS. Houses - Duplexes - Condos - Apartments. Call 696-4663. 3bdrm-2btR houses. CH/CA, carpeted, near campus, no pets. Call 690-0085. Adoption ADOPTION. Childless professional woman with lots of love and security, seeks to adopt white newborn. Attorney involved. Medical/Legal expenses only. Call Patricia 1-800-592-1995. Auto 1989 Honda Civic Si - 73,000 miles. Perfect condition. Call Steve at 693-4497. ‘86 Nissan Pick-up - 5 speed, A/C, stereo, $2,500 O.B.O. Call 846-4299. '86 Saab 900 Turbo - 2 door, 5 speed, looks great, needs engine work. Make offer. 764-2952. Computers GRADUATION SALE: Complete Computer System - 486 SLC/ 50MHz, 200 Meg HD, 2 Meg RAM, TVGA Monitor, Printer Card, Game Stick, Internal Fax/ Modem. Only $875. Call 846-8126. Macs & Printers for sale/lease from $30/mo. Software, repairs, RAM/HD upgrades. MacResource, 775-7703. DJ Music MOBILE DJ. Experienced. Weddings, Parties. Reasonable rates. Will travel. Call The Party Block at 693-6294. Employment Opportunity ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT - Students Needed! Fishing Industry. Earn up to $3,00- $6,000+/mo. Room & Board! Transportation! Male or Female. No experience necessary. Call (206) 545- 4155 ext. A58556. CRUISE SHIPS HIRING - Travel the world while earn ing an excellent income in the Cruise Ship & Land-Tour Industry. Seasonal & full-time employment available. No experience necessary. For info., call 1-206-634- 0468 ext. C58557. INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT - Earn up to $25- $45/hr. teaching basic conversational English in Japan, Taiwan, or S. Korea. No teaching background or Asian languages required. For info., call (206) 632-1146 ext. J58554. For Sale Kenwood 7 Disc Changer & Receiver with speakers, headphones & cartridge - $400 negotiable; 19 inch color TV with mobile stand - $30. Call Rod at 764- 6017. 5 Disc CD Player. Brand new, never played. Won in a contest. Fully programmable. Retails at $230. Only $169! Call 764-9196. Used 3 ft. refrigerator - $60; 11 inch color TV, cable ready - $20 negotiable. Both In great condition. Call Rod at 764-6017, 1600 Honda NSStTSpdrtEfke. Must sell. Priced low to move! Only $5501 Call 623-6111. T§58 Jet Ski 550- Limited . "Custom painted. Excellent condition! Must Sell! 823-6111. MUST SELL! ~Sega Genesis and Sega CD, plus two brand new controllers and ten games. $270 flexible. Call 268-8230. 16.5 Trek 800, silver/ indigo fade, $240, ridden four times. Perfect condition. Purple Trek Helmet Included, never used. Lisa 693-6916. Services Near Treehouse Apartments. 2bdrm-1 1/2bth fourplex, $600/mo. 823-8153, or after 5pm 774-4090. 2bdrm-2bth fourplex, $515/mo., shuttle stop, W/D con nections. Pets OK. 1104 Autumn Circle. 693-9959. 2bdrm-1bth, pool, laundry mat, patio/balcony, water & sewer paid, $475/mo. Monterrey Apartments. 268- 0840. Summer Leases Available. WOODED, 4 blocks from campus, large 2bdrm-1bth studio apartment (approximately 930 sq.ft.). Ceiling fan, gas & electric, patio, $495/mo. + bills. No HUD! No Pets! 693-8534. Lost & Found REWARD! Lost: Male Golden Retriever in Southwood Valley Area. 693-4340 or 776-0169. Miscellaneous ID KITS - Make your own! For amusement purposes only! For more information, send SASE to: P.O. Box 10312, College Station, TX 77842-0312. Need Money For College? Financial assistance avail able. For more information, send SASE to: P.O. Box 10312, College Station, TX 77842-0312. ATTENTION All Studentsll Need scholarships from major corporations? Call 1-800-AID-2-HELP. FREE FINANCIAL AID! Over $6 Billion in private sec tor grants & scholarships is now available. All students are eligible regardless of grades, income, or parent's income. Let us help. Call Student Financial Services: 1-800-263-6495 ext. F58554. Personal Call Your Date Now!!! 1-900-988-8700 ext. 4513. $2.99/min., must be 18 yrs. Procall Co. (602) 954- 7420. MEET YOUR MATCH! 1-900-884-7800 ext. 2740. $2.99/min., must be 18yrs. Procall Co. (602) 954- 7420. Call the Sports/Entertainment Line Today! Sports Fun!!! Scores, Point Spreads and much more!!! 1-900- 526-6000 Ext. 5437. $2.99/min and 18+. Procall Co. (602) 954-7420. DIRTY, LIVE, NASTY TALK. Hot, Steamy & Erotic. 1- 900-435-4SEX (4739). $2.50-$3.99/min., instant cred it, 18+. Pets Rottweiler/Shepherd - female, protective, shots & wormed, black/tan, 55 lbs. Large cage & automatic feeder included. $100. 778-5335, ask for Marcus. MINIATURE REVEILLE. Small adult male Sheltie look- ing for an Aggie home. 774-0110. ADOPT - Dogs, Cats, Puppies & Kittens. Brazos Animal Shelter. 775-5755. Roommates Female roommate needed. 2bdrm-1 1/2bth with tan ning beds, gym, game room, pool, FREE bus pass, FREE night pass and FREE 1st month rent. Call Amy 693-9494. Roommate needed starting in the fall, to share 2bdrm- 1 1/2bth duplex In Bryan. Pets OK. 778-2388. Roommate Needed ASAP! $ 183.33/mo. + 1/3 bills. Duplex with own room & 1 1/2 baths. 693-5143, 846- 6474. 1 or 2 female roommates needed. Private furnished rooms, private bath, Emerald Forest family. $475/mo. Includes food, utilities & W/D. Prefer education major. 696-1176. Female roommate needed ASAP! 2bdrm-1 1/2btfi apartment, Fall '96 (yr. +), bus route, $262.50/mo. (pro- lease July). 764-6778. Roommate Needed Immediately!] Own room, $230/mo. + 1/2 bills. Call 693-9689. Roommate Needed Immediately! 2bdrm-1bth apart ment, $ 186.25/mo. + bills, close to campus. (713) 781- 9576. AUSTIN: Aggie needs roommate, 4bdrm-2bth house, 08/15/95, 5340/mo. 693-1851, (512) 459-7849. Typing AAA Defensive Driving. Lot-of-fun, Laugh-a-lotll Ticket Strong Office Services. Typing, Presentations & dismissal , insurance discount. M-Tu (6pm-9pm), Tu Graphics. Laser Printer Out-put. Fast Service. 694- (8:30am-3pm), Tu-W (8:30am-11:30am), W-Th (6pm- 2120. 9pm), Fri (6pm-8pm) & Sat (10am-2:30pm), Sat (8am- Graduate Student with Bachelor's in English. Editing/ 2:30pm), Sun (12pm-6pm). Next to Black Eyed Pea. Typing. Reasonable Rates. Call Colleen 862-1685. Walk-Ins welcome. $20 w/ad = $5 off. 111 Unlv. Dr, Ste. 217, 846-6117. S Volunteers with a history of recurrent herpes labi- alis (fever blisters) need ed to participate in a research study using an investigational topical preparation. Eligible vol unteers may receive up to $150. Call NOW for infor mation. G&S Studies, Inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 ATHLETE’S FOOT STUDY PATIENT VOLUNTEERS NEEDED FOR RESEARCH STUDY OF NEW INVESTIGATIONAL MEDICINE FOR ATHLETE S FOOT * Free physical exam, treatments, study medications and lab tests available for qualified partici pants * Patient stipend available for qualified participants * Ages 12 years and above * No topical (prescription or over- the-counter) treatment in the last 2 weeks For Details, call: G&S Studies, Inc. 846-5933 Research Associate/ Engineer with background in Chemistry, Chemical Engineering, or related fields needed to work on a SBIR Grant in the area of Energy Conservation using fuel cells. Mechanical aptitude an advantage. Send resume: BCS Technology, Inc., 4001 E. 29th St„ Suite 170F, Bryan, TX 77802. Position available for part-time Receptionist/ Secretary. Mac experience a plus. Flexible hours. Call Joy Caldwell, Lynntech, Inc. (409)693-0017. EOE. BABYSITTER Position Available. Must love children, be dependable & energetic. Early childhood education major preferred. Part-time, 20-30 hrs/wk. Foreign stu dents or student wives also considered. 774-0040 or 776-1972. Highly motivated sheetrock/painter helpers. No expe rience necessary. Will work with schedule. 775-7126. Laboratory dishwasher needed. Part-time, 20 hrs/week, Mon.-Fri. Off campus. Call 690-2280. Blackjack Dealer. Will train. Call 778-0167 12-5pm, Mon.-Fri. Leave message. FREE RENT, utilities & board for female students. Requires 7-10hrs/week of work. Call 694-1376. Part-time cleaning. Busy Doctor’s Office/Home. Apply at 2005 S. Tex. Ave., Bryan. Telemarketers wanted promoting the circus. Work evenings that fit your schedule, 6pm-9pm, Mon.-Fri. No weekends. $5.00/hr. 846-8818. Cashier needed for convenience store. Apply in per son at Broach Oil Co., 1700 Kyle, Suite 200, CS. Bookkeeper Needed. Flexible hours. Piper Chevron, comer of University & Texas. Apply within. Healthy people needed to help save lives. Approx. 3hrs./wk. at your convenience. $ 130/mo. Donating plasma is so easy! Call 846-8855 for more info. Part-time help needed at Villa Maria Chevron. Experience preferred. Villa Maria at 29th, Bryan. 776- 1261. The Houston Chronicle is taking applications for imme diate route openings. Pay is based on per paper rate & gas allowance is provided. The route requires work ing early morning hours 7 days a week & earns $600- $900 per month. If Interested, call James at 693-7815 or Julian at 693-2323 between 8am-3pm for an appointment. Healthy males wanted as semen donors. Help infertile couples. Confidentiality ensured. Ethnic diversity desirable. Ages 18-35, excellent compensation. Contact Fairfax Cryobank, 1121 Briarcrest Suite #101, (409) 776-4453. Wanted Wanted: 100 students, Lose 8-100 lbs. New metabo lism breakthrough. I lost 15 lbs. In 3 weeks. R.N, Assisted. Guaranteed Results. $35 Cost. 1-800-579- 1634. Tutors Personal English Tutor Needed. Graduate Foreign Student. Reasonable Rate. Call J 693-3137. The Battalion Classified Advertising • Easy • Affordable • Effective For information, call Sandi 845-0569 G. Rollie: Continued from Page 2 When the coliseum was opened in May,1954, it was the largest building on the A&M campus. Today, it could barely seat oneTifth of A&M’s student body. Through the years, the Aggies have pulled off some of their most shocking upsets at G. Rol lie, most recently an 85-84 upset of eventual SWC champion UT in January of 1994. In 1993, A&M stunned perennial power house UNLV 68-62 in front of a near-sellout crowd. The Texas A&M women’s bas ketball team has enjoyed great success at home as well. They have called G. Rollie White home for the last 20 years, and have compiled a 160-80 record, a .667 winning percentage there. G. Rollie White has been home to two huge A&M upsets in the past two years, both at the ex pense of the highly-ranked Texas Tech Lady Red Raiders. On Feb. 8, the unranked Lady Aggies defeated Tech 76-73 with the help of 2,713 fans. Lady Red Raider Head Coach Marsha Sharp, two-time SWC Coach of the Year, attributed much of the upset to the environment. “Their crowd did a great job, they were really into the game,” Sharp said. “G. Rollie White got us again.” The days of A&M basketball Lady Ags clean up at home G. Rollie White Coliseum's Top 5 Moments 1. Peb. 15, 1975; Texas A&M 62, Arkansas 60. A crowd nW packs G. Rollie White while 1,700 more watch a closed-cira showing at Rudder Auditorium. 2, Ian. 12, 1994: Texas A&M 85, Texas 84. In the South we! Conference opener for both schools, A&M comes back from! points down with eight minutes to go to upset the eventu; SWC champion Longhorns. 3. Feb. 15, 1995: Texas A&M 78, Texas Tech 73. For the seconc consecutive year, the Lady Aggies upset the fourth-ranked Lad Red Raiders as Bambi Ferguson blocks a potential game-tyir'! three-pointer with 16 seconds left. 4. Feb. 10. 1973: Texas A&M 108, Arkansas 82. A&M's Rand; Knowles sets a still-standing Aggie record by scoring 42 p$int< against the Razorbacks. 5. Dec. 2, 1954: Houston 85, Texas A&M 63. In the first ganit ever at G. Rollie White, Don Bolderbuck sets an A&M recoid with 26 rebounds. at G.Rollie White will end after the 1996-97 season when the new Special Events Center is scheduled to open. The $33.4 million center will seat an esti mated 12,500, and will be built on A&M’s West Campus. When G. Rollie White was built in the early 1950s, it cost $1.8 million The new center will givif A&M the second-largest basket; ball arena of the four SffCf schools that will join the Bigli in 1996. Only the Erwin Centfl- is larger, with a capacityoL 16,042. Bulls fined $ 100,000 Lady Longhorn chooses NEW YORK (AP) — The NBA fined the Chica go Bulls $100,000 Wednesday for allowing Michael Jordan to wear No. 23 during the playoffs instead of No. 45. The fined was assessed by Rod Thorn, the league’s vice president of basketball operations. For Game 2 of the Eastern Conference semifi nals against the Orlando Magic, Jordan switched back to the No. 23 jersey he wore during nine sea sons with the Bulls. When Jordan returned to the NBA after a brief retirement, he chose No. 45, which he wore for 17 regular-season games and the first round of the playoffs. After Jordan’s surprise switch, the league fined the Bulls $25,000 for failing to notify the league of the number change. At the time, the league said more fines would be levied if Chicago continued to allow Jordan to play as No. 23. Saying he felt more comfortable in his old num ber, Jordan stuck with No. 23 through the rest of the playoffs. The Bulls were eliminated by Orlan do in six games. The $100,000 fine includes $25,000 for each ad ditional game in which Jordan wore No. 23. studies over basketball AUSTIN (AP) — Texas point guard Track Swayden, a freshman who started nine games last season for the Lady Longhorns, has quit the team to dedicate more time to her schoolwork. “It was a very tough decision,” Swayden,f premed major from Amarillo, told the Austin American-Statesman in Wednesday editions. “I felt I couldn’t give the commitment to basketball because I needed to give it to my schoolwork.” Swayden, 5-foot-7, stepped up last season when Nekeshia Henderson went out with injuries. Swayden averaged 18.7 minutes per game, 3.81 points and two assists for the 12-16 Longhorns She had a season-high 10 points and six rebounds at Texas A&M and a season-best six assists against Florida. “This was not an easy decision because basket ball’s been part of her life a long time,” said Texas coach Jody Conradt. Swayden’s departure leaves Texas with just one veteran point guard entering the 1995-96 season. SWIFT: Penguins OK without Mario Continued from Page 2 60-70 games and get my back in shape, I can be where I was a couple of years ago.” Those were the same senti ments echoed over and over by countless NBA players when Jordan came back. They were all wrong. Charles Barkley, the NBA’s resident chatterbox, even told Bob Costas during halftime of a NBA Finals game that Jordan could probably never again reach the plateau he set for himself two years before. It’s time for a reality check, oh Super One. After the Bulls’ season end ed, Jordan said his biggest mis take was underestimating the identity the Bulls had assumed in his absence. He expected everything to return to prere tirement form, but the 1995 Bulls didn’t mesh with Jordan’s 1993 mindset. Lemieux returns to a team that arguably doesn’t need him. The Penguins have a front-line armory stocked with center Ron Francis and former All-Stars Luc Robitaille and Kevin Stevens at left wing. The Pen guins also discovered a new su perstar in Jaromir Jagr, who filled the void of Lemieux’s de parture. “He likes to carry the puck, doesn’t he?” Lemieux said of Jagr. Yes, Mario, he does like to carry the puck. In fact, he carried it straight to his first NHL scoring title. Throw' ing Lemieux back into the mix may do nothing but clutter the ice and possibly start some battles over playing time. Pittsburgh is not a strug gling team,like the Bulls were when Jordan returned. This year, the Penguins advanced to the second round of the NHL playoffs before losing to ; the eventual-Eastern Confer- i ence Champion New Jersey Devils. The Penguins need to tweak and tune, not overhaul, I- their offensive engine. So, Mario, what’s the prog- | nosis for your return to hockey? £ The precedent doesn’t bode well, and neither does the fu ture of your team.