Page 4 • The Battalion Monday • July 10,1995 Mike Hill’s eagle equals one-stroke win □ He led after every round in winning the Kroger Senior Classic. MASON, Ohio (AP) — Mike Hill used an eagle on the par-5 ninth hole to offset two bogeys on the backside for a one-stroke victory Sunday in the Kroger Se nior Classic. Hill, who led after every round, shot a 5-under-par 66 for a 17-under 196 total, two better than Gibby Gilbert’s tourna ment-record total in 1992. Isao Aoki was second and Graham Marsh was another stroke back in third, as they had been after Saturday’s sec ond round. Aoki and Marsh shot 65s. The victory was worth $135,000 for Hill, who has made a career on the 6,628- yard Grizzly Course at The Golf Center at Kings Island. He got the last of his three PGA Tour victories on the course, winning the Ohio Kings Island Open in 1977. Hill’s opening-round 64 imme diately made him the one to beat, although perfect weather and a well-manicured course produced a bevy of low scores. After two rounds, 55 of the 78 players were under par. But Hill’s second-round 66 left little room for anybody to make a run, even though Marsh had a tour nament-record 63 on Saturday. Hill’s only other victory this year was in the Legends of Golf two-man tournament with Lee Trevino, and he came into the Kroger ranked 27th on the Se nior PGA Tour money list. Sunday’s check boosted his winnings for the year to nearly $340,000. Rocky Thompson had the best score of the day, a 7-under 64 to finish at 12-under, along with J.C. Snead. Ed Sneed was anoth er stroke back. The Battalion Classified Ads Phone: 845-0569/ Fox 845-2678 Office: Room 015 (bosemenf) Reed McDonald Building < o a. co ‘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 Adoption For Sale Help Wanted 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. 1989 Honda Civic SI sporty 2-door hatchback, 5- speed, 73.000 mi. Perfect condition. 693-4497, Steve. '82 Chevy Pick-up, good condition. 58,000 miles, $3,000. Call John 693-5846. 1985 Plymouth Horizon. A/C, 5 speed, runs great! Very clean. $1,800/neg. Call (409) 693-9831. '86 Nissan Pick-up - 5 speed, A/C, stereo, $2,500 O.B.O. Call 846-4299. '87 RX7 Turbo - stereo, pwr. sunroof, pwr. win., pwr. mir., 5 speed. Good condition. $4,950. 696-2166. ‘86 Pontiac Piero - black, leather, CD & more. $2,750. Call 696-2166. '86 Saab 900 Turbo - 2 door, 5 speed, looks great, needs engine work. Make offer. 764-2952. Computers Summer Student Special - New Macintosh 575’s 4/250 - $799, 5/160/CD - $899, 8/160/CD - $999, 8/250/CD - $1,049. Also refurbished Performa 475's 4/160 w/ 14” monitor - $799, Apple 15" monitor - $319. MacResource Computers 775-7703. FREE CD-ROM Sampler, http://www.pht.com/ Huge WWW and FTP site with games, apps, utils, links. Pacific HiTech 1-800-765-8369. 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 ARRLY NOW!! Part-time/ Full-time In Housewares And Sporting Goods $9.00 To Start Call 691-2261 Quasar V8SC Camcorder. Works perfect, extra tapes, hand straps & all cords. $325 O.B.O. Call Eron 764- 4131 Raleygh Olimpian 14-spd. roadbike. Excellent condi tion. 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Eligible vol unteers may receive up to $150. Call NOW for infor mation. G&S Studies, Inc. (close to campus) 846-5933 Part-time help needed at Villa Maria Chevron. Experience preferred. Villa Maria at 29th, Bryan. 776- 1261. 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. Taxi & Courier drivers needed. Full & part-time posl- tions. 822-9385. 9-4, Mon.-Fri. 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 AIDI 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 AKC Siberian Husky Puppies. Absolutely gorgeous. Four white feet, perfect batman masks, beautiful eyes, sweet loving disposition, $195. 694-2122. ADOPT - Dogs, Cats, Puppies & Kittens. Brazos Animal Shelter. 775-5755. Real Estate 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 eam- 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 Rent o z PLANTATION OAKS N—4 > W Eff., 1, & 2 Bdrms, W CQ Huge Closets, Spacious Floorplans, Computer C/3 N—4 and Study Center o z http://www.poapts.com w 693-1110 C/3 E.O.H. Finders Keepers Apartments, Duplexes, Houses, 4- Plexes 696-home Aug. 15th Pre-lease C.Sta. 2/1 duplex, lawn care, W/D conn., gas & elec. $495/mo. Select Properties 696-3107 Large 1bdrm/1ba over looking pool at the Enclave. W/D, $500/mo. Available Aug. 15th 693-9675 Close to campus 2-11/2-1, central air, W/D, fenced. $600/mo. 696-5337 Spacious 2bdrm/11/2 ba. W/D, shuttle, yard, $525/mo. Manuel Drive Flourplexes 693-0551, 764-8051 Best location- 2 blocks from A&M on North side. 2bdrm/1ba fourplex available NOW. No pets. $350/mo. 696-7266 Apartment available For Summer Only! 2bdrm-1bth, $ 186.25/mo. + bills. Call (713) 781-9576. WILLOWICK APARTMENTS - AUGUST RENT FREEH Sign by July 15th. Great rates on our spacious efficiency, 1 & 2 bdrm apartments. Features plush car pet, wall-paper, ceiling fans, walk-in closets, most utili ties paid. Great community with lots of amenities. Pre leasing now. Only a few left. NOW OPEN 8AM-8PM MON.-FRI., 10AM-5PM SATURDAY & 1PM-4PM SUNDAY. 693-1325. Duplex- Wolfpen Creek area. 3bdrm-2bth brand new. _ Beautiful all brick, facing amphitheater. Ready for fall 'term. $900/mo. for 12 mos. All amenities including pool, hot tub, lawn care and sprinkler. (512) 327-1970 (Jay). • For rent in August. Sutters Mill 2bdrm-2 1/2bth, W/D, 1 yr. lease, $850/mo. 764-9570. 1bdrm-1bth, W/D, microwave, dishwasher. New com plex, security gates. 1800 Holleman Drive. Available Aug. 15th. $560/mo. 696-6806. Aggie Owned & Managed! Large 2 bedroom, great location, shuttle, microwave, intrusion alarm, laundry & swimming - $459/mo. College Court 823-7039, Sonnenblick 691-2062. Save $200 1995-96 Forum lease. Call Travis (806) 585-6512 after 3:00pm. 2bdrm-2bth fourplex, $515/mo., shuttle stop, W/D con nections. Pets OK. 1104 Autumn Circle. 693-9959. 2bdrm-1 1/2bth fourplex, fireplace, W/D connections, shuttle, $550/mo. 404 Fall Circle. 693-9959. 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. GOV’T FORECLOSED Homes for pennies on $1. Delinquent Tax Repo s, REO's. Your Area. Toll Free 1- 800-898-9778 Ext. H-1652 for current listings. STUDY Roommates 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 COLOR-BLIND PERSONS needed for study of detecting and naming colors of lights in daytime and nighttime. Research to be conducted at Riverside Campus, State Route 21, West of Bryan. You must have your own trans portation to Riverside. Color screening will occur in Suite 207, Bldg. D, 707 Texas Ave. Compensation will be $25 upon completion of study. Call Dr. Greene at 845-9882 for more information and/or schedule color vision screening. OPTOMETRIC ASSISTANT 2 Positions: Mon.-Fri., 8:45 am-1:00pm Typing required. No experience necessary. Please call 846-0377 for an interview. COOL TIMES- Study while you work. Post Oak Mall $5/hr. Call Cheryl 774-0211 Free rent, utilities & board for female students. Requires 7-10hrs/wk of work. Call 846-3376 Full-time warehouse help needed. $6/per hour. 779-7586, 779-3270 Local business needs motivated Aggie for warehouse stock ing & delivery position. Must be available 25-40 hrs/wk. M-F. Call 779-7042 Prestigious teaching position, we train, must have had Tx.D.L. 5 yrs. & college experi ence, work evenings & Saturdays. No DWI's, Pi's, etc. 694-2122. 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. 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. Female graduate student looking for roommate. 884 sq. ft. apartment. Sonnanblick. $239/mo, 1/2 utilities, $87.50 deposit. Unfurnished, shuttle. Available Aug. 7th. (903)451-9583 Fall, 2/11/2. Bus route, quiet. $238/mo.,1/2 utilities. Prefer grad. Eduardo 845-6258, 696-9634 Female roommate needed. Duplex on Univ. Oaks. Own bdrm/ba. Shuttle, W/D available. $300/mo + utilities. Leah 691-5707 Graduating Senior needs housing for Fall. $275/mo or less . Art 696-0213 IMMEDIATELY!! Male Christian, private room, share bath, huge house, $250/mo. + 1/3 bills. Call anytime 776-8144. Female roommate needed!! $247.50/mo. rent, includes many features. Call Amy at (409) 849-9160. Lease begins August 19th. Roommate Needed ASAP! $183.33/mo. + 1/3 bills. Duplex with own room & 1 1/2 baths. 693-5143, 846- 6474, AUSTIN: Aggie needs roommate, 4bdrm-2bth house, 08/15/95, $340/mo. 693-1851, (512) 459-7849. Services GOVERNMENT TUTOR College Instructor with refer ences 696-2137 AAA Texas Defensive Driving & Driver’s Training. Lot- of-fun, Laugh-a-lotl! Ticket dismissal , insurance dis count. M-Tu (6pm-9pm), Tu (8:30am-3pm), Tu-W (8:30am-11:30am), W-Th (6pm-9pm), Fri (6pm-8pm) & Sat (10am-2:30pm), Sat (8am-2:30pm), Sun (12pm- 6:30pm). Next to Black Eyed Pea. Walk-Ins welcome. $20 w/ad = $5 off. 111 Univ. Dr., Ste. 217, 846-6117, Typing Double D Enterprises Editing, Tutoring, & Typing Services. Over 35 yrs. experience in the field. For information on rates & services, Call: 823-8256 Strong Office Services. Typing, Presentations & Graphics. Laser Printer Out-put. Fast Service. 694- 2120. Wanted COMIC BOOKS. 1 or 10,000. John S. (409) 776-7000 ext. 30 days, (409) 776-0814 nights, or leave message. 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. Attorney WE DEFEND M.I.P. CHARGES JOHN T. QUINN ATTORNEY (409) 774-8924 (800) 927-3115 Not certified as a specialist In any area. vJ WE DEFEND TRAFFIC TICKETS JOHN T. QUINN ATTORNEY (409) 774-8924 (800) 927-3115 Not certified as a specialist In any area. Stew Milne, The Battauo' TAKING THE PLUNGE Jeremy Anderson, a 20-year old Blinn student and College Station native, takes the plunge into the Wofford Cain swimming pool Sunday afternoon. Topless bar ads cause All-Star stinl □ Arlington officials don't want aeri al banners with the ads flying over The Ballpark during Tuesday's game. ARLINGTON (AP) — It all comes down to ex posure. Exposure is all nude clubs say they seek with banners towed by airplanes over The Ballpark at Arlington during baseball games. And the exposure offered by the strippers at the clubs has gotten under the skin of Arlington offi cials who want the aerial banners stopped. The banners, which stream across the sky during Texas Rangers’ home games, inform fans about movies, restaurants, area bars and naked dancers. “Kids will see worse on cable TV,” says Roger Ward, president and owner of Skyways Advertis ing, whose planes fly about half of the banners. “We have no pictures, we have no obscenities. The worst word we have up there is ‘topless.’” But that’s enough for the Rangers, the city of Arlington and U.S. Rep. Joe Barton. Barton, a conservative Republican from nearby Ennis, has come up with a stadium statuette that he introduced to the congressional Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. His bill would require all planes to fly no lower than 2,000 feet above sea level and no closer Ita 2,000 feet of the ballpark during any publiceveo/ identified by the city. That’s about 500 feet higher than the current regulation, which requires that aircraft remainat least 1,000 feet above the highest obstacle. Emei gency aircraft would be exempt. Barton’s bill, similar to a comparable bill into duced last year that didn’t get out of committee was introduced after Arlington officials com plained to the congressman’s office. If the legislation passes this session, it would!* the first of its kind, says Greg Juro, an air traff specialist with the Federal Aviation Administra tion in Fort Worth. Advertisers aren’t too concerned about the bill “Barton’s bill is never going to pass. He’s jus wasting taxpayers money,” Ward said. “There del nitely would be a lawsuit if we get banned.” But Barton won a partial victory last weet when the FAA imposed a temporary flight restrii tion for Monday and Tuesday — the day precedir- and the day of the 66th Annual All-Star Game an' festivities at the Ballpark. Arlington Mayor Richard Greene said he's f* up with the banners. Jacques Villenueve breezes to win in Texaco-Havoline 200 □ The 24-year-old Ca nadian led on all but three of the 50 laps. ELKHART LAKE, Wis. (AP) — Jacques Villeneuve went vir tually unchallenged Sunday en route to his second straight Texaco-Havoline 200 victory at Road America. Villeneuve, a 24-year-old Ca nadian, led all but three of the 50 laps on the four-mile, 14-tum road circuit in earning his se ries-leading third victory of the season and the fourth of his Indy-car career. The hard-driving youngster, whose points for winning the pole moved him out of a tie for the PPG Cup lead with Robby Gordon, built that margin to 22 points, 103-81, over Gordon after the 10th of 17 races. Gordon finished out of the points in 26th with a broken transmission after having to start in his backup car because of electrical problems in the car he qualified. “My car was very strong, es pecially after a few laps when the fuel went down,” Villeneuve said. “I never had any problem.” The sixth caution flag of the incident-filled race came out on lap 46 when Brazilian rookie Gil de Ferran went off-course and had to have his car removed from a tire barrier. That gave Paul Tracy, the 1993 Elkhart winner, one last shot at Villeneuve in a final two- lap, green-flag sprint. But the son of the late Formula One star Gilles Villeneuve was up to the challenge, beating Tracy to the line by 0.97-seconds — about four car-lengths. Tracy, who broke his left foot in a go-kart accident last week, had problems getting restarted after both of his pit stops, stalling the engine as he tried to get going after the first one. “My foot’s really sore,” Tracy said. “It swelled up a lot during the race. I had a hard time get ting out of the pits, but this feels like a win because we had to struggle so much all week.” Jimmy Vasser, who was awarded his first Indy-car victo ry two weeks ago at Portland, Ore., after A1 Unser Jr. was dis qualified for a technical violation on his car, finished third, fol lowed by Brazilian rookie Andre Ribeiro — his best career finish — and three-time series champi on Bobby Rahal. Michael Andretti and Unser were knocked out of the race on the third lap when Unser, com ing off the devastating disquali fication with a lot of determina tion, was overtaking Andretti and the two banged wheels. Unser, trying to sweep past Andretti into fourth place, moved to the inside of the track and began to pull alongside at about 170 mph. Andretti, appar ently not seeing Unser, moved to his right. Swift Continued from Page 3 Here’s a revolutionary thought: McDermott should spend less time worrying about how his stadium fits into a losing future and work harder to ensure his team doesn’t stop winning. If he does his job, the citizens of San Antonio will continued make the Alamodome finan cially sound. This situation an example of what is so appalling about professional sports today: They are geared toward the battle for big bucks, and the first casualty is usually a city’s loyalty. In times of turmoil, sports teams often are the only thing citizens can rally around. They unite citizens and give them a break from the hardships of life. Sports can be a security blanket, and McDermott has threat ened to yank that blanket away, leaving San Antonio out in the cold. A classy team would have waited for the city to recover from its coming economic quagmire. An even classier one would have even done something drastic, like cut ticket prices to help the citi zens get through a tough time McDermott did neither. Instead he showed that the Spurs, while putting a first- class team on the court, have a low-class front office.