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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 5, 1996)
Page 8 • The Battalion Tuesday • March 5,1996 Gretzky likely to miss time after injury □ The newest member of the Blues was sustained a concussion after being elbowed in the head. ST. LOUIS (AP) — Wayne Gretzky may be in street clothes Tuesday night for his first home appearance with the St. Louis Blues, but it’s likely just a temporary set back for the team that labored for months to acquire him. Gretzky sustained a concussion in Sun day’s game at Edmonton, and the Blues said a decision on his availability will be made after he skates with the team Tues day morning. But general manager and coach Mike Keenan said Gretzky definitely will be ready to play Thursday night against Calgary. Soon after the trade for the superstar was announced last Tues day, the Blues just about sold out the remaining tickets for its last nine regular-season home games. “It’s like the return of Michael Jordan to Chica- s go,” Keenan said. Keenan said Gretzky was to be evaluated by a specialist later in the day. “I talked to him this morning and he says he feels pretty well,” Keenan said. “He’s got a pretty huge headache, but other than that to this point he’s progress ing pretty well.” Gretzky said Sunday that he wanted to play, but Keenan said it will be up to the doctors. “This is a neurological call, not a coach’s call,” Keenan said. Gretzky was just about the only player absent at an optional practice Monday. His teammates appeared confident he’d be able to play Tuesday. “I’m sure he’ll be back,” enforcer Tony Twist said. Gretzky was injured when Edmonton’s Kelly Buchberger elbowed him in the head at 6:22 of the second period of St. Louis’ 4-3 victory. He was motionless for several minutes and had to be helped from the ice. “It makes you sick,” Keenan said. The Battalion Classified To place a classified ad: Phone: 845-0569 / Fax: 845-2678 Office: Room 015 (basement) Reed McDonald Building Business Hours 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monday through Friday Insertion deadline: 1 p.m. prior business day <c o LU (ClLw </> ‘AGGIE’ Private Party Want Ads $10 for 20 words running 5 days, if your merchandise is priced $1,000 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. ROOMMATE Male roommate needed. University Commons $250 down, $256/mo. (214)234-0320, 2 bdrm/1 ba. apartment, shuttle. 1st mo. rent free. Don 693-5028, Ken 693-7906. Roommafe needed 2 bdrm72 ba Arbor Square apart ments $180 + 1/2 bills, own room/ba. Call 764-8468 Female roommate needed ASAP. University Com mons, $250/mo own room. 693-2951 EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY Interested in Real Estate? Would you like to get your Real Estate License? Contact WTA Management 260- 9611 Cruise Ships Now Hiring - Earn up to $2006 + month working on Cruise Ships or Land-tour companies. World travel. Seasonal & full-time employment avail able. No experience necessary. For more information call 1-206-634-0468 ext. C58552 Premiere Brother - Sister Camps In Massachusetts. Counselor positions for talented & energetic students as Program Specialists in all Team Sports, especially Baseball, Basketball, Roller Hockey, Gymnastics, Field Hockey, Soccer, Volleyball; 30 Tennis openings; also Golf, Archery, Riflery, Pioneering/Overnight camping, Ropes & Rock climbing, Weights/Fitness & Cycling; other openings include Performing Arts, Fine Arts, Fig ure skating, Newspaper, Photography, Yearbook, Radio Station, Cooking, Sewing, & Rocketry; All Water front/Pool Activities (Swimming, Skiing, Sailing, Wind- serfing, Canoeing/Kayaking). Top salaries, room, board & travel. June 18th - August 17th. Inquire: MAH-KEE-NAC (boys): 1-800-753-9118 DANBEE (girls): 1-800-392-3752 ALASKA EMPLOYMENT - Fishing Industry. Earn up to $3,000-$6,000+ per month. Room & Board! Trans portation! Male/Female - No experience necessary! (206)971-3510 ext.A58552 NATIONAL PARKS HIRING - Positions are now avail able at National Parks, Forests & Wildlife Preserves. Excellent benefits + bonuses! Call: 1-206-971-3620 ext.N58553 HOUSTON Summer Jobsl Miller Swim Academy is now hiring swimming instructors & swim team coaches for this summer! Free training is provided. Excellent pay. Thirty locations throughout Houston. Swim team or teaching experience needed. 1-713-777-7946 FOR RENT THE HORIZON Housing for students, faculty & visi tors to campus. 'Furnished rooms w/all bills paid "Reasonable rates *Free shuttle to and from Texas A&M "Optional meals plans "Short term housing available "Various amenities Call 779-7091 Today! May & August pre-leases - luxury 2 bdrm/1 1/2 ba., W/D incl., some fenced backyards, shuttle. Manuel Dr. 4-plexes, College Station. 693-0551, 764-8051. Now pre-leasing for May & Aug. Hickory Park Duplex es. (off S.W. Pkwy.). 2-2’s & 3-2's, W/D conn., shuttle, and much more. $625-$765. 696-1138. 1 bdrm apartment. No deposit, $360/mo. Colony Apartments. Available April 1st. Bob 694-2987. 2 bdrm/1 ba pool, patio-balcony, laundromat, water/sewer paid. $475/mo Monterrey Apts. 268-0840 Fall prelease special. 2 Bdrm/1 ba apartment $345/mo. or try our dorm plan - own bdrm., furnished, all bills paid $245/mo. Casa Blanca Apartments 846- 1413 Available now 1/1 efficiency, fenced patio, stackable W/D conn., built-ins, pool, shuttle, some bills paid. 846- 4409 Bryan 2/1 & 2/1 1/2 Duplexes, fenced yards, W/D conn., some bills paid. 846-4409 Available now, College Station, 2/1 1/2 spacious 4-plex W/D included, shuttle, some bills paid. 846-4409 1 and 2 Bdrm apartment available now. Free gas and cable. 822-0472 Summer Pre-leasing - C.S. duplexes, four-plexes, 2 bdrm,3 bdrm w/ W&D, $475-$675. Select Properties 696-3107 Sublease Efficiency! March-May $375/mo. No deposit. Willowick Apts. 696-0910 electric bill only. Roommate Problems? Recent graduate moving to Houston. Must sublease 1/2 of 2 bdrm/2ba C.S. apt. Shuttle bus rt. $175/mo. No dep. Avail. 3/1/96. Con tact Jennifer wk. 691-3367, hm. 696-5302 Southwood Valley - neg. lease terms, below cost 2 bdrm/2 ba., shuttle. Brian 823-7313 2 bd/2 bth, 2 pools, laundry mat, for summer sub-lease $470/mo. Timber Creek 846-6469 Furnished 1 bdrm apartments pre-leasing for summer S fall. $345/mo., on shuttle. 846-9196 1 bdrm house, 1 block from campus. $295/mo. Great house gd. location. 693-8724. Sublease cute 2 by 1. Walk to campus, gas, utilities. $375. 691-8304 Autumn Circle 3/2 & 2/2 duplexes preleasing for sum- mer & fall. 693-5695. 4 bdrm/1 ba house behind Taco Cabana W/D conn., central A/C heat. Lg. fenced yard. $750/mo. $500/Dep 690-6243/690-2490 _ _ Sublease 2 bdrm/1 ba. $330/mo Bryan. April-August. Ceiling fan & balcony. 846-1215 HELP WANTED ’ ■ ■ Spring Break Employment The Texas Transportation Institute is looking for students from the following cities to survey child safety seat use during Spring Break: Amarillo, Austin, Beaumont, Brownsville, Corpus Christi, Dallas, El Paso, Ft. Worth, Houston, Lubbock, San Antonio, Tyler, & Waco. $6/hr. plus gas. Call 845-2736, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. for interview. 70 Part-time Positions No Computer Background Required!!! Universal Computer Systems • 5.50/hr. • Convenient location • Opportunity to work with 100 Ags! • Flexible hours - 24 hrs./day, 6 days/wk. • Computer repair. Data Entry, Cleaning To apply, contact our Recruiting department at 1-800-883-3031 no later than 3/6/96. UCS hires . non-tobacco users only. EOE. NOW HIRING SUMMER STAFF Spend your summer with the sun & surf on Galveston Island working in the Southwest’s most respected seafood Restaurant. Earn great money while working flexible hours. Call (409) 762-9625 ext. 292 for details, or apply in person Tue., Wed. or Thur., from 4-6 p.m. 3800 Seawall Blvd., Galveston TX. Summer Camp Counselors, Administrative Staff, Nurs es & Lifeguards needed for Girt Scout resident camps near Athens, Texas & on Lake Texoma; for more infor- mation, call 1-800-442-2260 or (214)823-1342. EOE. Howdy Ags! Short on cash? Looking for a part-time job? Don't go there! Come here - To the Westgate Plasma Center, where you can earn $140 a month donating your life-saving plasma.. $80 in your first two weeks! Donating plasma is everything you could ask for in a part-time job: minimal time, good pay, no work required, tax-free cash! Don't delay, call today! 846- 8855 - Westgate Plasma Center, just two short blocks north of campus at 4223 Wellborn Rd., Bryan. $1,750 weekly possible mailing our circulars. For info call (202)393-7723 SPRING BREAK EMPLOYMENT - The Texas Trans portation Institute is looking for students from the fol lowing cities to survey child safety seat use during Spring Break: Amarillo, Austin, Beaumont, Brownsville, Corpus Christi, Dallas, El Paso, Ft. Worth, Houston, Lubbock, San Antonio, Tyler. & Waco. $6/hr. + gas. Call 845-2736, 8am-5pm for interview. Equity Real Estate needs leasing agents. Pt/Ft avail able, flexible schedule. 696-4464 COUNSELORS - INSTRUCTORS needed. 100 posi- tions! Coed sleep away camp. Pocono Mountains, northeastern Pennsylvania. Good salary/tips! (908)689-3339. FOR RENT ARBORS lAtni r- rtria /-rw-rix *•- ■ WOLF PEN CREEK The hottest apartment community in College Station will be open this summer! Pool, sand volleyball, weight room, computer room, recreation room w/ big screen TV and foosball. Every apartment has a microwave, washer & dryer, and local alarms. Rents starting at $590. Small pets ok. Call 696-2130 NOW! HELP WANTED Women 16 Years of Age and Older Are you experiencing the symptoms of a Vaginal Yeast Infection? You may be eligible to par ticipate in a medical research program if you are presently experiencing vagi nal itching, burning, irritation or discharge. AS A PARTICIPANT, YOU WILL RECEIVE: Physician visits and research medication AND Payment for your time and effort. Call for more information: J&S Studies, Inc. 846-5933 Part-time file clerk needed. Junior, Senior or Grad stu dent preferred. Flexible hours. Please apply in person @ 2706 Osier Blvd. Bryan. No phone calls please. $ Cruise Ships Hiring! Students Needed! $$$ + Free travel (Caribbean, Europe, Hawaii!) Seasonal/Perma nent. no experience necessary. Gde. (919)929-4398 ext.C1023 Alaska Student Jobs! Great $$$! Thousands of jobs available. Male/Female. Room/Board/Transportation often provided. Great adventure. Gde. (919)933-0188 ext. A1023 Great part-time income, flexible schedules around class. $8 to start, evening & weekend schedule avail able, scholarships & Internship available. Call 10-4pm 691-8959 China Garden Restaurant now hiring all positions. Lunch and dinner. 823-2818 Drummer wanted for young country band. No experi ence required. 764-6828 Ruben. Paintball Jobs-Ex(>erlenced judges & managers need ed for B-CS paintball field opening soon. If you are without experience but think you would like full contact golf (or deer hunting from the point of view of the deer) this may be a sport you can get into. Call 846-2174 and ask for Rowdy Earn $6.50/hr. during Spring Break doing research interviews in Waco. Must have own transportation. Call Lisa at 845-8800 for details. Kitchen & waitstaff needed, restaurant experience pre ferred, will train. Kaffee Klatsch. 108 No. Ave. 846- 4360 Part-time receptionisT needed for local manufacturer office. Bilingual Spanish/English required. Experience answering multi-line phone with computer application a plus. Potential of becoming a full-time opportunity. 846-7009 Cortez Pools is hiring managers, assistant managers, and lifeguards for the upcoming summer season. Call now to interview (713)356-1815. Certification required to start. COMPUTERS 486 DX2/66, SMB RAM, 720MB HD, 3.5" Floppy (2), 2X CD-ROM, 14.4 Fax/Modem, HP Deskjet 500C Print er, Software, $1200. Scott 696-7754. Macs & printers for sale/lease from $35/mo. Software, repairs, RAM/HD upgrades. MacResource 775-7703 Pentinum-100 System w/ 4Xmulti-media kit $1769 8> 486 systems $750 up. Byte Me Computers, The Soft ware & Hardware Exchange. 104 College Main at Northgate, 846-1763. $250 Samson 500, 286, w/ keyboard & monitor, good for word processing. 764-7363 Scanner rental $20/hr. 589-2944 486 SX 4 meg Ram, 640 KB w/ keyboard & mouse, MS DOS 6.0, Windows 3.1 $700. Call 764-9082 DJ MUSIC Party Block Mobile DJ - Professional, experienced disc jockey. Specializing In Aggie weddings, parties, anniversaries, any special occasion. Ask about our New Club Light Package! References available 693- 6294 STARZ Mobile Entertainment Professional sound/ light ing. Church/School Dances, Weddings, Parties. Any occasion 1-800-435-6065, 694-8981 Sound Power Professional DJ - Service Dances/Mix- ers/Weddings. Experienced 696-9754 FOR SALE Computer: Dell 386, 33 MHz, all inclusive & IBM ink jet printer. $450/o.b.o. Large travel pet kennel, $60. 847- 4382. Near new, clean, attractive 2/2 M/H set-up, Bryan $15.000 1-512-357-6636 collect. Motobecane Super Mirage French Touring bike with accessories, seldom used. $120 775-7506 Super NES, 9 games, $150 obo will sell games individ- ually also. Call for game titles. 847-5306 Peavey TNT 1000 Bass Combo $200. Westone Bass $50. Peavey Bandit 65 $150, HP48GX $150, TI85 $50. Call Scott 260-9010 Diamond engagement ring-solitaire 3/4 karat marquise $1,100. Must sell! 272-9400,694-7892 2 entertainment units 6X4 1/2 ft. dark wood w/ shelves & cabinets $55. 3X5 white unit w/ shelves $45. 694- 7690 Picnic tables & Adirondack chairs custom made from $45-$130. 696-6549. REAL ESTATE Country living 5 minutes to A&M, new 3 bdrm/2 bth brick home, 5.9 wooded fenced acres, stocked tank, 2- car garage, and much more. $155,000 for appt. call 268-1199 Location! Carter Creek B/CS. Price low! $39,900 Seel 2 bdrm/1 1/2 ba. Lee Rutledge-Broker (409)774-7335 ADOPTION A LOVING CHOICE - Happily married couple will give your baby a secure life with books, sports, arts, nature, sincere values & two loving, understanding parents. Confidential. Legal/Medical paid. Please call Joni & Shop 800-528-2344 MISCELLANEOUS Attention all Studentsllt Grants & Scholarships available! Billions of $$$ In private funding. Qual- Ify Immediately. 1-800 AID-2-HELP(1-800-243-2435) PERSONALS ARE YOU READY FOR ROMANCE??? 1-900-255- 2700 ext.8518 $2.99/min. Mustbe18yrs. Touch tone phone required. Serv-U (619)645-8434 PETS 1 yr. old Ball Python. Includes 30 gal. aquarium, heat rock, and light. $150. King size water-bed frame $40. 693-4124 Sweet and loving bunny needs good home. Litter- box trained. Cage, food and accessories. $75 obo. Leave message 693-7877. AUTO 1990 convertible red Amigo w/ rag top, sun roof, cruise, AC, AM/FM cassette. Great deal! 694-8368. '91 metallic blue Geo Storm. Auto tint, runs great. $4200 obo. Laurie 694-1168 '90 Honda Accord LX 2/dr. Runs Great! Gray, all power stuff, 84,000mi. $7,200. Kenneth 693-9795 1989 Mercury Tracer 1/owner, excellent condition, low mileage, standard shift. $3000 693-4773 '89 Honda Civic for sale $3,500. Call Missy at 690- 0928 1994 Toyota 4-runner. Forest green, 42,000mi, $19,200. Call 696-6901 or 295-0731 '68 Firebird with 350, all original, good condition $4,000/obo. Call 693-3453' BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY Business of your own for $100 + never pay for long dis tance calls again. Run your business from your dorm or apt. Prepaid Long Distance Phone cards are the hottest craze. 1-800-233-5794 SERVICES Planning on getting married soon? Where are you going to hold the reception? Have you ever considered the Faculty Club? Yes, it is possible. For more information, please call Chuck Murray at 862-2988. Hoover’s Tennis Service. Same-day & overnight ser vice. Re-stringing tennis & racquet-ball racquets. 696- 9733 Free Financial Aid! Over $6 billion in public & private sector grants & scholarships is now available. All stu dents are eligible regardless of grades, income, or par ent’s income. Let us help. Call Student Financial Ser- vices: 1-800-263-6495 ext. #58552 AAA Texas Defensive Driving & Driver's Training. Lot- of-fun, Laugh-a-lotl! Ticket dismissal, insurance dis count. M-TU(6pm-9pm), W-Th(6pm-9pm), Fri(6pm- 8pm) & Sat(8am-2:30pm), Sun(12pm-9pm). Next to Black Eyed Pea. Walk-ins welcome. $25 cash. Low est price allowed by law. 111 Univ. Dr., Ste 217, 846- 6117. Show up 30 min. early. Word processing, proofreading: resumes, class papers, articles, publications. Professional results, rea sonable rates. 694-2900. Students! Let me help w/ your word processing &/or proofreading. I have a BA in English. Reasonable rates. 696-8785. Speeding ticket? Call Grin and Take It! Defensive Dri ving... Comedy style. 778-GRIN(4746). TRAVEL For rent - South Padre Island - Only 4 luxurious 2 bdrm condominiums remain available during Spring Break wk. of March 9-16. Accommodating 6 people, on the beach, over-looking the gulf. Reduced rate to $1200/wk. w/ $500 refundable deposit. Call (210)761- 4710 Break time! Hit the beach! 1 BR/2 BR condos on the beach. South Padre Island. 800-850-5277 WANTED Students who need to lose weight. New metabolism breakthru. All natural. Dr. recommended. 29.95. Credit cards, checks Local delivery. (409)823-3307. Raleigh or Cannondale Mountain Bike Good condition preferred. Call 696-5130 To Place Your Ad In The Battalion Call 845-2696 Former O’s manager Weaver up for Hall □ The Baseball Veterans Committee votes today on candidates. TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Earl Weaver guided his teams to nearly 1,500 victories, reached the World Series four times and posted winning records in all but one of his 17 seasons with the Baltimore Orioles. “And I never was fired,” he said last week. “I’m proud of that.” Considering that only 11 managers have made it to the Hall of Fame, it’s hard to say whether those impressive cre dentials will be enough to get him elected when the Veterans Committee meets Tuesday. “It’s tough to get in,” Weaver said. “You need three- quarters of the votes. That’s tough to muster.” Nellie Fox and Gil Hodges, 19th century manager Ned Hanlon and umpire Cy Rigler and Negro Leaguers Smokey Joe Williams and Bullet Joe Rogan stand a decent chance. Then again, this could be an es pecially ripe year for candi dates such as Weaver, Jim Bunning and Bill Mazeroski. In January, for the first time in 25 years, members of the Baseball Writers Association of America failed to elect anyone, blanking 300-game winners Phil Niekro and Don Sutton. Not since 1960 has there been a year in which no one was inducted. That means it’s up to the Veterans Committee to pre vent a shutout at Cooperstown. “We came up with four can didates to put in last year,” said committee member Monte Irvin, himself a Hall of Earner. “We’re going to try to do the same thing this time. And I would think the senti ment would be toward a can didate who’s living.” Induction ceremonies at the baseball shrine are scheduled for Aug. 4, but Hall chairman Ed Stack acknowledges they may not take place if there’s no one going in. “It would be nice to have someone elected,” Stack said. “But I think I will begin the meeting with a statement saying that it’s better not to lower the standards of the Hall than just to put someone in. We’re looking for quality, not quantity.” The Veterans Committee will announce its decision at 2 pm. EST Tuesday. Ted Williams, Stan Musial and Yogi Berra are among the vot ers; the committee is down to 14 members because longtime Pittsburgh general manager Joe Brown, who was supposed to chair the meeting, is ill in Mexico and unable to attend. Former NL president Bill White will serve as chairman. It will take 11 of 14 votes for election. The committee can pick can didates from four areas — for mer major leaguers, a compos ite ballot of Negro Leaguers, umpires, executives and man agers, a ballot of 19th century players and personnel, and an other ballot of Negro Leaguers. Last year, former Philadel phia outfielder Richie Ash- burn, NL founder William Hulbert, Negro Leagues star Leon Day and turn-of-the-cen- tury pitcher Vic Willis were chosen by the veterans. Weaver, 65, is hoping he’ll get the call at his south Florida home this year. “It would be the ultimate honor,” he said. “But if it does n’t happen, I had a wonderful career and no regrets.” Leo Durocher was the last manager to be elected in 1994. Before him, it was Walter Al ston in 1983. Weaver’s teams in Baltimore went 1,480-1,060 for a winning percentage of .583, fifth-best among managers who lasted at least 10 years. His Orioles won 100 games five times — tied for second-most in history — won six AL East titles and won the World Series in 1970. “The fact that it was all with one team, the longevity, I like that,” Weaver said. “We did it with different kinds of teams, too. We went from a power-hit ting club to a speed club and back to power hitting.” Weaver took over the Orioles during the 1968 season and stayed with them through 1982. He returned for part of 1985 and retired after 1986, his only sub-.500 season. « Bunning, nearly elected lay the writers in 1988, was - 224- 184 lifetime with a 3.27 ERA. A former teammate of White’s in Philadelphia, he is in his second year before the veter ans committee. Baseball Continued from Page 7 that’s good,” Stephens said. “Since we have had this situation early in the season, we’ll learn from them and do what it takes to get the runs later in the game. “We’ve made some baserun ning mistakes that later on in close ball games could hurt us. We haven’t had to have the clutch hits, but once we get in that situ ation we have a good enough team where people arq going to step forward and come through.” One player who has stepped forward for the Aggies is true freshman Jason Tyner who will be making a homecoming to Beaumont in today’s game. Tyner, who hails from West Brook High School in Beau mont, has been the leadoff hit ter in all 17 games. He is second on the team with Leone Continued from Page 7 Chicago has a serious lack of depth. With the exception of Toni Kukoc, what Bull coming off the bench contributes any thing but rest for the starters? Bill Wenningtnn? j uc i Buechler? How about Dickie Simpkins? Several years in the league and a beard are the only factors that make Wenningtons rear the most recognizable on this less- than-impressive bench. Furthermore, take a good look at the league the Bulls are ripping through. Mediocrity is on the loose. Of the league’s 29 teams, 15 sport losing records at the present time. Adding expan sion teams Toronto and Vancou ver into the fold before this sea son just diluted an already weakening conglomeration. The result is a Chicago win column bolstered by consistent opportunities to bludgeon a number of NBA pansies. Where’s the challenge in that? What kind of competition does Chicago have to contend with for the Eastern Conference crown? Orlando? Indiana? I have my a .455 batting average and is the team leader with 30 base hits and is second with 20 runs scored. 1 le is the leader with 13- of-14 stolen bases. At 66 at-bats he has struck out only once and brings a nine-game hitting streak into today’s game. Tyner said that he is really excited about playing in front of his hometown crowd again. “I’m really excited,” Tyner said. “As soon as I got the sched ule and saw that we would be playing, there I was excited. I’ve got a lot of friends there and they are all supposed to be there watching me. “They are all pretty proud. They are supportive of me, and are just as excited watching me play as I am playing in front of them.” After the single game on the road against Lamar, the Aggies will be back at home to host the Continental Airlines Aggie Base ball Classic March 8-11. doubts that these so-called con tenders would have been so in the late ’80s and early ’90s. Another reason why I hold off on bronzing this year’s Bulls as the best ever is that there are a host of past teams that could be considered as such. Many ex perts consider the best ever team to be the 1967 Philadel phia 76ers, who won 68 of 81 games with Chamberlain domi nating the league. How about the Boston Celtics teams of the 1950s and 1960s? Led by Bob Cousy and Bill Russell, the Celts of this era banged out an amaz ing eight NBA titles in a row and 11 out of 13. And the same Laker team the Bulls pursue for most wins in a season racked up 33 straight wins in a row during the 1971-1972 season. Time is the most important thing keeping me from canoniz ing the Bulls like everyone else has. They haven’t done anything yet. They haven’t won 70 games yet, and they’ve yet to obtain an other NBA title. Barring serious injuries and natural disasters, they’ll probably go ahead and accomplish the above, but until they do, it is way too early to even consider them the best basketball team in history. Tuesday • Mar Tuesday Aggie Toastn meeting for a held in 707 I welcome and tend. Contact 846-4145 for t Catholic Stir Mass will be in All Faith’s Catholic Stu The Catholii meet at 9 p Student Cent tails call Bee Aggie Toaster ing will be hi 707 Rudder. 779-9113 for Student Coun nority Studen Counseling st students will to 4:30 p.m. i Services are ; come, first se Dr. Juan Riki 134 for more i Student Cour African An Group will r 6:30 p.m. in t son Hall. Coi Williams at 1 information. Student Coun reer Counselii ter: Testing f Types for Ci place and for workshops (t< will be held i derson Hall, at 845-4427, and for detail Rodeo Club: held at 7 p.n All members Jason Littleti more informa Texas Student tion: A gener jkeld at 7 p, I Guest speake will discuss proach to Tei Bailey at 847 formation. Off Campus meeting wil p.m. in 601 I will be “Spri Show (Fashii Destination), more informa Study Abroat An informat students wh< the A&M Sa in Italy for I held from 5:1 Bizzell Hall 0544 for mon Anthropologic Wright will p tied “A Skelel Death in tl Past.” All inte Center for A ment: A GR held from 6 Blocker. Student Coi Learning Ski managemen tion worksho 30% - All Ski Wea Sale En (all tri SPORTI 3600 O 84 Low in Cos That'i Read ai The E