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 AUTO 1986 Ford Tempo GT, 4 door, A/C needs repair. $1,700. (409)696-9156 ANNOUNCEMENTS Attention all students!!! Grants & Scholarships avail able from sponsors! Billions of $$$ in college money $$$ Call 1-800-243-2435 ATTORNEY WE DEFEND M.I.R. CHARGES JOHN T. QUINN ATTORNEY (409) 774-8924 • (800) 927-3115 Not Certified By The Texas Board Of Legal Specialization. WE DEFEND TRAFFIC TICKETS JOHN T. QUINN ATTORNEY IIJ (409) 774-8924 (800) 927-3115 Not Certified By The Texas Board Of Legal Specialization. BED & BREAKFAST Angelsgate Bed & Breakfast A little bit of heaven. Come S be treated like an angel. 779-1231. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY How Xo IVIake A Fortune!!! At 25 years old, I earn more than your doctor & dentist combined. Amazing FREE recorded message tells how. 24 hr./800-477-6019 COMPUTERS 486 DX, SVGA Color Monitor, 245 Meg Mini Tower HD. Internal Fax/Modem, Lots Of Software. $650 Nego- tiable. 694-2552 DJ MUSIC Professional DJ/MC - Peter Block. Specializing in Aggie Weddings/Anniversaries/Parties. Mobile to any where in Texas. Formal attire always! The Party Block Mobile DJ 693-6294 DJ / Lights - for parties, weddings, Keggers, Country, Alternative, Urban Dance. JayTunnell. 731-8112/596- 2582 FOR RENT 1 and 2 Bdrm apartment available now. Ask about our specials. 822-0472 Two bedroom apartment south cf campus. Available now. $250.00 696-2038 Available now & for Fall. Pre-leasing College Station 2 & 3 bedroom 4-plexes. Some with washer/dryer. Start ing at $515/mo. Select Properties 696-3107 3-2 leasing now, available August, near A&M, CH & A, carpeted. $750/mo. & $350 dep. No pets. 690-0085 NORTHGATE nice 2/2 14x76, all appliances, small pet o.k. Available June $500/mo 828-3643 Sublease 2 large bdrm/2 ba, Huntington Apartment, new carpet & tile $465/summer, $600/fall 693-4388 FULL SZ. W/D, 2 bdrm/1 ba, shuttle, microwave, intru sion alarm, $459/mo. 846-7454 Large 2-1, great location, on shuttle, microwave, intru sion alarm, ceiling fans, $439/mo. 823-7039 Great deal!! 2-1, 884 sq. ft., 5 closets, microwave, ceil ing fans, intrusion alarm, $459/mo. 691-2062 142-6/4-8/12 Sublease $300 huge 2/2 four-plex, near theHilton. 268-6854 Older 2 bedroom home in Wellborn, $300/mo. + deposit. Call 776-8567 Sublease for Fall - Garden Double at University Tower. Contact (713)383-2062. $325 Large room, private bath & entrance, utilities paid. 1/2 block from campus 764-7363 Pre-Teasing nice duplexes/4-plexes for mid-August $425 to $490. 696-1245 Walk to class - 2 blocks from A&M on Noiihside of cam pus, 2 bdrm/1 ba fourplex, summer specials or fall lease, no pets, $350 -$450/mo. 696-7266 FOR SALE Cannondale mountain bike, 20 inch, XT components, rock shox Mag 21, Titanium seat $550 Call Jason 693- 0094. For Sale: 2 Continental Airline Vouchers worth $425 each. Fly anywhere. Anytime before August 6th $350 obo. Call 696-9328 Look!!! Why pay rent when you can own a manufac tured home for less. 2 & 3 bdrm model homes on large wooded sites ready to move in. 779-2123 '86 Kawasaki Ninja 1000 GPZ, excellent shape, low mileage. $2,800. 696-3545/845-8028 $55 gallon DAC salt/fresh water aquarium w/stand $250. 694-1317 Super nice 2 bdrm/2 ba fleetwood, 17 minutes to A&M, shady, fenced 1/2 acre yard. 778-8311 Mountain bike, giant ATX 770. negotiable. 260-7042 Asking price $250, TUTOR Talk English as a Second ^ Language Classes Small group lessons ■ • (Students, wives visiting faculty welcome • New classes begin r June 24 Call or visit 1:00 to 5:00 Mon-Fri 696-6583 707 Texas Ave. 303-C • Across from A&M QUANTUM QQW. ZgQ-COMtt Univ. Dr. on flor+haa+e ZHOpm Sun-Thu. CHKMXSTRY MATH PHYSICS BIOLOGY TUTORING NOTES/OLD TESTS/ ea b s PRELABS/REPORTS puizxes£fiwaes EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY TROPICAL RESORTS HIRING-Entry-level & career positions available worldwide (Hawaii, Mexico, Caribbean, etc.). Waitstaff, housekeepers, SCUBA dive leaders, fitness counselors, and more. Call Resort Employment Services 1-206-971-3600 ext. R58554. Teaching Opportunity in Korea - teaching English, 20 hrs/wk, $ 1,500/mo., 1 week paid vacation, room, health insurance & round trip ticket provided. Send your resume to: Uk Heo - 309 Ball St., Apt.# 1019, C.Sta., 77840 Windows programmer, full-time only, Elite Software, 846-2340, www.elitesoft.com LOST & FOUND Female rat-terrier, black, white & brown. Black collar w/tags. Her name is Missy. Lost in C.Sta. Walmart area. Reward!!! 846-1737 PETS Adopt: Puppies, Kittens, Cats, Dogs. Brazos Shelter 775-5755 Many purebreds! ROOMMATE Roommate needed for summer. University Commons. No deposit. $256/mo„ 4 bdrm/2 ba. (214)234-0320 Female A&M roommate wanted. Call for details 846-3376 Free rent + utilities. Nice house in Southwood Valley, $150/mo + utilities, own room. Summer. 764-9661 Roommate needed. Own room, W/D, $225/mo. + 1/2 utilities. June Free!! 775-6024 Male roommate needed, summer only, $250/mo. + 1/2 utilities. 693-4194 Roommate to share 2 bdrm/2 ba, W/D, huge closets, walk to campus, $345/mo. Call John at (817)772-8961 Female roommate needed - summer only - $120/mo. + $100 dep. Must See! 696-8435 Female roommate needed ASAP! 2 bdrm/1 1/2 ba, shuttle rt., 1/2 rent, 1/2 utilities, $262.50/mo. Cheryl 694-2485 Own bdrm, W/D, $225/mo. O.B.O. Non-smoker, neat, no pets, near shuttle. 260-1163 Female roommate needed, fall/spring, $225/mo + 1/2 utilities, 2 bdrm/2 ba. Call Michelle 696-3576 Female roommate needed. 2 bdrm. -1 ba. Own room, private yard. Prefer Christian non-smoker. $215/mo + 1/2 utilities. 775-0526 Female needed to share 3-2-2 house beginning fall in C.Sta. Large backyard, W/D, shuttle, lease negotiable, pets o.k., $260/mo. + 1/3 utilities. Rhonda 764-5689 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. Twin bed $35 or best offer. Call 846-7970 HELP WANTED Need part-time cleaners for commercial buildings. Working hours 5pm-8pm. Hours vary sometimes. No weekend work. Great for college students, must have car and phone. Call 823-1614 for appt. $1,750 weekly possible mailing our circulars. For info call (202)393-7723 Prestigious teaching position, must have had Tx. D.L 5 yrs. +, & college experience. Work evenings & Satur days, averages out to $5.00/hr. No DWI's, Pi's etc. 694-2122 Telephone interviewer position available. $5/hr., days, evening & weekends work. Contact IntelliQuest at 268-5307 or come by 702 University Dr. Ea. Ste. 102F College Station. Part-lime help wanted. Apply within Piper Chevron Texas Avenue @ Univ. Drive. Full & part-time workers needed for lawn maintenance co. $5/hr. 690-6392 Small ranch needs part-time ranch hand To work with cattle, build and repair fences. If interested, call 696- 2334^ Computer sales & technician needed. Experience pre ferred. Call Dan at 846-5454 Part-time person needed for clerical work. Acctg. major preferred. Must be available to work mornings schedule. Apply in person w/resume at 1700 Kyle, suite 200, C.S. Aggressive helper for carpentry/painting/sheet-rock Will work w/schedule. 775-7126 Part time Service Station attendant needed, student preferred. Apply in person at Chevron on the comer of Villa Maria & Ea. 29th. 776-1261 Part-time job helping handi-cap. Male A&M sTudent preferred. $270/mo, 12 hrs/wk. All after 7 p.m. 846- 3376 Hoover's Tennis Service. Same-day & overnight ser vice. Re-stringing tennis & racquet-ball racquets. 696- 9733 AAA Texas Defensive Driving & Driver's Training. Lot- of-fun, Laugh-a-lot!! Ticket dismissal, insurance dis count. M-TU(6pm-9pm), W-Th(6pm-9pm), Fri(6pm- 8pm) & Sat(10am-2:30pm), Sat(8am-2:30pm). 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. WANTED Students who want to lose weight. Metabolism break- thru. FDA reg. $29.95. V, MC, Disc. & checks. Fast free local delivery. (409)823-3307. Wanted: 25 students ASAP!! Lose 8-30 lbs. fast! Get paid. All natural. Dr. recommended and guaranteed. 1-800-435-7591 The Battalion Classified Advertising • Easy • Affordable • Effective Call 845-0569 Page 4 • The Battalion • Monday, June 10, 1996 Bulls show no mercy, crush Sonics 108"86 Jordan blew the game open with 15 consecutive points in 2nd quarter SEATTLE (AP) — All that re mains is the formality of Game 4. The NBA Finals are more or less over. Michael Jordan and the Chica go Bulls steamrolled the Seattle SuperSonics on Sunday, putting on as mighty a performance as they ve given all postseason. They led by 22 before the first quarter was over, got 15 consec utive points from Jordan in the second, withstood a Seattle run in the third and cruised through the fourth for a 108-86 victory and a 3-0 lead in the series. “In the first half we basically took the crowd out of the game,” Jordan said. “We pretty much wanted to control things, and that’s what we did.” No team has ever come back from a 3-0 deficit in any playoff round, and the Sonics don’t look like much of a candidate to be the first — especially after what they saw in Game 3. The Bulls quieted Key Arena right from the start, kept their lead in double digits for the fi nal 42 1/2 minutes and walked off the court looking as proud as the champions they seem certain to become. “When we get on the road,” Jordan said, “we become a little more focused.” Game 4 is Wednesday night, and a victory by the Bulls would give them a sweep of the series and the best postseason record in playoff history: 15-1. The current record is 12-1 by the Philadelphia 76ers in 1983. It was the ninth victory in a row for Chicago, tying the 1982 Los Angeles Lakers for the sec ond-most consecu tive wins in a single postseason. The record is 11, which the Bulls won’t be able to match, but it’s about the only great thing that can’t be said about them. Jordan led Chicago with 36 points, Luc Longley had 19 and Toni Kukoc 14. Chicago, which had struggled from the field in the first two games, finished at 50 percent from the field and forced 21 turnovers from a thoroughly overmatched Seat tle team. After a pair of mediocre yet effective performances at home in the first two games, the Bulls seemed determined to make themselves click as the series moved West. They started the game precise and nearly perfect, taking a 7-0 lead on a lefty hook by Longley, a side jumper by Kukoc and a 3- pointer by Jordan before the game was two min utes gone. Just two minutes later, the lead was up to 13-2 on a jumper from the lane by Jor dan, and after five straight points by Kukoc and a foul shot by Pippen, it was 19-4 with 6:07 left. Longley had con secutive shots inside, Jordan hit a jumper and a 3-pointer and then made a steal, feeding Pip- pen for a fastbreak dunk that was followed by yet another, this one by Rodman off an assist by Pippen, for a 34-12 lead. It was 34-16 after one period, two points off record lead of 20 by the 1970 Los Angeles Lakers. The second quarter belonged to Jordan, who took over the show with a display uniquely his. He made four foul shots, hit a high-arching fadeaway from 14 feet, buried a wide open jumper from the side and swished a 3- pointer from straightaway for a 56-35 lead. His next shot was another long jumper with his foot on the 3-point line, again nothing but net, and then bounced around on one foot and did a sort of backpedal strut downcourt. The 15-point burst ended with a pair of free throws, and Pippen scored the last two points of the half on a pretty driving bank shot from six feet away. It made the score 62-38, and a smattering of boos were heard as the Sonics sulked off the court. Longley scored the first bas ket of the second half, and Seat tle responded with a 16-2 run to draw to 66-54. “I thought we were going to give it away in the third,” Jor dan said. Steve Kerr ended the run with a 3-pointer and Chicago opened the fourth quarter with a 6-0 run ending with a three- point play by Jordan. “Yes! Yes!” Pippen said from the bench. The threat was over and so, pretty much, was the game. And the series. CHICAGO ABULLSk Golf Continued from Page 4 schedule was much tougher this year. The experience we got playing in the big tourna ments will help us [next year].” On March 29 through 31,the Lady Aggies competed against Arizona State and San Jose State, both nationally ranked, in the Ping/ASU Invitational. “It’s a good learning experi ence to play against top teams and see what you have to do [to compete against them],” said sophomore Jamie Hullett. In five of the nine tourna ments, the Aggies finished in the top ten, in the top five three times, and finished first place at the TAMU Book store/Welsh Memorial Tourna ment in February. Next year both teams return all but one of their players. The men’s team will lose Dru Fenimore, who was averaging a score of 74.08 going into the NCAA Tournament and proved to be a source of leadership throughout the season. “Dru kept us focused and also kept it light,” Brown said. “You can’t replace somebody like Dru.” Coach Ellis feels confident about the Aggie mens team’s chances for success next season. “I feel good about it,” he said. “Of course, we’re looking into the unknown. But I think the ingredients are there to have a very strong team. We have a chance to be very competitive.” On the women’s side, Kristina Ed- fors is the only team member who will not be back next season. SUTHERLAND Edfors av eraged a score of 77.75 during the season,earning All-SWC honors and a place in Golf World ‘a Top 50. Freshman Jamie Hullett said Edfors’ leadership skills and positive attitude will be missed. “She’s a motivator,” Hullett said. “She kept us up when we weren’t playing good. She kept it positive.” Like her counterpart on the men’s squad, Sutherland is op timistic about the women's chances next season. “We’ll have everybody back except Kristina,” Sutherland said. “Jamie [Hullett] and Is abelle [Rosberg] will step up. It’s going be tough to replace [Edfors] consistency, but we’ll be okay.” Better Ingredients. ® Better Pizza. Get to know the Official Pizza of Summer Open for Lunch! Limited Delivery Area 764-PAPA 1100 D. Harvey Rd VISA r AMERIC»NI ■expHH COME TO PAPA! (Carryout Only) One Small, One Topping $099* , One Large One Extra Large One Topping One Topping $599* $099* Vi Not valid with any other offer. Valid only at participating locations. Customer pays all applicable sales tax. Additional toppings extra. PAPA COMES’ ” 1 TO YOU! One Small, T 'SvT' ' M-Vy' Thrifty Ten Fifty One Large 0ne Extra ^ One Topping Two T ; $ 7- $ 10 50 * J L. Not valid with any other offer. Valid only at participating locations. Customer pays all applicable sales tax. Additional toppings extra. a; rWJTTM=4;LM NEW Motorola BRAVO PLUS $29.95* i.T-f-ii.ii..r 1 |i|| hi h 1 1 |i|| — * .-//"'"“’I"764-5300 Star Tech Motors 2423 Clarks Lane Bryan, Texas 77803 "Quality Service, Repair and Restoration of Your Automobile" Mike Roberts and Andy Greig (409) 778-4677 TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS PRESENTS THE 1996 cCXAS COu sic j—csrivcv.1 CONCERTS 7:30 p.m.- Rudder Theatre St. Petersburg Quartet (Russia) Alla Aranovskaya, violin Ilya Teplyakov, violin Konstantin Katz, viola Leonid Shukaev, violoncello Works by Mozart, Shubert, Shostakovich, and Borodin A reception to meet the artists, sponsored by Bryan Paint & Glass will follow the program. Supported by; Brazos Valley Arts Council, the Texas Commission on the Arts, the University Honors Program, and The Eagle. Tickets available at the MSC Box : Office Adults - $10.00 (season $35.00) Senior Citizens (65+) - $7.00 (season $25.00) Studens' $5.00 (season $20.00) Parking available in the University Center Parking Garage. ($.60p/hr) Rudder Theatre is Handicapped Accessible. Upcoming Concerts: June 17, 21 & 24 I .hti n Niedi, theth: .fparal iVoi ‘tarece VSti • Boeni jjkome Vtdc conk peofy, ‘ c °uld s