The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 07, 1999, Image 11
tieBattalion Sports Page 11 • Tuesday, December 7, 1999 eartyblleybaU team to take on Rainbow Wahine X\T)£\3th-ranked Aggies travel to Honolulu to face |0.3 Hawaii Thursday in NCAA 3rd round IDAHO It Lake City 0 BY JASON LINCOLN The Battalion UTAH edar City ARIZONA STRICKLAND id post near L®: ms not disclosed, I he has not bee: / crime. On the back of its locker room door is a list of goals, te large sheet of paper lists the dreams of the Texas iM Volleyball Team for this season. Imong the numerous items ad- bsed on that sheet are goals such as iieving balance across the court, pitalizing on the Twelfth Man home- urt advantage and being aggressive I time they step onto the court. One-by-one each goal the Aggies * lieir sights on was crossed off the hoy who turned- iPtil there was only one goal left, jy was no t - jk&M will not have to wait much up at a hogfam f 1 '- since the goal that has been a County andwa |>n in the making will be decided by a final show- n against the University of Hawai’i. r e made a lot of goals for the season as a team,” r outside hitter Summer Strickland said, ’’but for eniors there is only one thing that matters. We Id love to finish with a win but most of all we want Irish our career happy and knowing that we gave it 1 ii nil down to the final point.” "1 1*| 1 111 lire Aggies already have posted an impressive sea- X Uill with a 25-5 record and a trip into the Sweet Sixteen le NCAA Tournament. inform criminals.) throughout the season, the Aggies have dominated ng them. Failure:: pjonents when playing at home. In the process of es- ence — a confer Jshing an undefeated-home record, A&M upset two i ing lost to prosec: pjlO opponents. The result was an all-time best sec- g earlier this year,: d-place finish in the Big 12 Conference, urt of Appeals nils: Ince the postseason arrived, the Aggies knew they own as Sectionraid not have any second-chances. It was all on the nings no longer ref)! m with every single point. ce in federal prosff. ft&M responded to the pressure and swept its oppo- anale would applr tents in three straight games during the first two rounds r 8-5 vote lastFeitfie NCAA tournament. ing to give MiranrB'he biggest challenge of all lays ahead, thought, as ctors in deciding}he|13th-ranked Aggies will give up nearly all of their trade voluntarily. Jantages when they face No. 3 Hawai’i on Thursday. ot only will A&M go from being the favorite to underdog, but it will have to play in front of col- volleyball’s most intimidating crowds — 17,000 ibow fans. iOf course this has been our goal,” A&M senior liddleblocker Amber Woolsey said. “Hawai’i has a ially good team and great fans like our Twelfth Man. In my heart I think we have a good shot at winning.” The Aggies have accomplished nearly every goal they set for the season. All that remains is to leave it all on the court. “I’m ecstatic. I am so proud of this team,” A&M vol leyball coach Laurie Corbelli said. “This is where we want our program to be every year.” CODY WAGES/I'm: Battalion JP BEATO/The Battalion ipus Library HEARN UP TO FOUR CREDIT HOURS 14,1999 BbURING WINTER BREAK! of Food Services fhursday, Tiber 12 r 14. labaloo mtil B-.OO pm •y Starbucks® Coffee Die 4:00 pm to close & s for lie’s Place and tone Willy's ;n until 1:00 am >r late night pizza ^4 yCA* ^ Vinter-Term is designed for highly motivated students who can flevote time to an accelerated, fast-paced program of study. Ilasses begin December 20, 1999 and continue through January 14, 2000. Classes do not meet December 23 through ianuary 2 but resume on January 3. REGISTRATION lovember 29 - December 17 REGISTRATION HOURS Monday - Thursday 9 am - 7 pm Friday 9 am - 3 pm LATE REGISTRATION ecember 20 W COLLEGE ASTRONOMY RHYS 1411 FUNDAMENTAL ASTRONOMY RHYS 1412 GENERAL ASTRONOMY CRIMINAL JUSTICE CJCR 2324 LAW ENFORCEMENT COMMUNITY RESOURCES IN CORRECTIONS DEVELOPMENTAL COLLEGE LEARNING SKILLS These classes are for required TASP remediation only. DREA 0100 COLLEGE LEARNING (READING) DWRI 0100 COLLEGE LEARNING (WRITING) □MAT 0100 COLLEGE LEARNING (MATH) These classes are for required TASP remediation only ES0L 0045 DEV READING (NON-TV) ES0L 0055 DEVWRITING (NON-TV) ENGLISH ENGL 1302 COMPOSITION II ENGL 232? AMERICAN LITERATURE ENGL 2332 WORLD LITERATURE ENGL 1302 COMPOSITION II ENGL 2328 AMERICAN LITERATURE GEOGRAPHY GE0G 1301 PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY GEOLOGY GE0L 1403 PHYSICAL GEOLOGY GE0L 1404 HIST GEOLOGY GOVERNMENT GOVT 2302 AMERICAN GOVERNMENT HISTORY HIST 1301 U.S. HISTORY HIST 1302 U.S. HISTORY HUMANITIES HUMA 1301 INTRO HUMANITIES MATH / DEVELOPMENTAL MATH DMAT 0090 PRE ALGEBRA DMAT 009? ALGEBRA FUNDAMENTALS I MATH 1342 INTRO STATISTICS MANAGEMENT BMGT 1301 SUPERVISION HRP0 2301 HUMAN RESOURCES PHILOSOPHY PHIL 1301 INTRO PHILOSOPHY SPEECH SPCH 1311 INTRO SPEECH COMMUNICATION PLEASE CALL 214.860.8600 FOR INFORMATION. Mountain View College • 4849 West Illinois Avenue • Dallas, Texas 75211 • www.mvc.dcccd.edu • Educational opportunities are offered by the Dallas County Community College District without regard to race, color, age, national origin, religion, gender or disability. c 'oUege Foot b V7 W '> Mi Registration: baUcngc December 6-14 Rules: '-T& ' r* x-r iSfe TRec SPORTS Participants will select winners for all 22 college bowl games. They will then assign each pick with a point value from 22 to 1. (22 for your strongest pick down to 1 for your most uncertain pick) Total points for bowl games predicted correctly will determine the winner, with a tiebreaker, if necessary.