i SPORTS THE BATTALION . 3B Wednesday, February 27, 2002 Jlai' ifieds continued from pg. 2B I HELP WANTED teachers wanted for fall 2002. gH-e now reviewing resumes for Full- ^Beachers for the 2002-2003 school subjects and grade levels for and ^■mental Pre-k-12 school. Please ■■resume to ros505@aol.com and see l^pbsite at bsic.org. ly tor the b ■igConsultant: Professional apart- d early. J ■:ommunity has an immediate open- a leasing consultant with an outgo- T'^fcrsonality. excellent customer rela- 1S skills and strong sales ability. Apply /ANTED Aoh at The Colony Apartments, 1101 BiHj^Hvest Pkwy. 979-693-0804. "Y? Ideal fv^fcToffice now hiring full-time Medical APPT. F;.lR)nt. Great experience for student 1 eduies, r>o fo 3lyii i for medical school. Position re- cholarships a. ■ a one year commitment. Salary ties CofK)iii(»5^Bon experience. Please fax resume •.■umpam!ine ;-rM))776-4260 or apply in person at Al- gy / ociates, 2706 Osier Blvd., Bryan v.ichiig • iHshowroom assistant. Full-time. ♦ years. telephone skills in general office, hr 693-9254 ^B es excellent communication skills, *ENT ASSISTt^B l00ks Pro and atten, 'O n to detail, '■h alf Cote»^B in P erson Mon-Fri. 1pm-4pm. 380 hoosi'noam^B' 31 Blvd ' Br y an ur- ei c- rt-tir ie bookkeeper to set up and run ibte stuoenis - Hbook programs at Auto Pros serv- P . ise sly • ^■'ter Flexible hours Call 823-4939. rt-time cook positions 33, Koppe Bridge. needed. 764- rtne 5 Now Hiring. Flexible hours, xl f v Apply in person 113 Walton or ^Bsfooddelivery.com • Hnt Discount Handbook is hiring SUNDAY t-tir advertising sales representa- SCHOLARSHP ,s - Make great money and get valuable FLEXIBLE -'•flB nces selling advertising in your fa- MPANY WTh: i* 6 college publication to local busi- il-A Pos* Call 512-567-3887 or email ----a Fret - : ishestudentdiscounthandbook.com to ,r tedi i interview. ^■teeded C++, RS232, Call 695-0493 450-1147 giee: gineer02@yahoo.com ®~A~GREAT SUMMER JOB? De^ ,ndii g, highly- rewarding summer camp s available at oldest camp in the south- st. me teach sports and outdoor ac- ties while helping kids to grow. Top /. ift/ork on beautiful, cool Guadalupe rer i ear Kerrville. Download an appli- tion it www.vistacamps.com or give us alls' 1 800-545-3233. I LOST & FOUND st, Ffitball mix, female. Tan +white. 485- dBleward! wan for return of rings on watch band. >st il parking lot near small animal hos- tal. 979-731-8826/ 979-777-7952. MOTORCYCLE ^■rs +mopeds from $800 at www.giz- eals.com or email albiitb 8gizdeals.com. NEEDED Jiti lid v calist for wedding, March 30th; ig 4ve Maria. Male Tenor preferred, nta# 694-9813 auditions. PETS 18 andoi ;ipate in a study wilt ical medici it of Rosa and pustol rs will bee $200 for' Call for a tinued onfi OP 1 p ets: Brazos Animal Shelter, i-Ijtes, www.shelterpets.org led tail boa babies, vet raised, $80- fall 694-9091. Cradle has fabulous felines for ipfidn with a difference! Student dis- H 15-mins south of CS. (936)825- 0, (|936)870-6295. imeraner Puppies- full-blood, not reg- redl DOB 1/21, $200-$250. Docked, meci first shots. Exceptional! 979- i-33! REAL ESTATE ^^Bouthwood, CS- 3/2, many up- des. 979-694-7127. $115,900. iking of selling your home? FREE, ^^Bver the net market analysis of your www.AndrewSmithOnline.com Century21. ROOMMATES loommate needed for summer, fall, and 2bdrm/2bath apartment $375/mo 696 2130. jommate needed starting summer •2. b270/mo. +1/2bills. Great location, fflHroute. Cal Riki 694-2360. nale roommate wanted, 3bdrm/2bth se fin Bryan, $350/mo., all bills paid, liable now. Call Alana 777-9275. king for roommate for 3bdrm duplex, : mn/mn, all bills paid. Call Lynn 575- 9. : roommate needed asap. 2bdrm/1bth selin Bryan. Pets ok, $230/mo. Titles. Call Fletch at 779-8526. ate needed 2bdrm/1bath $200/mo bi(ls, W/D, shuttle route 695-8771 ^■ate needed. 2bdrm/3bth. South- id-'|/alley. Shuttle route. $255/mo. ■ad 693-4397. s 18 and olds' ?£ SERVICES d to partiCipa'K Texas Defensive Driving. Lots-of- Jtudy (0 COfflp Laugh-a-lotl! Ticket dismissal/insur- .. ,9 discount. M-T(6pm-9pm), W- 5pm 9pm). Fri.&Sat.- Fri(6pm-8pm) Of 8 yeast i' it(10am-2:30pm), Sat(8am-2:30pm). ) If yOU are ::le I BankofAmerica. Walk-ins wel- ig. '$25/casli. Lowest price allowed by nencing vao m-univ. Dr., ste.217. 846-6H7. ig or irritation w-Up 30/min. early. (CP-0017). • rmation. ^-'^^regnancy Test; Hope Pregnancy I be compensc'ters. College Station 695-9193, Bryan •1097; Post Abortion Peer Counseling ■919 ■ SPRING BREAK! Hottest Desti- IJlY^^Bns/ Parties! Lowest Prices Guaran- ^■1 Best Airlines/ Hotels' Free Booze/ BPd! 82 Free Trips on 15 Sales. Earn h! Group Discounts! Book online. ges 18 and c ^ s | nS p| aS ht ours corn 1-800-426- moderate plab ided to particiillNC BREAK Cancun, Jamaica, South C Clinical trial ;re and ploricla - Best Hotels, Free Par- and Lowest Prices! 800-985-6789. itional Oint! v.brE-akerstravel.com iteers willbecc|| time and trave^ TUTORo needed for High School Algebra-ll students. 846-2097. TRAVEL WANTED udies, Inc. ^74-5933 irsity Drive Eai tted: Teams for aduit Volleyball Le- tite 475 pree a 9 ents welcome. Contact 764- ,TX 77802 5 for more info. Aggies finish season against OSU Women’s basketball team hopes to avoid losing season with win over Cowgirls By Kevin Espenlaub THE BATTALION The Texas A&M women's basketball team will look to avoid a losing record for the season when the Oklahoma State Cowgirls come to Reed Arena on Wednesday at 7 p.m. for the final game of the regular season. The Aggies (13-14, 5-10 in Big 12) fell under .500 for the first time this sea son on Saturday after a lopsided defeat by the No. 14 University of Texas Longhorns. 91-63. The offensive output of the Longhorns was the most points they have scored in a game this season. “1 don't think our defense showed up,” said A&M head coach Peggie Gillom. “That’s not to take anything away from them. They were playing hard from start to finish in that game.” The season already has been a record- setter for the Aggies, and a victory against Oklahoma State (14-14, 6-9) would give the Aggies their first non-losing season since 1996 when they finished with 20 wins. The 13 wins this season already have exceeded their win total in any of the past five seasons, and the five conference vic tories are the most in a season for the Aggies since joining the Big 12 in 1997. In the last matchup with Oklahoma State, the Aggies accomplished their first back-to-back conference wins in the Big 12. The road victory against the Cowgirls followed a streak of seven consecutive games against nationally ranked teams for the Aggies. Junior forward Meg Banahan, the Aggies leading scorer at I 1.9 points per game, scored 23 points against OSU, but the spark came from sophomore guard Toccara Williams. Williams led the Aggies with a near triple-double performance recording 10- points, 10 rebounds and nine steals. Williams is currently leading the Big 12 in steals and assists and is ranked fourth and 1 I th, respectively, in the nation. “In that game, the girls played really hard,” Gillom said. “We stuck to the gameplan and were able to upset the things that they were used to doing. It gave the girls a lot of confidence, because they knew that they could win on the road.” The matchup will set up the Aggies' seed for the Big 12 Tournament that begins on March 5 in Kansas City, Mo. Their seed could range anywhere between number eight and 11 depending on the results of the other Big 12 games Wednesday night. The Aggies will look for their first sweep of the Cowgirls, a team that owns a 15-5 all-time advantage over A&M, since the 1997 season. Wednesday will also be “Senior Night” at Reed Arena as the team honors the final home game for seniors LaToya Rose and Celeria Washington. Each has played for the Aggie team for four years and will likely finish their college careers at the conference tourna ment next week barring an advancement into a post-season tournament. JOHN LIVAS • THE BATTALION A&M sophomore guard Toccara Williams and the Texas A&M women’s basketball team will host the Oklahoma State Cowgirls on Wednesday at 7 p.m. at Reed Arena. GUY ROGERS • THE BATTALION A&M men’s basketball coach Melvin Watkins sits on the bench frustrat ed during the Aggies’ 92-77 loss to Colorado on Tuesday night. Longhorns outlast Texas Tech Toll Continued from page IB from beyond the 3-point line. The Aggies had no answer for the Colorado sharpshooters. “We were not communicat ing,” King said. “Coach told us before we played them that they had good shooters. We had mental lapses and would back off of them and they would hit the three.” While mental lapses are common at the beginning of the season, a team in its sec ond to last game of the season should not be worrying about such things. “It just didn't register,” Watkins said. “The energy level wasn’t high enough to play tonight. I don’t- want to say the guys have given in, but losing has obviously taken a toll on our mental approach to game and it’s just difficult. “The losing has worn on them. So then, fatigue and all those other things tend to be more present than they should be.” AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Texas has been through the Big 12 tournament enough to know what is at stake late in the reg ular season: a first-round bye that no tournament champion has done without. Brandon Mouton scored 25 points as the Longhorns coast ed past Texas Tech 96-71 Tuesday night to pull into a four-way tie for third place in the league standings with Tech. Oklahoma State and Missouri. The top four teams in the league will earn a first-round bye in the conference tourna ment. No team has won the tournament without one. With just one game left in the regular season, Texas owns the tie-breaker over Tech with two wins over the Red Raiders this season. The Longhorns grabbed a 74-71 overtime vic tory in Lubbock back on Jan. 14. The Longhorns have won 1 1 in a row over their ih-state rivals and avoided a three- game losing streak, what would have been their longest of the season, with the win. “There’s definitely a sense Handle Continued from page IB After stretching the lead to 73-65, Colorado’s Michel Morandais made one of two free throws, but instead of the Aggies capitalizing on the miss, the Buffaloes got the rebound and Wilson knocked down a 3- pointer to make it a 77-65 lead with 4:15 left, effectively end ing the Aggies’ chances. “The big part was the free throws,” King said. “When they kept getting the rebound off a of urgency,” Mouton said. “We have to play every game like it's our last, a championship game.” Texas (18-10, 9-6 Big 12) looked primed for the league Th ere’s defin i tely a sense of urgency. We have to play every game like it’s our lash ci championship game — Brandon Mouton Texas guard tournament with 10-of-16 shooting from 3-point range and a dominating 39-18 rebounding advantage. The 25- point win was Texas’ largest in league play this season. Andy Ellis led Tech (20-7, 9-6) with 17 points. The Red Raiders shot 53 percent for the game but couldn’t compensate for the Longhorns ability to miss, it seemed like they would hit a three or get back to the free-throw line. Everytime we tried to get over hump, they just hit big shots.” Free throws were the big dif ference down the stretch as Colorado hit 22-of-29 in the second half, while the Aggies managed only 7-of-l 1 from the line. The Aggies close out league play this Saturday as they trav el to Stillwater, Okla., to take on the Oklahoma State Cowboys. grab seemingly every ball off the rim. “They just absolutely buried us on the boards,” said Tech coach Bob Knight. “The differ ence was just so monumental.” It was also a complete turn around from Texas’ last game at home, an 85-80 loss to Oklahoma State last week in which the Longhorns were out- rebounded by 20. “We knew we had to get to the glass,” said Texas center James Thomas, who scored 18 points and grabbed a game- high eight boards. “Our main objective was just to go down and get physical.” Texas was just as effective shooting the ball, hitting 57 percent from the floor as Sydmill Harris chipped in 14 points and Royal Ivey added 12. Mouton hit 5-of-6 3 point ers. Texas point guard T.J. Ford, who leads the nation in assists, dished out 10 more against the Red Raiders. Texas never trailed and led 45-32 on Thomas’ tip-in at the buzzer to end the first half. The Longhorns held a 26-7 rebounding edge by halftime and never let up. The Longhorns opened the second with a 13-6 run with a 3-pointer by Mouton and took its first 20-point lead at 63-43 on Harris’ 3 with 12:41 to play. While his players are focus ing on earning the bye in the league tournament, Texas coach Rick Barnes said he has not even discussed it with them. “I guess it’s important. I just told them it makes a differ ence in being 10-6 instead of 8- 8,” Barnes said. “It just looks a lot better.” ■■(■■■■■■■■NMMMnMnMRnHMMIHnnMMIIIIMMMBnMMMWMINi HEY AOH!! Money Ooesn'i Grow on Trees!! Apply online now for the Academic Excellence Scholarship! A F •r *7 " SCHOLARSHIP AMOUNTS VARY FROM $.500-$2500 PER YEAR of c - $ AI Ttexas University $|/ JrX , V IWT M- A DEADLINE TO APPLY; MARCH 1, 2002 (5 PM) HSlSilii icLtamii.edu/aeaii AJlLL Tutor Jomx wee kly classes & tutoring for MATH & PHYSICS (class sizes are limited) 485-8556 www.tutorjohn.com 1701 Southwest Pkwy., Suite 101 College Station imir-niiinnrirHr-TifrTiiniirTTiiTriyrMr'rr-wrmirT^