The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 25, 2002, Image 7
Classifieds continued from pg. 6 SPORTS THE BATTALION 7 Monday, March 25, 2002 HELP WANTED Tennis nday, March 2'. le ss (price must personal posseu item doesn't ss 1 Qualify for the 5 ncelled early. illege : er ■ IS ^: eoicdi OR RENT :e condos, 4/4 wf oking/pets. Avi Support. Full & Part-Time. UCS irrently has full and part-time opportuni- for the Internal PC Support Depart- This position configures, installs, troubleshoots all computers in the Station office. Full-time positions salary plus benefits including paid il, dental and vision insurance, rttime positions start at $7/hr. All posi- ns offer direct payroll deposit, free on- gym and semi-annual performance re- UCS promotes a healthy environ- by sponsoring a variety of sports nts and hiring non-smokers only. To apply, please call our Recruiting or visit our website. To apply, call iaj _at: 595-2609. Attn ad# 1546. ““ TOrsalcomputersys.com )E. lime ( S26r;- yers For Rent ; c & dryer, iityLeasing, Loci 02 leasing.com new 3bdrnV3ti /tag app& w/d SI 1/mo. Yulm. •6-2894/ 764-902' DR SALE membership to ^all 694-0284. neplex, end of a. close to >45-6097. , very nice. St or details. T Wireless will; ntract and give 979-S74-8' otmail.com wedding bands, 3.6mm in wdr ses. Paid S55 9273. mobile home, lust be moved, ir: light blue Seel er. $150 forte 3 WANTE de Cleaners is hiring part-time counter Tuesday/Thursday 3-7:30 and Sat. n. Please Call Heather 255-6324 mmer Jobs Available carpet cleaning ftnicians wanted full and part time posi- A good driving record a must, e Carpet Cleaning call 693-4474 City of Bryan is seeking qualified can- ites for the following seasonal posi- s: Pool Cashiers, Lifeguards, Water Instructors, Camp Counselors, Coordinators, Lead Counselors, hours will vary. For a detailed job cription or to obtain the required City of an application form, visit us on-line at w.bryantx.org or call or visit us in pet al 300 S. Texas Ave. (2nd floor), Bry- TX 77803, 209-5060. EOE. ilion I part-time sales assistant positions liable in large insurance agency. Each ting at $8/hr. M/W 1 pm-6pm and ev- olher Saturday from 10am-2pm, the and position would be T/TH 1pm-6pm every other Saturday from 10am-2pm. ies would include helping the sales I with marketing and insurance propos- Please submit resume to: The Liere ncy, 1101 University Dr. East, Ste. College Station, TX 77840. LOST & FOUND necklace. Ags from spring break ake Havasu have my friends necklace, isecall 696-3248 MISCELLANEOUS lh whitening systems. Same as lists use. Gels rated #1. Save up to Is. From $68.95- $129.95 +S&H. Toll i 1-888-48-white (94483). MOTORCYCLE ncers, dancersSS! 6 Suzuki VS700 Intruder. Runs great. Stocking 690-141 idytoride. 979-775-4807. Suzuki Intruder 800, fully custom ors & Cashiers" fro™' louc) +cnaroon, $3400. 779- >und class schedik ^ ons at BurgerYamaha Virago, excellent condition, per Plaza. 10-miles, black, sounds great. Diner on Nort M/oTj.o. Contact 324-6138. id cooks for ai 7' FUN, FUN- '00 KE100, low miles, } University Dr. 8 iient condition, $2000/negotiable. ad to get paid SS in the next SOdii olers +mopeds from $800 at www.giz- . Call 1-800-3114 icorn or email >bs/ 50 » P@gizdeals.com. Y. PA.NewEnJf • RETS EEDED: Tennis' \ ey. Soccer, Basel ^ p ets: Brazos Animal Shelter, ics, Lifeguards." .5755, www.shelterpets.org j, Windsurfing, kclimbing, Rop« rama, Ceramics, jrses Jr Lab/Weimeraner, 7 months old, fe- spayed, all shots/vaccines, large Arlene SM touse/ aut0 feeder -$100. Call Nick '7039. sale, registered rotweiler puppies born s11. $350- females, $400- males, dyforsale Easter weekend. 979-773- 3. Cals Cradle has fabulous felines for tjlplion with a difference! Student dis- nts. 15-mins south of CS. (936)825- 10,(936)870-62 95. "Is ar needed, available oad#13 level, on benefits )329-6434, Southwood, CS- 3/2, many up- ies. 979-694-7127. $115,900. ng energetic, ant, experienc* j dent Special: 16X80 manufactured 3/2, fully furnished, many extras. 0,000/0.8.0. 979-255-5349. irta n, $10 starter^ '3-6313-00 ROOMMATES ■5031- j fooromate needed for summer and fall needed for rasters. 2bdrm/2bth, w/d, bus-route. ed. $7.(W)* umate needed for summer, fall, and :—rrCj^sil mg, 2bdrm/2bath apartment $375/mo ketm9/ 11 1696-2130. acal.net. HoW '76-9399, epting apP'^X., M-Th a-Ap" 1 ' aded. j Full-tima in# 1 * 1 V!! Fun atj 33. ience, no come to Soro ritiei ^ iO om r pups, akc-reg. Shots, wormed, Jaws, Stalls cut, brindle and white, llashy fawn, ready to take home. .919-229-5384. REAL ESTATE sell in Bryan! 4bd/2.5ba 3 living entertaining. See to appreciate 64000777-5322 ingof selling your home? FREE, ick.overthe net market analysis of your iperty. www.AndrewSmithOnline.com oker,Century21. Call Terra 680-9990. Kiommate non-smoker needed for sum- jjj irand/or fall. 3bdrm/2bath house, fur- nager! Grea ', lied, security system, w/d, fenced yard, us P 03 '*' 005 , ^ Ketocampus. $450/mo, bills included, it pay and^Xie 695-7898. lie, non-smoker roommate needed uting summer or fall. Furnished drm/I.Sbth condo, on shuttle, w/d, yard, pool, no deposit. $375/mo. Mities. call 693-8978. . rei ,«l|Roommate needed. 2bdrm/1,5bath sxpenen start j n g Ma y 15 $300/mo. ll SCh00 ( Lpnl 5 «Mike 492-3807. commitmei" e- Plea 3e, !T ■ apply in P erS ! I '06 osier Froommate needed for April pre-lease, lymove-in. 4bdrm/2.5bath house, 2800 $375/mo +1/4-bills. 696-4876. ave message. Roommate needed, $175/mo. is, clean, pets ok. Call 779-0530. «ded: female roommate to sublet room University Commons for fall semester, eatprice. Call Carol at 696-0029. NOW! Pa (, *i immer sublease, f-roommate wanted, m bedroom, rent $250/mo. Call 694- SERVICES Texas Defensive Driving. Lots-of- —; TTopiJ’Laugh-a-lot!! Ticket dismissal/insur- tinuefl ii ce discount. M-T/eom-QomY. W- discount. M-T(6pm-9pm), W- (6pm-9pm), Fri.&Sat.- Fri(6pm-8pm) t(10am-2:30pm), Sat(8am-2:30pm). . * Q\0$ ii<le BankofAmerica. Walk-ins wel- n ' e - $25/cash. Lowest price allowed by with W ! V ' 111 -Univ. Dr., Ste.217. 846-6117 three J 10 ^? 30/min. early. (CP-0017) oes noting undraising « Pregnancy Test; Hope Pregnancy Jiters, College Station 695-9193, Bryan ‘'Qigs P ° St ^ ort ' on P eer Counseling Continued from page 5 6-4, 6-7, 1-0 (10-8). “It feels great to get such a tough win,” Karlikova said. “After being out on the court so long, you don’t want to lose those kind of matches, it feels great to come out of that with the win.” “It was a good match for both of them," McMurray said. “It was disappointing that we had to play the 10-point tiebreaker; I think both of them were a little bit tired though, and Alex did a good job of hanging in there.” Sophomore Jessica Roland and senior Majorie Terburgh both struggled in their matches as they fell to Tulsa, giving the Golden Hurricane its only two points of the night. Junior Ashley Hedberg also made her match look easy as she defeated Mariana Barrios, 6-3, 6-2 on the No. 5 court. Sophomore Roberta Spencer gets credit for the win by default due to Tulsa being shorthanded. Although the Aggies came away with the win, A&M head coach Bobby Kleinecke says there is still a need for improve ment from the team. “You take away that default and this match is still not a gim- mie,” Kleinecke said. “Maybe that played into our thoughts a little bit, but 1 thought Tulsa was a good, solid team. “We’ll take the win, but I’m a little disappointed in our intensity and hunger. We need to have more hunger at this point in the season.” The Aggies are not done with the Oklahoma schools as they travel to Oklahoma State and University of Oklahoma next week. The next home match for the Aggies comes on April 13 against Kansas State at 1p.m. Divers Continued from page 5 474-386 to capture the NCAA women’s swimming and diving championship. Texas A&M matched last year’s finish by placing 26th. “I was a little disappointed,” said A&M head coach Steve Bultman. “We had done so well at the end of the season and great at conference, 1 was hoping we would come here and continue to do that.” Representing A&M on the swimming side at the champi onships were All-American senior Clara Ho, freshman Courtney Patterson and fresh man Christina Thompson. Ho ended her career at A&M with a 28th place finish in the 200-yard butterfly in a time of 2:00.75 on Saturday. Patterson finished 20th in the 100-yard backstroke with a time of 55.54. Her time of 2:04.87 in the 200-yard individual medley placed her 60th. Thompson placed 33rd in the 400-yard individual medley with a season-best time of 4:23.30. In the 100-yard backstroke Thompson finished 37th with a time of 56.59. The freshmen duo of Patterson and Thompson fin ished 31st and 32nd, respective ly, in the 200-yard backstroke. Bultman now looks to next season as he finds new leaders on a young but talented team. “We’re always hoping to get top-20,” Bultman said. “That definitely will be a reality next year.” Broom Continued from page 5 not find a way to win,” Evans said. With the losses, the Aggies fall to 0-3 in the Big 12, which is a disappointing start to confer ence play after the impressive run they had to open the season. OU jumps to 2-0 in the Big 12 with the wins. Despite the slow start in Big 12 play, the Aggies remain con fident that they will pick them selves up and have a great sea son. “We have got all of the com ponents here to have a great sea son,” said Evans. “It s just three games and we have got 15 more games, which is a lot of games. We just have to continue to approach this with confidence in our ability.” The Aggies’ next action is this Tuesday when they wel come Northwestern Louisiana in a doubleheader beginning at 5 p.m. Kansas, OU land in Final Four KRT CAMPUS Missouri center Arthur Johnson tries to block Oklahoma’s Aaron McGhee during Oil’s 81-75 victory over the Tigers to advance to the Final Four. (AP) — If everything worked out according to the brackets designed by the NCAA basket ball selection committee, there would be four top-seeded teams headed to next weekend’s Final Four. Sometimes it does, which is why Kansas and Maryland will meet in one national semifinal next Saturday at Atlanta. Sometimes it doesn't, which is why Oklahoma and Indiana will play in the other. No. 1-seeded Kansas and Maryland completed the Final Four Sunday. The Jayhawks eliminated No. 2-seeded Oregon 104-86 to win the Midwest Regional, and the Terrapins held off No. 2 Connecticut 90-82 in the East. No. 5 Indiana won the South on Saturday, topping Kent State 81 -69, and No. 2 Oklahoma cap tured the West by advancing with a 81 -75 victory over No. 12 Missouri. Kansas has the highest scor ing team in the country and complements that with a strong inside game. Typical was the rout of overmatched Oregon. Drew Gooden and Nick Collison each had double-dou bles by early in the second half, and the Jayhawks outrebounded the Ducks 63-34. Kansas had 26 offensive rebounds, leading to 31 second-chance points. Gooden had 18 points and 20 rebounds, and Collison added 25 points and 15 rebounds as the Jayhawks (33-3) simply wore down the Ducks. Maryland (30-4) had all it could handle from Connecticut. Romp Continued from page 5 But in the end, the Terps used the senior savvy of Lonny Baxter and Juan Dixon — and one key shot by Steve Blake — to prevail. Baxter had a season-high 29 points and Dixon added 27, many of them crucial, to defeat the Huskies. Blake’s only field goal of the game, a 3-pointer that barely beat the shot clock in the final minute, opened a six- point lead and proved decisive. Indiana made sure the Final Four would have a new look when the Hoosiers defeated defending champion Duke in the South semifinals. That made the matchup against Kent State almost anti- climactic, but coach Mike Davis’ team did not let down. Indiana (24-1 1) hit 15 of 19 3-point attempts and opened a 20-point lead that Kent State could not overcome. The victory was costly, though. Tom Coverdale turned his left ankle and was in a wheelchair for the net-cutting ceremony. His availability next weekend is questionable. For Davis, in his second season succeeding Bob Knight, the trip to the Final Four is vindication. He was hired amid much crit icism, an assistant thrust into a high-profile head coaching job in the high-pressure Big. Ten. But the players supported him, and after a 7-5 start this season, the team jelled at the most important time. Oklahoma (31 r 4) used the pinpoint shooting of Hollis Price and Ebi Ere to defeat Missouri. Price had 18 points. Ere 17. It was an emotional victory for Sooners coach Kelvin Sampson, whose father had brain surgery last week. For Oklahoma,, it will be the first trip to the Final Four, since 1988. with an RBI single that was followed by Stephenson’s bases-loading single. Stephenson’s single set the stage for Wong's grand slam. “(Blair) fooled me with a changeup one pitch before that,” Wong said. “I thought he was going to stay away with another one like that because of how bad I took the swing before, but he came back with a fast ball out over the plate. I got it pretty good.” The Sooners got on the scoreboard in the fifth inning after Charlie Frasier led off the inning with a home run, only the sec ond long ball Ballouli has given up this season. Frasier was the first Sooner to get past second base in the game, and none advanced that far again until the eighth inning. Sophomore Kyle Parcus relieved Ballouli in the eighth inning, stifling the Sooners only real chance at a rally by forc ing two fly outs and one strikeout to end the inning. “Pitching is the name of the game. They had it and we didn’t,” said OU head coach Larry Cochell. “A&M pitched outstand ing. I think (Ballouli) is one of the best pitchers in the Big 12. He’s so competitive on the mound and will fight you tooth and nail.” We Are America's #1 Brake Service Company! Why do so many women shop at Midas? 2715 S. Texas Ave - (979) 764-1844 fiuBE,"oii • & FILTER s 15” 5»- A i—: 2818 Store CARKEIPER 7 BRAKES *59 ■ - Up To 5 Qls. 10W30 Oil. > Diesel Cars Excluded. 1 Most Cars & Light Trucks. Coupon must be presented at time of purchase. Not good with any oth offer. At porfiapoting shops only, limited time offer ends 12/31/02. 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A 979-680-0508 Sunday: "l 1 a.m. - midnight IVlonday - Wednesday: 1 *1 a.m. - 1 a.m. Thursday: 1 *1 a.m. - 2 a.m. Friday & Saturday: 1 1 a.m. - 3 a.m. Monday MeMown 1 f 1 Topping Pizza A B Every Monday Pick-up only LARGE 1 TOPPING after 10 p.m. Get a Life!! Come, join us... Join a group of men and women for a weekend of presentations, group discussions, private con sultations and prayer to find out what it’s like to be a Catholic priest, sister, or brother. The program explores the rewards and obligations that go with religious life. It is designed to help you make a more intelli gent choice of your vocation, whatever it might be. Single Adults Ages 20 - 45 July 12, 13, 14, 2002 Join us on... Friday evening through Sunday lunch Life Awareness Holy Name Retreat Center 430 Brinker Hill Road Houston, Texas 77024 For More Information, contact: Sandy Steffes: (281) 497-4349 Joe DiLeo: (713) 464-0170 Holy Name Retreat Center (713) 464-0211 \H THE AFTERNOON! 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