^5,; Classifieds continued from Pg. 2b FOR SALE >ossess 6 fl'tsei, '(ties 6x56 Sonoma, 2bdrm/2bth, Oak Forest ark, w/d, deck, shed, $29,900/obo, 1- 88-484-8880, 956-605-9213. Wii*' ions, #le bus im m/2bif Honda CRX-DX. Runs great, sup- ed-up, $1000 0.6.0. call 979-739-7121. 999 Town and Country home in Rolling lidge Park. 16x56, 2bd/2ba, furnished, V/D, deck, great condition. $34,000. Call iourtney (979)695-8909. 900 4bd/2ba double-wide set-up in Col- „ Station. Call Hank (979)229-8349 or 196-0469. 00-gallon saltwater aquarium. Custom tand& top, reef lights, sump- tank, 75-lbs igi Rock, Smore. $1300/obo. 512-775- 821/bigwhit@neo.tamu.edu. 000 16x76 set-up in new park in College ation $22,000. Call Hank (979)229-8349 696-0469. ®2,1000 Palm Harbor home for sale. 28x58, Scoured IK, one owner, 2-decks, shed, fenced '00fs.rs#ard. $62,500. Call Mark 979-574-3345. natat, lbdrm/2ba mobile home in Rolling Ridge tobile Home Park. W/D, dishwasher, re- rigerator, computer desk, lawnmower in- iluded. Call 325-247-3422 2204® I0'x8’ mobile home, close to TAMU, low Otrent, $2800/obo. 956-492-3144. bmVIbth ■Wine, satin, spaghetti strap, size 6 Wed- areatiJ ling Dress. Beautiful back & train, $300, all 979-764-8980. mglof lakery for sale. Great location close to nail. Call 713-501-0185. month h $27/mo. COMPARE TEXTBOOK PRICES! Search 24 bookstores with 1 click! Ship- ilng and taxes automatically calculated, iltpd/www.bookhq.com malC® Condo for sale! 4bdrm/4ba. W/D, full ■smoker lh of earn |. Animj 3reser%x Jrrepan pay you lichen, pool/extras, 3yrs old, like new. iWPkwy. 979-492-4878. Got Cash? I can sell you a mobile home cheaper than anyone. Call Hank 979)229-8349 or 696-0469. Class of '02. oombut gone to This hors ndfaiitj ivenienca rrindow tave 3-roommates? Money maker for owier! 1997, 28'x56’ mobile home in Oak Creek. 4bd/3ba, new carpet/ tile/ applian ces, storage building, two decks. Owner financing. $53,900 call Meredith 979-777- 4686. M-1-T bottles, 60 caps $40. (Higher Pow er) 979-739-7717. nimais hi mg with s astheres ^ (fe New Mobile Car Wash Rig. Everything in- Rjlpf. duded. Price Neg. Ramon. 979-575-8229.| preferrec ilty. Cal 13182814 rck numb: Pillow top mattress, lyr old, $450. 2- speaker set $50, 6ft bookshelf $35, 3ft bookshelf $25. Call for info 979-680- 8329. $250 and Refrigerator $150 220- 3665. i to cam $479!to HELP WANTED r. hone, ad iy free. ad MayC ssa 979! ex. Onsm yard,pes 79-258® ailable nectionsC olfPenC’i 54-3802 mCi* nenls. W /e-in W mo 97Jf5 th al Cm ive-ioW Mual must have a positive “can-do" atti- 0 2/2aparm rD, Ai. -575-7® n/tbtb 7 s. liable in S 35/mo. , Briar. from n. a- bdrm, shuttle,tlBBabysitter needed. Flexible Hours. Non- 5wks of smoker. $5/hr. 779-7872. ’tbth Bartenders, barbacks, Swaitstaff needed. Experience preferred but will train. Apply Fenced® i> etween 1-5pm. Old Fuddrucker’s location , -t-bis. .drnVIte - • mpus L*S Prairie and Wel| t>om. Cal €12. 500 Summer Jobs/ 50 Camps/ You Choose! NY, PA, New England. IN STRUCTORS NEEDED: Tennis, Basket- Roller Hockey, Soccer, Baseball, La crosse, Gymnastics, Lifeguards, WSI, Wa terskiing, Sailing, Windsurfing, Archery, Ml. Biking, Rockclimbing, Ropes, Piano Accompanist, Drama, Ceramics, Wood- shop, English Riding, Nature, Nurses. Ar lene Streisand 1 -800-443-6428; www.summercampemployment.com Assembly Technician. Lynntech, Ind., a rapidly growing, highly successful technol ogy development company in College Sta- lion, TX has an immediate opening for a full-time Assembly Technician. The indi vidual must be detailed oriented and have Ihe desire to work in a fast paced environ ment with a diverse group of people. The applicant must have mechanical skills and should be able to work with hands and power tools. Candidate must also have the ability to understand electri- il and fluid schematics and should have great deal of craftsmanship. The indi- tude, be self-motivated, professional and possess good communication skills. Send resume and references to: Human He roes Office, 7607 Eastmark Dr.; Suite 102, College Station, TX 77840 or fax to 979-764-5794 or email to hrlynntech@lynntech.com. EOE. Attention Students! Leasing Agents needed full/ part time positions available. Great pay, fun atmosphere. Must be neat appearance. Apply in person at Meadows Point Apts. 800 Marion Pugh or fax resume 979-693-0455. Babysitter needed monday through friday 3-5:30 Call Sandi 693-8808 lext to Target. Cashier, evening plus some grave yard shift Tigerland Express. Apply corner of SO/mo^f Certified, insured personal trainers need ed. Make much more than where you are low. Create your own schedule, 979-219- 3384. Cleaning commercial buildings at night, 4-F. Call 823-5031 for appt. Corner of Time Soda Fountain Bar, please apply at 118N Bryan Ave. in Historic ^ Downtown Bryan. i 5^ Frittella, New Italian Restaurant at 3901 Price!) South Texas Ave. Casual but elegant en- Ends A/' 1 vironment. Need motivated individuals with good attitudes, neat appearance and Jersonable. We will train. Cashiers/ Food Sales. Apply in person only. Full-time teacher/mom of BUSY family needs help! Min. 8-10/hr week. Starting $7/hr. Heavy cleaning- inside and out, washing and ironing a must, organizing i needed. Two full-year commitment necessary, training early May, begin work 117-04. Weekend interviews only. Fax biographical and work info to 979-690- 8075. : un, prestigious public speaking position. $7/hr., evenings &Saturdays. Must have DL 4+years. No criminal records. We 693-3992. dealthy women and men 18yrs+ not tak- ng hormonal preparations are invited to larticipate in behavioral research paying $10-20 for 1-2hrs of time, for further infor mation, contact. Dr. Alexander: gmaipsyc.tamu.edu. HELP WANTED NEEDED Koppe Bridge Bar and Grill. Part-time cook & counter help. Wellborn and Harvey Road locations. 764-2933, 776-2833. Looking for graphic artist/ cartoonist, Quantum Cow Tutoring. Call 979-260- COWS, will pay. Looking for summer work? Make $8,200. Get 3-hours of college credit. Great re sume and work experience. Open to all majors. Contact Marcel 979-218-0084. Med Tech/Lab Tech for full-time, two doc tor office. Excellent benefits. Great expe rience for student applying to medical or nursing school. Degree and one year commitment required. Fax resume to (979)776-4260 or apply in person at: 2706 Osier Blvd., Bryan, TX MSC Bookstore is now hiring for spring buyback. Please join us at one of our in formational meetings: March 29th from 2pm-3pm in MSC 212; March 30th from 3pm-4pm in Koldus 111; or March 31st from 3pm-4pm in Rudder 410. Interviews will be set up at the meeting. Notes-n-Quotes is accepting applications for outgoing, well-spoken, and self moti vated store sales people. A&M soph, and juniors preferred. Positions available im mediately as well as for summer and fall. Please come by NNQ at 701 University Dr. for more details and to apply. Now hiring servers, 2-lunch shifts/wk and night and weekends. Apply in person 2- 5pm. Cotton Patch Cafe HW6 at Rock Prairie. Office Assistant, Part-Time, Flexible Schedule. Kristen Dist. Co., distributors of Miller, Coors & other fine adult beverages has 1-position avail. 20-30 hours. Duties include, answer phone, filing, faxing & oth er various office tasks. Apply in person at 1501 Independence Ave., (979)775-6322 Part time sales assistant needed for Sat urdays 9am to 1pm, starting immediately. Must be able to work through the summer, also dependable and personable. No phone calls please. Apply in person only at our College Station location. Party Time Rentals 1816 Ponderosa Dr. Part-time in office work consisting of an swering the phones, light computer work and light sales of flooring materials. Flexi ble hours, friendly work place and close to campus. Call (979)696-8400 or apply in person at Accent Tile and Texture, 2908 Cain Rd (just south of Wellborn Rd. Koppe Bridge Bar and Grill). Part-time job helping handicapped. Male student preferred. $290/mo. 10-hours /week. 846-3376. Pest Control Sales- Dallas top pay 33% commission, May to end of August can make you 20-50K, call Mike, 972-353- 2200. Shift Supervisor and cashiers, flexible schedules apply 2-5pm Burger King 1719Tx.Av C.S. STUDENT WORKER. Lynntech Indus tries, Ltd. has a part-time position availa ble for a student worker from the Industrial Distribution department. This position will assist with shipping and receiving, and in ventory control tor a small manufacturing company. Applicants must possess the ability to work well with others and have good communication skills and must suc cessfully complete a pre-employment drug test. The position to be filled is for a mini mum of 12hrs/wk, between 8am-5pm Mon.-Fri. Send resume and times availa ble to work to 7607 Eastmark Dr. Ste.102, CS, TX 77840 or email to studentworkers@lynntech.com. Lynn tech, Inc. is an EOE. The Canyon. Now hiring all positions- DJ, bar, waitstaff, floor, &door. Call 979-696- 3031 for appointment. The Corner is now hiring Bartenders, Bar- backs, floor, and door positions. Please apply in person at 401 UniversityDr. be tween 2-5pm. Wanted: Cowboys & Cowgirls to guide tourists and horses through the Rocky Mountains. Come work for the largest horse operation in North America. Write Sombrero Ranch, 3300 Airport Road, Boulder, CO 80301 or visit our website at www.sombrero.com. Web/ Mobile Technology Developers Wanted Brazos Technology Corp. hiring students for web and mobile technology development. Min. 3.0GPA. CPSC/ INFO/ ELEN majors preferred. Knowledge of .NET, C++, web development required. 10-20hrs/wk Email kschmidt@brazostech.com for details. MOTORCYCLE Xtreme Conditioning: Beyond Athleticism is looking for 20-people interested in los ing weight before summer break. www.XtremeConditioning.com. PETS Adopt Pets: Dogs, Cats, Puppies, Kit tens, Many purebreds. Brazos Animal Shelter, 775-5755, www.shelterpets.org AKC Collies. Puppies born 12/29/03. $100. Call 936-348-3965. Female Pit Puppy. 14wks, very sweet, $50. ASPCA bound if no home found. 936-396-2075. Yellow labs, 9 weeks, darling, good dispo sition, first shots, vet exam. Dam is de scendant of best of show. $180. 979-764- 1124. REAL ESTATE Available in May. Newer 16x60-ft MH w/copper wiring. Near campus. Aggie owned. Graduated. 2bd/2ba, LR, kitchen w/14ft frost-free fridge, DR, util., washer, dryer. Deck. Fenced. Avg trailer payment, lot rent, utilities: $600/month total. Ideal for 2 students. For picture, balance owed call 979-492-5509, 281-388-5545, 281-331- 9603. Easy automatic home searches by mail/ e- rhail. Get the facts w/o the pressure. www.bcshomeinfo.com. Realtor Re-max. Free House Hunting Services reveal best buys in any area and price range you specify! Visit AndrewSmithTeam.com or 979-693-7653. Broker, RE/MAX B-CS. Free, quick, over-the-net home evalua tion! AndrewSmithTeam.com or 979-693- 7653 Broker, RE/MAX B-CS. ROOMMATES 1-M for 2bd/2.5ba condo, on shuttle, move-in August. $400/mo +1/2bills 979- 695-1268 1-M sublease in 2bdrm/2ba. $250/mo. Move in/out anytime! Call 832-640-5738. Ibdrm in 3bdrm apt. $395/mo. all bills in cluded. For fall and spring. Welsh Ave, Fox Meadows town homes 847-3036. IF-Roommate needed ASAP! 4bd/2ba University Commons Apartments, get your own bedroom, completely furnished, cable and ethernet included in rent. $325/mo +1/4bills. Call 979-764-9998. 2-roommates needed $275/mo each. 3/2 home 5-min from campus. 979-525-6076. 2-roommates wanted. 3bd/2ba 2-car ga rage in College Station. Large livingroom with fireplace, large fenced backyard. Pets welcome, $320/mo +1/3bills. Call 979-739-8380. 2M/F Summer Sublease: 3bd/2ba $250/mo. +1/4bills May rent paid (979)695-8141 Available now, non-smoking roommates for 4/3 new home, 904 Bougainvillea, w/d, $375/mo. +1/4utilities. Call Jacob at 979- 690-7781 or 512-557-7576. Available whenever. Rock Prairie and Wei- born. $280/mo +1/3elect. furnished, w/d, cable, internet, and TV included. Ping Pong skills a plus! 713-502-2544. F-needed. Beautiful 3/2 house in Bryan. $475/mo all bills included. Available June, 979-260-3952. F-sublease, Ibd/lba in 4bd/4ba ASAP, Aggie Station, ends 08/04. Free March/ August rent, $399/mo, private bath, fur nished, W/D, HBO 713-724-7149. Female roommate 3/2/2, shuttle, w/d, ca ble, internet, $350/mo +1/3bills, 210-383- 8524 or 979-695-8074. M/F Roommate for 3/2 in Bryan $350/mo. +1/3bills, own bd/ba, lease begins August 979-775-5997 M/F, 2/2 condo, w/d, $400/mo +1/2util. 1- block from campus, by Northgate. 979- 694-3848. M/F, roommate needed 2/1.5 $265/mo +1/2utilities, 1mi. from A&M, C.S. call 691- 6272. Roommate wanted $300 month, 1/3 bills free cable/ internet everything furnished 979-224-4400. Summer sublease; 2bdrms available. W/D, close to campus, on bus route, cov ered parking, rent $300/ea. 979-574- 4062. ‘01 Kawasaki Ninja 500, great condition, $3000. 680-1613, cell- 832-244-8209. 1992 Honda Shadow. Great shape, cus tom tires Shandlebars, 600cc, 17,500mi, $2500. (512)818-1807. 1995 Yamaha YZF 600. New clutch, runs great, $2900. Call 979-823-9142. 1996 Ducati, 900ss, T0K+, new tires, all maintenance performed, $4800 903-870- 8783 leave message. ‘96 Kawasaki Ninja ZX6 $3700. Izvery- thing you need for your first bike! 979-492- 6869. Honda Shadow, 1986. 12,000/mi runs Great! Very clean, new battery, tire, liquid- cooled drive shaft, custom windscreen, $2300, Travis 979-739-5140. MUSIC Party Block Mobile DJ- Peter Block, pro fessional/ experienced. Specializing in Weddings, TAMU functions, lights/smoke. Mobile to anywhere. Book early!! 693- 6294. http://www.partyblockdj.com NEEDED Can you walk, chew gum, and have fun all at the same time? Star Ranch is looking for a few good balancing acts! Are you looking for a challenging yet fun and re warding Summer Camp experience? Join us at Star Ranch, a Christian Summer camp for children with learning disabilities. Counselors, Teachers, and Nurses need ed. Salary, room, board, and laundry pro vided. Located near Kerrville, call Cody, 830-367-4868. UNLIMITED Yoga and Pilates! Students needed for classes at new studio! www.aggieyoga.com 979-219-3384. SERVICES AAA Texas Defensive Driving. Lots-of- fun, Laugh-a-loti! Ticket dismissal/insur ance discount. M-T(6pm-9pm), W- Th(6pm-9pm), Fri.&Sat.- Fri(6pm-8pm) &Sat(10am-2:30pm), Sat(8am-2:30pm). Former student serving you 20yrs. In offi ces above Aggieland Kiva Inn, Ste.200 (next door to Applebee’s). Walk-ins wel come. $25/cash. Lowest price by law. 104 Texas Ave. S. 846-6117. Show-up 30/min. early. Free Pregnancy Test; Hope Pregnancy Centers, College Station 695-9193, Bryan 846-1097; Post Abortion Peer Counseling 695-9193. Professional Websites- $299. Set-up de sign fee waived. 10pg. custom website. 1-800-903-3949 ext.670, ovaldez@heritagewebdesign.com, ask for Oscar. SELL YOUR FURNITURE FOR CASH. We will buy your used furniture. Quality Used Furniture 693-8669 TRAVEL Deep Sea Fishing- Red Snapper Trips $200 off until May. www.texasdeepsea.com, 361 -649-3954. TUTORS im msum n iumi Algebra and Spanish private tutoring. Call afterS pm, 979-575-7414. WANTED Student organizations for fund raising proj ects. Earn money for your cause. Send organization name and contact phone number to gracezim2004@yahoo.com or call 252-916-4300. SPORTS 3B THE BATTALION Thursday, March 25, 2004 Gillispie’s First Aggie War Hymn JOHN C. LIVAS • THE BATTALION (From left to right) Texas A&M freshman guard LaKeith Blanks, freshman forward Marlon Pompey, new head coach Billy Gillispie and sophomore guard/forward Antoine Wright sway to "Saw Varsity's Horns Off" at Reed Arena during Gillispie's first Aggie War Hymn. Gillispie was named A&M men's basketball head coach Wednesday, taking over for six-year head coach Melvin Watkins, who resigned two weeks ago. Another lousy report card for NCAA Tournament field By Jim Litke THE ASSOCIATED PRESS If your kids brought home the same lousy report cards that two-thirds of the 65 teams in the NCAA men’s tournament did, they’d be grounded for months. Instead, they’re all going to get new sneak ers and fistfuls of cash. Now you know why some of the people who watch college sports are always mad in March. It has nothing to do with basketball and everything to do — stop us if you’ve heard this before — with money. Those same people figure that if CBS is paying $6 billion over 11 years to the NCAA, the schools sharing that loot should be graduating most of the kids that play for them. Talk about a radical idea — if it ever catches on, many in the current crop of student-athletes would become as extinct as dodos. But pretend, for the moment, anyway, that the watchdogs were keeping score. First the good news: Stanford would score 100, Lehigh 90, Dayton 82 and Kansas 73. Five other schools, including those perennial bookworms at Duke and Vanderbilt, would register in the 60s. Now the bad: Four other so-called institutions of higher learning in the field would have a big, fat zero alongside their names. That’s even harder to accomplish than it sounds. The marking period in the NCAA’s latest grad uation rate report covered scholarship athletes who entered school between 1993-96 and allowed each six years to graduate. With that much time, you’d think at least one phys ed major in one of those places would have stumbled through the degree maze by sheer luck. Then again, maybe there aren’t as many of Jim Harrick Jr.’s exams in circulation as we thought. In any case, those four schools weren’t identi fied in the latest report, because along with a dozen others, they took advantage of a loophole created by new federal privacy rules and avoided publicly reporting any graduation rates at all. No matter. There is enough disgrace to go around. Another 40 schools that made the tournament field failed to graduate even half their kids, a num ber that trails the national average by a few percent age points. Ditto for at least four teams in the Sweet 16 (and maybe more, since only 11 of the 16 schools still playing published their graduation rates). And then there’s this: If a 50 percent gradua tion rate was required for postseason eligibility — something the do-gooders on the Knight Commission proposed in 2001 — exactly three first-round games would have gone off with the lineups on the floor: Gonzaga vs. Valparaiso, North Carolina vs. Air Force, and Mississippi State vs. Monmouth. But it gets worse. On the Boston Globe’s Web site last week, columnist Derrick Z. Jackson broke down the numbers for African-Americans on scholarship. He found the 37 schools that hid behind the priva cy rules to avoid publishing their 2003 graduation rates for blacks averaged just 19.7 percent in the 2002 report. No surprise there, since 13 of the 37 had black graduation rates of zero in 2002. “When we bring kids to our campuses and fail to educate them in the numbers we’re seeing here,” said Richard Lapchick, who heads the Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport at the University of Central Florida, “all we’re doing is using them up.” The search for a scapegoat usually lands on the doorstep of the NCAA, conveniently forget ting the organization simply administers the poli cies set by member schools. University presi dents have been calling those shots for almost 10 years, and as the latest numbers prove, the pace of reform is still at a crawl. At first, with initiatives like Prop 48, they tried to raise graduation rates by putting the burden squarely on the kids’ shoulders. Those moves nudged the rates upward, but not nearly enough. And with new chief Myles Brand feeling the heat from a lengthening list of embarrassments — everything from conference raids to recruiting scandals and “Coaches Gone Wild” videos have landed on his desk — a consensus is finally emerging to hold the schools accountable instead. This latest mess has already convinced the NCAA to force members to report their 2003 graduation rates in full. That voluntary compli ance will allow the organization to sidestep fed eral restrictions and make the information public late this summer. “Without continued full publication of the graduation rates — especially those at the low end — we will lose the ability to expose those athlet ics programs which are failing to educate their stu dent-athletes,” Brand said. Even more promising than public pressure, though, is the so-called “incentive-disincentive” proposal that will be put to a vote by the NCAA board in late April. As currently envisioned, the graduation rate for scholarship athletes would have to be within a few percentage points of the general student body or schools would face penal ties ranging from a warning, to loss of scholar ships, and possibly even a ban on postseason play. Assuming the measure is approved, another four years likely would pass before the penalties were phased in. It’s a long way away, but it’s a start. And as any parent would tell you, it’s never too early to make kid stick his nose in a book. Byrne Continued from page 1 B Watkins never could. Gillispie is well respected throughout the state, and he also has a coaching pedigree learned under current University of Kansas head coach Bill Self. Self transformed the University of Tulsa from relative obscurity into a top-10 team and NCAA Tournament regular. Self then took over at the University of Illinois, leading the Fighting Illini to three-straight NCAA Tournament appearances before moving onto Kansas. Gillispie was with Self for three of those seasons at Tulsa and two at Illinois, learning the game and how to coach it from one of the best in the business. At UTEP Gillispie showed what he had learned from Self, coaching in much the same style and turning around a mediocre program like UTEP. Now Gillispie finds himself trying to turn around A&M, a ship that three coaches have attempted to right. All have failed. But Kermit Davis, Tony Barone and Melvin Watkins all had something in common - an athletic department that frankly didn’t care about anything except football. In Gillispie’s case, he has Byrne and A&M President Robert M. Gates, who both want champions in every Aggie sport. It’s evident that Byrne will do everything in his power to allow Gillispie to succeed where the others have failed. If Gillispie fails as well, then Byrne will always have the legacy of the man who let Aggie basketball sink into col lege basketball’s abyss. Students Continued from page 1 B last in every Big 12 team defensive category except rebounding last season. “I’ve watched a couple of UTEP games and noticed the strong defensive presence they have on the court,” Bishop said. “I think if Gillespie turns around our defense, we just might win a few more games.” Aggie fans will have to wait until the basketball sea son starts in early November to see Gillispie's new program in action. “I don’t care if Gillispie's playbook has our players run ning in circles around the other team while singing the Oscar Meyer song,” said junior busi ness major Casey Crisp. “If it gets wins, it gets wins.”