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Faculty, staff & students receive a 10% discount CarePlus^ FAMILY MEDICAL CENTER and Pharmacy 696-0683 eto 8 1712 Southwest Pkwy • C.S Every Day TLENSES ENDED WEAR 59 e Station »ns .D. ing Z5PEN 24 HOURS ■■-BONE STEAK RIB EYE STEAK CATFISH between 5 ano ■ entree oi eq^ m other special AGGIE HtelOID j 77840 t Jniversity jcials $i 9! $2 9! 99c $2 CINEMA 7 ^CLIVE BARKER PROVES Hi HORROR KING OF MOVIEML -Bill Harris, At The Movies ’THE BEST SLAM BANG, NO-HOLDS-BARRED. SCARE THE- -OUT OF YOU HORROR MOVIE FOR QUITE A WHILE." •Screen International T HAVE SEEN THE FUTURE OF HORROB AND HIS NAME IS CLIVE BARKER" !* -Stephen King 1 \ HELLRA1SER He'll tear your soul apart. NEW WORLD PICTURES e kssxutn* wm< CINEMARQUE ENTERTAINMENT BV msom A FILM FUTURES PRODUCTION A FILM BY CUVE BARKER HELLRAISER sr/uuutc ANDREW ROBINSON CLARE HIGGINS «e ifmxxiWG ASHLEY LAURENCE mubt rt CHRISTOPHER YOUNG Exarnvt nwucas DAVID SAUNDERS CHRISTOPHER WEBSTER vt> MARK ARMSTRONG R lmemrim * nouca CHRISTOPHER FIGC wwmK we Dwrmi w CUVE BARKER A n(V l r,,* mjrrJTtr JKfSSSS ccimoisc OPENS NATIONWIDE SEPTEMBER 18th FREE SNEAK PREVIEW Monday, September 14, 1987 7:30 p.m., Rudder Auditorium sponsored by MSC Aggie Cinema seating is limited to first 500 free passes at MSC Box Office night of event Monday, September 14, 1987/The Battalion/Page 13 Super Bowl champs of last 2 years meet CHICAGO (AP) — The rarity of an NFL season opener between the last two Super Bowl champions will add to the extravaganza Monday night when the New York Giants meet the Chicago Bears. A crowd of more than 66,000 will jam Soldier Field, while the game is expected to attract the largest tele vision audience in Monday night football history. “I doubt if the game will be as good as the hype,” Bears Coach Mike Ditka said. It will mark only the second time that successive Super Bowl cham pions have met in the following sea- son-opening game. Two years ago, the Bears defeated the Giants 21-0 in the playoffs and went on to capture the Super Bowl with a 46-10 drubbing of the New England Patriots. The Giants extended their win ning streak to 12 games last season with a 39-20 triumph over the Denver Broncos in the Super Bowl. The only other time successive Su per Bowl champions have met in a season-opener was in 1982 when the Los Angeles Raiders defeated the defending champion San Francisco 49ers 23-17. The game will feature two of the toughest defenses in the league. The Bears will be aiming for an unprece dented fourth straight NFL de fensive title. They set an NFL record by allowing only 187 points for a 16- game season last year. The Bears also are trying to be come the first team to lead the league in rushing five straight years, and that wot vies Giants Coach Bill Parcells. Parcells said he sees little differ ence between the Bears’ 1985 de fense directed by Buddy Ryan and the current unit under coordinator Vinri° TVvKin One change finds veteran Gary Fencik in a backup role, with Todd Bell teaming at safety with Dave Duerson. The Bears’ defense will have to contain a Giants’ offense led by quar terback Phil Simms, running back Joe Morris and tight end Mark Ba- varo. Simms was voted the Super Bowl’s Most Valuable Player after completing 22 of 25 passes for 268 yards and three touchdowns against the Broncos. “I hope we don’t have to ask Phil Simms to carry the load,” Parcells said. “If we don’t do a little some thing about running the ball, we’re not going to win. I’m concerned.” Simms agreed and said the run ning game “is the hardest thing to put together. The passing game sometimes can work with a mistake. But in the running game, a lot of things have to be good before you can get it done.” The big question surrounding the Bears is the quarterback position. Jim McMahon is out for at least six weeks, if not the season, because his surgically repaired shoulder has been slow to heal. Mike Tomczak will be the quar terback. Ditka said he is “not worried about Tomczak. He’ll do a good job.” Ditka could be more concerned about the offensive line. Center Jay Hilgenberg missed most of the pre season because of a shoulder injury. The All-Pro will play against the Gi ants while wearing a harness. Tackle Jim Covert also has been bothered with shoulder problems. Walter Payton, the NFL’s all-time ruushing leader with 16,193 yards, will lead the Bears’ offense. But Neal Anderson will start at fullback in stead of Matt Suhey, a move which will add speed to the attack. UH off to shaky start, loses to Cowboys 35-0 HOUSTON (AP) — The Houston Cougars didn’t intend for their new run-and-shoot offense to sputter in its debut or for their defense to give up the big play. But both happened Saturday as the Oklahoma State Cowboys beat Houston 35-0, marking the Cougars’ first shutout loss in the Astrodome since 1965, a string that included 121 games. Houston linebacker Gary Mc Guire said, “Going into the game, we were just trying to avoid the big play and what we didn’t want to happen, happened. OSU tailback Thurman Thomas ran 49 yards in the first quarter. Af ter taking a 14-0 halftime lead, the Cowboys scored 21 points over a 5:04 span, beginning late in the third quarter. Barry Sanders returned a punt 68 yards, Rod Smith ran back a Dacus interception 41 yards in the third quarter and quarterback Mike Gundy ran one yard early in the fourth quarter to complete the rout. Houston Coach Jack Pardee, in his first game as head coach, used three quarterbacks without much success in trying to get the pass- oriented offense off the ground. Freshman Andre Ware had mar ginal success in the fourth quarter, driving the Cougars to their deepest penetration, the Cowboy 12-yard line. “There were some good points, like the guys were open all day, but we have to work real hard in the week we have off,” Ware said. Ware completed five of eight passes for 78 yards. Starter David Dacus hit seven of 18 for 62 yards but had two interceptions, one re turned for a touchdown. Ed Powers hit two of eight passes for 10 yards. The defense, which was supposed to be the team’s backbone, couldn’t contain Thomas, who rushed 111 yards on 21 carries, and Gundy, who hit 14 of 27 passes for 162 yards. “Thomas opened it up,” McGuire said. “Hejust stopped us. We are not going to have any excuses this year. There’s no doubt we have got a lot of work to do and a lot to prove.” Houston’s defense did stop the Cowboys at their one yard line in the first quarter and punter Simon Ro driguez helped the Cougars with 56 and 54-yard punts. “We decided we could have put them away in the first half but didn’t,” Thomas said. “We had to have a big play in the second half. “When Sanders broke the punt return, that was it. We never looked back. “The receivers we have are tall and have good speed,” Gundy said. “They can get open and they know when I’m scrambling, when to come back to me. “I felt our line did a good job. The Houson rushers were slow and never got to me.” Oklahoma State, 2-0, plays at Wyoming on Saturday. The Cougars have the week off. UT victimized by turnovers as BYU deals Horns 2nd loss AUSTIN (AP) — Quarterback Bob Jensen threw for two touchdowns and took advantage of eight Texas turnovers as Brigham Young de feated the Longhorns 22-17 Satur day night in non-conference college football. BYU is now 1-1 on the year, while Texas falls to 0-2. The Brigham Young defense grabbed four interceptions — two by defensive back Rodney Rice — and four fumbles. Texas opened the scoring on a 1- yard run by quarterback Bret Staff ord in the first quarter, but two of the turnovers in the second quarter led to Jensen scoring tosses of 21 yards to David Miles and 27 yards to Chuck Cutler. Texas narrowed the gap to 14-10 when Wayne Clements hit a 46-yard field goal to end the first half. Stafford, however, was sacked twice in the early moments of the second half, forcing the Longhorns back from their own 20. Then Alex Waits’ punt was blocked by Brigham Young linebacker Richard Hobbs for a safety to make it 16-10. Texas Tech survives scare, defeats Colorado St. 33-24 ■ cut here I mm Defensive Driving Course Sept. 16, 17 and Sept. 22,23 College Station Hilton Pre-register by phone: 693-8178 For information call 693-8178 24 hours a day ■■■■I Mi Mi ■■■■■■ l cut here i ■■■■■■I I I LEONARD AUTO SUPPLY Wholesale & Retail Tired of paying new parts prices? Buy used parts for less, all parts guaranteed. r 10% discount on all parts w/this coupon OPEN MON-FRI 8-6 SATURDAY 8-12 'Dial 823-8127 LOCATED BY UNDERPASS ON HWY. 21 &HWY. 6 INTERSECTION I I I a a a a a i i Kappa Alpha Psl Fraternity inc. LOOKING FOR A “FEW” GOOD MEN Many are called, but “FEW" are CHOSEN to pursue the dream of ACHIEVEMENT through KAPPA ALPHA PSI!!! If you have a desire to learn more about “The Fraternity” and wish to find out if you are Qualified; Attend the Interest Meeting of the Brothers of KAPPA ALPHA PSI for our Fall 1987 Pledge Line. PLACE: Rudder Tower room 407 TIME: 8:30 p.m. DATE: Tuesday, September 15,1987 DRESS: Semi-Formal “A HECKUVAIOT” That’s how much money you’ve spent building your wardrobe. Remember, in dry cleaning: “you get what your pay for.” Villa Maria EANERS ‘OjialiLy (Service" 710 Villa Maria Road 822-3937 Bring your garments to us for professional spotting, cleaning, and finishing care. Hours: Mon-Fri 7:30-6:00 Sat. 8:00-12:00 NEW 3'C i Restaurant TONIGHTS SPECIAL 5-9 pm, ALL YOU CAN EAT Catfish & 2 Vegetables $6.95 Specials —ALL DAY— M F 500 Draft Beer LUBBOCK (AP) — Texas Tech’s James Gray rushed for 150 yards, Ervin Farris ran for two touchdowns and Scott Segrist kicked two field goals to carry the Red Raiders to a wild 33-24 non-conference victory over Colorado State Saturday night. It was Spike Dykes’ first victory as head coach of the Red Raiders after three tries. Colorado State, 0-2, made Tech sweat to the final gun as Sanjay Beach returned a kickoff 99 yards for a touchdown after the Raiders took a 26-17 lead on Gray’s 2-yard touchdown run with 5:58 to play. The Raiders finally delivered the knockout punch with 1:23 to go on a 32-yard scoring pass from Scott To man to Wayne Walker. Texas Tech, 1-1, built a 19-10 lead in the third quarter on Farris’ 39-yard touchdown run and Segrist’ 20-yard field goal. Colorado State quarterback Scooter Molander’s 33-yard scoring pass to J.D. Brookhart trimmed Tech’s lead to 19-17 early in the fourth period. Segrist kicked a career-long 52- yard field goal, and the Red Raiders rolled 62 yards on seven plays for a 10-0 halftime lead on Farris’ 3-yard scoring run. FI BE DELIVERY 846-0379 Best Pizza in Town Bl