Wednesday,October 21,1987/The Battalion/Page 11 SKI Winterpark JAN. 8-15 $300. In cl udes: Spons. by We igh tliftinq club Steve Buras 845-5020 $150. deposit due by 11 -5-87 Tr^NSpor'i a+ioN Condos Shi Rentals Lift Tichets WANT TO HAVE FUN AT HALLOWEEN? DRY ICE Adds To The Fun Call To Reserve Yours Today CEN-TEX Fire & Safety 693-8593 1501 FM 2818 Ste. 327 Behind K-Mart May Drink or Use for Special Effect..The Hotter The Liquid The More the Effect ATM Watches Other Southwest Conferences i Available 404 UniversityeBehind Shellenbergers*846-8905 Student Y Youth Fun Day III 66 everyone is a winner Information sessions for people inter ested in being coaches or counselors on Wednesday Oct. 21 and Thursday Oct. !2 at 5:00 p.m. in 501 Rudder Lotus 1-2-3 One-week classes for students who want to learn this popular spreadsheet program Cost $35.00 Sterling C. Evans Library Learning Resources Department Room 604 845-2316 October 26 - October 30 2:00 - 4:00 p.m. November 30 - December 4 4:00 - 6:00 p.m. UFA University Pediatric Association 1328 Memorial Dr. • Bryan Full Range of Medical Service for College Students including Gynecological Services (Dr Kathleen Rollins) Call for appointment 776-4440 7 a. m. -7 p. m. extended hours for illnesses only WilliamS. Conkling, M. D.,F.A. A.P. Kenneth E. Matthews, M.D.,F.A.A.P. JtsseW. Parr, M.D.,F.A.A.P. Kathleen H. Rollins, M.D.,F. A.A.P. Robert H. Moore, M.D..F.A.A.P. IT IS A CRIME TO MAKE UNARTHORIZED LONG DISTANCE CALLS!! i The unauthorized use or possession and distribution of codes or calling card numbers with intent to de fraud is a violation of Federal and State law. It is the policy of University Communications, Inc. to seek prosecution to the fullest extent allowed by law. Pun ishments include fines and/or imprisonment. 811 MU. — ii n Replacement players looking for openings IRVING (AP) — Free agents who came to be called “Nowboys” and “Redscabs” will Find out soon if their NFL careers will end in videotape memories or continue with a spot among the regulars. For Washington Redskins line backer Bobby Curtis, it comes down to a pro football job or a return to the classroom at Savannah State Col lege in Georgia. “I’m just going to take it one day at a time, but winning tonight makes it easier to wait,” Curtis said Mon day. “We’ve just been having a whole lot of fun and this really caps it off.” Curtis, like others on the replace ment teams that took over when reg ular players staged a 24-day strike, said, “I’m just thankful I got the op portunity to play. I think we’ve all tried to make the best of it.” The sentiment was widespread Monday night among those who had crossed picket lines and will be al lowed to stay, at least temporarily, because the league has permitted the teams to keep 85 players. Only 45 — for the most part the returning strik ers — will man the active rosters. But many were optimistic at the possibility of joining a regular team somewhere in the league. “I think we developed some good friendships, and we had a lot of fun just getting another chance to make a team,” Dallas Cowboys quarterback Kevin Sweeney said. “I think most of the guys now are just hanging low, waiting to see if they’re going to make the team. “It’s been an up-and-down thing all along — waiting to see if they were going to strike, then waiting to see if the strike was ending,” he said. It was a common trait among these players that helped endear them to fans — they were grateful just for the chance to play, the chance to make the team. “I’ve been playing football a long time, and this was my opportunity,” said Redskins quarterback Tony Robinson, who hit 11 of 18 passes for 152 yards Monday night. “I never lost confidence in myself. The one thing I’ve done is trust in myself and the Lord,” Robinson said. “I was just happy to be part of the Redskins.” Dallas defensive tackle Mike Dwyer saw little action Monday night, but expressed no bitterness. “I’m going to keep going out there and trying as hard as I can un til they tell me to stop coming back,” Dwyer said. “If they won’t take me here, maybe another team will. I’m just glad they let me play a little while.” Zoeller final survivor in nine-hole Shootout TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — Fuzzy Zoeller dropped a 25-foot birdie utt on the final hole and won the 90,000 first prize Tuesday in the season finale of the Merrill-Lynch Shootout. “I think I’ll give up the tour and just play these nine-hole things,” joked Zoeller, who has made a habit of winning the pro golf tour’s big- money exhibitions. He won $360,000 last November in the Skins Game. Both the Skins Came and the Shootout are made- for-television events that are ap proved by the PGA Tour but are unofficial. The Shootout will televised na tionally by ABC on Nov. 8. Zoeller had to survive two chip- offs and a one-putt bogey to reach the last hole in a head-to-head match with Masters champion Larry Mize. Both reached the green on the par-4 ninth at the Ventana Golf and Racquet Club, and Mize scared the hole with a 30-foot putt before Zoel ler ran in the winner. The unusual format has 10 play ers in the starting field, with one man eliminated on each hole. If there is no clear loser on a hole, a chip-off is held, with the man the greatest distance from the cup elimi nated. Zoeller was involved in a three- way chip-off on the fifth hole which eliminated Ben Crenshaw, and again on the eighth after Zoeller, Mize and Payne Stewart all made birdie 4. Stewart was eliminated. But Zoeller’s biggest break came on the treacherous Httle par-3 third, where he and two others missed the green in a lateral hazard, took a pen alty drop and one-putted for bogey 4. That, however, was good enough to advance when Tom Watson four putted from about 60 feet. His fii si putt failed to make it over the ridge to the upper level of the green, and he had a 40-foot second putt, which he left 10 feet short, and then missed that one. Lanny Wadkins was the first to be eliminated, taking a double bogey 6 from a bunker on the first hole. Paul Azinger was the loser in a three-man chip-off on the second, and Dan Pohl left after a poor drive produced a bogey 6 on the fourth. Ray Floyd went out with a bogey from the front fringe on the sixth, and U.S. Open winner Scott Simp son bogeyed from a bunker on the seventh. Poke players say team has 'marked" image DALLAS (AP) — The “original” Dallas Cowboys players, practicing again at Valley Ranch, are preparing to deal not only with hostile oppo nents on the playing field, but also internal problems after the NFL players’ strike. While some of the league’s bigger names crossing the line were Cow boys, the team may also encounter some harsh feelings because of the highly visible role president Tex Schramm played in the strike, play ers say. “They look at the fact that Tex initiated a lot of the stuff or they be lieve that Tex is the one that did, and I’m sure they’re going to be ticked off,” said cornerback Everson Walls. “Mr. Schramm was pretty much the spokesman for management and if this is what they wanted, then he did a great job,” said linebacker Jeff Rohrer. “Unfortunately, it alienated a lot of players around the league, and I’m sure they’ll want to take it out on us.” The original Cowboys worked out Monday at the team’s Valley Ranch practice facility for the first time since the strike ended. Some Cowboys’ players believe other NFL teams will view them as one of the teams that ended the strike. “I think our problems won’t come from within as much as from other teams, especially a team like Phila delphia,” said safety Bill Bates. “They didn’t have anybody cross the line, and that will just add fuel to the fire.” “There’s definitely a lot of teams that will be gunning for us because we were weak,” Rohrer said. “The perception around the league that’s been quoted by other player reps is that that’s why this team never goes anywhere.” But Rohrer and others don’t think internal problems will critically hurt the Cowboys. “The only way to make up the money we lost is to get into the play offs.” Rohrer said. “We’ve got to focus our efforts in that direction, put this behind us and ignore the response we get from fans the first time we play in Texas Stadium.” Herschel Walker said, “For this team here, the Cowboys always have been a team where the offense is de signed for individuals — you do your responsibility and don’t worry about the guy over there. “So I don’t think it’s going to af fect us much at all.” Cardinals (continued from page 9) will start for the Twins. Rookie left hander Greg Mathews will start for St. Louis. Of the 37 teams that won the first two games in the World Series, 27 went on to win it. But in the last two years, Kansas City and the New York Mets each fell behind 2-0 and rallied to win in seven games. Straker and Tudor matched ze roes through five innings. Tudor retired the first six Twins and escaped trouble in the third by striking out Straker in his first ma jor-league at-bat. Straker failed to bunt with a runner on first, and the mistake was magnified when Dan Gladden followed with a two-out sin gle. Tudor got Greg Gagne on an in ning-ending fly ball. The Twins, who had scored 13 runs in the fourth innings of Games 1 and 2, went down 1-2-3 this time and that brought the loudest cheer from the relieved crowd. Tudor fin ished the fifth by fanning Straker with a runner on third, again on three pitches. The Cardinals again came out running against Straker, who has trouble holding runners on base and is prone to jitters. Straker committed the 17th balk in Series history in the second inning when he did not hold his set position, something St. Louis Manager Whitey Herzog said the Twins’ pitchers do not do. Bonfire Buddy Cake’s only $5.00 FARMERS MARKET SANDWICH SHOPPE CALL FOR INFORMATION 846-6428 f Contact Lenses Only Quality Name Brands (Bausch & Lomb, Ciba, Barnes-Hinds-Hydrocurve) *$79 00 " STD - DA|LYWEARSOFTLENSES I $99. $99. 00 -STD. EXTENDED WEAR SOFT LENSES 00 -STD. TINTED SOFT LENSES DAILY WEAR OR EXTENDED WEAR Call 696-3754 For Appointment Same day delivery on most soft contact lenses ★Eye exam and care kit not included CHARLES C. SCHROEPPEL, O.D., P.C. DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY 707 South Texas Ave., Suite 101D College Station, Texas 77840 1 block South of Texas & University r r 'H SSSK Dpn’t Worry when an accident f or sudden illness occurs CarePlus is open when you need them 7 days a week • . with affordable medical care. 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