The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 19, 1988, Image 10

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    MEAT SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY CENTER
DEPARTMENT OF ANIMAL SCIENCE
PRICE PER POUND
SALE
30-40# BOX
BEEF REG.
ROUND STEAKS (boneless) $2.79 $1.99 $1.69
T-BONE STEAKS (1 in. thick) $3.89 $3.59 $3.29
SIRLOIN TIP ROASTS (boneless) $2.85 $2.39 $1.99
CHUCK ROASTS (boneless) $1.95 $1.69 $1.29
PORK
PORK BOSTON BUTT ROASTS (bone-in) $1.65 $1.49 $1.09
PORK CHOPS (1 in. thick, 4/pkg.) $2.19 $1.99 $1.89
PORK SAUSAGE (1 lb. perpkg.) $1.69 $1.39 $1.19
HICKORY SMOKED BACON (1 lb. pkg.) $2.49 $1.89 $1.49
LAMB
LAMB CHOPS(6 chops/pkg.) : $3.49 $3.19 $2.99
LAMB SHOULDERS (whole, bone-in) $1.75 $1.50 $1.25
Other Beef, Lamb, Pork, Sausage, Dairy products and Farm Fresh Eggs are available. Prices effective through February 29, 1988. We are open for business
Monday through Friday from 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. We are located on the West Campus between the Kleberg Center and the Horticulture/Forest Science Building.
(Phone: 845-5651).
BEEF^P
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Real Food for Real People.
Visit our store for details on the
ENJOY DEEP
AND ENTER THE
SHARE IN THE GOLD
SWEEPSTAKES!
CO TO
MEDICAL SCHOOL
Find out how you can have your medical school tuition, required books and
fees paid in full—plus earn more than $600 a month while you attend school.
Clip and mail the coupon below, and we’ll send you full details on the Armed
Forces Health Professions Scholarship Program.
We'll tell you how you could qualify for a Physicians Scholarship from the
Army, Navy or Air Force.
If selected, you'll not only beat the high cost of medical school, you'll also gain
valuable medical experience serving on active duty 45 days each school year as
a commissioned officer in the Reserves.
After graduation, you'll serve three years or more—depending on the Service
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If you meet the age requirements noted below for the Service of your choice—
and want to cut the expense of medical school—send for more information today.
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YES! Send me full details on how the Armed Forces Health Professions Scholarship Program
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can help cut my medical school expenses. I meet the age requirements noted below.
I understand I am under no obligation.
Mail this coupon to: Armed Forces Scholarships. P.0. Box 2865
Huntington Station, NY 11746-2102 9012
Check up to three: □ Army O Navy □ Air Force
(21-52 yaars of age) (K-33 years of age) (19-35 years of age)
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Phnnp I I I I I I 1 I] I 1 I I. _.l Soc. Sec. No. I I .. .1 I L 1... I l.l J I J
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The information you voluntarily provide will be used for recruiting purposes only. The more complete it is. the
better we can respond to your request. (Authority: 10 USC 503).
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I started a nursery.
I constructed a well.
I surveyed a national park.
I taught school.
I coached track.
I learned French.
I WAS IN THE)
PEACE CORPS
Peace Corps Representatives are on campus to talk
to individuals about opportunities in Africa,
Latin America, Asia and the Pacfic. Your two
year experience with Peace Corps could be the
start of a great future. Plan to stop by or call
Colleen McGarrity 845 - 4722 for more info.
Call Battalion Classified 845-2611
Page 10/The Battalion/Friday, February 19, 1988
Jansen’s dreams
end with 2nd fall
CALGARY, Alberta (AF) — In
the blink of an eye, Dan Jansen’s last
chance to hang an Olympic speed
skating medal on his sister’s memory
ended in tears.
For Jansen, the Olympic dream
turned into a nightmare three times
over: the death from Leaukemia
Sunday of his sister, Jane, a fall in
competition later that same day,
then — impossible as it seemed —an
other fall Thursday.
With about 200 meters to go in
the 1,000-meter race, Jansen
slipped, fell to all fours, spun
around and slid into (he right wall.
He pushed back his hood and sat
with legs splayed, mouth open,
stunned, until Coach Mike Crowe
and teammate Nick Thometz helped
him up.
At the starting line, he embraced
his Fiance, Canadian speed skater
Natalie Grenier, burying his head on
her shoulder, sobbing visibly, hold
ing her as if he never wanted to let
g°-
His worst fears and those ol mil
lions with their hearts in the race
had come true.
“I’m afraid for him,” Geraldine
Jansen said a few hours before the
race from the family home at West
Allis, Wis. “He’s been trying to get it
out of his mind. But he said that just
when he’s got it in perspective,
somebody sends another goodwill
message, a telegram or something,
and then it all comes rushing back
like the day it happened.”
It happened again.
This time on a straightaway,
where he had never fallen before in
a race.
This time 200 meters from the
end, confident of the gold.
This time after starting perfectly
and skating flawlessly.
He passed 200 meters in 1(>.8()
seconds, fastest of the first eight
skaters.
He passed 600 in 44.02, another
best.
Then, a half-lap later, just af ter
the 800-meter mark approaching
the final turn, he hit his right outside
edge.
“I felt like I was still accelerating
and I put my right skate down and it
caught the outer edge," Jansen said.
“I couldn’t roll back over anti 1 was
down.”
“He tried to put too much power
in and hit an outer edge,” Crowe, his
coach said. “He put all the w'eight on
the outside of his right skate and it’s
not a good balanced position. He fell
over on his right side. It’s not some
thing I ever recall him doing.”
When Jansen came to a stop, he
sat staring in bewilderment. The
crowd fell silent.
U.S. skier hurts leg
in wreck with worker
Ag baseball
plays host
to Privateef
The Texas A&M baseball J
wi II play ht >st to the New(
Frivateers in a three-games
this weekend at Olsen Field
The teams will play as
game today at 3 p.m. Sadi
double-header will startai!;{
It also will be 25-Cent Hot
Day at the ballpark.
A&M is 5-0 (his season i
sweeps of Lubbock Chrisiiail
Soul h west Texas .State. I’NOq
0 alter a sweep of JacksonS
last week.
Baseball America ranks!
filth and l \() seventhiniktj
tion. KSFN/Collegiate
ranks the teams No. 14;
24, respectively.
A&M thi rd baseman Scon!)
ingstone will he reunited willlS
American Games teammates!
W ood and Joe Slusarskiofl)|
The three players helped!
team win the silver me
summer.
Slusarski (13-1 with a 2.8/0
last war) will start Fridav’sp
foi the Privateers. ABf
counter with Nick Felix(14
ERA).
The Aggies will go with A
Snedeker (1-0, 1.00)intheS
game Saturday and Randy®
(1-0, 1.20) in the nightcap.U)
will pitch Phil Wiese (0-0,HI
and Darin Fernandez (1-0,il
Saturday.
The Aggies play Sam Hoti
State, Lamar and Louisiana I
next week.
CALGARY, Alberta (AF) — A
U.S. skier may have broken her leg
in a collision with a course worker,
and East Germany scored another
sweep of women’s luge Thursday at
the Winter Olympics, where strong
winds forced postponement of the
women’s downhill.
America’s team, with only one
bronze medal, seemed to he finding
new ways of losing as the Eastern
Europeans continued their domina
tion.
Swiss skier Brigitte Oertli off the
course as she tried to get the down
hill going Thursday morning. The
race was postponed until Friday,
weather permitting.
SWC Indoors
start trackyesf
this weekend
America’s best hope in the wom
en’s downhill, Pam Fletcher, sus
tained what probably is a broken leg
when she slammed into a volunteer
worker during training for the race.
“I came down the training hill,
and you have to cut over a cat-cross
ing to meet up with the chair lift,”
Fletcher said. “A man came across
the exit. We tried to avoid each
other. He went one way. I went one
w r ay. He went the other way. I went
the other way.
“I just hope my teammates can do
the best we can for the U.S. of A,”
Fletcher said.
They were, but it wasn’t good
enough. Not yet, anyway. That
could change when the Figure and
speed skaters get back into action.
Winds gusting to 72 mph blew
Wind gusts of 25 mph messed up
the ski jumping schedule, where
Matti Nykanen, the “Flying Finn,”
was trying to become the Olympics’
first double-jumping gold medalist.
The 90-meter team jumping was re
scheduled for next Wednesday. Ny
kanen already has won the individ
ual gold on the 70-meter hill.
In women’s luge, Bonny Warner
was sixth but gave America its best
finish ever in the sport.
The luge medals went, in order,
to defending gold medalist Steffi
Walter, Ute Oberhoffner and
Cerstin Schmidt. Walter, 25, had
taken 1987 off to have a baby and
said she only made the team “be
cause of what I did in 1984.”
American Brian Boitano was sec
ond after the compulsory figures be
hind Soviet Alexander Fadeev and
ahead of world champion Brian
Orser of Canada with the short pro
gram coming up Thursday night.
The medal will be decided Saturday
in the freestyle, and Boitano is in a
great position to earn America’s first
gold of the Games.
Aggie golfers open season
The Texas A&M men’s golf team
opens its spring campaign against 20
other teams Thursday at the Fan
American Intercollegiate at Club
Campestre in Monterrey, Mexico.
A&M has not Finished lower than
fourth in the last six Fan Americans
and no lower than third in the last
three. The Aggies won the tourna
ment in 1986. A&M junior All-
American Roy McKenzie won the
event that year as a freshman and
finished ninth last spring.
“We’ve played well in Monterrey
' in the past, and I see no reason why
"j we can’t do it again,” A&M Head
Coach Bob Ellis said. “The course
there is fabulous and the competi
tion we ti lace is top-notch. It s just a
matter of whether we can get every
one playing well at the same time.
Against that type of competition,
we’ll have to get four strong scores
each day to have a shot at it.”
A&M enters the tournament as
the No. 15 team in Golf Coaches As
sociation of America poll. The Ag
gies are led by McKenzie and All-
American candidate Neil Hickerson.
Hickerson was the team’s most con
sistent player in the fit 11 with an aver
age score of 73.,
Freshmen Bobby Gee and Mark
Miller and sophomore Randy Tee
will also be competing for A&M.
Miller will he making his collegiate
debut.
By Curtis L. Culbersoi|
Assistant Sports Editor
The Southwest Conferen
track season gets mil oftheblo
this weekend with the SWClij
door Championships in fa
Worth.
The Texas A&M men's
women’s track teams will comp
Friday and Saturday in the Tif
rant County Convention CeU®]
This is the first year the the if
doors has been scheduled ail
two-day event.
Arkansas has dominated®!
event f or the past nine years,
ning eight titles since 1978
e luding the last seven, The -|
gies won the crown in
breakng the Razorbacks string rtf
titles.
A&M’s Stanley Kerr a®
Andre Carson are expectedW'
well irr the 55-meter dash,
Mike Sluice and Patrick M
nings should be top contender I
the shot put — but Texas is J
peeled to he the team the jn
the Hogs a real run fordj
money.
Greg West Iras already f-l
died f or the NCAA indoorchaj
pionships in the pole vault a 1 [
height of 17-3'/2 and is the Ag?
favorite in tire event. Kerr a 1, 1
has qualified for the MarchT]
tional indoors meet in theaj-^j
ter dash with a time of6.23i<[
onds.
The Lady Aggie tracksters®'!
pect to improve on last
fifth-place finish. A&M’sM
Clark-Stott has the best ^ I
jump in the conference this'^j
at 5-9'A, an A&M record.
The men finished seventh 1 '
year, scoring only 26 points to'J
kansas’ 93.
The Razorbacks have w n| 4
NCAA indoor chanipionLri
four years in a row. And the'"
dominated collegiate trad J
year, having the highesti' 111 "
ence point totals in indoor 3
outdoor competition.
I Nev
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