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RASBERRY, M.D. Board Certified Obstetrics & Gynecology Practicing in Bryan-College Station and the Brazos Valley for almost 20 years Announces the Relocation Of His Office to the Rosewood Medical Park 2911 Texas Ave. South, Suite 103 College Station, TX (Across from the New Wal-Mart) Practice includes: Obstetrics Gynecology, Female Surgery, Infertility, Laparoscopy, Colposcopy and Laser Surgery. OFFICE HOURS;Monday-Friday 8-5 New Phone Number 696-0331 Students! Work Smart. Work Simply... With Hewlett-Packard! lie .. 12C .. 15C .. 1 7B. . 19B. 225.. . 325.. . 275.. . 285.. . 41CV 41CX 71B . $42.00 .$60.00 ..$60.00 .$82.50 $132.00 $45.00 $52.50 $82.50 $176.25 $132.00 $186.75 .$468.75 AUTHORIZED HEWLETT-PACKARD DEALER 505 Church Street • College Station, Texas (409) 846-5332 Page 12/The BattalionfTuesday, September 20, 1988 Sports Give me the real Olympic music! Games just not the same on NBC What was there to do on a Saturday afternoon when the A&M football team was inexplicabley idle? There was to be no game — hurricane or heat wave — to occupy the time of Aggie fans that fine weekend. But there was a small consolation to this tragedy — the Olympics. Yes, the summer games — or should I say, the Almost-Autumn Olympics — were finally upon us. Cray Pixley Sports viewpoint It had been a long wait since the thrills of Calgary, but the time had come. The time lapse between the winter and summer games was so long, it was easy to lose sight of the fact that there was even to be a Seoul sports excursion. Yet, on the weekend when Aggies needed it most, the games arrived. While the Summer Olympics are a welcome respite from sports boredom with its wide range of events, I have been having some difficulty warming up to the games. There are certain aspects of the Olympics that have become familiar through the history of its television broadcast. The devices used by the network that covers the Olympics have become the games’ signature. The past few Olympics, including the Winter Games in Calgary, were covered by ABC. Over the years the ABC format of the games has become engrained and easily identifiable to viewers. With NBC handling the South Korean venue, the Olympics just don’t seem like the Olympics. Because of the unfamiliar format, the competition has seemed like an average afternoon of watching ESPN with its varied programming. As I watched the Olympics this weekend, 1 found myself becoming more and more disgruntled with what I was viewing. What was the problem? “This was the Olympics,” I told myself. This is something the athletes dream of for years. This was the event that had me glued to my couch watching the tube during the Calgary competition. But I was not quite glued to the set this time around. The games didn’t seem quite so special. The answer to the problem, I soon realized, was the way the coverage was packaged. Not that NBC was doing a less-than- spectacular job, but the Olympics were not on ABC. What was it that ABC had that NBC was lacking, I pondered? I know it sounds very simplistic and somewhat silly, but the first problem is theme music. NBC was trying something new and innovative with its Olympic theme but falling flat. I know when I think of the Olympics I think of the patriotic and stirring music ABC uses. You know how it goes. W1 tere was the rolling, thundering drum J the triumphant trumpets? Where was the Daaah, daaah, da-daaaJnJ daaah daaah. daaah daaah dada, dadada ) dadada da daaah. Where was the punch that gave the Ohm | its mystique? It’s a great event, but ABCdm it so much better. You may say the Olympicsj stand on its own, but that’s not entirelytrue.1 There must be a focus, a structure to the [ presentation of events, and this is missing. I But hack to business. Q. Where was Jim McKay — Olympic annoucer extrordinaire? A. On the other network, HA HA. 1 le had been doing the Olympics since! J child dreaming of Olga and Nadia. Without! the games don’t seem the same. Where is the “Up Close And Personal" j features on the athletes? I know, 1 know.ueJ really tired of these altera while but whent-J gone we whine. Well, they’re gone. NBC does this feature its way, but itishar-J accept the new style. Bryant Gumbel is more than couipeteiUdJ host, but the aura of ABC still hauntsthetey and can be unsettling. The competition will eventually winoukrl the network style good or bad. Still, NBCcM have the style that the other networkhas.Fcd time to come, the ABC idea of what the Olympics are will overshadow NBC’steleci I For now, I’m thankful for any broadcastoil the Olympic Games. But oh what alxnit the music! IR\ boys’ t day fo eleniei turns. Ref < on the witboL Cowlx The win tin nfargii Collin.' had m end an Clac bobble •Tli P I HO Oilers gressn {feivinf mnies Blond; j; The for 95 the Ne I A v flaggy 3S-35 Raidei R 1 (l an ythi game,' you ai Louganis recovers from dive accident SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Call him irresponsible. Call him a perfec tionist. Call him reckless if you must. But first, somebody call Greg Louganis an ambulance. That sentiment, at least one hopes, followed the shock wave Monday night that rippled through the Chamshil Indoor Swimming Pool in Seoul as Louganis, arguably the finest diver ever, thunked the back of his head on the 3-meter springboard laying out of a reverse 2 1 /2-somersault. So how is he? “Greg suffered a scalp laceration,” Dr. James Puffer, head physician for the U.S. Olympic team said. “After making sure he was neuro- logically intact and had not suffered a concussion, I temporarily sutured the laceration so he could complete his final tw'o dives.” Five stitches. Yeah, but how is he really? How is he going to be Tuesday, defending the first of his two gold medals from Los Angeles? “He’s in very good condition. I fully anticipate he’ll be able to com pete ... without difficulty.” Believe it. Louganis did it once al ready. He was in first after eight rounds in Monday night’s preliminaries when he struck disaster — horizon tal, no less. Heroically, perhaps even reflexively, he tried to finish the dive vertical, struggling to get his hands to break the plane of the water be fore his head. The judges gave Louganis 6.3. He tumbled into fourth. “It had to be a very unsettling ex perience. I mean, the one thing that you don’t want to do in competitive diving is hit the board. Particularly with your head,” said Vince Pan- zano, one of the team’s two coaches. “He’s never done it before, to my knowledge. Not even in practice. ... You should ideally be 2Vi to 3 feet from away from the board when you pass it. On that particular dive, Greg always seems to be closer to the board than he should be. “There’s no particular reason for it,”Panzano added. “Judges don’t give higher scores because a diver is closer to the board.” Louganis returned a half-hour later, his black hair slicked back OSU’s Jones: A&M helped by weeks ol (even the splash of gray at his temples) and grinned irrepressibly at those samejudges through a short delay. The ovation was thunderous. “You got it Lugo,” someone screamed. Louganis proceeded to rip a re verse 1 Vi-somersault with 3 Vi twists. See Louganis, page 14 STILLWATER, Okla. (AP) - Hurricane Gilbert caused Texas A&M to go three weeks without playing, but that means the Ag gies will be fresh and healthy for Oklahoma State on Saturday. Cowboy Coach Pat Jones said Monday. “I don’t see how the postpone ment with Alabama can have any real effect,” Jones said at his weekly luncheon for sports writ ers and sportscasters. “If any thing, it will allow them to he as healthy as they can be. And with our open date, we’re as healthy as we can be.” No. 18 Oklahoma State, 1-0, opened its season two weeks ago with a 52-20 victory over Miami of Ohio. Texas A&M, 0-2, lost the Kickoff Classic to Nebraska, then lost 27-0 to Louisiana State one week later. After an open Hate, the Aggies were scheduled to host Alabama Saturday in College Station, but Alabama Coach Bill Curry post poned the game because of un certain weather conditions sur rounding Hurricane Gilbert. Although Texas A&M Coach Jackie Sherrill hinted that Ala bama wanted to rest its injured quarterback, Jones said the Ag gies likewise were able to restore two key players to their lineup. "With the cancellation of ball game, now they are at strength for the first timet midway through the \ebr game,” Jones said. The Aggies lost kick rei specialist and receiver RodH. with a shoulder injun andi ning back Darren Lewis, wl Jones called “their most talei back,” against the Huskers. “They are two guys uho quality players,” Jt)nessaid.Tlu| will have an impact on thcmdl lensiN esi they’ve got." But Jones said he'll probattl have to wait until SaturdaytottiI Jones said he was countingoil spotting some trends intheA:! gies’ offense from the film | their Alabama game film. “The one thing that notplq ing the game down there did w| leave us in the dark asfarasm they might tend to do i]l:I terback-wise, or whether iM have made any. shifts in tbd overall offensive thin king,” Jot* said. Texas A&M has used thro] quarterback — Bucky Richatci son, Lance Pavlas and Chris ft good — in its two games thisveai Pr SPC E mat Opt and dou i mat sho gan A tent I lack hitti oth< mot oca spot und I des< “sto enic exp tent not Biondi lowers sights; wins heal SEOUL, South Korea (AP) —Matt Biondi, lowering his sights from seven gold to seven medals, won his qualifying heat Tuesday in the 100- meter butterfly one day after Janet Evans gave America its first victory at the Seoul Olympics. While Evans won the 400-meter individual medley gold on Monday, Biondi had to settle for bronze in the 200-meter freestyle as his quest to equal Mark Spitz’s seven gold medals in 1972 ended in his first race. “The Mark Spitz days are over,” Biondi said. Another Olympic assault also was in jeopardy as Carl Lewis was close to losing his spot on U.S. relay team. That would cost him a chance to win four gold medals, as he did four years ago in Los Angeles. Sprint-re lay coach Russ Rogers said Monday that Lewis would be dropped from the team if he continued his disrup tive behavior. Lewis has argued loudly with his coaches over the role of his personal adviser, who has been banned from practices, and Rogers said: “He’s at the end of his rope. The only thing he can do now is hang himself.” A little Romanian gymnast, mean while, was evoking memories of a time 12 years ago, when a country woman no bigger than her capti vated the world by becoming the original perfect 10. That was Nadia Comaneci; this was 4-foot-6 Daniela Silivas, who had 10s in the uneven bars and floor exercise during wom en’s team competition. The American gymnasts, in fourth place after compulsories, were done in by their own mistakes and an East German protest. They still had a shot at bronze. In diving, U.S. gold medal favor ite Greg Louganis had a close brush with a board, but escaped serious in jury. Leading the qualifying for the springboard and going for a second consecutive Olympic sweep, Louga nis hit his head while attempting a reverse 2 , /2-sommersault in his ninth of 11 dives. He got out of the water without help, rubbed the top of his head and smiled. He scored a 6.3. He came back about a half-hour later, five stitches in his head! mugged for the crowd bti-J launching himself into a nearl feet reverse 1 '/a-sommersault I 3'/2 twists. It earned 87.12 p | the highest score of the preliiil round, and he made Tuesday’s! easily, where the scores startfr«l Alter two days of medal eiei the Soviet Union led with six,t*l them gold. The United SlatesI China, with one gold apiece,'I t ied for second with four medals J Evans captured the women’s! meter individual medley swimrl event by nearly two seconds! world champion Noemi Lung oil See Olympics, page 14 Enctn* PtrfvrmancH Expert*.' Precision High-Tech Service Without The High Price! Tune We do more than fix your car. 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