a m v AM/PM Clinics M CLINICS Minor Emergencies General Medical Care Weight Reduction Program 10% Student Discount with I.D. Card 846-4756 3820 Texas (next to Randy Sims) 693-0202 2305 Texas Ave S. (next to U Rent M) College Station 779-4756 401 S. Texas (29th & Texas) ffcK.'JB.VKS PEKING EXPRESS TM MAGNIFICENT CHINESE BUFFETS Over 20 Selections of Salads & Entrees, Iced Tea, Desserts ALL YOU CAN EAT For Only w/coupon $6.49 □ine-ln Only Reg. $3.89 & $4.19 11 a.m.-8:30 p.m. Mon.-Sun. One coupon per person per visit. Valid September 27-October 7,1989 Not good with any other offer. 606 Tarrow 764-8960 Chevron Piper’s Chevron Aggies get in the Winning Spirit Win a $100.00 each Friday in September Bring this coupon to be eligible No purchase necessary but be sure to re-enter each drawing. Name- Address. Phone- Corner of University and Texas \aggi inema/ CMaggie Presents /ill a Cause Wednesday, September 27 7:30 PM, Room 201 MSC Bring your own refreshments Admission $2.00 with TAMU ID. Presale tickets are now available at the MSC Box Office. For more information call the Aggie Cinema Movie Information Hotline at 847-8478. The next Aggie Cinema General Committee Meeting is Monday, October 2, in Rudder Tower Room 504. A SPORTS BAR & MORE! OPEN DAILY FOR LUNCH! Beach Volleyball Tournament 3 man Sunday starting 1:00 p.m. Sign Up In Advance OPEN TO 24 TEAMS DANCING NIGHTLY 750 CORONA 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Daily Pit Bar-B-Q Every Weekend 504 HARVEY ROAD 696-8888 Spark Some Interest! (Jse the Battalion Classifieds. Call 845-2611 Page 10 The Battalion Wednesday, September 27,1989 Rasmussen (Continued from page 9) For those non-goiters, the ball de cided to fly right of the fairway, away from its desired point, namely the hole. Notice it was a conscious decision made by the ball. / never slice. The adrenaline gone, I contem plated throwing my driver. No, that might be dangerous. And who knows, the next hole could be the one. It wasn’t. And neither was the next one, or the one after that. Facing a three-digit scorecard, I humbly left the golf course with my head hung and shame on my face. I was embarrassed to leave the course gutted with so many uglv divots. The greens keepers will have a busy week. People envy professional golfers. These guys get paid to go out and spend days golfing in sunny, warm weather. Surrounded bv the glorv of nature, these men and women make hundreds of thousands of dollars ev- The only problem is that they have to win to collect their pay- checks. The pressure I feel golfing four holes with nothing on the line but pride can’t be compared to hav ing to score in the sixties week after week just so you can surv ive. I could never be a professional golfer. My lousy game aside, it would be hard to concentrate with all those normally quiet, polite golf ing f ans laughing at my game. Slocum (Continued from page 9) Southwest Conference games this year against Houston, Arkansas and Texas at home. A&M has a 24-2 record at Kvle svver about the Aggies going into the season, including problems stem ming from a lack of experienced players. The Aggies had a new starting quarterback in Lance Pavlas and had to replace All-SWC lineman Jerry Fontenot. Most of the defensive line was inexperienced, including several freshmen. Only one starting line backer returnee! from last year. But Slocum said a team must start R. C. Slocum over every year. “I think every team regardless of who you’ve got coming back or what ever, every single year that team starts over doing that, building or whatever it is you need to do,” Slo cum said. The game will serve as a reunion of sorts. Southern Mississippi Coach Curly Hallman was an assistant coach at A&M under Jackie Sherrill from 1982 until 1987. Slocum served as A&M’s defensive coordina tor during that time. Field since losing to Baylor in 1984, including a 17-1 record against SWC opponents. Slocum had many questions to an- Hallman led the Golden Eagles to a 10-2 record last year in his first campaign as head coach. They de feated the University of Texas at El Paso in the Independence Bowl. Ware, Darnell take SWC honors for week LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP)—Mis sissippi quarterback John Darnell )i qu had marched his team to the Arkan sas 4 and threatened to upset the Ra- zorbacks with 20 seconds to play. Desperate to protect a 24-17 lead, Razorback coaches called for man- to-man defense. Two plays later, cornerback Anthony Cooney snared his second interception of the game and saved Arkansas’ win. For his performance, Cooney, a 202-pound senior, was named De fensive Player of the Week in the Southwest Conference. The Offensive Player of the Week is Houston quarterback Andre Ware, who passed for a school-re cord 497 yards and two touchdowns in a 36-7 victory over Arizona State. Ware completed 40 of 68 passes and was intercepted four times. “Anthony Cooney made two big interceptions," Arkansas Coach Ken Hatfield said. “He’s a senior who was there when he needed to be.” Cooney said Razorback defenders became confident when defensive coordinator Bob Trott called for man-to-man coverage against Dar nell. Cooney said intended Mississip pi’s intended receiver Willie (been gave him a move to the outside, “but I didn’t take it.” “I just tried to stay w'ith him and be there when the ball came,” he said. “I got a great break on it. On the slant, it takes a split second and the ball is there. Our line put great pressure on. “I love those challenges. I felt the ball was going to come my way be cause of the play before.” Bills’ coach unhappy with NFL officiating ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP) — Every NFL team is required to rate the officiating crew that worked its game that week. A shopping bag might be needed to carry the report the Buffalo Bills will send to Supervisor of Officials Art McNally this week if the com ments of Coach Mary Lev y are any indication. The Bills, infuriated by the calls and non-calls made by referee Jerry Seeman’s crew in Buffalo’s 47-41 overtime victory over Houston Sun day, lashed out at league of ficiating following the game. Of particular concern to Levy were the clamps put on defensive end Bruce Smith and linebacker Cornelius Bennett as the two Pro Bowl players attempted to rush Oil ers quarterback Warren Moon. “I hope it doesn’t come to the point — but I don’t care — where I start to mention specifically of ficials' names who don’t do their jobs,” Lev v said, adding that the crew “totally lost control of the game.” Levy said that Smith and Bennett, two of the NFL’s most formidable pass rushers, have been illegally re strained by opposing plavers on nu merous occassions in all three Bills' games this season, but that penalties have not been called. “In the last three games, there have been about 30 inf ractions com mitted against Bruce and Corne lius,” he said Monday. “One lias been called. “It’s not just holding, but hands on their throats and face masks, clips, shots at their knees." If the holding is not called in Sun day’s game against the New England Patriots, Levy threatens to assemble a “very graphic film clip” detailing uncalled penalties and “name the in dividuals” who did not make the calls. Levy said he talked with Seeman before the Oilers game and asked which members of his crew were re sponsible for calling holding along the line. He said he then told his players to talk to those officials if they felt they weren’t calling viola tions. “They went over and asked the of ficials during the game, and the an swer they got was, ‘That’s not my re sponsibility,’ ” Lev v said. Levy said he went public with his criticism because the league doesn’t seem to be paying attention to his weekly officiating critiques. “The reason I spoke out is be cause I have been going through league channels to no avail,” lie said. “(Speaking out) is the only way it ap pears you can call it to their attention and think you’re not just one of 28 teams calling in and complaining.” Lev y was a little more tolerant of a controversial play near the end of the fourth quarter Sunday when cor nerback Nate Odomes knocked the ball loose from Oilers receiver Hay wood Jeffires after a 7-yard recep tion. Linebacker Darryl Talley scooped up the loose ball and took it into the end zone for what would have been the go-ahead touchdown, but the of ficials ruled that Jeffires’ forward progress was stopped and awarded the ball to Houston at the spot of the hit. “The one on Haywood Jeffires was an out-and-out blown call,” Levy said. “Fine. It happens. 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