The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 28, 1989, Image 11

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I Being 5 feet, 6 inches tall, Yvonne
Van Brandt is shorter than most vol-
yball players.
But she doesn’t let it affect her.
“Sometimes, I wish I were three
tor four inches taller, but you can’t
psh your life away,” Van Brandt
lid.
“I hate it when people say ‘You’re
Inly 5 feet, 6 inches, so you must be
a setter.’ It makes me compete even
larder.”
Lady Aggie Coach A1 Givens said
vat Van Brandt, who has made the
1-Southwest Conference team the
ist two years, is a great player.
“She plays a lot bigger than 5 feet
6,” Givens said. “She’s a fun player
to watch. Yvonne plays with a lot of
Inergy and positive emotion.
“Yvonne does her job well. If she
iere three or four inches taller,
she’d be an All-American. We give
up some size when she’s at the net,
but she’s got the ball-control skills to
compensate.”
A setter has to have good hands to
put the ball exactly where the attack
ers want it, but ball-control alone
doesn’t make a good setter.
“Q
Oometimes it
seems that she knows
what the other team is
going to do even before
they know.”
— Al Givens,
Lady Aggie coach
Van Brandt isn’t shabby on de
fense, either. She’s second in the na
tion in digs, and has blocked well this
year.
Leadership and experience are
important too, Givens said.
“The setter is to a volleyball team
what the quarterback is to a football
team,” he said. “Yvonne is our play-
maker. She checks the defense and
decides where to put the set.”
Being a good setter also means
knowing where the defense is. Van
Brandt’s anticipation skills are un
canny, Givens said.
“Sometimes it seems that she
knows what the other team is going
to do even before they know,” he
said. “She has a tremendous nose for
the ball.”
Since the setter runs the offense,
the position lends itself to lead
ership. Van Brandt is co-captain this
season, as she has been for the last
two years.
She said that being team captain
isn’t always easy.
“You want to be liked by your tea-
See Van Brandt/Page 12
Fay re hopes to fall out of favor
of Aggie fans with strong showing
By Alan Lehmann
Of The Battalion Staff
When Southern Mississippi
and Texas A&M square off at
Kyle Field Saturday night, the
Aggie defense will see a familiar
face on the Golden Eagles’ of
fense — quarterback Brett Favre.
Favre’s first meeting with A&M
was a shaky one — he completed
only six of 22 passes in a 27-14
Aggie win. But he’s improved
since then.
So don’t expect Favre to do the
Aggies any favors.
The 19-year-old junior from
Pass Christian, Miss., has started
every game for the Eagles since
the second game of the 1987 sea
son.
Favre came into the game
against Tulane late, and led the
Eagles to a come-from-behind
victory.
The next week, the true fresh-
So. Mississippi at A&M
• Site; Kyle Field (72,387 tau.)
• Kickoff: 6 p.m.
• Ranking: A&M (22nd), Southern
Mississippi (—)
• TWRadio: The game will not he
televised: KTAM (AM 1240)
man started his first collegiate
game against the Aggies. He
threw for 143 yards and two
touchdowns, but A&M won 27-
14.
Favre has been the starter ever
since.
He finished the 1987 season
with 15 touchdown passes, break
ing the school record.
Favre broke that record last
season, when he passed for
2,271 yards and 16 touchdowns,
and led the Eagles to an Indepen
dence Bowl victory over Texas-Fl
Paso.
He threw only five intercep
tions in 1988, and had a streak of
1 14 straight passes without an in
terception.
That streak was broken in this
year’s season opener, but he
passed for 282 yards and two
touchdowns as the Eagles upset
Florida State.
Although Favre has had a good
See Favre/Page 12
ast start, fast fade the script to another ho-hum Rangers year
As the baseball season winds down this
veekend, Texas Ranger fans have to
vender: What happened to our team?
(gain.
Once more, the Rangers displayed
jnough competence to keep you interested
for most of the season. Not greatness. Not
jeart. Just competence.
Nothing more.
The Rangers opened up hotter than a
ilOO Rolex with a batting order that could
hit the ball over, around and through the
fence. It didn’t matter who was on the
hound, for or against them.
It was Bobby Valentine’s own Run-n-
ihoot offense.
But as with anything good that befalls the
itrangers, it was short-lived.
Rafael Palmeiro, whose batting average
kas among the league leaders in the
season’s first six weeks, fell in a hole so deep
/ou would have thought it was a sequel to
ijll
the Jessica McClure story. He didn't
recover, if at all, until two weeks ago.
Pete Incaviglia didn’t recover all year.
Stinky is one of those rare individuals
who truly can’t hit his weight. Of course,
that kind of number would be a lot to ask of
Wade Boggs.
But Incaviglia’s laughable plate
performance could only look good
compared to his even more comedic
fielding. Let’s see, who’ve we got for left
field? How ’bout that guy that’s slower than
a tax refund and has that rocket arm to get
it to the cutoff man on one bounce.
What a ballplayer.
But that’s just two guys.
Chad Krueter, who couldn’t hit his
weight from the seventh grade, made Geno
Petralli look like Johnny Bench. Cecil Espy
started the year like Lou Brock and ended
it like Lou Grant.
Of course, names like Julio Franco and
Harold Baines did brighten and bolster the
Ranger lineup. And for better or worse,
Ruben Sierra may be the Ernie Banks of the
1990s. But that’s his problem.
Pitching is the other half of the Rangers’
sad story.
Charlie Hough, who many counted on to
win 17 games, had arm problems from
throwing that tendon-taxing knuckleball.
This was halfway through the campaign.
What can he switch to now? Throwing
underhanded?
Hough’s absence in the rotation brought
about what is now known as the “The
Alvarez Incident.”
Wilson Alvarez, 19, the hottest pitching
prospect in the Rangers’ farm system would
nave his day. With a lack of able starters,
and the team needing a shot in the arm,
Valentine called up Alvarez from Class AA
Tulsa.
In what may be the greatest confidence-
shattering event of the baseball season,
Alvarez failed to get an out against the six
batters he faced in the first inning. After he
was relieved, Alvarez was shipped back to
Tulsa the next day. The day after that he
was traded to the White Sox in the deal for
Baines and Fred Manriquez.
Shelled, shipped, traded.
Not exactly the next Fernando
Valenzuela.
But that’s just a footnote to the season.
The pitching wasn’t all that negative.
There was the biggest every-part-time-
baseball-yuppie-had-to-be-there event of
the season: Ryan’s 5,000th K. And Ryan
was a goldmine, both at the ticket window
and on the mound. His 15 wins to date will
lead the staff, along with being the
American League leader in strikeouts.
And with his slew of near-miss no hitters,
fans flocked to his starts at home and away
games. When Ryan started, history could be
made — as opposed to waiting a night and
seeing Bobby Witt start and do his
impression of Tim Bobbin’s character in
“Bull Durham.”
So It’s a season. Is there hope for next
year?
Can the Ryan Express barrel down the
tracks for another year?
Can the ^outh of Franco, Sierra and
Palmeiro carry the Rangers into the 1990s?
Ha, don’t even kid. They may be up by
five at the All-Star break, but they’ll still
find a way to make the standings say this in
August: Games Behind — 14.
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Scholastic Opportunities
For Outstanding Undergraduates”
The following scholarships are currently open for competition:
Truman Scholarship
Sponsored by: Harry S. Truman Scholarship Founda
tion
For: Current college sophomores intending to pur
sue careers in government service of all kinds, including
scientific research.
Terms: Up to $7,000 annually for tuition, fees, room,
board, books for last two undergraduate years and up to
two more years of graduate study.
Application Procedure: By nomination of Texas A&M
University
Application Deadline: November 3, 1989.
National Endowment For The Humanities
Younger Scholar Awards
Sponsored By: NEH
For: Current Freshman, Sophomores, & Juniors
Terms: $2,200 for Summer research and writing in the
Humanities; $400 of which is allotted to your advisor for
the project.
Application Procedure: Direct application by student
and advisor.
Application Deadline: November 1, 1989.
Time College Achievement Award
Sponsored by: Time Magazine
For:J uniors
Terms: One time cash award of $3,000, trip to New
York.
Application Procedure: Direct application, applications
will be available in the Honors Program Office late in the
Fall term.
Application Deadline: February 1, 1990.
Smithsonian Internships
Sponsored by: The Smithsonian Institute
For: Undergraduate and GraduateStudents
Terms: Stipends vat ) with program, positions are 3-4
months in duration.
Positions: Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden;
National Air and Space Museum; National Museum of
African Art; National Museum of American Art; Na
tional Zoological Park; Office of Architectural History
and Historical Preservation; Smithsonian Environmental
Research Center.
Application Procedure: Individual Application
Application Deadline: (Vary According to Position.)
Smithsonian 10 Week Graduate Student Fellowships:
Sponsored by: The Smithsonian Institute
For: Individuals formally enrolled in a Graduate Pro
gram and who will have completed one semester of such
prior to the appointment period.
Terms: Stipend of $250 per week for 10 weeks. Travel to
the Smithsonian to conduct research.
Application Procedure: Direct application and faculty
evaluation of proposal.
Application Deadline: Postmarked by January 15, 1990.
Mellon Fellowships in the Humanities
Sponsored by: Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
For: Current college Seniors.
Terms: $1 1,000 annually plus tuition and lees for up to
two years (possibly three) of graduate stud) in History,
English, Philosophy. Languages, or American Studies.
Application Procedure: After nomination by a faculty
member (no professor may nominate more than two stu
dents.)
Nomination Deadline: First week of November.
National Science Foundation
Graduate Fellowships
Sponsored by: NSF/National Research Council.
For: Current college seniors.
Terms: $12,9Q0 annually plus tuition and fees for stu
dents pursuing graduate study in science or engineering.
Application Procedure: Direct application by student.
Application Deadline: November 9, 1989. Applications
available in the University Honors Program Office in
early October.
National Science Foundation
Minority Graduate Fellowships
Sponsored by: NSF/National Research Council
For: Current college seniors of American Indian, Black,
Hispanic, Native Alaskan, or Native Pacific Islander
background.
Terms: $12,900 annually plus tuition and fees for three
years for minority students pursuing graduate study in
the sciences, engineering or veterinary medicine.
Application Procedure: Direct Application by student.
Application Deadline: November 9, 1989. Applications
available in the University Honors Program Office in
early October.
Ford Foundation Doctoral Fellowships for Minorities
Sponsored by: Ford Foundation/National Research
Council
For: Current college seniors of American Indian, Black.
Hispanic, Native Alaskan, or Native Pacific Islander
background.
Terms: $10,350 annually plus tuition and fees for up to
three years of graduate study in the humanities, social
and behavioral sciences, engineering, mathematics, or
physical and biological sciences.
Application Procedure: Direct application by student.
Application Deadline: November 9„ 1989. Applications
avalible in the University Honors Program Office in
earlv October.
Eisenhower Graduate Scholarship
Sponsored by: Eisenhower Memorial Scholarship Founda
tion
For: Seniors/others who will be full-time graduate students
in 1989-1990.
Terms: Minimum award of $1,000; maximum of $3,000 per
year.
Application Procedure: Application requested, direct appli
cation by student.
Application Deadline: February 1, 1990.
Rhodes Scholarship
For: U. S. Citizen, unmarried, senior status, 3.75 or higher
Terms: Tuition, fees and maintenance allowance. Tenable
at Great Britain’s University of Oxford.
Contact: Dr. John Reading. 505 Physics, 845-5073 or 696-
9190.
USA Today
ALL—USA Academic Team
Sponsored by:USA Today Newspaper
For:Any full time undergraduate student. Selection based
on original work such as published research, essay, poetry,
art or music.
Terms: National recognition through USA Today, trip to
Washington, I).( l..
Application Procedure: nomination by faculty member,
student may initiate.
Application Deadline: November 6, 1989.
Phi Kappa Phi
National Graduate Fellowship
Sponsored by: The Honorary Society of Phi Kappa Phi
For: Outstanding seniors planning to attend graduate
school in any field; GPA must be in the 3.8 to 4.0 range.
Terms: Up to $6,000 for the first year of graduate study.
Amount of award is dependent on other financial aid.
Application Procedure: Contact Dr. Ted Jones, 845-2031
Detailed information and applications are
available through the Universiy Honors Program,
room 101 of the Academic Building. See Scott Shafer.