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Come in and see our Cliffs Notes display $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 PAINFUL MUSCULAR INJURIES Individual with recent lower back or neck pain, sprain, strains, muscle spasms, or painful muscular sport injury to participate in a one week research study. $100 incentive for those chosen to participate. $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE STUDY Individuals with high blood pressure, either on or off blood pressure medication daily to participate in a high blood pressure study. $300 incentive for those chosen to participate. $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 *100 FEVER STUDY f’oo $100 $100 $100 Short at home study to evaluate individuals 17 years and $100 $100 o,c| er who have a temperature over 100° f.$i00. incentive for $100 $100those chosen to participate. Nights and weekends call 361- $100 $1001500. $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 *lro Cold study $100 Individual 18 years & older with active cold symptoms to partici- $100 $100 pate in a 1 day Cold Study with an over-the-counter cold medica- $100 $100 tion. No blood drawn. $100. incentive for those chosen to partici- $100 $100 P ate $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 CALL PAULL RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL 776-0400 Page 10 The Battalion Wednesday, November 15,198 I Davis gets Cy Young nod over Scott NEW YORK (AP) — Mark Davis of the San Diego Padres won the National League Cy Young Award on Tuesday, easily beating Mike Scott of the Houston Astros. The 29-year-old Davis, who led the majors with 44 saves, got 19 first-place votes and four seconds for 107 points from a 24-member panel of the Baseball Writers Association of America. Scott, the 1986 winner, got four firsts, 14 seconds and three thirds for 65 points. Greg Maddux of the Chicago Cubs was third with three seconds and eight thirds for 17 points. Orel Hershiser of the Los Angeles Dodgers, the 1988 winner, was tied for fourth with one first and two thirds for seven points, along with Joe Magrane of the St. Louis Cardinals, who got one second and four thirds. Tim Belcher of the Dodgers and Scott Garrelts of the San Francisco Giants were tied for sixth with four points, followed by Rick Reuschel of the Giants with three points and Mike Bielecki and Mitch Williams of the Cubs with one point each. Davis, a free agent, is only the fourth reliever to win the NL Cy Young, joining Steve Bedrosian (1987), Bruce Sutter (1979) and Mike Marshall (1974). Davis is the third San Diego player to win; Randy Jones (1976) and Gaylord Perry (1978) are the others. Davis was 4-3 with a 1.85 earned-run average and 92 strikeouts in 92 2-3 innings and had a win or a save in 48 of San Diego’s 89 victories. He was dominating throughout the season and finished just two short of Dave Righetti’s major-league re cord for saves and one short of Bruce Sutter’s NL record. Davis converted 44 of 48 save opportunities and allowed just 13 of 75 inherited runners to score. He saved 12 games from Sept. Iona stranded his final 19 inherited runners, allowil just one of his last 29 to score. He finished tl I year with a streak of 24 2-3 scoreless innings. • ' gave up just eight hits over the span. Davis also was dominating at the start, be, ; ning the season with 17 saves in his first 17(J» portunities. The streak was broken againstHoiii I ton on June 6, the start of his only inconsistet •’ period this year. From June 6-24, heblewthie | saves in six chances. His contract negotiations with the Padresha-i | not gone well and Davis could be the first® Young winner to start the next season with a c|'§ ferent team. His agents, Randy and AlanHe|| : th icks, say there is truly a 10-percent chance | will re-sign with San Diego. Davis made $600,000 last season and did:® have any bonus clauses for the Cy Young. 1 Former OU players’ trial opens Woman can’t identify men in alleged attack NORMAN, Okla. (AP) — A 20- year-old Oklahoma City woman told jurors Tuesday that she couldn’t identify her attackers but said she was raped at least three times in the Oklahoma football dormitory on Jan. 21. The woman was one of the first witnesses in the first-degree rape trial of former Sooner football play ers Bernard Hall of Detroit, Nigel Clay of Fontana, Calif., and Glen Bell of Muskogee. The three were charged in February in the alleged attack on the woman. The woman recounted details of the evening for the jury of five women and seven men selected Monday to hear the case in Cleve land County District Court. The woman, who has since married, was composed as she testified. She sobbed some and had trouble recal ling some specifics about the events of that night nearly 10 months ago. She said she went to the dormi tory with a girlfriend, that she drank alcohol in Clay’s room and that she was initially grabbed by someone as she came out of the bathroom. “He took hold of my shoulder. He took me to the bedroom, took hold of my zipper and started moving it down real fast,” the woman said. She said she tried unsuccessfully to get away from the person. “The next thing I know I was on the floor and he was on top of me,” she said. The woman said her underwear was removed and the attacker placed a hand over her mouth and nose and “then he started trying to rape me.” She said two people tried unsuc cessfully to rape her. A third person was successful, she said. She said she wasn’t sure if a fourth person was successful, but said attacks by two more people were successful. When lights came on in the bed room afterwards, she said she heard someone ask “What’s going on here?” “Then Nigel came into my line of vision ... I said ‘What do you think’s going on Nigel, they raped me,”’ the woman testified. She said she wanted to leave the dorm room afterwards and drove away with her girlfriend at one point. But she said her friend in sisted on returning to the dorm and she relented partly because she was in no condition to drive. In earlier testimony, Sherrelyn Osborn-Medice, who was in the dor mitory that night, said she heard a loud scream and banging noises coming from Clay’s room. Osborn-Medice said she was in the room of football player Larry Med- ice — now her husband — and heard what sounded like a scuffle in Clay’s room, which was directly above Medice’s room. “I told Larry ‘It sounds like some girl’s getting her butt kicked,”’ the woman testified. Osborn-Medice said she later asked Medice to go upstairs to see what was going on. When he came back, she said, he told her “Let’s go because a girl has just been raped.” The woman testified that while District Attorney Tully McCoy was investigating she told him the noises she heard may have been screams of passion. Defense attorneys focused on that portion of her testimony during cross-examination. In his opening statement, McCoy noted that the alleged victim would not be able to identify any of the people who attacked her. But he said other witnesses would bring the pic ture into focus. “At the close of the state’s evi dence, you will have some un answered questions,” McCoy said. “... but you will have no reasonable doubt that this man Bernard Hall, this man Glen Bell and this man Ni- el Clay did force (the woman) to ave sexual intercourse with them against her will.” Oilers’ Harris excels Monday night HOUSTON (AP) — It would have been difficult for Leonard Har ris to make a more spectacular exit from Houston coach Jerry Glan- ville’s doghouse. Harris stepped into the glare of prime time Monday night for in jured Drew Hill, caught his first NFL touchdown pass and snagged several other key passes that helped the Oilers beat Cincinnati 26-24 in a pulsating game. “I knew the whole world would be watching and I knew that I could still play,” Harris said. “Coach Glanville told me at the half Drew was hurt and I’d get a chance to play.” Harris, who had caught one pass for 13 yards this season, shocked Cincinnati with a 36-yard reception in a three-play, 80-yard drive that gave the Oilers a 23-21 lead. Harris completed that drive by catching his first touchdown pass in 2 1 / a seasons with the Oilers, a 23- yard pass from Warren Moon. “All Leonard Harris did was come in and make big plays for us,” Glan ville said. Those were comforting words for Harris, who has played in Houston’s first six games but was on the inac tive list two games and did not play in a third. “I was in the doghouse,” Harris said. “I fumbled against New En gland and the next couple of weeks I didn’t get a chance. I’m just fortu nate that I was able to contribute when I got the chance.” Hill, the Oilers’ leading receiver, suffered a back injury and sat out the second half. Johnson: Walls staying in Dallas IRVING (AP) — Dallas coach Jimmy Johnson denied Tuesday he is trying to unload nine-year veteran cor- nerback Everson Walls, who was beaten on a critical touchdown pass in a 24-20 loss to the Phoenix Cardi nals, by replacing him with Issiac Holt. Walls, who has 44 career interceptions since signing as a free agent in 1981, charged that Johnson is trying to ease him out, saying, “He’s setting me up to make a change.” “I’m not trying to run him (Walls) off but Holt will play against Miami just as we planned,” Johnson said. “Everson will start but he can play better than he has without question.” Johnson blamed Walls’ “breakdown” in coverage on the first of two fourth-quarter touchdown passes by Cardinals quarterback Tom Tupa. The second touch down pass also was thrown in Walls’ direction, but he was not specifically blamed for that mixup. The Cowboys lost for the ninth time in 10 games. Walls and Johnson had a shouting match on the field after the game as Walls visited with several of his friends on the Cardinals. “Different people take losses different ways,” John son said. “When you have a loss like the one we had on Sunday I’m not in a jovial mood. I’m not one to carouse with friends. It eats at my insides. I’d just as soon see my players go to the locker room so we can visit about the game.” Walls, 29, said other players also were visiting with the Cardinals and that Jdhnson’s action “embarrassed me. Only college coaches and Mike Ditka do that. He treated me like a child. Around here you’re damned if you do and damned if you don’t.” Johnson tried to downplay the controversy. “More is being made of it than what there is. No one player or players causes a team to lose a game,” he said. “There are a lot of plays that go into a game.” He said he doesn’t mind if players express their opin ions but added, “I can accept it more when a player is performing up to my expectations. I’m not as con cerned about a player talking who is performing. Ever son has done a good job but can do much better. “I’ve expressed my disappointment to him.” Walls doesn’t have an interception this year. But he ranks second on the club’s career interception list, trail ing only Mel Renfro, who had 52 during a career that spanned from 1964-77. Walls has led the league in interceptions an NFL-re- cord three times. He has been the club leader five times. “I guess they’ll Plan B me,” Walls said, referring to the NFL’s unprotected list. “I wonder about my future here.” Holt was obtained from Minnesota last month in the blockbuster Herschel Walker trade and has been get ting more practice time in Walls’ position. “We’ve planned all along to get Holt more action,” Johnson said. “We had this planned a long time before Sunday’s game.” The Cowboys try to win their first game in Texas Sta dium this year when they play host to the Miami Dol phins at noon Sunday. Tech duo nah SWC Players of the Week LUBBOCK (AP) — leu; Tech enjoys the rare honor si having the offensive and dt fensive Southwest Conferene, players of the week: runningbaa; James Gray and safety Traci Saul. Gray rushed for 209 yards o: 19 carries and scored thr«| touchdowns Saturday in a 2k rout of Texas Christian in Lub hock. Saul, only a freshman, inter cepted two passes — and missed a third — and had tackles, eight solo. He inlercepttc two passes the previous weei against Texas. “I did not think Tracy Sa: would do this well,” coach Spiitj Dykes said at his weekly ncvr conference Monday, shaking tej head in wonder. “He's had ai outstanding year as far as big.ra ible plays.” Saul, who graduated sa months ago from Idalou Hit: School just northeast ofLublxxi intercepted a pass in Techs sea son opener and was starting b| the fifth game, against Tex* AK-M. “It’s unusual to have a fresh man come in and adjust lih Tracy did,” Tech defensive coot dinator Carlos Mainord saiii “He’s a very intent player as farai watching and listening. He- going to Ik* a great one befon he's through.” Similar things were said to year about All-Southwest Confer ence safety Donald Harris, wht let t Tech early for a baseball a reer after being drafted by tin Texas Range rs. Saul’s job was it replace him. “I like to work hard every dc and try to make a workout i much like a game as you can,"tk 6-foot, 180-pound safety said. Gray, a senior, works justs hard — he is a fixture at the sit dent recreation center duringtk off-season, running lap afterla| around the vast gym—but then was considerably more presswi for him to produce at the beffi ning of the season. Dykes cale him the only name player on: no-name team. The 5-10, 210-pound Gra said he didn’t feel pressured. “As in anything, you can have: name player, hut you have l!J other guys around you, kindt: like a supporting cast, to taketk pressure off you,” he said “That’s what I told the guys an team meeting we had this yea: was that the pressure was not on!' on me, but it’s on the rest of tk team to get the job done, also.' Against TGU, Gray rushedfe - more than 200 yards for the thitf ^ time this season. He has an SVC leading 1,177 rushing yards tk -I season with games remainin' against Southern Methodist ak II AC ...Jj '' Houston. With 46 career toud downs, he needs four moretok come the conference’s caret y touchdown leader. He’s third k p ( hind Bill Burnett of Arkansas a with 49, and SMU’s Eric Dicker son, with 48. Gray consistently gives nw of the credit for his success toik rest of the team, especially theev perienced offensive line. "Some of the teams we face,i' : don’t have as much ability or i; 1 much talent,” Gray said. "Bu: think the heart is there, and got great work habits.” PRE-LAW SOCIETY Field trip to U of H & South Texas Law School 7:45 a.m. $10.00 Reservations need to be made by Midnight Thurs. Nov. 16, 1989. David 847-4904 Fri. Nov. 17, PRE-LAW SOCIETY fo W;