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LIVING COLOUR, the breakthrough debut album "VIVID," from one of the most important new bands of the decade. INDIGO GIRLS have attracted a fanatical follow- ing through the intensity of their live perfor- Ejsf mances and with the simple honesty and purity of the music on their albums "INDIGO GIRLS" and "STRANGE FIRE." ON EPIC CASSETTES, COMPACT DISCS Page 10 The Battalion Thursday, November 16, UCLA hoping team can recapture glory ASSOCIATED PRESS At UCLA, where basketball tradi tion took a plunge after the retire ment of John Wooden, Jim Harrick returns for a second season poised to improve upon last season’s 21-10 re cord. UCLA made it to the second round of the NCAA tournament last season before losing to North Caro lina. The Bruins, led by 6-8 forward Trevor Wilson (18.4 points and 8.7 rebounds) and 6-10 forward Don MacLean (18.6 points and 7.5 re bounds) could make a run at Ari zona in conference play if the team jells. UCLA lost Pooh Richardson and sophomore Darrick Martin will move into his spot at point guard. Gerald Madkins, sidelined last sea son after breaking his pelvis in a moped accident, will play the off guard. retired after 19 seasons. Miller.; replaced by Jim Anderson, who# an assistant for 28 seasons at Ore; State. Guard Gary Payton (20.1 poir. 8.1 assists) is back to lead a teamt* went 22-8 overall and tied UCLA for third in the Pac-lOat 5. Lynn Nance replaces AndyRi;i|| at Washington after Russo wemifi 62 in four seasons. Nance, h coached St. Mary’s of the West!.. Conference to 25 wins and a it- the NCAA tournament last seastJ has five returning starters, induM guard Eldridge Recasner, whoattl aged 18.1 points per game. In the West Coast Confer Loyola Marymount, coming offal secutive 20-victory seasons, is :fj vored to w in its second title in t)J Arizona State has a new coach, Bill Frieder, whose Michigan team won the national title last season af ter he left for his new job. Frieder takes over a once-thriving program that has fallen on hard times in recent years. The Sun Devils were 12-16 last season, finishing sev enth in the Pac-10 at 5-13. They lost All Pac-10 forward Trent Edwards, who led the team with 19.5 points and 8.2 rebounds per game. Another coaching change was at Oregon State, where Ralph Miller seasons. The Lions are led by HankCaJ ers, the nation’s No. 1 scorer (3il and rebounder (13.7) last sad Loyola led the nation in scorin;| 112.5 points and played the highest-scoring games in NCAA:? tory, beating U.S. Internationally 144 on Jan. 7 and beating theGJ in a rematch 181-150 Jan. 31. ] Loyola is expected to be dJ lenged by Pepperdine, which worl ? antes and reached the NIT T loach Tom Asbury’s first seasil The Waves have four starters baj including 6-7 forward Tom LeJ (16.2 points) and Dexter HovJ (15.9 points). Plano Rangers? Irving, Plano looking to join list of cities courting Rangers ARLINGTON (AP) — Plano and Irving may join the list of Dallas-Fort Worth area cities that want to be the home of the Texas Rangers. “If they’re taking proposals, we’ll be there,” Plano Mayor Jack Har vard said of the Rangers. “We haven’t done anything yet, but we’ll have something ready.” But the mayor of Arlington, the city halfway between Dallas and Fort Worth where the American League team now plays, says neither Plano nor Irving is a viable alternative. Mayor Richard Greene said Plano, located 20 miles north of downtown Dallas, is too far from the middle of the metropolitan area and Irving suffers because beer sales are prohibited in its stadiums, including Texas Stadium, home of the Dallas Cowboys. Greene and other Arlington lead ers have offered to build a 50,200- seat stadium on the parking lot adja cent to the Rangers’ current ball park, Arlington Stadium. “I think Richard Greene has of fered the Rangers a package that can’t be beat anywhere else,” said Ir ving Mayor Bob Pierce, adding his >:] city won’t make a formal proper unless asked for one by the ballck; But former mayor Dan Mail said private interests are putting, proposal together, though he’sn’; connected to it. “There’s some smoke. Wheir there’s any fire or not, we ll havti see,” Matkin said. Rangers president Mike Sti said the team has not decided ho* will take proposals, but saiditisic likely the team would invite compf ing interests to make them. k Dallas officials have discussed- w tering streets and swapping ciM* owned property for a baseball G dium development in the southed I* corner of downtown. The city'cowi! cil will take up stadium financrf| early next year. ^ Rangers managing partnfj n George W. Bush said the team > begin serious negotiations in Ma: re with anyone interested in proposrl™ a stadium location and fmano#, package. K The team is planning a suravi^ 1 determine where its fans comefros ” where they’ll likely go forgamesa “ what kind of stadium they want. 111 Judson ranked No. 1 in 5A ASSOCIATED PRESS Converse Judson in Class 5A, Groveton in 2A and Munday in A will move into the state playoffs with season-long No. 1 rankings in The Associated Press School boy Football Poll. Those three teams, along with West Orange-Stark in 4A and Southlake Carroll in 3A easily re tained their top ranks in the final week of voting by Texas sports- writers and sportscasters. After reaching the No. 1 spot after the first week of the season, no team has dominated its classi fication like Southlake Carroll. Carroll was the unanimous No. 1 pick five weeks and received all but one first-place vote on two I other occasions. West Orange-Stark started the I preseason ranked No. 6 butbv| the fifth week had assumed the > No. 1 spot after preseason choice Paris, the defending champion lost to Wilmer Hutchins 38-25. Third-ranked Houston Lamar was tied by Houston Waltrip 21 21 and Nos. 4 and 9 Houston Sterling and Lake Highlands were losers in Class 5A games Lamar dropped to No. 6, Hous l ton Sterling fell to No. 9 and Lake Highlands was replaced by Mar shall (8-2) in the No. 10 position Silsbee shocked No. 2 Jasper:;" force a shuffle in the 4A ranks be low West Orange-Stark. No. 8EI| Campo also was a loser. J Baseball pays tribute to Giamatti in ceremony * NEW YORK (AP) — Baseball said goodbye to A. Bartlett Giamatti Wednesday with cracking voices and glistening eyes as speaker after speaker extolled the late commis sioner’s association with the game he loved. An audience of owners, general managers, scouts, agents, lawyers, arbitrators and television executives filled Carnegie Hall for the 90-min ute program, called “A Celebration of Bart Giamatti and Baseball.” “To me, he was the noblest of them all,” Commissioner Fay Vin cent said, using words from Shake speare as his voice choked with emo tion. “Bravo, noble Bart, and goodbye.” “Epic,” are trademarks of CBS Inc. © 1989 CBS Records Inc. Giamatti died of a heart attack Sept. 1 at his summer home in Ed- gartown, Mass., just five months af ter becoming commissioner and eight days after banning Pete Rose from baseball. Giamatti’s son, Mar cus, was the most eloquent of the speakers. “This is the last pure place where Americans can dream,” he said, quoting what his father told him at a Yankese-Red Sox game last summer. “Each contest gives new hope. This is the last, great arena. This is 1 ® last green arena where even*' can earn t he lessons of life.... “Through the game, he sough] bring some means of enlightenn4 to a darkening world.” Broadcaster Joe Garagiola, ers Claire Smith and Roger Anf and Milwaukee Brewers ownert- Selig also spoke at the tribute ! ing them on stage were Amer? League president Bobby Brown,’ tional League president Bill# Yale president Benno C. Jr., DiMaggio and Doerr. Selig quoted from Giantf statement on the day the coiw sioner threw Rose out of baseball “I believe baseball is a beaij and exciting game, loved by mil- — I among them — and 1 beb; baseball is an important, endurP American institution,” Giamattisf “I will be told that I am an ideafe hope so. I will continue tolocateb als I hold for myself and for' country in the national gameas 1 ^ as in other of our national ins»T tions.” Selig’s eyes then got misty. “It was an endearing lessor morality and sensibility,” he said proud day for baseball.”