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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 3, 1990)
The MSC Visual Arts Presents Something For Everyone Works by PYP A JEN JOHNSON D JOHNSON September 1, 1990 - September 30, 1990 Reception Sept. 4, 1990 MSC Student Gallery 7:00 P.M. Texas ASM Flying Club COME LEARN TO FLY WITH US! 4 Insterested people are invited to attend our meeting September 4 at the Airport Clubhouse. For information call Maiy Walters at 693-6895 September 4 7:00 P.M, CarePlus^rff Presents Roc, The Good Doc “Fell asleep at a tailgate party, did you?” Make tracks to CarePlus Medical Center for all your minor emergencies. Our on-site x-ray facility allows us to treat your breaks, fractures and sprains quickly. And no ap pointment is necessary, so you can come in immediately after an accident. A&M stu dents, faculty and staff even receive a 10% discount at CarePlus Medical Center. At CarePlus, you get quality care plus value and convenience. CarePlus^fti 1712 Southwest Parkway • College Station, TX 77840 • 696-0683 See Castles in the Air And learn your way around the world "If you have built castles in the air, now put the foundations Under them." Henry David Thoreou Study in London for $4325 per semester. Includes air fare, resident tuition, field trips, home stay with meals. Study in Seville, Spain, for $3625 per semester. Includes resident tuition, field trips, home stay witn meals. No foreign language proficiency required. Summer program also available in London. For further information, write or call: Institute for Study Abroad Programs 308 Warner Hall University of Wisconsin-Platteville 1 University Plaza Platteville, Wisconsin 53818-3099 608-342-1726 Page 12 The Battalion Monday, September 3,1990 Baines’ homer ignites Oakland, Rangers lose 4-2 GARLAND, Calif. (AP) — Harold Baines said his his first home run for Oakland was no big deal. Athletics manager Tony La Russa wouldn’t buy it. “It was a big hit, and he’s had some big hits like that against us,” La Russa said Sunday after Oak land beat Texas 4-2. “It’s nice to have him on our side now.” Oakland increased its Ameri can League West lead to 6 Vs games over Chicago, which lost to California 1-0. Baines, traded from Texas to Oakland on Wednesday night, tied the score 1-1 in the second inning with his 14th home run. “When his timing improves, you’re going to see a lot more production from him,” La Russa said. “The home run is just like a base hit; the RBI is the big thing,” Baines said. “I’m not big on home runs. I had one good at-bat today, and the rest of the time I stunk.” Mike Moore (12-12) allowed four hits in 6 1-3 innings. Rick Honeycutt pitched 1 2-3 hitless innings and Dennis Eckersley fin ished the four-hitter for his 41st save. Moore, who struck out five and walked four, came out of the game in the seventh with a bruised right wrist after a tag play on Russ Kunkel. Moore struck out Pete Ineavig- lia with the bases loaded in the sixth to work out of a jam. Inca- viglia is in a 6-for-57 slump. “Incaviglia’s not getting the hits, that’s for sure,” Texas man ager Bobby Valentine said. “And when he doesn’t hit, we have trouble scoring. But this isn’t a one-man slump. A lot of people are contributing.” Charlie H ough (10-10) gave up seven hits and all four runs in his fifth complete game this season. He was hurt by three Texas er rors, giving up two unearned runs. Rickey Henderson stole his 54th base, leaving him 13 behind Lou Brock’s record of 938. BYU downs UTEP, beckons Miami Bring on the Hurricanes. Brigham Young passed its first test of the season with a 30-10 victory over pesky Texas-El Paso in a game marred by a third-quarter brawl. And now the Cougars are gearing up for one of the biggest games in school history — against the defending national champion and top-ranked Miami Hurricanes. Ty Detmer, who along with Miami’s Craig Erickson are among the nation’s top quarterbacks, passed for 387 yards, threw for a touchdown and ran for two others in the 16th-ranked Cougars’ victory over the Miners. In other games involving Top 25 teams. No. 7 Ne braska beat Baylor 13-0, No. 8 Tennessee defeated Pa cific 55-7 and No. 10 Clemson beat Long Beach State 59-0. Also, No. 13 Texas A&M beat Hawaii 28-13, No. 15 Virginia battered Kansas 59-10, No. 18 Pittsburgh beat Ohio University 35-3 and No. 25 West Virginia beat Kent State 35-24. BYU was called for 19 penalties in Saturday night’s game that saw Miners tackle Lorenzo Constantini and Cougars running back Matt Bellini ejected during the fight. “I told them we had an “A” for effort, but maybe a “C” for smarts,” BYU coach LaVell Edwards said. Smarts will come in handy on Saturday at Provo, Utah, when BYU plays a No. 1 team for the first time. BYU last played the Hurricanes in 1988, with Miami winning 41-17. The closest BYU came to playing No. 1 team was in 1984, when the Cougars upset No. 3 Pitts burgh 20-14. On Friday night, Todd Marinovich passed for three touchdowns and a career-high 337 yards, and No. 9 Southern California topped Syracuse 34-16 in the Kick off Classic. No. 7 Nebraska 13, Baylor 0 Nebraska limited the Bears to 164 total yards. The Bears hung tough, trailing 6-0 until 22 seconds re mained, when Scott Baldwin scored for the Cornhusk- ers from 2 yards out. Earlier, Gregg Barrios kicked field goals of 37 and 20 yards in the second quarter. The Hurricanes did not play Saturday, but most of last year’s starters are back from an offense that aver aged 35.7 points and 454 yards per game. “The way we look at it is if the other team doesn’t score, our chances of winning are pretty good,” Corn- husker linebacker Pat Tyrance said. Tyrance made the biggest play with about nine min utes left in the game, when he forced Baylor’s Frankie Smith to fumble at the Nebraska 5, with Travis Hill re covering for the Cornhuskers at the 3. O/i to Aggie land Ragin’ Cajuns roll over hapless Tulane Astros’ rally falls short, Pirates steal 7-6 victory NEW ORLEANS (AP) — James Freeman directed Southwestern Louisiana to a 48-6 victory over Tu lane in his first college game Satur day night, taking advantage of four first-half turnovers in a runaway start. It was the season opener for both schools and Southwestern’s victory was just its second over Tulane in a 19-game series. It also was South western’s highest opening game score since the Ragin’ Cajuns de feated LaGarde General Hospital, 53-0, in 1944. Southwestern led 24-0 a minute into the second quarter, driving 38 yards for a field goal and getting quick touchdowns following an in terception, a blocked Tulane punt and a fumble recovery. The Ragin’ Cajuns made it 27-6 at halftime, getting a field goal as time expired after yet another intercep tion. Mike Lemoine’s field goals were from 20 and 40 yards. Wayde Butler scored on a 5-yard run and threw a 38-yard wingback pass to Corey Williams for a touch down. Freeman scored on a 1-yard Tulane made it 24-6 on a 6-yard pass from Deron Smith to Willie Ur- sin, and Lemoine’s second field goal made it 27-6 at halftime. P.D. Broussard scored on a 21- yard run to cap Southwestern’s first possession of the second half, and Damon Denaburg plunged one yard for a touchdown with 66 seconds elapsed in the fourth quarter. Denaburg’s touchdown capped a 14-play, 92-yard drive on which he carried nine times for 43 yards. Reginald Francois scored on a 1- yard plunge with 6:03 left in the game, two plays after Ken Fogg re covered a fumble by Tulane third- string quarterback Billy Duncan at the 4-yard line. HOUSTON (AP) —John Smi- ley held the Houston Astros hitless for 5 1-3 innings and Jeff King hit a three- run homer, lead ing the Pitts burgh Pirates to a 7-6 victory Sun day. Smiley retired 16 of the first 18 hitters he faced before Eric Yelding broke up the no-hitter and the shut out with an RBI triple in the sixth. Smiley (8-7) gave up five runs on six hits in seven innings for the vic tory, which kept the Pirates a half game behind first-place New York in the National League East. The Astros, trailing 7-5 going into the ninth, got within a run on an RBI single by Franklin Stubbs and had runners at first and third with one out before Bob Kipper relieved Ted Power. Kipper then struck out Gerald Young and got Yelding on a fly ball to center for the final out and his third save. Danny Darwin (10-2) was tin loser, ending a personal nine-gam winning streak. Darwin pitched si' innings, giving up five runs on nint hits. Pittsburgh took a 1 -0 lead in tht first on an RBI double by Andy Vai Slyke, and scored again in the thin on Bobby Bonilla’s run-scoring sin gle. King’s three-run homer gave thi Pirates a 5-0 lead in the sixth after: infield single by Sid Bream and walk to Mike LaValliere. Mond WaR GOOP £ HR. wi A VOR WE, PAUL' jTORrt / WRPD Nert > Hait . Mul “It (the most effect University, In its rej newly impl universities discriminat The cor port, “...it \ ar to the o Houston cut its deficit to 5-3 it the sixth on RBI triples by YeldinJversities wc and Rafael Ramirez and a sacrificl for constitt fly by Craig Biggio. 1 from the tr Pittsburgh added two runs in thfj more tolen seventh oi l reliever A1 Osuna in hij A&rMUniv, major-league debut. Jose Lina It also st tripled and scored on a double b[ encourage Jay Bell, who came home on Boniliment in wh la’s sacrifice fly. The Astros made it 7-5 in the set enth on an RBI double by Stubk and a sacrifice fly by pinch-hitte: Glenn Wilson. less likely t staff and s oped an aj verse campi Carl Car and repres Awareness thought th A&M wouli n al report. ” would One Week port) would on campus know that i of Results FREE Present this ad for 1 free week of GREAT workouts! &> AEROBICS * 0 GnrjMC. A license of Gold's Gym Ent. Inc. 1308 Harvey Rd. C.S. 764-8000 Coupon Expires 9/15/90