The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 10, 1990, Image 11

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    209 Dominik
College Station, TX
(409) 696-3003
Monday, September 10,1990
The Battalion
Page 11
We fix $6 00 haircuts
A FULL SERVICE SALON
difference
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french Ope-
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>ointing (os
y you wand
Ace the Interview
. . . before you say a word
a workshop for graduating seniors
led by Sharon Grayum
Corporate Image Consultant
and President of Leadership Looks
Sept 10 or 13, 7PM Rudder Tower Rm 701
or Sept 15, 10AM Rudder Tower Rm 601
RegistenCareer Planning & Placement Ctr.
* * * ALL ENGINEERING * * *
AND COMPUTER SCIENCE MAJORS
The Student Engineers' Council Presents
’Capitalizing on Engineerina Opportunities’
The 1990 Engineering Career Fair
Meet Prospective employers at:
Barbeque
lues.. Sept. 11
Career Fair
Wed. & Thurs.,
Sept. 12 & 13
C3P
B3P
Brazos Center
6 - 9 p.m.
MSC - 2nd Floor
9 a.m. - 11:30 a.m.
1:30 p.m. - 5 p.m.
none!
» one!
i one!
‘diest teamj
day and c»
victory sin;
i. footing (J
es, made Is*
y dearly foil
dlas Cowb
yard out wte
theCowS * * * Over 80 Companies Attending *
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ainst Atlana,
light losses,
scoring dm
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e book.
2 basis of if'
won-loss
respect
tributions«
$1200 $1200 $1200 $1200 $1200 $1200 $1200 $1200 $1200 $1200
$1200
$1200
$1200
$1200
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$1200
$1200 $1200 $1200 $1200 $1200 $1200 $1200 $1200 $1200 $1200
$1200
$1200
$1200
$1200
$1200
$1200
HEALTHY MALES
Currently indentifying healthy males (19-40 years old)
interested in a 13-day on site research study to begin in
October. $1200 incentive for those chosen to
participate.
$300 $300
$300
$200
$300
$300
$300
$300
$300 $300
$300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300
ASTHMA STUDY
$300
$300
$300
$300
Individuals (12 and older) who have asthma to participate |300
in a research study. $800 incentive for those who j 3 qq
enroll and complete study. $ 3 00
$300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300
$300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300
^ HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE STUDY $3§o
$300 Individuals with high blood pressure, either on or off blood pressure $300
$300 medication to participate in a high blood pressure research study. $300
5300 $300 incentive BONUS: $100 RAPID ENROLLMENT BONUS for $300
$300 completing study. $300
$300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300
$100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100
$100
$100
$100
$100
$100
$100
FALL WEED ALLERGY STUDY VZ
Individuals (12 and older) to participate in a Fall $100
Weed Allergy Study. $100 incentive for those cho
sen to participate
$100
$100
$100
$100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100
CALL PAULL RESEARCH
INTERNATIONAL®
776-0400
NEW FLU STUDIES
We Are Taking Blood Samples ($5.00 compensation) to
Determine Eligibility for Mew Flu Vaccine Studies
Monday - Friday, September 10-14, 1990
For Information and to give Sample
Come to:
Commons Lounge (Krueger)
10:00 AM - 6:30 PM
(Monday - Wednesday, Sept 10,11,12)
or
Beutel Health Center, Room 03, Basement
10:00 AM - 4:00 PM (Thursday, Sept 13)
10:00 AM - 1:00 PM (Friday, Sept 14)
Dr. John Quarles
845-3678
Farr’s mistake
gives Rangers
6-5 victory
ARLINGTON (AP) — Steve
Farr’s bases-loaded walk to Pete In-
caviglia with two outs in the ninth in
ning gave the Texas Rangers a 6-5
victory over the Kansas City Royals
on Sunday.
It was the second time in as many
games that the Rangers beat the
Royals in the bottom of the ninth,
and both times Julio Franco scored
the winning run.
Franco was hit by a pitch from
Farr (10-7) with one out and Rafael
Palmeiro singled Franco to third.
Ruben Sierra was intentionally
walked to load the bases and the
strategy looked good when Juan
Gonzalez struck out. But Farr
walked Incaviglia on* five pitches to
make a winner of Brad Arnsberg (6-
1).
George Brett went 2-for-4 with
four RBIs for the Royals, raising his
batting average to .323. Brett was 7-
for-15 with five RBIs in the four-
game series and 17-for-40 on the
road trip.
HEKAGSf
ME MB LA rou/t HELP/
VOLLEYBALL - TUB TJPH
LAOYA&S VS. SOUTHWEST TEXAS.
Cougars
in my hands,” Good said. “We have a
lot of good receivers and if we all do
our jobs right, we’ll be alright.”
Gooper also caught two touch
down passes and averaged 18 yards
a reception.
Two endzone interference penal
ties on UNLV negated two more
likely touchdown passes from
Klingler.
Much of Houston’s success
stemmed from the fact the offensive
line gave Klingler time to throw
from the pocket.
“Our goal was not to give up a
sack,” senior offensive tackle Leroy
Truitt said. “Once, in the second
quarter, David told us it felt like he
was getting 30 minutes to throw-
from back there.”
When the Gougar offensive line
wasn’t giving Klingler time to trigger
the Run-and-Shoot, it was opening
up running lanes for Heisman Tro
phy candidate Chuck Weath-
erspoon.
Weatherspoon, a 5-7, 210-pound
senior, gained 120 yards on only 10
carries.
“We operated pretty well, but we
don’t have time to celebrate,”
Weatherspoon said. “We’ve got to
get ready for (Texas) Tech next
week.”
T he Cougars face the Red Raiders
next Thursday in a nationally tele
vised game.
Houston’s young defense limited
the Rebels to field goals of 39, 22
and 48 yards.
UNLV came out on its opening
drive and threatened Houston by
sustaining a 48-yard drive. The Re
bels penetrated deep into Cougar
territory before junior quarterback-
/tailback Hankie Cooper’s wild pitch
was hobbled by tailback Raymond
Walters. The ball w'ent out of the
endzone for a touchback.
Despite the 37-9 loss, UNLV
posted some respectable numbers of
its own. The Rebels amassed 348 to
tal yards, with 207 coming from ju
nior quarterback Derek Stott’s pass-
Continued from page 10
Photo by Mike C. Mulvey
Members of the Cougar defense celebrate Houston’s 37-9 win
over the UNLV. The win was coach Jenkins first as head coach.
Rasmussen
setting up, the Mays paid an inmate
to lead them to Rose’s cell, where the
former Cincinnati star was watching
a baseball game with “prison
buddies.”
Rose was agog.
“What a great ruse,” Rose told the
two. “Here, take my picture. I’m
giving you a ticket to ride.
“You’re going to be rich on this
picture.”
WOW.
I’m torn. Sure, the Mays used
little if any ethics to get the story.
Then again,estab/Ahedjournalists
ing attack.
The Cougars dominated the game
from Klingler’s second series. His
first touchdown pass was a 46-yarder
to Cooper who had beaten the
UNLV defense by five yards.
Continued from page 10
used traditional methods and
haven’t been able to get close to
Rose, who is not allowed to grant
interviews to the press while serving
time in prison.
And then there’s the payoff. Mays
and her husband stand to make over
$100,000 after all is said and done.
But what about the penalties?
If the two had been caught, they
would have faced a five-year prison
term.
“The money is one thing,” Doug
Mays said. “But the thrill of actually
doing it was unbeatable.”
Great, the truth comes out. The
Mays aren’t innovative journalists,
they’re just plain stupid. Ethics be
damned, if you balance the pros with
the cons (no pun intended), a
$ 100,000 payoff doesn’t come close
to the possibility of having a five-
year prison term dumped on you.
Then again, maybe Doug Mays
could work it where he ended up as
Roses’ cell mate.
But I wouldn’t bet on it.
(Pun intended.)
POSTERS
Huge Sale!
Si
Great Selection!
PRINTS
Back to School Sale!
THIS WEEK ONLY!!!
Great Prices!
Monday - Friday
September 10-14
10:00 - 5:00
First Floor M.S.C.
Decorate
Your
Room!
Ansel Adams, Dali, MC Esher, Picasso, Concert Posters, Renoir, Rockwell, Monet,
Sports, C^ars, Floral Graphics, European Images, Show Business Personalities
Sponsored by the M.S.C. Visual Arts Commitiee
Giants pummel
Astros in 5-1 win
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) —
Roger Craig almost gave Kevin
Mitchell the day off. The Giants
manager was glad he didn’t.
Mitchell drove in three runs
and Mark Portugal lost to San
Francisco for the first time in six
career decisions as the Giants lieat
the Houston Astros 5-1 Sunday.
Mitchell, who began the game
in an 0-for-16 slump, hit an RBI
single with two outs in the first in
ning and a two-out, two-run
homer in the sixth, his 33rd home
run of the season.
“I thought Fd have the day
off,” Mitchell said. “Roger just
said that he needed me in there.
I’m really tired and you tend to
lose a lot of concentration when
you’re tired. I can understand
why Roger wants me in there, but
I’m feeling really tired.”
The home run tied Mitchell for
the National League lead with
Ryne Sandberg of the Chicago
Cubs.
“You hate to rest a guy who can
change a ball game with one
swing,” Craig said. “1 know guys
need rest this time of the year,
but we’re still in contention. Be
sides, he’s got all winter to rest.”
Mike LaCoss (6-3) gave up
seven hits in eight innings and
was in constant trouble. But he
didn’t allow a run until the
eighth, when rookie F.ric An
thony hit his ninth home run of
the season.
“There is nothing like a winning
locker room,” Jenkins said. “But
with the Texas Tech game coming
up so fast, this certainly won’t last
long.”
Cowboys.
Continued from page 10
siac Holt interfered with San Diego
wide receiver Anthony Miller in the
Dallas end zone on a pass from Mark
Vlasic. The penalty covered 41 yards
and Butts scored on the next play
from a yard out with 5:43 left in the
second quarter.
“A year ago it would have both
ered us, but we didn’t let it and that’s
a real tribute to our will to win,”
Johnson said.
Dallas struck first on the cloudy,
78-degree day by driving 84 yards
following the opening kickoff. The
Cowboys had hoped for tempera
tures in the high 90s but it was
cloudy with an occasional light rain.
Aikman was on target with passes
of 16 yards to Agee, 18 to Jay Nova-
cek, and 19 to Martin. The payoff
came on a 28-yard strike to Dennis
McKinnon who outjumped defend
ers Gil Byrd and Vencie Glenn.
San Diego came right back to tie it
on a 62-yard drive climaxed by Vlas-
ic’s 14-yard scoring pass to Craig
McEwen, who slipped defender
Robert Williams’ tackle to dive into
the end zone.
Rookie running back Emmitt
Smith made his debut for Dallas but
was used sparingly because he only
had three days of practice after a 48-
day contract holdout.
Johnson got the game ball, his sec
ond. The first came from the Cow
boys’ only 1989 victory, 13-3 over
Washington at RFK Stadium.
1. Would you Ilk* to woik tor
your*«lf7
2. Would you Ilk* to *et your own
hour*?
3. Ar* you •slf-motlvBt*d7
4. Ar* you a bit of an *ntr*p*n*ur?
It you an*w*r«d YES to all of th* abova,
you ar*|u*ttha p*r*on war* looking (orl
A* an Amarltan Pinag* Ctmpas Hap-
rasantatlva, you will b* retponaMa for
placing adv*rti*lng on bullttln boards.
You will al»o hav* th* opportunity to work
on maikating program* for *uch cHtnt*
a* Amarlcan Exprait, Ford, and Botton
University Th«r» ar* no *al*» Involved.
Many of our rep* stay with u* long after
graduation. For mor* Information, call or
writ* u* at th* following addr***:
AMERICAN PASSAGE
NETWORK
ZtSWaatl
Stattla. WA gs11t-41Q7