anuary 20,1 Sports Monday, January 20, 1992 The Battalion Page 5 ijm ately began to; ; Buonaguro. -s had already| t to warm upivi- ■el the effects oft I spectators Wf! the arena after: le was discoverd . Baylor game«; at a later date. of the A&M i game schedule Jan. 22, will bet y, according 4LK speec dvancement It 1 the basic idea that anyoneti present state,® ■es. She said si: iy of Dr. King hich helped k her speech rove and we a nust be prepare: d," she said 1 she hopes ed the musk; tanding of wk or, and will re blic anction w he beginning;: ceived a lote who admire tie r with Rudd: 1 in the floor; vooded interie oriented, Bust! rrounding tk ;e the fountai: ag such as car "It's finished SCOREBOARD rage everyont (AP) - A »ing to open 1 files on the Kennedy, but ormer House littee predid- not produce ontain infor- aublicly dis- ' Rep. Louis 1 in an inter- iding there's records that ng will be eek that he's ility ofares- uthorizere- pen the files liver Stone's a suggested ? victim of a was shot in .3. committee, ded in 1979 i victim ofa that could uzed crime p porting re ude former I, a member San Antonio 89 Boston 98 Chicago Detroit 87 85 Milwaukee ....108 Orlando 98 Phoenix 132 Portland ....128 Atlanta ....119 Denver. 93 SWC Texas Tech 101 Tulane 98 TCU 80 Texas 76 Houston 84 Rice 60 SMU 92 Oral Roberts 80 Texas A&M vs. Baylor. PPD. Other scores.... UNCC 82 Duke ....104 DePaul 72 Georgetown 62 UCLA 87 Oregon St 81 Indiana 96 Northwestern 62 Minnesota ....70 Michigan St 66 Home sweet home A&M undefeated at the Coliseum By Doug Foster The Battalion There's no place like home for Lynn Hickey and the Lady Aggies. Texas A&M took advantage of four quick turnovers Saturday night and jumped out to an early 8-0 lead over Bay lor University at G. Rollie White Colise um. A&M never trailed on its way to a 73-64 victory, maintaining a 6-0 record at home this season. The victory moved the Lady Aggies overall record to 11-5, 3-0 in Southwest Conference play. It also marks the first time A&M has been 3-0 in the SWC since 1986. A&M will take a five-game winning streak to Austin tonight when they take on the University of Texas at 7 p.m. in the Erwin Center. The Lady Aggies held the eight point lead most of the way through the first half, a .d even opened it up to a 24-12 lead with 12:28 to play before Baylor started a late first half run. The Bears cut the lead to two points late in the half be fore A&M moved back out to a 42-37 halftime lead. Baylor cut the lead to 53-52 early in the second half, but after two free throws and a layup by junior Yolanda Brown, the Bears never seriously threatened again. Brown and senior Dena Russo fin ished the game as A&M's leading scor ers, both putting in 18 points. Russo said one of the keys to the victo ry was A&M's ability to take the ball in side to Brown in the second half. "We concentrated on going inside on them, and she (Brown) came out in the second half ready to play and she did a really good job," Russo said. See Lady Aggies/ Page 6 KARL STOLLEIS/The Battalion Lady Aggie Shawn Wedlock drives past a Baylor defender in A&M’s 73-64 victory Saturday night at G. Rollie White Coliseum. A&M has won five consecutive games and is undefeated at home. Richardson Richardson helps West to 14-6 win STANFORD, Calif. (AP) - Bucky Richardson of Texas A&M threw a touchdown pass to Kansas State's Michael Smith to lead the West to a 14-6 victory Sun day in the East- West Shrine Game. The West took a 14-0 lead when Richardson hit Smith, Kansas State's career leader in recep tions, yardage and touchdown catches, on a post pat tern down the right side for a 24-yard TD with 9:54 left in the half. California's Mike Pawlawski, named the game's top offensive play er, gave the West a 7-0 lead with a 1- yard touchdown run that finished off a game-opening 15-play, 77-yard drive with 5:38 left in the first quarter. Pawlawski, the Most Valuable Player in Cal's 37-13 victory over Clemson in the Citrus Bowl, faked a handoff into the line, spun and rolled left, deked New Hampshire lineback er Dwayne Sabb into the air with a pump fake, then beat two defenders into the left corner of the end zone. Klaus Wilmsmeyer, who made 22 of 30 field goals in four years at Louisville, pulled the East within 14-3 with a 31-yard field goal with 1:13 left in the half. Wilmsmeyer's 22-yard field goal with 2:44 left in the third quarter made it 14-6. Dana Hall of Washington, Tyrone Leggette of Nebraska and Matt Darby of UCLA intercepted passes for the West. Erick Anderson of Michigan and Tim Simpson of Illinois recovered fumbles for the East. Hall was named the defensive player of the game. no control les," said i prefer to ;. But they vay of any past not re. It's /ed." nmmittees that Joh n dim of a iracy. Now Available at 2 DAY VIDEO "Where Video isfun " Open lO a.m. to Midnight - T days a week jwtzrnpr Rent one ( I get one , I free | |^(one new release only) Exp. 2/10/92 1800 Texas Ave. S. College Station 693-6677 1121 E. Villa Maria Bryan 260-9952 BAYLOR COLLEGE OF MEDICINE AND RICE UNIVERSITY ANNOUNCE A SUMMER PROGRAM FOR MINORITY STUDENTS INTERESTED IN MEDICINE THE HONORS PREMEDICAL ACADEMY JUNE 1-JULY 10, 1992 Baylor College of Medicine and Rice University offer a six-week summer program for college students interested in a medical career. The goal of the program, funded in part by a grant from The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, is to increase minority representation in medicine. PROGRAM BENEFITS: • academic enrichment in the biological sciences and communications • practical research laboratory and clinical experiences • counseling regarding the selection of a medical school program and the application process • preparation and review for the Medical College Admissions Test (MCAT) • housing/financial support (Out of town students will stay in dormitories on the Rice University campus, across the street from the Texas Medical Center. Housing will be provided at no charge). A modest stipend will be paid to all students. • college credit (6 semester hours for courses taken at Rice University,* and 3 semester hours for Baylor activities**) • The Rice University courses are: English 317-Technical Writing (3 semester hours), and Biology 403-Special Topics (3 semester hours) ** The Baylor College of Medicine course is AHS-399: Preceptorship in the Health Sciences (3 semester hours) APPLICATION DEADLINE: MARCH 6, 1992 SUPPORTING DOCUMENT DEADLINE: MARCH 16, 1992 For additional information write or call the Office of Admissions, Baylor College of Medicine, One Baylor Plaza, Houston, Texas 77030, 798-4841 (Houston) or 1-800-633-6445 (outside Houston).