IT i l i BIG SWENSEN’S MEAL DEAL IT’S ALMOST MORE THAM YOU CAM EAT! Good For Up To 4 Per Coupon Vy. LB. HAMBURGER WITH FRIES ”1 l Page 6 Texas A&M SPORTS The Battalion Wednesday, September23,lij VVednc LARGE SOFT DRIMK SUPER SUNDAE ONLY $4.99 H Culpepper Plaza 1^ College Station, Texas Exp. 9-30-92 WITH COUPON EXTRA CHARGE FOR BACOM G CHEESE I 8 I I I I I I E E B E Li A&JVTs Buckley, Harrison receive honor (the Denim & Diamonds presents EDDIE RAVEN live in concert Thursday, September 24 21 or over Free Admission with coupon Denim & Diamonds asks to please drink responsibly Varsity Sport of tlio Mind Register now for our Fall Tournament Captains' meeting to be held on Monday, September 28th at 7:00 P.M. in 401 Rudder. Team captains must attend or contact Craig Bradford or Dennis Koch at 845-1515 for more information. Sign up as a team of four ($20) or as an individual ($5) with Barbara Wheat in Room 216 MSC. Deadline is September 26th. only 2 days away KAPLAN The answer to the test question. December 5 111 LSAT classes start Saturday Tuesday 10/3 10:00 or 10/6 6:00 December 12 th GRE classes start Thursday 10/1 6:00 or Saturday 10/3 10:00 January 16 m GMAT classes start Tuesday 10/13 6:00 or Wednesday 10/14 6:00 i 1 Now, The EKest For Less! $ 100 off our LSAT course or $ 50 off our GMAT or GRE course call TODAY 696-3196 Valid till Oct. 31, 1992 FROM STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS Texas A&M's Marcus Buckley and Tony Harrison each received accolades from the Aggies' 26-13 victory over Missouri on Saturday. Buckley was named AP's Defen sive Player of the Week while Harri son was cho sen for the AT&T Long Distance award for their performances against the Tigers. Buckley, a senior linebacker. Buckley had eight solo tackles, including a sack for a 12-yard loss. He tackled the ball carrier on two occasions for losses totaling three yards, and once he pressured the quarterback into an interception. Despite not being at 100 per cent as he overcomes a mysterious ailment in his ankle joints, Buck- ley has had 21 tackles in four games. He's recovered two fum bles and caused two more fum bles. He has four sacks totaling 33 yards and six tackles behind the line of scrimmage for losses total ing 22 yards. Buckley has been credited with five quarterback pressures. Buckley said you haven't seen anything yet. "I'm feeling better every week," Buckley said. "The cool weather helped in Missouri, and now with an off week, I should be back close to 100 percent for the Texas Tech game." Buckley didn't believe his effort Saturday was Harrison his best, and he said the strong effort that the Tigers showed is something the Aggies will see every week. "I thought I could have played better against Mis- 1 jumped too good job at halftime of making justments and we wereableto ecute in the second half. One about it, we'll get everyteai best shot each week." Harrison, a junior widen er, made only one catch Satan The reception, however,tui into a 73-yard touchdown opening seconds of theseci half, tying the score of the gam 10-10. On a third-and-10 from mivci, ■ ffjflblWe S rb Ch souri," he said, soon on one screen pass or I could have had an interception. "I thought our coaches did a Tiger' 27, A&M quarterback!! Granger threw to Harrison, ran a curl route, caught the broke a tackle and raced down sideline for the score. _ Harrison, who received prs y) son All-Southwest Conferenl- honors, has made eight catches i-r 1 far this season for a totalot yards. r kw"* Astros lose two to Reds Twins get 13th-innin^ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CINCINNATI - Bip Roberts quickly conceded he was lucky. No one even had to ask Milt Hill about his good fortune — it was obvious on one pitch. Roberts got his ninth-straight hit, one shy of the NL record, and Hill survived the wildest pitch of the day to get his first major- league save Tuesday as the Cincinnati Reds beat the Houston Astros 4-3 for a doubleheader sweep. ■Jose Rijo won his fifth-straight decision and singled home a pair of runs for a 6-3 win in the first game. Roberts bore down on a record and Hill simply bore down too hard as the Reds won their sixth-straight in the second game. Roberts singled and doubled twice in his first three at-bats, giv ing him nine hits in nine consecu tive at-bats over three games. He rested his sore right ankle in the first game, and left the second af ter aggravating the injury with the streak intact. The NL record of 10-consecu- tive hits has been accomplished six times since 1900, most recently by Woody Williams of the Reds in 1943. The major league record is 12-straight hits by Boston's Pinky Higgins in 1938 and Detroit's Walt Dropo in 1952. Roberts didn't realize he was one hit shy of the record until he'd left the game. "It's one of those things where everything I'm hitting is falling in right now," said Roberts, who has raised his average from .308 to .320 with the streak. "At the plate now, the ball looks pretty big and when I hit it, there's nobody standing there. You have to have a little luck." His luck came Monday night in the form of rain. He filed out in his first at-bat, ending the streak, but the game was postponed by rain after four innings, wiping out the out. He took advantage Tuesday by leading the Reds' second-game of fense. He doubled and scored in the first inning on Barry Larkin's groundout, singled in his next at- bat, then doubled home Dave Martinez for a 3-2 lead in the fifth off Shane Reynolds (0-3). Larkin followed with a double to score Roberts with the eventual win- win over Rangers, 1 THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rangers have lost by a shutout I ning run. "Bip's using the whole field to hit with, too," manager Lou Piniella said. "I notice he's had hits off breaking balls, off straight change-ups, and off fastballs. It's impressive." The Reds' bullpen was lucky to hold the lead that Roberts gener ated. Scott Bankhead (10-4) relieved Chris Hammond and pitched out of a bases-loaded threat in the fifth by getting Ken Caminiti to fly out, preserving the 4-2 cushion. Rafael Ramirez hit an RBI sin gle off Norm Charlton with none out in the ninth to make it 4-3, but Casey Candaele also tried to score on the play and was thrown out at the plate by left fielder Reggie Sanders. , ,. i . . Hill relieved with two outs and the bases loaded and Jeff Bagwell up. Bagwell, who had homered earlier in the game, pulled Hill's first pitch foul, then took a ball way outside. Hill's next pitch was over Bag well's head, but it deflected off his bat for a foul tip that kept it from being a game-tying wild pitch. Bagwell hit the next pitch for a routine fly out to center. of the dead ball era, the defending world champion Minnesota Twins kept their flickering pennant hopes alive Tuesday night. Pedro Munoz delivered a two- out single in the top of the 13th in ning to score Kirby Puckett from second base as the Twins defeated the Texas Rangers 1-0. Oakland, which lost to Chicago 8-3, still has the magic number of four to succeed the Twins as champions of the American League West. Nolan Ryan pitched gallantly again for the Rangers but left after six scoreless innings with a no-de cision in his return from two missed starts in the rotation be cause of a muscle pull. Ryan gave up four hits in six innings. It was the fifth game he has pitched in this year that the 7 "Overall I was pleased witli way 1 threw the ball," Ryan "1 felt fine and had goodstu: had command of all three of? pitches." Kenny Rogers, 2-6, was the; tim of the Twins' lucky 13lk ning uprising while Larry Casi! (1-0), who came up from Portia last week, got his first victe since Oct. 3,1990. Minnesota manager TomKil said, "Our pitchers didafabuin job. We had a couple of chano against Nolan but he just blew; away when he had to. But Mm came through when weneede) it." Munoz said "it's fun with Puckett in front of you.f( know he's always going to be base." Rick Aguilera earned M save, becoming the third pitchrl in major league history to back-to-back 40-save seasons. Quarterbacks of me, but I'm working harda having fun.' Emerson, who weighed2i Continued from Page 5 Davis Continued from Page 5 talk about it, having a more checkered collegiate career than the Great One, Lena Guerrero, herself, but someone had to say it. I've seen you out there screaming your lungs out for Jeff Granger hoping that he can throw a football like a football, instead of like a baseball des tined to kill worms. I've heard you sigh, hoping that GHT would actually run for more yards than his mouth says he can. I've watched you shrink in horror at the thought that if we possess one of the best offensive lines in college football, egads, what does the worst one look like! I have not, however, seen you at a volleyball game and that's your loss, not mine. And I have definitely not seen you study, and that will be your loss come Christmas time when your family gathers around the table to chew on your behind which your father roasted longer than the turkey because the turkey cost him $19.95 and you cost him $5,000 a semester. So take my advice, please. Aggie football and volleyball will be back next weekend, the Pokes will be in Philadelphia, and the Oilers' offense might catch more of Warren Moon's passes than the opposing de fense will and baseball season will be mercifully over. Even Aggie basketball will be just around the corner. So go ahead Aggies, bury yourself in the books, whatever and wherever they may be. And rest easy knowing that your football brethren will be hitting the book as well. The play book that is. Because R. C. Slocum is going to roast a bunch of behinds him self if this team doesn't start ulavine like one that belones in the top ten. The chances of either one be coming A&M's starting quarter back were becoming slimmer and slimmer. So they changed their positions and started new challenges. "I'm really excited about play ing linebacker," Emerson said. "I never got the chance in high school, so seeing the situation here, I decided to make the move. "It's still going to take me a while to adjust and get the de fense down right, but I'm learn ing. There are some guys in front The m pounds last spring, has bulkedt! the the p to 210 and is beginning tolot|not talkei more like a linebacker andle tative St like a quarterback. fleeting 1 Petty, on the other han;j Toana doesn't have to worry aboutmal Republic, ing a weight adjustment, but he eign affa in his final year of eligibility an appointr has less time to adapt. looked, "I'm just trying to go out am give the coaches enough coaf' dence in me to think I can' the position," Petty said. "It'stf first time I've ever done it. Ife of had an idea of what Odgen bl the medi the oversi Clinto: no exper as far as tion was all about from beingtf ei gn affai offense. "It's been fun so far. than sitting around." It's betW Lady Aggies jconcernec he said v don't anyth about it i Media. ] pointmen would ef Continued from Page 5 Middle blockers Kim Mitchell and Amy Kisling are holding the fort down inside, as Mitchell has team highs in service aces, blocks, block assists and blocking aver age, and Kisling owns the lead in hitting percentage. The magnitude of such a hot start is not lost on the players themselves, who are relishing the test they face against Tech. "I think we're all really pumped," Mitchell said. "I feel we can play with any team in the conference. "I'm pretty excited about it my self." Although A&M holds a 23-18 edge in their series, Tech looked invincible against the Lady Ag- eies a vear aeo, defeatine them Would no they woi 0d gensai i( fntion to “These enough fi tention to, twice during the regular season. Both wins came in the form of three-game sweeps. The rest of A&M's trip do get any easier. After Tech, _ Lady Aggies face Florida,W ^ me 1 r j can year's Southeastern Conferentf co-champion and currentlytl* lOth-ranked squad in the counin A&M then travels back upstate Tallahassee to lock hornswi Florida State, whose seven wi have all been relatively eas| three-game matches. "This is a tough road swing fa us," Givens said. "Tech is her 15, Florida is 10th and Florid* State is always a tough team. "I think it will give usac indication of what kind of ti we have." As for past histories with two Florida schools, Givens 1>* ! little to go on. A&M has facedil* Lady Gators only twice, losinj both matches. And the LadyA§' gies enjoy a 3-2 record agai^ FSU, but the two teams havend met since 1984, a year in A&M's 33-4 mark was the best® school history. MSC Black Awareness Committee Are you concerned about the future of African-Americans? "MEETING THE CHALLENGES FOR A BETTER TOMMORROW" A panel discussion which will include: Nelda Spears - Tax Accessor/Collecton Austin Benjamin Hall III - City Attorney: Houston Frank Pierce - City Councilman: San Antonio Samuel Biscoe - Travis County Commissioner Wednesday, September 23, 1992 7:00 PM - MSC 201 WHAT A RUSH. THE SHADOW PACK $17.50 * USE OF PISTOL * 30 ROUNDS OF PAINTBALLS *2 C02 CARTRIDGES HALF THE PRICE OF MOST PACKAGES 846-1439 BRAZOS VALLEY WAR GAMES ‘FEATURING THE PG PURSUIT »220 FEET PER SECOND FIRE POWER ‘PAINTBALLS WATER SOLUBLE/.68 CALIBER PELLETS ‘GAME EASILY EXPLAINED, NOVICE READY IN 1ST GAME AVAILABLE ‘CAMOUPLAGE OVERALLS ‘THE NORTON SAFETY GLASSES ‘FLAGS AND COLOR CODED BANDANAS ‘PAIN I FILLED GRENADES! ‘REFEREES UPON REQUEST ‘ADDITIONAL PAINTBALLS (10 FOR 1.00) ‘ADDITIONAL C02 CARTRIDGES (1.00 EACH) ‘2 MINUT E SMOKE BOMBS! Jo