• June 15, 1994 SPORTS ■'•/TheBia i May, ication, ag it,” he si to work Senate iepingd haveh publidh i. The' unour oan way se clear., bide by as the 1; ker. H er who A. 1th yea- late. : Exeat ted as le prev; ies untl : course* ictricalj ip aij l Baptii nigh or, nd i a stai Dledgicj lundree 1 writte: 1 50,od nty Cot rchwii have ;y Bull!! irtanti mnt ant lat.” le mo vows ne Lo s! ) youth , dew® s befot! 1( self, and wf ntil tl nship, 26 oth Romst ife ediW the fall ; (excepl postal ,ilding, niversiiyl’ torial 313. fa* Bntby £ ,r classic office A&M needs new special events center BRIAN COATS Sportswriter In July the State Coordinating Board for Higher Education is going to approve Texas A&M University’s request to build a special events cen ter. After years of being teased, it is going to happen. It is finally A&M’s year. All the pieces of the puzzle are in place. It is a no-lose situation. They are going to approve it be cause there are many politicians who are running for re-election this year. There are many Aggies in Texas. There are many Aggies who vote in Texas. If the Board does not approve the center, there will be many irritated Aggies who vote in Texas. If the ir ritated Aggies who vote in Texas do not get their center, some of those elected officials who did not support the center may not be elected offi cials after November. The last time the center came up for a vote, it was not an election year. This time it is. They are going to approve it be cause the center they are voting on is not the same one they voted on in 1990. The main difference is the cost. The first center, the one voted down, was going to cost somewhere in the neighborhood of S50 million. The new one is going to cost $35 mil lion. In 1990, the A&M Board of Re gents sent a 16,OOO-seat stadium to the board, much like the Frank Er win Center in Austin. Last spring, the regents approved a scaled-down, modified center. The new center will have about 12,500 seats. Head bas ketball coach Tony Barone thought Please see Center/Page 6 1994 Stanley Cup Playoffs - Game 7 Rangers break curse, take Stanley Cup 1 8,200 on hand to see New York win, 3-2 NEW YORK (AP) — Fifty-four years of waiting, 54 years of wanting, are over. The New York Rangers are Stanley Cup champions at last. The Rangers capped an extraordi nary championship series by beating the Vancouver Canucks 3-2 Tuesday night in Game 7. As the tense final seconds ticked off the clock at Madison Square Garden, where the home team had never before hoisted the most famous trophy in team sports, 18,200 raucous fans re leased more than five decades of pent- up passion. Fireworks exploded, smoke filled the arena, everyone wearing white jer seys hugged, and fans exchanged high- fives and screamed as rock music blared from the Garden audio system. The announcement that Rangers defenseman Brian Leetch won the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP AP Photo New York Rangers Alex Kovalev (27) scores on one foot against Vancouver Canucks goaltender Kirk McLean during game 3 of the Stanley Cup Playoffs. was barely audible over the triple-dig it-decibel celebration of the end of hockey’s cruelest curse. Finally, 4,232 games after last win ning Lord Stanley’s cup in 1940, the Rangers tasted sweet success again. Gooaal! Jennie Mayer/THE Battalion A&M sophomore goalie Sunny McConnell (left) fires a shot to one of the campers of the first session of Texas A&M Soccer Camp. Wichita Falls CBA hoops sold to Chicago investors WICHITA FALLS, Texas (AP) — The board of directors of the Continen tal Basketball Association have ap proved the sale of the Wichita Falls Texans to a group of investors from Chicago club officials say. “On the recommendation of thp commissioner (Mark Lamping), the board approved the sale for $800,000 to a group ... named Major Broadcast ing,” Texans owner Lanham Lyne said Monday. Lyne said he has heard that the new owners will move the team to the Rosemont Horizon, “although that’s not a definite. If not, I think they’re looking at an arena near Oakbrook, Ill., on the west side of Chicago.” “Their main deal is syndicated radio programming,” Lyne said of the new ownership. Astros top Giants 7-4, Rangers fall to Mariners 7-5 Astros 7, Giants 4 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — It’s practically been a formula this sea son: Bryan Hickerson is on the mound, Jeff Bagwell hits a homer. Bagwell hit his third homer of the season off the San Francisco Giants pitcher Tuesday, capping a day on which the Houston first baseman drove in three runs to increase his league-leading total to 62. He had four hits and three runs led the Astros to a 7-4 victory over San Francisco on Tuesday. “Bagwell sure has my number this year,” said Hickerson, who gave up a solo shot to Bagwell in the seventh. “You don’t need to ask me anymore about him, because I don’t want to hear about it.” This season, Bagwell is being tough on the Giants in general, hit ting .647 in four games, but he’s al ways been particularly hard on Hick erson. Bagwell is 9-for-l2 lifetime with four homers off the left-hander. Rangers 5, Mariners 7 ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Ken Griffey Jr. hit two home runs, in creasing his major league-leading to tal to 28 and lifting the Seattle Mariners over the Texas Rangers 7-6 in 13 innings Tuesday night. Griffey hit a 429-foot drive into the upper deck in right field with two outs in the 13th off Dan Smith (1-2). He led off the seventh inning with a 404-foot homer to right. Griffey, who hit a grand slam and drove in a career-high six runs Mon day night, went 4-for-7. He also made an excellent play in center field, throwing out Ivan Ro driguez from his knees as Rodriguez tried to stretch a single into a dou ble. Goose Gossage (2-0) pitched two innings. He ended the game by get ting Junior Ortiz on a grounder with the bases loaded. ATTENTION ACCOUNTING STUDENTS DAUBERMAN ♦ KAPLAN CPA REVIEW announces A Special CPA Exam Seminar Wednesday, June 15 at 7:00 pm Blocker 165 Complimentary refreshments will be served ✓ May ’94 Exam & Solutions ✓ How to Prepare for the CPA Exam ✓ Exam Strategy & Techniques WIN A FREE CPA REVIEW COURSE & SOFTWARE Special program begins July $650 100% live classes available in Arlington, Dallas, Austin, Houston & San Antonio beginning June, July and August. 800/CPA-2DAY Spend Spring 1995 at Santa Chia^a! For info, come to one of the following meetings: Thursday, June 16 at 10:00 a.m. Tuesday, June 21 at 3:00 p.m. Wednesday, June 22 at 2:00 p.m. All held in Rm. 251 Bizzell Hall West Study Abroad Programs 161 Bizzell Hall West 845-0544