The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 09, 1995, Image 10

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Page 10 • The Battalion
Monday • O c toh,.,(i
BILLIARDS BAR
Open Dart Tournament Happy Hour 4-7 pm M-F
Every Tuesday starting at 8:00pm
$5 entry fee • Double elimination
• 1st, 2nd, & 3rd place prizes
• Bud Light Chuggers $2.00
$1.50 Draft
$1.50 Longnecks
$2.25 Pitchers
$2.25 Well
Mariners stun Yankees
in 11-inning thriller
MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL
2 Big Screens
$3.50 Miller Lite Pitchers 7:30 - 10:30
Free Buffalo Wings 7:00 - 9:00 (All you can eat)
I Winn Dixie Shopping Center - Texas Ave. 764-8664 I
4r memorial student center
Does Business or Law School Interest You?
Come hear about the MBA/LAW Committees three travel opportunities to
visit the nation’s top business and law schools:
MIDWEST
(Indiana University, Univ. of Chicago, Univ. of Michigan)
J. WAYNE STARK NORTHEAST TRIP
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WEST COAST
(Stanford, Berkeley, UCLA, USC)
3.5 GRA required for last 60 hrs. of study.
Applications Due Oct. 10, at 5pm Room 216Q in The Student Programs Office of the MSC
and The Office of Professional School Advising, Academic 203
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coat tteetU. “We, xeycteat ttatifccttfuw- tAnee (3) cvanAittf datfa. fo tAe
evetit auxAle to- atexAt you fo (Ac Aeat 0/ otcn aAitM&i
Dawn Killion
Former lesbian activist
“Being lesbian wasn’t an issue for me. I was happy.
But then someone changed my life forever.”
“Having a lesbian identity was the best
thing that had happened to me...I’d been
rejected by men...ridiculed all my life for
being a tomboy. I was angry about being
treated as "different" from other girls, tired
of the pain of rejection...! mean, as soon as
I learned what ‘homosexual’ meant, I knew
that was me. I had no interest in men...and
it just felt so natural, so I acted on it. As a
lesbian, it was great to finally have an
identity that fit. i loved being gay...but down
deep inside, I wondered if living like this
was right. Of course, I didn’t think there
was any way out...I mean, I was born this
way, right? So why did I feel the doubt?
When I let Christ into my life, He opened my
eyes to a love I had never experienced
before, but had always wanted. I learned
how He had a different purpose for my
life...and saw how His unconditional love
helped me to heal the pain I’d covered for
so long...I really thought I belonged before,
but believe me, there’s no better life than
being with God.”
There is
another wav out.
For a free copy of other stories like Dawn’s, give us a call.
1-800-236-9238
This ad is sponsored by Aggie Sisters for Christ, the Baptist Student Ministries, Campus Crusade for Christ.
Chi Alpha Christian Fellowship, Christian Leadership Ministries, the Fellowship of Christian Athletes,
and the Wesley Foundation—Methodist Student Center
□ Edgar Martinez's
two-run double lifted
Seattle into the AL
Championship Series.
SEATTLE (AP) — The Seattle
Mariners, the team that could not
win for nearly two decades, now
just cannot lose.
Edgar Martinez hit a two-run
double in the 11th inning Sunday
night, capping one of baseball’s
best comebacks ever, and sent the
Mariners over the New York Yan
kees 6-5 to win a classic, decisive
Game 5 of their AL playoff series.
Ken Griffey Jr., whose playoff-
record fifth homer began an
eighth-inning rally that tied it,
scored from first base on Mar
tinez’s ball into the left-field cor
ner, sliding home with the win
ning run.
“All the hard work we did fi
nally paid off for us,” Griffey said.
Defense:
Continued from Page 7
“Now we’re like dang, are we
really as good as we’re sup-
j posed to be. We come into a big
game like this and we just don’t
perform like wo’re supposed
to.”
With the loss at Tech, the
I Aggies fell to No.22 and fifth
place in the conference.
Slocum said that the SWC
race could turn out to be an in
teresting one.
“There are no guar
antees for anyone at
this point.” Slocum
said. “Tech has
demonstrated that
they can beat us and
I’m sure that this will
give encouragement to
everyone else. Perhaps
we’ve read too much
about how many
games we’ve won or c| c
how easy it is. We may
need to go back and
evaluate and start worrying
about whether we can beat
anybody.”
The Tech game left Aggie
fans wondering what is wrong
with the Aggies. After all, los
ing is not something that they
have had to deal with often.
Slocum said, “I wish there
was a simple one line answer
and I could say this is what’s
.iiHh idhti
Randy Johnson won in M
as Seattle won for the fourth:
m a week when a loss wo*
meant the end of its season. lh,
Manners became only th& J
team to overcome an 0-2 deficit
a hve-game series, and the fe
since San Diego beat Chicasi
the 1984 NL playoffs. 8
The Mariners, in the po*.
son for the first t ime in their»
year history, begin the bestoi;
AL championship series again;!
Cleveland on Tuesday night j
the Kingdome.
Jack McDowell, making J
first relief appearance inthemJ
jors, was the loser. He escapee
jams in the ninth and 10th it
could not hold a 5-4 leading
11th after a go-ahead singlet?
Kandy Velarde off Johnson.
Joey Cora opened the innin>
with a bunt single, barely eh*
first baseman Don Mattingly;
tag, and took third on Griffey;
single.
wrong, but when you lose
games it’s never that simple,"
With 30 seconds left inth
game, Corey Pullig threw:
pass that should have move?
the Aggies down the field:’
their way into field goal pis
tion. Instead it landed inth
arms of All-American middl:
linebacker Zach Thomas, wk
ran it in for the game winnki
touchdown.
Thomas’ defensive
touchdown handed the
Aggies their second
loss in a row, some
thing that hasn’t hap
pened since 1988, and
ended their Southwest
Conference win streak
at 29 games.
“They say that thert
is a first time for
everything.” Coach
Slocum said. “1 guess
that hold true. It was a
disappointment; we’re not ac
customed to this. I have to give
Tech credit. I thought thejAM
a great job fighting throipout
the ball game. They made
plays they had to make to win
the ball game.”
While Tech made tho plays
offensively, the big plays for
the Aggies came from the
fense.
WOLF FEN CREEK
AMPHITHEATRE
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special needs. We request notification three (3) working days p
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