The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 07, 2000, Image 16

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Howdy Camp 2001
Counselor/Crew Applications
Available in Koldus 135
Due Sept. 15 th
by 5:00
for more info, call 862-1785!
rELCHICO’:
ALL YOU CAN EAT
BOTTOMLESS PLATTER
522
Served daily from 11-5 p.m.
. Now open till 11 p.m. on Thursday!
Prink Specials! ^
Tuesday & Thursday - Margaritas $ 1.19
1912 S. Texas Ave.
College Station, TX 77840
693-6684
t&e 'Pefifien''
Sun. - 42 Tournament
Mon. Night Football - Hamburgers & Hot Dogs
Tues. - Live Blues Band
Wed. - Ladies Night
Thurs., Fri. and Sat. - $3.00 Flaming Dr. Peppers
$1.75 Domestic Longnecks Every Night!
2005 South College Ave.
TAMU
South College
Page 2B
SPORTS
Tlnn sJav. Sepiember?. in
THE BATTALION
pday, September 7
A&M’s Thrasher out for at least 3 wed
By Blaine Dionne and
Jason Lincoln
The Battalion
Texas A&M forward Nicky
Thrasher was ready to lead the Aggie
soccer team into the Top 10. Thrash
er, one of the Big 12’s leading offen
sive threats for the past three seasons,
would not get the chance to do it with
her scoring. Instead, she had to be in
tent to watch it from the bench as
A&M defeated
first No. 7 Hartford
and then No. 17
Harvard.
What first ap
peared to be a
bruised calf suf
fered early in
A&M's game
against Hartford
was later determined to be a broken
fibula.
THRASHER
“Well, she's out for a while," said
A&M coach G. Guerrieri. “We'll
have to see how she does.”
The injury will sideline Thrasher
for at least three weeks and probably
most of the season. It marks the sixth
A&M player lost to injury for an ex
tended part of the season. A&M's in
jury woes have seen four torn ACLs
and a foot injury prior to this injury.
In 1999, Thrasher scored 21 goals
and added 10 assists, in 1998, she
was the offensive M VPofthe
tournament.
Those injuries have takes
some of A&M'
2000
IJUl Its nave LdNCIi . _
M's top prospectsl ffiinSt IV
season. Yet the Aggies! YORK (
still been able to take downsois J( jg e ru i e d Wet
the country’s top teams andd Fernet music
the No. 7 seat in the polls.Hp3.com willfi
A&M will have to try and mail opynghts of re
their status with a thin benchn nd ordered it
...... i/vm.uuHuv,.- -
ing some key veterans, with Du lusic Group $
er atop the list.
McNair unveils name and logo
Road Trip
Continued from Page IB
lakoff said it vs
end a messag
ommunty to d
ingement.
Rakoff said
After months of speculation, franchise has identity
championship and much of theirtean warded as mu
er CD but ch
HOUSTON (AP) — A not-
too-well-kept secret was revealed
Wednesday when Houston owner
Bob McNair announced that the
nickname of the NFL’s 32nd fran
chise will be the Texans.
The name won out over the
Stallions and Apollos.
“Are you ready for some foot
ball?” McNair shouted to a down
town crowd estimated at 16,000
which turned out to learn the
team’s name, logo and colors.
The colors for the team that
will begin play in 2002 will be
battle red, steel blue and liberty
white with a bull’s head logo that
includes a Texas Lone Star on
one side.
“We're so excited about the re
turn of the NFL to Houston,” Mc
Nair said. “We don’t want to be
stereotyped as cowboys. We are
proud of our past, but we don’t
want to be bound by it.”
Looking out over a stretch of
downtown Texas Avenue that was
turned into a football field, com
plete with goal posts, NFL com-
I rooted for the
Oilers, and now
I II be rooting for
the Texans."
— Chris Lockeridge
Houston football fan
missioner Paul Tagliabue revealed
the team name and logo on a large
screen.
“With teamwork you can
achieve the impossible,” Tagli
abue said. “Not many years ago,
you thought ‘it’s not going to hap
pen,’ but it did happen, and you
can be proud of yourselves. You
made it happen.”
McNair paid $700 million for
the franchise in a lengthy battle
with Los Angeles, a favored place
for the NFL because of the size of
its media market. But Los Ange
les never presented a unified plan,
and McNair won the team.
The crowd that showed up on
a steamy afternoon reacted posi
tively to the new name. Several
spectators grabbed their cell
phones to spread the word.
“Yeah, it's the Texans,” one man
shouted into his phone.
Another fan. Chris Lockeridge.
beamed beneath his hard hat which
bore a sign with the year 2(X)2 and
a question mark attached.
“I rooted for the Oilers, and
now I'll be rooting for the Tex
ans,” Lockeridge said.
lore responsil
;rnet startups
Universal M
veterans from the ‘98 squad.
UF's main asset is their athletici ^y srna ' er an
Guerrieri said, and the Aggies willi aus ® ^^ ( r |
to deal with that as well as theG
home-field advantage.
Sophomore Heather Ragsdale.
week’s Big 12 Offensive Plajm, S urged a st
Week, said the matchup with the Gfoselywatcbec
and the Seminoles could play into
gies' advantage.
“They play with a lot more speei; 1
a lot more space (than Hartford or 1 ' t ,Tia y
vardl.” Ragsdale said. "Also.iheirfd ^tesSmeth
going to be a lot more like ours.
What region of the country spat
played in can dictate what typeofpl.
surface you use. In New England,*!
A&M was last weekend, there
thick, thatched grass that slowedtfe
down, effectively negating the As
ral ji
r roughly SIT
U.S. Distric
“Music is a n
ifringement m
mt," said Unive
>peed.
In Florida, as Ragsdale said,thej rnet * a !, ic ^°'
is a closely trimmed Bermuda ra P CL * ^ 0l> ^' n i
Bermuda has'an opposite effect®
Jitters
Continued from Page IB
said. “We have talent that's always waiting to
play.The more players we use, the harder it is for
an opponent to stop.”
That proved exactly the case as A&M was able
to control the match despite never scoring more
than four points in a row. In the first two matches,
the Aggies were drawn out to 15-11 and 15-9 wins.
But when the new faces came on the court, the
Cougars did not know who they needed to stop, re
sulting in a 10 point win.
“This year it feels like we're really deep and we
all play really well together,” A&M setter Jenna
Moscovic said. “Consistent passing enables us to
do a lot on the floor with any position.”
Texas A&M volleyball is no longer a team dom
inated by its front lineup. This year's team looks to
win through its varied offensive threats from both
the starters and on the bench . A fact that they hope
will get them through an entire season fresh for an
other NCAA run.
icient living quarter
Ha to in tti
roof ervec
entraice ai
lorage
ball, sending it careening aboutthti nvestigaing
and making team speed necessary lei w**'ve«vid«no 1 ha*b.
“We'll ba able to pass the ballan w»8"t.ereevince.
like we want to and play our style^
so than we did last weekend
Ragsdale.
Also, the Aggies might receive2.|h" &,r 1 h ? d B.nmes
. 1- w ^ i • ^ i i n i !enseal ©d. recesed
er reprieve from inis mucn-ballvte
« . » lemofi
week in weather, where temper's
records have been dropping like (lie
The weather in New England lash
end was 88 degrees for both games.F
da has been experiencing morelexr*
temperatures but is expecting thi
storms throughout the next few day
(AP) — Pile
/
ycup local online auction source
HOW GENEROUS CAN WE BE?
HOW MUCH DO YOU LOVE PASTA?
Right now at Olive Garden,
you can enjoy all kinds of our delicious pastas,
all you want. Because for a short time,
were offering our Never Ending Pasta Bowl
for just $7.95 every day.
So come, pick the pastas you love.
And enjoy a taste of generosity
this Italian can’t wait to share with you.
^CrUy TCP
□ooo Texas Avenue South,
CORNER OF HOLLEMAN & TEXAS AVENUE (979) 696-1921
© 2000 Olive Garden
tiearthing cues
w site was atandoned 1
curred. Investjators thee
iy have terrdzed and <
lie root had
len left intact,
fccause tlmbei
bs scarce, root
fere typically
Jsmantled whe
dwelling was
landoned.
e
Huma
In the
positb
myogl
carrie:
bloodi
cells.
Exca'
COLORADO
irSoiTSystiimali'
V
Qualit
www.seii
S>n
3601 T’X
1 mile rurt
Serving,
Hours IVo
L
An
wT
co
an
pc
AI
re
th
ar
L!
Si
01
w
c«
hi
si