OVER $ 30,000 WON WEEKLY 1805 Briarcrest, Bryan 979-776-0999 Open Tuesday thru Sunday Ag Appreciation Nights Wed & Thurs Nights: 6:45 & 9:00 Drawing for trip to Las Vegas Cash Grab Machine to run each night 1/2 price paper $ 10.00 1/2 price Bingo Magic Machines BYOB *Doorprize- I Color TV per night *Free hot dog or corn dog per person with ad * October 16 &I7: drawings & registration, 2nd session only LARGE NON-SMOKING ROOM Great Food • Security • Pull Tables and Much More! Due to recent changes, no one under 18 is allowed to enter St. Joseph Brazos Valley Rv/f'/vcA Girls Club of St Joseph Catholic Church Elks #859 Brazos County Catholic School 10 School of Hair Design:, We give you the look you want at discount prices! iff*?-®* Haircuts - s 5 75 Color - $ 20 00 and up Walk-ins Welcome 1711 Briarcrest Drive, Bryan 979-776-4375 Services done by students with instructor supervision. Islamic Center O'pew Houses Come visit your local mosque and learn more about Islam Get to know your Muslim neighbors Enjoy international food Saturday, October 19, 2002 9:OOAM - 4:OOPM For more details, please visit TCBmr.icbcs.org r i ^ Sponsored by the Islamic Community of Bryan/College Station & the Muslim Students’ Association “YOU WILL FIND MEANING ONLY BY SHARING IN THE RESPONSIBILITIES, THE DANGERS AND THE PASSIONS OE YOUR TIME.’ President Lyndon B. Johnson Leadership starts here. The Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs The University of Texas at Austin Graduate degrees in public affairs and public policy. LBI -SCHOOl OF * PUBLIC AFFAIRS www.utexas.edu/lbj Tuesday, October i 5, 2002 JPORls THE OATTAli Runner sets record, asks for test (AP) — Paula Radcliffe had the pedi gree, the past performances and a track tai lor-made to showcase what she does better than any woman in the world: run mile after mile after mile after mile with the precision of a metronome. So nobody should have been surprised when the 28-year-old British runner was the first woman across the line Sunday at the Chicago Marathon. Or that she covered the distance in a world-best 2 hours, 17 minutes and 18 seconds — lopping nearly a minute and a half off the old mark. Even less surprising, though, was what Radcliffe did afterward. She insisted on taking a drug test. “I just wanted to make sure that was done,” said Radcliffe, the two-time world cross-country and half-marathon champion, “so there could be no questions and no issues about this one.” That reveals as much about her sport as Radcliffe’s place in it. Nobody who competes in track and field is above suspicion of using performance enhancing drugs. Same with cycling and all the other endurance sports — and for that matter, baseball, football, soccer, hockey, golf and even chess. What makes Radcliffe stand out, beyond her success these past two seasons, is that she welcomes the scrutiny, even insists on it. Remember how Sammy Sosa chafed at the offer of a surprise test to back his claims about being steroid-free? Well, Radcliffe refuses to let any opportunity slip away without doing just that. As she’s climbed steadily toward the top. Radcliffe has raised the stakes in her crusade against the per formance-enhancing drug EPO. She wears a red ribbon on her singlet to show support for compulsory blood test ing, a more effective method than urine tests, and she's authorized release of her own blood tests from just about every race she’s run in. At the world championships in Edmonton last year, Radcliffe sat in the stands during the 5,000-meter heats holding up a hand-lettered sign. It read "EPO Cheats Out” and it was intended for Russian Olga Yegorova, who had tested positive for EPO but was allowed to com pete on a technicality. David Moorcroft, an outstanding dis tance runner who was head ot the British federation at the time, warned Radcliffe she’d “spend the rest of her life looking over her shoulder,” wondering whether some body had spiked a post-race drink, a snack, even her toothpaste. ii I just wanted to make sure (the test) was done so there could he no question and no » i • d issues about this one. — Paula Radcliffe Winner of the Chicago Marathon Radcliffe explained in an interview soon after why that wasn’t too steep a price to pay. “Too many people think we’re all at it,” she said. “It’s like the Tour de France. Because no cyclists stood out against the cheats, they all got tarred with the same brush, those who wouldn't touch a drug condemned along with those who are full of the stuff. “And I don’t want that,” she concluded, “to happen in my sport.” Like Lance Armstrong, she knew what to expect after setting herself up as a beacon for drug-free performance in a sport shrouded by it. She’s been asked to prove her innocence over and over and so far. A t dives] l You’ll Feel Better, Fast! Sports q Back lSl Clinic Helping Ags feel better for over 20 years. Rehabilitation for: • Sports Injuries • Vehicle Injuries • Orthopedic Injuries • Back & Neck Injuries • Occupational Injuries CS>T9> 776.2,2,2,5 2011 A Villa Maria • Bryan, TX 77802 s& s,%eo <$\ TEXAS A&M golf course coupon redeem and receive $9 twilight rate 2 hours early, good only Mon.-Thurs. Coupon has no cash value. Photo copies not valid. Coupon expires 10/31/02. j9lc/' Tee times: 845.1723 Radcliffe has produced the goods changed, however, is the size of the ta she commands. f* Radcliffe was practically bom to run , l(! great aunt won an Olympic silver med/™ swimmer for Britain in 1920 and her fatfe was a respectable amateur marathoneriniii! spare time. When Paula was 11, he moved the fj*,, the early 1 ly to Bedford in the English midlands^ Idents helped she found in the fields ''tirrounding teulM^p.^theid rea that running could he both her lo V eandte| Afr ic! throueh a ,ivC ! ih00d - inaign, according A string of disappointments steekif w ‘i’ .r This Radcliffe for the lough times ahead. BeforJ 1 , , ,,, ni her breakthrough 2001 season, herptaf student ^ n P ; weakness at distances ranging from 3!i| l eir in ' 1 LS, | L meters through 10,000 meters was the If J 0 ^. com P am / ! " of a finishing kick. injustices. 1 he a But the consistency that enabled her:J [novement ' s a S stay with the elite competitors in soiM!\|f° cuse ^ ant * P aS! of those races — producing lap after lap j| or t an ' ze anc * ma near top speed — has been her greatc l Now a new d asset in both of her remarkable marate»weeping campu performances. lAccording to lit In Chicago, with temperatures intheiitudents’ efforts and a stiff wind facing the runners headnJdivest from any home, Radcliffe methodically grounddoisiess with Israel, the competition. She ran the second halfolactivists is to pn the course a minute faster than shedidtltlhanging its poll first, leaving her last threat, iwo-tiiiii|p a | es ji n j’ ans> w h defending champion Catherine Nderebti^ cons ider o sputtering in the 17th mile. lAccording to Tit The only time Radcliffe stopped afet! niversili ;,s j n vo that was to leave a sample for drug test Too bad. Where once we marveled at huiE achievement, we now immediately si better living through chemistry Why? On the eve of the Atlanta Games, Mj U.S. athletes, most of them Olympiansa aspiring to be, were asked if they wouldtt'l- niverM! l' c performance-enhancement substances :|atAustin. Target they were guaranteed ot winning and ffiicwup 311 ' 68 inclin being caught. iGeneral Electric Only three answered no. «nd McDonalds, Ing to Time. Uni ppartheid predec iodern divestim s unnecessary, i ective. It also c< lose to becomir The problem igainst Israel is nvolved will alv tarboring anti-Si Unfortunately, it tften accompani srael and the M diish anti-Israel sample, accord or Jewish studei n the first day c brew a cinder b pray-painted its ng Jews. There io Berkeley’s str M members of vehemently c< temitic words o fbat they offere iffective stateme Me signed by 2 in which they “u ejected “all fon according to The Berkeley’s stude livestment move dude the Univ lichigan, the Jniversity of alifornia at lerkeley and the ^ rco ^ Redef i ne Your World Today 37 Aggies are serving. Are you next? Talk to former Volunteer & TAMU Recruiter Dr. Nelson Jacob at the TAMU Career Center, Koldus Bldg, Room 209: • Monday and Wednesday, 3 to 4:30 p.m. • Tuesday and Thursday, 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. • Friday, 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. • or call (979) 862-7966 or e-mail peacecorps@tamu.edu • All majors are welcome. • Peace Corps is a two-year commitment. • Apply now to be abroad next summer! www.peacecorps.gov • 1-800-424-8580 jfm Sna ANCH Tuesday Night Extravaganza Steak and Lobster for 2 ; ^ $ 2 9." Best deal in town! *3.00 Lava Lamp Martini’s LIVE BLUES/JAZZ BAND Happy Hour from 4-8 with 994 Drafts & Rita’s 520 Harvey Rd. (979) 694-461 8 Hours: Mon-Thurs llam-lOpm Fri llanH P Sat 11 am- 11 pm Sun llam-9pm Tuesday’ 5 & rf,lit s ( i (1 y s BUY ONE REG, or LARGE COMBO GET ONE FREE Of equal or lesser value - after 4:00 p.m. Not valid with any other offer or coupon. Dine in only. HO College Main 846-7000 This store not affiliated with Texas Avenue location. Pesi Treaty i Nov Slicwinfi MSC Him Society and AIXT present — DEAD PCET SOCIETY With speakers Craig Ectter and Curt Steinhcrst Tuesday ©etcher IS 1 " 7s€€-1€:€€ MS© 292E Eree Admissi 011 free pcpccrn *E)©©r prizes g1 g For more info or accommodations call 845-1