10 University Daily Kansan / Monday, November 4, 1991 LSAT GNAT GRE THE PRINCETON REVIEW For the Best Prep CALL 843-3131 Mathematics Department Placement Test 7:30 p.m., Tuesday, November 5th Is your ACT score too low for the Mathematics course you want? Then take the Are you in doubt whether you have the right prerequisites for MATH002, 101, 104, 105, 110, 111, 115, 121, or 365? Mathematics Department Placement Test 7:30 p.m., Tuesday, November 5 Call the Mathematics Department 864-3651 for a reservation and the location of the test Moonlight Special for a reservation and the location of the test. Limited Time Only! Two Biscuits & Gravy with two eggs $4.25 reg. $5.09 Country sausage in between two biscuits, covered with gravy and served with basb browns and two eggs of your choice. 10pm-4am Not valid with other offers or discounts 821 Iowa 842-3251 Open24 Hours MAKE A DIFFERENCE! AFRICAN AMERICANS There are over 600 of us currently attending KU. Let your opinions about relevant issues concerning our community be known! HOW? By participating in a 30-40 minute research project that will be published in a Scientific Journal. The findings of this study can have a positive impact on our lives and those that will come after US! Room 124 Fraser Hall WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6 5:00-6:30pm For more information call 864-4131 For more information call 864-4131 leave message for R. Harvey. - After 5:00 call 865-3827 and leave message. Kansas Union Level 2 864-4431 Matt Mourek, Glen Elllyn, III., sophomore, turns to catch a short pass. Despite snow and frigid temperatures, Mourek and several friends played football yesterday afternoon at Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets. According to the KU weather service, yesterday's wind chill factor reached a low of 9 degrees below zero. Justin Knupp/KANSAN Freezing football Miami, Washington tie for second in AP college football poll Washington moved into a second-place tie with Miami, while Virginia and Indiana cracked the Top 25 for the ACC in both排位赛. Associated Press college football appl., The Associated Press Washington (8-0), which has been inchering closer and closer to Miami the last few weeks, finally caught the idle game. The Clippers beat beating Arizona State 46-165RUSH. The Huskies and Hurricanes each received 1,413 points from a nation-wide panel of sports writers and broadcasters. Washington got four first-place votes, one more than Miami. Florida State (9-0) remained No. 1 after beating Louisville 40-15. The Seminoles, who have occupied the top spot every week this season, received 53 of 60 first-place votes and 1,492 points. Michigan (7-1) stayed No. 4 following a 42-0 win over Purdue. Notre Dame (8-1), which blanked Navy 38-0, is still No. 5 and Florida (7-1) remained No. 6 after downing Auburn 31-10. California (7-1) rose three spots to No. 7 after beating Southern Cal 52-30, while Alabama (7-1) fell to No. 8 after edging Mississippi State 13-7. Idle Pen State (7-2) dropped one spot to No. 9, nine and low (7-1) jumped one place to No. 10 following a 16-9 victory over No. 6 (6-2), which fell six spots to No. 19. Nebraska is 1th, followed by Texas A&M, Tennessee, Colorado, Clemson, East Carolina, Syracuse, North Carolina State, Ohio State and Oklahoma. Roundting out the top 25 are Baylor, UCLA, Georgia, Virginia and Indiana. The following are the top 25 teams in The Associated Press college football poll with first place votes in parimuthai. The final round's results received and last week's ranking. AP top 25 | | Rec. | pts. | pvs. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 1. Florida St (53) | 9-0-0 | 1,492 | 1 | | 2. Washington (4) | 8-1-0 | 1,413 | 1 | | 3. tee Miami (3) | 7-0-0 | 1,413 | 2 | | 4. Michigan | 7-1-0 | 1,314 | 4 | | 5. Notre Dame | 8-1-0 | 1,239 | 5 | | 6. Florida | 7-1-0 | 1,219 | 6 | | 7. California | 7-1-0 | 1,073 | 10 | | 8. Alabama | 7-1-0 | 1,060 | 7 | | 9. Penn St | 7-2-0 | 1,004 | 8 | | 10. Iowa | 7-1-0 | 969 | 11 | | 11. Nebraska | 6-1-1 | 884 | 9 | | 12. Texas A&M | 6-1-0 | 851 | 12 | | 13. Tennessee | 5-2-0 | 770 | 14 | | 14. Colorado | 5-2-1 | 654 | 15 | | 15. Clemson | 5-1-1 | 624 | 16 | | 16. East Carolina | 7-1-0 | 581 | 17 | | 17. Syracuse | 7-2-0 | 502 | 18 | | 18. N. Carolina St | 7-1-0 | 469 | 19 | | 19. Ohio St | 6-2-0 | 403 | 13 | | 20. Oklahoma | 6-2-0 | 398 | 20 | | 21. Baylor | 7-2-0 | 334 | 21 | | 22. UCLA | 6-2-0 | 288 | 23 | | 23. Georgia | 6-2-0 | 272 | 22 | | 24. Virginia | 6-2-1 | 79 | — | | 25. Indiana | 6-2-1 | 74 | — | Others receiving votes: Tufa28, 28 Brigham Young, 22 Stunden, 16 Illinois, 14 Arkansas, 11 Texas, 9 Air Force, 7 Navy, 5 Michigan, 5 St. 5, Fresno St. 2, Georgia Christ 1. McColgan backs up boast by winning N.Y. marathon The Associated Press NEW YORK - Salvador García got none of the preface hyme, yet he won the New York City Marathon. Liz McColgan got most of the women's hype, mostly because of her boastfulness, and fulfilled her promise by winning the women's division in record time. García, a sergeant in the Mexican army who was not invited to any of the press conferences for elite runners, led a one-two Mexican finish on Saturday, favorites continually dropped out of competition. His time of 2 hours, 9 minutes, 28 seconds was the sixth-fastest in the race's 22-year history, but the manner in which he won was methodical more than spectacular. Meanwhile, McColgan came through on her promise of victory in her first try at the race, and her time of 2:27:23 broke the record of Blythe Griffiths by Sylvia Rueger of Canada at Ottawa in 1984. "I will run a pace that that's very comfortable to Me. McColgan had said, 'I am very confident with it.'" Some observers thought that McColgan, accustomed to running 5,000 and 10,000 meters at very fast pace, would be undisciplined in the marathon, going too fast too soon. But she showed remarkable restraint, staying at the front of the pack before making her break between 22 and 23 miles. "I planned for my first marathon," she said. "I plan was to win. I have enough confidence to be ready." "I got stronger and stronger as the race went on." She showed her strength when little-known Oliga Markovka of the Soviet Union made a surprising run at her between miles 22 and 23, completing a loop that turned her away and won by nearly a minute. Markova, who chopped more than $3/4'$ times from her previous best by finishing third in this year's Los Angeles Marathon in 2:33:27, and then getting off that clock by finishing second in 2:28:18. Her runner-up finish was the highest over by a Soviet in the New York City Marathon. Australia's Lisa Ondieki, formerly Lisa Martin, the second place finisher at New York in 1985 and 1986 and two-time Commonwealth Games champion, was third on 2:28 53. "I felt I was running easy until between 23 and 24 miles," Ondiaki said. "But just after 23 miles is where my quadraceps began hurting. I was just trying to hang on to third." "I was surprised by the Russian girl. I didn't know who she was or where she was from. I thought Joan (Benoit Samuelson) had changed her shorts or singlet or something." Samuelson, sentimental favorite of the crowd and race director Fred Lebow, could do no better than sixth in 2:33:48. Forget rallies in fifth set to defeat Sampras in Paris In the match, which was billed as a preview of a Davis Cup match later this month, Forget duplicated his victory against Samprai in the ATP Championships in Mason. Ohio, in August. PARIS — Guy Forget rallied from a set down to beat U.S. Open champion Pete Sampras 7-6, (11-9), 4-6, 5-7, 6-4, 6-4 and win the Paris open yesterday. The Associated Press Sampras and Forget are almost sure to be selected to represent their nations in the Davis Cup championship matches Nov. 29 through Dec.1 in Lyon, France. Forget, seeded No. 5, and Sampras, No. 6, were the highest ranked survivors in this $2 million tournament after the top four seeds - Stefan Edberg, Boris Beck- Micheal Stich - were eliminated by the third round. The three-hour, 45-minute final yesterday came down to the 10th game in the fifth set. Sampras got himself into a hole with three errors, making the score 15-40. He saved one match point with an an ace. Then he rushed the net and Forget hit too long and wide to save another point for Sampras. A net approach by Forget forced Sampras to a forehand long. Then on the third match point another rush of the net by Forget put up an easy volley into the open court, giving him the match victory. FREE PIZZA! BUY ONE & GET ONE FREE SPECIAL COUPON PYRAMID PIZZA MONDAY MANIA Buy Any PYRAMID PIZZA & Get The Second Pizza (of equal value) FREE! Limited Delivery Area 14th & Ohio, Lawrence, Kansas (Under the Wheel) A Lawrence Tradition Since 1978 We open at 11:00 a.m. We Pile It On! PER HOUR FINANCE YOUR COLLEGE CAREER WITH UNITED PARCEL SERVICE UNITED PARCEL SERVICE WE CAN OFFER YOU: • M-F (NO WEEKENDS) • POSSIBLE CAREER OPPORTUNITIES • MEDICAL, DENTAL, AND VISION CARE BENEFITS • SHIFTS TO FIT YOUR SCHEDULE • PAID VACATIONS / HOLIDAYS We will be interviewing September 25, 10-2 p.m. on campus for part-time loader/unloader positions. 3-4 hour shifts. Contact the placement office 110 Burge Union to schedule an interview WORKING FOR STUDENTS WHO WORK FOR US. UPS DELIVERS EDUCATION EOE M/F