10 Tuesday, October 5, 1993 PLAYOFFS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Do A Double Take. Just Order Your Next Set Of Color Prints on KODAK EKTACOLOR ROYAL Paper. Bring in your next set of film for developing on KODAK ROYAL Paper and take home a double set of sharp, rich color prints. Store in cool, dry place. LAWRENCE ONE HOUR PHOTO © Portrait Studio Only Drive Thru In Town 2340/10864 (913)842-8564 15% off any purchase Find the Porpoise! Framewoods Gallery 819.59am, 842-4900 This holusion and many others available now at Framewoods. Must be presented at time of purchase Sale items may be excluded. Limit 1 coupon per purchase. EXPIRES/12/15/93 Bo mystique fills Chicago's Comiskey Park this week White Sox to face Blue Jays in playoffs "It's the seventh game, we're down by three runs in the bottom of the ninth inning, the bases are loaded," Raines says, his eyes widening in wonderment, "and Bo Jackson steps up." The Associated Press CHICAGO — Tim Raines has a vision so vivid that it almost becomes real when he looks at the empty batting cage at Comiskey Park. "The count is no balls and two strikes. The pitcher throws a nasty forkball," he says, turning his head to follow the flight of the pitch from the mound to the plate. "Bo digs it out of the dirt and hits it over the center-field fence," Raines says, shaking his head in amazement. GAME 1 7 tonight, Channels 5, 13 But Tim, was that in the playoffs or the World Series? "We win the game." "Oh, the playoffs," he says, smiling. "Then he does it again in the World Series, and we win the whole thing." Instead, he was playing ping pong in the clubhouse, making rules up as he Whether Bo was imagining the same thing while the Chicago White Sox worked out yesterday was uncertain. He wasn't talking as his team prepared for Game 1 of the AL playoffs at 7 tonight against the Toronto Blue Jays. But the only time he's ever cheated was when he cheated the forces of nature that conspired to take away his left hip and finish his sports career. In his last playoff game for the Los Angeles Raiders, a hit near the sidelines ended his football days. Jackson missed the entire 1992 season. He came back this year with an artificial left hip, and while everyone swore it could not be done, he played baseball again. went. That was nothing, or almost nothing, compared to what he did in the 1989 baseball All-Star game in Anaheim, Calif. He led off the first inning with a monster blast into the center field stands and went on to win the MVP award. "There's a mystique about Bo, that he can do almost anything," teammate Sax Sax said. "We believe it because we've seen it." Pitcher wants to throw in pressure games The Associated Press CHICAGO — Jack McDowell has never had a bigger stage to show why he has been one of baseball's best, and he believes most overlooked, pitchers. Young Award — at least not yet. "I think as a pitcher, everybody wants to be in that position," he said. "There's a little bit of responsibility to pitch the jitter game and get everybody over that," said Chicago's ace, who will start tonight's AL playoff opener against the Toronto Blue Jays. "You have a national stage every time you play professional sports," McDowell said. "You figure, 'Hey, maybe I'll never get here again,' and you want to give it your best shot at winning it all. I think that's where the jitters come from, more so than the national stage." McDowell first must stop a Toronto lineup filled with All-Stars who stole a league-high 170 bases and were caught only 49 times. His ERA in two appearances against Toronto this season was 5.68. Chicago catcher Ron Karkovice has thrown out more than half of the runners who have attempted to steal on him this season, but the Blue Jays have top base-stalkers Alomar, Rickey Henderson, Paul Molitor and Devon White. again. All the numbers are already gone. We know McDowell knows that, and we know that." "Everybody is now 0-0," said Toronto's Roberto Alomar, a .526 hitter against McDowell in his career. "It's just like the beginning, like being born McDowell, whose 22-10 record includes two losses this season to the Blue Jays, has had 59 victories and 38 complete games in the last three years. But he doesn't have the Cy McDowell, at age 27, is the old man of the White Sox' four-man rotation against the Blue Jays, pitching ahead of Alex Fernandez, Wilson Alvarez and Jason Bere. "In the past, I've been one of the easier guys to steal against, but that hasn't been the case this year," McDowell said. COMIC CORNER *Role Playing & Wargames *Miniatures & T-shirts *New & Old Comics (Marvel, DC, Valiant, Image) *Open Gaming & Player Board Champions Club Soonsor Sunday-Friday:11-7,Saturday:10-8 15% OFF COUPON 1000 MASS St. Suite E, 841-4294 relationships? Atschool? - Tired of making the same mistakes over and over again? In - focused on goals,achieving success? - Having a hard time completing assignments, staying - Suffer from depression, anxiety, or a drug problem? - Concerned about sexual issues? - Want prompt help from a professional with any of these or other personal problems? other personal problems? - Short and longer term individual psychotherapy. * Psychological evaluations. John B. Greene, Ph.D. Licensed Psychologist 1012 Mass. Street suite 209 832-2134 Philadelphia pitcher switch a surprise The Associated Press PHILADELPHIA — In a mild surprise, Philadelphia Philias manager Jim Fregosi chose Curt Schilling to face Atlanta's Steve Avery in tomorrow night's opener of the National League playoffs. Fregosi had been expected to start Tommy Greene because Greene finished with a better record, 16-4, ERA, 3.42, and beat the Braves in his only start against them this season. Schilling started four times against Atlanta, losing twice and was involved in two no-decisions, giving up 24 hits and 16 earned runs in 21% innings. Yesterday, Fregosi declined to discuss the merits of the two right-handed pitchers. Psychotherapie auch in deutscher Sprache. He said one of the keys to beating the Braves is keeping their speedsters, Otis Nixon and Deion Sanders, off the bases. so Greene, who is 10-0 at home this season, could work two games in the best-of-seven series at Veterans Stadium in Philadelphia. Schilling is 16-7 with a 4.02 ERA, with seven complete games and two shutouts. He won eight and lost only once — to Atlanta — after the All-Star break. "It's something you dream about your whole life," Schilling said. "I'm probably a little nervous, but I'll be fine after strike one. There is no pressure yet. Pressure is trying to strike out a guy with the bases loaded. "This will get Tommy Greene two starts at home. That's one of the reasons they've done it." Avery has faced the Phillies twice this season, losing to Terry Muhland Aug. 3 and beating Schilling Sept. 26. He worked 13 innings, allowing 12 hits and five earned runs. Fregosi apparently made the switch "I pitched well against them last time," Avery said. "I'm confident I can beat them." The Phillies, who clinched the NL East last Tuesday at Pittsburgh, had a two-hour workout yesterday, while the Braves, who did not clinch the NL West until Sunday, rested. Realignment comes too late for runner-up The Associated Press Realignment came a year too late for the San Francisco Giants. That thought alone was enough to ease some of the hurt of falling short after a brilliant season. Their 103 victories weren't enough to win the NL West or even force a tie. But the team that beat them for the title on the final day of the season, the Atlanta Braves, will be playing in the NL East next year. After San Francisco's season ended in a 12-1 loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers Sunday, the proposed wildcard playoff format that many players opposed suddenly looked like a good idea. "This team is going to be here, and the Atlanta team is going to be there," said Barry Bonds, whose season was ended by the Braves for the third season in a row. "Hopefully, they're going to do everything to keep this team together or make this even a stronger team. With the new divisions as well, it lets the other teams do something. We'll be back." "Very good teams deserve to be vying for the World Series," Todd Benzinger said. "One won't. We're on that team." If the Giants can come close to doing what they did this year, they'll be in the postseason, where they again could meet the dreaded Braves. If there was any question about what off-season changes needed to be made by Giants management, Sunday's game provided a clearcut picture. Eight Giants pitchers were tagged for 12 runs by the Dodgers. "As it turned out, we ran out of pitchers," manager Dusty Baker said. "We had some tired guys. Everyone was running on empty." "It made us rethink everything," said pitching coach Dick Pole. Injuries played a big part, with starters Bud Black and Trevor Wilson making only 34 starts combined. Black finished the season on the disabled list after undergoing elbow surgery, and Wilson was to undergo arthroscopic surgery last week on his left shoulder. Looking past 21-game winner Bill Swift, 22-game winner John Burkett and closer Rod Beck, whose 48 saves set a team record, the Giants' pitching cupboard was mostly bare. General manager Bob Quinn also faces the problem of trying to re-sign second baseman Robby Thompson and first baseman Will Clark, both eligible for free agency and both looking for fat contracts. Thompson demonstrated his leadership and guts by playing Sunday, nine days after his cheekbone was shattered by a pitch. He hit .319 with 19 homeruns and 65 RBI, all career highs. Delivers Traditional Pizza by the slice or pie. *DINE IN-CARRY OUT* 1035 Mass. *Downstown* Mon-Wed, 11-10th, Sun-Sat, 11-12th, 12-8th NEW! ZENITH DATA SYSTEMS Z-STAR 433VL NOTEBOOK COMPUTER - Cx486SLC/33mhz Processor - Zenith Total Care Warranty - Integrated J-Mouse $1,500.00 - 170 mb Hard Drive - 4mb RAM - 3.5" 1.44mb Floppy Drive - 9.5" Backlit LCD Video - PCMCIA, Type II slot - Zenith Total Care Warranty - MS-DOS 6.0; Windows 3.1 pre-installed; 1.7AHr NiCad battery; AC adapter/Charger and full documentation Jayhawk Bookstore only at the top of Naismith Hill! 20 Crescent Road Lawrence,KS 66044 843-3826 A free public education forum Depression is an illness, not a weakness A person with a depressive illness can't just "snap out of it." Depression is an illness involving physical symptoms, moods, and thoughts. Without treatment, symptoms can last for months, or even years. And depression is as common as it is misunderstood. It affects more than 15 million Americans each year. The good news is 80 percent of people with depression are treated successfully with medications, psychotherapy, or a combination of both. As part of National Mental Illness Awareness Week, The Menninger Clinic will present a public Demonstration Education Forum that features A presentation on depression by Don Rosen, MD, and Meredith Titus, PhD A question and answer panel with Drs. Rosen and Titus; B.D. Ehler, A question and answer panel will work with psychopharmacologist; Bryce Miller, president of the National Depressive and Manic-depressive Association; and Flynn O'Malley, PhD, child psychologist An opportunity, if you choose, to meet privately with a Menninger mental health professional. (This five-minute screening is designed to be informational and will provide free professional guidance, but it is not a substitute for a detailed, psychiatric evaluation.) At Menninger we've been helping people with depression for 68 years. We invite you to learn more about this widely misunderstood and very treatable illness. This is an opportunity for you to help yourself or someone you know. No reservations required. Thursday, October 7 7-9 pm Seeyle Conference Center 5800 SW Sixth Avenue Topeka, KS Menninger From any city in Missouri or Kansas, please call for more information 1-800-351-9058, ext. 777. Directions To reach Menninger from 1-70, exit 1-70 at Directions Due to road construction, local access to Menninger is limited to Wanamaker Road at the 10th Street intersection. williamaker road and turn north onto williamaker Wanamaker will curve right (east) onto Sixth Avenue. Turn left (north) at the light, the main campus entrance.