the sports THE BATTALION Page 11 MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1978 Tr iciaFo4 recuper Jay school zr oviet UnkM (rued ho hould paralyzed ristian Uni- i Leningrad on and dei- break dow dazahasnc ion. ught back i id Waldrep il from Lon- en criticald : do not have Fhey have mybody ini •om a tackle t it is incred- ly the thinl best patient and because Mark Patterson Fry jumps the fence to greener pastures The resignation of Hayden Fry as head football coach and athletic director at North Texas State University this weekend was met with both regret and sadness. Also with joy for Coach Hayden Fry. People close to the NTSU say they’re sorry to see a man like Fry leave the school. They agree that that Fry is a good coach, one who will be missed. At least they know quality. But I can not feel any sorrow for the people who let Fry hop the fence and run to a greener pasture. In his six-year stay at NTSU, Fry rebuilt a crumbling athletic program into a reputable one, a class outfit. Yet he did it almost single-handedly. The officials at North Texas promised Fry the world, yet gave him [Cleveland. They continuously promised to help Fry upgrade the program but lended little support to the cause. So he ended the marriage and eloped to Iowa. IN A BRIEF TRIP to its campus this past weekend, Fry took a look at the facilities that the University of Iowa had to offer, listened to the proposal presented to him by the school’s officials and accepted the job as head football coach at the school. Fry has opted for a school where he’ll be able to satisfy a dream he’s ■ held since his coaching days at SMU. He’s going to a school with a I strong alumni backing, an unlimited football budget and a member- * ship in one of the nation’s most prestigious conferences, the Big 10. But the school also has the reputation for being a loser. Iowa has had two winning football seasons since 1961. Yet Fry looks forward to the challenge of turning their program around, as he did with the SMU and NTSU programs. WHEN I HEARD THE NEWS that Fry had taken the job at Iowa Imade some phone calls to a few North Texas people I know, past and present students close to the athletic program of the Mean Green, to get their reactions to Fry’s acceptance of the Iowa job. "I think it’s a good move for him,” a former NTSU football manager told me. “North Texas won’t give him the program he deserves to work with. Iowa will give him the program he wanted North Texas to have. “Fry has been trying to get into the Southwest Conference to give his players a shot at a major championship. Now he’ll have the chance to go for one of the most prestigious titles in the country, that of the Big 10.” I put in another call to a pretty North Texas coed who has known the Fry family for years, having gone through junior high and high school with the coach’s sons, to get her reaction to Fry’s move to Iowa. “OF COURSE I’M UPSET he’s moving, she told me. "He made pur team. He turned our football program around. “But I can’t blame him for wanting to better himself. Since he s come here it’s been nothing but frustration for him. Everyone has rejected us. We haven’t gotten a howl bid, we haven t been on TV. I can’t blame him for leaving. “But I’ll miss him. He’s a great coach and a great man. Fry will be missed by the people who have followed his career from his assistant coaching days at Arkansas through his SMU stint and on to North Texas. But he’ll have a lot of people in this state supporting his venture at Iowa. Every Sunday people across Texas will open the sports pages to see if Hayden and Iowa won their game Saturday. And who can blame them. Everyone loves to support a winner. Oilers edge Saints, clinch playoff spot United Press International NEW ORLEANS — For Hous ton quarterback Dan Pastorini eight shots of Novecain and the Oilers’ first playoff berth since 1969 eased the pain of three cracked ribs. Now that we re in the playoffs I don t feel any pain,’ Pastorini said after the Oilers defeated the New Orleans Saints 17-12 Sunday to ad vance to the AFC playoffs with a wildcard spot. Pastorini, who completed 12 passes for 137 yards and one touchdown, abandoned any idea of testing his pass protection with long throws. Instead, he tossed short flips to his backs and wide receivers in the flat. Unfortunately for the Saints one of Pastorini’s 8-yard specials to rookie wide-receiver Robert Woods turned into an 80-yard touchdown that wilted a 12-point New Orleans second-half rally. “On our passing game we ran mostly quick screens and quick cuts,” Pastorini said. “The play to Woods was a quick out to pick up 8 yards. But he’s a world class sprinter and once he got behind the corner- back I said ‘He’s gone. ”’ Woods, who joined the Giles only two weeks ago after working at a Lit tle Rock, Ark. children’s center was just as surprised as Pastorini. “The coaches told me it was about time for me to score a touchdown,” he said, “but I thought it would be a punt return. I do good in domes.” Woods scored just one minute after Saints’ kicker Steve Mike- Mayer blew a 23-yard field goal that would have tied the score at 10-10 with eight minutes remaining. The Oilers clinched an AFC wild card playoff berth on the strength of the win because Oakland, the New York Jets and Seattle all lost. Hous ton is 10-5 with San Diego as its final opponent next week. The Oilers steamroller running game dominated the first half, grinding out 16- and 12-play drives for a touchdown and a field goal. Playing with three cracked ribs, Pastorini kept the ball on the ground with running backs Tim Wilson and Earl Campbell. He threw sparingly mostly on safe tos ses into the flat. Campbell, also playing with bruised ribs, capped a 76-yard Cowboys clip Eagles 31-13 first-quarter drive with a 2-yard scoring sweep around right end. Kicker Toni Fritsch’s 22-yard field goal midway through the sec ond quarter ended a 62-yard drive aided by a 25-yard interference call on Saints’ cornerback Maurice Spencer. At that point the Oilers had run 31 offensive plays to the Saints’ six. New Orleans quarterback Archie Manning finally brought the team to life late in the third period complet ing four of five pass attempts for 61 yards in an 80-yard touchdown drive. Manning hit Tinker Owens on a 6-yard slant pass narrowing Houston’s lead to 10-7. The Oilers punted and Manning again drove the Saints from their own 20 to the Houston six with passes of 20, 19 and 12 yards. But on fourth and two from the six the Saints attempted a field goal to tie the score. Mike-Mayer, perhaps hurried on his kick, pulled it to his left. It was the second time he missed a field goal of such short yardage in two games. The Saints later picked up a safety when Pastorini fumbled a snap and the ball rolled out of the end zone. *-A-***--*-*-A-A--*'*-***-**** HATE DOING LAUNDRY? Let Frannie's do it for you Aunt Frannies Laundromat * * * * -A lAHolleman at Anderson 693-6587 zAA-A-A-**A^**r-A-A*A-**.*-* United Press International PHILADELPHIA — The Philadelphia Eagles discovered Sunday what a lot of NFL teams al ready know — you can’t spot the Dallas Cowboys two touchdowns and expect to win. With running backs Tony Dorsett and Scott Laidlaw each scoring touchdowns on a run and a Roger Staubach pass, the NFC East cham pion Cowboys continued to warm up for the playoffs with a 31-13 trouncing of the Eagles. The Cowboys, who clinched the home field advantage for the playoffs’ first round with the victory, jumped out to a 14-0 lead only 6.01 into the game with the help of two turnovers, and that pretty much was the end of the road for Philadelphia. “I can say Dallas is a better team and they proved it,” Eagles coach Dick Vermeil said. “We had to come back from 14-0 and you can’t do that. If you get behind Dallas you’re in trouble.” “We got some early breaks,” Dal las coach Tom Landry said. “Philadelphia really wanted to win badly but two touchdowns are hard to overcome. The breaks are very important. We didn’t get too many early in the season but we re getting them now.” m /tfpTnantl>a Eddie Dominguez ’66 aw illy n treatments in a specially ET5 rnaments ob security lacking or baseball managers mm United Press International ORLANDO, Fla. — Earl Weaver laughing. He couldn’t help it cause of the subject under discus- job security for a major league mager. Over the past two years 21 mana- rs have either been fired or quit their own (14 in the American |ague and seven in the National) a with the way they keep being e pt out, job secruity for them netimes works out to less than 48 urs. By July 15 four or five more of • including myself, may hit the ft, said Weaver, still smiling. “So Sparky Anderson has to do is just back, wait a little while and pick t the job he wants. ” Each year at the winter baseball •etings, Sy Berger and the Topps ewing gum people host a special ivate party for all the managers, a Earl Weaver, who never ls ses, was on hand for this year’s ['together. We even had three undefeated ln agers this time, pointed out eav y, calling off the names of ln j^cssinger, Les Moss and Pat lrr ales, all getting ready to start ers rSt season as big league man- “But Ralph Houk and Billy Mar tin weren’t there and those two usu ally are the life of the party,” added Weaver, who has had his run-ins with Martin but wants to see him come back. “Billy Martin adds something to baseball,” said the Orioles’ man ager. “Wherever he’s gone he has gotten the team up and created pennant fever. He has added ex citement even if he didn t win every year.” Since taking over the Orioles in July of 1968, Weaver has strung to gether a record of 999 victories against 686 losses. If you want the real thing, not frozen or canned . . . We call It “Mexican Food Supreme.” Dallas location: 3071 Northwest Hwy 352-8570 Aggie Gifts & Novelties for Christmas! LOUPOT’S BOOKSTORE NORTHGATE - Across from the Post Office FOOTBALL FIESTA SPECIAL —» r-. j._ wirM-l-i crvft- Hr ink or Buy a Fiesta Dinner with soft drink or tea for only $2.95 Regular $3.70 Good Monday thru Thursday At the following locations: 1816 Texas Ave., Bryan, 823-8930 And our newest location: 907 Hwy. 30, College Station (Woodstone Shopping Center) 693-2484 OFF one coupon per customer, please Laidlaw scord on a 1-yard run and a 44-yard pass from Staubach. Dor- sett caught a 16-yard pass from Staubach and raced 23 yards for his touchdowns while breaking Calvin Hill’s single season rushing record set in 1973. The Eagles (8-7), who lost to the Cowboys for the ninth straight time dating back to 1974, were plagued by five turnovers and eight sacks while seeing their hopes for their first playoff berth in 18 years di minished. The first Dallas score was set up when Harold Carmichael fumbled on the Eagles first play from scrimmage and Cowboys’ free safety Cliff Harris recovered and ran to the Philadelphia 5. Laidlaw scored from the 1 three plays later. On Philadelphia’s third play of its next series Ron Jaworski’s pass was intercepted by Benny Barnes and returned to the Eagles’ 16. Staubach tossed a screen pass to Dorsett on the first lay and Dorsett followed a fine block by guard Herbert Scott into the end zone. The Eagles mustered a 73-yard, seven-play drive for their first touchdown late in the quarter. Jaworski scrambled for 16 yards on a fouled up flea flicker and then hooked up with Carmichael on a Our A 42-yard pass play to the Cowboys’ 5. Mike Hogan scored on a 1-yard run to make it 14-7. But after a scoreless second quar ter Dallas drove 79 yards on its opening second half possession for its third touchdown. Staubach set it up with a 54-yard pass to Tony Hill to the Eagles’ 23 and Dorsett ended the march with a 23-yard dash around his left end. Rafael Septien kicked an 18-yard field goal later in the third quarter and Laidlaw finished the Dallas scoring on the first play of the fourth quarter when he caught a screen pass from Staubach and ran for a touchdown to complete a 44-yard pass play. A 42-yard pass from Jaworski to Carmichael set up the Eagles’ final BUSINESS CBUEBE Inquire About Our Term Starting January 2 Phone 822-6423 or 822-2368 For more information call 822-6423 French's Schools NIGHT CARE French's Care-a-Lot Every Thurs., Frl. and Sat. 900 UNIVERSITY (Behind Beef & Brew) RESERVATIONS 693-1987 or 693-9900 SELL YOUR BOOKS at UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE tochdown, a ence Barnes. 4-yard run by Lawr- NORTHGATE CULPEPPER PLAZA ’O't: 40th Year New Shipment ° f oxjosN Satin Jeans Sizes 3-13 $36 Open til 9 thru XMAS MANOR EAST MAT T. RAVEi /■ GMAT PCAT OCAT GRE SAT ! f ECFMG FLEX VCLE NDB I, II VAT / NLE TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938 sfa/nfley-H. KAPLAN Educational Center Call Days Evenings & Weekends CLASSES FORMING NOW FOR SPRING EXAMS 696-3196 707 TEXAS AVE. 201D COLLEGE STATION, TX. 11300 N. CENTRAL EXP. DALLAS, TX. 75243 Outside NY State CALL TOLL FREE: 800-223-1782 IJkTyj Aggie Xmas Shopping List Dear Mom and Dad, Here’s what I want for Christmas: *MARDI GRAS TRIP — celebrate Fat Tuesday in New Orleans Feb. 23-25, 1979, for $58. *SNOW SKIING at WOLF CREEK — for $235 get round trip transportation, five days of lift tickets, family-style lodging with breakfast and dinner every day. (March 9-16). *SNOW SKIING at TAOS — spend March 9-16 on the slopes. Round trip transpor tation, motel-type lodging and six days of lift tickets are included in trip price - $230. *SAIL THE FLORIDA KEYS — an educational experience on the high seas. Learn to sail the square rigger used in the movie “Roots” (March 9-16, $420). ‘EUROPEAN TOURS — May 14 - June 7, see Europe. Grand Tour of England, Holland, Germany, Austria, Italy, Switzerland and France for $946. The Iberian Tour of Spain, Morocco, Portugal and England for $1075. Add $379 airfare to the price of either option for the cost of the trips. ‘MEXICO TRIP — celebrate the end of school May 11-18. Drink, dance and lie in the sun in Acapulco for $295. ‘CARIBBEAN TRIP — Lay back and live a little. Soak in the Caribbean sunshine May 19-26. Since I’ve been so good this year, any of the above will satisfy my Christmas wish. Your Loving Aggie, P.S. Transportation rates are subject to change which may affect any trip price. For trip information contact MSC Travel Committee, P.O. Box 5718, College Station, Tx 77844 or (713) 845-1515. Radio Shack’ DECK THE HALLS . . . WITH REALISTIC HI-FI CASSETTE RECORDERS MON.-SAT. 10-6 Culpepper Plaza College Station 693-1444 1125 Villa Maria Bryan 846-7384 VISA’ REALISTIC SCT-30 379 95 REALISTIC SCT-17 $13995 REALISTIC SCT-16 $ 259 95 REALISTIC SCT-12 $ 79 95