The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 26, 1979, Image 8

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    Paged THE BATTALION
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1979
PREGNANCY TESTS
• Immediate Appointments
• Confidential Counseling
• Birth Control Information
• Termination of Pregnancy
WEST LOOP CLINIC
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HOUSTON, TEXAS 77027
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the office
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suite 221d
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By MARK W. PATTERSON
Battalion Sports Staff
The countdown to Texas has
begun.
The Texas A&M football team dis
posed of its final obstacle, the TCU
Horned Frogs, Saturday afternoon
in Fort Worth 30-7. Now the
coaching staff and team can concen
trate on the Texas Longhorns.
“You set your goal and now you
can achieve it,’ Texas A&M head
coach Tom Wilson told the Aggies in
the locker room Saturday. “You have
a chance at having a winning season.
It’s in your hands now.
“Our bowl game is next week. ”
Two years ago in TCU’s Amon G.
Carter Stadium, an Aggie freshman
named Mike Mosley was given his
first start as a college quarterback.
Mosley led the Aggies to a 52-23
romp over TCU. But upon his return
to Fort Worth, Mosley was as cold as
the November wind. The hero of two
years ago, Mosley became a specta
tor with 38 seconds left in the first
half.
This year, it was David Beal’s turn
to work the magic. The junior quar
terback, who has spent three seasons
in a back up role, took over the
offense with the Aggies leading 2-0.
In the 30 minutes of football he
played Saturday, Beal transformed
the slumbering Aggie offense into a
scoring machine, leading A&M to
four second-half touchdowns and an
easy victory.
“We went into the game wanting
David Beal to get some playing
time, ” Wilson said. “Mike got off to a
shaky start. He threw two intercep
tions and it shook him. We put
David in to give Mike a chance to
regroup himself.
“There was no need to go back to
Mike this game because David was
moving the team.”
The Aggies scored on four of their
seven possessions in the second half.
Beal hit on six of 10 passes for 34
yards and two touchdowns while
rushing for another. Both fourth
quarter touchdown throws went to
split end Mike Whitwell.
“Coach Wilson just came over to
me in the second quarter and said it
(the game) was mine and to see what
I could do,” Beal said. “I went in and
it just clicked for us. The line was
blocking great and the receivers
were running their routes. All I had
to do was throw it to them.”
For Mosley, it was a long after
noon on the sidelines.
“I just had an off day today, ” Mos
ley said. “Coach Wilson felt like he
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NOV. 26-30
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FUN TO LISTEN
STARTING
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Nov. 27
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TuTh 7:30-12:00
FrSa 8:30-1:00
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has just received a new shipment of books.
now 50% off
FOR YOUR GIFT GIVING PLEASURE!
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LOCATED IN THE MSC
needed to make a change to give the
offense some spark.
“It’s hard to stand and watch. But
when the change goes for the better,
you can’t say anything about it. The
pressure was on David and I’m hap
py he played well.”
The Aggie defense came within
one second of achieving its first shut
out of the season. TCU scored on its
last possession of the game, a 26-yard
pass from Reuben Jones, the third
TCU quarterback of the day, to
flanker Phillip Epps.
Until the final touchdown drive,
TCU had totaled 58 yards rushing
and 17 yards in the air. On the after
noon, the Frogs totaled 66 yards on
the ground and 70 yards passing.
“We needed a game like this for so
long,” linebacker Mike Little said.
“I’m just happy it finally happened.
“They didn’t run too many plays
that we defensed in practice. They
stayed on the ground more than we
thought they would. They didn’t
fight as hard as I had expected.”
“We knew that if it stayed 2-0 for
the entire game we could win,”
Jacob Green said about the Aggie
defense’s attitude at the half. “We
knew that we could keep the press-
United
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“The defense played like the de
fense has all year. We played as a
team — all out for 60 minutes. It was
fun out there.”
But the Aggies’ fun is over. The
Texas Longhorns come to town this
week in the Aggies’ biggest game of
the season. The game offers the
Aggies a chance to have a winning
season — their sixth straight — and
to avenge last year’s 22-7 loss to the
Longhorns.
“I’m looking forward to the Texas
game,” Green said. “It will be my
last as an Aggie, it will be Bonfire
week and we ll be at home. We want
to get clicking and put on a show.
The curtain rises at 1:30 p.m.
Saturday — five days away and
counting.
Texas A&M linebackers Doug Carr (63) and Mike Little (!
plant TCU quarterback Kevin Haney in Amon G. Carti
Stadium’s turf. It was a day for the Aggie defense as theAj
forced numerous turnovers, giving the Aggie offense excelleo
field position and holding the hapless Horned Frogs tosevei
points. Battalion photo by Pat 0'Mali
Alaskan women
want equal mone
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Wyoming’s Lewis
reassigned
United Press International
LARAMIE, Wyo. — Wyoming
Cowboys head football coach Bill
Lewis has been relieved and will be
reassigned within the university,
President Edward H. Jennings
announced Sunday.
Jennings said he and Lewis
reached the decision mutually, and
that Lewis requested his reassign
ment become effective immediately.
Jennings said he had directed
athletic director George McCarty to
start a nationwide search for a re
placement as soon as possible.
“Coach Lewis and I feel there is no
longer adequate interest by the
Cowboy fans to carry forward the
program that we would like to
accomplish,” Jennings said.
Jennings said the 1979 season has
been “a major disappointment.
“I am confident of brighter days
ahead,” he said.
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The women’s
basketball team at the University of
Alaska wears old, mismatched uni
forms. Its members say they were
told last winter they would havq to
come up with $250 each if they
wanted to make their scheduled five-
game trip to Hawaii.
They were so upset three of them
went to court.
Now suddenly, the beleaguered
women Sea Wolves have the support
of the federal government in a law
suit that could mark the start of a
facelift for college athletics.
The Justice Department filed pap
ers in Anchorage to intervene in
their lawsuit, in its first action under
1972 Education Amendments bar
ring sex discrimination in college
athletics. If it gets its way, women’s
teams could soon be receiving fund
ing and opportunities equal to men’s
teams.
And the government took the ac
tion just a day after it filed its first suit
under Title IX of the 1972 amend
ments, challenging Texas A&M Uni
versity’s failure to allow women stu
dents to join the all-male Texas
Aggie marching band and three
other elite groups.
The Alaska suit follows a strict in
terpretation of the Title IX amend
ments. It says the school’s Anchor
age campus spends more of its athle
tics budget on the men’s
team than the women’s team, J? c . lai , n £
gives the men s team morescH
ship money, greater publicity,
travel expense money and a b^pionship
coaching staff than the -
team.
The suit asks the court to find
university in violation of the las:
Constitution and to requireittoi
the alleged discrimination.
Drew Days III, assistantatte
general in charge of the civil rii Icou j t j pu(
division, said the Justice De[
merit is committed to elimiiu
such discrimination in interm
ate athletics. He said he hopes
Alaska case, and the Texas A&!l
tion, will create judicial inter]*
tions that will help bring volm
compliance with the law.
The Justice Department lias
thority only to enforce the
joining in private actions,
Alaska case is the only ones ^ er w ^j c j
pending in college athletics.
That suit was filed on Jan. 1
1978-79 team members Co!
Pavey, Mary Owen and
Greene.
The three obtained a temp:
restraining order against the uni
sity on grounds it canceled a
game trip to Hawaii, refused to
for the trip and required team®
hers to each pay $250 if they nisi
to go.
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