The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 10, 1980, Image 11

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    Phillips wishes
he’d kept quiet
THE BATTALION
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1980
Page 11
WANTED ^
AGGIES who enjoy serving God
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Call 846-3811 for info
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I through
ley couldn’t
ting block,
core fourti
J Raiders
still find hii
ts) this weel
erred to free
om Wilson.
) has a
is. Terry El
i the s
r after
ly mediocrel
1 by a brol
Texas, and
ow, the ui
las taken m
{ hole again
tps, but not
mered, and
und this w
tically sink
ip.
i, on theotl
th many of
id dished t: Aggie starting quarterback David Beal slants
;ks. Also, tltfcft as he looks for a hole against the Texas
is simply | defense Saturday. He found the hole,
ind his coho!||
art a very ^
, the Aggies
ind of day
gars.
Photo by Lee Roy Leschper
and scored his fourth touchdown to lead the
Aggies to a 42-21 win. The Beal-led Ags take on
Houston Saturday night at 10:30 p.m.
Texas A&M teams stay busy
JR or Columbus Day weekend
e bac By RICHARD OLIVER
Here s a review of some of what
° e R a PP en »ng in Aggie sports
.lllU s weekend:
. , FOOTBALL — The Aggies will
55 the Houston Cougars Satur-
hard deser t/* 10:30 P m - in the Astrodome
’ .. Houston.
■ wprv&ouff ^8g‘ es 31-6 2-2, fresh off a 41-
.11 jg-mf^Rbing of Texas Tech. Houston
uld enable Ba y lor in Waco last
^"irlplds Ew ® ame W ’R start late because of
* .iti Wfff oustop Astros-Philadelphia
i J| Spla y offcontest at 3:15 Satur-
3p , e r::i emoon - u ^ at 3v 2 -4
V ° hmiMerr^ 8 *° conver t the baseball sta-
1S J seat * n 8 to a football format, so
y an j th(^J lon °fficials advise that fans
• 1U | 0 ,i„rr n ( '* Ulm 8 to attend the game should
' s . ^..pfessS/ 11 , to a local radio station for
recover 2fe ati ° n about 90 m »nutes before
recover" ne t lme
^a WfJfTIMLL-Tl.e 22-1 Aggies
1?™.*',!" Amarill ° l <" TAIAW
y o te Meet today. The Aggies will be
111 Heir ai SUcb tou 8h competition as UT-
s makinga» ton , Texas Womens Universi .
t iff d Baylor.
P°\ ■%iJm Aggies lost for the first time
acdywhetl^ lastw ^ nd ^nst UT-
3 Kv wlioi . 22-1 start > however, is the
)f ^ nip! ever for Ac Ags.
pC t"/!S LLE¥BALL ~ The Texas
involved women’s team will be hosting
p . lJ® 5 ec h at 3:30 p.m. Sunday on
0 . nRl i ;i main floor of G. Rollie White
im ! l f C Um -, Admission ^ free. The
Lstrodont^ men wiH play the best three . of .
n ceremotui ga mes
! H ! ftenlfj** 11 ?,!?/ tbe Ags will be senior
C U JhelM.. y ^ SOn > juniors Kristen
C l° Wnr« m and ^ ar ianna McNamara,
, the Wort ihomore Sue Wetzel and fresh-
, isa Johnson and Lisa Sanders.
I? 1 !™ 1 he a great match,” said
Terry Condon. “It’s a chance
e girls to revenge our prior los
ses to Texas Tech earlier in the
season.”
Today and Saturday, the Aggies
will be at the University of Houston
Invitational.
BICYCLE CLUB — Will have a
series of races at the drill field Satur
day at 10:30 a.m. There will be a
mens’ race at that time, and a
womens’ race will follow at 11:15.
The club will have a race with its
members at 11:45.
Drinks will be available, and
everyone is invited to attend. Entry
fee for the mens’ and womens’ indi
vidual races will be $1. The first
three places in each race will receive
trophies, and other surprises such as
albums and t-shirts will also be
given.
TENNIS — The Aggie men and
women will be participating in the
McFarland Open in San Antonio.
United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The
Houston Oilers still hope to “kick
down the door” of the Pittsburgh
Steelers in the American Football
Conference in 1980. But Houston
Coach Bum Phillips wishes his Oil
ers could go about that task in a more
low-key fashion.
Phillips himself removed any
chance of being low-key when he
announced at a post-playoff pep rally
in the Astrodome last January — af
ter Pittsburgh had eliminated Hous
ton from postseason competition a
second straight season — that 1980
would be the year his Oilers would
“lack down the door.”
But Houston lost its season opener
to Pittsburgh last month and has
stumbled off to a 3-2 start for a
second-place standing in the AFC
Central behind the World Cham
pion Steelers. And people are begin
ning to think Phillips put too much
pressure on his Oilers by his com
ments last January.
“I don’t know what people think,”
said Phillips. “I only know what I
think — and I think I shouldn’t have
said that.
“But we had 70,000 people in the
Dome and they all wanted to hear
something good. They don’t want to
hear you say, ‘We’re going to try har
der.’ It gets back to what my old
daddy used to tell me: the less you
say, the less you have to take back.
“Everybody we play seems to
want to remind me of what I said.
Fortunately, what I say is not real
important.”
The Oilers, who travel to Kansas
City Sunday to play the revitalized
Chiefs, have been hampered in their
bid to overtake the Steelers by in
juries. Three All-Pros have missed
playing time because of injuries: full
back Earl Campbell, wide receiver
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848-8769 Mon.-8«t., 10 to 6
THE MSC HOSPITALITY COMMITTEE
IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR THE
MISS TEXAS A&M
SCHOLARSHIP PAGEANT
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE AT THE MSC
ROOM 216. ENTRY DEADLINE NOV. 3
INFORMATION MEETING WILL BE HELD
OCT. 16 AT 7:00 PM IN 301 RUDDER
ber
[ice
Consider A Future
With Superior Oil.
We’re the largest independent oil and gas producer in the U.S. and our
success is based on our people and our technology.
We’re looking for talented, motivated graduates for our Houston, The
Woodlands (Houston area) and Lafayette, Louisiana offices who want
to contribute to and benefit from the continued success of our dynamic
company.
Let’s discuss your career opportunities. Your future begins with
Superior Oil.
We’ll be on your campus:
MONDAY OCTOBER 20
We’ll be interviewing MBA’s and Bachelor’s Accounting & Finance can
didates for opportunities in our Finance Dept, as Accountants and
Financial Analysts.
YOUR PLACEMENT OFFICE WILL GIVE YOU MORE DETAILS.
SUPERIOR miL
P.O. Box 1521
Houston, Texas 77001
The Superior Oil Company is an equal opportunity employer, m/f
Ken Burrough and defensive end
Elvin Bethea.
Campbell missed the better part
of three games with groin pull, Bur-
rough the entire season with a knee
strain and Bethea, last week’s game
with a bruised collarbone. Campbell
will be back for the Chiefs but Bur-
rough and Bethea will not.
The Houston passing attack has
suffered with the absence of both
Burrough, the team’s long ball
threat, and Campbell, who made the
opposition respect the running
game. Quarterback Ken Stabler has
already thrown 12 interceptions in
five games — just 10 fewer than he
threw all last season at Oakland with
a much less talented supporting cast.
“We can get eight guys going but
not 11,” said Phillips. “We can have
the ball thrown right, but it won’t
get caught. And when we have a
guy wide open, we can’t get him the
ball. And on days our offense has
played bad, the defense has also
played bad. We’re just not clicking
on all 11 cylinders.”
Kansas City, which was staggered
by four straight losses in September,
came off the ropes in the opening
week of October to knock out the
Oakland Raiders, 31-17, for the
Chiefs’ first win of the season.
sss
Dennis Ivey's
Lakeview Club
The Very Best In Country-Western Music and Dancing"
SATURDAY NIGHT
“BATTLE OF THE
BANDS!”
DEiVJVIS IVEY & THE
WAYMEJV
VS.
ROY ROBBINS &
THE AVAILABLES
$3.00 Cover Charge
3 miles north on Tabor Road
off the East Bypass
0MSC AGGIE CINEMA^mmm
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Yesterday’s a beautiful memory. Today is the rest of your life.
Columbia Pictures Presents a Ray Stark Production • James Caan • Marsha Mason in Neil Simon's “Chapter Two”
a Robert Moore Film • Also starring Valerie Harper '-Joseph Bologna . Mustc-by Marvin Hamlisch
Screenplay by Neil Simon • Produced by Ray Stark
Directed by Robert Moore • From Rastar
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