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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 23, 1980)
THE BATTALION Page 13 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1980 ports ennis team in action Ags win again rockets int t, He sai<! arrived,; lOnc By RICK STOLLE Battalion Staff ce more the Texas A&M men’s With a nu (mis team will try to compete in a d and won ll Tri-meet with Trinity University structure ai |d the University of Texas begin- iberty was ig Friday on the campus of Trinity orpedo bon San Antonio. The first meet, in Austin, was sink imnud ned out Sept. 26-28. le torpedol Reid Freeman, Trey Schutz, Max her 40 mi# ng, Ron Kowal, Tom Judson, anythinji ianjoelson, Jim Grubert, Leonard hip; macli lith and Genero Fernandez will as they tm ay singles for the Ags. The doubles am are slated to be King-Smith, Irubert-Schutz, Freeman-Joelson, J.S. NavalC i) W al-Judson and Stapper- ivened aft# mandez. erty heardi ‘We need the matches,” said ion of then avid Kent, A&M tennis coach, ice that pre# be Southwest Conference is the ttack lasted; jghest conference in the nation for being brolta in j s . We need to get a lot of experi- have been ce fast.” the Libert) The SWC had five teams ranked in ie top twenty in the nation last year. »xas Christian University was the ghest ranked SWC team as fourth lie they have mportant heir late 1 in the nation. Trinity ended the spring season ranked second. “Our doubles play is the strength of the team right now,” said Kent, “so we need work on our singles.” The team is practicing with a fer vor to prepare for the tournament. The players want to beat Trinity and Texas to prove themselves. They are excited about the tournament. “I think we are the best team at this tournament,” said Trey Schutz. “We’re looking forward to this match.” “We’re playing well now,” said Jim Grubert, positively. “We will do well.” “The whole team is fired up. Yeah,” said Ron Kowal looking around, “we’re ready.” The women’s team is also on the road this weekend. Coach Jan Can non takes her girls to Houston to compete in the Houston Fall Festiv al Open, The entire team will compete in singles since the tournament is open. Liliana Fernandez, Ferol Hinkle, Terri Nuetze, Amy Gloss, Judy Wil lard, Maylen Hooten, Mary Hise, Sonja Hutcherson and Laura Hanna will compete. Hanna is returning af ter an extended absence due to an illness. The doubles teams are Hanna- Hise, Closs-Hutcherson, Hinkle- Willard and Nuetze-Hooten. “We are glad to finally have every body back and fairly healthy,” said Cannon. “We badly need the play.” Cannon said the tournaments in the fall will help determine the team for SWC competition in the spring. “Everyone except the top three players are so even, it will be hard in the spring to leave anyone behind, ” she said. The next match for the women will be on Nov. 7-9 at the April Sound Invitational in Conroe. The men will compete again the the Tri-meet at the Omar Smith Tennis Center at A&M for the third and final round of the series of tournaments. It will be the only home tournament for the men this fall. him upset at refs again nen expem L„ United Press International ho havedi HOUSTON _ xhe enigmatic , mston Oilers are an unsettling 4-3 >gis oraltl B s se as 0n , and as usual NFL re- . r *'ees are causing most of the acid cause inert ^ ^ g um Phillips’ gut. ^rh e Oilers’ head coach has proved can figure how to stop Franco irris and then put up with Harris’ , , asional brilliant bursts. Phillips en i epi o | )as s h own he can predict when '• °PP 0S ‘ n 8 defense is going to blitz is e 5 “when a quarterback is going to r jf ow l° n 8- ® ut those factors are optionotsm isjstent and understandable to ef y 7 ove imps. is re icve ^ ot h er hand, the officiating team has been getting in the first en games this season is neither sistent nor understandable, he WO “Some crews are more inconsis- !nt than others,” he said Monday r being questioned by reporters ut several Oilers’ penalties in May’s game, a 20-14 win over ipa Bay. n illegal motion penalty called iainst center Carl Mauck was sed, Phillips said, when “the in noseguard hit Carl Mauck with helmet and knocked him back” be the ball was snapped. jTfve had (officiating) crews that let pie line up six inches offsides and er throw a flag, and crews that ^ , n** the slightest movement in the Democrat -he continued. >ved to Coip In his book, “He Ain’t No Bum,” |llips says full-time professional rees, instead of the present offi- |s who work other jobs during the k, would deviate the problem. [Obviously you can’t do that,” he Monday. “It would cost a for- ie to hire full-time guys, unless 9 to fill a w 1 let them shovel manure in the successfull) Season. itfzen S H ter that comment, he asked But the f reporters, “don’t you write i 1849an(lt P' a ^ rnost ever y one °f Phillips’ 1 londay news conferences he has a :ical word for the league’s officials, pite having been fined repeated ly the NFL office for such com- nts in previous years, ine penalties for 75 total yards A ave reprei e in the Hi /as elected ervativedel ger, a Dei mmbent Cl 0 Senate of the syi Buckley, % etter amonjl s Irish imi d was a Mi emor of the 48. ted to the S were called against the Oilers and accepted by the Buccaneers Sunday. “Yesterday (Sunday) we get a bunch of calls, but it’s a different set of officials. That’s probably the har dest thing to adjust to in the whole NFL, that one week you play exactly the same way, and they don’t call anything. ” The career coach added, “I don’t think there’s anything they can do, or they would have already done it, to get more consistency.” He singled out Pat Harder, the umpire on referee Jim Tunney’s crew, as the easiest to figure. “Pat Harder, for some reason or another, calls lots of holding penal ties,” Phillips said. “I don’t care whether it’s this week, or next week, or last week, or the week before, he’s just one of those guys that throws the flag a lot. “The guy in the Kansas City game (Oct. 12) didn’t call nothin’ — and it was the same people blocking, the same people doing everything. ” Phillips had other examples of offi ciating “mistakes” Sunday. A per sonal foul called against fullback Tim Wilson was “as good a play as I’ve ever seen in the whole time I’ve been watching football,” the coach said. “(Dave) Casper catches the ball, goes to the ground and (Tampa Bay’s) No. 25 is coming to hit him. No. 25 is in the air on the way down, and Tim hits him before he can hit Casper. If Wilson don’t hit the guy, will they call piling on? Heck no. “If that’s overaggressiveness, then I want it,” he said. On a holding penalty against Wil son, Phillips said: “He (Wilson) didn’t want to clip a guy so he put his hands out to keep from clipping him. Two officials standing right on top of the play didn’t see nothin’ wrong. Pat Harder comes from 15 yards off and throws a flag.” as defeateJ )ta. It didn! 1 ilds long, nesota’s ffe as admitted! ; he could .at year for* J SENIORS!!! for SHO** Aggieland ’81 Through Friday F-L Oct. 27-31 M-R Nov. 3-7 S-Z YEARBOOK ASSOCIATES STUDIO at Suite 140, Culpep per Office Park off Puryear Street. Regular hours 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Phone 693-6756. ■ed a three-: 1 n a newly-e’- f lied in,-. etired and ; ■ ■state senatt’ Willey, els 61 and Wei en it joined Now Better Than Ever. You Will Be Pleased With These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Foods. Each Daily Special Only $2.13 Plus Tax. “Open Daily” Dining: 11 A.M. to 1:30 P.M.—4:00 P.M. to 7:00 P.M. »*••••*! »*•••{•! ><•••• > i* «• • • • 11 IRL"; S: P.M. atime lilll MONDAY EVENING SPECIAL Salisbury Steak with Mushroom Gravy Whipped Potatoes Your Choice of One Vegetable Roll or Corn Bread and Butter !. Coffee or Tea TUESDAY EVENING SPECIAL WEDNESDAY Mexican Fiesta Dinner EVENING SPECIAL Two Cheese and Chicken Fried Steak Onion Enchiladas w/cream Gravy w/chili Whipped Potatoes and Mexican Rice Choice of one other Patio Style Pinto Beans Vegetable Tostadas Roll or Corn Bread and Butter Coffee or Tea One Corn Bread and Butter Coffee or Tea THURSDAY EVENING SPECIAL Italian Candle Light Spaghetti Dinner SERVED WITH SPICED MEAT BALLS AND SAUCE Parmesan Cheese - Tossed Green Salad Choice of Salad Dressing - Hot Garlic Bread Tea or Coffee FOR YOUR PROTECTION OUR PERSONNEL HAVE HEALTH CARDS FRIDAY EVENING SPECIAL BREADED FISH FILET w/TARTAR SAUCE Cole Slaw Hush Puppies Choice of one vegetable Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Tea or Coffee SATURDAY NOON and EVENING SPECIAL Yankee Pot Roast (Texas Salad) Mashed Potato w/ gravy Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Tea or Coffee ‘Quality First M i SUNDAY SPECIAL NOON and EVENING ROASTTURKEY DINNER Served with Cranberry Sauce Cornbread Dressing Roll or Corn Bread - Butter - Coffe or Tea Giblet Gravy And your choice of any One vegetable By RICHARD OLIVER Sports Editor The Texas A&M women’s soccer team, behind the two goals of Carol Smith, knocked off Sam Houston last weekend, 4-0, to raise its record to 2-0 this fall. Smith scored twice on corner shots following assists each time by Becky Carpenter. Stephanie Barrett and Sue Tesar added one goal apiece. “Rob (Borgeson) said he thought we could’ve done a little better,” said team member Adele Fairman. “We coulda really beat ’em worse. But Sam Houston is one of the tougher teams.” Borgeson, the head coach of the team, has a tough act to follow this year. Last spring the Allan Heath- led Aggie women took the state title, whipping Stephen F. Austin to take the championship. Borgeson was assistant coach at that time, and took over when Heath resigned. The Aggies had a 5-0-1 record in the spring, which leaves gives them an undefeated record spanning a semester and a half. But, the toughest part of the fall lies in front of the ladies. Sunday, the group travels to Houston to take on Rice, and on Nov. 1, on to Austin for the toughest encounter of the year, against Texas. “We have to beat Texas,” said Fairman. “If we beat Texas, we can go to the national tournament in Col orado. If we don’t beat them, we can’t go.” So, the stakes are high for the Aggies once again, but for Borgeson and his “girls,” that’s just the way it should be. Golf team places 2nd in tourney The men’s golf team waded through a 27-team field to finish second in a tournament at the Water- wood Country Club course at Sam Houston State in Huntsville Tuesday. The Aggies finished with a 36- round total of 624 to tie Southwest Texas State for the runner-up posi tion behind winner Texas Weslyan, who shot a 607. Howie Johnson led the Aggies with a third place finish individually, shooting a two-round total of 151. Other Aggie scores: Ronnie Byrd, 158; Mike Miller, 158; Mike Waller, 164; and Mark Esler, 164. 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