Page 8 THE BATTALION FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1981 — TV show brings coach problem United Press International BROWNWOOD — High school coach Gordon Wood’s foot ball teams have given him more victories than any other schoolboy coach in the nation. His appear ance on “Good Morning America’’ has given him nothing but prob lems. During the Sept. 15 segment of the ABC-TV morning show, host David Hartman showed a him of a coach slapping and punching his players and then incorrectly iden- Croc O’ Shirt P.O. Box 157, Richmond,VA 23201 19S1 Mod Dog Production*, Inc. TX AM I know a qock! thing when I see it! Send me. as indicated below. I am enclosing $. .Croc O’Shirtfs) .at $12.95 plus $1.50 postage and handling for each shirt (VA residents add 4% sales tax). I’m impatient but I will allow 4-6 weeks for delivery. Name Address. City, State, Zip. S Light Blue White Yellow XL XL Red Kelly Navy COACHES LIQUOR #1 AND #2 • Beer (Imported & Domestic) • Wine • Liquor Week Long Special on IMPORTED BEER!! Coaches #1 846-2731 113 Boyett St. (Next to Campus Theatre) Coaches #2 696-7863 (Down From Rother's Bookstore) titled the man as Wood. Wood, who has the highest winning record of any high school coach in the country, had been asked to appear on the show to defend schoolboy football and was unaware the film was to be shown. Although ABC has apologized and asked for the resignation of the woman who produced the seg ment, Wood said he was sorry he agreed to appear on the show. “I can’t sleep at night and I can’t work in the day,” he said. “I don’t understand any of it really. I took time off when I needed to be here, then went up there and got in volved in this thing. “They just got a country boy up there and tried to ride him to death,” Wood said Wednesday. “I don’t feel very good about it.” In New York, ABC spokesman Peter Heller described the inci dent as “doorknock journalism,” which he defined as “surprising someone without their know ledge.” While Wood said he was sorry someone lost their job, he said he also believed “everybody in volved (at ABC) was in on it. Even if they had the right coach (the one in the film), they should have told him rather than embarrass him on national TV.” Although Heller said Hii» was unaware of the film'll tents, Wood said the ABcl “seemed to know a lot abc J stupid film clip.” Heller said the woman had been with the progre* several years, said only tk| film was the coach and thepal and did not elaborate on tl;j content. “Apparently, the way (14 structured the segment, out to ambush the coach,"SI said. "She thought it was and the clip would hav damaging to him. Butasilt^ out, it wasn’t Gordon. : Notary public charged with falsifying document United Press International BROWNSVILLE — A 20- count federal indictment charging falsification of documents for illeg al aliens has been returned against a notary public and a midwife. “It’s not so, ” notary Steve Tul- los, 62, said of the indictment. “I know I didn’t do anything wrong. ” A federal grand jury returned When you need $65 fast, you find out who your friends are. Lowenbrsiu. Here’s to good friends. Cc) 1QR1 Rftfar hrt=»\A/£>H in I J A hv Miller Rrvawinn Cnmn; 1981 Beer brewed in U S A. by Miller Brewing Company, Milwaukee, Wisconsin the indictment Wednesday against Tullos, who has helped hundreds of Mexican nationals gain U.S. citizenship, and mid wife Clara Delgado-DeLeon, 50. Immigration officials and gov ernment prosecutors charged that from Oct. 1, 1977, to the present Tullos and Delgado-DeLeon were paid by Mexican nationals from $100 to $600 for fake birth certifi cates showing the nationals were bom in the United States. The indictment alleges the two used Texas Delayed Birth Certifi cates, which can be issued years after a child is bom, to prove U.S. citizenship for Mexican nationals. If tried and convicted on all 20 counts, eachsuspectcouldn a maximum penalty of up years in prison anda$76.(i!: Tullos is currently uniieni porary court order, demaic; I stop advertising his senicei “notario publico.” Officiii that title in Mexico haven:' al powers than notary putt the United States. Tullos, who has been i:i in legal battles with the stain 1956, recently completed ii year suspended sentenceoii eral forgery conviction and: ;,‘ K rently the plaintiff in a lam ! ’‘I the Texas attorney office. Caboose ends u at Texas poolsil United Press Internationa) EL RENO, Okla. — For $5,500, a Texas couple walked away from a Rock Island bankrupt cy auction with a caboose, ending a two-year search for the perfect poolside cabana. Another caboose went for $1,200 Wednesday and the Tulsa, Okla., family that bought it is thinking of turning it into a pool- side deck. The two-day auction of equip ment, railway cars and buildings at the bankrupt Rock Island’s yard west of Oklahoma City could net as much as $1 million, auctioneer Donovan Arterbum said. It is the railroad’s 18th auction nationwide and it drew crowds of collectors, buyers from other rail roads and the curious. Sharon Wy ridge, Texas, said she aneffe band came to El Reno strict caboose to grace fheirW pool. I as : stol $1 as Ch Ro nil Shirley Adwers of Tub she and her husband camel;' for a caboose without really ing what to use it for. A deck is a possibility, shea: Ron Adwers said he lst . truck to haul his purchaseli but the caboose buyers and agreed they first would k: ,)ii; me safi An Oklahoma City dealer came with his eye “anything with a RR” staif it. A railroad man from fa found a number of drums with railroad spikes the 1 : 268 500KPACK.S THAT ^Lifetime. Guarai see oup LARGE SE you ft •1 Sioo OFF AMY PACK IN STOCK MWH THIS COUPON ^ OOOD THRU SEPT. 30,»9ft WHOLE LARIH PROVISION OOMFWfl 105 Boyett 846-8794 j