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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 4, 1982)
'national — With Rt'| ing control lent R ” on his ear but notv mse of GOf m aide said lief of Stal ssing Tuft 1 elections, encouraged ity — whitl if the Senait bed." ection billed m Reagans Republicans ntrol of tit locrats et- i the House ttom line is i the presi :o lead this verthenes Id reporten oalition :e from timt issues, 1 e a 25 seas ;r, but it nil ;an’s ikersaidtlt the course' •ogram. Ht ur life.” did iress to give e election. : president’! ; suggestion mployment osses in tie lot see this ation of Is r a repudia- s,” he said, ; and other lad said the ) 30 seats in considered Write House thing undet ■y, and over ,s a loss, he not see a by Reag e losses. / modifio Texas A8cM The Battalion Sports November 4, 1982 Page 11 AJ, Ph.D. tj automat!- ,d annunltj 5C0PAL IRCH i YOU Church cer ryan ommunion Eucharist ommunion Rozelle not in favor of Super Bowl move United Press International NEW'YORK — The striking NFL Players Asso ciation spent a hectic Wednesday reporting prog ress on almost every front but the bargaining table. While the NFL was calling off a seventh sveekend of games and nip-flopping on tfre possi bility of moving back the scheduled Jan. 30 date of Super Bowl XVII, the disgruntled union huddled itn Ted Turner on prospects for starting a “Play ers League” in 1983 and paid a surprise call on Chet Simmons, the commissioner of the fledgling United States Football League. Amid these new' developments came the return to normalcy: no progress was reported in negotia tions between the NFLPA and the Management Council before talks recessed at 11:25 p.m. ES I . Bargaining is scheduled to resume at 9:30 a.m. today. Neither union head Ed Garvey nor owners’ chief negotiator jack Donlan participated in the evening negotiating sessions. The 44th clay of the players’ walkout brought the usual weekly NFL announcement that a seventh weekend slate of games had been scrub bed and league spokesman Jim Heffernan added that Commissioner Pete Rozelle had been visited by a group of player representatives who met with them for an hour and 40 minutes. “On the subject of moving back the Super Bowl date, the commissioner told the players it was not impossible, but impractical, it w'ould be a logistical nightmare,” Heffernan said. At 10 p.m., Rozelle released a statement that said: “In addition to the probability of severe weath er, I also told the players the television networks have indicated to us they have strong contractual concerns about any extension of the season as it is now scheduled,” read the statement. “Based on such factors, it is my opinion it would not be feasible to change the Super Bowl date from Jan. 30. Turner, the ow ner of baseball’s Atlanta Braves and the Atlanta Hawks of the NBA, met with player representatives at a midtown hotel follow'- ing a request by Garvey. “He talked about what the financial arrange ments would be in his Players League,” said Gar vey. “He’s very optimistic about how you can put it together. This is the first time our reps met with him as a group.” With talks still stymied, a group of 16 players, including 14 player representatives, walked six blocks for an impromptu meeting at USFL head- quarters with Simmons. They were accompanied by union spokesman Dave Sheridan and NFLPA assistant Doug Allen. Kuenn manager of year United Press International NEW YORK — The Milwaukee Brewers’ Har vey Kuenn, who took over a struggling club in uneand turned it into the first pennant winner in die team’s history, today was named the American League's Manager of the Year for 1982 by the United Press International. Kuenn received 20 votes cast by a panel of 53 UP1 baseball correspondents f rom across the na- lion to outdistance Baltimore’s Earl Weaver by six votes. Seattle’s Rene Lachemann was third witli seven votes, followed by California's Gene Mauch with six, Boston’s Ralph Honk with four and Toronto’s Bobby Cox and Kansas City’s Dick Howser with one vote each. ’m very thrilled about it. There’s no question about it,” Kuenn said from his home in Mil waukee. “I never thought anything like that would happen wdien I took the job. “There’s only one thing I can say, it would never have happened if it hadn’t been for my players. Those are the fellows that did the job and not me.” Named to replace Bob Rodgers as manager on June 2, Kuenn took over a team that had a 23-24 record and led it into the World Series. The Brew ers won the AL. East Division by one game over Baltimore, beating the Orioles on the final day of the season, then came back from an 0-2 deficit to defeat the West Division champion Angels in a hest-of-five series for the pennant. Up and over for the touchdown staff photo by David Fisher Aggie tailback Johnny Hector falls into the end zone for Texas A&M’s only TD of the day in Saturday’s loss to the SMU Mustangs. The Aggies, who have the week off, travel to Arkansas to face the fourth-ranked Razorbacks Oct. 13 in Little Rock’s War Memorial Stadium. The status of quarterback Gary Kubiak, who sustained hip and ankle injuries against the Mustangs, is still uncer tain. Texas A&M has a 4-4 record and the Razorbacks are 7-0. 10 Fulltime 15 Parttime Delivery men needed. Must have car. Paid commission daily. Flexible hours. $3.50 a hour plus 6% commission. Apply in Person Chanello’s Pizza 301 Patricia CHRISTMAS MONEY! What are Chicarrones? 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