Wednesday, August 31, 1983/The Battalion/Page 19 I learn will i 3k ‘ fonlit'J ;rmn g to® The* Hege at G. meet. orns nued from page 17) c , w was largely inef fective hl Sa "'Ho« t he Tar Heels, but he under the worst possible ' ,#| l stances. His own lack of W1 “'ll! ation didn’t help any, and | Br conditions that made El ... . 11'senihle Anchorage made ~~ ^ I minutes of horror for !< He was hoping this sea- c ' ‘i"iitt luld be different. It could |might not play at all. n there is the sentimental Rick Mdvor. Mclvor last season with a knee land then missed spring with scholastic prob- his knees and his grades althy, he could be the ins' man. |n we’re not through. Rob Moerschell, who ;r for SMU’s Lance |nny at Highland Park hool when Little Mac college. re’s Danny Akers, the son who was No. 3 on the ugars’ secondary has ach edgy about Rice es added it the Whir straight vi Twins 3 t, Lance ier of the backed D able plays. 5, Bluejiyil to, Jim R® iv from iningtoli enry Jol’I’sM.ited Press International JSTON — With only one Iveback that has any play Tne, Houston Cougars Yeoman has to hope |abit off the money in its attack Thursday night. Is quarterback Philip will be leading the attack the inexperienced rymade upof C.D. Byn- Greg Purcell, Audrey and DeWay ne depth chart in the spring. And finally, there’s Mark Gabrisch, who quarterbacked the Strat ford Spartans to the Texas high school state championship in 1978. Gabrisch transferred to Texas from the University of Nevada at Las Vegas, just to en ter the quarterback sweepstakes. Any of these players could win the starting nod when the Horns travel to Alabama to play Auburn Sept. 17. And any of them could lead Texas to a Cot ton Bowl berth. But there’s no way Bevo would lead the Horns to Cotton, as several sportswriters have suggested. Though he’s hard to bring down, Bevo’s much too slow, has trouble throwing the ball and could seriouly hurt someone should he ever get tackled. No, Bevo won’t do the trick. The Longhorns need a leader. Not necessarily a great quarter back (no one ever accused Brew er of being an all-American), but someone who can stay out of the way and let the rest of the squad do its stuff. Let Stanford and BYU have the passing wizards. All the Horns want is someone to keep the team together and the first downs coming, a regular guy to lead a superior team. The word out of Austin is that Dodge, Mclvor and Moers chell are running arm-for-arm- for-arm in the QB race. A spokesman in the UT Sports News Office said late Monday they are expecting Akers to re lease some kind of depth chart later this week. But for now, the missing link has not been chosen. The con test is still on, the prizes still under wraps. It’s just that Bevo is out of the running. On-off Astros defy Cardinals’ supremacy with offensive surge •y.butni Mark Qa Mirth save. 0, Indians! im, Calif. I a three-m ile and e tiebreakiiif gels. 3, Mariner; le, Tom e hits over s third strait irlie Moore; [he Bremen 8, A’s 5 land, C: riple trigj nth inning Guidry to neand Iftf ' Bowden has played at a ary position in a Houston and that was only for 92 y; Ul! rsity 0f' tation t say I’m concerned ab- way the secondary will eoman said on Tuesday, iston and Rice play the lly early Southwest Con- game at 8 pan. in the nevval of a relatively new [etween schools separated 5 miles. season more than any both teams are un its. Yeoman said uncer- plus the factor of being t game for both teams, his game hard to figure, i can do all the mouth ou want,” he said, “but at of year you have to do Iking on the field.” nan spent the 1982 sea- pleased with veteran, ex- ed cornerbacks and saf- s young group is a lot • and a lot more into the PLITT THEATRES HEV.COME BACK AGGIES] INEMA I llSUIItg* North ME-6714 8:00-10:00 tllVATE SCHOOL” (R) 1 ““7:45-9 50 “NATIONAL IPOON VACATION’’(R) 7:30-9:40 1‘HERCULES” (PG) I Homy Rood 764-06161 7:30-9:30 ‘STAYING ALIVE” (PG) LRIS1 •8:00-10:00 TRANGE BREW” (PG)_ -7:45-9.45 RISKY BUSINESS” (R) SCHULMAN THEATRES OFF ADULT TICKET 1st SHOW PACK r>AV :hulman 6 2463 7 7 5 - 2 4 6 8 20C2E. 29th 7:15 9:45 MR. MOM 7:20 9:50 SASY MONEV 7:30 9:55 Iading places 7:259:40 CUJO 7:25 9:40 VAR GAMES Fl 7:10 9:35 DANCE 7:20 9:55 RETURN of THEJEDI 7:25 9:45 THE MAN FROM 1NQWY RIVER. 7:25 9:40 YOR ocTOPussr ABSENCE OF MALICE SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT PART 3 NEIGHBORS . program. They have a lot better attitude. The senior leadership is as good as on any team I’ve had,” he said. He pointed to captains Eugene Lockhart, a linebacker; fullback Dwayne Love and, offensive tackle Duane Losack — and defensive tackle De- Wayne Calloway as the ones who are personally taking charge of the team. He said the hard work put in by this Cougars team reminded him of that during the 1976 pre season, a year Houston was 10-2 and won the Cotton Bowl. “Going 5-5-1 has an exhilarat ing effect sometimes. I remem ber two days after the 2-8 season Wilson Whitley and the other captains came to me and said, ‘All right, what do we have to do.’ “That sure made the players a lot more receptive to coaching,” he said. United Press International HOUSTON — Although St. Louis allowed only one earned run, Houston’s offense proved too much for the world cham pion Cardinals who lost only their second game in 12 outings against the Astros this season. The Cardinals’ rookie pitcher Danny Cox, 1-3, had defeated the Astros in his last start using changeups to keep batters off balance. “I felt that I pitched well tonight, although they scored on me when it counted,” Cox said aftertje Cardinals’ 3-1 loss to the Astros. “I went to my fast ball with men on base because it seemed like they were waiting for my changeup tonight.” Cox’s strategy did not get off to a good start. Bill Doran opened the Astros charge in the first when he led off with a sing le, moved to third on Terry Puhl’s bloop single, and scored when Dickie Thon grounded into a double play. Houston made it 3-0 in the seventh with just one hit. With one out, Jerry Mumphrey sing led to center and John Mizerock hit a grounder that first base- man Hendrick booted for an error, moving Mumphrey mov ing to third. Ruble then ex ecuted a perfect squeeze bunt that delivered Mumphrey. Dane lorg singled with one out in the ninth. Bill Dawley relieved and earned his 14th save. Houston manager Bob Lillis was delighted with his team’s performance. “We’re in the pennant race now,” he said. “We have an en tire month to go. We have to get hot and we have to beat L.A. and Atlanta when we play them.” Lillis indicated he will be looking to Ruble to raise the temperature of his players. “Ruble did a beautiful job tonight. This is the longest he’s gone this season,” Lillis said. “He’s had a tremendous August, and he will be a great help to us the last month.” Dickie Thon Ruble made his most impor tant contribution, however, dur ing 8 1-3 innings on the mound. He allowed just three hits to up his season mark to 8-3 and notch his second win in five days. Once George Hendrick hit his 15th homer of the year and Welcome to OronaG vJuliu Hamburgers Ranch Fries POST OAK MALL Now Introducing: Strawberry Yogurt Julius. It’s a natural. o 4J, if>"l ./ill) Buy V4 pound Ham burger and order of Ranch Fries and get a FREE 12 oz. Julius of your choice! Good only with coupon Expires 8/31/83 Post Oak Mall only ASM STUDENTS Special half price offer! Call today for delivery of The Houston Post to your dorm or apartment door. Only $ 13.00 for daily and Sunday delivery of the Southwest’s #1 morn ing newspaper. . Call 846-0396 or 846-2911 or 1-800-392-9736 x 6744 To Subscribe The Houston Post We put the good in every morning. '• V • MSC Cateteria Now Better Than Ever. You Will Be Pleased With These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Foods. Each Daily Special Only $2.39 Plus Tax. “Open Daily” Dining-. 11 A.Wl. to V.30 P.NI. — 4:00 P.M. to 7:00 P.NI % W&it m % ,n k ■ i to* « m MONDAY EVENING TUESDAY EVENING WEDNESDAY SPECIAL SPECIAL EVENING SPECIAL Salisoury Steak with Mexican Fiesta Dinner Chicken Fried Steak w cream Gravy Mushroom Gravy Two Cheese and Onion Enchiladas Whipped Potatoes and Choice of one other Whipped Potatoes w chili Vegetable Your Choice of Mexican Rice Roll or Corn Bread and Butter One Vegetable Patio Style Pinto Beans Coffee or Tea 1 Roll or.Corn Bread and Butter Tostadas Coffee or Tea Coffee or Tea One Corn Bread and Butter mum mm t mm mm irntmim * mm, mm s mmm mm mrnm mm V/ZS*/, aoooooi 8 'Y'/jM'/ yS-V.-Y.-. Y///SS/, ■//.•///, il fy, Y'/.-Ys, YY/S. '/s YY////- y/’j'Aj'S, mS/AA 4*** YY 'YY, Y-m, men w/#, «m», wt&vtm ma— <*m-Mm. Mm «mmm ' mm ■///** YYY, toSWfr YY/ySsy Y/Z/y/Y. Y///YY/. '/////; ya 'yy// '"Y/Zy yssy//. Ytfs#, Y&sasL z/ma ***/'' y. vy/S/y'wZZy//#* 'y . yy//, /////a '/*?//, mm ***** /mt wm mu* //m'/Mm u/mum*. '■■■ 7"''//' '///#, ms*, /urn '■yyyyy y/y/y/z '////ss/Wte* /// '///yy/ /y/Yy, '/y/y//,yyyyy ■y/y, 'yyyyy, Y/m ///yYy ///// '/&» //to# mcy, * 'y/y// ///m, y//ymmm wm, mm/umv Y///// Y/y/Ys '/YYyy, mu* YYU wm '//yy YY/y/ysYm* rnmmttmmmm y. /yy/yy/ ///'/< wmwmmem m* y/yzy/'/yW/YY/fm, yy'/vm/Y/ YY/yY/> /' ■/ / /Y/UY ///* Y/yY/y YYY/. YMY/"/', 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 PROTbCTlON OUR PERSONNEL HAVE HEALTH CARDS. FRIDAY EVENING SATURDAY SUNDAY SPECIAL SPECIAL NOON and EVENING NOON and EVENING FRIED CATFISH SPECIAL ROAST TURKEY DINNER FILET w TARTAR Yankee Pot Roast Served with SAUCE Cole Slaw Hush Puppies Choice of one vegetable Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Texas Style (Tossed Salad) Mashed Potato w gravy Cranberry Sauce Cornbread Dressing Roll or Corn Bread - Butter - Coffee or Tea Giblet Gravy And your choice of any Tea or Coffee Roll or Corn Bread & Butter One vegetable Tea or Coffee |“Quality First”! 1 Bdrm. Furnished $305 2 Bdrm. Furnished $400 1 Bdrm. Unfurnished $290 2 Bdrm. Unfurnished $375 •FREE Metro Membership to Woodstone Nautilus & Court Club •FREE Cable & HBO ^On Shuttle Bus Routes •Pool *24 Hour Emergency Maintenance •Security Guard •W/D Connections •Laundry Rooms •Activities •Cash Contests ■w 811 Harvey Road, College Station, 693-4242 METRO PROPERTIES MANAGEMENT INC