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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 5, 1983)
Monday, September 5, 1983/The Battalion/Page 17 d|o i<)03 / 'JEASObJ THE FUST r HFA TFAM 00! quarters! Valker-less Dogs look good in 19-8 win United Press International ierschel Walker was present Georgia didn’t need him. Fhe Bulldogs’ 1982 Heisman phy winner watched from stands, as defensive back arlie Dean raced 69 yards a pass interception for the idling touchdown with 18 ondsto play Saturday night, ing 13-ranked Georgia a 19-8 toryover 12th-ranked UCLA nationally televised season __,er. The Bulldogs, who led 12-0 en sophomore quarterback dd Williams scored on a rdrun with four minutes re ining in the first half, saw that id shrink to 12-8 late in the quarter after they took a e ma nts have little dill g the ball againtt /s. Dallas allowed son, a statistic have Redskins mi tin Riggins at least safety to keep from turning over the ball deep in their end of the field. After the free kick, UCLA, which twice had been held for downs inside the Georgia 10 in the second half, moved for a first down at the Bulldogs’ 32. But Dean picked of f a Rick Neuheisel pass at the Georgia 31-yard line and raced down the right sideline into the endzone. “It was really a relief to see Charlie Dean take the ball and run down the field,” said Geor gia Goach Vince Dooley, who turned 51 moments before the touchdown. "It was a great birthday present.” Dean’s interception was one of eight turnovers in a game pla gued by steady rain. “In a game like this, with the rain, you have to expect to turn the hall over,” UGLA Coach Terry Donahue said. “That was a major factor in the outcome. “We had a lot of chances to win, but we just weren’t quite able to get the job done.” Georgia built its early lead on two field goals by Kevin Butler — a 26-yarder six minutes into the first quarter and a 32yarder on the second play of the second quarter — and Williams’ touch- clown run. But UCLA, catching fire on the passing of Neuheisel, drove from its own 20 to the Georgia 10 before settling for a 32-yard field goal by John Lee with 1:12 left in the first half, and then added a 35-yard Lee field goal just as the half ended. Georgia, had A fourth down at its own 15 and punter Chip Andrews deliberatly ran out of the endzone for a safety that cut the margin to 12-8. In other games Saturday, No. 15 Pittsburgh downed Tennes see 13-3, No. 7 Florida St. edged East Carolina 47-46, Florida handled No. 19 Miami (Fla.) 28- 3, No. 10 North Carolina beat South Carolina 24-8, No. 17 Southern Methodist defeated Louisville 24-6, West Virginia blasted Ohio 55-3, Clemson bounced Western Carolina 44- 10, Northern Illinois upset Kan sas 37-34, Kentucky whipped Central Michigan 31-14, Pacific clipped Oregon 21-15 and Air Force crushed Colorado St. 34- 13. At Knoxville, Tenn., Eric Schubert kicked two fourth- quarter field goals and John Cummings rilled a 56-yard touchdown pass to Dwight Col lins to lead the Panthers. At Tallahassee, Fla., Kelly Lowery threw for three touch downs, including the go-ahead score with 5:59 left in the game, and Greg Allen ran for three more TDs to lead Florida State. At Gainsville, Fla., Wayne Peace flipped a pair of short touchdown passes to fullback Joe Henderson the first two times Florida got the ball to pace the Gators, over Miami (Fla.). At Columbia, S.C., Scott Stankavage completed 12-of-14 passes, including a 32-yard touchdown toss to Mark Smith, to lead the Tar Heels. At Irving, Texas, Lance Mcllhenny’s seldom-used pas sing arm produced two critical completions in the second half that enabled the Mustangs to overcome a sluggish start and whip the Cardinals. At Morgantwon, W.Va., Paul Woodside scored 13 points on field goals of 47 and 30 yards and seven extra points, and Tom Gray and Pat Randolph ran for two touchdowns each to pace West Virginia. At Clemson, S.C., Mike Fp- pley passed for three touch downs and ran for another and Terrence Flagler rushed for 139 yards to lead the Tigers. At Lawrecne, Kan., Vince Scott’s 26-yard field goal with eight seconds left in the game gave Northern Illinois a sea sonopening upset victory after blowing a 17-point third- quarter lead. Lou Wicks scored twice for the winning Huskies. At Lexington, Ky., Lawrence “Choo Choo” Lee scored two touchdowns to help Kentucky snap an 11-game winless streak. Lee helped Kentucky break a 14-14 halftime tie with back-to- hack touchdowns in the third quarter. ilway sloppy in gainst bruising opener Orioles sweep; lead by 4 Vz Steelers United Press International ohnElway, Denver's inillion- laf rookie quarterback, re- 1 ^ a bruising welcome to the tat I a l Sunday. VV JLl5 ' 111 veteran Steve DeBerg, ( . . 0 took over when Flway hys chief worn 1 a [bed an elbow in his NIT.de- atching font pre-st|,completed a 2-vard tmu h- n pass to Ron Eglofi with '4left td play to lift the Bron- to a 14-10 victory at Pitt- n the ground dum irgho Ve r the Steele, s i„ the ion opener for both teams. Ijway was at the helm when . , _ nver scored its first touch- Riggins gained i wnon a i. V ard run bySammv 1° >' ar ? s m four who ru s h ed for 96 games last year. Ws, early in the second quar- not satisfied that* But neither Elwav nor De defense at the let, Irg pl ayed wd , ms( , he play, Landry said biers' def ense [)[aying ^ undhalf,completed just lour W" passes for 35 sards. i„- ™ n g the ID. He Was sat ked e to keep working, tesn’t stop when ts. pe when we get teep in the seasojjee t lnies f()r 22 val ,, s will jell the way I tin Ekvay, a Stan(or(| lut ., right now weareg fcdhr sl q,,. N1 . [ ( , a|l , is| too much yad Rng, s v;is i. lol , H (()1 . u |s rude that, you aret mng th e fi rsl lW() to outscore people Under W, .L 'SteeC^oung am. re- >ks like n ts gomgl toped defense, Elwav mg year. We mat e .mer cepnon , u;(s vy games, but we ce for inte F nti()na | di " ^ ’'An.lli*' 11 ™!* '"line,,™ 1 : ngtori and Dallas! 'to Be^. E1 als() w;is ee previous times %1 fo Ur times for 2( - ls nights. j P^daheckofalothetter edsktns have lost! “''«th an | ast wcck •• j. hv lN Monday night app ,,‘jhink 1 did eve. vtlu.m I thin 1980, totheC do in the nrst at Denver. 20-1/.f'ous, b ut not ()U1 ()f ( . ( j lUro i | ! quarters, pressure from threw ailed "I got a lot of pressure but I got rid of the hall. I didn’t get trapped too many times.” It was similar mistakes by the Steelers’ offense that enabled Denver to hand Pittsburgh only its fourth home opening loss in 14 seasons. With veteran backup Cliff Stoudt playing instead of injured regular Ferry Brad shaw, the Steelers turned the hall over seven times. A lost fumble by Franco Har ris led to Denver’s first touch down and the game’s winning drive started after a sack of Stoudt forced the Steelers to punt. After Denver had taken its 70 lead on Winder’s touchdown, Pittsburgh tied the game on a 4-yard run by Harris 68 seconds before intermission. Pittsburgh look the lead 10-7 6:19 into the third period on a 31-yard field goal by Gary Anderson. Sunday's opener marked the first time since 1974 that the Steelers had started without Bradshaw, who continues to re cover from off-season surgery on his passing elbow. Stoudt, a seven-year veteran, started all five 1983 exhibition games but it was his first regular- season start since 1980 and just the 15th game in his career. He completed 18 of 32 passes lor 217 yards but the three intercep tions and two late sacks negated his efforts. Harris, trying this season to catch NFL all-time rushing lead ers O.J. Simpson and Jim I L N NAUTILUS ^1 I ID & COURT WUID now offering SEMESTER Memberships nautilus „ free weights Workout” to music classes racquetball • leagues • tournaments • happy hour ^stairs” recreation area * rac quetball viewing * Pool * beer/wine beverage bar JT □N PM ^ Qian inc,ucle fitness evaluation, pro- ( 8 % eps n n 9 & instruction, locker room use C0Uf t roel Saunas » whirlpools, towel service), feservation privileges. \(|st 0 n r LoCated ln the e Commerce Center behind Park Ave. narvey 693-4684 Brown, made little progress to ward his goal. He rushed 14 times for 28 yards, leaving him 266 yards short of Simpson’s second-place career yardage of 11,236. But Harris’ touchdown was a milestone. It was the 94thTD he has scored in his 12 seasons, giv ing him sole possession of fourth place on the NFL’s alltime touchdowns scored list. He had gone into the game tied with jim I aylor. Just ahead of Harris is Don Huston, with 105. In other NFL openers, Balti more tripped New England 29- 23 in overtime, the Los Angeles Raiders downed Cincinnati 20- 10, Atlanta toppled Chicago 20- 17, the Los Angeles Rams beat the New York Giants 16-6, Miami blanked Buffalo 12-0, Minnesota bumped Cleveland 27- 21, Detroit shut out Tampa Bay 11-0, Green Bay shaded Houston 41-38 in overtime, New Orleans bumped St. Louis 28- 17, the New York Jets beat San Diego 41-29 and Kansas City dropped Settle 1713. On Saturday, Philadelphia downed San Francisco 22-17. Dallas is at Washington Monday night. United Press International After a stirring three-game sweep in Minneapolis, the Orioles are flying high atop the Eastern Division standings. John Shelby singled in two runs in a three-run eighth in ning Sunday, breaking a 5-5 tie and propelling Baltimore to a 9-6 victory over the Minnesota Twins. The victory was Balti more’s 11th in its last 12 games. After Sunday’s action, the Orioles led New York and De troit by 4'/a games and Mil waukee by five in the AL East. Winner Storm Davis, 12-5, gave up seven hits in seven in nings. Tippy Martinez worked thelast two innings and notched his 14th save. Eddie Murray led off the eighth with a double off loser Ron Davis, 3-7, who then walked pinch hitters A1 Bumbry and Jim Dwyer to load the bases. John Lowenstein delivered a pinch-hit sacrifice llv to center to bring in Murray with the go- ahead run. Todd Cruz beat out an infield single to reload the bases and Shelby laced a single over second to score Bumbry and Dwyer. Glenn Gulliver hit a sacrifice tly in the ninth for the Orioles’ final run. 1 he I wins scored their first run in 23 innings when Faedo singled in Dave Eaigle with two out in the fifth. // 'M //' MOIBIUE AUTO | PHI ETA SIGMA | ICE CREAM SOCIAL ALL MEMBERS WELCOME! \ Room 229 MSC WE COME TO YOUR CAR ALL TYPES OF REPAIRS AMERICAN & FOREIGN ALL WORK GUARANTEED 10% Discount with Student ID 846 -1125 CHANELLO’S NOW HAS 2 GREAT TAMU LOCATIONS 301 PATRICIA ST. PKWY. SQ. SHOP CTR. (Formerly Cassino's) s T U D Y I N G Mon—Thur» I I mm — I AM Eridmy I I mm-2AM SAT I|AM -2AM SLW I 1AM- Midnight j PEPPERONI 0 HAM p BL. OLIVE I MUSHROOM GR. PEPPER S JALAPENO SAUSAGE ONION ANCHOVY GR, BEEF GR. 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