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STEEL METRIC RADIALS 40,000 MILE WARRANTY TPm-rmoNt&HT; Toe gUDWE/Sf/? N/r^i $mo i« mm HvGe&Haz AMP Yoo KJtePTHe TfAPTYCOP.'i Go oz Pitch (d Bottles op BUD 4/v /C£" I.W Gorei&ret^ t . Slices- All VAV ( mus! -V TM 'PIZZA'£ -T-shirts TRis-rees Posted mucs +, Moee (l 303 W. UNIVERSITY • 846-1616 TM The Flvino Tomato Brothers & The Flying Tomato are registered trademarks © 1986 Flying Tomato Inc. Page 12AThe Battalion/Thursday, November 6, 1986 TANK MCNAMARA by Jeff Millar & Bill Hind. YOU YOU VA/AhTf TO PULL Tf\1^ 'VESyT UjrTH TMC. MGPiA M6R6.? IT'LL LOOK LUC£ Tpe OF Tl-lE UNIVERSITY LlA^GlYEM IK)TO TUG PRUG LiY^TGRlA. 3PEAKING OF/ TME MEPA / IAJMER& ARE TMEY ? (JL\-OM. I PUT IT TOlAJfO AW HOUR EARLY IK) TUE F&h RELEA39- WE UJAlT. IT'LL SAME CARING ACT OF CONCERN) UUlTN TfAEMEPIA^ MERE. . KW Coach says it’s no surprise his Sun Devils are winning th< po Hi TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) — Arizona State football Coach John Cooper chuckles over the surprise being cre ated by his fifth-ranked Sun Devils, who suddenly have become a na tional contender. Cooper last August suggested that Arizona State could challenge for the national championship. “People thought I was crazy,” said Cooper. “I didn’t say we would win it; I said somebody’s going to win the national championship and it may as well be us.” “I’ve been lucky all my life,” he said. “You got to be lucky and any thing can happen.” Among the things that have to happen is for Arizona State to win the Pacific 10 championship and win the Rose Bowl. “We got a chance,” said Cooper. “We got an outside chance.” Under Cooper, nothing can be ruled out. In just his second season, he has turned the Sun Devils from also-rans into the conference leader with a solid shot at its first Pac-10 title and the accompanying trip to the Rose Bowl. Arizona State is 7-0-1 overall and 4-0-1 in the Pac-10 with two games remaining. The Sun Devils started the season by beating both Michigan State and Southern Methodist at home before struggling to tie Washington State 21-21. They then went on the road and became the first team ever to beat both UCLA and Southern Cal in Los Angeles in the same year. They have also defeated Orewg l tab and Washington. rul “The strength of our teair di< the lines. We control the Ikm sc rimmage on both sides of thelJp We’re a very physical footballtr. fei Cooper said. of “When I came here, the adi the trators asked me whether 1 warJ 'I an artificial practice field or a briar weight program. Weliavcnou nu an ail il k i.il I icld. so \u- pu: tioi money into the weight programJfei it’s really helped.” He Arizona State is unspectaciJifi but solid both offensively andlioi fensively. I he Sun Devils havefJ 1 bled only three times, havegone'Mt straight games without throwir dcx interception and are the Pac H" least pc-nali/ed team. vid fen Krieg finds bench familiar setting dal SEATTLE (AP) — In less than two years, quarterback Dave Krieg of the Seattle Seahawks has gone from the Pro Bowl to the bench. His future in professional football is uncertain. Seahawks’ Coach Chuck Knox re placed Krieg with second-year pro Gale Gilbert last week and Krieg watched from the sidelines last Sun day as the New York Jets beat his team 38-7. as the Seahawks’ starting quar terback. Zorn never regained his former role. A similar fate could be in store for Krieg, a former free agent from Mil- ton College in Wisconsin, a little NAIA school which no longer exists, who helped the Seahawks into the playoffs in the 1983 and 1984 sea sons. om Ir.u Gilbert figures to be the Sea hawks’ starting quarterback for the remainder of the season. The situation bears a striking re semblance to what happened mid way through the 1983 season when Knox replaced Jim Zorn with Krieg What happened? “If I knew the answer to the ques tion, I wouldn’t have let it happen," Seattle quarterback coach Ken Meyer said. “It’s a whole bunch of things. •“When a team isn’t going good, a lot of it falls on the quarterback. But he gets more blame than he should and he probably gets more p! r '' than he should. When a team ® going good for some reason, tlH° you make a quarterback ck * ,n I hat’s what happened to Dave If 0 I 11 When Knox arrived in foil 11 from Buf falo in Januai v of 198 ^ In inherited the popular Zorn II Ki in k i ic >\ w mi u> ki in alit ® t,l< fu st eight games. H sl Krieg took the Seahawks to|Sj ul I American football Conference fail' game in the 1983 season. _ Knox made his decision toswflp from Krieg to Gilbert after theJjV hawks were beaten in Denver I 5° u completed only six of 16 passes Stiu 26 yards in a 20-13 loss. HealsoH^ sacked five times. |r n I Dawkins sparks Spurs past Nets EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) — Rookie Johnny Dawkins came off the bench to score 25 points Wednesday night as the San Antonio Spurs held off a late rally and posted a 112-103 NBA victory over the New Jersey Nets. The Spurs led by as many as 19 points in the first half before the Nets rallied in the fourth quarter, pulling within 97-95 on Mike Gminski’s two free throws with 5:12 remaining. But that was as close as New Jer sey, losers of three in a row after an opening-night victory, ever got. With San Antonio ahead 101-98 with 3:51 to play, the Spurs, who connected on 15 of 16 free throws in the quarter, scored six of the next seven points to put the game out of reach at 107-99 with 1:28 to go. Mychal Thompson, who had 22 points and 11 rebounds, opened the decisive spurt with a jumper. Artis Gilmore added a basket on a hook shot and Dawkins canned two free throws. Alvin Robertson added 22 points for San Antonio and David Green wood had 19 points and 11 re bounds. Tony Brown topped New Jersey with 21 points, while Orlando Woolrodge added 19. In the first half, Thompson scored four points in an 8-0 Spurs run, giving them their biggest lead of the first half at 54-35. T U The Nets scored six of the eight points of the half, indudiL four by Dwayne Washington, f make it 56-41 at halftime. * W NBA Standings m the 1 EASTERN CONFERENCE WESTERN CONFERENCE elen Tex; of or conn . ‘"I most w L Pet. GB w L Pet. Gl passi Boston 2 1 .667 — Houston 2 0 1.000 - lee ir Philadelphia 2 2 .500 Dallas 2 1 .667 K is in New Jersey 1 3 .250 1Y2 Denver 2 # 1 .667 K Washington 1 3 .250 Utah 2 1 .667 )i all il New York 0 4 .000 216 San Antonio 2 2 .500 I Ofil. Sacramento 1 2 .333 ffi Dr Central Division Pacific Division havit W L Pet. GB W L Pet. W ate b Atlanta 3 0 1.000 — Golden State 2 1 .667 - indu Chicago 3 0 1.000 — Phoenix 2 1 667 - thai Indiana 2 2 .500 1V2 Seattle 2 1 .667 - lOun Milwaukee 2 2 .500 172 LA Lakers 1 1 .500 h rani) Cleveland 1 2 .333 2 LA Clippers 1 2 .333 1 Se Detroit 1 2 .333 2 Portland 0 3 .000 2 Will Cfatic Wednesday’s Games San Antonio 112, New Jersey 103 Boston 133, Indiana 102 Philadelphia 107, Milwaukee 101 Detroit 109, Washington 85 Utah 111, Cleveland 95 Portland at Golden State, (n) “An Evening of Sophisticated Jazz’ featuring Kirk Whalum Thursday, November 13, 1986 8:00 P.M. Rudder Auditorium - Texas A&M University Tickets: $8 nonstudent $5 student presented by MSC Black Awareness for more information - Call 845-1234 available at Rudder Box Office