The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 07, 1987, Image 6

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SKIN INFECTION STUDY
DIAGNOSIS OF ABCESS OR
CELLULITIS? Patients needed
with skin infections such as ab-
cesses, impetigo, traumatic
wound infections and burns.
Make money compensatory for
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treated to resolution.
G&S STUDIES, Inc.
846-5933
ACUTE DIARRHEA
STUDY
Persons with acute, uncom
plicated diarrhea needed to
evaluate medication being
considered for over-the-
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G&S Studies, Inc.
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DIAGNOSIS - Acute Sinusitis? If
you have sinus infection you may
volunteer and participate in a
short study, be compensated for
time and cooperation and have
disease treated (all cases treated
to resolution).
G&S Studies, Inc.
846-5933 159tf
ACUTE LOW BACK PAIN
STUDY
Persons needed with recent,
painful low back injury. Take
one dose of medication and
evaluate for 4 hours. Volun
teers will be compensated for
their time and cooperation.
G&S Studies, Inc.
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HEADACHES
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CALL PAULL RESEARCH
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Wanted individuals with high
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if interested.
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DON’T WAIT! ENROLL NOW!
FEVER BLISTER STUDY!
If you have at least 2 fever blisters
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• NOTICE
* FOR SALE
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Page 6/The Battalion/Wednesday, October 7, 1987
Sports
Sherrill: A&M must regroup
prep for UH run-and-shoot
2a
no
ST. LO
tarter Gr
ressure z
hit b
looping a
lay night ;
at San 1
me of tf
iffs.
Blue Stone Sr. Ring. NJB inside. Please call 696-2244.
25tl0/9
ESSAYS & REPORTS
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11322 Idaho Ave. #206-SN, Los Angeles, CA 90025
Custom research also available—all levels
By Doug Hall
Assistant Sports Editor
Texas A&M Head Coach Jackie
Sherrill said Tuesday the Aggies
must accomplish the three “R’s” be
fore Saturday’s 2 p.m. game with
Houston at Kyle Field.
Those “R’s”, in this instance, stand
for regroup, redirect and recover.
At Sherrill’s weekly press confer
ence, the coach of the 2-2 Aggies re
iterated his praise for Texas Tech
Head Coach Spike Dykes, and the
need for A&M to bounce back.
“They deserved to win because
they made the big plays,” Sherrill
said, referring to Teen’s punt return
for the opening score of the game
and two fourth-quarter intercep
tions.
“You are not going to win all of
them,” he said. “And the ball
bounced right for Tech and not for
us.”
A big bounce that hurt the Aggies,
the coach said, came with 5:47 left in
the game when A&M faced a fourth
down and three yards to go on the
Tech 44 yard line.
Quarterback Craig Stump rolled
right and hit Rod Harris for what
appeared to be an Aggie first down.
But Harris dropped the pass and
Tech took over.
“If we catch that pass, then maybe
we drive down the field and score,”
Sherrill said. “But we didn’t catch
the ball, . . . and the game is over.”
On those same Tines, the sixth-
year coach emphasized the Aggies’
inability to convert third downs (4 of
11 on the day and 2 of 6 in the first
half). Tech, on the other hand, was 7
of 8 in the first half enroute to a 24-
14 lead.
The redirection, Sherrill said,
must come in preparing for Hous
ton’s run-and-shoot offense, master
minded by A&M alumnus Jack Par-
dee who is in his first year at Hous
ton after coaching stints in the
World, National and United States
Football Leagues.
“For those of you who haven’t
seen Houston play,” Sherrill said,
“you are in for a real treat. They will
throw the ball 50 or 60 times. I think
they were close to an NCAA record
last week (against Baylor) for the
number of passes thrown in a
game.”
Sherrill said the 1-2 Cougars, led
by freshman quarterback Andre
Ware, sometimes will go without a
tailback or use a one-back formation
but will constantly have men in mo
tion.
When asked how he planned on
defensing the run-and-shoot, espe
cially since the Cougars’ offensive
line averages almost 300 pounds,
Sherrill smiled and said, “I may just
pull some coaching privelege and
drop off 11 players (into pass cover
age).”
Realistically, the coach said his
would use five, sometimes six de
fensive backs in the secondary while
trying to use the linebackers’ speed
to pressure Ware.
Sherrill admitted, however, that
preparing for the Cougars’ offensive
scheme has been dificult.
“(UH) is completely different," he
end Terry Price already
ghth whe
nd loaded
Reliever
said. “You have to take alithati Even w
we’ve done and throw it out. ThtW r § es . t ‘ 0 ,
not going to let you hem themuj tp r y’.
side because they’ll run the di
That’s their play.”
Both Southern Mississippi
Tech hampered the Aggies' agr lark on a
sive defense with the draw.
“If we don’t handle the drti
Sherrill said, “we’re in trouble.
Three injuries in a hard-hitc aseman ]<
battle like the Tech game m >' s t*™ 6
usually be considered an aven ann y
day on the turf.
But when all three injuries on
to defensive ends, with startinerj
ingand th
The Car
ies and pi
eck.
Mathews
ie game I
tineij 6““
sidet )onc l ec ‘
aunded h
lis year.
Mathews
from a practice injury (thij
spells a need for recovery,
sa id- r
Asked what he was going sv e
about the situation, a straightfs tied
Sherrill replied, “We’re goingio'
out an ad for defensive ends.”
fikeouts a
ho drove
Both Guy Broom and Al :ar ’ a * so ^
Jones suffered knee injuries agii
Tech and are not expected bad:
at least two weeks. Price, how
ed a-tl
Todd V
ai icasr iwo weens, rnce, now ] ■
may be lost for the season, Sbr at he w s h
said.
obby Tho
lie eighth.
Back-up noseguard Jeff I
freshman, probably will man
end while O’Neill Gilbert (whoti
bruised ankle) will handleihtodi
Sherrill announced.
Much like last week, Sheiril
all three quarterbacks would
playing time in the Houston h
Although freshman BuckyRktu
son didn’t play against Tedi,: "
coach said he probably shouldhii f
wvws.
“We’re in a situation
where we don’t have a quartnh
that is way above the rest, so»
play all of them,” Sherrill said
“Whomever has the hot hand'
g°-
Switzer denies charge
of OU improprieties
NORMAN, Okla. (AP) — Okla
homa Coach Barry Switzer said
Tuesday that published reports con
cerning alleged improprieties in the
University of Oklahoma football
program will not reveal anything
new to the NCAA.
“The NCAA knows more about
our program than the Dallas Morn
ing News," Switzer said at his weekly
luncheon with broadcasters and
sportswriters. “I don’t think they’ll
be surprised at anything.”
Switzer answered allegations con
tained in a copyright story in the
newspaper in Dallas on Tuesday.
The newspaper said some former
Oklahoma football players netted as
much as $4,000 per season from
complimentary tickets that were is
sued to them and then sold to boost
ers at inflated prices.
The News also said a bank that
was headed at the time by former
university president George Lynn
Cross and prominent Oklahoma
booster Jack E. Black gave prefer
ential consideration to selected
members of the Oklahoma squad.
Switzer said he feels “very com
fortable, very good” about Oklaho
ma’s ticket policy. He also said he
makes it clear to his players each
year that when it comes to obtaining
loans that they “have to stand on
their own.”
“There was no player that had any
allegation that he was induced to
come to the University of Okla
homa,” Switzer said.
He also said an Oklahoma City-
area reporter wrote a similar story
about alleged improprieties in the
ticket policy several years ago.
“I remember what’s been written
in the past. I really wasn’t that con
cerned about what they were going
to write,” he said. “I didn’t think
there was anything out there that I
had to be concerned about.”
Switzer later amended his remark,
saying he would be concerned about
“anything that’s written about our
athletic personnel that concerns any
possible violation.”
He said Oklahoma’s ticket policy
“has been scrutinized in depth by the
NCAA several times and, as of re
cent, have looked at the entire depth
of our recruiting program in regard
to complimentary tickets and how
tickets have been conducted the last
several years.”
Switzer said he expected the out
come of the investigation to be pre
sented “sometime in the future.”
The News said it interviewed 22
varsity football players who have left
school since 1980, and that eight said
they either directly benefited from
the ticket sales or were aware they
existed.
Lady Aggies
take on
in SWC play
The Texas A&M vollcvb
team will try to improve on
four-match winning streak win
it takes on the University
Houston in a Southwest Coni
ence battle tonight at 7:30pn
G. Rollie White Coliseum.
The Lady Aggies, 9-12,«
the Texas Aggie Classic last w«l
end by defeating Oral Rote
University, Texas-San Antoni
and Southwest Texas State,It
beat the Bradley Lady Bi
Monday night in four games
Houston comes in with IIS' 1
overall record, including a
SWC slate.
A&M Coach Al Givenssaibi
was pleased with his team’s p«
formance the past few days.
“Last weekend was exactly
type of weekend we neededtoli
ve,” he said. “Not only
need to win, we needed toil
prove our level of play, The®
have given us momentum as"
prepare for our matches rt
Houston and San Diego State
A&M will take on 17th-ranlt
San Diego State Universi
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in
Rollie White.
McWilliams, Switzer: OU-UT great rivalr)/1
despite Horns’recent losses to Sooners
TYPING: Accurate, 95 WPM, Reliable. Word Proc
essor. 7 days a week. 776-4013. 27tl0/7
COUNTRY CABIN FRAME SHOP $Drive a little -
Save a lot.$ Quality picture framing. Elmo Weedon
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WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, theses, manu
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Classified
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845-2611
AUSTIN (AP) — No. 1-ranked
Oklahoma is riding high above
Texas, but Longhorn coach David
McWilliams and his players still
think the series is a great one.
Texas salvaged a 15-15 tie on a
controversial end-zone call in 1984,
was shut down 14-7 in 1985, and was
wiped out 47-12 last year.
This year Texas is a 31-point un
derdog, the biggest point spread in
the series’ 82-game history.
Playing Oklahoma is brutal, says
Texas Athletic Director DeLoss
Dodds, but he is negotiating with
Oklahoma Athletic Director Donnie
Duncan on a new 10-year contract.
Dodds said, “I think it’s a great
event. I don’t think we ought to mess
with it. And, of course, we want it to
be a competitive thing.”
Oklahoma Coach Barry Switzer
has suggested that the game be
switched to a home-and-home series,
but Texas and Dallas officials have
said that would spoil the tradition.
This year’s game reminded Mc
Williams, a player and assistant at
Texas before becoming the new
head coach, of his first Oklahoma
game in 1961. “I was almost nau
seated I was so nervous. I wasn’t just
nervous, I was scared ... I was a ner
vous wreck, really.”
Texas won during McWilliams’
years as a player 28-7, 9-6 and 28-7,
and UT had its share of victories
when he was a Texas assistant in
1970-85.
Now, with a depth chart that in
cludes 17 freshmen, McWilliams
worries about the game being a mis
match with all the nation to n 1
television, but says he would 1 *
be killed on TV than not
game televised.
“We take the chance of ^
just very poor, and 01daho® i
running up and down the W
killing us. At the same time,li t
ing to take that chance.
? ;o in there and play a u
ootball game, regardless of*! 11
score is, and it gives usacliaif
cruiting-wise,” McWilliams said
Key Longhorn players wett;
viewed about Oklahoma afe'
had defeated Rice, 45-26, las'
day and agreed the Sooners d
be heavily favored over Tex* 1
they think the series remains
portant one.
yoi
or
fiei
do
Bat
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