ial >d ils in Washington finitely was a Silt ;ared the damais closest of the wo ,iiti tankers intheit the damaged Sea ias Princess—"was id the Reagan ad- concerned about iut no U.S. reulia- ansidered because quite clear: we are ct American-flaj ivoy of reflagged Navy escort vessels er this week. Ike sailed through the i into the Gulf of /ers :abs )t seaf — Parisian tic y armed against dth a measure of vy and an oca- y soon be equip- with hot seats. 00 volts, “le siege r “the seat that signed to thwar. to attack cab dm- sh of a discreet!' he taxi driver or. icily coursing for nigh the back seat tssengerwith ajolt! te neck. ■pe cabs with the e cruising the dts inion leader hopes able to all drivers y the end of the eady are 100 mote ier. ! Friday, October 23, 1987/The Battalion/Page 7 Sports A&M may spoil Owls’ homecoming Strona Rice offense collides with Ag defense By Anthony Wilson Sports Writer Snap, crackle, pop. The Rice Owls should begin emitting these sounds at 1:30 p.m. Saturday from Rice Stadium in Houston where they will battle Texas A&M in their homecoming game. Rice is 2-5 for the year and 0- 3 in conference play. Although the Aggie offense has sputtered most of the season, it will get its chance to light up the scoreboard against the Owls. Of the eight teams in the Southwest Con ference, Rice ranks dead last in total defense, giving up 489 yards per game, and in rushing defense, giv ing up 291 yards per game. That should be good news to A&M running backs Keith Wood- side and Darren Lewis, who had his second 100-yard game of the season last week against Baylor, and to quarterback Bucky Richardson. Richardson, who rushed for 45 yards against Baylor, leads the team with a 7.7 yards-per-carry average. Richardson’s running ability has Rice head coach Jerry Berndt more than a little concerned. “It appears they (A&M) have de cided to go with a more option- oriented attack,” Berndt said. “Ri chardson is the guy who makes that attack go. The last couple of games they have done an outstanding job with Richardson running the op tion.” Rice’s passing defense has given up an average of 197 yards per game, ranking it sixth in the confer ence. The Owls’ defense has allowed 37 touchdowns this season. By comparison, A&M’s defense ranks First in total defense and rush ing defense and second in passing defense in the Southwest Confer ence. It has allowed nine touch downs this season. The Rice offense, however, is on the opposite end of the spectrum from its defense. It ranks second in the conference in total offense with a 391 yard-per-game average. The Owl passing attack averages 188 yards per game, fourth in the SWC. Rice is fifth in the conference in rushing with a 202 yard-per-game average. Rice’s offense is spearheaded by quarterbacks Quentis Roper and Mark Comalander, running back Lorenzo Cyphers and receiver Dar rell Goolsby. Roper, a 5-foot-9, 175-pound ju nior, has passed for 832 yards and _ four touchdowns and rushed for 231 yards and three touchdowns this season. Comalander, a senior, has passed 446 yards and two touch downs. Cyphers is Rice’s all-purpose back who leads the team in rushing and receiving. The junior has rushed for 465 yards and five touchdowns this season in addition to catching 23 passes, one for a touchdown. Goolsby is second on the team with 21 receptions. He has averaged 13.7 yards per reception and scored one touchdown. Roper and Goolsby team up to provide Rice with one of the most potent return combos in the nation. Roper, the Rice and SWC season re cord holder for kick return yardage, has averaged 25.6 yards per return on seven returns. Goolsby is second in the SWC with a 18.9 yard average on 10 kick returns. ure York’s Greemick taught at seven! :s and universities informed he P 5 lunch in a Lond« ant with British sp Carre. Brodskysw award would (to ito reading Russia! terrific shape,”!* ass of whisky. Ilopse ft Frame, vowed mpany disagrees i of a victim, said d, “We’re angry aking 28 lives.” g the floors, had : before at L’Am in., project, Pen- ompany officials lar embedded in rods attached to mins. Under the stacks of 320-ton with the plates 'ds bureau’s chie! said the building .t that inadequate structure made :xtra weight. i need im :ostuine now o fast! By Tim Stanfield Sports Writer When Texas A&M took the field at Rice Stadium on November 16, 1957, it did so as the No. 1 team in the country. Yes, Coach Bear Bryant’s fourth — and final — Aggie squad had taken that slot from the Oklahoma Sooners on October 29, following its 14-0 win over the Baylor Bears. Senior halfback and defensive back John David Crow was on his way to becoming both Texas A&M’s and Bryant’s only Heisman Trophy winner, but his thoughts that day were on the Rice Owls. “I felt like going into the game that we had better talent than Rice did, though they had such players as King Hill, Frank Ryan, Buddy Dial, and Don Gillis,” Crow said Thursday morning. “Yet we were pretty thin and had had some injuries along the way (including Crow, who had missed two games due to a knee problem). “But all of us had no doubt that I we were going to win our final two regular-season games and become " the national champions.” Bryant had put the team through ksome tough practices during the wet week leading up to the game, leaving ^Crow and others to ponder later if I that had contributed to A&M’s I shocking 7-6 loss. “Coach Bryant wasn’t one for ex cuses, nor am I, but the fact remains that we were mainly a senior team on which about 14 players shouldered the load,” Crow said. “By the eighth game of the season, we were worn out and some of us nursed injuries. aE “I still believe that we had the bet ter players, but, at least on that day, Rice was the better team.” Coach Jess Neely’s Owls had split their first six games, including a loss to Darrell Royal’s initial Texas squad, but caught fire late in the sea son. Led by all-purpose backs Hill and Ryan, the Owls entered the fray 4-3, finishing at 7-4 after a 20-7 loss to Navy in the Cotton Bowl. A missed extra point cost the Ag gies the game, but only two weeks earlier, they had defeated Arkansas by the exact score when Hog place- kicker Freddie Akers had missed an extra point and a short field goal. Crow, who scored the Ags’ touch down in that game and sealed the win with a last-minute pass intercep tion in the A&M end zone off quar terback George Walker, recalled that contest clearly. “Arkansas’ last drive was set up when our quarterback, Roddy Os borne, surprised us all by throwing a pass toward me that Don Horton in tercepted,” Crow noted. “There was no way I was going to catch him, but somehow Osborne ran him down.” In between the Aggies’ two 7-6 games they had defeated the South ern Methodist Mustangs (with soph omore quarterback Don Meredith) 19-6. All Crow did that game was to rush for 89 yards on 20 carries, score the winning touchdown on a 2-yard run, return two kickoffs for 49 yards, complete the only pass he threw for 15 yards, and intercept two passes (returning one of them 30 yards. For his efforts he was named the Associated Press Back of the Week. Crow was — and is — proud of the fact that A&M was ranked first in the polls. He told a reporter back then that he “hoped and prayed that we can stay there”. On that cool November af ternoon, the Aggies’ hopes and prayers went by the wayside, out done by a gritty bunch of Owls. Late in the contest Ryan broke through the A&M line, shook off an attempted Crow tackle and took the ball inside the Aggie five yard line. Hill replaced him and scored the winning touchdown, re-emphasizing the depth at the skill positions that Rice had. Yet Hill had to make a game-sav ing tackle later in the period after Crow had broken into the clear. “I can recall thinking later that had I run straight at King — and then made a move away from him — I could have scored because back then I was faster than he was,” Crow pointed out. “But I angled away from him, and he used the sidelines to eventually pin me down. I proba bly should have scored on the play.” When the clock expired, so did the Aggies’ dream of being national and SWC champions, a bitter pill for them to swallow. Things got worse in a hurry, for rumors that Bryant was leaving to return to Alabama proved to be true, though Crow never felt that it affected the team very much. “Coach Bryant didn’t like distrac tions, and that certainly was one,” he said. “But our seniors were also lead ers and I really don’t think we lost to either Rice or Texas because of that.” Indeed the Longhorns beat A&M 9-7, as Crow scored the only Aggie touchdown, and Texas went on to the Sugar Bowl (where Mississippi beat them 39-7). For Crow and his fellow seniors, all that was left as a team was to play Tennessee in the Gator Bowl on De cember 28. “We were all disappointed, but still wanted to beat the Vols,” Crow said. “Late in the game, I put a good lick on running back Bobby Gordon, which some people out there still re call to this day. “They kicked a field goal to win 3- 0, and that night at a banquet, 1 was named the outstanding player on the losing team. I was embarrassed to accept the trophy, for I agreed with Coach Bryant that if the team lost, there wasn’t any individual suc cess to be had.” Crow won the Heisman Trophy in early December, and soon thereafter was made the first pick in the Na tional Football League draft. The Chicago Cardinals chose him, and he had a fine career with them and the San Francisco 49ers. But he will always recall with dis appointment the dreary day that the Aggies lost their chance at the na tional championship. Poor Wildcats to take yet another beating this weekend From the Associated Press One of the problems with being in the Big Eight Conference if you’re not Oklahoma or Nebraska is that you must play Oklahoma and Ne braska every year. However, only winless Kansas State (0-6), which can least afford it, has to play them back-to-back this season. The Wildcats must have improved some. They were 56-point under dogs at home against Oklahoma but are only SSVfe-point underdogs at Nebraska, which played a near-per fect game in trouncing Oklahoma State 35-0. The Cornhuskers won’t have to be anywhere near perfect. The pick is Nebraska 56-0. Last week’s prediction record was 33 right and 19 wrong for a percent age of .635; for the year, 210-89-4 — .702. Against the point spread, last week’s mark was only 14-23-1 — .378; for the season, 88-105-5 — .456. Saturday’s only game between members of the AP Top 20 finds No. 20 Michigan favored by 7 V2 points at No. 15 Indiana. Michigan leads the series 35-8 and has won 15 straight. Two weeks ago, Indiana stunned Ohio State 31-10 to snap an 0-30-1 streak against the Buckeyes. Not this time. The pick is Michigan 24-14. Colorado at No. 1 Oklahoma (fa vored by 37): Oklahoma 42-7. No. 3 Miami, Fla. (no line) at Cin cinnati: Miami 49-7. Mississippi State at No. 6 Auburn (by 27): Auburn 35-10. North Carolina State at No. 7 Clemson (by lOVa): Clemson 34-14. California at No. 8 UCLA (by 28): UCLA 38-17. Colgate at No. 9 Syracuse (by 34): Syracuse 42-14. Southern California at No. 10 Notre Dame (by GYz): Notre Dame 24-20. Kentucky at No. 12 Georgia (by 10): Georgia 27-13. Georgia Tech at No. 13 Tennes see (by 13‘/a): Tennessee 34-10. Illinois at No. 14 Michigan State (by 1634): Michigan State 28-14. Minnesota at No. 16 Ohio State (by 11): Ohio State 21-14. No. 19 Oklahoma State (by 3) at Missouri: Oklahoma State 24-14. Arizona (by 7‘/a) at Washington State: Upset Special of the Week ... Washington State 28-24. ANNOUNCING A $2.00 SAVINGS TO STUDENTS & FACULTY OFF ANY FRONT OR BACK PREFERRED SEAT Tickets on Sale at MSC Box Office I.D. required October 27-29 Brazos County Rodeo Arena Tues., Oct 27 7:30 p.m. Wed., Oct 28 4:30 p.m. & 7:30 p.m. Thurs., Oct. 29 4:30 & 7:30 p.m. For more information 764-1062 845-1234 MSC Pageant presents The 1m 1988 Miss Tfexas A&M Scholarship Pageant APPLCATIONS Available at the MSC Pageant Cubicle Room 216 MSC Applications Due Friday, November 13, 1987 Applicant Meeting Wednesday, November 4, 1987 8:30 pm 402 Rudder Requirements Student of Texas A&M Screenings November 21-22, 1987 A Preliminary to the 1988 Miss Texas Scholarship Pageant •Free Delivery* 846-0379 •Northgate* Sandwiches • dinners Italian Style Pizza The 12 Topper 16” • 10 cuts Everything on it 99 M + tax $9 X Large Thin Crust 18" • 12 cuts • one topping >) + tax Large Thin Crust 16” • 10 cuts • one topping ^ Attention Horsemen The American saddlery is over- N stocked. Must auction a truckload of western saddles of all kinds includ- M N VJ ing Circle Y, American, Tex-Tan, ^ \ Action, Billy Cook, with 14”, 15”, V • and 16” seats. Some handtooled sil- ' ~ ^ ( ver laced & buckstitched, some ^ S plain hard seats, some childrens sad- k. o dies. Also English saddles, several si ' full silver show saddles. ALL adult N , saddles have a 5 yr. written guar- V S antee. ^ Partial Tack Listing N Electric clippers, SS spurs, SS bits, wool blankets, ropes, bridles, silver ^ headstalls, and show halters. Plenty . . of halters of all kinds. Hundreds of \ items too numerous to list. Tack to I be sold individually & in group ^ lots. V N s N 'erms: Cash, Mastercard, Visa, or | Checks with proper I.D. Inspection Time: 6 p.m. Sale Day > Auction: Oct. 29 7 p.m. V. F. W. 2818 W. ByPass Bryan, Texas «Auctioneer: Melvin Chapin X TXS.017-0891 Name Brand Merchandise 1957 Rice game hurt Aggies’ title chances | $5 < Small Thin Crust 12” • 6 cuts • one topping $4 99 + tax Battalion Classifieds Call 845-2611 Coupon f -> INTERNATIONAL HOUSE of PANCAITCL .RESTAURANT 2.99 Mon: Burgers & French Fries Tues: Buttermilk Pancakes Wed: Burger & French Fries Thiir: Hot Dogs & French Fries Fri: Beer Battered Fish Sat: French Toast Sun: Spaghetti & Meat Sauce All You Can Eat $ 2" mmA 6 p.m.-6 a.m. no take outs must present this Exp. 11/1/87 I International House of Pancakes Restaurant 103 S. College Skaggs Center Loose Diamonds largest stock in area MARQUISE PEAR 2.78 2.14 1.23 1.20 1.10 1.01 .93 .91 .90 .81 .74 .71 .57 .55 .54 .47 .47 .35 .31 1.80 1.22 1.14 1.04 .60 Our Price $13,200 $4,888 $2,750 $3,200 $1,975 $1,175 $2,585 $1,890 $1,575 $995 $2,900 $895 $895 $795 $695 $626 $425 $425 $435 PEAR $3,495 $2,390 $2,375 $2,085 $1,195 .55 .52 .51 .45 .37 .31 1.52 .83 .71 .48 2.16 1.36 .74 .42 .38 .27 1.03 .46 .33 OVAL Our Price $795 $665 $695 $325 $350 $245 $5,275 $1,350 $1,495 $375 EMERALD CUT HEART RADIANT SQUARE $6,295 $4,900 $1,350 $695 $595 $335 $2,600 $920 $385 This is only a partial listing 30 DAY MONEY BACK GUARANTEE ON LOOSE DIAMONDS (excluding lay-aways, mountings & labor) C@IN Since 1958 One of Texas’ Oldest Rare Coin Dealers 846-8905 • Behind Shellenberger’s • 404 University