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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 13, 1988)
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NOW 2 LOCATIONS Northgate & Redmond Terrace (across from Post Office) (next to Academy) m SKsSBas®; 4* v&v '■.LJ-t-vic-r-r? Mr- • rs BOOKSTORE Mk i —s. B A B iB«y MB WjIik Wm $$$ (With Purchase of $50 or more you get $2.50) U Page 10/The Battalion/Wednesday, January 13, 1988 Lady Ags meet Bears, Arkansas this week The Texas A&M Lady Aggies will resume their conference schedule this week against Bayfor and Arkansas. A&M travels to Heart of Texas Coliseum in Waco for Wednes day’s game with Baylor. Tip-off is at 5 p.m. Saturday the Lady Aggies are back in College Station to meet Arkansas. The game begins at 7:30 p.m. at G. Rollie White Coliseum. A&M is 6-4 this year and 0-1 in conference. Baylor is 6-7 and 0-2, while Arkansas is 5-7 and 1-1. A&M Head Coach Lyni Hickey said, “We definitely naitl a lot to prove against (Baylorj since losing to them the last timtl we played them cost us a triptoj the conference tournament.,,.ll is particularly important to have J victory on the road against then! to make up for our loss at honitl against SMU. “(Arkansas) will be extremel; competitive. . . . The homecouri should he a real big advantage i!] this contest, but we will haven concentrate on executing lathe on winning and revenge factors. A&M plays host to TO in swim meet Friday The Texas A&M swimming teams’ first action of 1988 is Friday, as the men and women meet Texas Christian at P.L. Downs Natatorium. The men’s and women’s teams are both 1-1 this season with wins over TCU earlier this season. Both losses were to Southern Methodist. A&M Swimming Coach Mel Nash said, “This meet will be a great chal lenge for us. This will be be the most tired that we will be going into a meet all year, because this is when we work the hardest. “We’re exhausted, but we’ve heard that TCU will be coming into this meet well rested. That should make the outcome interesting.’ Fatigue is not the only working against A&M. Three swimmers are ill. and all threeatt| doubt for the meet. Sophomores Courtney Seracv; Mike Varozza had tonsillectod over the holidays. Searcy isdefinij out, and Varozza is questiona Sophomore Susan Habermas had walking pneumonia and islej as probable. “We have had a lot of aches J pains and some shoulder probli because of all the work that vg been doing," Nash said, "buleiil body else should be ready to go. | Browns are confident they will contain Elwa) ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — The Cleveland Browns are certain they could devise a defensive scheme to prevent the scrambling of Denver quarterback John Elway in the AFC championship game Sunday. “Yeah, there’s a way you can keep him in there, but in doing that you’re going to make yourself vul nerable to something else,” said Coach Marty Schottenheimer, whose team was holding the first of four workouts at the University of New Mexico on Tuesday. Although Schottenheimer down plays the potential effects of thinner air at Denver’s Mile High Stadium, the Browns pointed out in a news re lease this week that the University of New Mexico is 5,314 feet above sea level. The Browns’ familiarity with El way goes back well beyond last year’s conference title game, in which he guided the Broncos to a 23-20 over time victory after they trailed 20-13 with less than a minute to play. Cleveland’s first experience with Elway came in 1983, when Elway was perceived by many to be just another overpriced rookie. He had lost his starting job to Steve DeBerg after five games and returned to the lineup five weeks later only because DeBerg was injured. Cleveland visited Denver the 14th week of the season, and Elway came of age. Showing suddenly the confidence that had been his hallmark at Stan ford, Elway was not sacked as he passed for 284 yards and two touch downs to beat the Browns 27-6. It was his first game with over 200 yards passing, his first with two touchdown passes, his first withoe sack, and his first with a compk rate above 60 percent (16 for .667). “I remember all the bad pL that one,” Schottenheimer si “ I here was no doubt in my mincl was going to be a great player. Itift just a question of how longitwrflj take.” Elway has beaten Cleveland tif since then. He* had poor passings tistics (15 of 35 for 170 yards. | thr ew lor two touchdowns as: Broncos beat the Browns 24-H 1984, and he completed 22« passes for 244 yards in last y« playoff victory. He also rushed four times foi yards in the playoff game, includi twice for 20 yards on the 98-vi game-tying drive. Overall, the Broncos have r eight straight games against Or land. “Everybody in this league i tried to contain him in some k Schottenheimer said. “Whenyoul involved in defending any uniei talent like John is, like Eric Dicll son is, you liave to find ways to trol or contain him as best you® In doing so, you’re going togivti something.” < A big part of the problem isl way’s speed, which Schottenheia said is popularly quoted at an uni pressive 4.7 seconds in the 40'| dash. “He may be 4.7, but when lies ing to run away from somebody] runs faster than that, becauseldt see many people catching Schottenheimer said. IP' Ve ye de |P' P ( ah Iowa remains on top in AP women’s Top 20 M l.( From the Associated Press Iowa Coach Vivian Stringer has been near the top before when her Cheyney, Pa., team was ranked No. 2 in 1982. But she said life has be come a little more complicated since her Hawkeyes reached the top spot in the Associated Press women’s col lege basketball poll for the first time last week. Iowa, 11-0, remained No. 1 in this week’s balloting by a nationwide panel of 64 women’s coaches after beating Wisconsin and Northwest ern, to start Big Ten play. “When we were No. 2 at Cheyney, it was no big deal because the news papers didn’t really pay that much attention to us,” Stringer said about the school in suburban Philadelphia. “We were busy just trying to win games and get into the NCAA tour nament. “But here, there’s been a constant amount of attention and I think the players felt pressure last weekend to play perfect because of the crowd. I think we’re going to forget we’re No. 1 for a while and just concentrate on our league schedule, one game at a time.” The next seven teams that trailed Iowa in the poll were almost the same as last week, except that Au burn, despite a 71-68 Southeastern Conference win at No. 4 Tennessee, dropped from its second place tie with unbeaten Louisiana Tech, 12-0. The Tigers, 12-1, remained close to the Techsters, who received three first-place votes and 1,200 points. Auburn collected the remaining first place vote and 1,170 points. Tennessee, 10-2, the defending NCAA champion, held fourth with 1,043 points. Texas, 12-2, which began to cover from the loss of Clarissa to a leg injury with three vied over Arkansas, Louisiana State Rice, remained fifth with points. Houston, ranked No. 20. the only other Southwest Coni ence team in the list. Mississippi, 12-0, held sixth* 971 points, followed by Virginia. 1, at seventh with 915 points' Ohio State, 9-2, at eighth with • points. 5, le Rutgers, 8-3, moved up a spo ninth with 796 points, while!* 1 ford, 13-0, advanced a notch made its first-ever top 10 app ance with 71 1 points to complete upjper half of the poll. The voting was completed be“ Ohio State defeated visiting Rutj 75-60 Monday night. Duke, which lost to host Mary]' 83-73 in an Atlantic Coast dropped from ninth to 11th. Vanderbilt, 9-3, which was u| at the buzzer by host South Ala’:- ||. F G h 73-71 on Sunday, fell out of the from 18th. Penn State, which No. 20, also fell after two Atlanta losses, including a surprising setback at Rhode Island Saturday Southern Cal, which won Pa< games over visiting Oregon anil egon State, rejoined the list for first time in several weeks at N&gg D with an 8-3 record. Unbeaten rajd tana. 1 1-0, made its first appearq of the season at No. 19, justap* 0 behind USG. I q The second ten were Duke, h Beach State, Georgia, Maryh 1 Western Kentucky, Washington vada-Las Vegas, Southern Cal, tana and Houston.