Wednesday, June 8, 1988/The Battalion/Page 7 Sports Probation may end for onl T’s football program s year, u yv alloflastyJ worst for W after 198t banks in ]>, show some g larjje, buK ght direction laid he bet;.; Jnably well ng interest i a recession; downturn is ; p or extendrj AUSTIN (AP) — The University f Texas is expected to announce oon that the NCAA is taking the onghorn football program off pro- ation after one year of sanctions, he Austin American-Statesman re- orted Tuesday. UT compliance officer Butch orley said the Longhorns have im- lemented all 13 changes ordered by niversity President William Cun- ingham as a result of NCAA penal ties against the school on June 17, ■987. ■ The National Collegiate Athletic ssociation had said the Longhorns’ wo-year probation would be re duced to one year if those 13 re- orms were completed. “All the points President Cun- ingham made to the committee ave been achieved,” Worley said onday. UT Athletic Director DeLoss odds confirmed that UT has re- eived a letter from the NCAA’s Committee on Infractions and said utes into tb stage of tin vay and pint i. :v became lb his “glasnos >s in select; tomarily w® icn succesif : ter the fact overage had or, and othet I the story reports on tit oviet manm ae Soviet pt. ■ U.S. manndl January 11 space shuttlt silled sevemi' that “it’s not bad news.” He said the NCAA had stipulated that the letter not be released until June 17. UT’s sanctions included the loss of five scholarships and 10 paid re cruiting visits for the 1988 recruiting class. The 13 changes, and what has been done, include: — A policy prohibiting a player who knowingly violates NCAA rules from competing. Athletes were noti fied by letter of such a policy and it is included in the student-athlete handbook. — Stressing compliance with alumni. Letters and brochures ex plaining NCAA rules were sent to 5,000 alumni and donors in the spring of 1987 and again in January. Baseball season ticket holders also received a mailer. — Requiring athletes to register their cars, including a loan or lease agreements, with the school. UT adopted this measure, as well as re quiring athletes who live off campus to complete forms detailing their lease agreements. — Letters of reprimand or admo nition from the president to boosters and staffers involved in violations and the dissociation of boosters who were guilty of more serious viola tions. The American-Statesman said Cunningham sent letters of dissocia tion to two boosters and admonished five others. Head coach David Mc Williams, Assistant Coach John Mize, Assistant Athletic Director Ken Dabbs and team physician Dr. Paul Trickett received letters of rep rimand. Dabbs, who was involved in three cases of providing extra benefits to athletes, has been relieved of any re sponsibilities for handling problems by prospective and enrolled athletes, the newspaper said. Lakers get driven by Pistons "The Los An- g e l e s Lakers looked exactly the way everyone expected in the first game of the NBA finals Tuesday. An early 8-0 lead, a potent fast break, and powerful help from their bench helped the Lakers to a 17-point lead at half time. ...” Or something like that. That was the lead every sportswriter in the country had in his head be fore the game started. It’ll still do fine. Just reverse the teams. The 105-93 final tally was as shocking as not being subjected to a bombardment of star cameos by Hal L. Hammons CBS. Jack Nicholson looked as absent as Michael Cooper. The message was clear. The young Turks are on the rise, and they’re walking up the old guard backs to do it. When the Pistons eliminated Boston in four games — it took six to knock off the referees — we overlooked it. When the Lakers took seven games to knock off Dallas — and that after barely surviving against Utah — we overlooked it. It can’t be overlooked any longer. Oh, the cameos and the Lakers made a late run. The lead was cut to seven with 1:27 to go. But two free throws by Isiah Thomas with 51 seconds left gave the Pistons a 10-point lead, and the few fans remaining in The Forum headed for the parking lot. The brutal fact of the matter is that the Lakers went out on their home court and just got stomped by a team that looked consider ably better in all phases. You saw it. You all saw it. You saw LA held to 37 points in the first half. And Magic John son had 16 of them. You saw Adrian Dantley score almost at will against anyone he was matched up with. A near-per fect 14-for-16 and 34 points for A.D. You saw two perfect pick-’n- rolls between Magic Johnson and Mychal Thompson — not one, but two — end in stuffs. Not Thompson stuffs, Dennis Rod- man stuffs of Thompson stuff at tempts. You saw the Detroit bench out- score the Laker bench 18-0 in the first half and 32-4 for the game, as Cooper looked as accom plished in three-point land as Dyan Cannon. Of course, much of the blame will slide to Laker ineptitude rather than Piston defense, espe cially out West. Sure, LA missed a bucketload of open shots. So did Boston. That excuse, a couple of. six-packs and a buzz will be as much consolation as the Celtics get, as they watch the finals sitting down. Spurs give Weiss pink slip SAN ANTONIO (AP) — The San Antonio Spurs’ owner fired Coach Bob Weiss Tuesday, saying the team needs a change after two consecutive losing seasons. “My decision is a subjective one, but it was mine to make and I just felt it was best for this oper ation at this time,” B.J. “Red” McCombs said. Weiss, a former assistant coach with the Dallas Mar .'ricks, has a 59-105 record in h ; . two seasons with the Spurs. He could not im mediately ment. be reached for com- The Spurs have also been plagued with dwindling atten dance that last year was the NBA’s lowest. Gate revenue was $78,000 per game, compared to an NBA average of $170,000. McCombs said he has talked with former Spurs Coach Stan AI- beck. Weiss’ firing was the second at a Texas NBA team in two days. Maverick could be on trading block DALLAS (AP) — Dallas Mavericks owner Don Carter attributed Mark Aguirre’s absence from a mandatory team meeting to the forward’s absent- mindedness, but reports say the team’s leading scorer could be on the trading block. Newspaper reports say the club is split be tween Carter and his basketball management about whether to trade Aguirre. Neither Aguirre nor Mavericks officials re turned calls made by The Associated Press on Tuesday. Aguirre’s defensive shortcomings and his moodiness could work against him, some of his teammates and team officials have stated. Aguirre played golf Monday in the Big Broth ers-Big Sisters of Arlington charity tournament and missed a mandatory team meeting before the team broke up for the summer. Carter dismissed Aguirre’s absence and failure to tell team officials he would miss the meeting. “You may find I’m wrong, but I’ll bet you that he will feel like one of my sons,” Carter said. “When they were younger they’d say, ‘Ooh, I for get to do something I told momma or daddy I’d do.’ Mark Aguirre is a child at heart, and I love him for that. So this meeting was the furthest thing from his mind this morning.” Aguirre probably will be fined $250 for miss ing the meeting, Carter said. Now that the team is adjourned until Oct. 7, Coach John MacLeod and his staff are expected to hold a meeting in the next couple of weeks to discuss the state of the club after their most suc cessful playoff season. Dallas defeated the Houston Rockets and Denver Nuggets and stretched the defending champion Los Angeles Lakers to a deciding sev enth game in the Western Conference Finals, which Dallas eventually lost. “You win championships playing defense, and he (Aguirre) has to get better in that area,” assis tant coach Gar Heard said. jery xcised thedis- of Duarte'ip astatic diseast es of the live •emoved,” til! te’s recupen l , “this diseast ated with die | tementsaid. rated the surj ment said. leader, whol ay 31, will re :are for a lev I ng to his rep for convale the Unitf allies in Lad: final year of) al term. Jting Texas A&M University System Employees Your Body Is ) , . ... -mils .. W ...O , m A Wonderful Thing. Cover It With Texas Health Plans. or peace. Ht ils for an inlet ; includinjttk embers ol ncil — the Sey States, Chin; s are the has: n for the Mic Secretary m. has been pr n. mir said Israt :al concession diplomatic r( ■p hinting its plomatic ret agree to the: internation- r said. 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