Friday, November 11,1988 The Battalion Page 11 iBattalion Football Picks Doug Walker Assistant Sports Editor d.p. Cartoonist Cray Pixley Assistant Sports Editor Anthony Wilson Opinion Page Editor Jerry Bolz Sports Writer Hal L. Hammons Sports Editor Reveille Mascot Texas A&M at Arkansas Hogs by 4 Aggies by 24 Aggies by 1 Hogs by 2 Aggies by 7 Aggies by 1 Ags by a squeal fexas at TCU Frogs by 7 Frogs by 1 Frogs by 4 Frogs by 3 Horns by 7 Frogs by 3 Frogs by 14 1 Baylor at Rice Bears by 6 Bears by 1 Owls by 3 Bears by 14 Bears by 14 Owls by 4 Bears by 11 Wyoming at Houston Cougars by 4 Cowboys by 1 Cougars by 6 Cougars by 6 Cowboys by 7 Cowboys by 7 Cowboys by 1 nmar at Texas Tech Raiders by 21 Raiders by 7 Raiders by 14 Raiders by 20 Raiders by 21 Raiders by 34 Raiders by 20 leorgia at Auburn Tigers by 4 Tigers by 7 Bulldogs by 6 Tigers by 8 Bulldogs by 3 Tigers by 10 Dogs by 7 Hrizona St. at USC Trojans by 7 Trojans by 14 Trojans by 10 Trojans by 13 Trojans by 10 Trojans by 13 Trojans by 3 P tt at Penn State Panthers by 6 Panthers by 1 Lions by 7 Panthers by 13 Lions by 4 Panthers by 11 Lions by 8 ■ichigan St. at Indiana Hoosiers by 4 Hoosiers by 1 Hoosiers by 4 Hoosiers by 2 Spartans by 6 Hoosiers by 3 Spartans by 7 pfest Virginia at Rutgers UWV by 10 UWV by 7 UWV by 7 UWV by 4 UWV by 14 Knights by 1 UWV by 8 Hikings at Cowboys Vikings by 7 Vikings by 7 Cowboys by 4 Vikings by 5 Cowboys by 10 Cowboys by 6 Cowboys by 1 Silers at Seahawks Oilers by 3 Seahawks by 3 Oilers by 10 Oilers by 9 Seahawks by 5 Oilers by 17 Oilers by 30 Hecord 10-2 (.833) 10-2 (.833) 11-1 (.916) 9-3 (.750) 9-3 (.750) 10-2 (..833) 7-5 (.583) Bverall 91-27-1 (.771) 89-29-1 (.754) 87-31-1 (.737) 26-9-1 (.742) 85-33-1 (.720) 77-41-1 (.653) 65-53-1 (.551) &■%***? M WAITINgA /wfi, FOR TUB 3AD STOMP/ 1 Practil chosei dice Friday will w ; flee in Fayettevilkil vishing to attendki : the center squaretfi ame yell will be i a m. Saturday, aturday afternoon 12th Man Scoreboard omen’s soccer splits games in Austin A&M’s women’s soccer team icked the competition in the Austin omen’s Tournament last weekend. Even though the team did not place n the single-elimination tourney, A&M performed well. The Lady Aggies defeated Mead- ws Alliance of Houston in the ipener of the meet by a 2-1 score hanks to excellent play by center-for ward Elena Olive. Olive scored both A&M goals in the win, team spokesperson Lindsey Craig said. In the second game of the tourna- 'J (AP) — Univi icials will mecl mittce on Infracti® 3 alleged rulesvioli lotball program, nts allegedly occii : of former CoacliE. BlOO.OOO-a-yearta sity. \ has accused Yew ■s and the former a isionally helping ph reasons. .'signed at the after former players! vid Roberson saidi 00 and $ 10,000 fo irmer player, Kefe red about $150 ore: md he knew of 1 got personal loaas is become a c md-raiser but 1 President Ri >n Chronicle saidlij eratcly successful!!! trying to raise hletics training cr urces say Yeoffl out $250,000in(Mt II keep his jobrtjf ilties the school A. see any changes ady done, if thereisi urce said. The NO the school of tliei| on’s response, tilt' reach a decision oil s early as the first** :s would come tooy rugars from plajiij s season. Bowlimt d on Nov. 19. ment, A&M fell to Austin Arsenal by Jailine team travels to SMU meet this weekend The A&M Sailing team missed a Women's Soccer a 2-1 count as they lost in a “shoo tout” after ending regulation in a 1-1 tie. Solid defensive play from Craig, Kim Mac Cormack, Jean Bombach and Allison Morris kept A&M in the game before the shootout. This Saturday the team will playu in a tournament hosted by the A&M Varsity soccer team in the field near the Zachry Building. Texas, Rice, Stephen F. Austin State and A&M will be represented in the tournament. chance to sail this past weekend as bad weather pushed the Tulane Fall Invitational back a day. The Aggie team couldn’t stay until Sunday, when the races took place, and missed their charice to qualify for the Sugar Bowl Regatta later this year. The University of Texas and Tulane University were the teams that did qualify. A&M will try again this weekend in the Frozen Hate Regatta hosted by Sailing Southern Methodist University. The race is the qualifier for the Timme Angsten Regatta Nov. 25-26 in Chi cago. Seven teams from Texas and Tu lane will compete for the top two spots. Dave Jones of A&M said the Aggies have a good chance to qualify for the Timme Angsten because Tu lane already has an automatic bid and UT doesn’t want to go to Chicago. Aggie Lacrosse resumes season this weekend Lacrosse Club plays the Corpus Christi club in an unscheduled match Saturday at noon at the polo fields. Corpus Christi is a new club and this is A&M’s first time to face them.The Aggies were off last weekend. Sunday, A&M heads to Huntsville to play division rival Sam Houston for the second time this fall. The Ag- Lacrosse gies won the last meeting here but Sam Houston had a good showing in the Fall Invitational here two weeks ago. Next weekend the Aggies take on the University of Texas in their an nual pre-Thanksgiving match. olleyball team faces SU tonight at 7:30 he Texas A&M Lady Aggie Volley- 11 tries to rebound from a disappointing is to Houston tonight in a match with uisiana State at 7:30 p.m. at G. Rollie White Coliseum. ■A&M, 16-12 overall (5-3 in the SWC), gets a break from Southwest 'Conference competition against the Lady Tigers. LSU visits College Station on the fijial leg of a three-game road swing. LSI! stood at 19-9 overall entering the trip. ■Senior outside attackers Cheri Steensma and Vivian Viera lead the A&M attack. Steensma has leads A&M with 130 kills this season while hitting .289 and has chipped in 88 digs. Viera has 117 kills and is hitting .229 while adding 94 digs. “The match with LSU will be another opportunity for us to help ourselves in the region,” A&M Head Coach A1 Givens said. “A win would give us the opportunity to move closer to our goal of attaining an at-large bid to the NCAA tournament." Hayes (Continued from page 9) defenders took the ball away from the bumbling Hogs again. Running back Michael Forrest, whose 7-yard touchdown run in the third quarter had broken the Aggies’ back in 1975, was hit hard on a carry up the middle, and linebacker Jesse Hunnicutt recov ered at the Hog 30. Woodard and Dickey alternated carry ing the ball to the Hog 1, where Big George bulled into the end zone, making the score 24-3. Along with the Aggies’ destructive middle linebacker Robert Jackson, Hayes added to the Razorbacks’ misery shortly thereafter. The two behemoths chased Calcagni out of the backfield and smashed him to the cold, hard astroturf (then Hayes pushed himself up off the prone QB). The Aggies got up, but Calcagni needed help having suffered a shoulder separation that caused inexperienced freshman Houston Nutt to take over at quarterback. Arkansas scored on a halfback pass early in the fourth quarter, but the Ag gies retaliated with an 80-yard touch down drive of their own. Walker directed the entirely ground- based attack during which the Ags at tacked only up the middle or around the left side of their offensive line. With 5:31 left to play, Woodard, who had been injured and was ineffective the previous year, vaulted over the ex hausted Hog defense, then waved his hands at the dispirited Hog fans (well, those who were left). Following the game, Bellard was effu sive in his praise for the entire squad. The Wishbone attack hadn’t turned the ball over at all, while the Maroon Ma rauders had limited the potent Hog of fense to 198 yards of total offense. Hayes led a secondary that held Ar kansas to 4 completions in 21 passing at tempts, two of which were intercepted. “Now you are looking at a live man,” Bellard said. “A year ago I was a dead man. Last year we were flat after playing Texas, and we weren’t as sharp and crisp as we should have been. Saturday, we played an outstanding game. ” With the offense on fire and the na tionally-ranked defense snuffing out enemy offenses, the Aggies cruised through the rest of the 1976 season. A&M won its last seven games to finish 10-2 for the second straight time (the only time A&M has posted back-to-back 10-win seasons). Hayes was named first-team All-SWC for the second straight season, one of 10 Aggies so honored in 1976 (14 made it in 1975, including nine defensive players). He also was one of three Aggies to make first team All-American, along with Jackson and Franklin. His great quickness and speed made him a force to be feared in the arena. In 1975 Bellard said of Hayes that “he can run like the wind and will knock the fire out of you.” From the normally staid, calm Bellard, that was quite a compliment. Simonini pointed out that he knew Hayes was a player from the time he showed up in 1973 as a freshman line backer from Houston Wheatley High School. “Lester had great speed, and when he came to A&M I’m not sure the coaches knew what to do with him,” Simonini said. “Garth (TenNapel) and I finally asked them to get him away from us and move him somewhere else on the team. “When Lester became one of the safe ties, it made our defense better again be cause of his speed. He blitzed a lot, and that caused a lot of problems for our op ponents because they never knew if he was coming or where he would be com ing from.” Hayes remains elusive to this day, since neither his former National Foot ball team, the Los Angeles Raiders, nor his agents, the Hendricks brothers of Houston, know how to get in touch with him. That isn’t much different than he was on the field, where opposing quar terbacks and receivers often didn’t know where he was until it was too late. Two other games stand out in Hayes’ Aggie career — Baylor in 1975 and Texas in 1976. In the former he inter cepted a pitchout and raced 77 yards for what turned out to be the winning touch down (19-10). Against Texas, in his fi nal regular-season game at A&M, Hayes intercepted three passes, setting the school record for most interceptions in a career (14, breaking Pat Thomas’ record set in 1975). Simonini was involved in Hayes’ touchdown scamper, the only one of his career at A&M. “Tank Marshall and I hit the Baylor quarterback (Charlie Parker), and the ball popped right up in the air,” Si monini recalled with a chuckle. “As we were falling to the ground, I saw Lester catch the ball. With nobody in front of him, I knew that he wouldn’t get caught and would score.” Following the game, Hayes was diffi dent, saying only that “I was about three yards from the spot where the ball popped up and I just grabbed it and ran. ’ ’ I SWENSEtfC 1/3 LB. HAMBURGER WITH FRIES ITS ALMOST MORE THAN YOU CAN EAT! Good For Up To ^ 4 Per Coupon WITH I COUPON 5 I BRING THIS COUPON BIG REAL DEAL Get a 1/3 lb. Hamburger | with French fries, large soft drink and a Super Sundae with your choice of toooinas. "GOOD FOR UP TO 4 PER COUPON, CHEESEAND/OR BACONEXTRA. OFFER Expires 11-14-88 | §$ OFFER VALID AQT THC FOLtCMANG SWENSEN’S m | Culpepper Plaza KSST S *3.99 1 ^AUD OfFER VALID AT THE FOLLOWING SWENStNS Culpepper Plaza College Station, Texas PLEASE PRESENT WHEN ORDER IN a GOOD ONLY WITH COUPON DURING SPECIFIED DATES NOT WITH ANY OTHER DISCOUNT SPECIAL OR PROMOTION. ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER VISIT UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED. VOID WHERE PROHIBITED BY LAW. SWEKSEN^ Need Extra CASH for Christmas? We buy gold, gold jewelry, silver, rarecoins, diamonds, Rolexwatches, Piaget watches, Patck Phillipe watches and platinum Texas Coin Exchange 404 University 846-8905 o £7 Texas A&M Vs Arkansas 1pm Saturday -Fly There Flight Time: One Hour: 45 minutes Air condltioned-Pressurized Refreshments served on Board Seating Capacity 7 passengers Get Your Group Together and Call: EASTERWOOD AIRPORT FLY SMARTER. Colleae Station. TX THINK CHARTER." Call For Quotes & Additional Information 409-846-1987 i, Chick! achos [DAY $9. 12. ,s 95 hS 1988 CHINESE .MOVIE FESTIVAL ENGLISH SUBTITLED |p • O f SPONSORED BY ; The Federation of Chinese Student Assoc, in USA COORDINATED BY: TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY JIIIHiM- CHINESE STUDENT ASSOCIATION H NOV 12« 7:00pifi (SAT) 9:00pm NOV 13« 1:00pm (SUN) 3:00pm msc 201 THANK YOU ! SIR ROUGE OF THE NORTH CHOPPER and THE SIX FRIENDS PEOPLE BETWEEN TWO CHINAS ADMISSION IS FREE ! The College of Agriculture ! Second Annual Chili Cook-Off and Tournament Date: Saturday, Nov. 12, 1988 Time: 10a.m.-6p.m. Place: Central Park Volleyball, Dominoes, Horseshoes, Food and Lots of Fun! Everyone Welcome! Sponsored by: Student Ag Council