i :i 'easinj >d mort :an’t all rnmeni, ises wi| Antonio Monday, )°ing to g to bf ’ Cisne. ; annual Ameri- he was Bowl bids cementing rish, Mountaineers look to Fiesta Miami will probably stay home for le holidays. But Notre Dame and hst Virginia apparently are head- ig for a Fiesta in Arizona. Although bowl bids don’t offi- ally go out until Saturday, many of tie nation’s top college football ams are already making travel Ians. Fourth-ranked West Virginia eemingly locked up a Fiesta Bowl late against No. 1 Notre Dame with 35-25 victory over Rutgers, leaving io. 3 Miami as a likely opponent for he Oklahoma-Nebraska winner in he Orange Bowl, arddis I “We’re going to be participating hospital a a major bowl and there will be ilenty of time for people to make heir arrangements,†West Virginia thletic director Fred Schaus said. ive. ie baby er, past are will nber o( )St-C0!V on doi ng peo- adding lot cov- nishing iayor. ■lection, do syn- ams in ning of ciation, xil and linority rapidly, n many y shows ipulous will be r Asian 'e vice said he •ciety is aid the o meet do it Schaus wouldn’t name the bowl, tut there was little doubt he was talk- tig about the Fiesta. Notre Dame coach Lou Holtz, dtose team is also being sought by he Orange, was coy when asked iboutthe bowl situtation. “What bowl can we go to to possi- ily enhance our standings?†he said. ‘Winning the national hampionship is nice. It’s not an ab- olute necessity, and it’s not some- hing everyone’s obsessed with, but fyou are going to do something in radition with Notre Dame’s history . . let’s be the best we possibly can ie." Translation: Look for a Notre )ame-West Virginia matchup in the nesta, no matter what happens the estof the season. Both teams are currently unde feated, although the Irish still must Penn State and No. 2 Southern lal. West Virginia has a date with No. 15 Syracuse on Saturday. i Notre Dame handed Miami its n+ mly loss this season, 31-30. But the III Irish have no desire for a rematch, iothe Hurricanes will probably have UrC :o settle for an Orange Bowl berth ■^ igainst the Big Eight champion. The tentative lineup for the other fan. 2 bowls looks like this: Michigan vs. the Southern Cal-UCLA winner in the Rose; Arkansas vs. Florida State or UCLA in the Cotton; Au burn or Louisiana State vs. Southern Cal or Florida State in the Sugar; — An emical in this prepa- equate al cen- ment’s unit- / three th. : chief, iest de south- : time, cal out lannel, ;aid in e area ces. I Guz- arsenal asts 12 ocom- which rn Re- is also year, y need o work pment ire de- ile now n said- dinner s Faw n-fried d corn are up- ed p ea |-vinai- bran- es; p°- acolatt spared ve-staf O’Do- | e , had urant’s paring would aniver; aonW 1 “Ifs Iff by * n sta ers, off- Associated Press Clemson vs. the Nebraska-Okla- homa loser in the Citrus; and Syra cuse vs. Auburn or LSU in the Hall of Fame. Michigan clinched the Big Ten championship and the Rose Bowl berth with a 38-9 victory over Illi nois. But Michigan coach Bo Schem- bechler said he’s only thinking about Saturday’s upcoming game against arch-rival Ohio State. “We’re playing the biggest game of the year next week,†he said. “The Rose Bowl doesn’t mean as much to me as playing at Ohio State.†LSU clinched at least a tie for the Southeastern Conference title with a 20-3 victory over Mississippi State, but they haven’t clinched a spot in the Sugar Bowl. If Auburn beats Alabama in Bir mingham Nov. 25, it will share the league championship with LSU. If that happens, the Sugar Bowl committee will choose the league’s representative in New Orleans. Arkansas, which beat Texas A&M 25-20 to remain undefeated in 10 games, locked up the Southwest Conference title and a Cotton Bowl berth several weeks ago. Their opponent in Dallas figures to be Florida State or UCLA, if the Bruins lose to Southern Cal. Clemson beat Maryland 49-25 to gain its third straight Atlantic Coast Conference title and a trip to the Cit rus Bowl against the loser of Satur day’s Nebraska-Oklahoma game. Here’s the tentative lineups for the other bowls: Gator — Georgia vs. Michigan State, Pittsburgh or Colorado. Sun — Alabama vs. Army. Aloha — Washington State vs. Houston. All American — Florida vs. Illi nois or Michigan State. Holiday — Wyoming vs. Okla homa State. California — Western Michigan vs. Fresno State. Freedom — Brigham Young vs. Arizona or Colorado. Independence — Southern Mis sissippi vs. Texas El-Paso. Liberty — Indiana vs. South Caro lina. Peach — Iowa vs. North Carolina State or Pac-10 team. Lewis’ 196 yards not enou to put A&M in win column By Hal L. Hammons Sports Editor Player of the Week Darren Lewis lose The Aggies obviously were going to win c with Darren Lewis Saturday. They did both. Apparently Jackie Sherrill didn’t care that Arkan sas’ run defense was ranked No. 1 in the country. Apparently he thought his star running back would be able to handle them. Apparently he was right. The sophomore from Dallas Carter rambled for 92 yards in the first quarter on his way to a 196-yard performance — his second best of the year. He carried the ball on Texas A&M’s first five plays. He earned A&M’s first six first downs. He ran on eight of the first nine Aggie first down plays, in cluding the first five. Was it to open up the rest of the offense, or was it to run Lewis for its own sake? Either way, it worked. The first quarter may even have been too slanted toward Lewis. His 92 yards rushing accounted for all but seven yards of A&M’s total offensive output. It ended with Lewis carrying the ball three plays in a row for 31 yards, taking the ball to the Arkansas 34. He got 12 more on the first play of the second quarter. Then Robert Wilson got the ball — the first play of the drive that anybody but center Mike Arthur, quarterback Bucky Richardson, and Lewis had touched the ball at all. Wilson fumbled. It didn’t discourage Sherrill from getting away from the one-dimensional attack, though. And di versification worked the next time. The defense might have figured with the ball back on the A&M one yard line, Lewis was sure to be the man. Instead he carried the ball only three times for eight yards on the drive, as the Aggies took the ball the length of the field behind Wilson’s running and Richardson’s passing. But in the end the Aggies could never count on anything else but Lewis’ running. Wilson met a brick wall most of the times he tested the Arkansas line. And Richardson threw two key in terceptions — one that went for a touchdown, an other in the other end zone that killed a sure scoring drive. Arkansas could afford to overkey on Lewis the next time the Aggies had the ball inside their own five, and it resulted in a safety. The Hogs stopped Lewis on a key third down play, forcing the Aggies into a punting situation with less than eight minutes remaining. The attempted fake that followed resulted in an 11-yard loss, giving Arkansas the field position to tack on a field goal to extend the lead to 25-14, es sentially icing the game for the Razorbacks. Sometimes it just doesn’t pay for me to leave town Friday night, 10 p.m., Fayetteville, Ark. My family van plows into a dingbat high-school girl’s Mustang in front of a shopping mall. Of course, 1 wasn’t at fault. The dip-ette cruised on through a flashing red light doing about 30 on a wet road. We didn’t have a prayer of stopping. Actually I wasn’t even driving at all. It was my mother — the epit ome of paranoia. If anybody could have avoided the accident, she could have. But she couldn’t and didn’t. The mental equivalent of Chuck Barris — obviously a fu ture physics major at the University of Arkan sas — could’ve and didn’t.The result was pre tty much what you would expect. Squash city. Now, I don’t really believe in omens, buuuuuuut. . . Ya kinda figger I should’ve been expecting the worst Saturday afternoon. I mean, Arkansas did seem to have every thing going for them. They were 9-0. They did match up pretty well with the Aggies. And if that weren’t enough, there’s always the Texas A&M-Hal L. Hammons road game curse. I don’t know what it is, but I can’t seem to o Hal L. Hammons Sports Editor be present at an Aggie road game when the Aggies actually show up themselves. OK, this year’s Cotton Bowl win over Notre Dame is a notable exception. I was there, and the team was too. Instead it was Lou Holtz’ brain that didn’t make the trip. And the Au burn win too — I was there for that one. But other than that, my record stands at 6- 2 — 3-0 this year. Pretty impressive, huh? As much as I like for the Aggies to win road games, as well as home games, you’d think I’d learn. You’d think I’d stay home. You’d think I’d be satisfied with watching the Aggies whip up on their opponents on TV or listening to the carnage on radio. Buuut Noooooooo! I’ve got to go see it in person!!! It started in 1984, when an innocent fresh man tagged along with a senior friend on a road trip to the Astrodome. A&M played pathetically all game and still was able to stay in the game. Until the officials robbed A&M of any chance at a late field goal that would put the Aggies ahead. If only I had known about the history that was in the makings. Maybe I got a big head when A&M beat Texas — in Austin, and in my presence — to clinch the Cotton Bowl in 1986. But then again, I didn’t have any idea what was in store. The game, plus the 1986 Cotton Bowl against Auburn, actually had me with a losing record — one I enjoyed fully. But Ohio State would bring me and the Aggies down to earth. I travelled all the way to Lubbock to watch the Aggies play another stupid game. Billy Joe Tolliver just sat back in the pocket as the quarters rolled by. A&M wouldn’t blitz him, and eventually he found receivers. Result — a Texas Tech win to kick off the conference season. Wins against Baylor and Notre Dame made me think that feeling that’s always telling me the Aggies aren’t going to do well was just paranoia.But this year has been atrocious for me and the Ags on the road. I went to the Kickoff Classic. I went to Louisiana State. And now I’ve gone to Arkan sas. Three for three. How much do you believe in stuff like that? I never really have, but it’s always been fun to fool around with it. My sophomore year I wore the same sweater to three critical games in a row at the end of the season. Arkansas, SMU and Texas. The Aggies won all three. Of course, all three were at home. I know none of that really matters. The team isn’t going to play any better or worse one way or the other.That’s why I’m not going to feel guilty about going to the Texas game. Even though it’s in Austin. SCOTT&WHITE CLINIC, COLLEGE 1600 University Drive East STATION Audiology Occupational Medicine Richard L. Riess, Ph.D. Dr. Walter J. Linder Cardiology Oplitlialmology Dr. J. James Rohack Dr. Mark R. Coffman Dermatology Orthopedic Surgery Dr. David D. Barton Dr. Robert F. Hines Family Medicine Dr. Art Caylor Dr. William R. Kiser Dr. Walter J. Linder Dr. Richard A. Smith Dr. Kathy A. Stienstra Dr. Robert Wiprud Otolaryngology Dr. Michael J. Miller Pediatrics Dr. Dayne M. Foster Dr. Mark Sicilio Plastic Surgery Dr. William M. Cocke, Jr. General Surgery Dr. Frank R. Arko Dr. Dirk L. Boysen Internal Medicine Psychiatry Dr. Steven Kirk Strawn Dr. Valerie Chatham Psychology Dr. Alton Graham Dr. Jack L. Bodden Dr. David Hackethom Radiology Dr. Michael R Schlabach Dr. Luis Canales Obstetrics/Gynecology Urology Dr. James R. Meyer Dr. Michael R. Hermans Dr. William L. Rayburn Health Education Dr. Charles W. Sanders Sally Scaggs, RD Call 268-3322 For Appointment R1 Flowerama Located in Post Oak Mall Anniversary Special l dozen long-stemmed roses Wrapped $9.99 Boxed $13.99 Arranged $19.99 We deliver 7 days a week order by phone with a credit card FLOWERAMA OF AMERI CA Aggie owned & operated 764-1828 resaa Texas A&M Flying Club (Teaching the (Best to 'fCy tfie Best Interested people are urged to attend our meeting Tuesday, Nov. 15 at the Airport Clubhouse For information Call Julie Scott 846-1279 7:00 p.m i » a * * * * ft t‘i 'A ■*•*•*'