5mber28, Soorts The Battalion Monday, Nov. 28, 1988 Page 9 ceriii iould suffer :ias a less worthy rolitical or raatei reed Chronicle the implications A practice that designed to prol dercover agents rg undercover o| nforcement rat the Chronicle' m such a story, eceived advance ication date so >n to protect ui ot be determim isclosure interfei vestigations neone gets killed, i) use that technii)i eral Drug Enfotj aration spokesme d. .aRocque said volving the medi!: ' I f we Tie to the pi to believe us?" . And one more makes five Aggies survive poor 2nd half to give UT 7th loss of season rove) UT receiver Tony Jones tries to drag down rrick Richey after the A&M defensive back inter- ()l the University! pted a pass in the third quarter, (below) Darren l ism departma concerns: “They' 1 as a means to tfid press is trying to public needs ■Hi. head oftheoryij sion for the Brow: fs Department would be preferal e media when ease the informal dth reporters rrt of the respon: dia, for the li said. eded that repond y with that arratf reque said such pi eption would viol ns. he knows ofnosi ‘Tve never press who’dbeawi in planting a stoty,' he DEA practicecai ress skepticism ofiit sed by drug enforci Photo by Scott D. Weaver Lewis runs for the Aggies’ first touchdown as UT’s Stanley Richard gives chase. Lewis gained a career- high 212 yards on the night. oto by Scott D. Weaver By Hal L. Hammons Sports Editor AUSTIN — University of Texas cen ter Alan Champagne slowly walked off the field Thursday night, helmet in hand, with a completely emotionless express ion on his face. He had just seen Texas A&M’s Aaron Wallace streak by tackle Charles Sea- phus to sack quarterback Mark Murdock on fourth down, giving the Aggies the ball with 40 seconds remaining in the game and clinching a 28-24 A&M win. The fifth-year senior had seen his Longhorns lose to the Aggies for the fifth time. And the way it happened must have made it all the more depressing. A few minutes later a jubilant Dana Batiste saw a familiar sports writer, flashed a big smile, and said, “Piece of cake.” It was anything but. And after the game. Batiste admitted it was a little nerve-racking toward the end. “They had me worried,” he said. After the first half of the game. Batiste probably would never have thought he would be saying that at the end. After all, the Longhorns were shellacked for 30 minutes with hardly a break. They were lucky to be within three touch downs. Having earned only 98 yards of of fense — only 8 in the first quarter — it would have seemed inconceivable that UT could not only close the 28-7 gap, but have two chances in the waning mo ments for a go-ahead touchdown. But such was the case. Texas had driven to the A&M 34 with 3:20 remaining, looking to go ahead for the first time in the game. But third-string quarterback Donovan Forbes — inserted as an extra running threat on third and 2 — pitched the ball to nobody, and Batiste covered it for the Aggies. The play was intended to go to Eric Metcalf, but the back had fallen down. UT Head Coach David McWilliams said, “Eric slipped and Donovan just didn’t see him. I’m not sure there was going to be much there for Erie anyway, but at least there wouldn’t have been the fumble.” y UT got another chance with 1:37 left (200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 res nts hey appeared ini ■illy two copiesoftl) ting Travis’ the Alamo were: :, he said, but s®| s have surfaced, to any thinking pi i plausible.” )s, I had sold l Declaration of 1 me copy of the ln| ;reat deal of montjJ ace and worry a H see another copytj ts, but I did not r.J trouble.” iocuments he hat J fakes was one Tajl i to the San Jaci® listory in Houi'j for $30,000. Hes it money, dor said, he ) for fake documei^ v sold. ~ation of ) be a kind of Rost discovery of oi* aid. “I simply look] documents that 1 on, that original^ dealers, that «fij or which sho»i aing a negative,” ( her discoveries unaents that had! ifts to the Univefl ed fake Texas dof ossession of the: | >ry Center, Yalel'J nerican Antiquan* ' of the Republic!lj ngton-on-the-Bral ;ity, the Texas $0'“ aciation, the the branches of i Fexas system at S dington and assofJ rs. ay of the Dedarac j ce turned up ini an of Gov. Bill Ch i URINARY TRACT INFECTION STUDY Do you experience frequent urination, burning, stinging, or back pain when you urinate? 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Known cedar allergic individu als also welcome. to the forgings printed documej suspect a signify] )graph letters by ^ e about i ni P orI ! i state’s history p^| s and describe ev£ [ | iened.” CALL PAULL RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL 776-0400 ft] & ^ fl © & © 5 Hoy en Belen ha nacido el Nino Dios, ven con nosotros a adorarlo La comunidad Latina de St. Mary's estard celebrando la llegada del Sexior el Sdbado 3 de Plcleinbre a las 7:00 PM. HabrA una xnisa de Navi dad en la cual se tendrd una Pastorela o representacidn del Evangelic por parte de los nldos de la Comunidad. A1 final de la mlsa, se llevard a cabo una Posada, con vUlanclcos. plftatas. etc. TODOS ESTAN BLENVENIDOS. TE ESPERAMOS lllllll ©©EflTomiBiiJB lUMfnssjx sss oir. Huxunro Catholic Student Association ■ ■ Emerging Leaders Seminar "The Freshman Advantage" Applications available in the Student Activities Office, 208 Pavilion, 845-1133 i ' * . . 'I '7. / i 7V Wii - "a. ■ Deadline: December 12,1988 and got as k as second and 1 at the Texas 33. But a pass off Metcalf’s hands and a sack by Alex Morris made it fourth and 7. Wallace’s sack sealed it for the Aggies. Murdock said, “This kind of sums up the season. It’s just been too little too late. We fought back, but we didn’t win.” The Longhorns ended the season at 4- 7, the worst record since 1956. A&M climbed to 7-4 with Thursday’s game against the University of Alabama re maining. Six Aggie turnovers — four in the sec ond half — cost A&M, as UT got three of its four scores on drives starting inside the A&M 30. But Darren Lewis made up for it with a career-high 212 yards rushing, includ ing 102 in the first quarter, for his ninth straight 100-yard performance. Lewis now has 1,564 yards on the sea son and needs 181 Thursday to break the Southwest Conference mark held by Heisman Trophy-winner Earl Campbell of Texas. Metcalf, a preseason Heisman candi date, rushed for only 52 yards on 22 car ries. He also caught three passes for 17 yards. Early it looked like the Aggies were headed to a blowout like the first two games of the streak, instead of a nip-and- tuck, hard-fought win like the last two. Wallace blocked a field goal attempt that would have given UT its first points with 12:52 remaining in the second quar ter, and John Boper took it 48 yards for a touchdown. Instead of being within a touchdown of the Aggies, UT found it self down 21-0. Even without starting quarterback Bucky Richardson, who had left the game in the first quarter after re-injuring his knee, the Aggies moved the ball with little difficulty in the first half. A&M had 287 total yards in the half, including an amazing 138-63 advantage in passing yardage. Chris Osgood took the Aggies 64 yards for another touchdown when UT was unable to answer Roper’s score. A pass to Rod Harris for 25 yards gave A&M the ball at the UT 8, and Osgood took it in himself on an option the next play. The big “0” of a smoke ring that came from the Aggie howitzer and floated across Memorial Stadium looked like a pretty big omen. But the Aggie fortunes started to turn the next series of downs. Osgood fum bled the snap, giving the Longhorns the ball at the Aggie 17. Murdock capitalized on the turnover — the first of six on the day for A&M — with a TD pass to Kerry Cash to break the UT ice with 2:05 left in the half. Osgood, who went 5-for-8 passing for 88 yards in the first half, fell apart after the break. He completed four of his five passes, but three were to Texas players. The first interception went to Mark Berry and gave Texas the ball at the A&M 18. Murdock hit a wide-open Ste phen Clark over the middle for the score. Willie Mack Garza intercepted a pass the next series, and the Aggies lost the ball on downs the next time they got it. Neither time could the Longhorns capi talize. A&M Head Coach Jackie Sherrill w livid during and after the failed four down try. Darren Lewis was ruled short of a 1 down on a third-and-three attempt, a officials ruled Osgood didn’t make the first down either on his sneak attempt. Replays seemed to indicate both mark ings were too short. Texas started with the 15-yard un sportsmanlike conduct penalty on Sher rill and moved to the A&M 20, but Mur dock threw an interception to Mickey Washington at the 1. The Texas fans came to the game pre pared to harass A&M for its recent scan dal over alleged “hush money” payoffs sent by overnight mail from Sherrill to former player George Smith. Some signs read, “Aggies + Hush Money = Death Penalty,” and, “Federal Express: When the hush money absolutely, positively has to be there overnight.” Batiste said it didn’t bother him even when the team was pelted by Federal Ex press boxes. “I was going to take one for a souve- nier,” he said, “but really it has nothing to do with Texas A&M.” The Professionals” Copy Shop” Self Service Copiers Oversized Laminating Wedding & Graduation Invitations Scantrons-Bluebooks • Word Processing • Binding • Resumes • Xeroxing • Transparencies • Friendly people & Friendly service (Above Farmers Mkt.) Jjk W m Northgate 846-3755 M-F7a.m.-10 p.m. Sat. 9a.m.-6 p.m. Sum. 1 p.m.-6 p.m. Pepe’s s. Mexican Cafe At Pepe’s, where valuable specials happen every day. You can get our £ famous tacos for only A O e * o eaelt' Limit IO with coupon Offer Good November 18 - 30' 33 I 2 S« College Ave* IO. Bryan Colt clip coupon m