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MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY Room 110 Reed McDonald Phone 845-2427 Room 112 Evans Library Phone 845-4637 Room 1105 Oceanography Building Phone 845-5836 49ers reflect on 3rd Super Bowl victory Walsh will remain with 49ers but may retire from coaching MIAMI (AP) — Still savoring the victory that made him the second winningest coach in Super Bowl his tory, Bill Walsh had bad news for the rest of the NFL Monday: Even if he steps down as coach, he will continue working to keep the San Francisco 49ers on top. “I don’t necessarily have to coach to keep the 49ers at or near the top of the league,” Walsh said as he basked in the last-minute, 20-16 vic tory over Cincinnati that gave the team its third NFL title in the ’80s. That was the feeling of Jerry Rice, who earned the game’s MVP award by catching 11 passes for 215 yards. The yardage was a Super Bowl re cord; the number of catches tied The victory stamped San Fran cisco as unquestionably the team of the decade. “People with the right chemistry all participate together and are in volved in the decisions. We have worked well together for years.” 1 STUDY ABROAD OFFICE i F 11 "” 11 ■ 1 i Walsh’s news conference Monday was an opportunity for the 57-year- old coach, now second in Super Bowl victories to Pittsburgh’s Chuck Noll, to get a few things off his chest. He put in a none-too-subtle plug for defensive coordinator George Seifert as his successor if he decides to give up coaching and move into the front office after meetings later this week with 49ers owner Edward DeBartolo Jr. And sometimes with tongue in cheek, sometimes not, he took jabs at impatient NFL owners; “mercenary” player agents and the Bay Area me dia, harsh critics when the 49ers were 6-5 and faltering this season. But the criticism faded as the 49ers went on to win seven of their last eight, including Sunday’s victory on a 92-yard drive in three minutes, capped by Joe Montana’s 10-yard pass to John Taylor with 34 seconds left. That pass may have given Walsh the opportunity to leave on top, al though he still seems to be wavering. Ironically, he had served as the team’s president as well as coach un til after last season, when DeBartolo stripped him of the presidency after a 36-24 loss to Minnesota in the play offs following an NFL-best 13-2 sea son. “Now that we’ve won this game, it would be far easier to do it,” Walsh said. “But I don’t want to leave and then come back nine days later and sav I’ve changed my mind.” “Right now, we feel like Bill is going to come back,” Rice said. “I feel Bill is still competitive and not ready yet to give up the game. “And when you’re getting paid $1 million a year ...” Walsh, who has one year left on a contract due to pay him $1.3 million next season, laughed at that refer ence. But he only half laughed about some other things that came up — like owners and agents. “This is a competitive game. There are a lot of people — espe cially the owners — who have lost sight of the fact that there are 28 en tities,” Walsh said. “A lot of owners don’t realize you can’t win every year. They come from businesses where they’ve had continued success and there’s no competition. “So a lot of coaches get fired un fairly or prematurely by owners who don’t understand the dynamics of the game.” Walsh seems to have patched things up with DeBartolo after the two barely spoke for six months over differences ranging from player personnel to Walsh’s personal life. As for agents, Walsh suggested that they distract players from the goals of a team. “It’s different working with some of today’s athletes — probably be cause of the agents,” he said. “They get very mercenary. We like to feel we’re a team, but agents sometimes move the players away from that concept. I blame the agents for that more than the play ers.” As for Seifert, Walsh seemed pre pared to give him a present beyond Sunday’s Super Bowl victory, which took place on the assistant’s 49th birthday. “He’s had offers,” Walsh said of the man who has been with him ev ery year but one since 1977. “He’ll be a head coach next year. At least I hope so. He certainly de serves it.” Oldest rookie fulfills dream Figure the odds MIAMI (AP) on this one. Pierce Holt, a pass-rushing line man for the San Francisco 49ers, played one year of high school foot ball at Rosenberg, near Houston. Not even a junior college offered to see more of him in uniform. He went to work. He farmed. He drove a fork lift. He got a job in a make-ready shop of an auto dealer. He was an inspector for a mortgage company. That went on for three years. By then, he had gotten married and had a daughter. He decided to attend college and play football again at age 22. He’d grown from the 180- pounder in high school. He was 240 and in decent shape from weightlift ing and pickup basketball games. But who wanted him? What possible skills could he have? He made no waves in high school. A Division II school accepted him. He enrolled. He played four seasons in the defensive line. A son was born to his wife and him. Pro scouts were on his trail. The no-talent prep player turned out pretty good. He was the Division II defensive player of the year as a se nior. “Half of the scouts were con cerned about my age,” he told sportswriters in Miami for the Super Bowl. “The other half didn’t care. They just wanted a player.” San Francisco drafted him in the second round. And that, in capsule form, is how Holt, who turned 27 on New Year’s Day, became the oldest rookie ever to appear in a Super Bowl. Holt was born in Marlin, Texas, grew up in Rosenberg, and starred in college at Angelo State. He was al ways a Dallas Cowboys fan, he said. “They never showed much inter est,” Holt said. “One scout came out. I never saw a coach. It kinda irri tated me because I was a defensive tackle in a 4-3 and the Cowboys ran a similar defense. “I always pictured myself playing next to Randy White. But I’m ecstatic over the way things turned out, especially after the season they had.” The 49ers employ Holt as a situa tion pass rusher. He’s even a late bloomer in that role after missing the first eight games with a toe in jury. Yet he evolved into everything 49ers envisioned. Otherwise, tit wouldn’t have lined him up in Super Bowl against toughie guat Max Montoya of the Cincinni Bengals. What lured Holt back to footl; T anyway; Some of his jobs didn’t pan out, said. High interest rates at drought ruined his father’s farm,! was sold. He foresaw a limited ft ture in repairing trucks for hist ther-in-law. Fork lifting didn’t crea; tingles. “I didn’t know how, butsomehot I wanted to get back and play it game.” Holt tried first to interest Unite sity of Houston coach Bill Yeomai But Yeoman learned from t| NCAA that Holt had only one yea of Division I eligibility remaininglx cause he was already 22 years old, “That kinda knocked me down notch,” Holt said. The only patch lay at a Division] school. Holt could play four years that level. Holt tried Angelo State. “I talked to the coach on fo phone and told him how earnest was. Either that cinched it or hem in dire need of a player.” Holt applied himself there t blockers and books alike. He mai II tackles and one sack in his fresk man debut. He became an academ All-American (3.25 GPA). He neve lacked ambition or tenacity. Straight out of high school, he tended Wharton Junior College fc one semester, a round-trip drive 60 miles. Back home at 2 p.m.,1) drove 60 more miles to and hot Houston to operate a fork lift, made for a full day. Holt knew the so-called real wort before he entered the NFL. Hispei spective is shaped by a backgrowt of physical labor, rejection arc tough times. “It prepares a guy to roll withtii punches. To never give up. It gist you some resilience.” Those thoughts sustained He during rehab. “I kept thinking I’ve comethisfai It’s been damn hard to get here.h traveled a different road. I dot want this injury to stop me." It didn’t. Nothing has. PierceHd made it to the Super Bowl the hat way. And the longest, most roum about way on record. Bengals deal with end of fairytale year MIAMI (AP) — The Cincinnati Bengals can’t accept a storybook sea son without a fairytale ending. The Bengals thought they had completed one of the most dramatic turnarounds in NFL history when Jim Breech’s field goal gave them the lead with 3:20 to play in the Su per Bowl. But San Francisco’s Joe Montana fashioned a little legend of his own, leading San Francisco on a 92-yard touchdown drive for a 20-16 victory Sunday. “We came so close to the top of the mountain and to lose this way really hurts,” quarterback Boomer Esiason said. The Bengals lost in an uncharac teristic way — their defense let them down when it mattered most. After Breech’s third field goal put the Bengals ahead 16-13, Montana drove the 49ers to the winning touchdown with just 34 seconds to play. The nearness of a championship left the Bengals with an empty feel ing, despite their turnaround from a 4-11 record last year to 14-5. “We were 34 seconds away from a great victory,” Esiason said. “The next thing you know, we’re using all the losing cliches you can use.” Safety David Fulcher, who came within a couple of steps of knocking down the winning 10-yard touch down pass to John Taylor, sounded bitter. “Would you sound bitter if you lost a game you thought you should have won?” he said. Cincinnati’s offense has needed saves from its defense throughout the season. The defense preserved a season-opening victory over Phoenix with a goalline stand, throttled a last- minute drive by Philadelphia, and used a pass interception in the clos ing minutes to stop Pittsburgh and open the season 3-0. They had chances in the Super Bowl, but let them slip away. Cornerback Lewis Billups dropped an interception in the end zone in the fourth quarter with the Bengals leading 13-6. Montana cashed in quickly, hitting Jerry Rice with a 14-yard touchdown pass on the next play. “It was up on me so quick,” Billups said of the pass that went through his arms in the end zone. “I still think I could have made it.” The loss left the Bengals 0-2 in Super Bowl appearances. Only two other teams have played in more than one Super Bowl without a win —Denver at 0-3 and Minnesota at 0- 4. Coach Sam Wyche said he was crushed Monday morning when the reality of the loss finally hit him. He said he turned on the television and saw the celebration in San Francis “I think it hit me this morningi actly how close we came and how we came from a year ago,” he said think many of the players don’ti derstand the difference betw« winning and losing this game.yel Super Sunday notable JL for excitement, not riots Vol. g« AUS and ai proposi they sa women the sex “Sun use of Bill Pri alition 1 Price abortio the feti to have tion if t “In i J.E. “B son, “al rise to 1 Brov biak, I troduo it illeg; abortio Prict it won! law, bu B fc STjS Bundy out wh he was fession 20 won cuted ' year-ol His hoode< at 7:0 throug lawyer to my 1 Mor death across cheere cracke old T1 had b< comm Three stymie “Be shoute MIAMI (AP) — A great final I darter saved a bad week. And so uper Bowl XXIil, shoved briefly off the sporting world’s stage by television pictures of an gry young blacks, exited Miami still a star. For openers, the NFL turned a tidy $16.8 million profit from the game, which under the league’s revenue-sharing plan, translates ' into a $600,066 bonanza for each dub. For seconds, overnight Nielsen ratings showed that the game was seen in 65 percent of American households. Both were big im provements over last year’s disap pointing numbers. But most important, Super Bowl XXIII delivered drama enough to be remembered fa the game, not for a mugging ir. Miami. “The events earlier in the wed were and remain a real tragedy,' said NPX spokesman Joe Browne. “We were asked several time what we —- the NFL — were going to do about it. “But the fact is,” Browne con tinued, “that once the game was over ... the tent was dosed and the local leaders were in charge, just as they are in charge, prop erly, for the. other 5 1 weeks of the year.” M International Film (Scries presente Tampopo $ 0 b Tuesday, January 24 7:30pm * * * Rudder Theatre Co-sponsored By 9dSC Jordan Institute $2.50 w/TAMU ID Do not miss a single remaining International Feature! International Film (Series Passes, good for admission to all 13 remaining Films, are still on sale through January 31 at the Rudder Box Office for only $24 Toke o hand. Touch a heart. Aggie Partners foi Special Olympics 1st meeting: Jan 25 7:00 p.m. 164 Read 114 SAN Henry his de< term e would ponen In e fice, ( the ei porter decisic seek r time t mattei The City Of Los Angeles Department of Public Works Bureau of Sanitation Will be recruiting at TEXAS A&M for SANITARY ENGINEERING ASSISTANTS Friday, February 17,1989 If you will have your BS or MS in Engineering by Mid-1989, and would like to work for the City at the forefront in sanitation, come talk to us. INTERVIEWS MAY BE SCHEDULED THRU YOUR PLACEMENT OFFICE An Equal Employment (Opportunity, Affirmative Action Employer R ta to 8/ Disc play sterr duct worr city, tors relu T subr stati in trial men her jury h sexc case T ity i her coni B, tiqjc and to jr said unU jury S testi