Page 12 The Battalion Wednesday, January 25,1989 Texas WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 25 DILLARD’S MALL ENTRANCE • 6-9 PM Events, presented in cooperation with BRIDE’S Magazine, include entertaining seminars, a Bridal Fashion show and reception, bridal experts and the Perfect Match games in which couples compete for almost $2,000 in prizes! Participants include: Bride n’ Formal Al’s Formal Wfear Kountry Korner Bakery Post Oak Florist Harpist Shanna Norton Brazos Valley Limo The Victorian World Travel Dillard’s BRIDE l.D.E.A.S. Florage by Gayle Christie Chicago Cutlery Richelieu Croscill Laura Ashley Oster Wedding Pages Imagemaker Photography Dillard’s Portrait Studio Dillard s POST OAK MALL NOTICE: Looking for mountain cedar allergic individuals to participate in a 1 or 2 week allergy study. $100 monetary incentive for those cho sen to participate. 4 days remaining to enroll. $50 00 bonus for qualifying patients Free skin testing available to determine elegibility. Call Pauli Research International 776-0400 UIL, sportswriters team up while pondering rules change DENISON (AP) — Texas sports writers and the University Inters cholastic League have not seen eye to eye on several occasions, but the UIL made a rare request recently when it asked the Texas Sports Writ ers Association for help. Two hotly discussed changes are on the drawing board, and the UIL is seeking the help of Texas’ sports writers in gauging the sentiment of football fans across the state. One of the changes would result in all six state championship football games being played in Austin over one weekend. The other would involve some type of overtime to decide tie games instead of the present method of us ing penetrations, first downs and to tal yards. A poll of superintendents and athletic directors in the Denison area indicates most of them oppose the changes. The nearby states of Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, Kansas and Missouri play their state championship games at one site. Oklahoma plays its games over two weeks. The others play on a Fri day and Saturday. The format has been successful in each state and has been responsible for spectacular crowds. The biggest complaint about host ing all of the Texas title games in one site concerns geography and economics. “It doesn’t seem right to send two teams from North Texas to Austin for a state championship game,” Denison athletic director Marty Cris well said. However, it’s rare that two schools from the same area meet in the Fi nals because of the way teams are bracketed by regions. Many sports writers love the idea of playing all the games at one site because of the opportunities it pro vides. Such an event would bring college and high school coaches to Austin from all over the state. This type of event also would be a special treat for the football fan. Few gridiron fans in the big cities have ever seen six-man football. “I think it would be a wonderful idea,” said Sherman head football coach John Outlaw. “This sort of thing can really create some excite ment. “We did it in Arkansas, and it was a very successful thing.” Pottsboro head football coach Bo Jones said, “I have real mixed emo tions. It would be good for the view ers, but ... I sort of think it should be left up to the two schools involved.” Bells head football coach Monte Pritchett said: “I wouldn’t mind it as a coach, but it can be a negative. I coached in Kansas, and they do it successfully. “Still, if I was involved, I probably would rather have a say in where I played.” Denison superintendent cobs agrees with his coach. “It’s not pro ball. It’s higl kids playing a game,” Jacobssai| However, Outlaw is foracli; His team tied Fort Worth Tii] Tech in the playoffs last Novetj and was eliminated because I teams also were tied in penetraj and Trimble Tech had more] downs. “I’m definitely in favor ofJ time,” Outlaw said. “TheyplajJ time in basketball and extraim in baseball. Why not football?" Bonham’s Clark said he i support overtime for districtj and playoff games, but not for i district games. “We almost had a championship game here in Denison this year with Lindsay and Fannindel. They wanted to play here if they met in the championship game. “Would it be fair to make two teams like this play in Austin?” Bonham head coach Loy Dean Clark opposes the idea. “The two people involved in the game should determine the site. Would it be fair if we played a team near Austin for the championship?” There were more positive reac tions to the possibilities of changing the methods of determining the win ner in playoff games that end in ties. Criswell would like things left the way they are. Pottsboro’s Jones also dis current rule. “I’m all for overtime," “You’ve got to make it fair. Siij death may be the way to | there’s a lot of good ideas. “I’m totally against first and total yardage deciding thtl come of a game.” C.L. Chambless, superinterJ at Pottsboro, said he also thinl time for a change. “They need to do away Hips, and there’s always the t of the officials messing upi counting penetrations and; downs. When you go home I night, you need to know whovj lost,” Chambless said. “I think 48 minutes is enough time to decide a contest,” he said. “High school kids don’t need to play any longer. We still have the two- point play, and I personally like the present system.” Former Texas A&M head Emory Bellard, now head coatll Spring Westfield, missed the offs this past season because mistake by the referees. Bellard’s team tied for place in District 15-5A, but rai gated to third place because ofa| eree’s mistake — later confiraiKl league officials — that cost Wesll a penetration. Some coaches say they’d like; time in the state champii game, but nothing else. Former Steelers lead Hall of Fame inductees CANTON, Ohio (AP) — Art Shell of Oakland, Willie Wood of Green Bay and Pittsburgh teammates Terry Bradshaw and Mel Blount, key players for three of the game’s most successful teams, were named to the Pro Football Hall of Fame on Tuesday. “You’ve got representatives of the best teams of the ’60s and ’70s,” Bradshaw said. “It speaks well for what athletes are taught. Athletes are told to win and they are judged on how many games they win. It’s not personal accomplishments or statistics that matter most. America loves winners.” Wood spent 12 seasons as a de fensive back with the Packers, who won five NFL titles and the first two Super Bowls, in 1967 and 1968. “I was selected as a finalist a cou ple of years ago, but I wasn’t chosen then,” Wood said. “I started think ing that so many Green Bay Packers had gone in, maybe they might have used up their quota.” Shell played offensive tackle for the Raiders from 1968-1982 and participated in eight AFL or AFC ti tle games and two Super Bowls. He remembered that he had walked through the Hall of Fame a decade ago prior to a Raiders exhibi tion game at Canton. “I had no idea I’d ever be in there,” he said. “You never think in terms like that. I was in awe walking through that building and reading about the people enshrined. It is hal lowed ground. To walk through it was enough, but to be included in it is almost too much to believe.” Bradshaw and Blount were both inducted in their first year of eligibil ity. Blount, a cornerback, and Bradshaw, a quarterback, each spent their 14 professional seasons with the Steelers, helping the club to an unprecedented four Super Bowl championships. “This is a particularly good feel ing because Terry and I came in to gether, we retired together and now we go into the Hall of Fame to gether,” sai Blount, 40, the director of player relations for the NFL. Not selected from among the seven finalists were Bob Griese, quarterback of the Miami Dolphins; Ted Hendricks, a linebacker who played for the Baltimore Colts, Pack ers and Raiders; and defensive tackle Henry Jordan of the Packers. Shell, Wood, Blount and Bradshaw will be enshrined Aug. 5. Super Bowl gives NBC big ratings fol. 88 N . BONN, \ Ls Wednes Vompanies ; L invest ig; German fir pected chen r Some p< Chancellor ■bungling W to the allegt Lat compa rocket facto Customs [and homes [had been vi [byan plant, [man lor th [burg. Fla wil WASHD Imile-long d [ment olfici; I to a buried [for a stret [border to si I Southern C But the ] I too little to< Jvocates bu [border and [immigrant Associate |cis A. Keat I the idea las age drug I loads of d NEW YORK (AP) — NBC's nal national ratings for the Sup Bowl were up 4 percent overt year’s game on ABC and cm exceed the 120 million ipated viewership, new spokesman Doug Kelly saidTut day. The San Francisco 49ers’29- victory Sunday oyer CinciuiE drew a rating of 43.5 and a share, compared with 41.9an(l last year for Washington agaii Denver. The rating represents the pc centage of TV’s in the mart while the share reflects the pc centage of TV’s on at the time. NBC’s postgame show had 32.5 rating and 49 share, co pared with 25.5 and 401ast)ti up 27 percent, Kelly said, mat it obvious that “people stu around for the end since in decided in the final 34 seconds “We’re very pleased with l ratings,” he said. The most-watched Super B( was NBC’s 1986 game betwB Chicago and New England, set by an estimated 127 millionvit ers. TANK ftPNAMAUA* by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds / Tf?A<3ICAU-Y, YOU ]/ It? e-ViiTeNcefdAt ASOUT TH6 EFFECT OF TAU4lk\G> ABOUT OM OTHERS? ? near San D The plar Immigrate Service was Attorney G Keating sai The ditc to a buried and wide smugglers cars across mile stretcl Ysidro, Cal The ass who is leav the Bush a< sert stretcl east of Sat smuggling “This is AS drt By Deni STAFF WF Serving could bee Texas if a A&M’s Ce and Educa The pr Texas Sta ways and to fund a p other estal to encoun nated driv Texas \ states to r gram, and for coor throughor grant has A&M, Dei for the C< dent A&:M “We ha grant yet, dse hap] should ki I SCOTT & WHITE 'CLINIC, COLLEGE STATION 1600 University Drive East Audiology Richard L. Riess, Ph D. Cardiology Dr. J. James Rohack Dermatology Dr. David D. Barton General Surgery Dr. Frank R. Arko Dr. Dirk L. Boysen Internal Medicine Dr. Valeric Chatham Dr. Alton Graham Dr. David Hackethorn Dr. Michael R. 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