i 120, 1990 riday, April 20,1990 are aey )iled a I?.; n and is 5-J 148th in tl|( tings, O’Do. on of Teel 5, 6-2, 6.4 ayed in ntinued in. the NCAA onth is not asp. s a 4-3 con. 1 a winning is last seven Red Raider '• 2 single 1 ; >tt Phillips or the team with a 15.j tonference, 'egular sea. opponents ositives this lovan play, ips coming gles,” Kent it the tour- \&M(Tech the winner natch. The 1 position mdefeated list 4 lands dur- Tuesday cted after Hogs’ Foster >pts for bucks, inters draft GRAND PRAIRIE (AP) — Many f those familiar with Barry Foster’s amity understand completely why te is anxious to leave Arkansas and tart hauling home those NFL pay- hecks. Foster, a two-year starter for the lazorbacks and a former star at hincanville High School, has de- ided not to return for his senior ear and will be up for grabs in the 4FL draft, scheduled Sunday and donday. Projected by some as a late sec- md-round pick, Foster says any igning bonus and salary he receives vill go to help his struggling family. Foster’s mother is a single parent, dio has been unable to work since 986, and has had neck and back urgeries in that time. She is trying 0 raise Foster’s twin sisters, Yulena md Selena, on $376 monthly in fed- :ral assistance. “My children don’t go hungry,” Mrs. Foster said. “But since I got lurt, I can’t work. We don’t want the TOrld. We just want a decent living.” "If Barry makes it in the pros, I old him he doesn’t have to give my nything. That makes him mad. He ivants to help us.” Arkansas coach Jack Crowe, who eplaced Ken Hatfield three months igo, said he initially had a poor time ommunicating with Foster after the tandout fullback announced he would be leaving. But Crowe said he now believes the Razorbacks should ncourage underclassmen to enter he draft if they are projected as arly draft picks. “People ask me if I am upset that Jarry is turning pro,” Crowe said. “I m not. 1 told him that if he can make the money as a pro, then you need to take it.” Last year’s second-round draft hoices averaged $165,000 in sala- ies. The average signing bonus was (255,000, with a $43,000 addition or making the team’s roster. The Battalion Page 9 IRS: Everything coming up Roses; ex-manager planning to plead guilty CINCINNATI (AP) — Pete Rose has agreed to plead guilty to failing to report income in exchange for avoiding harsher felony charges as part of an agreement with federal prosecutors to be announced Friday, a source told The Associated Press today. There was no deal on a possible jail sentence for the former Cincin nati Reds manager, who was ban ished from baseball last summer for gambling. Rose, however, would have to re pay several hundred thousand dol lars in back taxes as part of the agreement, the AP learned. Rose is expected to appear Friday morning before U.S. District Judge S. Arthur Spiegel, who can either ac cept or reject the arrangement. “There’s been some documents filed. They’ve been sealed. Any com ments I could make would be inap propriate,” Assistant U.S. Attorney William Hunt said. “I would antic ipate that they will be unsealed to morrow.” The charge of failing to report in come will be brought against Rose in the form of an information, which is filed by a federal prosecutor rather than through a grand jury, the source said. A federal grand jury in Cincinnati began investigating Rose’s taxes last May. It wrapped up its investigation earlier this year and Rose entered the agreement with prosecutors, al lowing him to avoid indictment, the source said. d by Rod presideni Freak baseball accident not so uncommon ires t win AP) - 112 of (turner Dallas th seed e play- y over third- pening scored i third a com- larper erupts, shoot- >eriod. to the •i with ouar- icmrd lied to If. An- with a e the 35-34 ithout ie Bo- d his t over Dell raight jrnets n had rd 756 "exas »Ml) TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — When a baseball struck a 10-year-old boy in the chest and killed him dur ing a Little League game last month, league offi cials claimed it was only the second such death in 40 years. But a 1986 federal study documented nearly two dozen cases in which children died after be ing hit in the chest by baseballs. “Parents should be aware of that danger, and they should take some precautions,” said Albert King, the dean of bioengineering at Wayne State University who headed the study by the U.S Product Safety Commission. “Nobody should be getting hurt that badly playing baseball. It’s a non-violent, non-contact sport.” William Ryan Wojick was struck in the chest by a pitch as he batted during a game here March 18. The impact of the ball stopped his heart and he died at a hospital 45 minutes later. Little League officials in Williamsport, Pa., ac knowledged they read the report evaluating 23 cases like Wojick’s soon after it was published. But they concluded the incidents were too rare to justify requiring child pitchers and batters to wear chest protectors as the study panel recom mended. Officials rechecked their records this week and now say Wojick was the third Little Leaguer in 30 years who died after being hit in the chest with a ball. “These were isolated incidents —freak things. To take drastic measures seems inappropriate,” said Steve Keener, national spokesman for Little League baseball. After he was told about the study, Wojicks’s fa ther criticized Little League officials for not fol lowing the panel’s advice. “If they nad information that children should wear chest protection and did nothing about it, then I’m frustrated,” Jeffrey Wojick said. “It’s not going to bring my son back. But I’m Willing to take it to the Little League to help make the game safe for other kids.” But King said the Little League and many par ents resist requiring chest protection for pitchers and batters because they don’t think baseball is dangerous. “Little League should acknowledge this situa tion and do something to help prevent it because it is preventable,” he said. Brewers’ bats sing in 11-0 rout over Texas Sports Focus: NFL Personalities Bum’s Back ... Coach returns to Oilers in new capacity FULSHEAR (AP) — Direc tions to a man’s place of business can often offer insights into his personality. Behind a small forest of oaks you’ll find Bum Phillips, the for mer coach of the Houston Oilers and New Orleans Saints and now one of the more famous ranchers in Fort Bend County. Instead of herding helmeted behemoths through a football practice, Phillips is yelling at a young cattle dog named Andy and coaxing 20-odd head of cattle into a covered arena. Phillips is one of the best-liked figures in Houston sports history, but there’s little doubt he’s from the country and doesn’t care to be defined in any other terms. “I started out in ranching and I’m going to end up the same way,” he said. Phillips is as much at home on winding country roads, creaky old bridges, cattle pens and cut ting horses as he was straddling the sidelines in the Astrodome and Superdome. But Phillips won’t be home on the ranch on Sundays this fall. He’ll be back in the Astrodome and other NFL stadiums as a color analyst for the Oilers’ broadcast network on KTRH- AM. Phillips also will accept a lim ited number of public appear ances and speaking engagements on behalf of the Oilers. It will be Phillips’ first associa tion with the NFL since he retired from the Saints in 1985, saying “I’m just loading up the wagon and not worrying about which mule it’s hitched to.” He hasn’t regretted riding away. “When I walked away from football I forgot it at that instant,” Phillips said. “Coaching does that to you. You get your butt beat one week and you’ve got to forget reaching does that to you. You get your butt beat one week and you’ve got to forget it. I guess I was ready to get out because I truly didn’t miss it.” — Bum Phillips, Former Oiler’s coach. it and play the next week. “Evidently, I learned that les son well. I guess I was ready to get out because I truly didn’t miss it. I got right into the cattle busi ness and I’ve been thinking about that ever since.” So why return now, even to the radio booth? Because, after the horses have been fed and watered and he’s driving home in his pickup truck late at night. Bum has memories. He remembers returning to the Astrodome to 50,000 crazed “Luv Ya Blue” fans after losing the AFC championship game to Pittsburgh in 1979. “That was a great feeling to have everyone in town, all on the same page, everybody pulling in the same direction,” Phillips said. “I’d like to see that get started again.” He shook his head and spit to bacco on the ground. “You expect to see 50,000 fans at a major championship game, not coming out and to see a team that just got the hell beat out of it.” That was when Bum, speaking through teary eyes, told the fans “This year we knocked on the door, next year we’ll kick the SOB down.” But the Oilers never kicked down the door to the Super Bowl, and Phillips left under less than harmonious circumstances. It has taken 10 years and the departure of Ladd Herzeg as Oil ers general manager to get Bum back in the Astrodome. “I wasn’t trying to hide out; I just wasn’t interested in the peo ple who were running it at the time,” Phillips said. “I didn’t have any ax to grind. I was just happy doing my thing.” Even last season after Herzeg’s departure, Phillips was conspicu ously absent from a reunion of Oilers players at a home game. “I can’t put it in words, but it just didn’t feel right to be there,” Phillips said. “It was like there was still a division there. Now it’s different.” Oilers owner Bud Adams is glad to have Phillips associated with the Oilers once again. “People on the street thought there was animosity between us, but that was never the case,” Ad ams said. “There are always going to be personnel changes. That’s just a part of the game. “We thought he’d be a positive addition to the broadcast team. He’ll add charisma.” Oilers Executive Vice Presi dent Mike McClure, who left the Oilers in 1981 and returned prior to last season, wanted to bring Phillips back into the fold. “I just thought it was the ap propriate thing to do. He was such a big part of a successful Oiler era,” McClure said. Fans likely will expect to hear the homey style that made Phil lips among the most quotable coaches. Phillips is eager to give the ra dio booth a try, out he won’t force it. “If it gets to the point I don’t want to do it any more or they de cide I’m not what they want, they don’t owe me a damn thing,” Phillips said. ARLINGTON (AP) —Chris Bosio pitched a four-hitter for the Ameri can League’s first complete game of 1990, and Milwaukee took batting practice against the opposing pitch ers for the third time this week as the Brewers trounced Texas 11-0 Thursday night. On Wednesday, the Brewers de feated the Rangers 11-6. At Fenway Park on Monday, Milwaukee routed Boston 18-0. In its last four games, the Brewers have scored 42 runs. Greg Vaughn and B.J. Surhoff each homered for the Rangers on Thursday off Bobby Witt (0-2). Bosio, who led the Brewers with 15 wins last season, struck out five and walked one. There have been four complete games in the National League this season. Bosio (1-0) retired the first nine batters before Gary Pettis and Rafael Palmeiro singled in the fourth. After Julio Franco popped out, Bosio grabbed Ruben Sierra’s hard comebacker and turned it into a double play. Milwaukee took a 2-0 lead in the first inning on a walk to Billy Bates, Surhoff s double, and Robin Yount’s RBI single. The second run scored when Dave Parker grounded into a double play. Vaughn hit his first homer of the season, a 430-foot shot to center field, to give Milwaukee a 3-0 lead in the second. Yount’s leadoff triple and Par ker’s sacrifice fly put the Brewers ahead 4-0 in the third inning and Surhoff hit a solo homer in the fifth. The Brewers got three runs in the sixth inning off reliever Brian Boha- non with the help of an error by Pet tis in center field. After singles by Rob Deer and Ed gar Diaz, Bates singled to center where Pettis slipped and let the ball roll past him. Deer and Diaz scored with Bates taking third. Surhoff scored Bates with a sacrifice fly. Milwaukee made it 10-0 in the seventh in reliever Ramon Manon’s major- league debut on an RBI groundout by Diaz and Charlie O’Brien’s run-scoring single. Parker drove in the Brewers’ final run with a run-scoring double in the eighth. i ‘ GHgaaaaaBP **Th« Center lor all your Medical naoda" 200 W 26th • Cornet ot 26th A Bryan Streets Bryan. Texas 77803 822-3575 SPRING 20% OFF SALE on SPORTS NUTRITION FOR SERIOUS ATHLETES ONLY! 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