ie Battalion SPORTS 7 ednesday, October 3,1990 Sports Editor Nadja Sabawala 845-2688 NT inference race for Cotton Bowl toughens up for Ags Douglas Pits -Jj IJtrike up the and, its time to start narching to Dallas or the Mobil Cotton owl and a return to [lory for the Texas t&M football team. While A&M’s oss last weekend to ouisiana State filed any hopes of a lational championship, there’s still the natter of returning to capture the iouthwest Conference title for the first ime since 1987. Texas Tech comes to town this week- nd and the Aggies should have no noblem getting psyched up for this one. First and foremost, A&M needs a vic- ory to get back on the winning track and leaded back up the charts. Secondly, the Aggies will be looking to venge last year’s 27-24 last minute loss othe Red Raiders in Lubbock. There’s been plenty of talk about the fggies not being as good as they look on »aper because they haven’t played any- me tough and were beaten by the Tigers -ateam that lost to Southeastern Con- erence lowlife — Vanderbilt. But by no means is that any reason to end off any red flares and start worry- ng about the competency of this team. t&M lost to a talented and a very emo- ionally charged LSU team that was hell- lenton proving their worth in front of a lome crowd. That game is gone and it’s time to for get about the opportunity lost until next ear, when the Bayou Bengals return to iggieland. Tech, although 1-3 and 0-2 in confer- nce play, always seems to play its best gainst the Aggies and this year should le no different. Its 1-3 record is somewhat deceptive, :onsidering the Red Raiders perfor- nance this year. Tech lost a hard fought game at Ohio itateon a fourth quarter punt return for touchdown. They piled up 476 yards igainst Houston in a 51-35 loss and See Pils/Page 8 Slocum: QBs or not QBs By RICHARD TIJERINA Of The Battalion Staff Texas A&M freshman quarterback Steve Emerson will be redshirted for the 1990 season and Jeff Granger could follow, head football coach R.C. Slocum said Tuesday. The two freshmen recruits have not played this season. Slocum said Emerson, a 6-2, 195 quarterback from Aldine MacAr- thur, would “definitely redshirt,” but that it was too soon to tell if the 6-4, 193-pound Granger also would redshirt. “Emerson will definitely redshirt, but it’s still up in the air about what we’ll do with Granger,” Slocum said at his weekly press conference. “You’d like to redshirt him as well.” Granger and Emerson were the only quarterbacks the Aggies signed in their 1990 recruiting class, which was ranked in the top five classes in the nation. Granger of Orangefield was considered the state’s No. 2 quarterback prospect behind Huntsville’s Steve Clements, who signed with Texas. But Slocum’s comments Tuesday on A&M quarterbacks weren’t limited to Emer son and Granger. He also discussed starter Lance Pavlas’ direction of the offense —“or lack thereof — in last Saturday’s 17-8 loss to Louisiana State. Pavlas, who is the No. 2-rated quar- See QBs/Page 8 Battalion file photo by F. Joe Quarterback Lance Pavlas must shake last weekend’s three-interception game from his mind while preparing for Texas Tech, R.C. Slocum says. Former Heisman Trophy winner teamless Oilers place RB Rozier on waivers HOUSTON (AP) — Running back Mike Rozier, a Pro Bowl selection in 1987 and 1988 but more recently a seldom-used sub stitute in the Houston Oilers’ run-and- shoot offense, was waived Tuesday. Rozier, who led the Oilers in rushing four straight years, had 10 carries for 42 yards and no touchdowns in Houston’s four games this season and he caught 5 passes for 46 yards. General Manager Mike Holovak failed in attempts to trade Rozier. “If you look back at my quotes from training camp, I said at the time that in this offense we really only needed two backs,” Holovak said. “There’s just not enough work to go around for three.” Rozier was a contract holdout at the start of the 1989 season and then missed the early part of the season with a knee injury. He appeared in 12 games and finished with 301 rushing yards on 88 carries, the lowest totals of his NFL career. Rozier’s playing time this season dropped off even more when new Coach Jack Pardee installed the one-back run-and- shoot offense. The Oilers started training camp with four veterans battling for the starting S- back spot, which places a high premium on blocking. Alonzo Highsmith was the projected starter but he was slowed in camp by inju ries and eventually traded to the Dallas Cowboys. Lorenzo White earned the start ing spot with Allen Pinkett in reserve. White leads the Oilers in rushing with 80 yards on 34 carries. Rozier signed a one-year contract with the Oilers for $600,000, making him an ex pensive reserve. “In no way were finances a consideration in this decision,” Holovak said. “The bot tom line is we don’t go three deep at any po sition on the ball club. Why should we be three deep at running back. We don’t need a third running back who doesn’t play spe cial teams.” The Oilers also waived quarterback Don McPherson, leaving two vacancies on the roster. Former NBA commissioner O’Brien buried SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP) —Larry O’Brien, who served as commissioner of the NBA and engineered John F. Ken- ...TV.*-] + ' li-h* k+K where he learned how to get out the vote. “How appropriate that this funeral is celebrated in the city of his birth in this, the church of his baptism, in the com pany of friends who rejoiced in his achievements and who, to the end, proudly claimed him as their own,” the Most Rev. Joseph Maguire, Roman Catholic bishop of Springfield, said in his homily. The son of an immigrant saloon keeper and Democratic party activist, O’Brien became the confidant of presi dents. And as Lyndon Johnson’s con gressional liaison, he engineered passage of such wide-ranging social legislation as the Peace Corps, Medicare and the model cities program. O’Brien died Thursday of cancer in New York, He was 73. Among the hundreds of people at St. Michael’s Cathedral were Ron Brown, chairman of the Democratic National Committee; NBA commissioner David Stern; Gov. Michael Dukakis; Irish Con sul General Liam Canniffe, and Joseph Califano, who was Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare in the Johnson Administration. Honorary pallbearers included U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy and his nephew, U.S. Rep. Joseph Ken nedy II. “He was really a member of the fam ily,” Senator Kennedy said. “He shared the triumphs and many of the sad nesses.” “His great contribution was to always make sure ordinary people were in volved in the election process,” Rep. Kennedy said, “He didn’t pay so much attention to the media. He was a great believer in neighborhood organization and ordinary people. And that kind of political campaign will be missed.” O’Brien left politics in 1972 for Wall Street, then was named NBA commis sioner in 1975, when free agency and big money were reshaping pro sports. r 16 0! jocial NUCLEAR CAREER OPPORTUNfllES The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission is seeking college graduates to assist in licensing, regulating and researching nuclear facilities and materials. Qualified candidates will possess a B.S. in engineering, science, or related degree, and have knowledge of operations of nuclear industry. Positions at our Bethesda, Maryland Headquarter Offices include the following areas of concentration: Mechanical, Nuclear, Electrical, Chemical, Civil/Environmental, Material/Metallurgical, and Geotechnical Engineering; Radiological Waste; Hydrogeology; and Health Physics. Regional Office positions exist in the areas of: Health Physics, Resident Inspection, Resident Inspector (ME, NE, EE). ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWS October 9, 1990 To arrange a convenient interview time, sign up at your Placement Office. Or, for Regional Office positions, apply directly to the Personnel Officer at the Regional Office(s) of your choice. Send Federal application form (SF-171) or resume with salary requirements to: The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission REGION I: 475 Allendale Road, King of Prussia, PA 19406 REGION II: 101 Marietta Street, Suite 2900, Atlanta, GA 30323 REGION III: 799 Roosevelt Road, Glen Ellyn, IL 60137 REGION IV: 611 Ryan Plaza Drive, Suite 1000, Arlington, TX 76011 REGION V: 1450 Maria Lane, Suite 210, Walnut Creek, CA 94596. For Headquarters positions, apply to: REG^ A ♦ jS^griculture c areer E ♦ . ♦ xposition "Capitalize on your career" Oct. 4'Career Fair Biochemistry Building 9am'4pm Over 50 companies represented 4 it^ v COMPANIES REGISTERED FOR ACE 1990 September 26,1990 Agricultural Workers Mutual Auto Insurance Company American Cyanamid American Institute of Real Estate Appraisers /Society of Real Estate Appraisers Barefoot Grass Lawn Service Caprock Industries, Inc. Cargill, Inc.- CMD Cargill, Inc. - Nutrena Feeds ChemLawn Services Corporation Ciba-Geigy Corporation Collingwood Grain Inc. Communicating for Agriculture Deere & Company Dekalb Swine Breeders Design Foods Dow Elanco Dupont Earth Tone Development Environmental Care, Inc. Excel Corporation Green Teams, Inc. IBP, Inc. International Agricultural Exchange Las Colinas Landscapes Lone Star Growers Maintain Incorporated Mallscapes Mars MSD AGVET National Park Service, Big Thicket National Preserve Northrup King Pfizer Plantation Foods, Inc. Purina Mills, Inc. Sandoz Crop Protection Corporation San Jose Cattle Co. Sara Lee Sausage/Jimmy Dean Smith Realty Consultants Society of Texas A&M Real Estate Professionals Texas Agricultural Extension Service Texas Chapter, American Society of Farm Managers and Rural Appraisers Texas Parks & Wildlife Texas Society of Professional Land Managers The Spencer Company Touch of Green, Inc. Trees, Inc. Tri-Hill Enterprises Tropical Plant Rentals, Inc. - Houston Division USD A, Agricultural Marketing Service, Poultry Grading Branch Vocational Agriculture Teachers Association of Texas