4 201 Live Oak College Station, TX 77840 Behind La Quinta 696-3411 TEXAS HALL OF FAME Your #1 Live Country Night Spot! Thurs. Night - Any single shot bar drink, longneck, or margarita $ 1.00. Music by Special F/X Fri. Night - -25 Bar Drinks & Draft Beer. Music by Jonny Lyons & the Country New Notes Sat. Night - Any single shot bar drink, longneck or margarita $1.00. Music by Cookin College & Faculty I.D. Discount 822-2222 by'j'ryv'j?' 2309 FM 2818 South S N S <: S I *222222222222221 0NFIRE UDDY When your hardworking BONFIRE BUDDY comes home from cut site or off stack, he’ll be mighty hungry for a DoubleDave’s Great Pizza. So buy him a Bonfire Buddy Gift Certificate. He can use it whenever he needs it. DoubleDave’s Pizza . Chosen “Best Pizza in Aggieland 2 years running by the Battalion staff.” 326 Geo. 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Texas Ave. on Hwy. 21 in Bryan 1 i H HWY. 21 s i 8 HWY. 1M l HWY. 21 ■ 91KH4 WORTH TEXAS AYI * OOVM rj t E s l OLDKUKTtM BO. s SUNDAY SPECIAL UNLIMITED RIDES! $ 8 PFP PERSON Ride all the rides as many times as you like on Sunday, October 14th Proceeds Benefit Brazos Valley Masonic Library and Museum Association J Page 10 The Battalion Thursday, October 11, Horned Frogs’ pummeling of Razorbacks an incredible feat times FORT WORTH (AP) — It’s not deja vu all over again for Frog foot ball. It’s worse. “Incredible,” says Jim Wacker, Texas Christian’s delightfully neu rotic coach. In fact, he said it 17 tii Tuesday while describing last weekend’s 54- 26 upset of 2 1 st-ranked Arkansas. Maybe the only two things that weren’t “incredible” were the Horned Frog offense and defense. They were “fantastic” and “unbe lievable.” And the largest Frog Club crowd of the year loved it. They roared over phony congratulatory notes from Richard Nixon, Ronald Rea gan and George Bush and cheered the discovery of a new species of Horned Frog. It is something called “Kickus Buttus.” Wacker never met a superlative he didn’t embrace, but what’s really incredible is that he may be right. The Wonder Frogs just might be back. For the first time since the 8-3 Bluebonnet Bowl season of 1984, TCU is off to a 4-1 start, winning four in a row after a season-opening loss to Washington State. It was also in 1984 that TCU last beat Arkansas, a 32-31 thriller. The Frogs are 2-0 in Southwest Conference play, which hasn’t hap pened since 1958 when they wound up in the Cotton Bowl. And as Wacker says, the ambush in the Ozarks Saturday night was no fluke. “It was one of those games where it all came together,” he said. “But never in my wildest dreams did I think it would come together like that. We got the ball 10 times. We scored five touchdowns and four field goals and had to punt only once. “That’s incredible.” Equally remarkable, he said, was a defense that blocked a punt for a touchdown, recovered a fumble, in tercepted two passes and staged a goal fine stand just before halftime. “That was the biggest play of the lid. “Fir game,” Wacker sakf. “First and goal on the 2, and to be able to hold them four plays and not let them in, that’s incredible.” Wacker’s eyes almost glazed over when he spoke of the post-midnight reception after the flight home. “I can not tell you how much it meant to the players when they saw that crowd at the airport, 2,000 strong,” Wacker said. “That was really special.” And he could not camouflage his enthusiasm when he spoke of quar terback Leon Clay, who has passed for 11 touchdowns and run for four while directing three late come- from-behind victories. “He’s been on an unbelievable roll, and it’s the triggerman who has to make things happen, whether it’s the Cowboys or junior high or what ever. If the quarterback has an off day, you’re in trouble. And everyone has off days, even Joe Montana. “When Clay has an off day we'rt going to have to claw, sweat and fig ht ” Tempering his euphoriajustakit Wacker pointed out that with all ttiii early success, “Now is when the pro sure builds. If we don’t get a grej effort every week, anybody can beai “We’ve got to keep our headoui of the clouds and our feet on ikt ground." The Frogs entertain SWC oppo nent Rice in a regionally televised game Saturday, and Wacker said tke Owls, "with one of the best quai terbacks in the country,” are tough. “This is by far the best tear, they’ve had in 25 years,” he insisted Pointing out that TCU's perfor mance at Little Rock “was one of those rare moments...when we had about 60 guys that exploded ai once,” Wacker said the Frogs art primed for an upset by the Owls. “It’s scary coming off onelikethis. because you can nave a letdowi ii£l llliliiliililllili SWC coaches' views of proposal From Staff and Wire Reports Most Southwest Conference coaches say the new proposal that may keep some high school students from playing sports in the league is a step to ward keeping academics ahead of athletics. However, some found stan dardized tests, used in deter mining eligibility, unfair and prescribed broader academic performance standards. At Texas A&M, head foot ball coach R.C. Slocum said the rule will have no bearing on how the University’s athletics are run. “The presi dents’ decision will not affect us here at A&M, be cause we were ac tually operating under those guidelines alrea dy,” Slocum said. “I don’t see it having a big af fect on us other than the other people we play in this league will all have to fulfill the same rules.” SWC presi dents finalized Spike Dykes a proposal this week that would eliminate par tial qualifiers from ever com peting in athletics at an SWC school. The new rule requires re cruits and walk-ons to score at least 700 on the SAT or 18 on the ACT entrance exams and to have at least a 2.0 high school grade point average in core classes. Junior college players who were partial qualifiers from high school may not be able to transfer to a SWC school de pending on the outcome of a junior college option being studied. The proposal must first stand up to the scrutiny of league lawyers, but SWC Com missioner Fred Jacoby said he is certain the pol icy will be in place by August 1991. Current policy requires student- athletes who do not meet both standards to sit out of competi tion during their first year, but al lows students three years of athletic eligibility if their grades im prove. Baylor coach Grant Teaff said he thought the ruling wouldn’t make a big differ ence in the league presidents’ ruling and that it should eliminate some athletes who may not be ready to step into a big university like A&M. “I really think it’s a step in a positive direction,” Slocum said. “I think for too long ath letes and univer sities have been abused by bring ing in a guy who is not qualified to be at a particular school. “You abuse the university by bringing a guy in and with implied F ressure on the acuity and coaches to do whatever to keep that person in school and keep him eligible when that person should not have been at that school to start Jim Wacker background, not intelligence.” Texas Christian coach Jim Wacker said admissions are ra cially biased. He and other coaches recommend using an alternate grading system that balances a student’s GPA with his performance on entrance tests. Despite coaches’ support for ensuring a player can make the grades, most said partial qual ifiers should be given another chance to prove themselves acade mically. “To say you can never play in this conference? That’s pretty se vere isn’t it?” Texas Tech coach Spike Dykes said. “1 thought this with without some type of ju nior college or prepatory cour- because most of the borderline students have been eliminated by Proposition 42’s impending restrictions next year. That rule bars scholarships to par tial qualifiers. Slocum said he supports the But Jack Pardee, coach at University of Houston for three years before moving to the Houston Oilers this year, saw problems with the SWC’s proposal. “When you’re recruiting a lot of kids, you don’t know they’re Prop 48 (partial qual ifiers) because they haven’t taken their tests yet,” he said. “In many cases, being a Prop 48 athlete is because of whole deal was for kids and it looks like to me like that’s the last thing ever considered.” Dykes said he has had seve ral players on his teams that were admitted into Tech as partial qualifiers and went on to graduate and become suc cessful professionals. “I’m concerned that we in the conference give youngsters who are Proposition 48, who don’t qualify, an opportunity to go to a conference school with the junior college (op tion),” Teaff said. McWilliams uses speakers to motivate football team to drop negative thoughts AUSTIN (AP) — On Wednesday night before Texas played Penn State, motivational speaker Lewis Timber- lake told the Longhorns to first believe they could win. Though Timberlake takes no credit for Texas’ 17-13 victory, Longhorn football coach David McWilliams wouldn’t bet against it. He has used a procession of speakers such as Timberlake to lift a football team whose spirits might have sunk along with its record the last two seasons. Timberlake, 58, is one of several McWilliams has en trusted with helping the team believe in itself. Others include Tena Bradley, a 32-year-old Oklaho man who formed Tena Bradley Inner Prizes a year ago, and Glebe McCleary, a Vietnam war veteran who sur vived 32 operations and lost an arm and an eye when he jumped on a grenade in a foxhole to save his friends. “He came in his Marine-dress uniform and gave as good a talk as I’ve heard,” McWilliams said. Another is professional basketball star A.C. Green, who speaks on behalf of Athletes In Action. Bradley meets individually with Longhorn players and coaches to reinforce positive self-images. McWilliams said: “I’m always looking for speakers. Nebraska’s been doing this for years.” SMU women’ coach retires DALLAS (AP) — Southern Methodist women’s basketball coach Welton Brown announced his retirement effective after tht season. Brown, 45, said he is needed more at home since his fathers death earlier this year. He has a 153-214 record in H years, SMU Athletic Director Forrest Gregg said a replacement seatdt di will begin immediately. coffeehouse IT a monumental event ! 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