Pi! I AMES/m Dund in pa College, of Studen ollege in! his poetn icreanessJ houghts to t are good, [ nple, andti! ^pe > to sho'' ,; nity to sell ive alter 1 ) 2 ; allery'sv® en, fo r ^ taff avails it there f able to ad own he\ of our (f staff at* ' art, it p ri art dent 011 ca is 0,,e f . irsage 1 ' gnosed) rrently b£ mpensa lk mation’ >, INC. Sports Tuesday, December 1,1992 The Battalion Page 5 Victory-greedy ADs are ruining college football here are many who would like to see college football as we know it done away with. It's already an infor mal minor league feeder system of talent for the NFL, so why not go ahead and make it official? The answer to that question, like every other one the NCAA ad dresses, will come about only when it can be determined how much money can be made out of the deal. But re cent events in the college coaching ranks have proved that at least a few athletic directors around the country think that they are now general man agers. New head football coaches have been named or will be named in the near future at Arkansas, Auburn, Bay- 1 lor, Colorado State, Pittsburgh, Tem ple and Tennessee. In case you're counting, that's only two coaching changes less than the NFL had throughout all of the most recent off season. And this off-season is just be ginning, so the number of coaching changes left is anyone's guess. More disturbing than just the amount of turnover in the NCAA is the fact that of the six recent changes, only the ones at Baylor, Pitt and Tem ple do not involve questionable cir cumstances. Joe Kines was removed from the picture in Arkansas Sunday, just two days after his players carried him off of the field following the Razorbacks' 30-6 humiliation of Louisiana State. Colorado State bid Earle Bruce a not- so-fond adieu last week, even though he has been the only coach in recent history to lead the Rams to a bowl game. Johnny Majors had his contract bought out at Tennessee despite years of Top 10-caliber football and a recent comeback from life-threatening heart surgery. And Pat Dye completed the inevitable just before Thanksgiving, resigning at Auburn with the dark cloud of an NCAA investigation hang ing over his head, as well as his own set of physical problems. The message the respective athletic directors at Arkansas, CSU and Ten nessee have sent is obvious - a head coach with character and loyalty See Norwood/ Page 6 DON NORWOOD Columnist Student tickets for Cotton Bowl go on sale Wednesday FROM STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS Tickets for the 1993 Mobil Cotton Bowl Classic will be available to Texas A&M students starting on Wednesday at 7 a.m. at the ticket windows in front of G. Rollie White Coliseum. More than 5,000 tickets will be avail able to students at a cost of $40 each. Stu dents must provide a valid I.D. card with either the all-sports pass or the football ticket fee option for every ticket pur chased. A maximum of six tickets can be purchased by one student. No guest tick ets will be available. All eight ticket windows will open at 7 a.m. and will be accessible until the ticket office closes at 4 p.m. At least half of the I.D. cards used to draw tickets must be either senior or graduate student classification when drawing tickets on Wednesday. On Thursday, half of all I.D. cards used can be of junior classification, provided that tickets are still available. On Friday, half can be sophomores, and freshman draw on Monday, Dec. 7. No tickets are currently on sale for the general public. The Aggies, who finished their regular season undefeated at 12-0, will play in their second straight Cotton Bowl on Fri day, Jan. 1 at noon against a yet-to-be- named opponent. The Cotton Bowl and the other members of the Bowl Coalition will announce matchups on Dec. 6. Mobil Cotton Bowl Classic Another season to go Genny Wood (left) reaches for the ball while Kim Mitchell (right) dives for the set as Karen Richards stands awaiting the kill. Lady Aggies get late call to postseason with NIVC bid By DON NORWOOD Spw/s Writer of THE BATtAttdbl Christmas came a jnonth early for the Texas A&M volleyball team as the Lady Aggies received a surprise bid Sunday night to the National Invita tional Volleyball Championship in Kansas City, Mo. Up until finding out about the invi tation, the Thanksgiving break was a fairly dismal one for the 16-16 Lady An gies. They lost two straight matches in the Albuturkey Classic in Albuquerque, N.M., with 18th-ranked New Mexico beating A&M in four games on Friday, and Colorado State sweeping them in three straight on Saturday. As the Lady Aggies arrived back in College Station following the tourna ment, they did so with a resigned atti tude about a season that was suddenly over. Then came "the call." When women's athletic director Lynn Hickey relayed the good news to A&M head coach A1 Givens, it was, to say the least, a pleasant surprise for the players. "We were very shocked," senior out side attacker Elizabeth Edmiston said, the excitement still painted all over her face. "L as a senior, was in a bit of a de pressed state (before being informed of the invitation). "It's awesome to have another shot." The question of how a team with a .500 record gets to play in a postseason tourney is easily answered - toughness of schedule. The Lady Aggies played the 15th-toughest schedule in the na tion in this season, making that .500 record look a little better. And the Southwest Conference, despite having only six members that field volleyball teams, ranks among the most competi tive in the country with three teams in the NCAA Tournament and one in the NIVC "I think the reason we ended up get ting the invitation was our tough schedule," setter/attacker Genny Wood said. "(The number of ranked teams A&M played) shows that we can play t level." at that See Lady Aggies/ Page 6 Lady Aggies open 1992-93 season tonight Oklahoma State serves as first test for A&M FROM STAFF AND WIREREPORTS The Lady Aggie basketball team opens its 1992-93 season on the road tonight in Stillwater, Okla. against Oklahoma State at 8:30 p.m. at Gallagher-Iba Arena. Texas A&M finished last season with a 15-13 record and a 7-7 mark in Southwest Conference play. The Lady Aggies have two starters back from that team, senior forward Yolanda Brown and sophomore forward Twylana Harrison, both of whom were named to the preseason All-SWC second team. Brown averaged 12.1 points and 7.0 re bounds a game last season and averaged 13.5 points and 10.0 rebounds in the Lady Aggies' two exhibition games this season. Harrison, who also was named All-Amer ican in track last season, averaged 8.5 points in the two exhibition games. The Lady Aggies also have true fresh man guard Lisa Branch of Desoto, who led the team with a 14.5 point average in exhibition games. Also, freshman center Kelly Cerny of Corpus Christi (8.0 ppg) and junior forward Beth Burket of Jour- danton (6.5 ppg) are listed as possible starters. A&M lost its Wo exhibition games to the Houston Flights by a 76-71 margin, and the Talinn Meents of Estonia, 67-66. The Cowgirls of Oklahoma State are coming off an 11-17 season in 1991 which was good enough for sixth place in the Big Eight conference. The Czechoslavakian team, Cassovia Kosice, defeated Oklahoma State in an ex hibition game, 62-57. In the game, senior forward Lisa McGill had 15 points and 24 rebounds, sophomore guard Regi Briley picked up 13 points. A&M head coach Lynn Hickey, who enters her ninth season at the helm , also will have the services of freshman center Martha McClelland of Duncanville, who averaged six points a game in exhibition, and senior forward Karol Decuir of Spring, who averaged 4.5 points. ACCICl For Information Call 847-8478 An MSC Student Programs Committee (UINNER-CFINNES FILM FESTIVAL ’★★★★! Erotic, tipofic and mesmerizing!" -James Verniere. BOSTON HERALD 1 masterpiece! Astonishing!" -Grofiam Fuller. INTERVIEW Thursday - Dec. 3 7:00p.m. & 9:00p.m. Admission is $2.50 THE THRILLER OL THE YEAR IS HERE! BRIDGET FONDA ■ JENNIFER JASON LEIGH nw w : SINGLE WHITE FEMALE West Side SWF seeks slworth 1 ls lr\j Friday - Dec. 4 & Saturday - Dec. 5 7:30, 9:45, & Midnight Admission is $2 All films will be presented in Rudder Theatre Complex. /Pi/jM /1m jQm A]M AIM Apt Apfr/fi, Apl aJm Jm aTm aJm Woolworth c °tton Values Our Tradition BOWL Post Oak Mall CAPS $5.99 COTTON BOWL T-SHIRTS 10 DESIGNS TO CHOOSE FROM T-SHIRTS $12.99 SWEATSHIRTS $24.99 Texas A&M twin or full size blanket $21.99 Beautiful potted poinsettia plants $4.99 aTm Apl Apl aTm Ltm l/pi aPi ^/pi xpi /pi ^ x]m jqsi ■\ RESEARCH Panic Do you experience brief, unexpected periods of intense fear or discomfort/ Have you visited your doctor or the hospital emergency room because of chest pains, shortness of breath, numbness or tingling sensations and find out that you have no physical problems/ These occurrences may have been panic attacks. VIP Research is conducting a study on Panic Disorder. 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