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So his cheese ravioli is not only delicious, it's also 95% fat free and a good source of complex carbohy- drates, and it has no preservatives. So for cheese ravioli with all the good things your mother would use, _ you can thank goodness for Chef Boyardee. Thank Goodness for Chef Boyardee 10 For Appt Call 80 Tables • Desks Wall Units Bedrooms Dining Rooms Years Experience & Expertise in the Design of Affordable Laminate, Lucite & Wood Furniture Muriel Wetsman FRIDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1989 661.3838 © 1 989 American Home Food Products, Inc. AMERICAN BULK FOOD COUPON hey call Billy Gold- berg the University of Georgia's A 11- SouthEastern Conference defensive tackle, "The Mouth of the South." Goldberg, 6-foot-3 and 255 pounds, is a sportswriters' favorite for his free-wheeling quotes before and after games. He'll probably be get- ting more newspaper space than any other Bulldog player prior to their Peach Bowl Game against Syracuse on Dec. 30 (2:30 p.m., WXYZ- TV, Ch. 7). Only once has Goldberg, a second-team All-American selection of the Football News, wished he'd stayed silent: he didn't "just say no" when of- fered marijuana the night before last year's Gator Bowl game against Michigan State. Goldberg failed an NCAA drug test and was suspended for the game, disappointing his parents, two football- player brothers and several other relatives who flew to the game — one of them his great uncle, millionaire philanthropist Louis Wolfson, who is owner-breeder of horse racing's 1978 Triple Crown winner, Affirmed. "After my first interview after the incident,"he admit- ted, "it wasn't that bad. And I turned that negative into a positive. Instead of moaning and sulking, I dedicated myself to being the best player I could be for my final season." That involved a restruc- tured summer diet and work- out schedule. "I ate a big breakfast so that basically I was eating four big meals a day and between weightlif- ting, running and karate workouts, I was working out four times a day, too," he explained. For breakfast, he ate 12 to 14 egg whites with torn-up waffles on top, all of it smothered with honey; grapefruit, orange juice and milk. "I'd have loved to have bagels and cream cheese and .„---lox on the side," he added, "but you can't find bagels and lox in Athens, Ga." Goldberg's comeback began in the game that concluded Georgia's spring football prac- tice. Despite the fact that it was his fifth such game, Goldberg won the "Hustle Award" as well as the award for being the Outstanding Defensive Lineman. Billy Goldberg: Didn't say "no." The year before, he won awards for being the best all- around defensive player and outstanding defensive lineman and for outstanding work habits. spring, During the Goldberg was switched from defensive nost guard to defen- sive tackle, to take advantage of his quickness and agility. He totalled 62 unassisted tackles and 59 assisted tackles for a total of 121, breaking his own school record of 107 for most tackles by an interior lineman. His 348 career tackles rank him seventh on Georgia's all-time list, and his 12 quarterback sacks rank him sixth. But "The Mouth" quickly asserted that "I, by no means, am the best defensive lineman that's ever come through here. I can tell you many who are better than me. But I have better stats, which tells you that stats don't mean diddly. I haven't played well this year." Goldberg feels a summer shoulder injury and a sprain- ed ankle in Georgia's eighth game — The Bulldogs ended the regular season with 6 wins and 5 losses — have hindered his play. It could of where he'll be drafted by a National Football League team. "The fact that I played with pain could be in my favor," Goldberg said, "but what is more likely is that they will just look at the game films and not know how bad the sprain was. I think the injury has dropped my value, pro- bably." Goldberg hopes his ankle will be improved by Dec. 30, but doubts it'll be 100 per- cent. As for the NFL, "I've been told by prospective