Tigers Hit The Road Friday || To Tangle With Houston Furr HHPi By RICHARD CAMPBELL Maroon saw their record moved ing particularly Joe Griffin, Jim- Assistant Sports Editor The A&M Consolidated Tigers, fresh from their first victory of the year last week, travel to Houston Friday night to tangle with the tough Furr Brahmas. The Bulls bring a 3-1 record (into the 8 p.m. tussle while the Aggie Soccer Team To Start Weekend Iwith Texas Match The Aggie soccer team gets the sports weekend at A&M off and running with a game against Texas University Saturday at 2 |p,m. The game will be played on the drill field across the street Sifrom the Memorial Student Cen ter. to 1-3 following their 7-6 win over Cypress-Fairbanks last Fri day night. Furr has beaten C. E. King (Houston), Pasadena Dobie, and Huntsville, 19-0, last Friday. They lost their only game to Port Acres. The Tigers probably showed their best offensive strength of the season in handing the close loss to Cy-Fair. Coach Jack Churchill expressed pleasure in the way the offensive team moved the ball against the tough Cardi nal line. “I felt the offense moved the ball exceptionally well,” Chur chill said. “The only reason we didn’t score more on several long drives was because of small er rors which we will try to cor rect in practice,” he continued. Churchill also had special praise for the defensive unit cit- bo Butler, and Jim Woods, who came in for the injured Bart In- glis. Inglis left the game with a sprained ankle but is expected to be back in action for the Furr tilt. The Tigers will go with the same starting lineup Friday night with the exception of the full back position. Junior Richard Marshall (160) is slated to start so that regular fullback Larry Terrell can concentrate on de fense. Terrell and Jimbo Butler will man the two linebacker posi tions against the Brahmas. RELUCTANT DONKEY A Mexican boy kicks his donkey to get it moving outside the Olympic Village in Mexico City. Rider is Jack Bacheler, Birmingham, Mich., who is U. S. entry in 5,000-meter run. (AP Wirephoto) Lolich Changes Style; St ill Bru ndage Gets Way Rips Redbirds In 0 i ympic Ballot ST. LOUIS ) — Mickey Lo lich changed his mind and altered his pitching plan midway in Thursday’s climactic World Series duel with Bob Gibson. But the stocky southpaw would not change his habits . . . not with the Detroit Tigers’ biggest killing in 23 years riding on every pitch. Lolich, working with two days rest in the seventh and deciding game, stymied Gibson and his St. Louis Cardinals 4-1 for his third series triumph and Detroit’s first world championship since 1945. The 28-year-old motorcycle buff, relegated to the Detroit bullpen at one point in the regu lar season, emerged as the Series standout with his third route going performance. But he hadn’t expected to be around at the finish . . . not after having pitched nine innings Mon day. Neither had Manager Mayo Smith or the favored Cardinals. “I figured I might be strong for five or six innings, then tire real fast,” he said. “But it didn’t happen. I felt the same in the ninth inning as the first.” “I would have settled for six innings from him,” said Smith. “I had Wilson and McLain warming up in the bullpen. But he sure surprised me. He got better as he went along.” MEXICO CITY (A*) _ Avery Brundage, long the center of con troversy in the world of interna tional sports, won re-election Thursday as president of the In ternational Olympic Committee on the eve of the strife-torn Games of the 19th Olympiad. Brundage, a rich, 81-year-old Chicagoan, defeated his only ri val, Conte Jean de Beaumont of France in a secret ballot cast by the 57 members attending the IOC sessions. The tough American had his own way. There had been talk of limiting the term to two years, but Brundage insisted on four years or nothing, and won. Meanwhile, the Mexican gov ernment moved sternly against university students and their sympathizers whose rioting over the last two months cast a shad ow over the Games and caused 50 or more deaths. Formal charges ranging from sedition to homicide were placed against 113 persons, including two women. A high official told The Asso ciated Press it was learned from the arrested students that a plan was concocted to kidnap a prom inent athlete in order to draw at tention to their cause. The Games open here Satur day. While there is the possibili ty of some kind of demonstra tion by the Mexican students, or a show of sympathy on the part of student athletes from oth er nations, the government has brought such strong army forces to Mexico City, and called out so many police, any disorder appears unlikely. The students are demanding the release of all student prison ers, and removal of all troops and police from school buildings. The city itself was calm and even gay as the time to open the Games drew near. The sacred Olympic torch, lit at Olympia in Greece, was being carried by relay runners closer and closer to the capital. Friday night it will be shown to a vast crowd at the ancient Toltec pyra mids of Teotihuacan on the out skirts of Mexico City. A bril liant pageant of sound and light has been arranged. Saturday, it will be carried in to the 80,000-capacity Olympic Stadium near the University of Mexico by a young Mexican girl athlete, Enriqueta Basilic Sote lo, and used to light the big gas fed torch that burns day and night throughout the Games. DON’T THE BATTALION Friday, October 11, 1968 Colleee Station. Texas Page 7 Call 822-1441 Allow 20 Minutes Carry Out or Eat-In THE PIZZA HUT 2610 Texas Ave. ^ j. —t * —> 5—^ mi at CUSHION and CUE GRAND OPENING POCKET BILLIARDS PIN BALL SNACK BAR CUE STICKS TABLES WHOLESALE NEW TABLES REGISTER for FREE $30.00 Cue Stick On the South Side of Gibsons The Hiding Place for the Best In Recreation Bring this Hand Bill in for 1 hour FREE Pool FREE COKE TO EVERYONE Open 11:00 a. m. to 11:00 p. m. Phone 846-9892 ^ g=ai —■"' l r ^ i " | j« ■* r ' ' o« { rfn IT!! Town Hall Kicks Off Its Regular Series With: Anita Bryant * “One of the most exciting female vocalists in the world.’^ ★.... Former “number one female recording artist of the year.” ★ Ex runner-up- Miss America. / r ,4* >4 *r t :, % Rich Little *..,. Comedienne *.... Has appeared six times on the Ed Sullivan Show. *.... Guest performed on the Joey Bishop, Johnny Car- son and Dean Martin T.V. Shows. *.... Had a starring role in NBC-TV’s “Love on a Rooftop”. ’A A i*! XI FRIDAY NIGHT G. ROLLIE WHITE COLISEUM ADMISSION: Student Activity Card (Plus ID) Town Hall Season Ticket Single Admission Ticket Date or A&M Spouse $1.50 Faculty & Staff (A&M U. System)....$3.00 Public School Students $2.00 Patrons $3.00