Page 6 THE BATTALION College Station, Texas Wednesday, October 1, 1969 Si! ^ STEGENT RETURNS It was good news for A&M Saturday against Nebraska as tailback Larry Stegent returned to action for the first time in almost a year. The 6-1, 198-pound speedster will be starting this week against Army’s Black Knights. Buckeyes Favored By Fourteen By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ohio State sends its point-a- minute wreckers against Wash ington this week, favored by two touchdowns to defend its position as the country’s No. 1 college football team. National champions and Rose Bowl champions last season, the Buckeyes cemented their place at the top of The Associated Press poll by smothering Texas Chris tian in its opener last Saturday 620. Some observers called it one of the most powerful college ma chines of the era. Woody Hayes, the Buckeyes’ reluctant master commented: “We have to get better every time we play.” Most of the top teams in the weekly poll face formidable riv als with three of the games matching members of the Top Twenty. Eighth-ranked Purdue, winner over Notre Dame last week, plays a strong Stanford team at home in a game some predict could be a preview of the 1970 Rose Bowl. Stanford is ranked 17th. Missouri, No. 9, invades Mich igan, No. 13, with the latter fa vored by a point while Alabama, No. 15, and Mississippi, No. 20, tangle at Birmingham in a match of Southeastern Conference powers. The Alabama-Mississippi bat tle will be Saturday’s national television morsel, starting at 9:30 p.m. EDT. ABC televises. Ohio State received 35 of the 40 first place votes cast by a sports writing and broadcasting panel of 40 and collected 784 to tal points. Penn State, which trounced Colorado 27-3, is second, followed by Arkansas, 55-0 winner over Tulsa; Texas, which ran over Texas Tech 49-7, and Southern California, which crushed North western 48-6. Penn State is at Kansas State Saturday and Arkansas at Texas Christian, Texas is host to Navy and Southern California travels to Oregon State. Completing the Top Ten in the poll are Oklahoma, Georgia, Pur due, Missouri and Tennessee. (ITole-dHaan SHOES |fuit ^tiu'nrs umbergitp men’s toear 329 University Drive 713/846-2706 Collesre Station, Texas 77840 \ WOULD YOU RECOGNIZE A ENGINEER IF YOU SAW ONE ? Probably not. They don't really look that different from any other engineers. Maybe one even lives in your hometown. It's what Bechtel Engineers DO that sets them apart. Working for the company that is internationally known as a pioneer . . . the one that tackles the tough, the interesting, the "can-it-be-done?” jobs . . . The Bechtel Engineer is the one who is there. 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Only defending co-champions Arkansas and Texas emerg'ed smiling — Texas with a sweet 49-7 victory over Texas Tech in the SWC opener and Arkansas with a 55-0 rout of Tulsa. So far this season, Tech and the other five league teams that have been defeated have lost 22 of 37 fumbles, yielded 29 inter ceptions and 54 touchdowns. Arkansas, ranked No. 3 in the nation, is unscored on after a 39-0 victory over Oklahoma State in addition to Tulsa. The Hogs are hogging the team statistics with top figures in both total offense 427.0 and total defense 178.5 yards per game. Texas, with its fleet of run ners, leads in rushing offense with a 284.0 yards per game average and Southern Methodist leads in passing offense with 870 Tournament Set Friday A “get acquainted” tournament will be staged Friday by the table tennis club. Club president Frank Storey of Pasadena said the 6:30 p.m. event open to all A&M students and faculty and Bryan-College Station residents will be in the Memorial Student Center Assembly Room. yards through three games. Bill Burnett and Bruce Max well, a pair of Arkansas’ swift runners, are 1-2 in individual rushing. Burnett is the leader with 178 yards and Maxwell has 165 yards. SMU’s defending national pass ing champion Chuck Hixson is off his record pace of last year but he’s still far ahead of Texas By Table Tennis Club Participants may register until 6:15 p.m. or register early by phone at 846-3965 or 845-6593. Division placement will be de termined by the club, Storey said. Dark shirts, non-skid shoes and an entrance fee of $1 in the open division and 75 cents in the novice division are required. Christian’s Steve Judy in pass ing with 76 completions for a 58.5 percentage. Judy has hit only 28 passes through two games, including 19 in the season opener against Purdue. Gary Hammond, Sam Holden and Ken Fleming, all of SMU, are 1-2-3 in receiving. Hammond has snagged 21 passes for 278 yards and one touchdown.fl) en has caught 16 for and a touchdown and FwSinc is 12 for 171 yards aKptch* 1 touchdowns. | l e ^ A four-way tie ousts iyelopc scoring race among Burnetituden Bill Montgomery of ArtifijBegi Linzy Cole of TCU andiom Lesser of SMU, all points each. Sown Hfeivelo] ~m (! BUSIER AGENCY Twe REAL ESTATE • INSURANCE 3 i P , en£ . . make i F.H.A.—Veterans and Conventional LOMij"^ ARM & HOME SAVINGS ASSOCIATION ™ ^ Home Office: Nevada, Mo. are tc 3523 Texas Ave. (in Ridgecrest) 846*3708 } j|iden m m Shurfine — Evaporated Tall Cans Crisco 24-Oz. ^ RE VECIETABLE S> ^J NlNG PRICES GOOD THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY. OCTOBER 2-3-4. QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED. ICE CREAM V2 Gal. Ctn. a m/j " * Xvl A A xV-Oj 1/A.IN A-Aj A JLvJciot^ A. OK Cokes ‘.'AjLLJuV’-' 6 BTL. CARTONS (PLUS DEPOSIT LIMIT 3 PLEASE WITH PURCHASE OF $5.00 OR MORE EXCL. 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