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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 7, 1970)
:: I FRYERS U.S.D.A. Grade ‘A’ WHOLE Cut-Up Fryers Lb. . . . 33c PRICES GOOD THUR. FRI. SAT. Oct. 8, 9, 10. PORK CHOPS 99c Smoked Pound . A. F. All Meat WIENERS LB U.S.D.A. CHOICE HEAVY BEEF Round — Full Cut Steak *95 Tenderized Round Rump or Pikes Peak Steak. I 05 Roast >89 Peeled & Deveined “ORR’S FROZEN SPECIALS” Pepper id ge Farm TURNOVERS Captain Duke FISH STICKS Chicken Of Sea, Cooked SHRIMP Channel PERCH FILLETS Channel CATFISH FILLETS Gelatin JELL-0 Shurfine EVAP. MILK Oak Farms COTTAGE CHEESE Shank Portion 38 BACON 10-Oz. A.F. MILK Low . Fat . i/ 2 S 49c BREAD ™ 3-Oz. 2 Tall Cans 16-Oz. Choc. Marshmallow SHURFRESH PIES 3 12 Ct. It 00 Pkgs. K RANCH STYLE CHILI 59c Plain 15-Oz. VINE RIPE TOMATOES Mix or Match CELLO RADISHES CUCUMBERS BELL PEPPERS 3129 3 Eta'g 49c APPLES WHITE ONIONS 2 ,.,.25c BARTLETT PEARS Lb 25c Salad Dressing Shurfine Cream or W. K. POTATO CHIPS FOOD RING CORN BEANS ASPARAGUS CHUNK TUNA Shurfresh lO'/z-Oz. Shurfine Cut Green 5 5 303 Cans 303 Cans 300 Can Shurfine No. ‘/z Chunk Can 49* 39c $1 $1 37« 35« POTATOES U. S. NO. 1 RUSSET Carolina Freestone Peaches Shortening Cake Mixes Food King Betty Crocker Layer dUst to 6/Ufcun* WE REDEEM THIS COUPON GOOD FOR 100 FREE S&H GREEN STAMPS With Purchase of $10.00 or More Excluding’ Cigarettes or Beer. ORR’S SUPER MARKET ' Coupon Void After Oct. 10, 1970. FOOD COUPONS outs 2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS lOUWMWIAlIl 200 E. 24th STREET DOWNTOWN 3516 TEXAS AVENUE RIDGECREST WE GIVE S&H GREEN STAMPS Page 6 THE BATTALION College Station, Texas Wednesday, October 7, llffl A&M sports news and notes... Gene and Jim meet again By CLIFFORD BROYLES Battalion Sports Editor By JOE Assistai The j opens il Fort W Tcu W Saturday’s game with Texs Tech will be a reunion for the heatJjiuh, at coaches of the two schools. Coach Gene Stallings was an assistant coad | The j for Paul Bryant at Alabama, and Coach Jim Carlen of Tech was a: iradio st assistant under Boddy Dodd at Georgia Tech during the same time. One of Stallings’ main duties while working with the Crimsoi Tide was to scout the games of the Georgia Tech Yellowjackets. He handled the scouting reports on the Jackets for five seasons. Carlen is known to be a great admirer of Dodd and Stallingssai the offensive style of the two is similiar. They execute well and run very few plays,” he said, andaddti 9-3 in The that that was tradition of Tech teams under Dodd. But defensively the Raiders don’t pattern after GT. Georgiais aging 2 more of a stunting team, he said, nothing that the Raiders don't normally stunt much. ***** 7:30 tot It wi! the twc sored l; Associa 14 wins Fish ha biggest Associate athletic director Marvin Tate represented A&M Monds at Memorial services at Wichita State University, held for 30 person!- including 13 members of the Shocker football squad—who died in plane crash in the Rockie Mountains Friday. ***** Trainer Billy Pickard says the hard hitting and hustle the Agif showed on the recent road trip against LSU, Ohio State and Michip were key factors in the Ags’ coming off the trip with only a few sm- injuries. “When you stand around is when you get hurt,” Pickard said. We were really hitting people. Against Ohio State we weren standing around but we just were making a lot of little mistakes wlie we moved.” ***** The world-record clocking of 1:21.7 in the 880 yard relay byl Aggie foursome of Donny Rogers, Rockie Woods, Curtis Mills an Marvin Mills has been officially accepted as a world record by tli International Amateur Athletic Association at its yearly meeting. Ollan Cassell, track and field administrator for the NationalM said the IAAF approved the record which was set last spring at tli Drake Relays in Des Moines, Iowa, at their meeting in Stockholm. line. I 227 poi The of last bi-distr Morrisc Houstoi A P By CLl Battali With belts, a column looking Southw Texas The ***** As of noon Tuesday, 36,000 tickets had been sold for the Ted game, according to Athletic Business Manager Wally Groff. Groff said that ticket sales were going briskly for the conferenc opener, and both upper deck sections are sold out. The rest of the tickets are for the end zones, north and south,an; on both sides, Groff said. Knothole tickets for youths of high school age and under will placed on sale Saturday at 8 a.m. for $1. A crowd of around 40,000 is expected for the 7:30 p.m.contet on Kyle Field. coach , 3-1 m: Their 1 the of Tex They ball te said T his wei Letten “The back f won th nitely The by Ch Class A bowling playoffs slated By MIKE STEPHENS Battalion Sports Writer The third week of intramurals has ended with several Class A bowling team champions deter mined. Winning outright league titles were D-2, 4-1; Squadron 13, 4-0; G-l, 4-0. Playoffs are scheduled, for League C which had a three-way tie. Squadrons 8, 9 and 10 each had 3-1 records. Another three- way tie was in League F where B-l, F-2 and K-l all had 3-1 records. League D and G will also have playoffs as Squadrons 4 and 5 tied wtih 3-1 records and A-l and E-l tied in League G. Playoffs are scheduled all this week. Class A and C football con tinues wtih several teams still un defeated. D-2 leads all Class A teams with a 4-0 record. Th showed power last week in whif ping H-2, 22-0. Having records are Squadrons 11, and 2, and having 2-0 records ai G-l, L-l, FT and A-l. Tfliigl: wood, 3-0, and Mclnnis, 3-0, co: tinue to be the class of civilii football. Powerful Tanglewoo beat Crocker, 22-6, and Walto beat AYI, 28-0, in high scoria action last week. Basketball continues in Claa B and Class D. Walton and La* are undefeated in Class D. M- 1-1, C-2, B-l, A-l, E-l, Squadro 1 and Squadron 2 are all unde feated in Class B. Class B horseshoes is headiW into its final week as 1-1 spot! a 5-0 record to lead their lea? 8 and all teams. Squadron IL ■ and 5 and B-l all have ^ records. Falcon QB flying high NEW YORK UP)—Bob Parker of undefeated Air Force has dis placed Stanford’s Jim Plunkett as No. 1 in total offense among the nation’s major college foot ball players. Plunket, who was third in pass ing in last week’s statistics re leased by National Collegiate Sports Services, fell to fifth as Parker and three other players tied for first. average of 156.7 yards per gain! leads the nation’s scorers 10 touchdowns for an average 20 points in three games. Mari naro scored six touchdowns for two-game average of 18 points. Marv Bateman, Utah junto took over first place in puntin! wth a 48.2 yard average on punts. Rifle team wins Parker, a 5-foot-ll, 175-pound senior, took over the lead with 1,217 yards in 150 plays. Plunkett had gained 1,080 yards in 166 plays. Parker, defending champion John Reaves of Florida, last week’s leader Leo Hart of Duke and John Read of Pacific area in a four-way tie for passing honors. In four games each has com pleted 73 passes for a game aver age of 18.3. Plunkett has com pleted 72 passes in four games for an 18.0 average. Ed Marinaro, Cornell junior who was runnerup in rushing in 1969, took the lead in that cate gory, averaging 205.5 yards a game following a 260-yard game against Lehigh last Saturday—a major college season high. Gary Kosins of Dayton, who trails Marinaro in rushing on an The A&M Men’s Rifle Tea® has won its first two match! 5 beating Texas A&I and Steph*® F. Austin University. At the ^ept. 26 match, 0 won with 2,566 points to A&1- 2,369. A&M beat Austin Uni versity 2,565 to 2,466 on Oct. 1 These scores are out of a P° s hie 3,000. siderec How f goes tl Nap ser, SI the Be Rev: he sa good, and w “Wi couple 1 Oilers sign Gary HOUSTON (A?)—The Housto! Oilers signed 12-year veteran offensive guard Ken Gray Tuei day after a knee injury hospital ized Tom Regner, four-year regn lar from Notre Dame. Gray, a free agent, was waive earlier this year by the St. Loui Cardinals and retired. He too the Oiler physical and passed i Tuesday.and will sign a central Wednesday,