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Shufoii ate; secreta: Herring, Tea r Wayne te rommunicafc mgans iS IlH JR- LY DISCOUNT MEAL COUPON BOOKS ARE ON SALE AT THE FOOD SERVICES MANAGER’S OFFICE; MSC MONDAY EVENING SPECIAL BROILED SALISBURY STEAK W/SAUTEED ONIONS Choice of two vegetables Rolls - Butter Tea or Coffee $0.99 TUESDAY EVENING SPECIAL YANKEE BEEF POT ROAST Potato Pancake Choice of One Vegetable Rolls - Butter Tea or Coffee $0.99 WEDNESDAY EVENING SPECIAL CHICKEN FRIED STEAK WITH CREAM GRAVY Rolls - Butter Tea or Coffee and Choice of any two vegetables $0.99 THURSDAY EVENING SPECIAL ITALIAN CANDLELIGHT DINNER ITALIAN SPAGHETTI Served with Spiced Meat Balls & Sauce Parmesan Cheese Tossed Green Salad Choice of Salad Dressing Hot Garlic Bread Tea or Coffee $0.99 FRIDAY EVENING SPECIAL OCEAN CATFISH FILET Tarter Sauce Cole Slaw Grandma’s Cornbread Rolls - Butter Tea or Coffee and Choice of any two vegetables $0.99 SATURDAY SPECIAL NOON AND EVENING SLICED BARBECUED PORK LOIN Choice of Two Vegetables Rolls - Butter Tea or Coffee $0.99 SUNDAY SPECIAL NOON AND EVENING ROAST TURKEY DINNER Served With Cranberry Sauce Cornbread Dressing Rolls - Butter Tea or Coffee Giblet Gravy and your choice of any two vegetables $0.99 For your protection we purchase meats, fish and poultry from Government inspected plants. “Quality First’* THE BATTALION Tuesday, February 23, 1971 College Station, Texas Page 5 Ags upset Tech, face Longhorn challenge By CLIFFORD BROYLES Battalion Sports Editor “We play well but we just haven’t been shooting well.” Coach Shelby Metcalf has been using those same words just about all season long, but Satur day afternoon his team played well and they shot well enroute to a 66-64 win over the Texas Tech Red Raiders in the Raid ers’ own back yard, Lubbock Mu nicipal Coliseum, which was packed beyond its capacity of more than 8,000. The Aggies shot 48.9 percent from the floor and gave the Raiders their first loss at home in conference play this season. Tonight the Aggies try to equal their longest winning streak of the year when they host the University of Texas at Austin at 8 in G. Rollie White Coliseum. A&M had a six-game winning streak over the Longhorns snapped when the two teams met in the first round in Austin. The Aggies lost the first meet ing at the foul line when Texas attempted 52 free throws, mak ing 34. Four Aggies fouled out —Steve Niles, Rick Duplantis, Jeff Overhouse and Chuck Smith —leaving the team with no real rebounding strength in the fad ing minutes as it tried to over come a UT-Austin lead. In the first meeting the Long horns got outstanding work from Tyler Junior College transfer Jimmy Blacklock, who scored 21 and had 11 of 21 from the field, mostly on long jump shots. Billy Black, who played in high school with the Aggies’ Steve Niles, scored 15 in the first meeting and Scooter Lenox, who got 15, will be in the back court for UT-Austin. Lynn Howden and B. G. Brosterhous, the two guns inside for Texas, are aver aging 14.8 and 11.3 respectively and are averaging near double figures in rebounds. In their last game, with the University of Arkansas, all five Longhorn starters scored in dou ble figures, despite the fact they lost 88-87 in overtime. That loss trims them to a 4-6 season mark, and A&M’s win over Tech makes the Aggies now 3-7 and a win would tie the two schools with two games re maining. The Aggies will start Charlie Jenkins out front against the Longhorns. Although not start ing, Jenkins played well and hit a crucial bucket in the overtime period against Tech. “Bob Gobin and Jenkins were really passing up the opposition coming down the floor,” Metcalf said and noted that this gave the Aggies a 5 on 4 offense. “We haven’t been getting that,” he added. Aside from Jenkins, the Ags will start the same four who played against Tech. Jeff Overhouse, who has to be the league’s top candidate for Sophomore of the Year, hit on 11 of 17 as he put on an impressive show before the television cam eras of the regionally televised battle. He finished with 27 points and grabbed 12 rebounds, by senior Chuck Smith, a game high that was equalled Smith, who had 14 points de spite putting up only 5 field goal attempts and Niles, who snapped out of slump with 14 points and 7 rebounds, will round out the front court. It was Niles who made the final difference when he netted a layup with one second to go in the overtime period to break the tie. Both teams displayed a disci plined offensive style and the Aggies took advantage to take the measure of the Raiders, de spite blowing a six point lead in regulation time. It looked like another typical Aggie finish when they missed several late chances to break the game open at the foul line. Tankers split two meets By MICHAEL RICE Battalion Sports Writer The Texas Aggie swim team came home Saturday night with another win and another loss in its pocket as it thoroughly splashed Eastern New Mexico out of the water Friday night at Portales, N. M., with a runaway score of 98-13. And while the Aggie basketball team was busy beating Texas Tech at Lubbock, the Raiders’ swim team trounced the A&M swimmers by almost the same score the Texas swim team downed the Ags Tuesday, 72-41. Looking at the ENMU swim meet, the Aggies managed to place first and second in every event except for the 1000-yard freestyle, where Eric Wolff placed first with a time of 11:00:2, and Steve Prentice placed third with Mike Hicks an 11:21:4. The other event was the 500-yard freestyle where Dan Sonnenberg qualified first with 5:17:0 and John Allred came in third with 5:56:3. Other first place finishers were Gordon Taylor in the 200-yard freestyle and the 200-yard back- stroke; Mike Hicks in the 50-yard freestyle and the 200-yard butter fly; Tom Sparks in the 200-yard individual medley; and Steve Prentice in the 200-yard back- stroke. Also the medley relay team of John McCleary, Fred Meyers, Duncan Cooper and Sparks, and the freestyle relay team of Steve Sonnenberg, McCleary, Doug Car- son and Meyers, placed first in the meet. Duncan Cooper, an A&M diver, placed first in the 1-meter and 3-meter diving competition. Commenting on the results of the meet with ENMU, Coach Dennis Fosdick said, “We were experimenting at this meet to find the best possible spot to place our swimmers for the conference meet, while giving the boys a break from what they usually swim. I think they swam fairly well con sidering they usually don’t swim these events. “But the meet in Lubbock was a different story,” he said. “Our boys were just swimming tired, so we’re going to he easying off this week and only have one workout per day by cutting the morning workouts out of our schedule. “We did have some good ef forts,” Fosdick continued. “Eric Wolff did another outstanding job in the 200-yard freestyle with a 1:49:8 and the freestyle relay team of McCleary, Taylor, Wolff and Sparks turned in a 3:29:1, just one second off the school record.” Wolff and the relay team earned first places, and Steve Prentice placed first in the 200- , yard backstroke for A&M. Placing second for the Aggies were Sparks in the 50-yard free style; Hicks in the 200-yard indi vidual medley and the 200-yard backstroke; Bobby Willoughby in the 200-yard butterfly; and Car- son in the 200-yard breaststroke. Other point-getters for A&M were Dan Sonnenberg, McCleary, Cooper and Taylor. “Our times are beginning to come back down,” Fosdick said. “They have to, because we’re swimming sixth-ranked SMU this coming weekend, and they’re really going to be rough.” 7&.--L .MS’ ’ ssjap Doug Carson TAMU SPECIAL ATTRACTIONS presents "I RECOMMEND 1776’ WITHOUT RESERVATION!” —Clive Barnes, N.Y. Times America’s .iS?' Award Winning f?0 r> Musical BRYAN CIVIC AUDITORIUM Sunday, March 7, 1971 2:30 p. m. ALL SEATS RESERVED Ticket Prices: $5.50, $4.50, $3.50, $2.50 # ♦Available to A&M students only until four days prior to performance ON SALE NOW! MSC Student Programs Office — Call 845-4671 For once the Aggies took less shots than their opponent but once again the team that took fewer shots managed to win, and that’s what counts. Tech hit on 24 of 61, and was stymied by the Ag’s zone de fense. Greg Lowery, the leading outside gunner, hit only 5 of 17 and Gene Knolle was only 4 of 15. “We started out playing a mixture of the man to man and zone and the zone worked pretty well for us so we stayed with it,” Metcalf said. The Aggies started slow and when the game was four minutes deep the score had A&M lead- gotten as the Aggies jubilantly celebrated their upset of the Raiders. In the preliminary game to night, the Aggie Fish, who have not played a game in 10 days and haven’t won one in 20, play the University of Texas at Austin Freshmen at 5:45. The Fish have dropped their last two starts and are 5-4 for the season. The Yearlings start ed that streak with a 96-62 romp on Feb. 9 in Austin as Lawrence Johnson and Larry Robinson of the Yearlings intimidated . the Fish with a super show of block ing shots. Coach Jim Culpepper will start Randy Knowles, the team’s lead ing scorer with a 20.2 average, and Bobby McKey, with a 12.7 mark. Johnny Mayo, the leading rebounder, has a 12.2 mark and Jack Vest has a 6.9 average. Joe Arciniega is also averaging 6.9. “That was the first time I ever faced anything like that,” the high school All-American from Ohio Knowles said, referring to the constant shot-blocking of Johnson and Robinson. “I guess I got a little shook up, but we know what we’re facing this time and we’ll be ready.” Ag netters blank St. Edwards, 7-0 M £ Jeff Overhouse ing, 4-2. They held the lead un til just 13 minutes remained, when the score was 10-8. Overhouse then put on his show and hit everything in sight from short jumpers outside to inside layups and tip-ins. Tech moved its defense inside to slow down the Clear Creek high ex, who had 17 points, and they did limit him to 10 in the second half, but he didn’t shoot but six times from the floor and made four. Niles got 9 of his 14 in the second half as the Aggies broke from a 33-31 halftime lead. They took a 57-51 lead into the final 3 minutes but missed a one-on-one free throw effort that would have given them an 8 point lead. Then after Mike Oakes got a tip in they missed another one-and-one and David Johnson made two foul shots to narrow the margin to two. After Chuck Smith gave A&M a 59-55 lead with 1:30 to go with two foul shots Lowery then hit from 25 feet. But with a minute to go, the Aggies missed again on a one- and-one and Steve -Williams put the game into overtime with a layup after getting a rebound with 39 seconds to go. Niles missed a last-second shot to send the game into overtime but put in the clincher in the overtime and everything bad that happened before was for- The Texas Aggie tennis team won its third straight dual match without a loss Saturday after noon as the Aggies defeated St. Edwards University of Austin, 7-0 on varsity courts. A&M now owns wins over the University of Houston and Texas A&I as well as the Big State Conference team. The Aggies played without their numbers one and two play ers, Jon Ragland and Dickie Fikes, who sat out the match. “A couple of singles matches, Chastain’s and Park’s were real tough ones, but they came on to win in split sets and that’s what counts,” Coach Omar Smith com mented of the match. “Our dou bles team played well and didn’t have any trouble.” The Aggies will have no dual matches this week but will be entered in the Corpus Christi In vitational tournament Thursday through Saturday, which will have five of the top seven teams in the country entered. Results of the St. Edwards match are: Singles: Mike Hickey, A&M, defeated Richard Poppe, St. Edwards, 6-1 6-3. Tommy Connell, A&M, defeat ed Ricardo Castillo, St. Edwards, 6-2 6-1 Lawton Park, A&M, defeated John Waddell, St. Edwards, 1-6 8-6, 6-4. Dan Courson, A&M, defeated Mark Goulais, St. Edwards, 6-2 6-2. David Chastain, A&M, defeated Bill DeMyers, St. Edwards, 5-7 6-3 6-3. Doubles: Paul Lothrop and Mike Mills, A&M, defeated Poppe and Cas tillo, St. Edwards, 6-1 6-0. Kermit Smith and Jeff Carter, A&M, defeated Goulais and De- Myers, St. Edwards, 6-3 6-4. UNIVERSITY TRUST THE MODERN APPROACH TO LIFE INSURANCE FOR COLLEGE PEOPLE © Especially Prepared for You by the RESERVE I3EE INSURANCE COMPANY A Legal Reserve Stock Company HOME OFFICE • DALLAS, TEXAS 75222 .representa Ronnie Ingle general agent : :iA . ' ' Jim Kidwell representative Is WORLD CAMPUS AFLOAT for YOU? 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