F bahalion b Tuesday, October 12, 1971 College Station, Texas Page 5 nistakes beat the Aggies as Red Raiders slide by, 28-7 JOHN CURYLO Jon Sports Editor It’s the way the ball bounces, if that’s how the cookie Ales. ifrery bouncing ball had “Texas ■p written on it Saturday ^t in Lubbock, and the cookie |mllied for the Aggies, 28-7. fhere were 10 fumbles, and the j Raiders recovered eight of | four of their own and |of the Aggies’. To this they W two pass interceptions, ■ field position provided by H errors, and a cornerback med Marc Dove. Dove recovered a fumble which iinstrumental in Tech scoring ffirst touchdown. He got both i cross country is in Lubbock «r a successful match st Texas Tech last Satur- the Texas A&M cross coun- jrlquad will be out to revenge ~j , | early season loss at the hands llintB exa3 an< * BayIor on Fri(Ja y- wf™ 0 weeks ag:0, set " Hat' W° r * n a triangular meet ?plad the same teams in College ition. st Saturday, Frank Ybarbo first place honors with a /LI of 20:51 to lead the Aggies 1 125-30 win over the Red Raid- ^■n Lubbock at McKenzie Park p J Other finishers for A&M were: n Haynie, third; Dennis -jjien sixth, Sam Skinner, sev- 3 th and Dan Jones, eighth. The lint total of 25 is determined dding the number of the A&M took. If the times seem somewhat it is because the usual four course was lengthened by ards due to a miscalculation the part of Tech officials, ach Ted Nelson expressed lire with the running of both . 'bo and Haynie. 84H#|rhis was the best Haynie has ince he’s been at A&M,” Nel- ml stated. “I was also pleased k Dennis O’Brien.” l Whe conference meet will take iTiuwe in Dallas at the campus of ' ° n ■^ ovem ber 22. AH of tv ~ Bat«l —AGGIE PLAQUES rf«t •! I V lrl m faster Accessories ^^iFinished - Unfinished ® Working Area ! gS Free Instructions - Ip ir« I riwi GIFT - A ken, P* 1!» led! Iggie M' brand s IJIUI RAMA Redmond Terrace College Station of the Red Raiders’ interceptions, one going all the way for the third touchdown. To this, he add ed two tackles, got credit for breaking up two passes, and did a fine job on returns. It was the same old story for the Aggies, with the defense turn ing in its usual outstanding per formance. It was the same story also in the respect that A&M mistakes gave Tech all its touch downs. The first quarter looked like the defensive battle the game was supposed to be, with the first first down not being made until the Red Raiders’ third possession. Two more followed, and Tech faced a third and one situation at the A&M 14. Charles Napper tried quarterback sneaks twice, but the Aggie defense wouldn’t allow him any yardage, and the ball went over on downs. On the second play from scrim mage after that, quarterback Lex James tried to pitch to Mark Green, who was playing tailback for the first time this year. The toss was way off target and Dove covered it on the six. It took Tech three plays to score, Joe Barnes hitting Robby Best for one yard with 57 seconds left in the period. Don Grimes kicked the extra point. The Raiders grot started the next time they got the ball, but penalties pushed them back to their own 10 twice. Brad Dusek, with Hugh McElroy shaken up, took a Johnny Odom punt at the A&M 45, broke a tackle, and was hit at the 43. He fumbled, and Russell Ingram recovered. Seven plays later, James Mosley dove in for the score. The Grimes con version made it 14-0 with 7:26 to go in the half. Tech fumbled twice in this stretch, and A&M players recov ered, but the officials ruled the ball dead in both cases. Dove returned a punt from his own 28 to the Aggie 48, but Dusek stopped the threat with a crucial interception at the 20. Early in the second half, Lee Hitt picked off a Barnes aerial at the Tech 41, and returned it to the 18. With a third and goal from the nine, James hit Homer May for the first Aggie offensive touchdown in 14 quarters. The previous one came late in the Wichita State game on a keeper by Joe Mac King. This drive went 18 yards in six plays. The point after by Pat McDermott put it at 14-7 with only five minutes gone in the half. A&M had a chance to even it up when Bill Wiebold fell on a Tech fumble two plays later, 29 yards from pay dirt. But, Dove 3 SEASON'S in New York! "WITTIEST MUSICAL IN YEARS.” — Clive Barnes, N.Y. TIMES DAVID MERRICK in association with Theatre Now presents fromises. sse* , NEIL SIMON v, Based on the screenplay **The Apartment ’ by \ BILLY WILDERand I. A. L DIAMOND | BURT BACHARACH HAL DAVID TAMU SPECIAL ATTRACTION BRYAN CIVIC AUDITORIUM SUNDAY, OCT. 31 — 2:30 P. M. A&M students and Date $3.50 E&. All Others $5.00 Ea. All Seats Reserved There will be a Rotary Community Series Production at 8:30. p. m. Tickets and information, MSC Student Program Office 845-4671 CLOSING IN on Texas Tech quarterback Joe Barnes (12) is Aggie defensive tackle Boice Best (68). The Red Raiders won the game 28-7 Saturday night in Lubbock’s Jones Sta dium. (Photo by Mike Rice) got in the picture, making an interception at the 16. At the beginning of the fourth quarter, Dove again hurt the Ag gies, intercepting another James pass. This time he went all the way for the score. The conver sion gave the Raiders a 21-7 lead. As if this weren’t enough, Don- old Rives, the Tech middle guard, Still no word on condition of Lin Piao WASHINGTON (^P) — The United States received strong assurances on the well-being of Communist China’s party chair man Mao Tse-tung before his meeting Friday with Emperor Haile Salassie of Ethiopia, but there is only silence on the fit ness of his designated successor, the ailing minister of defense Lin Piao. Reports that Lin, who has long suffered from tuberculosis, is either dead or dying are being treated with great caution in official circles here. But specu lation persists that the slight general who masterminded Ko rean War strategy two decades ago is playing some central role in the drama of succession now thought to be taking place in Peking. picked off a center snap that flew past the line of scrimmage and returned it from the A&M 20 to the eight. Two plays later, Doug McCutchen ran around right end for the last touchdown. Grimes added another point to produce the final result. Doug Neill led Aggie rushers with 49 yards in 13 carries. James passed for 64 yards, with six of 19 being completed for one touch down. Two were intercepted. The top receiver in the game was Robert Murski, who caught three for 44 yards. In his debut as a running back, Green ran eight times for 31 yards. Official tackle charts showed Grady Hoermann with seven un assisted and four assisted stops. Steve Luebbehusen had six and five and a pass broken up, Wie bold got five and three, plus a fumble, and Hitt made seven tackles and intercepted a pass. McElroy was shaken up only temporarily, but split end Tommy Goodwin broke an ankle after making a five yard gain on an end around in the second quarter. Statistics Tech First downs 10 Yards rushing 122 Yards passing 115 Passes 13-25-2 Total offense 237 Punts, average 10-43.5 Return yardage 160 Fumbles lost 1 of 5 Yards penalized 9/106 0 0 7 0 7 7 7 0 14 28 A&M 8 122 64 6-23-2 186 11-39.6 60 4 of 5 8/69 A&M Tech Attendance: 44,380 BUSIER - JONES AGENCY REAL ESTATE • INSURANCE F.H.A.—Veterans and Conventional Loans ARM & HOME SAVINGS ASSOCIATION Home Office: Nevada, Mo. 3523 Texas Ave. (in Ridgecrest) 846-3708 BURGER HUT Remember Happy Hour! BEER ON TAP 20c Monday - Friday — 4:30 p. m. - 6 p. m. 317 University Dr. North Gate ATTENTION All Seniors and Graduate Students! MAKE SURE YOUR PICTURE WILL BE IN THE 1972 AGGIELAND YEARBOOK PICTURE SCHEDULE A - D Oct. 4 - 8 E - I Oct. 11 - 15 J - K - L Oct. 18 - 22 M - N - O Oct. 25 - 29 P - Q - R Nov. 1-5 S - T - U Nov. 8 - 12 V - W - X - Y - Z Nov. 15 - 19 Make-Up Week — Nov. 22 - Dec. 10 NOTE: Students needing pictures for job-applications or any personal use may come ahead of schedule. CORPS SENIORS: Uniform: Class A Winter - Blouse or Midnight Shirt. CIVILIANS: Coat and Tie. PICTURES WILL BE TAKEN FROM 8: A.M. to 5: P.M. NOTE: BRING FEE SLIPS to UNIVERSITY STUDIO 115 No. Main — North Gate Phone: 846-8019 No Job Too Big Or Too Small printing center 603 Sulphur Springs Road 822—4-026 Bryan F~astest Sorv/ce In Town Blueline - Blacklines Auto-positives Enlargements / Reductions Report Publishing Collating / Binding Pawn Merchandise For Sale Tape Recorders Mech. Drawing Sets Guitars & Amps. Cameras, Radios TAPES Buy - Sell - Trade PAWN LOANS On Anything of Value TEXAS STATE CREDIT CO. 1014 Texas Ave.—Bryan 822-5633 Non-stop growth for engineers. At Dallas Power & Light Company. Dallas is one of the nation’s fastest growing major cities. To continue this growth Dallas Power & Light Company is deeply involved in innovation and in planning for the future. We will always need engineers to stay abreast of rapidly changing technology. New equipment and systems must be designed and imple mented to meet the electrical power needs of Dallas. New concepts of construction and mainte nance must be developed to insure a plentiful supply of highly reliable electricity for our cus tomers. We need sales and planning engineers who want to meet the challenge of our rapid growth. If you are seeking a challenging career; one where there is opportunity to develop your ana lytical and professional abilities — come grow with us at Dallas Power & Light Company. Interviews on your campus Thursday and Fri day, October 14 & 15, 1971. DALLAS POWER & LIGHT COMPANY An equal opportunity employer