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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 17, 1972)
THE BATTALION Page 6 College Station, Texas Thursday, February 17, 1972 Read Classifieds Daily John Curylo Improvement seen in conference and Aggies WORLD CAMPUS AFLOAT Discover the World on Your SEMESTER AT SEA Sails each September & February Combine accredited study with educational stops in Africa, Aus tralasia and the Orient. Over 5000 students from 450 campuses have already experienced this interna tional program. A wide range of financial aid is available. Write now for free catalog: WCA, Chapman College, Box CC12, Orange, Cal. 92666 ATTENTION AGGIES An Austin Seminary Representative will be on campus Wednesday, February 23. Information available con cerning Graduate Theological Study, Admission Require ments, Fellowships, Financial Aid, Rockefeller etc. Ca reers in Ministry Christian Education. Interested stu dents contact Placement Center, YMCA Building, 845- 6551. Juniors and Seniors preferred. Southwest Conference basket ball is on the way up, and the Texas Aggie cagers are moving right along with it. The varsity, picked to finish last in the league, currently is tied for second. The Fish have established themselves as the best in the conference. Youth, talent, desire and hustle are traits of both squads, and bright things can be seen in the future. 1972 version of the team is the framework of the 1973 squad that has to be labelled a top contender. These thoughts bring to mind the subject of recruiting. This task is doubly trying in basket ball, because of the numbers in volved. The Aggies have only two seniors, Bobby Threadgill and Rick Duplantis, so the ground work is being done for the cage program at A&M, under the aus pices of Shelby Metcalf and Jim Culpepper. With Cedric Joseph, Mike Floyd, Webb Williams, Dale Donaldson and Jerry Mercer moving up to join this year’s starters, Mario Brown, Jeff Overhouse, Brad Pauley and Randy Knowles, the squad will be full of talent and size next season. There are more schools that play the game, fewer coaches to carry the load, more colleges with good programs and a lot of miles to travel in search of talent. So, regardless of how the Ag gies finish this time around, it must be remembered that the Yet, the miles to travel cause Sbisa Hall & Duncan Hall Meal Schedule Week Beginning Feb. 20 Thru Feb. 26, 1972 SUNDAY Breakfast WEDNESDAY Tang Ass’t. Dry Cereal Chilled Apricots Fried Eggs Sausage Links Toast-Jelly-Oleo Blueberry Hot Cakes Syrup Coffee-Milk Breakfast Tang Fresh Fruit Ass’t. Dry Cereal 1. Scrambled Eggs Jelly-Oleo Sausage Patties Raisin Bread Toast Duncan 2. Cinnamon Rolls w/Raisins Sausage Patties Milk-Coffee Sbisa—Plus Hotcakes & Fried Eggs Dinner Roast Boneless Pork Loin Brown Gravy Apple Sauce TTiri Tcttors Shoe Peg White Corn Buttered Buttered Green Peas Rainbow Salad Tossed Green Salad Bleu Cheese Dressing Cherry Pie Bread-Oleo-Ice Tea Dinner •Barbecue Beef On Bun •Turkey a la King •French Fried Potatoes •Pinto Beans w/Salt Pork Buttered Mixed Vegetables Cheese Rice Cottage Cheese &, Pineapple Chocolate Pudding Bread-Oleo Fruit Punch FRIDAY Breakfast Tang Fresh Fruit Ass’t. Dry Cereal 1. Scrambled Eggs Home Fried Potatoes Hot Biscuits-Jelly-Oleo 2. Coffee Cake Pan Fried Bacon Coffee-Milk Sbisa—All Plus Hotcakes & Fried Eggs MONDAY Breakfast Tomato Juice Ass’t. Dry Cereal 1. Blueberry Muffins Pan Fried Bacon 2. Jelly Fritters-Oleo Pan Fried Bacon Milk-Coffee Sbisa—Plus Hotcakes, Fried & Scrambled Eggs Supper •T-Bone Steak 10-Oz. Au Jus Smoked Pork Chop •Baked Potatoes w/Sour Cream •Buttered English Peas Buttered Carrots Steamed Rice Tossed Salad Russian Dressing Hot Rolls-Oleo Ice Cream-Ass’t. Cookies Milk-Coffee-Ice Tea Dinner •Fried Jumbo Shrimp 6 each Cocktail Sauce •Meat Loaf w/101 Sauce •French Fried Potatoes •Buttered Peas w/Whole Onions Beef Rice Buttered Succatash Grape Jello Peach Cobbler Combread-Oleo-Fruit Punch Dinner Beef & Vegetable Soup •Chili w/Beans Ass’t. Cold Cuts—Ham, Cheese, Piemento Loaf •Potato Salad •Baked Beans, Steamed Rice Chilled Tomatoes Shredded Lettuce & S. Tomatoes Mayonnaise Mustard Ice Cream Ass’t. Cookies Bread-Oleo-Ice Tea THURSDAY Supper •Grilled Beef Cutlet Au Jus Chopped Beef Steak •Snowflake Potatoes •Scalloped Corn Steamed Rice Garnish Spinach Tossed Salad French Dressing German Chocolate Cake Bread-Oleo Milk-Coffee-Ice Tea Supper •Chicken Fried Steak Cream Gravy Shrimp Creole •Steamed Rice •Field Peas w/Salt Pork Mashed Potatoes Broccoli Chopped Buttered Raisin Slaw 1,000 Island Dressing Peach Crisp Grape Punch Hot Rolls-Oleo-Milk-Coffee Breakfast Grapefruit Juice Ass’t. Dry Cereal 1. Cinnamon Rolls w/Raisins Finger Steaks 2. Scrambled Eggs Finger Steaks Raisin Toast Duncan Only Jelly-Oleo-Milk-Coffee Sbisa—Plus Hotcakes & Fried Eggs SATURDAY Dinner •Chicken & Dumplings •Veal Curry •Buttered Rice •Green Beans Buttered Mashed Potatoes Brussel Sprouts Buttered Mixed Fruit Salad Ind. Tarts Bread-Oleo Ice Tea Breakfast Pineapple Juice Ass’t. Dry Cereal 1. Coffee Cake Grilled Ham 2. Scrambled Eggs Grilled Ham Hot Biscuits-Jelly-Oleo Coffee-Milk Sbisa—Plus Hotcakes & Fried Eggs TUESDAY Breakfast Pineapple & Grapefruit Juice Ass’t. Dry Cereal 1. Jelly Fritters Pan Fried Bacon 2. Blueberry Muffins Pan Fried Bacon Coffee-Milk Sbisa—Plus Hotcakes, Fried & Scrambled Eggs Supper •Baked Meat Loaf w/101 Sauce Shrimp Newburg •Buttered New Potatoes •Mustard Greens Steamed Rice Carrots Buttered Health Salad Apple Pie Hot Rolls-Oleo Coffee-Milk-Pink Lemonade Dinner Roast Beef Brown Gravy •Lyonnaise Potatoes (1) •Pinto Beans w/Salt Pork Buttered Carrots Steamed Rice Sliced Tomatoes on Lettuce Leaf Salad Dressing Individual Chocolate Cakes Bread-Oleo-Ice Tea Supper Spaghetti & Meat Balls Spaghetti Sauce •Cut Green Beans •Spiced Beets & Onions Steamed Rice Tossed Salad Russian Dressing Toasted Garlic French Bread Space Crunch Coffee-Milk-Orange Punch Dinner •Beef Pot Pie •Spaghetti w/Meat Sauce •Creamed Whole Potatoes •Harvard Beets Green Beans Herb Rice Strawberry Jello Pear Cobbler Bread-Oleo Ice Tea MEAL SCHEDULE AT SBISA MEAL SCHEDULE AT DUNCAN Monday through Friday: Breakfast—7:00 a. m. to 8:00 a. m. Continental Line—7:00 a. m. to 10:30 a. m. Lunch—10:30 a. m. to 2:30 p. m. Dinner—4:30 p. m. to 6:30 p. m. Monday through Friday: Breakfast—7:00 a. m. Lunch—M. W. F.—11:15, 12:15 and 1:15 p. m. T. Th.—11:30 and 12:30 Dinner—6:30 p. m. Supper •Roast Beef Brown Gravy Sukiyaki Over Rice •Dry Navy Beans w/Salt Pork •Parsley Carrots Steamed Rice Squash Buttered Caesar Salad Dutch Apple Pie (1) Bread-Oleo tvcuv Coffee-Orange Punch Saturday: Breakfast—7:00 a, m. to 8:30 a. m. Lunch—11:30 a. m. to 1:00 p. m. Dinner—4:30 p. in. to 6:00 p. m. Saturday: Breakfast—7:00 a. m. Lunch—12:15 p. m. Dinner—5:00 p. m. Sunday: Breakfast—8:00 a. m. to 9:00 a. m. Dinner—11:30 a. m. to 1:00 p. m. Sunday: Breakfast—8:00 a. m. to 9:00 a. m. Dinner—12:45 p. m. MSC Food Services Open 7:00 a. m. Close 7:00 p. m. Daily Open Ice Cream In Sbisa •The Only Vegetables and Entrees Served at Duncan Hall Master Menu No. 3 Week beginning Feb. 20 through Feb. 26, 1972 the most problems. The midwest is full of prospects, so several junkets are made each season. Not only is time a factor, but money becomes a difficulty. Bas ketball budgets do not even come close to matching the dollars spent on football. Then comes the wooing itself. With well over a hundred schools courting the top recruits, impres sions are important. Unlike foot ball, basketball coaches can talk to high schoolers starting in De cember and have them visit the campus now. The next home game, Rice, will have several prospects seeing A&M for the first time. With freshmen eligible next season, these young men project a few months ahead and see what is happening now going on then. This includes attendance, manners and support. A&M’s ace in the hole utl fine spirit and the wide vario of academic majors offered students. The chance to play a winning team is incentive high schoolers and junior collet players alike. So, as the 1972 SWC race* mains tight and sunset comesoee basketball, the most import part of the future—recruiting-ii Smaller high schools are more competitive in basketball, so the number of prospects is increased. Also, with only two or three coaches on a university staff, each man has to do half or a third of the job. In football, each mentor has one-tenth the responsibility. In football, too, smaller colleges and universities are unable to compete in recruiting with the major schools. But in basketball, this is not the case. Schools such as Stephen F. Austin and South western Louisiana are proof of this. AIA weight lifter here next week Russ Knipp, a champion weight lifter, will put on a demonstration Tuesday, Feb. 22, at A&M. Affiliated with Athletes in Ac tion, Knipp will perform in room 105 of the Geology Building at 7:30 p.m. Knipp has held nine world rec ords and 22 national marks. In the Pan American games last fall, he won three gold medals and one silver for a 991-pound perform ance. He pressed 336 pounds, lift ed 281 on the snatch and lifted Mustang swim team dominates dual tank meet with Aggies, 7043 Powerful SMU won eight of the 13 events and went on to defeat Texas A&M, 70-43, in a dual swimming meet at P. L. Downs Jr. Natatorium on the A&M cam pus Wednesday afternoon. Coach Dennis Fosdick’s Aggies pleasantly surprised by winning five of the events against the perennial SWC swim kings. Steve Prentice, a sophomore from Pasadena, led the A&M thereby qualifying for the NQi nationals this year. Prentice also won the 200-yw individual medley while Doi| Meaden, a freshman from How ton Memorial, won two otltr events, the 200-yard freestylew the 500-yard freestyle. The fifth Aggie victory m fashioned by Duncan Cooper, i sophomore from Midland, ilj won the one-meter diving. The Aggies will be in actki 374 on the clean and jerk. Also appearing with Knipp will be Dan Hollis. surge and had the day’s outstand ing performance when he won the 200-yard backstroke in 1:59.7, at home at 3 p.m. Saturday wfc» they entertain the Texas Ttd Red Raiders. DRIVING FOR THE BASKET in Tuesday night’s 86-85 victory over Arkansas is point man Mario Brown (13). The 6-2 junior college transfer scored 15 points in hitting six of 13 field goals and three of five free throws. The ball-handling play maker was credited with nine assists. Other Aggies in the picture are Brad Pauley (42) and Randy Knowles (32). A&M visits Ft. Worth to play Texas Christian Saturday night. (Photo by Mike Rice) JL REV. and MRS. W. H. BRAND Evangelist—Singers—Musicians MUSIC FESTIVAL AT THE ALL FAITHS CHAPEL ON FEB. 21-22-23-24, 1972 Rev. and Mrs. W. H. Brand, nationally known musicians, have recently completed 1,000,000 miles of travel through the United States and Canada making public appear ances. Mr. Brand is a talented baritone solo ist, having a three-octave range. He has done much work on radio stations and also had his own daily programs in his hometown of Ft. Wayne, Ind. One of the unique phases of his ministry is the ability to quote and use over 5,000 verses of the Bible by memory. He studied voice for opera before his conversion, receiving diplomas from “The European School of Music” and “The Perfect Voice In stitute” under Professors D. Baxter and J. Feuchingter. Mrs. Brand, who travels with her hus band, is an accomplished musician, playing the guitar, organ, guitar, piano, guitar, vibra harp, bells, and the accordian. Mrs. Brand spent seven years in the theater previous to her conversion. She not only does solo work on the instruments, but also accompanies Mr. Brand’s vocals as well as doing duet numbers with him. It was by a freak occurance that we have the chance to hear this team since they are usually booked 8 years in advance. 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