105.00 Week Al RESERVE LIFE SALUTES A WINNER PHIL ADAMS OUR CONGRATULATIONS to Phil Adams for his outstand ing- achievements this past year. | efforts qualified him to attend Reserve Life’s “Ba- amas 72” Convention held at the Grand Bahamas ptel and Country Club on the Grand Bahama Island, il has expressed a desire to thank all those who joined Reserve Life “Family” to qualify him for the honor the trip. CASA CHAPULTEPEC OPEN 11 A. M. TO 2 P. M. — 5 P. M. TO 9:30 P. M. 1315 COLLEGE AVENUE — PHONE 822-9872 SPECIALS GOOD WED., THURS. & FRI. Taco Dinner UNC 99c 2 Tacos Fried Rice Fried Beans Guacamole Tostaditas Hot Sauce Tamale Dinner 99<* 2 Tamales Spanish Rice Fried Beans Chile Conquezo Tostaditas Hot Sauce Enchilada Dinner 99c 3 Enchiladas Fried Rice Fried Beans Guacamole Tostaditas Hot Sauce 99c Combination Dinner Enchilada Tamale Spanish Rice Fried Beans Taco Guacamole Tostaditas Hot Sauce Double Treat Retreat 1 .r' J- •• " w for blanlti . Open BEVERLY TERRELL Soloist and Composer from Dallas, Texas JACK TAYLOR pastor of Castle Hills Baptist Church San Antonio Author of “The Key To Triumphant Living’’ WHAT: Texas A&M BSU Retreat THEME: “Much More” PLACE: Pineywoods Baptist Encampment DATE: September 22-23, 1972 TOTAL COST: $6.00 plus transportation ($1.00 reservation fee due noon Wednesday, September 20) For further information, call 846-6411 BSU, 201 N. Main or come by the THE BAHALiON Wednesday, September 20, 1972 College Station, Texas Page Tigers Similar To Huskers In Reference To Personnel By BILL HENRY Battalion Sports Editor This week’s opponent for the Aggies, Louisiana State Univer sity, will have much the same appearance as did last week’s foe, Nebraska. A&M will travel to Baton Rouge for Saturday’s 7:30 p. m. contest. “LSU plays a different style than Nebraska,” coach Emory Bellard said at his weekly press conference Tuesday afternoon. “They line up body on a body and whip your body. Every year they have one of the top defensive teams in the nation and this year- will be no exception. They have great personnel, a lot of depth and they are well coached. “They are a very physical team plus a fine offense. They have two great quarterbacks in Paul Lyons and Bert Jones.” Jones has been the starting quarterback and is a much better passer. Lyons, on the otherhand, is the better runner and caused the Aggies fits in last year’s 37- 0 whipping. The Aggie coach dittoed what he said after the 37-7 defeat suf fered against Nebraska last Sat urday. “We didn’t play up to our ex pectations,” he said. “It can’t be said that things would have been different but we could have made a much better showing. “The players really wanted to win but we were too cautious. So cautious that we never got un tracked and got after it. They weren’t as aggressive as they should have been.” Brad Dusek, injured last Sat urday, is still on the doubtful list but may get to play against LSU. “There is an outside chance,” Bellard said. “Ht has responded well to treatment and he was able to run a little on it yesterday. Saturday I didn’t think he had a chance but there is a little hope now. If he is unable to go, fresh man Alvin Bowers will start in his place. Bubba Bean, injured against Wichita State, will be ready for LSU. “We thought he’d be ready against Nebraska but before the game we watched him run his plays and it was evident that his ankle was still bothering him and we decided not to chance aggre- vating the injury.” Like the gentleman and fine coach he is, Bellard took the blame for the defeat when it was ap parent that he shouldn’t. The answer to the defeat was that the UKJvEfcS i T^Y su-fsis r i ^ fra-m Te*as A M) At North Gate players had a bad day against one of the nation’s finest foot ball teams. “It is my responsibility to get the team ready and on the field,” he said. “The only satisfaction you get out of coaching is seeing your players do well and I guess the team just wasn’t prepared.” Another coach said that the team had worked on everything Nebraska ran and again voiced the fact that the team did not play well on that given day. Bellard praised the play of jun ior safety Larry Ellis and senior cornerback Robert Murski on their performance Saturday afternoon. “Both played exceedingly well against the pass and the run,” he said. “We had several other players who made some good plays but the consistency wasn’t there. “Offensively, Richard Osborne caught the ball real well and Lex James played well under the cir cumstances.” On preparations for this week Bellard said: “Our players are working real hard. We just have to keep work ing until everything comes to gether and that time will come, hopefully this Saturday night against LSU.” ERROR-FREE TYPING MMU11II1I CORRECTION RIBBON ERRORITE BOOKSTORE Offense Shining For SWC Against Non-conference Foes DALLAS—Those cries to break up the Bears, Mustangs and Red Raiders may be a little premature, but there’s no denying that the offenses flashed by Baylor, SMU and Texas Tech in last Saturday’s debuts staked the Southwest Con ference to its most impressive statistical start in recent seasons. SWC schools playing for the championship this year have a 4-3 won-lost record, the three three losses coming to national powers Southern California, Ne braska and Georgia—and they’re averaging a shade under 26 points per game. The big rumbles came from Tech and SMU, both offensively suspect after mediocre showings last year. And Baylor, winner of three games in the last three years, outgained Georgia decisive ly in a 24-14 loss to the highly- regarded Bulldogs. SMU’s twin terrors, junior Al vin Maxson and freshman Wayne Morris, put on the greatest two- man rushing act in the Mustangs’ 58-year history. Not even the Walker-Rote glory days saw two Mustangs rush for 323 yards in one game and, is a result, they rank one-two in rushing. Max- son’s 169 rushing yards is the third best ever in an SWC opener, eclipsed only by TCU’s Bobby Davis (247) in 1970, and Arkan sas' Leon Campbell 236) in 1949, while Morris’ 154 ranks sixth for openers. However, the Mustangs had to take second in team rushing and total offense to Tech’s new breed of whiz kids. Eight Raiders rush ed for 481 yards, led by transfer George Smith with 153 on 11 car ries and sophomore Cliff Hoskins with 117 yards and a touchdown on only two carries. Hoskins broke for a 79-yard touchdown on his first varsity effort, later came back to gallop 38 yards—giving him an average gain of 58.5 yards per carry. Tech's 481 yards is the second best rushing total ever in an SWC opening game, and marks the fourth straight year an SWC school has rushed for more than 400 yards in the season’s first game. Five runners are currently averaging more than 100 yards per game, the biggest onslaught by rushers since the return of two-platoon football in 1965. Only twice before in that span have more than two rushers gained more than 100 yards in the season opener. 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