The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 03, 1972, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    m
THE BATTALION
Friday, November 3, 1972
College Station, Texas
Page 7
SALE
Deluxe!
In Athletic Hall Of Fame
it. Air (
new. 846-Dlfi
Endure. PW
fter 6, 846-JtIi,
ill Mario at
4 Inducted Saturday
'uwer, autoBH
12 x 60. J L
ondition. Loa!
17.
Three footballers and a world
champion trackman are the most
recent additions to the Texas
A&M University Athletic Hall of
Fame.
mobile home, t
in appliaactt
Charlie Krueger
Joe Utay
onneville. Eu
. only 1100 nii
■0216
L. NOTICE
THE EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
it arrive la tli
ns before deiu
roceedinj pd(.
ffers inquirers class for
r the DoctonliM . . , , . ,
lose interested in learning
hel Antoun _
'City c, ami bout its faith and practice.
'IONS A801
OPEN CH.S
972 at 2:30 p.!
n Zachry E«i.
aduate Collet!
aduate Collep
TE COLLEC!
r the Doctoriil
Dee
Klish
1ITICAL EDI
IEMES OF 1J
’UDE IN SEll
)F SAMUEL^
1972 at 2:Stpi
the Academiet
aduate Collet!
)ve peraonel
IGINEERWtll
traphs of ^
6 Surauai
7 Sunuasl
or g Sunuaa
9 Sunua!
0 Suraus!
13 Makeup
110, Zachry hi
P. m. anli)
ICE ENGLISH
ATION. AI
for all Jon
of the Ui
)t uken tkel
ion, will be p
, 1972 at 7:«|
nent Currimk
tment Currinl
‘Partment Cmi
kD
lent Currirei
1 guideliaei
ation, check n
r. Completioii
ement of the
equisite for i
rmeater, 191!.
ave not nadei
English Dill
o take a depeS “
xamination W
ir. Such Mi a
1:00 p. m. ci!
loom 208, Nip
take the enc:
History Dept
uvember 6.
purchase tin
raduate studfsl
ademic yeir
or ninety-fin
hours passed
irt period on l
d in satialpij
luirement id
regulation m
ith the rint
Coke Buildiit
records to dtie
era for te
ring clerk fl
continuing 2
he rings will
trar’s Office
: January 2!,
uty from I:#
' through Frid
ND
gold-rimmed,
ublications fc
•race Drcf
16-1113
6-South
ion, Texas
)ns, Etc.
mts Iml
livery
DAY-
iti-Freeze
r coolant
Douglas fi
tlGH “
extra cbH
the i
o most tin
2e with
only Premi
gladly ii
Amalie,
illips 6f
- 35c qt
'LUGS
•n,
ich
95 exchan
;nerators
exchange
: for most
id some
dealer priti
>oy and
Dealer
do Parts
822-16#
Service Foi
Bryan
906 Jersey
Sou^h Side of Campus
Class Meets
:45 p. m. Sun. Nov. 5
For Further Information
Call 846-1726
egular Services
Sunday 8 and 9:30 a. m.
7 p. m.
Tuesday 5:30 p. m.
Thursday 6:30 p. m.
Douglas Jewelry
212 N. Main
822-3119
Due to be inducted in cere
monies on Kyle Field prior to the
A&M-Arkansas game Nov. 4, are,
in order of class seniority: Joe
Utay, class of ’08, now a Dallas
attorney; Jim Thomason, class of
’41, » Bi-cnham public accountant;
Charlie Krueger, class of ’58, de
fensive tackle for the pro San
Francisco 49ers; and Randy Mat-
son, class of ’67, world record
holder in the shot put and now
a staff member of the Associa
tion of Former Students at Texas
A&M.
Football Officials Association in
1912 and served as chairman of
that group until 1936. He offici
ated in more than 100 Southwest
Conference games before he re
tired in 1936. A charter member
of the National Football Founda
tion and Hall of Fame, he was
awarded the Distinguished Amer
ican Award this year in recogni
tion of his lifetime devotion to
the sport.
where the Aggies played Ford-
ham in 1940.
Krueger came out for football
as a freshman in 1954 without a
scholarship and went on to win
All-America honors as a tackle
in both 1956 and 1957. He signed
with the San Francisco 49ers in
1958 and has been a standout
with them ever since. He cap
tains the defensive team from
his tackle slot.
ALLEN
Oldsmobile
Cadillac
SALES - SERVICE
“Where satisfaction is
standard equipment”
2401 Texas Ave.
823-8002
AGGIES
Do we need a new sheriff after a quarter of a century?
Should any one person stay in this office for life?
Do we need a sheriff that will take the lead in fast, fair,
firm, sure enforcement of the law, the same treatment
to all ?
Who has fought against dishonest officials all his life?
One who has been an Aggie booster all his life?
Would you attend a meeting once a month to talk about
how to improve law enforcement?
Did you know that full corporation of the sheriffs dept,
with all the news media protects you from illegal acts
by officials ?
Did you know that our team is going to beat Arkansas
next Sat.?
YOUR SUPPORT AND VOTES APPRECIATED
W. R. OWENS
For
SHERIFF, BRAZOS COUNTY
Utay captained his 1907 foot
ball team and later became an
assistant coach and athletic direc
tor in the Charlie Moran days.
Still later he was appointed to
the Board of Directors of Texas
A&M and served as chairman of
the Athletic Committee of that
board. He founded the Southwest
Thomason was the durable
blocking back on the 1939 Texas
Aggie National Championship
team and set a record by playing
584 minutes of a possible 600
that season. John Kimbrough, the
Aggie All-America fullback, has
said, “Without Jim Thomason, no
one ever would have heard of me.”
Thomason also was Southwest
Conference champion in the shot
put and discus for two years. In
the school year of 1940-41 he was
co-captain of both the football
and track teams. He has been
named the Best Blocker for the
first 25 years of the Cotton Bowl
Matson came out of Panipa
High is the state champion in
the shot put and discus and in
his sophomore year at A&M he
won the silver medal in the shot
put during the 1964 Olympics in
Tokyo. In 1968 he added the
Olympic Gold Medal and a new
Olympic record at Mexico City.
He was the first shot putter to
break the 70-foot barrier when
he set a world record of 70 feet,
IVz inches in 1965 and two years
later he raised the world record
to its present distance of 71 feet,
5% inches.
Tech, Texas, Arkansas Vie
For Post-Season Bowl Berths
Paid Pol. Ad.
By KEVIN COFFEY
Assistant Sports Editor
Hayden Fry of SMU and A1
Conover of Rice have both been
quoted to the fact that they feel
the Texas Longhorns only have
to play out their schedule to win
an unprecedented fifth straight
Southwest Conference title.
The fourth straight was un
precedented enough, but a fifth
is down right ridiculous. At this
point the ’Horns do indeed ap
pear to have that fifth straight
Cotton Bowl appearance locked
with only SMU, TCU, Baylor and
A&M remaining on their SWC
schedule.
Combined these teams have a
record of 13-13, but it seems that
Texas is just too much for the
conference again. How do they
do it?
This week the Longhorns host
SMU and are a 20 point favorite.
SMU coach Fry gave the Mus
tangs little hope of upsetting
Texas earlier in the week, but he
OAKRIDGE
SMOKEHOUSE
ALL YOU CAN EAT
Mon. Tues. & Wed. After 6:00 P. M.
Mon. — Southern Fried Chicken $1.89
Tues. — Hickory Smoked Ribs $1.99
Wed. — Bar-B-Qued Chicken $1.89
(Served with homemade Bread, Butter, Salad, French Frys or
Baked Potato)
Daily Buffet-$1.49 11:00 a. m.-1:30
We’re under new management and we’d like to have all the
Aggies come by and try our specials. You’ll find you get
all you can eat for reasonable prices.
We will be open after the football game.
OAKRIDGE SMOKEHOUSE
Manager Ross Beams
807 Texas Ave.
846-6290
may have been using psychologi
cal warfare.
Last year SMU gave Texas a
whale of a game in Dallas losing
22-18 in a game marred with
some highly controversial plays.
SMU’s hopes ride on whether
their famed M&M boys can come
back after a poor showing against
the surprising Texas Tech Red
Raiders.
Kickoff is scheduled for 2 p.m.
Saturday with a crowd of some
60,000 fans expected.
Texas Tech hopes to keep itself
in the bowl picture when it faces
the Rice Owls Saturday in Hous
ton.
Tech is now ranked 18th in the
AP poll, their only loss coming
at the hands of the ninth ranked
Texas Longhorns. Tech’s record
now stands at 6-1.
The last two meetings between
the schools have been close defen
sive battles, but this year Tech
has a high octane offense and
seems to be able to put the points
on the board.
Last week Tech beat SMU 17-3
showing a tremendous defense
which earned the Raider nose-
guard national defensive player
of the week. Rice was blasted by
Texas 45-9 as the Owls record
fell to 2-3-1.
Tech is a 10 point favorite for
the 2 p.mj kickoff at Rice Sta
dium.
TCU lost to the revengeful
Fighting Irish of Notre Dame by
a 21-0 score and now must turn
their thoughts to the Baylor
Bears.
Baylor evened its record at 3-3
by beating the Aggies last week.
The Bears are a totally different
team from years past, but are
still a 3-point underdog to the
Horned Frogs.
Baylor hasn’t beaten the Frogs
at home since 1954 but that rec
ord could be put to the test Sat
urday. Kickoff is scheduled for
2 p.m. in Fort Worth.
The University of Houston tries
to rearrange their football for
tunes when they face Florida
State in Tallahassee at 1 p.m.
Houston has faced some of the
finest passing teams in the coun
try this year in the likes of Rice,
Virginia Tech and Arizona State
and Florida State will be no ex
ception.
The Seminoles feature quarter
back Gary Huff who currently
ranks second in the country in
passing with 2,115 yards and 17
touchdowns.
Houston is having one of its
worst seasons ever and find them
selves 10 point underdogs this
week.
If Texas does indeed go on to
win the conference theirs should
be a real battle between Texas
Tech and Arkansas for the second
spot. Both teams are in good po
sition to be invited to post-season
bowl games barring any major
upset. Tech and Arkansas meet
November 25 in the last regular
season game for both teams.
Randy Matson
Jim Thomason
BYRON
I!
TUNNELL
RAILROAD COMMISSIONER
BYRON TUNNELL
is a graduate of Baylor University Law School, an outstanding
attorney, experienced in all fields regulated by the Railroad Com
mission of Texas.
BYRON TUNNELL
believes we must develop our own domestic oil and gas reserves
to avoid becoming overly dependent on unreliable foreign sources
for our domestic needs.
BYRON TUNNELL
is a Conservationist concerned with our environment.
BYRON TUNNELL
believes more domestic refineries should be built, which would
create more jobs at home, and at the same time prevent our
becoming dependent on foreign refineries for our product needs.
BYRON TUNNELL
believes the public is best served by a great transportation system
which is permitted to operate in a sound economic climate.
Pd. Pol. Adv. Tunnell for R.R.C. Committee, Kenny Paul, Chairman.