The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 07, 1972, Image 5

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Tuesday, November 7, 1972
College Station, Texas
Page 5
Murski Takes SWC Honor
[y DENNIE H. FREEMAN
ssociated Press Sports Writer
DALLAS (A*) — Robert Murski
, p irely had time to get his chin
& a ra P fastened before Joe Fergu-
m dialed for danger Saturday.
Murski, A&M’s premier corner-
ick, said “I looked up on the
rst play and saw it coming 100
lies an hour ... It was the hard-
it thrown ball I’ve ever attempt-
i to catch.”
But catch it Murski did to set
le stage for the day as the Ag-
swiped six Ferguson passes
went on, Is ( a U p Se t victory over Ar-
a released I )nm
mi gave tki intercepted two passes
had been IS ^ g anie to earn The Asso-
back (thel« a j e( j p ress Southwest Confer-
'Ut Defensive Player of the
id once in li ^ awar( i - a ] so made seven
wish we had him another year.
He’s a tough, sure tackier. He
has great quickness and reads the
quarterback and the pass patterns
quick . . . and well. He can think
his feet and break for the ball
rapidly.”
Murski, a senior, helped the
A&M defense shut down Arkansas
wide receiver Mike Reppond with
out a catch.
Aggie safety Larry Ellis also
intercepted two passes.
The 6-foot, 189-pound Murski,
a native of Houston, said A&M
double covered Arkansas’ wide
receivers to shut down Ferguson’s
bombs.
“We also knew from films that
they favored inside cuts ... so
iwe favored their inside,” said
Murski, who explained that A&M
was in the zone coverage most of
the day.
Murski said he went home “in
a daze” after the victory over
Arkansas.
“It was a great feeling going
to school the next day and having
people congratulate you instead
of facing nothing but silence,”
Murski said.
Basketball Season Tickets Available
f which fnj
,vas said
on the
hing was
ound.
octors lean*
that there t
in the tlrtt
their miiiii
> body, W
de a “<
jse to 1
ickles, knocked down two passes
punted nine times for a 40-7
wage.
Melvin Roberts, Texas A&M
efensive coordinator and boss of
cm ams.'» ]e secon( ]ary, said Murski “play-
.ameteuii j a p er f ec t; football game. He
L!'!! Jfraded 100 per cent.
“Robert is an excellent football
layer and is getting better every
ay and every practice. We just
ALLEN
Oldsmobile
Cadillac
SALES - SERVICE
"Where satisfaction is
standard equipment”
2401 Texas Ave.
823-8002
Baksethall reserve ticket appli
cation blanks have been mailed
out to last year’s season ticket
holders, A&M Athletic Ticket
Manager Euleta Miller announced
Monday.
Mrs. Miller urged those receiv
ing applications to get their ticket
orders in no later than Tuesday,
Nov. 14, for processing. Season
tickets for A&M’s 12 home games
are $24. The Aggies’ first home
game is against Wayland Baptist
College on Tuesday, Nov. 28.
All A&M home games will start
at 7:30 p.m. this season. A&M
will play single varsity games as
there is no freshman program
this season.
A&M faculty members who
bought season football tickets get
a bonus in basketball. They can
attach their football ticket covers
to their application blanks and
get basketball reserve seat tickets
at half price, or $1 per ticket.
Faculty members should pick up
basketball applications at G. Rol-
lie White Coliseum and make
their orders prior to Tuesday,
Nov. 14.
M if
II* "m JL
The birds,
animals & flowers
are dying to tell us...
“Give a hoot,
don’t pollute!’
PSC
Robert Murski
SWC Defensive Player Of The Week
loin Woodsy Owl’s fight against pollution. Today.
Scholarship Fund Endowed
Dr. R. Henry Harrison of Bry
an, member of the 1918 and 1919
undefeated, unscored-upon A&M
football teams and Aggie team
physician 24 years, has perma
nently endowed a 12th Man Ath
letic Scholarship at TAMU.
BIKES
ENT OF
EOT
Supply
,95
rd Mon,
125.0
!ell alarm,
, day-date
e change,
feel back,
3
>rlrv
JAY’S SABER INN
Package Store
Come by and let us show you our selection of fine liquors
and wines. Weekend specials every Friday and Saturday.
We appreciate your business.
Student Discount
Open: 10:00 a. m. to 9:00 p. m. Monday Thru Saturday
701 Texas Ave. at .Saber Inn
846-7755
EROTIC EMPTINESS AND
THE LOVE OF GOD
Dr. Merold Westphal, Yale University
Assembly Room, MSC, Wed., Nov. 8,—7:30 p. m.
Sponsored by Faculty-Staff Christian Fellowship
The public is invited to attend
BARKER
>
PHOTOGRAPHY
STUDIO
Open Every
Thursday Evening
7-9 p. m.
till Xmas
Phone 846-2828
M - F 9-5
Sat. 9-12
Athletic Director and Head
Football Coach Emory Bellard
presented Dr. Harrison a plaque
commemorating the endowment,
which will provide $1,500 annually
for a student-athlete.
The scholarship is named in
memory of Dr. Mark Francis,
first dean of veterinary medicine
at A&M who was Dr. Harrison’s
dean, teacher and friend.
Dr. Harrison, medical doctor
with a family practice in Brazos
County since 1931, was a veter
inary medicine student during his
football days. Recalling he weigh
ed only 135 pounds, Dr. Harrison
told Bellard he believes there’s
a place for the little guy in col
legiate football.
He was well known as a drop-
kicking extra point and field goal
kicker during two of the Aggies’
best seasons.
Dr. Harrison recived the first
D.V.M. degree awarded by Texas
A&M, an honor, he recalls, only
because Harrison came alpha
betically before the other three
members of the first class.
As a veterinarian, he worked
four years for the Texas State
Department of Health before go
ing to Baylor College of Medicine
in Dallas. He received the M.D.
degree in 1928 and worked as a
company physician for Humble
Oil before moving to Bryan in
1931.
The late Coach Homer Norton
asked Dr. Harrison to be team
physician when he started coach
ing here. Dr. Harrison served 24
straight seasons, ending with
Coach Bear Bryant’s last year in
1957.
Coach Bellard said he deeply
appreciated the endowed scholar
ship, pointing out one benefit of
college sports is giving the stu
dent-athlete an opportunity to
earn a degree for future profes
sional growth.
John Hopkins, executive vice
president of The Aggie Club,
noted there are now four perma
nently endowed 12th Man Scholar
ships.
Ag Water Polo Team Wins Tourney
The A&M varsity solidified its
claim as the best water polo team
in the Southwest with five im
pressive wins and first place in
the 1972 Southwest Water Polo
Championships here this past
weekend.
The Aggies beat Hendrix Col
lege (Arkansas), 16-4; University
of Tulsa, 19-2; St. Marks Water
Polo Club of Dallas, 21-0; College
Station Swim Club, 18-0; and
“The Bunch” (combination of Rice
and Baylor Medical School), 14-7,
to earn the first-place trophy.
“The Bunch” was second, fol
lowed by College Station Swim
Club, Hendrix College, Texas
A&M Freshmen; State College of
Arkansas; St. Marks, and Tulsa.
The Aggie Varsity finished the
1972 season with a 19-4 record
and a two-year mark of 40-6.
Six Aggies — Lester Hamann,
Fred Meyers, Gordon Brown,
Steve Sonnenberg, Mike Hicks
and freshman Steve Moore —
made the all-tournament first
team, along with Willie Mercer
and Laurie Goddard of “The
Bunch,” Bob Leland of College
Station Swim Club and John
Bumpers of Hendrix College.
The all-tournament second team
included Aggies Wade Mattingly,
Paul McKinzie, Steve Prentice,
Dan Sonnenberg and Doug Mead-
en plus A&M freshmen Lee Davis
and Jim Yates; College Station
Swim Club members Doug Adam
son and Tom Sanders; Hendrix’s
Darryl Warren and David White
and “The Bunch’s” John Allen.
The Aggies scored 88 points to
their opponents’ 15. The one sta
tistic that most graphically illus
trates A&M’s superiority in the
tournament was the 118 assists
compared to 9 by the College Sta
tion Swim Club that was second
in that category.
0
Kent Ellis, Evangelist
“IN CHRIST”
The most important and beneficial relationship which one can
sustain in life is that of being “in Christ.” These words are used
“of a person to whom another is wholly joined and to whose power
and influence he is subject, so that the former may be likened to
the place in which the latter lives and moves . . . ingrafted as it
were in Christ, in fellowship and union with Christ . . . most inti
mately united tod him” (Thayer’s Greek-English Lexicon, p. 211).
The person “in Christ” enjoys all spiritual blessings, redemp
tion, forgiveness, and sanctification (Eph. 1:3, 7; I Cor. 1:2). “In
Christ” he is a new creature, receiving the benefits of God’s grace
and love, being led on to triumph and eternal salvation (II Cor.
5:17; II Tim, 2:1; Rom. 8:39; II Cor. 2:14; II Tim. 2:10). The
blessings of being “in Christ” continue in and beyond death, for
"Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord” (Rev. 14:13).
To live and die outside of Christ is to miss all these blessings
in time and eternity.
Two passages in the New Testament tell us how one comes to
be “in Christ.” Both state that a proper subject is “baptized into
Christ” (Gal. 3:27; Rom. 6:3). You wil search in vain for any
other way to enter “into Christ,” and thus to enjoy the incalculable
benefits of this relationships.
TWIN CITY CHURCH OF CHRIST
3610 Plainsman Lane
Bryan, Texas
Phone 846-4515 or 846-0804
FANTASTIC
FASHION
UNDER $20.oo
New Shipment
of Pant Suits
All Polyester
reg. $24 now $18
= ANDRES
213 University — College Station
NOV. 8th IS OUR 1st. ANNIVERSARY
AND WE ARE CELEBRATING
To help commemorate this achievement of our student-owned
business, the distributor for LABONNE bicycles has given a discount on
our last shipment.
Model No. 36-C $ 99.95
VC $104.95
36 $112.95
—Campi derailleur and Kickstand included on
all models—
ALSO ON ROOLD-GENT Semi-Pro Reg. $196.95 — Now $179.95
SPECIAL FALCON Semi-Pro - “531” Reg. $174.95—Now $159.95
u
Taking it all together-
performance, features, styling,
the BSR 810 moves into ranking
place among the best automatics
we know of. And at its price,
the others may well be in
for a real contest.”
From HIGH FIDELITY MAGAZINE-May, 1972