The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 21, 1973, Image 7

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    IE BATTALION
Wednesday, February 21, 1973 College Station, Texas Page 7
krciniega Thrills Fans T o Highlight Circus
‘Good Time Had By All’ As Aggies Whip Rice, 90-80
By BILL HENRY
Coach Shelby Metcalf said after
Tuesday night’s 90-80 whipping
jof Rice that “a good time was
had by all.” Even losing coach
iDon Knodel had a good chuckle
while visiting his friend Metcalf
at the Aggie bench during the
jame and giving the “Gig Em”
mi when it was out of reach
tor his team.
It was more like a three-ring
-circus than a basketball game as
41 turnovers were committed, 39
personal fouls and two technicals.
The most entertaining portion
for the fans was the arrival of
Aggie folk hero Joe Arciniega on
the floor of G. Rollie White.
A standing ovation was given
as he entered the game with 50
seconds remaining. He satisfied
his well-wishers with a career
high four points and committed
Prentice Qualifies For Nationals
fcSwim Team Splits Four Meets
2-5823
A&M’s swimming squad split in
[our matches Friday and Satur-
isy, beating Midwestern Univer-
dtyandTCU while losing to UT-
Irlington and SMU.
The Aggies beat Midwestern,
02-8 and TCU, 63-48, in a dou-
ile-dual in the TCU pool Friday
ifternoon. The Aggies lost to
IIT-Arlington at Arlington, Fri-
iay night, 80-33, and they lost to
iMU in the SMU pool Saturday
ifternoon, 71-42.
Steve Prentice kept alive his
dory string in the 200-yard
ackstroke and he qualified for
the Nationals in that event with
a time of 2:01.3 against UT-Ar-
lington.
Aggies Steve Moore, Larry
Schueckler and Nash Dowdle all
swam their personal bests.
During the four meets the Ag
gies had their best times of the
year in the 400-yard freestyle re
lay, 400-yard medley relay, 200-
yard individual medley, 200-yard
backstroke, 100-yard freestyle,
200-yard butterfly and 200-yard
breaststroke.
The Aggies are idle this week
but will be in the SWC champion
ships at TCU the following week.
his second foul of the year.
Both teams were loose as nei
ther have any title hopes and all
that was gained was experience
as numerous substitutions were
made. Rice played 11 players and
the Aggies played 10.
The win moves A&M to 6-5 in
the SWC, 14-9 overall, while the
Owls slumped to 2-9 in confer
ence and 7-15 for the year.
Randy Knowles was again the
leading scorer with 22 points but
5-10 sophomore guard Mike Floyd
stole the show.
He hit 16 points, most coming
from shots the Harlem Globetrot
ters couldn’t make. His floor
leadership and ball control were
amazing as was his hustle.
Mario Brown also played well
scoring 18 points with 11 assists
to fellow teammates for the score.
His performance proved to the
3,553 fans that he is deserving of
gaining votes on the Pizza Hut
All-America team ballot that was
being distributed during the
game.
“Our guard play was potent,”
Metcalf said. “They took the ball
inside and looked for the open
man. I thought we did a lot of
things right tonight.
“Mike Floyd is the best sopho
more guard we’ve ever had at
Texas A&M. He helps us a bunch
and we’ll have him for two more
years.”
6-9 sophomore Jerry Mercer
also played an exceptional game
scoring 11 points and intimidating
the Owls’ inside men.
Leading scorer for Rice was
6-10 center Steve Emshoff with
18 points followed by guard Perry
Gaudet with 16.
The game started off slowly
with only ten points scored dur
ing the first five minutes of ac
tion and A&M ahead, 6-4.
From the outset, it was hot and
cold for both clubs. Great scoring
sprees and deft silence from the
nets.
After the first five-minute dol
drums, A&M caught fire and
jumped out to a 21-8 lead less
than five minutes later.
Rice then caught up within
seven, 23-16, ten minutes left. The
Aggies, however, kept a good ten-
point buffer most of the way and
finished the first half with a 45-
35 lead.
The second half was much the
same as the Aggies jumped out
ahead by 14, 57-43, five minutes
deep and Rice cut it to ten, 63-53,
five minutes later.
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WANT AD RATES
On di; 5« per word
U per word each additional day
Minimum charge—76c
Classified Display
$1.00 per column inch
each insertion
DEADLINE
( p.m. day before publication
FOR SALE
IBl Suzuki 500. 2,000 miles. Perfect
ipt. 846-2159. 219M
IMS Chevrolet Impala. Fully equipped,
"ill 846-3942. 2I8U
letently reupholstered sofa and matching
lir in Herculon fabric. Very colorful
leicellent condition. $75. 846-9306 after
ij gal, aquarium, gravel, filter, pump.
«tl, lighted hood, etc. $50. 845-128
|7.11
21713
1112 Honda SL 350. Very low mileage.
214tfn
Pure blood dalmatian puppies. Call 823-
21218
GIRLIE MAGAZINES.
GIRLIE POCKETBOOKS.
IMM Color Films, 8-track Party Tapes.
Optn 3 p.m. to 12 p.m.—7 days a week
Tremendous Selection
CENTRAL NEWSSTAND
SSJ'/i University Dr. — C.S.
209tfn
OFFICIAL NOTICE
Ifficial notices must arrive in the Office
Student Publications before deadline of
B. of the day proceeding publication.
d be eligible to purchase the Texas
M University ring, an undergraduate
lent must have at least one academic
r in residence and credit for ninety-five
semester hours. The hours passed at
preliminary grade report period on
th 12, 1973 may be used in satisfying
ninety-five hour requirement. Students
difying under this regulation may now
their names with the ring clerk,
#m Seven, Richard Coke Building. She,
tarn, will check all records to determine
will
e 1
ords to dt
■geligibility. Orders for these rings will
taken by the ring clerk starting March
[1973, and continuing through May 4,
be returned to the
The rings
listrnr's Offic
will
ce for delivery on or be-
ill is on
B June 14, 19T3. The ring clerk
from 8:00 a. m. to 12:00 noon, Mon-
through Friday of
Edwin H. Cooper, Dean
each week,
iper, I
Admission and Records
Mrs. H. Brownlee,
Ring Clerk
Redmond Terrace Drugs
Phone 846-1113
1402 Hwy. 6-South
College Station, Texas
Prescriptions, Etc.
Charge Accounts Invited
Free Delivery
WORK WANTED
Linda's Typing Service, IBM Selectric II
typewriter. Experienced. 823-5681. 21913
Under-water work, utility diving. 846-
3652 or 846-8914. 214t8
Experienced typing, electric, near campus.
846-6551. 209tfn
Typing, electric, experienced, near cam
pus. 846-6473. 168tfn
Fast and expert typing, Julie, 846-0222
evenings. 143tfn
Typing 822-0526. 135tfn
Typing near campus. Electric. Ex
perienced. Symbols. 846-8965 or 846-0571.
124tfn D
Typing. Call 845-2451. Ask for Kathy, j
C2tfn y
SPECIAL NOTICE 5
m
FLY TO EUROPE HALF PRICE
Save up to $400 on special round-trip
charter flights departing and returning
this summer.
Write Debry & Hilton —
Travel Service Inc. 2363 Foothill Dr. r-
Salt Lake City, Utah 84109
219U6
Reward leading to the recovery of 11
week old male Irish setter, white on chest.
Stolen Saturday. No questions. 846-7320.
219t4
CUT FOOD COSTS
FOR RENT
Home upright freezer $12.50 per month. A
May be shared by several families. „
Call 8221-2369
218t4
2E
ACTION (PEACE CORPS/VISTA) ,,
Will Recruit At
Memorial Student Center,
February 19 - 22, 9-4 Daily
All Graduating Seniors. m
21713 15
Have you picked up your 1972 Aggieland?
If not, please come by the Student Publi
cations office, 216, Services Bldg, and get
your copy. 202tfn
ATTENTION MAY GRADUATES ! Grad
uation announcements will go on sale Jan
uary 15 - February 23, Monday-Friday,
9 :00-4 :00, Cashier’s Window, MSC. 199120
Service For All
Chrysler Corp. Cars
Body Work — Painting
Free Estimates
HALSELL MOTOR COMPANY, INC.
Dodge Sales and Service Since 1922
1411 Texas Ave. — 823-8111 57tfn
W
lach
SPARKLING
NEW
1 and 2 Bedroom Flats and Studios
Quiet, Wooded Residential Location - 24 Hour
Security
Students - Adults - Families - Individual Heat and
Air
Private Patio or Balcony - Pool - Sauna - Tennis
Courts
Club House - Fireplace - Billiards and Table Tennis
Shag Carpets - Custom Drapes - All Electric Kit
chens
Free Cable TV and Bus Service to A&M Campus
Southwest Village
Apartments
1101 Southwest Parkway & Medina St. College Station, Tex.
From 150“ - 846-1931
HELP WANTED
MEN — WOMEN
WORK ON A SHIP NEXT SUMMER !
No experience required. Excellent pay.
Worldwide travel. Perfect summer job
or career. Send $2.00 for information.
SEAFAX Box 2049 - DZ, Port Angeles
WA 98362.
210110
PERSONAL
To the students and personnel of TAMU.
>unt rurmture st
ty and national
unt prices. Yd
buy. Free
Is and otters to you
brand furniture at
must see us
desired.
jrm
see us bef
ture Co.
ore you buy at
ire at
ou must see us before
delivery. Budget plan
Location: 501 North
East 22nd and
floor to Employ-
i c
buy
FOR RENT
Clean room for rent with or without
kitchen privileges. Prefer male student or
working gentleman. 822-4301 or 822-5235.
218t4
Near A&M. Available February 15. Two
bedroom house, fenced yard. 846-4456.
213tfn
)t afford not to
Discount Furni-
136tfn
WANTED .
WANT TO BUY'
of good deer land
>r write
E. B. NEUMAN
Around 300 s
around College Station area.
258-2676 after 6
Dayton, Texas 77535
21913
Date for Military Ball.
Call 845-6685.
218t2
LOST
Airedale terrier, male, black and tan. Lost
ling Road, Wellborn area, December
CHILD CARE
Aggie wife wants to babysit in her home
y-Friday. Near campus. Call 846-
218t4
FOR
BEST
RESULTS
TRY
SOSOLIKS
TV & RADIO SERVICE
Zenith - Color & B&W - TV
All Makes B&W TV Repairs
713 S. MAIN 822-2133
-EVERYDAY-
OPEN 7:30 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.
Mon. Thru Sat.
Premium grade Douglas Tires
mounted and HIGH SPEED
balanced for no extra charge.
Priced below the so-called
“Sale” prices on most tires.
Just check price with any
others. We sell only Premium
grade tires, and gladly invite
comparison.
Havoline, Amalie,
Conoco, Phillips 66,
Gulflube — 35c qt.
SPARK PLUGS
A.C., Champion, Autolite
69^ Each
Alternators 18.95 exchange
Starters - Generators
from 13.95 exchange
Most any part for most
American and some
Foreign cars at dealer price
Your Lawnboy and
Friedrich Dealer
“We accept
BankAmericard - Mastercharge”
Except on Prestone
Joe Faulk Auto Parts
220 E. 25 822-1669
Giving Better Service For
27 Years In Bryan
Aggie Couples or Vet Stu
dents save $10 a month on
rent. Special Rental $120
a month on apartment re
gularly renting for $139 a
month.
2 bedroom furnished central
air & heat less than 1 year
old, central location.
T.V. Cable & Utilities Fur
nished Except Electricity.
20 4-A Lane Dr. —822-5236
211tl3
Three room modern house. Unfur-
iwy,
C.S. $70. 825-2402 Navasota.
211tfn
Unfurnished duplex apartments near
A&M campus. Cali 822-3793 weekdays and
846-6296 after 5 and weekends. 205t30
Travis House
Apartments
846-6111
505 Hwy. 30 C.S.
Our 2 bdr. Apts, have 960
sq. ft. 4-Students $57.40
each. All bills paid cable
T.V. 2 pools
Bus to A&M
Ruth Shelby - Mgr.
Verda Shelby - Asst. Mgr.
Will show apts. anytime.
202tfn
BROADMOOR ARMS
AND
PINE APARTMENTS
2 bdr. furnished or unfurnished.
Central air and heat, carpeted.
From $135.00 per mo. All bills
paid, including cable. 5 minutes
to campus. Office 1503 Broad
moor. 846-1297 or 846-2737.
ATTENTION MARRIED COUPLES. One
and 2 bedroom furnished apartments. Ready
for occupancy. 1% miles south of campus.
Lake for fishing. Washaterla on grounds.
Country atmosphere. Call D. R. Cain Co.,
823-0934 or after 5, 846-3408 or 822-6135.
166tfn
U-STOW & GO
SELF STORAGE
Secure Accessible
Fire Proof
Six Sizes—Six Prices
Reasonable
Resident Manager
2206 Pinfeather Rd.
Bryan, Texas
822-6618
AUTO INSURANCE
FOR AGGIES:
Call: George Webb
Farmers Insurance Group
3400 S. College 823-8051
Rentals-Sales-Service
TYPEWRITERS
Terms
Distributors For:
Royal and Victor
Calculators &
Adding Machines
Smith-Corona Portables
OATES
TYPEWRITER CO.
909 S. Main 822-6000
The Aggies were never in any
trouble keeping at least ten points
ahead the rest of the way and it
ended that way, 90-80.
A&M hit almost 50 per cent of
its shots from the field, 38 of 78,
while the Owls hit on only 30 of
72 for 40 per cent.
On the free throw line it was
much different as the Owls wait
ed until only 2:18 left before they
missed their first one and finished
the game hitting 20 of 23 for
nearly 90 per cent. The Aggies
hit on 14 of 17 for 83 per cent.
A&M will hit the road Satur
day to take on league - leading
Texas Tech in Lubbock at 8 p.m.
Seagren Collects $39,700
By HUBERT MIZELL
Associated Press Sports Writer
ROTONDA WEST, Fla. <A?)—
Pole vaulter Bob Seagren, who
had never “earned, a legal dime
in athletics,” turned the Super-
stars sports carnival into a one-
man show Tuesday and collected
a whopping $39,700.
“We’ve been eyeing a nice home
in Los Angeles,” said Seagren’s
wife Kam, “but our bank account
Women 9 s Lib
Takes Cue
WASHINGTON (^1 — Wom
en’s liberation is taking a cue
from black capitalism and start
ing more of its own businesses,
from novelty jewelry stores to
cosmetic companies.
More than 400 persons, includ
ing many female entrepreneurs,
crowded into a workshop on bus
iness practices Monday at the Na
tional Organization for Women
convention, discussing how to
compete with giant industries
run by men.
“The only alternative to sup
porting women’s business is sup
porting the male establishment,”
said an advertisement for the
new cosmetics company, Equa
tion.
It said women who buy toi
letries from the big firms “sup
port the sexist companies that
discriminate against women . . .”
Lorraine Allen, an Equation
executive, is giving NOW mem
bers a discount on the company’s
first product — bath soap with a
ginger ale scent.
“The cosmetics companies use
women as counter girls but never
let them into the bulk sales divi
sions where the commissions are
highest,” she said.
“The future is going to be in
black capitalism and female en
trepreneurship,” she added.
hasn’t matched our taste in hous
es. Today, we bought the house.”
The handsome part-time actor,
a gold medalist in the 1968 Olym
pics but a disappointment at Mu
nich when his vaulting pole was
outlawed, swept four of the last
six events on a 10-sport program.
Ten of the world’s best-known
athletes strained through two
days of action in events other
than those for which they are
famous, competing for a $122,000
purse.
Seagren, 26, began his march
by upsetting former heavyweight
boxing champ Joe Frazier in
weightlifting Monday night and
then won the baseball hitting,
half-mile run and one-mile bicy
cle race Tuesday.
Jean-Claude Killy, the French
idol of the ski slopes, was No. 2
overall — despite not winning an
event—and took home $23,400.
Table tennis was dominated by
Rod Laver, and the tennis great
from Australia rallied to tie for
third in all events with race driv
er Peter Revson. Each man
earned $13,100.
The top five finishers in each
sport were awarded points on a
10-7-4-2-1 basis, with each point
worth $300. Then, the No. 1 over
all man received an extra $25,000,
with $15,000 for second and $10,-
000 for third.
Seagren was a late entry, being
selected when golfer Gary Player
of South Africa was forced to
withdraw due to illness.
“Only a strange turn of events
allowed me to win all this mon
ey,” said the 175-pound vaulter.
“If the International Track As
sociation hadn’t started business,
1 would have retired after the ’72
Olympics.”
Seagren, Jim Ryun, Kip Keino
and other trackmen of note begin
the first pro circuit in the sport
with a March 24 meet in Los
Angeles.
The Superstars is scheduled to
be an annual event and the top
four men are supposed to be in
vited to return in 1974.
Texas Tech Nips Longhorns
To Capture Conference Title
AUSTIN (A*)—Ron Richardson
scored six points and William
Johnson pulled down four key re
bounds in overtime as Texas Tech
defeated Texas 80-77 to claim its
first Southwest Conference cham
pionship since 1962.
The Raiders win coupled with
the 84-82 Baylor victory over sec
ond place SMU, earned Tech the
right to represent the Southwest
Conference in the NCAA playoffs.
The Raider victory shut down
a dramatic Texas comeback which
had seen the Longhorns come
from nine points down with five
minutes remaining in regulation
play to force the game into over
time.
Texas’ B. G. Brosterhous stole
the ball from the Raiders’ Bill
Bailey and made a driving layup
with 25 seconds left to tie the
score at 70-70 at the end of regu
lation play.
Richardson scored two free
throws and a field goal to give
Tech a 74-70 advantage in the
overtime and the Raiders didn’t
trail after that. It was the sec
ond time this season the two
teams had gone into overtime.
Richard Little led the Raiders
with 25 points and Richardson
had 19 while Harry Larrabee had
18 for Texas.
Tech is now 17-6 on the season
and 10-1 in SWC while Texas is
10-12 and 4-7 in the conference.
SMU fell to 7-4 in loop action.
S L E
OPEN MIDNIGHT
THURSDAY FEB. 22ND
SWEATERS & JACKETS 40% OFF
LARGE GROUP OF JEANS
SLACKS & SHIRTS 50%-60% OFF
ALL BELTS 50% OFF
ALL DRESS SHIRTS 20% OFF
jeans n tbioqs
325 UNIVERSITY DR.
NORTH GATE
COLLEGE STATION
846-0223
SALE
Sale Ends Sat. Feb. 24th 6:00 p.m.
I
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