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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1973)
E BATTALION Tuesday, November 13, 1973 College Station, Texas Page 5 ice allocation on 1972 pur- as utilities, natural gas, el oil to fire r 2. y are going > before they nergy front. UJMENTS COMPLETE l REPAIR Fexas Ave. 22-23J4 Patricia St. 446-2851 IN t)ile ic RVICE action is ipment” i Ave. 02 a perfect Keep- jy our written an be sure there lond ring. Every •manently regis- ted against loss. >et In Senior ngs. Aggie “No ” Charge ount / Now For stmas Vatch & / Repair. s Jewelry ; — 846-5816 kv detail. Trade-Mark Reg. ily $1.45 taco, tosta- :offee. ledillo g Water Polo Team Takes Top Prizes A&M Wins Southwestern USA Tournament Jh two teams entered in the and B” divisions, the A&M Polo teams '^grabbed first bird place honors in the thwest USA Championship rnament held Friday and Sat- ay. he A&M varsity won the “A” lion with the “B” varsity tak- lWN LOANS y Loaned On Anything Of Value, uick Cash For Any Emergency. |e Us For Ready Cash Today. Texas State Credit Pawn Shop [014 Texas Ave., Bryan Weingarten Center 'rpfnam&a Eddie Dominguez ’66 Joe Arciniega ’74' want the real not frozen or id ... We call It lean Food me.’’ Dallas locations: Northwest Hwy. 8570 I Ft. Worth Ave, >0645 Save Gas Mother-to-be % GANZA THE BEETLE GETS ABOUT 25 MILES TO A GALLON. BASED ON DIN 70030 Few things in life work as well as a Volkswagen. RICHARD BARTON VOLKSWAGEN 1701 So. COLLEGE jng third. The freshman “A” team took first in its division while the “B” took third. Lester Hamann, team co-cap tain, made 18 points in the four team challenge and came out high point man. He was followed by Steve Son- nenberg with 13 goals, Kevin O’Brien with 11, Jim Yates with 7 and Steve Moore with 6. The Ags earned 72 points overall and their opponents 19. The team defeated Houston’s The Bunch 18-6, Hendrix College 22-4, State College of Arkansas 17-8 and the A&M varsity “B” team 15-1. The varsity finished its season with a 19-4 record. Hamann led the team in assists with 9 to his credit, Sonnenberg and Larry Schueckler followed with 6 apiece. Goalies Paul Mc- Kinzie and Steve Engle had 37 and 12 saves, respectively. Varsity “B” had Mike Sharley, Doug Adamson, Mike McLellan and Mike Reilley in high scoring Intramural Results The coming of the end of the semester was quite clear in the intramural competition of last Friday as the beginning of play offs in Bowling and football be gan in Class X and G. In the field of round-robin playoffs for bowling; Hart XI, for Class X, finished first in their league with a 6-0 record. Hart XI made it to the playoffs on the skillful playing of Mike Andrews, Jim Lovin, and Jim Deaconson. In Class G, the trio of Lisa Byrd, Pam Brown and Linda Vander- Veer pinned a 4-0 record on the board. On the football field Class X had it’s playoffs game with the Studs overpowering the Saints on penetrations. In the University Handball competition, C-2 defeated the Vet III 2-1. Charlie Scott, Eric John son, Mark Stilson, and Rodney Masters brought the champion ship home for C-2 as the players in that championship. Competition ended at 40 yards for the field goal kicking contest held last Friday on Kyle Field. The three kickers that will be competing in the final competi tion will be Mark Rowe, David Hicks, and Mitch Barker. In Last Week’s Action: The Class B competition of Football, F-l won the champion ship over Sq. 2 on penetrations. F-l freshmen were led by quar terback Quentin Schaefer. Schae fer’s passes to Paul Lombardino and Jerry Weathersby gave F-l (the winning penetrations. The good but futile efforts by Charles Weinbaum, Mark Hartt, and Richard Daily made up the at tack for Sq. 2. We’ll Send Flowers Anywhere THE FLORAL CENTER The Full Service Florist” 823-5792 * flNTERBURY ‘HSSBCMTION Each Tuesday, 5:30 p.m.—Holy Eucharist and Supper Thursdays, 6:39 a.m.—Holy Eucharist and Breakfast Daily 5:30 p.m.—Evening Prayer EPISCOPAL STUDENT CENTER 904 - 906 Jersey Street (Southern Boundary of Campus) 846-1726 Father James T. Moore Chaplain positions. Scott Jones was high in assists. Hendrix fell to the “B” team 9-5 and State College of Arkan sas 16-2. The “B” team lost to the Bunch 10-6 and the A&M var sity “A”. The “A” Division all tourney team consisted of The Bunch players Bob Supple, John Gau- drean, Tegze Haraszti and Ag gies’ Hamann, Sonnenberg, Yates, O’Brien, Adamson, Wade Mattingly and Paul McKinzie. The A&M Freshmen “A” over took the Bunch “B” 16-4, Lack- land Air Force Base 19-3, College Station Swim Club 10-6 and A&M fish “B” 14-3, finishing first in “B” division. Captains Don Reeser and Bill Cunningham led team scoring with 17 and 11 points respectively for the frosh. They were followed by Tim Hale with 10 goals, Tom Sanders 8, Steve Kuhn 7 and Da vid Young and Hank Ecroyd at 6 each. Brian Holt served as goalie. The fish “B” team was led by Tom Schwab and Curtis Jordan. They overtook Lackland AFB and the Bunch “B”, taking third. All tournew Division “B” team included CSSC players Bob and Bill Leland and Peter Leabo, Lackland AFB player Steve Hen- nessy, Bunch man Tim Eberside and A&M players Reeser, Cun ningham, Holt, Schwab and Kuhn. CHRISTMAS GROUP SPACE HOUSTON - NEW YORK - HOUSTON ?148 17 Group Round Trip DEC. 21 DELTA 380 -Lv. Houston 9:05 P.M. -Arr. New York 1:55 A.M. JAN. 20* = DEC. 22 DELTA 1063 -Lv. New York 1:00 P.M. -Arr. Houston 3:35 P.M. EASTERN 50 -Lv. Houston 9:00 A.M. -Arr. New York 12:56 P.M. JAN. 20* Z EASTERN 50 Lv. New York 12:25 P.M. •Arr. Houston 2:58 P.M. HOUSTON - WASHINGTON - HOUSTON S-l Jl 027 Group *148 Round Trip EASTERN 554 \—Lv. Houston 5:10 P.M. rxr^ 01 IOO—Houston o: 10 P.M. A 11 A A—Arr. Washington 8:50 P.M. EASTERN 551 IA Kl Of!* —kv. Washington 5:05 P.M. JAVIN. A\J —Arr. Houston 7:00 P.M. AUSTIN - CHICAGO - AUSTIN s 126 2 * ^ v AWAY WE GO—Skip Walker blasts through SMU’s defense on way to 52 of his 184 yards Saturday. Ready to toss a clearing block is Richard Osborne. (Photo by Rodger Mallison) Top Twenty Pulls Closer;/ Raiders, Longhorns Climb By HERSCHEL NISSENSON Associated Press Sports Writer Led by No. 1-ranked Ohio State, the seven top teams in The Associated Press college football ratings held onto their positions Monday while UCLA moved ahead of Southern California into eighth place and Nebraska re turned to the Top Ten. Following Saturday’s 35-0 vic tory over Michigan State, the Buckeyes of Ohio State received 35 first-place votes and 1,130 points from the 61 sports writ ers and broadcasters who partici pated in this week’s poll. Alabama, which had the week off, got 13 first-place votes and 1,068 points. Last week’s margin was 1,146-1,096. Third-place Oklahoma drubbed Missouri 31-3 and pulled down 10 top votes and 966 points while knocking the losers from 10th to 14th. Michigan, a struggling 21-6 victor over Illinois, earned one first-place ballot and 834 points for fourth place. Notre Dame’s 31-10 triumph over Pitt earned the fifth-place Irish one vote for the top spot and 767 points while dropping Pitt out of the Top Twenty after a one-week stay. Penn State, No. 6, received the remaining first-place vote and 648 points after a come-from-be- hind 35-29 triumph over North Carolina State. The Wolfpack’s fine effort in defeat lifted them back into the Top Twenty, re placing Pitt as No. 20. LSU, which also had the week off, held onto seventh place with 572 points, followed by UCLA and Southern Cal, which revers 6. Penn State (1) 9-0-0 648 ed positions from last week, and 7. La. State 8-0-0 572 Nebraska, which moved up from 8. UCLA 8-1-0 469 11th, UCLA defeated Oregon 27- 9. U.S.C. 7-1-1 407 7, Southern Cal nipped Stanford 10. Nebraska 7-1-1 358 27-26 and Nebraska whipped Iowa 11. Texas 6-2-0 188 State 31-7. 12. Texas Tech 8-1-0 176 Texas routed Baylor 42-6 and 13. Arizona St. 8-1-0 167 climbed from 13th to 11th, fol 14. Missouri 7-2-0 115 lowed by Texas Tech, Arizona 15. Houston 8-1-0 112 State, Missouri, Houston, Tennes 16. Tennessee 6-2-0 88 see, Miami of Ohio, Kansas, Ari 17. Miami Ohio 9-0-0 71 zona and North Carolina State. 18. Kansas 6-2-1 44 1. Ohio State (135) 8-0-0 1,130 19. Arizona 8-1-0 16 2. Alabama (133) 8-0-0 1,068 20. N. C. St. 6-3-0 15 3. Oklahoma (10) 7-0-1 969 Others receiving votes listed 4. Michigan (1) 5. Notre Dame (1) 9-0-0 8-0-0 834 767 alphabetically: East Carolina, Kent State, Oklahoma State, Pitt. THE COLLEGE STATION Formerly East Gate Lounge BEER-$1.00 PER PITCHER Pool Table — Foosball — Bumper Pool and Your Favorite Games Open From 2 p. m. — Mon. - Fri. 4 p. m. — Sat. - Sun. 109 Walton Drive 846-9819 Peniston Cafeteria Special Thanksgiving Candlelight Feast Nov. 15, 1973-4:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. Roast Breast of Trukey Cornbread Dressing Giblet Gravy Chilled Cranberry Sauce Marshmellowed Sweet Potato Souffle English Peas w/Water Chestnuts Choice of Salad (Except Chef Salads) Kutches Harvest Moon Pie Home Made Hot Yeasty Rolls Choice of Beverage *1 90 plus tax ‘Quality First” Group 15 Round Trip DEC. 21 = JAN. 13* = BRANIFF 126 " -Lv. Austin 10:00 A.M. -Arr. Chicago 1:18 P.M. BRANIFF 125 -Lv. Chicago 3:20 P.M. -Arr. Austin 6:42 P.M. AUSTIN - LOS ANGELES - AUSTIN 54 28 Group 15 Round Trip DEC. 21 JAN. 13' CONTINENTAL 69 —Lv. Austin 3:55 P.M. —Arr. Los Angeles 7:15 P.M. CONTINENTAL 74 —Lv. Los Angeles 12:00 N Arr. Austin 7:23 P.M. ♦RETURN ON THE DAY OF YOUR CHOICE. Separate returns are possible if booked on the same airline as the originating carrier. EUROPE KLM to AMSTERDAM E CIO Round Trip HOUSTON - AMSTERDAM - HOUSTON VIA 747 KLM 682—Lv. Houston 1:00 P.M. Dec. 23 —Arr. Amsterdam 7:00 A.M. Dec. 24 KLM 681 —Lv. Amsterdam 1:10 P.M. Jan. 11 —Arr. Houston 6:40 P.M. Jan. 11 KLM 682 —Lv. Houston 1:00 P.M. Dec. 26 —Arr. Amsterdam 7:00 A.M. Dec. 27 KLM 681 —Lv. Amsterdam 1:10 P.M. Jan. 4 —Arr. Houston 6:40 P.M. Jan. 4 This is an affinity program GROUP TRAVEL Let us make your travel arrangements in groups of 10 or more people at fantastic savings to you — Call us for details. sTI Beverley Braley Tourt, Travel Memorial Student Center — 846*3773 Townshire Shopping Center — 823*0961