The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 01, 1974, Image 5

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    Set*
THE BATTALION
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1974
Page 5
Tech’s Reuther finds new home on banks of Brazos
Former all-SWC standout finds way to Aggieland via 'Belgium, Canada,
Ijr TONY GALLUCCI
Would you believe A&M re-
ruited a basketball star last year
ho was an all-stater at Ft.
Perth Arlington Heights, broke
' the Ft. Worth scoring records,
ired 78 points in one game and
layed on a team who had a 73-10
rd over a two year span ?
Where is he?
hy hasn’t he played this
mple.
'sy - jail The above mentioned star is
He
?ds and
apj’^orm Reuther, new assistant bas
ketball coach for TAMU.
C Reuther comes to A&M after an
ent ^ UBtrious career with half a doz-
# l basketball teams in Texas,
and Belgium.
# Sefore graduating from Arling-
n Heights in ’62, Reuther man-
l ;ed to break all the city scoring
~^~>ecords. They stood for ten years
2nd st inti 1 “ironically enough Cedric
j le 'bm[ffoseph came along and broke
fio rev wery last one of them.” Reuther
a first team all-stater al-
gh his team never left dis-
om Ft. Worth Reuther travel-
;o Lubbock to play for the Tex
as Tech Red Raiders. He bad an
outstanding freshman year on a
13-1 team. The next year it was
varsity and the tall Ft. Worthian
never missed a starting night
through graduation.
His sophomore year the Raiders
finished second behind A&M, and
his senior year they were third
in the conference. It was Reuther’s
junior year that was the highlight
of his Tech career. Reuther called
it “the best team I played on there
and probably the best team ever
to play at Tech.”
The team was 18-6 and South
west conference champions that
year but because of an error in
counting that was all the honors
the team gained. It seems Reu
ther had enough hours to be eli
gible but one of those hours was
a Phys. Ed. course which, un
known to Tech officials did not
count toward the total. The inef
ficiency didn’t slip by conference
officials though and Reuther was
declared ineligible. There was no
NCAA tournament for Tech in
’65.
Reuther had stayed in Lub
bock to study when, a year later,
he was picked by the Dallas Chap
arrals in the first ABA draft ever
held. He spent the training sea
son in the Dallas camp before
being put on waivers. The Chi
cago Bulls took the option but
Reuther wanted to stay in Dallas.
That wasn’t the end. Reuther
had been moonlighting. The big
forward played on an independent
team from Texas, leading them
to the AAU National Champion
ships in Denver.
Reuther remained in Texas an
other year before being offered a
coaching job at the University of
New Brunswick and accepting a
position there as an assistant.
Canada was the start of the sec
ond half of Reuther’s life as he
met his wife-to-be there. It just
so happens that Mary Ann Ai-
kenhead of Renfrew, Ontario was
a member of the New Brunswick
U. girls intercollegiate basket
ball team which won 87 games in
a row (shades of a dynasty, a-
la-UCLA).
His stay in Canada was not re
stricted to coaching though. Reu
ther played again on an indepen
dent team and led them to the
finals of the Canadian National
Championship, where he set a
scoring record of 75 points in two
games.
From Canada, Reuther set sail
for Belgium* He was hired by
“what they call an amateur team
but it compares with a pro team
in the U. S.” Nevertheless, he
was put on as a player-coach with
a full salary and “incentive for
high scoring.” It was with the
Belgian team that Reuther’s stat
istics look most impressive.
In one breath, Reuther scored
78 points in one game, scored over
50 in ten others and was awarded
the Honor Cup by the Antwerp
Gazette. His team had a 78-10
record during his two seasons
with them, lost only one division
game in that span, made the
eighth finals of the National Cup
both years and was always ranked
in the top fifteen teams in the
country. Probably the most amaz
ing demonstration of this man’s
abundant talent was his average
of 35 points, 20 rebounds and 10
assists per game.
Reuther took Miss Aikenhead to
Belgium and there they wed. Bom
e Chureh.Jor a Fuller Life..For You..
$65 plus
<1. Call i
iSSIFIE
ANCE
ES:
iVebb
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82J-SIU
5:30P^
u Sat.
heat^
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The history of man is a story of progress. Each
of its thousands of volumes could bear one common
title: The Quest for New Trails.
Even in childhood we display this strange genius
which has brought us from primeval forests to this
atomic age. We love to penetrate the untouched spaces
... to open trails where none have ever been.
But this quest could destroy us more rapidly than
it has profited us. History recounts the fall of many a
civilization too busy with its search for new trails to
understand its deeper needs.
For man can truly progress only when his spiritual
growth keeps pace with his cultural and scientific ad-
vancemeht.
Or, bluntly, the future of this young Arctic explorer
and of his world depends on the Church. The truths of
God are unchanging—and ever more essential—as we
seek new trails into the Unknown.
Scriptures Selected By The American Bible Society
Copyright 1974 Keister Advertising Service, Inc., Strasburg, Virginia
Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday
I Corinthians Matthew Jonah Psalms Luke Zephaniah
7:29-31 4:12-23 3:1-10 25:4-9 4:14-21 2:1-3
Saturday
Psalms
146:5-10
CALENDAR OF
CHURCH SERVICES
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST
OF LATTER DAY SAINTS
26th East and Coulter, Bryan
8:30 A.M.—Priesthood meeting
10:00 A.M.—Sunday School
5:00 P.M.—Sacrament Meeting
FAITH CHURCH
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
A&M METHODIST
9 :45 A.M.—Sunday School
10:S6 A.M.—Morning Worship
6 :30 P.M.—Campus & Career Class
5 :30 & 6 :00 P.M.—MYF Meetings
CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
9:46 A.M.—Sunday School
10 :46 A.M.—Morning Worship
6 :30 P.M.—Young People’s Service
7 :00 P.M.—Preaching Service
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY
9:15 A.M.-—Sunday School
10:30 A.M.—Morning Worship
7:30 P.M.--Evening Service
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Homestead & Ennis
9:45 A.M.—Sunday School
10:50 A.M.—Morning Worst
6:30 P.M.—Young People
UNITARIAN FELLOWSHIP
305 Old Highway 6, South
10:00 A.M.—Sunday Service
7:00 P.M.—Adult Service
305 Old College Road South
A&M PRESBYTERIAN
7-9 A.M.—Sun. Breakfast - Stu. Ctr.
9:45 A.M.—Church School
11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship
6:00 P.M.—Sun. Single Stu. Fellowship
7:15 P.M.—Wed. Student Fellowship
6:45 A.M.—Fri. Communion Service
Wesley Foundation
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN
Hubert Beck, Pastor
9:30 A.M.—Bible Class
10:45 A.M.—Divine Worship
6:00 P.M.—Worship Celebration
7:30 P.M.—Wednesday, Discussion
Group
ling
7 :00-8 :00 P.M.—Wed., Reading Room
8 :00 P.M.—Wed. Evening Worship
FIRST BAPTIST
9 :30 AM—Sunday School
10 :46 AM Morning Worship
6:10 PM—Training Union
7 :20 PM—Evening Worship
6:46 PM—Choir Practice & Teachers’
meetings (Wednesday)
7:45 PM—Midweek Services (Wed.)
SECOND BAPTIST
710 Eisenhower
9 :45 A.M.—Sunday School
11:00 A.M.—Church Service
6:30 P.M.—Training Union
7 :S0 P.M.—Church Service
OUR SAVIOUR’S LUTHERAN
8:30 & 10:46 A.M.-r-The Church at
Worship
9 :30 A.M.—Bible Classes For All
Holy Communion—1st Sun. Ea. Mo.
CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH
3206 Lakeview
9:46 A.M.—Bible School
10:46 A.M.—Morning Worship
6:00 P.M.—Youth Hour
7:00 P.M.—Evening Worship
ST. MARY’S CATHOLIC
Sunday Mass—9, 11 A.M. & 12:30, 7
P.M. (Folk Mass)
Weekday Masses -6:15 P.M.
Saturday Mass -6:16 P.M.
Holy Day Masses—5:16, 7 P.M. & 12:16
Confessions—Saturday 4:30-6:15; 6-630
A&M CHURCH OF CHRIST
8:00 & 10:00 A.M. Worship
9:00 A.M.—Bible Study
5 :18 P.M.—Young People’s Class
8 :00 P.M.—Worehip
7 :1S P.M.—Aggie Class
9 :S0 A.M.—Tues. - Ladies Bible Class
7 :16 P.M.—Wednesday - Bible Study
COLLEGE HEIGHTS
ASSEMBLY OF GOD
9 :45 A.M.—Sunday School
11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship
6 :30 P.M.—Young People’s Service
7:30 P.M.-
-Young People's s
-Evening Worship
ST. THOMAS’ EPISCOPAL CHURCH
906 Jersey (So. Side of Campus)
846-1726
Rector, William R. Oxley
Chaplain, James Moore
SUNDAY SERVICES:
8 :00 A.M.—Holy Communion
9:30 A.M.:—Holy Communion l(st &
3rd Sundays)
Morning Prayer (2nd, 4th &
6th Sundays)
7 :00 P.M.—Youth Choir
8 :00 P.M.—Evening Prayer
GRACE BAPTIST CHURCH
2505 S. College Ave., Bryan
An Independent Bible Church'
9 :46 A.M.—Sunday School
10:50 A.M.—Morning Worship
7:00 P.M.—Prayer and Bible Study
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST
CHURCH
North Coulter and Ettle, Bryan
9:30 A.M.—Sabbath School (Saturday)
11:00 A.M.—Worship Service
7 :30 P.M.—Prayer Meeting (Tuesday)
funeral ^lome
BRYAN,TEXAS
502 West 26th St.
PHONE TA 2-1572
Campus
and
Circle
Theatres
College Station
College Station’s Own
Banking Service
University
National Bank
NORTH GATE
Central Texas
Hardware Co.
BRYAN
• HARDWARE
• CHINA WARE
• CRYSTAL
• GIFTS
Student
Publications
Texas A&M
Book Store
University Center
to them was a daughter Melissa
Ann, now three, who has, says
Reuther, “triple option, she can
claim to be Canadian, Belgian, or
American although the Belgian
government claims she is Bel
gian.”
Reuther came back to Texas
looking for a position and went
to Tech temporarily for a teaching
certificate preparatory to coach
ing. At last year’s Tech game,
Shelby Metcalf acted interested
and a year later finds Reuther as
sisting the Sage of the Brazos.
Reuther always had “a great
deal of respect for Metcalf. He’s
a great person and a great coach.”
Reuther says, “I’ve learned more
in five or six months here than I
would have coaching a high school
team for five years.”
As for the team he’s currently
involved with, A&M, “we have
good potential because we have
good people. We match up well
with any team in the conference.”
There is trouble explaining
the Ags current slump though as
Reuther explains, “we’re having
difficulty finding the right com
bination. It seems there is a built
in animosity toward A&M from
every team in the conference.
Everybody plays their best game
against us.”
Reuther is currently working
on his Master of Education here in
Health and Physical Education.
He comes from Tech well educat
ed with a Bachelor of Science in
Zoology and minors in Botany
and Chemistry. He also earned a
teaching certificate; “whatever
that’s worth.”
Hobbies other than his first
love, basketball, include fishing,
(a must for assisting Metcalf),
hunting and collecting first edi
tions and rare books.
Reuther is one recruit who’ll
probably last longer than the av
erage four years.
He has been working diligently
with A&M’s post men. Play at
center in the forms of Cedric
Joseph, Jerry Mercer, John Thorn
ton, Webb Williams, and C. W.
Guthrie is noticeably improved.
His intensity on the court, sprink
led liberally with jumping, point
ing, yelling and (most appreciat
ed) praise, indicates the type of
coach he is. Exciting.
ALLEN
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823-8002
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Two Dallas locations:
3071 Northwest Hwy.
352-8570
2131 Ft. Worth Ave.
946-0645
NORM REUTHER leaps off the bench to point out
either a questionable call or questionable play. The former
Texas Tech standout is responsible for the improved play
of the Aggie postmen this year.
’Pokes sign Young
Rentals Are
Low
At
DALLAS (AP)—Running back
Charles Young of North Carolina
State, spurning a last minute
feeler from the World Football
League, Thursday signed a con
tract with the Dallas Cowboys.
Jones’ agent, Fred Joseph, a
Greensboro, N. C., investment and
life insurance broker, said his
client agreed to a multi-year con
tract at undisclosed terms with
the National Football League
Cowboys.
The Florida Sharks of the
WFL, which did not draft Jones
on its first six rounds, made con
tact with Joseph less than 12
hours before announcement of the
Dallas signing he said.
Jones was the second player
to be chosen on the first round by
the Cowboys in the NFL draft.
He was the 22nd prospect select
ed.
“His characteristics are out
standing for a pro runner” said
Coach Tom Landry.
“He is big at 215 pounds and
runs the 40-yard dash in 4.6 sec
onds. One thing we liked most was
his abilities to play either fullback
or halfback equally as well. This
will give us more versatility in’
our background.”
Intramural
Class A Basketball
Squadron 15 over Squadron 13
K1 over Cl
Squadron 8 over Squadron 4
Ml over L2
Maroon Band over N1
Squadron 16 over LI
Squadron 2 over K2
Class A Racquetball
LI over Squadron 7
D1 over Squadron 13
Squadron 3 over Squadron 6
Class B Racquetball
LI over Squadron 6
D1 over II
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