The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 29, 1974, Image 8

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

    Second squad also wins
Soccer team shuts out Baylor, 4-0
The A&M soccer team upped its
season record to 2-1-2 with a 4-0
smashing of Baylor in Waco.
The Ags were outstanding defen
sively in their first shutout of the
year. Goalie Dan Byerly, despite
being injured played a superb game
making numerous outstanding
saves. Byerly saved a high corner
shot on a penalty kick late in the
game to completely and finally stop
the Baylor offense.
The Ag offense took the initiative
and midway through the first half
took the one point lead that was
good enough for the win. Captain
Merhdad Farrokhnia took a lead
pass one-on-one with the Baylor
goalie and chipped in a short shot to
his right. Wallacb Rivas popped in
another to make the halftime score
2-0.
Rivas came back in the second
half as the Aggies continued their
relentless pressure to score again.
Ricardo Scwartz ended Aggie scor
ing midway through the second
half.
The second team led by John
Magee’s hat trick bombed Baylor’s
Cubs 6-1. Baylor scored early on a
chip pass just to the right of A&M
goalie Tony Gallucci. Magee scored
soon after to tie up the score. Greg
Ingram scored on an indirect kick
from Kyle King to give the Ags the
lead 2-1 at the half.
The second half, the Ags poured
it on scoring three goals in five mi
nutes. The triple quickie on shots by
Magee, Ingram and a beautiful head
shot by Gery DiMarco completely
frustrated Baylor’s worn out de
fense. Magee scored again late in
the game to complete his spree.
The Aggies, now 2-1-2, will be
traveling to Dallas for their first
meeting of the season with confer
ence leaders SMU. The Mustangs
will be sporting a speedy forward
line and freshman goalie Joe Hight,
a high school All-America.
The second team is 2-0 after two
wins over Baylor and is expected to
travel to Dallas.
After returning from Dallas the
Ags will host Stephen F. Austin, Le
tourneau, Texas and SMU in four
games on two weekends to finish the
Aggies stay in eighth place;
Texas moves ahead of Tech
(AP) — The nation’s Top Ten col
lege football teams maintained their
positions in The Associated Press
ratings Monday with runner-up Ok-
NOTICE
ALL
ORGANIZATIONS
(Hometown Clubs, Professional Clubs, Etc.)
GROUP PICFURES ARE NOW
BEING SCHEDULED FOR THE
1975 AGGIELAND AT THE
STUDENT PUBLICATIONS OFFICE
Room 216
REED McDONALS BUILDING
Across from Chemistry Bldg.
Pictures will be taken on Monday and Thursday Nights.
Price — Full Page — §55.00 1 2 Page — $30.00
Carlen says
Murphy will
miss game
CANTERBURY ASSOCIATION
Each Tuesday, 5:30 p.m.—Holy Eucharist and Supper
Wednesdays, 12:00 noon—Bible Study
Thursdays, 6:30 a.m.—Holy Eucharist and Breakfast
EPISCOPAL STUDENT CENTER
904-906 Jersey Street
(Southern Boundary of Campus)
846-1726 Father James T. Moore Chaplain
LUBBOCK, Tex., (AP) — Texas
Tech Coach Jim Carlen announced
Monday that noseguard Ross Mur
phy will be lost for Saturday’s
Southwest Conference game with
Rice in Houston.
Murphy suffered a knee injury
against SMU. Earlier, David
Knaus, an All-SWC performer, had
been injured.
“If somebody had told me that
with four games to go, we would be
playing a freshman Earnest
Cheatham at middle . guard, I
wouldn’t have believed it,” Carlen
said. “Earnest has the ability, but I
question his experience.”
Speaking of Rice, Carlen said
“the last five games between us and
Rice were decided by a total of 32
points ... I can’t explain
it . . . and I don’t expect an easy
time with the Owls this week.”
Carlen emphasized that sopho
more quarterback Tommy Duni-
ven, who sat out the SMU game
with a stiff back, is still starting quar
terback, despite the fine perfor
mance of Don Roberts against the
Mustangs.
“I never would take a young man
out of a starting spot because of an
injury.
Of the SMU game, Carlen said he
thought sophomore tailback Larry
Isaac played the best game of his
career. Isaac rushed for 125 yards on
20 carries.
He also praised Roberts.
“Don had some typical sopho
more mistakes, but overall he
played real well,” Carlen said.
Save money and
enjoy Kentucky Fried
Chicken every
FAMILY TUESDAY
THE DINNER BOX $1.29
The dinner box
includes three pieces
of the Colonel's
finger lickin' good
chicken, potatoes 'n'
gravy, cole slaw, and
two rolls.
THE SNACK BOX 99c
The snack
box is just
right for
small appetites.
It has two big
pieces of chicken,
potatoes, gravy,
and a roll.
No substitutions please.
Kcntufkij fried
110 Dominik Drive, College Station
3320 Texas Avenue, Bryan
lahoma chipping away slightly at
No. 1-ranked Ohio State’s comfort
able lead.
Ohio State walloped Northwest
ern 55-7 Saturday and received 45
first-place votes and 1,222 of a pos
sible 1,260 points from a nationwide
panel of sports writers and broad
casters.
The next five positions again went
to Southern California, Notre
Dame, Texas A&M, Nebraska and
Penn State.
Meanwhile, Oklahoma crushed
Kansas State 63-0 and earned 14
first-place votes and 1,123 points.
Last week, the Sooners trailed Ohio
State with 61 votes cast to this
week’s 63 ballots.
Southern Cal defeated Oregon
State 31-10, Notre Dame drubbed
Miami, Fla. 38-7, Texas A&M
blanked Baylor 20-0, Nebraska
shaded Oklahoma State 7-3 and
Penn State downed West Virginia
21-12.
NOW TWO LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU.
FAMILY NIGHT ^
6-9 Tuesday Night
$1.69
New Store Off E. 29 near Bryan High School
846-1784
413 Texas Ave.
846-6164
l
si
<§>
m ijtti
Third-place Michigan, which
trailed Oklahoma by 159 points last
week, received two No. 1 votes and
969 points following a 49-0 thrash
ing of Minnesota.
Alabama, the No. 4 team,
trounced Texas Christian 41-3 and
received exactly the same score as
last week—one first place vote and
887 points. Fifth-rated Auburn got
the remaining first-place vote and
765 points by whipping Florida
State 38-6.
There was a shakeup in the Sec
ond Ten, however.
Florida moved from 12th to 11th
with a 30-13 decision over Duke and
Texas climbed from 13th to 12th by
trimming Rice 27-6. Meanwhile,
Texas Tech slipped from 11th to
13th after a hard-fought 20-17
triumph over Southern Methodist.
Arizona State and Maryland held
onto the 14-15 spots, while Miami of
Ohio rose from 19th to 16th, fol
lowed by five newcomers to the Top
Twenty—Mississippi State, UCLA
and Temple, with San Diego State
and Wisconsin tied for 20th. UCLA
and Wisconsin were in the rankings
earlier in the year.
The AP Top 20
(AP) — The Top Twenty, with
first-place votes in parentheses,
season record and total points.
Points tabulated on basis of
20-18-16-14-12-10.9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1:
Dropping out of the Top Twenty
were Arizona, North Carolina State,
Tulane and California, last week’s
17-18-19-20 teams.
15% OFF
On Purchase of $50.00 or Over
10% OFF
long
resident
itical co
to shod
leriencin
hg surge:
1 'The di
On Purchase of $50.00 or Less
FOR YOU AGS WITH YOUR STUDENT II
CASH PURCHASE ONLY
Douglas Jewelry
212 N. Main
Downtown Bryan
822-3119
1. Ohio St (45)
2. Oklahoma (14)
3. Michigan (2)
4. Alabama (1)
5. Auburn (1)
6. So. Cal
7. Notre Dame
8. Texas A&M
9. Nebraska
10. Penn State
11. Florida
12. Texas
13. Texas Tech
14. Arizona St.
15. Maryland
16. Miami, O.
17. Miss St.
18. UCLA
19. Temple
San Diego St.
tie Wisconsin
7-0-0
6-0-0
7-0-0
7-0-0
7-0-0
5- 1-0
6- 1-0
6-1-0
5- 2-0
6- 1-0
6-1-0
5-2-0
5-1-1
5-1-0
5- 2-0
6- 0-1
6-1-0
4- 1-2
6-0-0
5- 1-0
4-3-0
1,222
1,123
969
887
765
584
559
513
353
336
236
214
198
175
159
59
28
24
' t •••. V. '
• ' *••••* '.* •** 7!»
an’s lif
Jorman
uesday
idn’t me
e serioi
But a si
iter conf
ire worrii
if survive
Inasta
John C.
Ihysician
Ihock me
I stable
lion was
■uesday.
■ He ad
Jonsidert
Lungr
nder rc
earn of
SEMPERIT
ASK ABOOTOUR WITO GUARANTEE
Others receiving votes, listed
alphabetically: Arizona, Georgia,
Houston, Michigan State, North
Carolina State, Oklahoma State,
Pitt, Tulane, Vanderbilt.
(intramural s^)
Flag Football
SEMPERIT
STEEL RADIAL
TIRES
TUBE
LESS
165 SR 13-M401 BL
165 SR 14-M401 BL
165 SR 15-M401 BL
Fish League D: C2, 16; Sq3, 0
D2, 20; Sq8, 0
E: Sq2, 18; Bl. 6
Dl, 1; Sq6, 0
Military B: Dl, 1; K2, 0
Ml, 27; Sq3, 0
N2, 29; H2, 27
C: Sq9, 18; Sq4, 13
B2, 21; Sql5, 16
Women: A: Krueger, 20; Scan 15
Bowling Results
Included With Any
Purchase of 4 STEEL RADIAL TIReT
FREE BALANCING
FREE MOUNTING
FREE VALVE STEMS
3* 05
95
plus F.E T
& State Tax
Per Tire
League D: Sq7, 425; F2, 0
E2, 429; L2, 421
E: Mbaud, 444; Al, 396
Sq8, 448; SqlO, 426
H: H2, 400; Sq6, 335
Ji Wband, 334; F2. 0
R:1EEE, 467; AccS I. 347
: Saints 455; Strike, 387
OPEN MON - FRI 8-5 SATURDAY 8-6
HOUSE OF TIRES
CORNER OF COULTER & TEXAS AVE.
822-7139
BRYAN - CONROE - HOUSTON - 1 PASADENA
B)
On Se
Dorps C
member
pass key
juniors a
"We I
Skip Gn
The (
(he time
through
next day
Group
were pu
Honorv
code str
his boil'
marijua
Two
(cadets
vice) we
They m
semest'
grades
said Uti
volved
Thre
Corps,
the oth
Whe
he sign
use nar
The Houston Police need 2000 new faces.
Houston’s growth requires almost doubling
the size of its Police Department. A career
opportunity is waiting for you. There are no
quotas or waiting lists. We need qualified
people now.
school diploma or the equivalent, you may
qualify for this exciting career opportunity-
If you are interested in $787 per month while
you are training, a 3-week paid vacation af e
A career with the Houston Police is a special
opportunity for people who wish to continue
their education. Full tuition scholarships in
Police Administration are available to every
Houston Police Officer. Funds are provided
through a federal program. Gl benefits apply
to our Gl accredited academy, a special
bonus for veterans.
you are Training, a 3-week paio vaocuiLM* -
one year, $12,000 a year after three
and much more, check us out. Here
r\ uo ^
chance to help people in a very '
and help yourself to an exciting career a
same time. Come by and get the full story-
If you are a man 5'7" or a woman 5' tall be
tween 19-35 years old, and have a high
Houston Police Recruiting
One Allen Center Building, 18th ^* oor 2
500 Dallas at Smith Houston, Texas 770
(713) 222-4041
An Equal Opportunity Employer
“An
then a h
the cad
dispute
breachi
if
wc
Sep