The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 25, 1975, Image 7

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    6
FINANCIAL
ACHIEVEMENTS, INC.
CASUALTY AGENCY
AUTO-HOME-MOBILE HOME-BUSINESS-BOAT
303 College Main 846-8791
College Station
Gridders prepare for finale
By DAVID WALKER
Staff Sports Writer
While students are griping about
how much they are going to have to
TYPING ERRORS
ERROR-FREE TYPING
NYLON TYPING RIBBON
CORRECTION RIBBON
ERRORITE
AT YOUR
CAMPUS STORE
- OUT OF SIGHT!
"Pd like to help,
but Pm just one
person.”
Do you really think God
will accept that?
Maybe you can't help others all by
yourself. That’s no excuse for
doing nothing. Join with others at
your local synagogue or church.
There’s plenty you can do together
Example: In Wisconsin, one
religious group set up a halfway
house to help women parolees fit
themselves back into society. The
God we worship expects us to seek
out those who need our help, and
to help them.
Start treating
your brothers and sisters
like brothers and sisters.
A Public Service of This Newspaper
8 The Advertising Council
pay to see the Aggies next year,
there is one more time this year that
they can see them free.
The annual Maroon-White game
will get under way at 7 p.m. Satur
day night. Students get in free with
I.D. while adults have to pay $3.00
with non-A&M students paying
$1.00.
David Shipman will quarterback
the Maroons while Mike Jay and
David Walker call the signals for the
Whites.
Along with Shipman in the start
ing maroon backfield will be half
backs Bubha Bean and Skip Walker
and Ronnie Hubby at fullback. Jay
and David Walker will have Jim
Hartman and David Craig at the
halves with Bucky Sams at fullback
if he is fully recovering from a
sprained knee.
The starting line for the Maroons
will have Carl Roaches at split end,
and Richard Osborne at tight end.
Glenn Bujnoch and Dennis Swilley
will be in the tackle slots with Bruce
Welch and Craig Glendenning at
guards and Henry Tracey at center.
The starting White line will have
Mike Floyd at split end, David
Greeno at tight end, George Burger
and Dennis Smelser at tackles,
Frank Nfyers and Billy Lemons at
guards and Mark Dennard at
center.
The Maroon defense will have
Blake Schwarz and Tank Marshall at
ends, Edgar Fields and Jimmy
Dean at tackles, Ed Simonini,
Garth Ten Napel, and either Grady
Wilkerson or Robert Jackson at
linebackers, Pat Thomas and Wil
liam Thompson at the corners and
Jackie Williams and Lester Hayes at
safeties.
The White defense will start
Richard Frey and Gerald Shannon
at ends, Ronnie Walker and David
Barrington at tackles, Jessie Hun-
nicutt, Phil Bennett and Kevin
Monk at linebackers, Tony Blank
enship and Charlie Arndt at the
corners and Charles Bell and Carl
McCormack at safeties.
Coach Bellard said that is is pos
sible that all three quarterbacks will
see action on both teams. There are
a few others who may switch from
White to Maroon.
Fourteen Aggie seniors will be
starting their final spring game.
They are: Charlie Arndt, Glen Buj
noch, David Greeno, Jim Hartman,
Ronnie Hubby, Mike Jay, Richard
Osborne, Carl Roaches, Bucky
Sams, Blake Schwarz, Ed Simonini,
Dennis Smelser, and Mark Stand-
ley.
The game will be the final spring
game for the Aggies who open the
season next year on September 13 in
Kyle Field against Mississippi.
Tickets purchased early enough
will be good for admittance to
Saturday’s double header between
A&M and Texas.
THE BATTALION
FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 1975
Page 7
—
Show ’em the big ones
BRUCE L. SUBLETT
Suppose you’re a real sportsman
and you just turned that nine-pound
sow bass back in the lake so she
can spawn. Nobody will believe
you caught one that big — unless
you have pictures to prove it.
Every sportsman should have a
camera of some kind. Good photos
can recreate a memorable trip,
provide a record of fish landed or
run unwanted guests out of the
house (provided you show them the
same pictures seven or eight times),
times).
Fem fencer
gains spot
in nationals
Denise Gordon, A&M’s top
woman fencer, qualified for the na
tional competition by taking second
place in women’s foil in the divi
sional meet Saturday.
Kevin Crowder, also from A&M,
took fourth place in epee. It is not
yet known whether he will qualify
for Nationals.
The National meet will he held in
June in Los Angeles.
ALLEN
Oldsmobile
Cadillac
SALES - SERVICE
“Where satisfaction is
standard equipment”
2401 Texas Ave.
823-8002
Back to the
GROVE
■Might
rye. ■- c
SPONSORED
BY
AGGIE CINEMA
Featuring Zero Mostel in
A Funny Thing Happened on the way to the Forum”
and
‘ The Producers” — a Mel Brooks film!
PLUS
FREE POPCORN
ONLY 25c
APRIL 25 & 26
The GROVE
located at West Gate
IN CASE OF RAIN BRING AN UMBRELLA
But don’t good cameras cost more
than a whole store full of baits?
Not really. In fact, anyone but a
pro photographer who takes expen
sive gear to the lake is asking for
trouble.
The ideal sportsman s camera is
a small, lightweight 35 mm that
can take a lot of abuse. The instant
load 126 cameras just aren’t solid
enough and don’t really deliver top
quality pictures. Anything bigger
than 35 mm is too bulky.
The electric eye 35 mm rangefin
ders are fine cameras for outdoor
use. They are very compact, and a
reasonably good one only runs
about $100. A provision for chang
ing lenses is nice, but the rangefin
ders with fixed lenses are quite a bit
less expensive. Compact rangefin
ders also make a handy second cam
era in other situations.
If you already have an inter
changeable lens single lens reflex
camera, you can use it on the lakes
if you take some precautions. I car
ry my Nikon F2 in a soft canvas
case, with extra lenses in hard plas
tic cases. A bulky gadget bag only
gets in the way, hut the light can
vas bag can be carried easily.
The biggest enemies of a camera
in the outdoors are dust, water,
and vibration. After use, the cam
era should be cleaned thoroughly
on the outside, and the inside
should be blown out by a gentle
stream of dry air. I carry a soft cloth
in my bag to wipe any water that
gets on my camera off as soon as
it hits. Moisture inside a lens can
be the very devil to get out.
Vibration can destroy or cripple
a camera in a very short time. I
carried one lens in the floor of an
aluminum boat for several hours
once. When I tried to use it, it
wouldn’t focus. The fine vibration
set up by the motor had loosened
every screw in the lens. A dab of
fingernail polish on the head of each
Perfect
Symbol
of
Love.
/tep Into the m/c circle
The Keepsake
guarantee assures
you of a beautiful,
perfect diamond forever.'
There is no finer
diamond ring.
keepsake
Registered Diamond Rings
EMBREY’S
JEWELRY
415 University Dr.
College Station
9:00-5:30 Mon.-Sat.
screw will keep them tight except
under the worst conditions.
To keep bulk down, I carry only
two lenses on fishing trips. The one
getting the most use is the 35 mm
semi-wide angle. It delivers well
framed photos at boat-length dis
tances and fairly impressive scenics.
The second lens I carry is a 105
mm short telephoto. It gives 2X
magnification, enough to fill the
frame with a boat-size object at
medium distance or to punch up a
sunrise or sunset.
The reason I don’t carry a longer
telephoto is that a boat is not a
steady enough platform to shoot
from. The least amount of motion
is magnified by the longer focal
lengths.
As for film, a fast one is a good
overall choice in both color and
black-and-white. Kodak Tri-X for
black-and-white and High Speed
Ektachrome for color are my
choices. These fast films let me
shoot hand held in low early morn
ing and late evening light, when the
most dramatic picture opportuni
ties happen.
Don t get caught up in technicali
ties when you shoot a fishing or
hunting trip. The eamera, is only
as good as the photographer.
Next time you catch old big or
bag a trophy buck, haul out your
trusty picture-clicker and fire away.
The thrill lasts a lot longer. Only
thing is, it makes lying a hell of a
lot harder to get away with.
AifiHMiiir
PACE, NEWSOM & MOATES, Inc.
846-7362
MORE MERCHANDISE FOR LESS MONEY!
^Sunflower
& Terry
* Brushed
Nylon
dearfoams
2 n
GREAT
COMFORT!
Sizes: Small,
Medium, Large.
In Pink or Blue
303 College Ave.
Next to Skaggs-Albertsons
Check my
Tire Values!
fr
Atlas Cushionaire. ^
as Pacesetter Tire
TUBELESS WHITEWALL
FED. EX. T4»>
(>ach tire)
E78-14
31.51
2.32
G78-14
36.23
2.62
G78-15
37.02
2.69
Four tough plies of
polyester cord.
Computer-designed
tread for good mileage
and skid resistance.
TUBELESS WHITEWALL
SIZE 1
Prlc« with | (Mch tire) |
E78-14
26.39~
2.27
F78-14
27.97
2.40
G78-15
31.12
2.60
H78-15
34.26
2.83
Our tough belted bias-ply tire
Two reinforcing belts of
fiberglass cord.
Two polyester
cord body plies
contribute to a
comfortable
ride.
Offers End May 15
David Dean
701 University
846-5078
6 AM to 10 PM
7 Days
Trademarks—'Atlas'-'Cushionaire'—Reg. U-S. Paf. Off., Atlas Supply Company.