The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 02, 1975, Image 11

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BUSINESS COLLEGE
Inquire About Our Term Starting
Sept. 16
Phone 822-6423 or 822-2368
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CROSS'
SINCE 1046
Writing Instruments
in Lustrous Chrome
Free Engraving
on all Cross
pens purchased
at Embrey's.
EMBREY’S
JEWELRY
415 University Dr.
846-5816
Mon.-Sat. 9:00 - 5:30
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Associated Press
Ed Dibbs
beats Ashe
Eddie Dibbs, an unheralded 24-
year-old with a ferocious two-fisted
backhand, turned in the biggest
upset of the 1975 U.S. Open Tennis
Tournament, eliminating Wimble
don champion Arthur Ashe in
straight sets 6-4, 6-2, 6-3 Monday.
Dibbs, in his element on the
newly installed clay courts at the
West Side Tennis Club, at Forest
Hills, N.Y., fired away from the
baseline and kept the fourth-seeded
Ashe off balance throughout the
match. By the time Ashe stopped
trying to match gr ound strokes with
the chunky Dibbs and tried to come
to net in the third set, it was too late.
Dibbs’ stunning triumph lifted
him into the quarter-finals of this
tournament for the first time. Last
year Dibbs, from Miami Beach,
Fla., didn’t even play in the Open,
preferring to bypass any event held
on grass.
While the result came as a shock
to the crowd at the stadium’s center
court, Ashe, whose vaunted service
lost its sting on the soft clay courts,
was not surprised.
Tufrfnamka
Eddie Dominguez '66
Joe Arciniega 74
Greg Price
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Research scientists in
university laboratories
throughout the country need
thousands of mice to help
save lives from cancer.
Will you help?
GIVE TO YOUR
American Cancer Society
Fight cancer
'with a checkup
and a check.
I uS SPACE CONTRIBUTED BY THE PUBLISHER
If you ivant the real
thing, not froren or
canned . We rail M
"Mexican Food
Supreme "
Dallas lor*tion:
3071 Northwest Hwy.
352-8570
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“I said my chances weren’t as
good on this surface,” he said. “I
thought if I could manage to get to
the net, I could make him nervous.
But he played passing shots for all
three sets, which is unusual.”
Dibbs agreed.
Dibbs’ opponent in the quarter
finals will be Bjorn Borg, the 19-
year-old Swedish star who outlasted
Australian Rod Laver. Borg and
Laver put on the best match of the
afternoon, a 2 hour, 10 minute affair
that featured lengthy rallies on the
slow clay surface.
The youthful Borg proved too
much for Laver who, at 37, has lost
the fine edge that made him the
world’s top player and brought him
an unprecedented two Grand Slams
during the 60s, winning 6-1, 6-4,
2-6, 6-2.
Andrew Pattison of Rhodesia
downed South Africa’s Bob Hewitt
6-4, 6-2, 1-6, 6-2 in another men’s
fourth round match.
British veteran Virginia Wade,
seeded second, survived a scare be
fore subduing 18-year-old Beth
Norton, a rising star from Fairfield,
Conn. Miss Norton, national junior
champion playing in her first Open,
shocked Miss Wade, 12 years her
senior, by winning the first set 4-6.
Miss Wade recovered sufficiently
to take the next two sets 6-4, 6-3,
and will face West Germany’s Katja
Ebbinghaus in the quarter-finals.
Miss Ebbinghaus beat Pam
Teeguarden of Los Angeles 6-0, 6-3.
Fourth-seeded Evonne
Goolagong, in control all the way,
moved into the quarter-finals with a
6-3, 6-2 triumph over Valerie
Ziegenfuss of Mission Viejo, Calif.
Miss Goolagong lost the first
game of each set but little else. She
will go against Japan’s Kazuko
Sawamatsu, a 6-2, 7-6 winner over
Linky Boshoff of South Africa in the
quarters.
Seaver in
20th win
Tom Seaver hurled a four-hitter
for his 20th victory and became the
first pitcher in major league history
to strike out 200 or more batters in
eight consecutive seasons in leading
the New York Mets to a 3-0 home
victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates
Monday.
The 30-year-old right-hander
fanned 10 Pirates, boosting his sea
son total to 204 and breaking a
three-way tie with Hall of Earners
Walter Johnson tnd Rube Waddell.
The only hits Seaver allowed
were singles by Willie Stargell in
the fourth inning, Manny Sanguil-
len in the fifth, Ed Kirkpatrick in
the sixth and Dave Parker in the
seventh.
Rookie sensation Mike Vail gave
Seaver the only run he needed
when he homered in the first inning
off loser John Candelaria, 7-5. It was
the first at-bat in Shea Stadium for
Vail, who was brought up from the
minors on the Mets’ recent road
trip.
Cowboys
cut squad
The Dallas Cowboys cut five
players Monday to bring their squad
to 53 members, meaning one more
player will have to be released by
this week, a Cowboy spokesman
said in Dallas.
Those released were running
back Billy Ray Nash of Claremont,
defensive end Mel Hinton of
Westchester State, wide receiver
Lee McGriff of Florida, guard Jim
Boyle of Montana State and defen
sive hack David Shaw from Prairie
View A&M.
The Cowboys listed seven players
as “questionable” for play Friday
night against the Oakland Raiders in
Dallas.
The players and their injuries are
Percy Howard, hamstring; Lee Roy
Jordan, knee; Ken Hutcherson,
knee; Danny Kepley; Scott Laid-
law, knee; Rodney Wallace, hip;
and Mark Washington, finger.
Listed as “probable” for the game
are Robert Newhouse, strained
neck nerve; Dave Edwards, hamstr
ing; D.D. Lewis, toe; Drew Pear
son, groin; and Mel Renfro, groin.
Baseball
American
W
L
Pet.
GB
Boston
79
54
.594
-
Baltimore
73
60
.549
6
New York
67
67
.500
12 I/a
Cleveland
61
68
.473
16
Milwaukee
59
76
.437
21
Detroit
52 81
West
.391
27
Oakland
82
54
.603
-
Kansas City
73
61
.545
8
Texas
67
69
.493
15
Chicago
66
70
.485
16
Minnesota
63
70
.474
17 Ms
California
62
74
.456
20
■f 0 0 . )t 'V
ROLLER
SKA TING
• concessions
• game machines
• parties
Vi. X
&
m
ai
indoo r
MINIATURE
GOLF
• 18 holes
• astroturf
• air condition
19 07 Tex a s
telephones'.
College Station
Q-=l€3 “ 5VST • — SV33
“across from C.S. ■w^a/ter to-wer on niglrw-oLy e
Saturday’s Results
Detroit 9, California 2
Minnesota at Cleveland, 2, ppd.,
rain
Baltimore 4, Chicago 2 —
Oakland 7, Boston 6, 10 innings
Kansas City 5, New York 2
Texas 8, Milwaukee 3
Sunday’s Results
Minnesota at Cleveland, 2, ppd.,
rain
California at Detroit, canceled, rain
Chicago at Baltimore, ppd., rain
Oakland 8, Boston 6
Kansas City 7, New York 0
Milwaukee 4, Texas 1
Monday’s Games
Chicago 10, Kansas City 8, 1st
Kansas City 3, Chicago 1, 2nd
Cleveland at Baltimore, 2 ppd., wet
grounds
Oakland 6, California 3
Milwaukee at Detroit, n
New York at Boston, n
Minnesota at Texas, n
Tuesday’s Games
Cleveland at Baltimore, n
New York at Boston, n
Milwaukee at Detroit, n
Kansas City at Chicago, n
Minnesota at Texas, n
Oakland at California, n
Baseball
National
tmam • M* ■' f— ■ —1
ta bo mM]
in —OO
W
L
Pet.
GB
Pittsburgh
75
59
.560
-
St. Louis
73
63
.537
3
Philadelphia
72
63
.533
4 Vi
New York
72
64
.529
4
Chicago
62
75
.453
14 Ms
Montreal
58 75
West
.436
16V&
Cincinnati
90
45
.667
-
Los Angeles
72
64
.529
IHV2
S. Francisco
67
68
.496
23
San Diego
61
75
.449
29 Vi
Atlanta
59
77
.434
SIMs
Houston
52
85
.380
39
THE BATTALION Page 11
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2. 1975
Texas Instruments
New SR-51
SuperSlide-Rule Calculator
SR- 51A $132.95
SR-5 0A 85.95 j
SR-16 52.95
SR-11 33.95 1^ cl
TI- 5050 127.95 1 1
Plus $2.00 Shipping
By Air Mail
And 5% Sales Tax
SEND MONEY ORDER OR
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IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
ALL MODELS AVAILABLE
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PHONE 214-691-0215
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MONEY??
Position: Intramural Flag Football Officials — Men &
Women
Pay: $2.26, $2.36, $2.45 per hour.
Football Sign-up meeting: 6:30 p.m. Thursday Sept. 4,
1975
Room 267, G. Rollie White.
Other officials needed for: softball, tennis, soccer,
volleyball, track & field, basketball, waterpolo, swim
ming and handball.
Questions ?: contact John Meyer-Intramural Office-
Deware Field House 845-2624.
Saturday’s Results
Atlanta at Chicago, ppd. rain
San Francisco 4, Philadelphia 1
Houston 7, Pittsburgh 4, 2nd game,
ppd. rain
Cincinnati 3, St. Louis 2, 10 innings
Lost Angeles 7, New York 0
Montreal 5, San Diego 1
Sunday’s Results
Atlanta 3-8, Chicago 1-9, 2nd game
10 innings
Pittsburgh 9, Houston 6, 2nd game
ppd., rain
St. Louis 5, Cincinnati 3
San Diego 6, Montreal 0
San Francisco 5, Philadelphia 4
Los Angeles, 5, New York 2
Monday’s Games
St. Louis 6, Chicago 3
New York 3, Pittsburgh 0
San Diego at Cincinnati, n
Montreal at Philadelphia, n
Los Angeles at San Francisco, n
Atlanta at Houston, n
Tuesday’s Games
Los Angeles at San Francisco
Montreal at Philadlphia, n
San Diego at Cincinnati, n
Pittsburgh at New Yorkn
Chicago at St. Louis, n
Atlanta at Houston, n
_ AGGIES!
AIM Douglas
Jewelry
offers
Student ID Discounts!
15% off of ^O 00 or more
10% off of under $ 50 00
CASH PURCHASE ONLY
212 N. MAIN 822-3119
DOWNTOWN BRYAN
DISCOUNT
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STUDENTS, FACULTY & STAFF
FOR ONLY $6.35 YOU CAN HAVE
THE HOUSTON CHRONICLE
DELIVERED TO YOUR DORM, APARTMENT, OR HOUSE
EVERY DAY FOR THE ENTIRE FALL SEMESTER.
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693-2323 or 846-0763