The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 10, 1975, Image 9

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

    [) niaiii
is listed]
•ar's St.
ans
He's bad,
ittle
David
le to r
riK I
e worl j
I >otlil
mldn'ti,
• DavidjJ
''InniianJ
one.’’
at theptJ
aroimdiiJ
Is alloJ
' instead!
1 set earlj
layers |
liallisp
suit n; |
; t year*
e liadatJ
(In t (reli]
r e a pan ]
'it Op,ill
I'cises ']i|
closer fed
s C A.\ jin
i? ti'avelii
d tliinp
lie XCtJ
e idea Ik
ie to sail
it, hut jus
e done t
\CU'
■ disisli
s wliocai
“There
‘.Hi slate li
e-divisin
a divisioi
(I thevcai
t.
I)\ Cln
1974 na
they tale
rdaj.
he Agsil
ill field,
pnictice
lav witlil
thers in-
ad
■hiiildin;
st years
(fradna-
imherol
y ears of
etiirniii!
eh, Bilk
(I Bruce
li |>resi-
ie team
e main-
2 record
[hey are
anipion-
r Join)
s inter-
;ets mi-
illeyhall
liedule-
rtied by
Ami)®'
t rtp.m
Kiel-
oaclied
F. An-
Xacoj!-
Satin'-
fa
iz '66
74
$
itc
AL CAPONE’S PENTHOUSE
Located at 1201 Hwy. 30 in Briarwood Apts.
Open for Business Monday-Saturday Gameroom at 3 p.m.
Club at 7 p.m. Weekly Specials for All People
g pent house 1
RIDE ON!
Sales Center For:
PEUGEOT
RAL£k&f
FOLKS
,.f
\Si WE SERVICE ALL MAKES OF BICYCLES
Bicycle parts & accessories
CENTRAL CYCLE & SUPPLY
3505 E. 29th St. — 822-2228
Take East University to 29th St. (Tarrow Street)
EMBREY’S JEWELRY
Your Gift Headquarters
We feature a complete line of:
RINGS - LADIES & MENS
BRACELETS - LADIES & MENS
CHARM BRACELETS
WATCHES - SEIKO, BULOVA
CARAVELLE & TIMEX
ARNEX POCKET WATCHES
SMALL SILVER GIFTS
SMALL CRYSTAL GIFTS
NECK CHAINS - ALL SIZES
CROSS PENS & PENCILS
PENDANTS
EARRINGS
CHARMS
LOCKETS
KEY CHAINS
TIE TAGS
LIGHTERS
CUFF LINKS
BABY GIFTS
DIAMONDS - TO SET IN AGGIE RINGS
TURQUOISE JEWELRY - ALL KINDS
THE WINNER OF OUR FREE
AGGIE SWEETHEART RING
WAS: VONDA HARRISON
I
FREE GIFT WRAPPING
WITH ALL PURCHASES
415 UNIVERSITY DR.
COLLEGE STATION
9:00-5:30
MON.-SAT.
-*»#!
Sportfolio
|
m mmm By paul McGrath
Sports Writer
iaaMyrfr* |
There is an internal spark of desire in some of us, and
like a flower bud, eventually it develops into a beautiful
blossom.
Jerry Honore is one of those people who had the spark
all along, but it never bloomed until it was almost too late.
The Jerry Honore story is a typically American, typical
ly Aggie success story. It is a dream-come-true Hollywood
movie plot.
Honore rode the A&M bench for three years before re
ceiving an opportunity and later recognition. The Lake
Charles, Louisiana native came to Aggieland in the Gene
Stallings era and was one of the first blacks to don the Aggie
Maroon and White.
Honore’s future seemed doomed to anonymity as he
was not listed on the depth chart and was confined to the
squad team for three years, never receiving a varsity letter.
But the spring of 1974 brought a different atmosphere
to Aggieland. It was a winning atmosphere, a mood that
must have rubbed off on Honore.
Coach Emory Bellard was impressed with the fourth-
year Cajun and said Honore was having his best spring ever
at A&M. Honore’s bubbling enthusiasm shone forth when
he stated in the preseason that “I want to go to a bowl game.
I don’t care which one, I just want to go. ”
The season began with Honore once again in a familiar
position — on the bench. But he kept working and the team
kept winning, both of which had been unusual previously.
The Aggies were 7-1 on the year, but had to face the
unpredictable Arkansas Razorbacks with an injury-riddled
backfield.
Prior to this game, Honore had rushed for 25 yards on
four carries in three years’ service. Against the Hogs he was
to more than double that figure on one run.
Honore, the Aggies’ forgotten man, rose to the occasion
when he was needed on this blustery Saturday afternoon.
This was a game the Aggies needed badly and Honore
made sure they got it.
He got his first shot in the opening quarter, squirting
over the right side for a one yard score, putting the Aggies
in front early. It was the first six pointer of his career and
Honore responded with a jubilant series of jumps.
After he crossed the goal-line, many in the crowd
turned and asked “Who’s that number 30?” or “Honore,
who’s Honore?”
Later in the fourth quarter, Arkansas had just tied the
score at ten-all and the Ags were facing a severe loss of mo
mentum. But again Honore provided an answer.
With the ball at the A&M 40, Honore took a handoff,
shot up the middle for about a dozen yards before being
hit by the Hog safety man.
Honore bounced off the tackle, and with eyes glued
on the goal-line, sped across the remaining white stripes
for the clinching touchdown. The Aggies won 20-10.
On that 60-yard run, Honore doubled his previous three
year total. For the day, he carried the ball 19 times for 131
steps and two touchdowns. Pretty good for a former bench
warmer.
Honore drew deserved raves for his performance and
caused Bellard to have to reveal that this secret weapon
had been collecting splinters for three years.
The next week against SMU, Honore proved his was
no fluke by collecting 65 yards in 16 carries and again scoring
two touchdowns in the Aggies unsuccessful comeback effort.
What was remarkable about this performance is that Honore
was restricted to mostly second half action.
For those two games, Honore had scored all of the A&M
touchdowns and had accumulated almost 200 yards in about
three halves. He added 51 more yards and another touch
down against Rice.
Honore’s dream season ended in the gloom of Austin ’s
Memorial Stadium as did that of all Aggies. However, it
was one that will not soon be forgotten.
Jerry Honore is now gone from Texas A&M and is
working as a juvenile probation officer back in Lake
Charles. It’s a job he is suited for because youngsters and
Honore have always had a special rapport. He dutifully
believes in the good image athletes should have with youth.
Jerry Honore has departed but, like the Aggies of 1974.
should not be forgotten.
^UcO^Gfigie-^BaWiLin
BUSINESS COLLEGE
Inquire About Our Term Starting
Sept. 16
Phone 822-6423 or 822-2368
900 Miss
tickets left
Witli just three days remaining
until Texas A&M s 1975 football
opener against Mississippi in Kyle
Field, the demand for tickets is con
tinuing at a feverish pace.
As of Wednesday morning, ticket
manager Eideta Miller reported
that there were approximately 900
tickets available for the Ole Miss
contest. “But we may be able to re
lease some more tickets by Friday
morning depending on student
sales, Miller said. “If the good
weather holds, I would estimate a
crowd of about 46,000 for the
game.
If such a prediction holds true, it
will be the largest crowd for a home
opener in A&M history. That
number would also threaten the re
cord for a non-conference home
game of 46,680 for Army in 1972.
“We sold more than $7,000 in tic
kets Monday, and that is just fantas
tic for this time of year," Miller said.
“1 can remember weeks when we
didn’t sell that many.
The Bay lor game is soldout, and
only 200 folding chairs on the track
remain for the Texas game. There
are 6,000 tickets left for Illinois and
2,500 for SMU. Illinois has already
sold the 1,000 tickets it had for the
A&M game and requested 400
more.
Intramurals day
is successful
Fish field day, held Saturday,
ended with Company H-2 taking
the crown.
Squadron 8 finished second and
Company N-2 took third.
The first year cadets competed in
flag football, basketball, tug-of-war,
pushball, and track and field events.
The day-long ordeal was the first
intramural activity- of the year.
The intramural department will
begin campus-wide competition
Monday with flag football play . Last
year 417 games were played with
155 teams competing.
THE BATTALION Page 9
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1975
>>;« >-»-« >-«■< >-»■« »>-< >-»-« »-»-«»;«>>;« »;«>>:« »>;<»>;« t>;« »:*:« *>:« »>:«»;« »:«»>:<
£ 7% »?ST« »VN »T5T« »T5T« »?5T« »?•% »T5% *?•?« tlSTol? 5
>H*.
M
m
m
m
m
m
M
M
M
M
m
M
M
m
n
m
m
n
Tt\c
Shape
Roger Rozell
m
APPOINTMENTS MADE 1-6 WEEKS IN ADVANCE FROM DAY OF HAIR
CUT: SAVE $2.00 ON CUT & BLOW DRY.
BAUBLES, BEADS & THINGS
Come In & String Your Own
MON.: 9:00-5:30 TUES. - FRI.: 9:00-9:00 SAT.: 8:00-5:30
331 UNIVERSITY DRIVE
846-7614
>>;«»>;« >>;« »>;«»:»:« »>;« >>;■ >:»:< »:»;« »>:< »>;«»>;« »>-< t:>:< t:< . <
»T5!« »!5!« ,T5I, »T5!i rI5T« »T5T« r
Battalion Classified Call 845-2611
OLD TIME PHOTOS
“WHILE YOU WAIT”
Different costumes that fit
over your street clothes
take you back in time.
Antique style frames
available.
MANOR EAST MALL
TEXAS AT VILLA MARIA
'^O/VDERFUl WORLD of F4S/s/ 0/P
$
EUREKA
SALE
59
95
WITH
ATTACHMENTS
Save $ 29 95
Reg. Price Cleaner $69-95
Reg. Price Attachments $19.95
Total $89.90
Special features
4 way dial-a-nap
• Huge disposable dust bag
• edge kleener cleans that last
tough inch along the baseboard
MANOR EAST MALL
TEXAS AT VILLA MARIA
'BaMz
WOft/DEBFOL WORLD OF FASH/q^
The
SILVER FAWN
Gift ^§ljpp
TURQUOISE & STERLING
SILVER
FROM
$5.50
UP.
FED MART SHOPPING CENTER
SUITE 404
COLLEGE STATION
846-7877
For unlimited flexibility,
this is the ultimate calculator.
It’s programmable.
1
HP-25. This new, programmable science and engineering
calculator gives answers to repetitive problems in just
seconds when you pre-program your formula or equation.
Up to 49 program steps can be used. All the basic common
and scientific math (log, trig, exponential functions). Trig
functions in either decimal degrees, radians, or grads.
Automatic vector arithmetic and rectangular-to-polar
coordinate conversion. 8 addressable memories —
and more. $195.00.
University
ulator
mm
mm
HP-25
From HEWLETT-PACKARD, manufacturers of
the most advanced, quality calculators
in the industry.
LOUPOT’S
Northgate
Across From The Post Office
< 1975 Application Calculators Incorporated