i KEEP ON CLOGGIN’ 3725 E. 29th 846-1148 Town & Country Center Water Polo THE BATTALION TUESDAY, OCT 7, 1975 Page 5 Harriers lose, Ags net 7 wins improve on times m •"Vi X JOOOOOOO \M c Laughlin's/ of corpus chnstf^fr o o o o o o o a The Texas A&M University Water Polo team concluded its California tour on a happy note, winning college division title in the West Coast tourney. The Aggies of Coach Dennis Fos- dick rampaged for seven straight wins before having to settle for a tie with Stanford. For the year, the water poloists now stand 9-0-1. The Ags beat Fresno State, Di ablo Valley, De Anza, and Berkeley by the combined score of 39-19 be fore the 6-6 match with Stanford. Because of a need to continue the tournament, no overtime period was allowed. In the game against the Golden Bears, A&M trailed 6-4 with 43 sec onds remaining and managed to put in two goals within 25 seconds to knot the score. 1403 UNIVERSITY DR. COLLEGE STATION m 2M ESS ■ass more 21(2 ass wash and wear haircuts call 846-5764 for appointment 18t3 in. "in i kM kly, )tia- and *46- Iron off, op Olh 19t6 as® 392tfn s. 822- 21118 19.2H3 MYSTERY MONEY SAVER SPECIAL 99c Freshman Blake Hinman led the Aggie attack all during the tour, hit ting 20 of 31 shots at goal, or 65 per cent. Another freshman, Bill Yates, scored 21 goals for the Maroon. His older brother, Jim, had 20. Don Reeser was next with 19 scores and led the squad with ten assists. The younger Yates followed with nine. Fosdick seemed pleased with his team’s overall performance but felt the team’s fatigue became obvious in the final games. He also said that while the offense and defense came together on several occasions, the team still had some problems with the new rides and not playing as a team. By PAUL McGRATH Battalion Sports Writer The Rice Owls and University of Houston Cougars used their home-ground advantage to outdis tance the Texas A&M University of Texas cross-country teams last Saturday. The Owls led by Jeff Wells and John Lodwick, took the four-team meet with the low score of 29 points. UH followed with 45, Texas A&M went to the showers with 65 and the Horns brought up the rear with a score of 80. Such was the Houston school dominance that the two squads had seven men place in the top ten finishers, Rice with four and the Coogs with a trio. Texas A&M s Charles Cottle was the only man from the Aggie contingent to place, at fourth, while the Steers had a pair of runners in the lead group. Wells, who won his 14th straight cross-country race, was the first finisher with a time of 19:27 for the four-mile course covering the hilly terrain of Buffalo Bayou. Teammate Lodwick was right behind at 19:55. Cottle paced Wells the entire race until the last half mile when he was passed by Lodwick and Brad Rickman of Houston. Cottle clocked ■ in at 20:01. “Our kids have been improving each week. Charles Cottle really ran well for us, said Nelson. “I told them not to worry about winning the meet, just to run well. The sun will still come up tomorrow if they don t win. Vikings prove deserving of top ranking, prevail over Killeen By MARLA GAMMON Battalion Sports Writer Kyle Field held the game that could compare to no others Friday night. The two top teams in the state met in what was said to be tbe deci sive game of District 15-4A. Bryan, ranked No. 1 by AP and Killeen, ranked No. 1 by UPI locked horns in the district opener and Bryan came out on top 28-12. The stands re sounded with the roar of over 20,000 voices. The roar was well de served as the fans were treated to an Monday-Frlday Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner 'A FREE DESSERT | WITH THIS COUPON | FOR ALL DINNERS ... I ANY TIME OF THE DAY | a division of International Industries. Inc " - ' UNIVERSITY SQUARE 846-1817 7:00 A.M.-1:00 A.M. SUNDAY- THURSDAY OPEN 24 HOURS FRIDAY & SATURDAY TONIGHT 10:00 j , 0 » BRYAN fiticiAs de mm KILLEEN on KflmU*TV 15 GREAT ISSUES ,\0 A Richard Levinson - the International Affairs Specialist speaks on RRORISM the Inside Story in the MSC ballroom at 8:00 p.m. Tuesday, October 7 Admission: Free to Activity Card holders, others $1.00 Recipe ft/ 2 ©C^ADO: ★ Add ice to a mixing glass or jelly jar, depending on your financial situation. ★ Pour in 2 oz. of Jose Cuervo Tequila. ★ The juice from half a lime. ★ 1 tbsp. of honey. ★ Shake. ★ Strain into a cocktail glass or peanut butter jar, depending on your financial situation. exciting, action-packed game. Despite the lopsided score, Kil leen put up a fight that any coach would have been proud of. Only brilliant defensive plays by Bryan’s Gerald Carter and James “Tank” Hunter kept Killeen from crossing tbe goal line more than once. Car ter, playing at defensive end, inter cepted two passes and knocked down several others. His first inter ception came in tbe endzone when Killeen was threatening late in the fourth quarter. While tbe defense was keeping 1 Killeen out of the endzone Curtis Dickey and Co. were racking up : points for tbe Vikings. Dickey, one r of tbe most sought-after football I players in Texas, set a new Bryan 1 High rushing record with 190 yards. He literally outran the Killeen sec- 'I ondary on a 85-yard touchdown run ! late in the second quarter. His * superb running left no doubt in ; anyone’s mind that be should be highly thought of by college football coaches. Quarterback Harry Fran- cis and fullback Mike Davis ran con- : sistently all night and Francis pas- • , ! sing kept the Killeen secondary on 1 their toes. i There were many worried minds V. in Bryan before the game because of 1 tbe unknowp ineligibility of fullback ■ RifrlrttmUlafris. Harm was found to ' be two weeks too old to play in U1L 1 competition and the Vikings had to forfeit their first three games be cause of it. > Coach Merrill Green moved David from quarterback to fullback and Francis took bis place at quar terback. It was feared that tbe morale of the team would be hurt because of it, but the Vikings proved that hurdle a small one. The Vikings showed the determination of a team that knows it is good enough to be No. 1 Killeen was supposedly the team s toughest test of tbe season. ' Embrey’s Jewelry JOSE CUERVO® TEQUILA. 80 PROOF IMPORTED AND BOTTLED BY © 1975, HEUBLEIN, INC., HARTFORD, CONN. Battalion Classified Call 845-2611 We Specialize In Aggie Rings. Diamonds Set — Sizing — Reoxidizing — All types watch/jewelry Aggie Charge Accounts 9-5:30 846-5816 CHRISTMAS IN OCTOBER 3 FOR 2 ■ SALE photography NORTHGATE 846-2828 PURCHASE TWO ENLARGEMENTS AND GET A THIRD ENLARGEMENT OF THE SAME SIZE FREE GOOD ON ALL IMPERIAL PORTRAITS TAKEN DURING OCTOBER