The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 04, 1975, Image 5

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LAKEVIEW CLUB
3 Miles N.on Tabor Road
Saturday Night: Johnny Lyons, Janet Lynn and
The Country Nu-Notes
From 9-1 p.m.
STAMPEDE Every Thursday Nite
(ALL BRANDS BEER 35 cents)
LADIES FREE
Every Tuesday Nite
All Brands Beer 35c
8-12
Music furnished by the Brazos Sounds
MEN $2.00
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TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY
TOWN HALL
YOUNG ARTISTS SERIES
PRESENTS
TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY
SYMPHONIC BAND
Tuesday Nov. 18, 1975 8:00 p.m.
Rudder Theater
Tickets
(no reserved seats)
A&M Student free w/activity card
Student Date 1 00
General Public 2.50
Tickets and information available at the MSC Box Office, first floor of Rudder
Tower. Open 9-4 Monday-Friday. 845-2916. No cameras or recording
equipment will be allowed.
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AGGIE CINEMA
Popular Film Series
presents
Jonathan Livingston Seagull
Musical score by Neil Diamond
Nov. 8
Rudder Theater
Ge
8 P.M.
$1.00
Advance tickets available at Box Office
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Title a tossup
THE BATTALION
TUESDAY, NOV. 4, 1975
Page 5
SWC cage coaches confer
By DAVID WALKER
Battalion Sports Writer
DALLAS — It was press day here
Sunday for the nine Southwest Con
ference basketball coaches, and for
one time all nine of them agreed on
two subjects.
All coaches feel that the SWC
post season tournament and the
debut of Houston will help the con
ference on the national scene where
it has been lacking attention in the
past.
Even Texas coach Leon Black ex
pressed excitement over the tour
nament even though he voted
against it. “I voted against the tour
nament idea because I feel that the
team that ends up on top after the
round robin schedule would be the
best team to represent the confer
ence, but since the vote I ve had
time to reconsider, and now I feel
that the pluses by far out weigh the
minuses,” he said.
All coaches reached the agree
ment that the SWC would be at
least a seven team race with A&M,
Houston, Arkansas, Texas Tech,
Baylor, SMU, and Texas all title
material.
The coaches seemed more intent
on pushing SWC basketball than
their own teams. Arkansas coach
Eddie Sutton summed up the feel
ings on the other eight coaches, “I
felt that last year there was a tre
mendous drop from the top three
teams and the rest of the conference
but this year it isn’t that way,” Sut
ton said.
“I’m going to stay around the
SWC for a long time because I want
to help raise SWC basketball where
it is on par with the national level
that our football programs are on,
Sutton said.
The consensus pick for the con
ference title was Texas Tech. Most
coaches cited the return of Rick Bul
lock as the big reason for the Raiders
to unseat Texas A&M as conference
champions.
One coach disagreed with the
Tech picks. Baylor coach Carol
Dawson picked the Aggies. “I have
to go with A&M,” Dawson said.
“They’ve got their top three scorers
back. The second half of last year we
played everybody well except
A&M. They heat us bad at their
place, and we had them down 18
points at our place, and they came
back to beat us, and that’s impres
sive. I ve got to pick them, Dawson
added.
Another point the coaches agreed
on was that the new TV set up would
help conference reputation through
exposure.
The TV season opens with a
Monday night game this season with
Houston at Arkansas on Jan. 5. The
first, second, fifth and sixth
weekend games are set with all of
the others listed as wild-card games.
Two of the first-round tournament
games will he on the tube with both
tourney semi-final games and the
tournament final on TV.
All-in-all the coaches are prepar
ing for a barn burning season, and
no one gave any reason why it
shouldn’t be.
Editor’s note: The Battalion will
run features on all nine SWC
schools in coming issues.
Sue AuKema
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Golfers trek to Edinburgh
for three day tourney
By ALAN SMITH
Battalion Sports Writer
Golf coach Bob Ellis had high ex
pectations of his swinging quintet
before driving off to Edinburgh in
South Texas yesterday.
“We are out to win this one, we re
not going to settle for second or
third,” he said.
The top notch Texas A&M squad
of senior Larry Gorzycki, juniors
Monty Schauer, Bobby Baker, and
Steve Whiteside, together with
frosh Mike Schwerman, will spend
today and Wednesday brushing up
on their strokes, before hopefully
clubbing their way through a 20
team field in the Jimmy Demaret
Invitational at Edinburgh.
Ellis clubbers start swinging on
Thursday on the first of three
courses at the Rancho Viejo Golf
Club.
They will play 18 holes a day,
each on a different course, for a
three-day total of 54 holes.
The four golfers with the lowest
score on each team count for team
points, and the team with the lowest
score wins the tournament.
Coach Ellis had high praise for his
ace senior Gorzycki, who drove his
Davis moves north
to Canadian league
Associated Press
TORONTO — Anthony Davis,
the former Southern California
scathack and one of the few stand
outs in the now-defunct World
Football League, signed a million-
dollar contract with the Canadian
Football League Monday.
The exciting breakaway runner,
whom the Toronto Argonauts hope
will help them end a 23-year champ
ionship drought, came to terms with
the CFL team over the weekend
and officially signed Monday.
Although terms of the contract
were not released, Argos own Bill
Hodgson called it “a million-dollar,
multi-year contract.” Davis said it
covered five years.
The 5-foot-9, 190-pound speeds
ter was drafted by the New York Jets
of the National Football League,
but NFL Commissioner Pete
Crush
all smokes
dead out.
Please-, help prevent forest fires.
Rozelle ruled that NFL clubs can
not sign WFL players until next sea
son. Thus, the Jets couldn’t pursue
Davis although they indicated they
weren’t interested in shelling out
large sums of money.
“I decided on Toronto because
when I came up here a couple of
weeks ago, I really liked the
people,” Davis said.
“Everybody I met made me feel
that I was wanted.
He admitted that what really sold
him was his first look at a CFL game
and the possibilities league rules
pose for a speedy runner to make
use of the longer and wider field.
“It was the first time I had been to
Canada and only the second time I
had watched a game from the
stands,” Davis said. “I liked the
rules, you know, the yard between
the defensive line, the blocking, the
wider field.
“I really think it is suited to a
player like myself. The Canadian
game can be real exciting.”
What could have been even more
exciting, had the Argos been able to
survive the mauling they took
Saturday from The Hamilton
Tiger-Cats that knocked them out of
the playoffs, would have been a
matchup Sunday with Johnny Rod
gers of the Montreal Alouettes.
“That was another reason I de
cided on Toronto. Johnny’s a great
athlete and I was really disap
pointed when I found out Toronto
had lost to Hamilton,” Davis said.
The California Sun, with Davis
providing the momentum, was one
of the more successful teams — at
, least on the field — in the disbanded
circuit. He was the league’s leading
scorer, rushed for 1,204 yards —
more than any other league player
— and caught 54 passes.
w
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way to a record-tying seven under
par 65 round on the College Station
course last Thursday.
“Larry is in prime condition, he’s
driving long and hard, and is proba
bly playing the best golf he’s ever
played,” said Ellis.
In practice last week the dyna
mite senior from Bryan blasted a
330 yarder on the College Station
tenth hole within 20 yards of the
green, and according to Coach Ellis,
“that’s putting the fuse to things.”
“The whole team has improved
tremendously. Monty Schauer s
playing a great game, as are Bobby
(Baker) and Steve (Whiteside).
Frosh Mike Schwerman is on the up
and up, and is surprising many
people.
Pan American University is spon
soring the three-day event, which
should turn out to be quite a
swinger.
THE GREAT CONTROVERSY BETWEEN
CHRIST AND SATAN ON FILM!
WHERE? CORNER OF N. COULTER & ETTLE STREETS BRYAN, TEXAS
WHEN? NOV. 6, 1975 AT 7:30 P.M.
SPEAKER: HAGAR THOMAS OF BEAUMONT, TEXAS
THE PUBLIC IS CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND THIS INTRODUCTION
AND FIVE (5) OTHER BIBLE LECTURES THAT FOLLOW ON NOV. 7,8,13,
14, AND 15.*
THESE LECTURES CENTER ON GREAT BIBLE TRUTHS THAT SATAN
HAS TRIED TO COVER THROUGH THE AGES, LARGELY THROUGH
THE TRADITIONS AND TEACHING OF MEN.
BRING YOURSELF AND A FRIEND!
•ALL LECTURES BEGIN PROMPTLY AT 7:30 P.M. AND LAST FOR 1 HOUR
campus v.:r.
STARTS
FRIDAY
S:iJ«U4XCi>
DAILY AT 6:35, 8:10 & 9:45
FROM CINEMA 5
COMING SOON! HARLAN ELLISON'S "A BOY S
HIS DOG" 8. PETER O’TOOLE & KATHARINE
HEPBURN IN "THE LION IN WINTER”
IffiPPT:
7:00 & 9:05
LAST 3 DAYS!
AHHWO
THEWrllY
miteH
A COLUMBIA PICTURES
andRASTARPRpOUCTinN
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