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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 10, 1975)
SENIORS Check our special prices for full length portraits for the Centennial Class of ’76. UNIVERSITY STUDIO 115 College Main, Northgate 846-8019 'BluebonnetJfeutelrt/ by Fbu/a fV V Unique pendants, bracelets, /oclets, necklaces, pins, earrings, tie tacks, Ca/f d/nks and framed miniatures each featuring a sing/e stem bluebonnet fired on fine china. fvodable onitf at "Tic Bfue &!6 [/((to/Marta fBd. Bn f m,'%*s7780t f7&t&23S2/t tO. OO - SltdOyiton. - Sat. Make Entertaining Easier! Use colorful, coordinated Hallmark paper party- Hallmark Shop MANOR EAST MALL Fourth straight time THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, DEC. 10, 1975 Page 13 Ags win, hit 100 again BUSINESS COLLEGE Inquire About Our Term Starting Jan. 5 Phone 822-6423 or 822-2368 The Aggies, playing their slowest and lowest scoring game of the young season, still managed to break the 100 point mark for the fourth game in a row and axed the Sam Houston Bearcats 105-74. With Barry Davis again leading Ag scorers with 22 points and col lecting a game high 11 rebounds the Ags picked up their fourth win without a loss this season. The standard six Aggie players scored in double figures led by Davis. Karl Godine pumped in 17 points followed by Ray Roberts with 16, Jarvis Williams with 15, Wally Swanson with 13 and Joey Robinson with 11. Godine started Aggie scoring al most one minute into the game when he hit a jumper from the top of the circle. The Ags jumped out to a quick 5-0 lead and raced on to a healthy 15-4 lead after Davis hit six straight points. Sam Houston called time out to regroup. The Kats came out pressing hard and caused two quick turnovers. From those they scored on a Henry Green jumper and two James Holcombe layups. Sonny Parker fouled Holcombe on the second layup and he converted for the three-pointer. The gap had closed to 15-9. The teams traded baskets with the Bearkats closing it to four at 27-23. The Ags again boosted their lead to 11, 51-40 just before the half. The teams went to the locker room with the score 51-42. The muscling post team of Davis and Williams accounted for ten points each the first half to lead the Ags while Melvin Moore was the Kats mainstay at the half with nine points. The Bearkats were definitely the best team-play ballclub the Ags have seen this season but as in ear lier games, the Ags returned the second half and began absolute domination. At the half the Ags led in re bounds only 22-16 but had in creased that gap to 51-33 by the end of the game. Likewise, at the half the Ags had nine assists to the Kats seven, but the final total was 20 for A&M and 10 for SHS. Despite dominating the boards and the scoring, the Ags found themselves in foul trouble early. Sonny Parker fouled with but a minute gone in the second half to gain his fourth and before Steve Jones could get in the game Parker was called for going over the back to get a rebound on his own shot. Godine received his fourth with two minutes gone and his replacement Gates Erwin received his fourth soon after. But it wasn’t to stop the scorers. Swanson scored all his points the second half and Godine and Davis doubled their point totals. The Ags looked as though they might not hit 100 this game but kept up the pace, scoring eight straight points in two and a half minutes. The Ags hit their largest gap at 34 points when Roberts hit a jumper from the corner with 2:10 left in the game and Swanson set the crowd aroar hitting another jumper with 1:21 left to gain the century mark. In addition to Davis’ 11 rebounds, Swanson collected nine and Williams and Roberts each had eight. Leading scorers for the Kats were Moore and Billy Froechtenicht each with 15 and Green and Gay each with 10. Erwin fed seven assists and Steve Jones and Roberts each had a block for the Ags. The Ags hit 51.3 per cent from the floor and 77.1 per cent from the line while SHS hit 44.4 per cent from the field and 85.7 from the line. Co-captain Roberts said after the game, “They were pretty tough for awhile there, they were pretty hot the first half. The first four games we realize that the competition wasn’t top-notch. But it’s something we needed as young as we are.” The Ags now take a week and a half off in preparation for the first of three tournaments they will partici pate in over the holidays. The Ags will play LaSalle in the first round of the Jayhawk Classic on Friday. LaSalle is currently 4-1. They were 21-4 last year. Also in the tourna ment are Yale and Big Eight toughie and host Kansas. The game will be broadcast on KTAM. Off Campus Graduate Students I am your representative to the Student Senate. Please contact me regarding any matter requiring senate ac tion. Dick Gunselman Goodwin Hall Room 003 Phone 845-7325 Home 693-6177 GET HOLIDAY CASH FOR YOUR BOOKS NOW! LOUPOT’S BOOKSTORE lE Dawson undecided on J career, retirement plans © 1975 Hallmark Cards. Inc. Associated Press Len Dawson’s long, distinguished career may have ended in the shadow of his own goalposts, in pain and frustration. If so, it would seem an unfitting way for the American Football League’s all-time leading passer to go out. The 40-year-old Dawson has maintained that this, his 19th season as a professional quarterback, may be his last. But he insists he still has not made a decision and will not do so for several weeks. In any event, he will play no more this year. Midway in the fourth quarter of the San Diego-Kansas City game Sunday, Dawson fell be neath a Chargers pass rush and broke his right thumb. The Chiefs went on to lose to lowly San Diego, 28-20, falling to 5-7. An obviously disappointed Dawson said later, “It sure wasn’t a very glamorous finish if this is the way I went out. If this is the end, it’s been a great experience playing in Kansas City.” From 1957 — Dawson’s rookie year at Pittsburgh — through his last play Sunday, he passed for 28,711 yards and 239 touchdowns. Both figures represent American Conference records. On the all-time NFL quarterback list, Dawson ranks fourth behind Johnny Unitas, Fran Tarkenton and Sonny Jurgen- sen. Dawson, who played at Purdue and led the Big Ten in passing and total offense for three years, lan guished for three seasons at Pittsburgh and two at Cleveland be fore catching on. In 1962, Hank Stram brought him to the young AFL’s struggling Dal las Texans and Dawson promptly led them to the AFL championship over the Houston Oilers in pro foot ball’s second longest game. The next year, owner Lamar Hunt moved the Texans to Kansas City and renamed them the Chiefs. For the next seven years, Dawson and the Chiefs hovered near the top. On Jan. 15, 1967, as the AFL champions, they met the Green Bay Packers in the first Super Bowl and were dispatched, 35-10. Three years later, they extracted their pound of flesh from the rival NFL by upsetting the Minnesota Vikings 23-7 in Super Bowl IV, giv ing Kansas City its finest hour. The Kansas City Star ran a front page story last Thursday saying the Chargers contest might be the home fans’ last opportunity to see Dawson and Buck Buchanan, a 12-year vete ran of the defensive line. When Dawson ran onto the field, the crowd jumped to its feet and gave him a standing ovation. Signs reading, “But Lenny, we love you” and “Go, Lenny, Baby” appeared in the crowd. Mf xii ^ **»**»& CHARU'S % f^JS s *KSSa»•* openiMS Houston-" 11 Chart your career growth with Texas Instruments, a company whose diverse technological leadership is evidenced by more than 3,500 patents. From design to manufacturing, from microprocessors to digital systems, from integrated circuits to calculators, Texas Instruments offers exceptional opportunities. LlV© in HOUStOn, the largest city in the South and the nation’s fastest growing major metropolis. Enjoy the best in sports, theatre, museums and shopping, all a short drive from salt water beaches. ■ / J Electronic Engineer Requires a BSEE plus experience with digital equipment design. Assembly language programming experience on minicomputers is desirable. Systems Analyst Requires a BS in EE or CS, or a BS in Math with a Computer Science background, and 2-4 years experience with minicomputers in an applications environment. Merry Christmas CLOTHES FOR THE HOLIDAYS, SPORTSWEAR OR DRESS . . . 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Experience with minicomputers is desirable. Requires an AA degree or 1-2 years of college with 6 months to 1 year of experience in electronic drafting. Ability to lay out MOS and BiPolar cell and interconnect is highly desirable. For an interview at your convenience, call Jerry Moulder at (713) 494-5115, extension 2151. Or apply in person at the Employment Office, 12201 S.W. Freeway in Houston. Or send your resume in complete confidence to P.O. Box 1443, M.S. 605, Houston, Texas 77001. Texas Instruments INCORPORATED An equal opportunity employer