The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 29, 1976, Image 7

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    °\LPHA PHI OMEGA Backlashes
THE BATTALION
THURSDAY, JAN. 29, 1976
Page 7
WAGES
wages
'“'“olCnJ
»"ie.Ck*i
: ® Oranoe
ERAGES
ranges
ISIATIOIMAL. SERVICE
FRATERIMITY
■RIENDSHIP,
LEADERSHIP,
and SERVICE.
What’s it all about ? Come
to one of our pledge rush
meetings and find out:
January 27and 29
Rm. 206, MSC
8:00 PM.
R COME BY ROOM 216 OF THE MSC ANYTIME
Bass club tournaments yield awards
By BRUCE L. SUBLETT
Battalion Outdoor Writer
I want to let you all in on a little
secret. There’s some folks on this
campus who are giving away trophies
for catching bass.
No kidding, folks. Real, genuine,
impressive silver and marble
trophies. All you have to do to get
one of these little jewels is join the
Aggie Bass Club and be one of six
fishermen (excuse me, “fisherper-
sons”) to catch more pounds of bass
in a tournament than the rest of the
club. Simple.
Why, just this week, trophies
went out to the winners of the
November and December contests.
James George and Ray Hinnant
walked off with the big one for the
November team tournament held at
Conroe. Anyone who fished de
served a prize, because it was cold, I
guarantee.
Joe Janac carted home the whole
shooting match for the December
roadrunner tournament. He took the
first place trophy (a spectacular
three-footer), an 84-quart ice chest
and the $26 big bass pot. Tommy
Nuche took second and Joe’s brother
Jimmy was third.
Besides being a legitimate excuse
to go fishing, fishing with the Aggie
Bass Club is a chance to prove once
and for all that you are a success on
the lake. Nobody can argue with a
first-place trophy.
Looking back on a year of tourna-
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le, Coin, ft
Next year
you could be on
scholarship.
An Air Force ROTC 2-year scholarship. Which not only pays your tuition,
but also gives you $100 a month allowance. And picks up the tab for your
books and lab fees, as well.
And after college, you’ll receive a commission in the Air Force...go on to
further, specialized training.. .and get started as an Air Force officer. There’ll
be travel, responsibility, and a lot of other benefits.
But it all starts right here...in college...in the Air Force ROTC. Things
will look up...so look us up. No obligation, of course.
Contact: Lt. Col. Joe G. Bergstad
Trigon, Room 209-Phone 845-7611
Put it all together in Air Force ROTC.
ments, die act of committing fishing
is really secondary. The real purpose
in going is to be around a bunch of
fellows who can tell lies like you
never heard before. Of course, they
won’t admit to stretching the truth,
but what fisherman will?
Associating with this group is a
great way to learn more about bass
fishing. Several of the members
were just getting started a year ago,
and now they’re fishing like pros.
Besides the trophies, the good
bull and the coaching, members get
to wear a really tough team shirt with
AGGIE BASS CLUB emblazoned
across the back for the whole world
to see. Club members also get a lot of
free product patches to adorn the
shirts. Evert if you Ve a lousy fisher
man, a shirt like this makes every
body else think you’re a pro.
Interested, are you? Well, the
next meeting of the club will be Feb.
17 at 7:30 p.m. in the Rudder Tower.
The next tournament is Feb. 7 and 8
out of Overlook Marina on Lake
Somerville. Membership costs $6
from now through August and tour
nament fees are usually $5. Mem
bership is open to students, faculty,
staff and former students.
Besides Somerville, tournaments
this spring will be Conroe in March,
Livingston in April and Toledo Bend
in May. The top six fishermen in the
club will fish the Top Six tournament
on Toledo in June.
Anyone who thinks he can put up
with this kind of lunacy can contact
Tommy Nuche (845-7419) or me,
Bruce Sublett (845-4611).
Aggies’ record 6-3
as UT wins, 55-49
By CAROLYN BLOSSER
Battalion Staff Writer
The University of Texas women’s
basketball team squeezed past A&M
55-49 in a seesaw battle last Tuesday
night at Gregory gymnasium in Au
stin.
The loss drops A&M s record to
6-3 for the season. The Ags are still
looking for their first win on the road.
A&M drew first blood, taking a 4-0
lead with goals from Cissy Auclair
and Cindy Gough. But from then
T lie
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Open until
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Mon.-Sat.
until the end of the first half, both
teams struggled to stay ahead as the
lead changed hands constantly. At
halftime, the Longhorns held a slim,
seemingly vulnerable 28-25 lead.
The Aggies came out in the second
half, but their shooting didn’t. They
simply went cold. Nothing would go
through.
Despite having 14 more turnovers
than did the Aggies, Texas managed
to hold on to their slim lead until the
final seconds ticked off the clock.
The big gun in the Longhorn at
tack was the six-foot tall center Retha
Swindell. Swindell consistently
managed to get in perfect scoring po
sition under the basket, scoring 22 of
Texas’ points, 17 of which came in
the crucial moments during the sec
ond half.
Auclair led the scoring for the Ags,
obtaining a personal game high of 23
points. Sally Morisse and Gough
were the other two high scorers for
A&M, each getting 10 points.
Auclair also led the Aggies in re
bounds with eight, while Morisse
and Margaret Byrne each grabbed
six.
A&M will have another chance at
the Longhorns when Texas comes to
College Station Feb. 3 for a rematch
at 5:15 p.m. in G. Rollie White Col
iseum.
The travel-weary Aggies will be on
foreign soil once again as they face
Wharton this Friday night in Whar
ton.
Hockey team
falls to Finns
by six goals
Associated Press
PORI, Finland — The U.S.
Olympic hockey team, which lias
hopes of winning a medal at the In
nsbruck Games, was dealt a 9-3 de
feat Wednesday by Finland. The
Finns are one of the teams the
Americans must defeat in order to
win a medal at Innsbruck.
The Finns, who last week beat the
Soviet Union 5-3, got seven goals in
the first two periods against Ameri
can goalie Jim Warden. Warden was
replaced by Blaine Comstock in the
third period, in which each team
scored twice.
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Shooting Gallery
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Greg Price
WMU
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