ailing team has good year The Texas A&M Sailing Team Inished this semester’s racing sea- lon with strong showings in its last [to regattas. The Aggies won the I&M Invitational and finished a second in the Baylor In vitational. The Ags won the A&M In- [jtational by defeating Texas, Baylor |ik1 Rice. Each school sends a team Ifat least four sailors. The racing is lone on 420 class sailboats. These two man boats, so the racing is split into two different fleets, “A and “B. Each fleet has a skipper and crew from each school. In the A&M Regatta, the Aggies “A” team came in first in its fleet with three first places and one sec ond place. Terry Gough, of Bed ford, and Greg Schertz, of Bryan, split the skippering and crewing jobs, with each of them skippering twice. Kevin Fuller, a skipper, and Julann Chiles, crew, finished sec ond in “B fleet with enough points combined with “A fleet for A&M to win the first place trophy. Texas was second, followed by Rice and Baylor respectively. In the Baylor Invitational, the Aggies came in second, only four points behind Texas. A&M was fol lowed by Rice, Baylor and Texas Tech. Low point totals are better. In : histon. ved from • last sprii k rjasftW lasses for i own. e the s#i! [anker will Battalion photo by Pul O’Xlttlley Coming through George Woodard (No. 33) takes a hand off from David Walker (No. 8) and runs through I a huge hole opened up hy the Texas A&M offensive line. Woodard rushed for 116 yards against the Razorbacks. Arkansas defeated A&M 26-20. Jefense," 1 strong in t likes top strong ini ggies’ Coll tie will tell lg-Horn affair will be hown on closed circuit scoring sailboat races, the team re ceives the same number of points as is its finish in each race. First place receives one point, second place two points, etc. The racing was very close be tween A&M and Texas. Fuller and Chiles represented A&M again in the “B fleet. They finished second. Gough, skippering and Schertz, as crew, finished in a tie for first place in “A” fleet with Texas. Going into its last race, A&M had nine points while Texas had seven points. In order for the Aggies to tie for first in that fleet, they would have had to finish two places better than Texas. A&M began by legally forcing Texas over the starting line early. Texas had to sail back behind the starting line in order to have a proper start. This put the Texas boat in poor position in the fleet. The Aggies got the best start with Rice very close behind. Gough and Schertz held their slim lead over Rice around the triangle course until the last windward leg. A forty degree windshift put Rice into the lead by a slight margin. With about thirty yards left in the race, it looked as if Rice could hold on to finish first. The Rice boat was one boat length to windward with A&M two boat lengths ahead. Both boats were on port tack not quite being able to lay the pin end of the finish line. Both boats would have to tack to starboard to finish. If A&M coidd complete their tack to starboard fast enough, they would have right of way over Rice. It looked as if Rice was too close for the Aggies to tack. The Aggie team decided to try it because Rice would surely win if they did not. They tacked and had right of way over Rice, who tacked also, A&M won by one foot, the closest race of the day. Texas came in third, so the Aggies tied for first in the “A fleet. A&M finished this semester with the best showings they have had since the 1970-71 season. Schertz, team captain, attributes A&M s suc cess to some very good freshmen, some hard work by a few experi enced sailors, and some very good coaching by Randy Davis. & lllie m being i by the Bn ft, said he B re wen Tutfield Is h the W ewers' Ni man, Id* he said ke Lyman - they’d R t see anjd leiiing ml rs got The A&M-Texas football game turday, November 26, will be own on closed-circuit TV in G. White Coliseum on the Texas M campus. Fans can buy tickets for that awing now at the athletic ticket in G. Rollie White Coliseum, tickets are $5 each on a first-' come, first-served basis. A total of 6,500 fans can be accommodated in the basketball coliseum. A 15-by 20-foot screen will be erected at the south end of the coliseum for the showing. • Kyle Field tickets have been sold • out. * iwif'P aKi Happy Cottage [across from Luby’s] Music Box World iDozens of music boxes & musical figurines to choose Irom. A TOTALLY NEW AND EXCITING APPROACH THE AGGIE PLAYERS PROUDLY PRESENT RUDDER CENTER FORUM THEATER 8:00 P.M. NOV. 10-11-12-16-17-18-19 WAITING FOR The International Tragicomedy Hit by SAMUEL BECKETT TAMU STUDENTS $1.75 GENERAL PUBLIC $2.75 YOU HAVE NEVER SEEN A GODOT LIKE OUR GODOT! Also stereo albums tique music boxes. of an- ly Fondi Matthews. DANCE Polka, Waltz & Country Western Music by Wild Moravians Nov. 18 8-12 Snook SPJST Hall Nov. 18 8-12 Snook SPJST Hall Tickets available at MSC Box Office and at the door SPONSORED BY TAMU Czech Club LIMITED TIME OFFER Have an In-Dash 8-Track AM/FM Stereo Installed in your car for only $“| 29 95 'Cost of speakers not incl. Model PE-618A Existing Stock Only TAMU f TEXAS AVE. r • cc 3 SEARS >3 1 s => o t TOP 1000 S. COULTER - BRYAN - 823-5745 Store Hours: 9:00-6:30 Mon.-Sat. TIPTOP RECORDS AND TAPES irtXi inii miii ii J More Of A Good Thing ^ HAPPY HOUR 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Monday Thru Friday Call any weekday during the dinner hours and have a piping hot pizza delivered to your door — at these discounted prices!!! \S' -iS* (No coupons accepted during Happy Hour, please ) * 846-7785 VTIIIITI LI IIIII nrrrrv H M M THE BATTALION Page 15 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1977 EMBREY'S JEWELRY The Friendly Store Why has EMBREY'S Jewelry been the AGGIE gift store for so many years? Because we have the finest service departments available • All Types Jewelry Repair • All Types Custom Jewelry Making • Expert Diamond Settings in your Aggie Rings • Expert Engraving • All Types of Watch Repairing Plus an experienced sales force willing to assist you at all times. 415 University Dr. College Station 9:00-5:30 Mon.-Fri. 9:00-5:00 Sat. 846-5816 MAKE FREE TIME PAY OFF Earn Extra Cash As A Blood Plasma Donor At: PLASMA PRODUCTS, INC. OF TEXAS 313 COLLEGE MAIN in Northgate College Station, Texas Relax or study in our comfortable beds while you donate — Great Atmosphere — Trained employees. Hours: Monday-Friday 9:00-5:00 Bring this coupon and receive $2 Bonus on your first dona tion. Effective 'til Nov. 30, 1977. Call 846-4611 Living is knowing HIM I didn’t grow up like the average American, in fact, my life has been a rather unusual one. My father worked for an oil company and was trans- fered a number of times. When I was 12 years old, my family moved to Tripoli, Libya on the coast of North Africa. This move was in 1967, six months before the Six-Day War raged between the Arab na tions and Israel. Since Ameri cans were not well loved at the time, we were evacuated in an Air force cargo plane at the height of the war. We left the country with the assumption that everything we owned would be lost. What seemed like a disaster turned into a most enjoyable summer. We were evacuated to Rome and put up by the American Council in one of the finest hotels in Rome. After living first class for a couple of weeks we moved to a small island in the Mediterranean Sea called Malta. For the rest of the summer we bathed in the sun until the Arab-American relations were restored. At the end of the summer the political scene had cooled down and we moved back to Tripoli to live quietly and undisturbed for a couple of years. With Libya being so close to Europe I spent many summers with my family trav eling, going to Girl Scout camp in Germany and taking school cruises on the Mediter- .raneap.Se^ This leisurely life went on until 1970 when Libya had a military coup and Colonel Kadaffi took control of the country in a bloodless revolu tion. We were confined to our homes for about two weeks having no news except what we could glean from the British Broadcasting Corporation and the orders of the Libyan Revo lutionary Command Council. We lived on a tight-rope for the following year until we re turned to the States. After a few years in the States I went to college with the philosophy “to live is to experience.” I didn’t want to talk about doing things, I want ed to do them. During my first two years at college I did a lot of “living”: worked one sunb mer building houses, worked the next summer in Germany, made a 4.0 one semester, had a wonderful boyfriend among many other things. Eventually, the thrill of whatever I did lasted only a short span and lead me to press on in search of some kind of fulfilling experi ence. While in this state I could not help but be aware that my roommates in the dormitories seemed to have what I lacked. Although both of them had never done or traveled much, they had some kind of inward satisfaction that I was trying to obtain. Neither said much to me regarding their faith in the Lord Jesus but seeing them j-ead their Bibles inplanted a questidn in me to wonder if God was more than a Sunday 'morning religion. This little question inside me became a big issue when a close friend came back to school after the winter holidays claim ing that Jesus had come to live inside of him and had filled his emptiness. Tom was such a different person that our whole group of friends were uttlerly shocked. We had never seen any tiling like this before. Not long afterwards my boyfriend listened to Tom’s words and opened to receive the Lord Jesus. This made me see that Jesus was something more than a - childhood story. Watch ing their lives change so won- drously I didn’t want to be left out, so I too asked the Lord Jesus to come into my life. 1 simply told the Lord I would give Him a chance to prove Himself in my life and He took it! After I received the Lord it didn’t seem like any thing happened but something was different in me. By the end of the first week I had no doubt that God was really living and best of all, He was living in me! Tom, my boy friend and I were so excitied that we had found the living God, we told all of our friends. Although many didn’t listen, being stunned and offended by both our inward and outward changes, our experience of the Lord was too real to refrain speaking of. It was three years ago when the Lord Jesus was just a seed sown into me and today He is more real to me than when I first met Him. That first experience I had was wonder ful but now I experience Him in a daily and more wonderful way than ever dreamed of before. Mary Randall, ‘78 846-0610 Paid for by Christian students.