THE BATTALION FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1980 Page 11 The Battalion | Picks Mike Burrichter Kurt Allen dp Richard Oliver Jon Heidtke i/T h’-'i / Rick Stolle gister Pal Tlic entsdoi mood’kii ics and ii •s, stndi cruitinj,' chiniliiii o win is lnt will i his lean 1 Texas Tech at Texas A&M A&M by 2 A&M by 2 A&M by 10 A&M by 14 A&M by 10 A&M by 3 TCU at Arkansas Arkansas by 7 Arkansas by 9 Arkansas by 7 Arkansas by 7 Arkansas by 14 Arkansas by 1 ' Houston at Baylor Baylor by 2 Baylor by 3 Baylor by 7 Baylor by 7 Baylor by 7 Baylor by 8 * ■ Texas at Rice Texas by 11 Texas by 7 Texas by 21 Texas by 14 Texas by 17 Texas by 17 M f SMU at Tulane Tulane by 3 SMU by 10 SMU by 10 SMU by 3 SMU by 7 SMU by 13 * K Ohio State at UCLA Ohio State by 6 Ohio State by 6 Ohio State by 14 Ohio State by 4 Ohio State by 14 Ohio State by 6 M Alabama at Kentucky Alabama by 10 Alabama by 9 Alabama by 21 Alabama by 20 Alabama by 21 Alabama by 11 * Missouri at Penn State Penn State by 7 Penn State by 13 Penn State by 1 Penn State by 1 Missouri by 7 Penn State by 3 H Giants at Cowboys Cowboys by 10 Cowboys by 12 Cowboys by 7 Cowboys by 19 Cowboys by 14 Cowboys by 10 * Seahawks at Oilers Oilers by 3 Oilers by 5 Oilers by 3 Oilers by 17 Oilers by 3 Oilers by 7 * 4 u eason records thus far: . - 18-9 (.667) 18-9(667) 16-11 (.593) 15-12 (.556) 15-12 (.556) 0-0 (.000) H ^ :r::= ONE GOOD TERM £ DESERVES ANOTHER! J TELL YOUR FRIENDS J TO VOTE FOR J BRAZOS COUNTY ATTORTHEY J ohn H. Barron Jr.J (AfifM CLASS OF '71) J (Pol. Ad Paid by John M. Barron, Jr., Box 4146, Bryan, Texas 77801) Pf lllf If IfirfinflT! AffiPHA PH 3 (WKE«A’g> FOOTBALL MUMS! lolmes batters Ali in title defense United Press International IS VEGAS — The fans who for : decades could find no wrong in (lainmad Ali, booed him for his hetic performance in the ring rsday night. His friends and enemies had told him to quit. But Ali, with his pride and the ego still at their peak, didn’t listen. Finally, Larry Holmes told Ali in the only way he understands, it was The woi Major League Standings ^ toumaii -The*! eaunionl] National League American League nvitatii: fjgt W L Pet. CB East W L Pet. CB ■5 roail tjjontreal 89 70 .560 New York 100 58 .633 Madrlp 89 70 .560 Vt Baltimore 98 61 .616 2Mt 'exasAft* bur 81 78 .509 8 Milwauke 85 75 .531 16 • . k’- 72 87 .453 17 Boston 82 74 .526 17 uste f few York 66 93 .415 23 Detroit 83 75 .525 17 ein the imago 63 96 .396 26 Cleveland 78 79 .497 2m lit at " I'Yesf W L Pet. GB Toronto 64 94 .405 36 louston 92 67 .579 West W L Pet. GB Handle^ 89 69 .563 2V4 Kan City 94 64 .595 U (UR* . il/incmna 87 72 .547 5 Oakland 82 78 .513 13 15 atte "Atlanta 80 78 .506 im Minn 74 82 .474 19 petia;- ian Fran 73 84 .465 18 Texas 73 83 .468 20 'z, PamH Diego 71 88 .447 21 Chicago 67 90 .427 26 ki ri Nuetzel Calif 65 92 .414 28W cherson. B Seattle 59 99 .373 35 all over. The era had come to an end. It ended after 10 rounds when Angelo Dundee, Ali’s chief handler, refused to let Ali, his eyes swollen and purple, come out for the 11th round. Holmes battered the 38-year-old Ali from the first round to the victory that left him with his World Boxing Council heavyweight championship intact. Ducking the few punches Ali bothered to throw, Holmes hurt Ali in the seventh with five straight pun ches. In the eighth, the thundering punches from Holmes continued to find their mark on Ali’s face as the three-time champion lay against the ropes. In the ninth, the round Ali had predicted he’d knock Holmes out, (“His behind will be mine by nine,”), Holmes opened up with both guns, battering a badly bruised Ali against the ropes with punishing rights and lefts. The beating continued in the 10th round, but still, despite Ali’s sagging legs and apparent inability to protect himself, many people still believed. The celebrity-filled crowd of 24,000 at the new Sports Arena at Caesars Palace which paid a record live gate for the fight, waited for him to come bouncing off the ropes with a blistering barrage of punches aimed at Holmes. But it never happened. As Ali struggled back to his corner at the end of the 10th round, Dundee, his longtime trainer and friend, signaled Golf team now fifth tii Leaf I loth rcf“l oveth^i ;ame upl have an I iative i 1 by the and Hi n move game to 1 said, the -S 7:30 p.® ision eh®! nes enib ct. 10' The Texas A&M women’s golf team enters today ’s final round of the Dick McGuire Invitational in fifth place. The Aggies started in a tie for seventh place Thursday, but got some good performances out of its ranks and moved past Tulsa, SMU, and New Mexico into fifth, one shot behind fourth-place Texas. The team scores entering today’s match play in Albuquerque are as follows: TCU 618, Florida State 619, Arizona 622, Texas 628 and A&M 629. Leading the Aggies at this point is Kim Bauer, who is currently second in the individual category with a 147 two-round total. The leader indi vidually is Florida State’s Michelle Guildault, with a 145 total. FRIDAY FOR itfI : i) >PY HOUR 4:00-5:001 ? OR 1 HAPPY HOUR 5:00-6:00! 'OR 1 HAPPY HOUR 6:00-8:00 UNESCORTED LADIES IN FREE EVERY DAY (EXCEPT TUESDAY) DALLAS NIGHT CLUB IN THE DOUX CHENE APT. COMPLEX BEHIND K-MART. COLLEGE STA. '"student senate VACANCIES Current vacancies in the Senate are: Ward I Ward II Ward IV University Apts. Aston/Dunn College of Engineering - Sophomore . Graduate College of Liberal Arts - Graduate College of Science at Large College of Vet Medicine College of Agriculture at Large Graduate Off-Campus College of Medicine College of Education - Graduate Applications may be picked up in the Student Government Office, Room 216 MSC Applications must be turned in by 5:00 PM, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3 b Student Floral Concessions is selling Aggie Mums A tradition for nearly 40 years! on sale in MSC: Tues.-Fri. 9:00-4:00 Free Corp delivery Corp personnel please buy from dorm representative. < / r X 3 j Day students get their news from the Batt. IliTKO-RIDES t LESSONS Wg START FLIGHT OPEIWIC-MS AT MOOAJi. SATURPAT5 isUHtATS PRIY'F OUT TO : COULTER FIELP, BRYAH RPKAp^inoMAL I NFC?(Alb S&AO tAtnu DISCOVER SOARING BA5>r there would be no more. There was a brief argument, because Ali’s other cornermen, Bundini Brown anti Herbert Muhammad couldn’t be- lieveit could end like that. But, Dundee and common sense prevailed, and referee Richard Green raised Holmes’ arm in triumph as Ali remained slumped motionless on the wooden stool. He did not argue. He he had learned, finally, what many others before him — including Joe Louis, Jack Sharkey, Jack De mpsey — all learned. Old Man Time doesn’t give in to anyone. FREE DELIVERY ON CAMPUS & TO TWO OFF CAMPUS DIST. CENTERS!! many styles and prices! On Sale Monday - Friday MSC : 9-5 bisa, commons: 1T1,4-6 AP0... We Deliver!! 5553SBBBB SALE It’s our way of saying, “THANK YOU for seven good years of serving your fine jewelry needs.” FOR ONE WEEK, we will offer our regular lines of FINE JEWELRY at CONSIDERABLE SAVINGS. With gold prices rising and Christmas just 12 weeks away, NOW IS AN EXCELLENT TIME TO BUY. SB We tell you why. We show you how. 14 KARAT GOLD CHAINS 30% REDUCED 14 & 18 KARAT GOLD “UNIVERSAL- GENEVE’ WATCHES 25% OFF DIAMONDS &COLORED' STONE RINGS & PENDANTS 10% to 50% off C ARL /f) USSELL ’S DIAMOND ROOM MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY TOWN & COUNTRY CENTER 3731 EAST 29TH • BRYAN, TEXAS 846-4708 CASH • MASTERCHARGE • VISA ♦ l AY AW AY COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE STUDENTS FOCUS IN ON A CAREER JOIN US AT PCPA DAY PROFESSIONAL CAREER PLANNING IN AGRICULTURE OCTOBER 8, 1980 WEDNESDAY 9:00 A.M.-5.-00 P.M. ROOM 201 MSC — SECOND FLOOR MSC SIGN UP FOR THE EVENING BARBQUE (OCT. 8) AT PLACEMENT CENTER TODAY Each participating organization will have a booth on the second floor of the MSC. The morning hours (9:00 - 11:30) are reserved for seniors and graduate students and for those underclassmen with schedule conflicts. The afternoon (1:30 - 5:00) is open to all students. The purpose of our PCPA Day is to acquaint students with their career opportunities as well as enable industry, state and local representatives to meet the students and faculty of Texas A&M University. The event is open, but not limited to, all classifications of majors in the College of Agriculture.