■ill 1— m ports reshmen lead tennis team title, Joelson finishes 2nd By RICK STOLLE Battalion Staff |d by three freshmen, the A&M tennis team domin- Ihe third Texas A&M Univer- Ihree-vvay tonrnament. pmnio Alkio, Mike Pazourek regHill, all freshmen, were Ihree Aggie players to reach Isemifinals in singles. The semifinalist was Vaughn of Southwest Louisiana Bversity. defeated Pazourek 6-1, i|br the championship. Kimnio is really playing well Jit now,” said Pazourek. “He j unbeatable in this tourna- |t. ill three of our freshmen had a jply great tournament,” said i David Kent. “They are com- n strong and we will need it |g into the Westwood tourna- It." Westwood Invitational nament, held next weekend ustin, is one of the biggest aments of the fall in Texas, year, the University of Texas, fjl',Trinity, TCU and A&M will ompeting. All the teams were ranked in the top twenty national ly last spring. “The Westwood tournament will be our biggest test of the fall, ” the coach said. “We will need ev erybody we have playing well. ” In doubles of the Three-way tournament, both Alkio and Pazourek reached the semifinals before getting rained out Sunday. Alkio was paired with Arnold Kettnacker and Pazourek had Ron Kowal as his patner. “We were a little spotty in dou bles,” Kent said, “but we played well enough to get two teams into the semi’s. We ll have to have a little more work on that before the Westwood. Alkio had a bye in the first round hut defeated Marlis Smith from Rice in the second round 6-2, 6-2. He went on to beat Howard Price of Rice 6-3, 4-6, 6-1 and third seed Bryan of SWL 6-3, 6-1 to reach the finals. Pazourek beat Mark Miller of Rice 6-4, 6-3 in the second round, and teammates Ron Kowal 6-3, 7- 5 and Greg Hill 4-6, 6-4, 6-3 be fore falling to Alkio. Hill heat Boyd Bryan of SWL 6-2, 6-4 and fourth-seed Ties Cushing of Tice 6-3, 3-6, 6-1 be fore he fell to Pazourek. “Greg and Ron had a great tour nament and played well, he said. “Alkio was unbelievable.” He said he did not think Alkio would even get past the first round since he was coming off a battle with the flu. “Early in the week, I wouldn’t have bet on him at all, ” the coach said. “Now, I’m glad I didn’t have to.” Pazourek and Kowal were the top seeded doubles team in the tournament. They defeated Bryan-George Rodrequez of SWL 6-3, 3-6, 6-3 after a bye to reach the third round before the tourna ment was rained out. Alkio-Kettnacker defeated Price-Spike Jopiti of SWL 6-2, 2- 6, 7-5 as the rain started. “It was a real shame that the last portion of the doubles was rained out,” said Kent. “We sure could have used the work.” Brian Joelson missed the Third A&M Three-way because he was competing in a Nationals tourna ment in San Diego. Joelson was defeated in the finals of the tour nament by George Bezecny of Florida, 6-1, 6-3. “Brian did an outstanding job in San Diego,” said Kent. “He should really have his confidence back after doing so well out there.” Kent said Joelson had not had a very good fall so far and really needed a good win. “He beat some of the best young tennis players in the coun try,” said Kent, “and he should ■ come back ready to tear every body up on the courts. We can really use a confident Brian Joel son going into the biggest tourna ment of the fall. ” The tournament was a National tournament of Regional cham pions. The winners of the 16 re gions in the nation went to San Diego to compete. Joelson defe ated top seed Tom Leonard 6-4, 6-1 in the first round. omen s soccer team oils past competition met a 26-vnil FRANK L. CHRISTLIEB Battalion Staff [1ii‘ Texas A&M University men’s soccer team defeated the ivcrsity of Texas 3-2 Friday to ^ the regional title, qualifying Aggies for the national tourna- Int. The national competition, |vhich the Aggies placed fifth in ill be held Nov. 19-22 in |apel Hill, N.C. fter cuuinf' from behind to ,t the Longhorns, the Aggies In four matches Saturday in the stinWomen’s Invitational tour- Saturday’s tournament, which was cut short because of rain, be gan with the Aggies defeating the Austin Hazzard soccer club 4-1. Carpenter, Smith, Gittinger and Jamie Fougeron scored for the Aggies, who once again fell behind early but easily won the game. The Aggies defeated the Hous ton Kickers 7-0 in their next match, limiting the Houston club to two shots on goal. Texas A&M received balanced scoring, as Sue Niles and Smith scored two goals apiece, while Gittinger, Carpen ter and Fougeron each scored one. The Deer Park Rowdies fell 3-0 to the Aggies, as Gittinger, Car penter and Laura Estes scored for Texas A&M. Texas A&M defeated UT again, holding the Longhorns without a shot in the Aggies’ 3-0 win. Smith, Carpenter and Estes scored goals for Texas A&M before the game was called because of darkness. . ™nent, raising their season re- tealt ' f,f, |dfoll-0. ,S \^ a - v Wexas scored the first two goals M avor ■ Friday's match, putting the [gies behind 2-0 late in the first However, Texas A&M’s jrol Smith scored with seven mi- jtes left in the half to pull the 15 a 11 ptgies within one goal. ftcxasA&M tied the score about 1CC > 17 minutes into the second half, lien Becky Carpenter scored, S-tont- 1 I iile the Aggies’ Carol Gittinger slemlc t | ie w j nn i n g g oa ] with 12 ' nl,Kir — - 1 ' r ' in the match. score indicates a ; music, > Riiutes left P le ' ?. ■though the ntrv life c the lera ission Set cl told lit' indie it. the Gen husband' ul South 1 operators ■J withal* nesting -'l )se match, Texas A&M coach n Butts said his team dominated e game. The Aggies took 20 jots on goal, while limiting the [mghorns to only four. one potato, two potato... Each Bite an EDUCATION in NUTRITION 102 Church St. College Station *46-0720 Uni It tV -77. M- TAMC 7 Days a Week 11 a m.-10 p m. All our potaotes are Ph. D’s PURE, HEALTHY, and Nutritiously DELICIOUS each of our ingredients is REAL and prepared FRESH each day i Foods Tax. oo pi f IAL 5t63K vy ; and her id Butte f :IAL SING ■inne r ig ■utter iany Advanced R&D Careers The atmosphere at Fairchild’s Advanced Research and Development Laboratory in'Palo Alto, California, is charged with new ideas, new developments and new expansions. The Advanced R&D Laboratory is the force that will push Fairchild into worldwide technical leadership. The opportunity for you to play an important role in that push is very real. Nearly half of all our new technical staff will be MS and PhD graduates like you from major universities throughout the world. On-Campus Interviews Nov. 24 & 25 Fairchild is committed to taking over the leadership position on the frontiers of electronics technology. As a member of our Advanced Research team, you can make it happen. Make an appointment to meet with Fairchild’s R&D representative at your Career Planning and Place ment Center. Or write to: Fairchild Advanced Research Laboratory 4001 Miranda Avenue, Dept. A Palo Alto, CA 94304 As an affirmative action employer, we encourage women, members of minority groups and the handicapped to apply. A Schlumberger Company PHI ETA SIGMA new AND old members — in duction for new members to be held Monday, Nov. 9 at 6:30 p.m. in Rm. 701 Rudder. Year book pictures will be taken for old and new members. TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION THE SCIENCE OF MANTRAS? A LECTURE & DEMONSTRATION BY DR. RAAM SOMA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 7:30 P.M. ROOM 109 MILITARY SCIENCE BUILDING $ 3 00 , $ 2 00 WITH STUDENT I.D. $ 1 00 WITH MEMBERSHIP (Memberships Available) SPONSORED BY THE METAPHYSICAL SOCIETY Zales puts a SOLITAIRE PENDANT AND EARRING SET IN r EASY REACH " FOR CHRISTMAS $8995 AND UP! Solitaire Pendant, from $149 Solitaire Stud Earrings, from $249 At d Zales, there's a diamond solitaire pendant and stud earrings in 14 karat gold that's just what every woman-hopes for. At a price that's just what you hoped for! The Diamond Store is all you need to know for Christmas. ZALES CREDIT: INCLUDING 90-DAY PLAN—SAME AS CASH MasterCard • VISA • American Express • Carte Blanche • Diners Club Illustrations enlarged THE BATTALION Page 9 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1981 ZACHAB1AS GREENHOUSE dub & game purler Monday Nights at ZACH’S! Pool Tournament (Downstairs) OR Monday Night Football (Upstairs) Zacharias Greenhouse 1201 HWY. 30 — In the Briarwood Apts. — One Two Fingers Dorm Shirt Yours for $ 6 95 It’ll cover you up. It’ll keep you warm. Besides, it says you have good taste when it comes to Tequila. Two Fingers. Order one up. . . the Tequila and the Dorm Shirt. Just fill out the coupon below and send along $6.95 for each shirt. The rest is up to you. Send check or money order to: Two Fingers Tequila Merchandise Offer P.O. Box 02609, Detroit, MI 48202 Please send me Dorm Shirt(s). I have enclosed $6.95 for each Dorm Shirt ordered. Specify women’s size(s): □ Small □ Medium □ Large □ Extra Large Name Address City State Zip No purchase required. Allow 4-6 weeks for delivery. Offer good in Continental U.S. only. Void where prohibited by law. Michigan residents add sales tax. Offer expires August 31, 1982. ©1981. Imported and bottled by Hiram Walker & Sons, Inc., Burlingame, CA. Tequila, 80 Proof. Product of Mexico. Two Fingers is all it takes.