Battalion/Page 11 February 22, 1983 Reverse layup o take puK ire still . Aggie freshman guard/forward Doug cCall savi|*e slips two points in the back way as a host of St. Mary’s defenders con verge on him in second-half action of staff photo by David Fisher A&M’s game Monday. Lee scored a career-high 18 points for Texas A&M as the Aggies beat the Rattlers 96-76. Texas A&M plays TCU here Saturday. jll fjH moves closer to top; ebs now No. 1 in UPI filiations orgia Univi ercg ' ' IterCSt $h(WBLJnited Press International all talentsYORK — Now finally at ear,hesaidB t0 P> Nevada-Las Vegas liirdtimeaif 1 ’ l err y Tarkanian under- emenhaveB 5 si^e of the chasm same sitwsM.; ... . . fhev kno*B lls . No - 1 ranking is gonna tke things tougher for me,” states ttai ,nian saicl Monday upon ' tming the Runnin’Rebels, for ta or reur® rst t ‘ me U1 their 25year his- I i,m vere voted t he premier col- eol Y|..uMpasketball team in the na- 'i‘‘ vve e r ,' ( ! m bv UPI’s Board of Coaches. maladvisor lf Ever y one ’ s g onna be g un ‘ |g for us,” added Farkanian. . , ,, he lead in the poll has changed ™ 0 'inds six times so far this March h ason With all 42 members of the ue , .p 0t °Md participating, the nation’s major undefeated school ‘r^TW^ 30 first-place ballots ' 1 id 576 total points to beat out ouston for the top spot. Wlllll' T , c i j . T 1,11 wo coaches railed to name | Runnin’ Rebels anywhei e on • NCAA ‘fballw. liers won twice to pick up four First-place ballots and 508 points. North Carolina, ranked No. 3 a week ago, plunged eight spots to 11th following the Tar Heels’ third straight loss. Indiana, last week’s top- ranked team, fell three spots to fourth after a 58-57 loss to Iowa. The Hoosiers, 20-3, received the remaining First-place votes and 472 points while Arkansas, 22-1, advanced two notches to Fifth with 438 points. Louisville, 22-3, moved up two spots to No. 6 with 393 points, Villanova, 19-4, advanced two to seventh with 364 points, and St. John’s, 22-3, fell two places to No. 8 with 341 points after a lopsided loss to new No. 16 Boston College. Rounding out the Top 10 are UCLA, 19-3, which moved up two spots to ninth with 292 points, and Kentucky, 18-5, which alsojumped two places, to No. 10, with 275 points. North Carolina is ranked 11th, Missouri is No. 12 and Memphis State remained 13th, but Syracuse posted two easy vic tories to vault three spots to No. 14. Ohio State, 17-6, moved into the Top 20 at No. 15 while Bos ton College is 16th: Iowa, which was drubbed by the Buckeyes 85-69, fell two spots to 17th and Georgetown plummeted four rungs to No. 18 after a narrow loss to Pittsburgh. e sees now on filing'| Nevada-Las Vegas, 24-0, clin- eg an t" )ec | ^ regular-season cham- ionship of the Pacific Coast wmll thletic Association Saturday of time, ightwith a 11 1-78 rout of Utah that (it' t ate and the Runnin’ Rebels ,! : l l ] ) l x ;' ose out their regular season :an f ha Pj: ith three road dates, gativeis? “\\ e ’ ve st jn g Gt three tough Wes to go, including Thurs- night’s game at Fullerton tate,” said Tarkanian. “That He’s gonna be a war — they ^en’t lost at home all year. If 'CLA were to go into Fullerton Iiursday night, the Bruins Quid be underdogs.” Houston, 22-2, advanced two pots to No. 2 with seven first- lie votes an 559 overall points Hxtehding its winning streak ‘•16. Virginia, 21-3, also moved up ■spots, to third, as the Cava- b Pre-Law Society Meeting WEDNESDAY, FEB. 23 7 P.M. #410 RUDDER Speaker: Mr. Bill McCulloch (V.P. Trust Dept. Texas Commerce Bank) New Members Welcome! nd MSC Travel Committee Sponsors SUMMER TRIPS to Europe June 5-26, $1699 — Camping trip — Visiting seven countries — Meals and accommodations — Ground transportation — Round-trip airfare from Houston • Tour guide — Camping equipment excluding sleeping bag China May 15-30, $1990 — All meals, lodging, and ground transportation — Visiting Bejjing, Shanghai, Xian, Waxi, Suzhow, Nanjing — Round trip airfare from West Coast — Tour guide and transfers 19 - For more info please call 845-1515 or stop by MSC 216. Walker player of week United Press International DALLAS — Arkansas’ Darrell Walker was named Southwest Conference basketball player of the week and Shasta Smothers of SMU and Texas’ Annette Smith tied for female player of the week honors in voting Mon day by SWC coaches. Walker, a 6-4 forward from Chicago, led the Fifth-ranked Razorbacks to SWC victories over SMU and TCU last week and was named player of the game for the regionally telecast TCU-Arkansas " game last Saturday. Against the Horned Frogs, Walker helped his team to a 64- 56 victory with a game-high 24 points, along with seven re bounds and seven steals. The SWC’s leading scorer, averaging 18.4 points per game, Walker totaled 17 points and six re bounds in Arkansas’ 71-61 win over SMU earlier last week. For the first time this season, a tie in the voting gave both Smith and Smothers a share of female player of the week honors. Smothers, a freshman for ward for the Lady Mustangs, led all scoring with 20 points in SMU’s 69-67 win over Baylor last Saturday. A residertt of De nton, Smothers is third in re bounding in the Southwest Con ference, with a 9.5 per-game av erage. Smith scored 80 points in three games last week for third- ranked Texas. 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