Friday, October 7, 1983/The Battalion/Page 19 Battalion Football Forecast Hope Paasch Houston at Texas AScM AScM by 10 Texas vs. Oklahoma at Dallas Texas by 3 Baylor at SMU SMU by 7 TCU by 3 TCU at Rice Penn State at Alabama Penn St. by 10 UCLA at Stanford UCLA by 7 LSU at Tennessee itatll: Tampa Bay at Dallas Denver at Houston Percent Tennessee by 3 Dallas by 6 Houston by 3 John Wagner Houston by 3 John P. Lopez Melissa Adair d2 Texas by 10 A&M by 7 AScM by 3 AScM by 12 Texas by 10 Texas by 6 Texas by 1 New Mexico at Texas Tech Tech by 6 Baylor by 6 TCU by 6 SMU by 7 SMU by 10 Baylor by 2 Tech by 4 TCU by 7 TCU by 10 TCU by 1 Alabama by 10 Tech by 7 Tech by 3 Tech by 10 UCLA by 1 Alabama by 14 Alabama by 6 Alabama by 7 LSU by 2 UCLA by 3 UCLA by 14 UCLA by 1 Dallas by 14 Tennessee by 3 LSU by 1 LSU by 1 Hope Paasch 0-0 .000 Houston by 3 Dallas by 14 Dallas by 7 Dallas by 20 John Wagner 21-9 .700 Houston by 7 Houston by 3 Houston by 1 John P. Lopez 19-11 .( Melissa Adair 6-4 .600 dp 18-12 .600 Reveille AScM by 1 Texas by 2 SMU by 2 TCU by 11 Tech by 8 Penn St. by 2 UCLA by 6 LSU by 4 Dallas by 21 Denver by 32 Reveille 19-11 .633 Boddicker K’s 14 in Orioles’ win United Press International BALTIMORE — Mike Bod- cker silenced Chicago’s guns jith a record-tying 14 strikeouts d Gary Roenicke supplied the tillery with a two-run homer hursday night, enabling the laltimore Orioles to blank the hite Sox 4-0 and even the merican League playoffs at e victory apiece. Boddicker, the rookie right- nder who helped rescue Balti more’s rotation this season, tched a five-hitter and enicke, in addition to his mer in the sixth inning, dou- |ed, walked twice and scored iree runs to send the playoffs to icago for the rest of the best- if-five series. photo by Domia fioddicker’s strikeout total ped the AL playoff record set by Detroit’s Joe Coleman in 1972. i member Glenn It also represented a season- lOOters that will high for Boddicker. rerontlv The White Sox will send t u ™ recent| y iRjchard Dotson, 22-7, against Orioles left-hander Mike Flana gan, 12-4, in the first post- season game in Chicago since 1959. A 26-year-old native of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, who was thrust into the rotation because of in juries to the Orioles’ staff, Bod dicker finished with a 16-8 re- rd and a 2.77 ERA. He kept ie White Sox off balance with a |arp breaking ball and a crafty i. « ies rulinf i j se to pla| English has e five Green Wave 11 under a court orderl nts Tulane fromcarni e mandate of the NCI mixture of pitches. Before a Memorial Stadium crowd of 52,347, Boddicker pitched with all the effectiveness that LaMarr Hoyt did for the White Sox on Wedesday. He struck out two batters in the first, second, fourth, fifth, eighth in nings and allowed only two hits until the eighth. He walked three and never faced more than four batters in an inning until the eighth and ninth when he began to tire. Boddicker’s strikeout victims included Harold Baines and Julio Cruz three times each and Carlton Fisk and Vance Law twice apiece. He ended the fourth inning with a flourish, nailing Tom Paciorek with a sidearm breaking pitch. Boddicker, who became a regular starter when Flanagan sustained ligament damage in his left knee, hurled a five-hit shutout in May against Chicago for his first major-league com plete game. He led the AL with five shutouts and was second on the staff in victories, complete games (10) and strikeouts (120). Roenicke, playing left field in the right-handed platoon that Baltimore employs against left- handed pitching, doubled and scored in the second, walked and scored in the fourth before delivering the two-run homer in the sixth. He continued his lifetime domination of loser Floyd Ban nister. Roenicke is 6-for-18 in cluding two doubles and four home runs. Baltimore took a 1-0 lead in the second inning. Roenicke lined a shot into the left-field corner and wound up on second with a double as left fielder Ron Kittle, with a shot to nail him at second, overthrew the bag. Ken Singleton grounded to third, where Vance Law first hobbled the ball then threw past first into the Oriole dugout, allowing Roenicke to score and Singleton to reach second. But Bannister V\w vv CnNHJEWELR^ Has all sizes of DIAMONDS for your Aggie Ring at 20% off* We also buy gold at guaranteed highest prices. 415 University Dr. W. 846-5816 settled down and escaped the in ning with three straight putouts. The Orioles extended their lead to 2-0 in the fourth with Roenicke and Kittle again at the center of action. With one out, Roenicke walked and Singleton grounded a double down the left-field line. ! \ r (kncm& Festive Italian Cuisine Weekend Special The NCAA declared ■ligible because he dill t a year during t )rn Iowa State tol| iere his father is 1: Texas-OU resume classic’ match-up by Donn Friedman English has claimedli * 1 that requirement®: ' Battalion Reporter rher transfer iroin* Ip or ^ggj es> football season tie to Iowa State W ' eac h es jt s peak with the world’s arterback also ^^largestbonfireandtheUniversi- tior colleges in PittsM Lf Texas _ b ut for the Lon- ■w Orleans. ghorns, the big game opens with Texas State Fair and the Univer- Tulane initially suK 1^ °^ Oklahoma, igiish in his attempt n | s ktekoff (scheduled red eligible, but l for n 2 ' 0 P' m - ^ th ? C °“° n B ™' th the NCAA that it mD ? llas ) mark u s the 78th n } eet - ible to nlav ln & between the two nvals - a ’ ' ‘ match-up that can only be called af classic". Just ask Texas head coach Fred Akers. J»; “Our game with Oklahoma is Tenure of wins o- 0ne 0 f- a sma u nuin ber of true ite and Mississippi' I classics in intercollegiate foot ball,” Akers said. “It fires the im- Tulane also could l< : pgination of people all over this crifice the $340,000Wition. It is almost like a calen- >n revenues it earned Par—it marks a special time and ss to Kentucky ^place in everybody’s schedule.” 37,500 it was pro® The Longhorns, ranked No. If English red ineligible, W :e NCAA sanctions' 2 in the nation by United Press International and 3-0 on the sea son, are slight favorites over the Sooners, ranked No. 7 with a 3-1 record. A sell-out crowd of 75,587 is expected, but for those without tickets, there’s not much hope of catching the game on network television. The current NCAA televi sion plan with ABC and CBS permit each network to show a team no more than three times over a two-year period. Both Texas and Oklahoma have reached their limit. Because of this dispute, the only non-pay station covering the game will be KTVV-TV in Austin (Channel 36, Commun ity Cablevision in Bryan-College Station). KTVV is being allowed to show the game since it’s located in UT’s home market and the game is sold-out. Oklahoma opted not to apply to broadcast the game in its home market. Saturdays 11-3 and Sundays 12-3 Champagne (Brunch Features Cenare’s “Frittata” an Italian omelette served with hot croissants and spicy Italian break fast sausage and all the champagne you dare enjoy for an additional $1.95! For more information or reservations call 696-7311 | Cenare 404 University Dr. College Station An easy-to-understand, careful exposition of the New Testament by faculty members of the respected Dallas Theological Seminary. Verse-by- verse analysis, based on the New International Version of the Bible. You’ll find all the handy study aids you need: book outlines, maps, charts"; diagrams, bibliographies, book introductions. Many cross_references. $19.95 W $14.95 SCRIPTURE HAVEN, Inc. VICTOR A Division of Scripture Press Publications, ific ~\MT Shiloh Place, C.S. 696-7434 (While supplies last) DEPT. OF ANIMAL SCiENCE MEAT SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY CENTER (Located on West Campus next to Kleberg Center) PRE-GAME SPECIALS We will be open for all Aggie home football games. LEAN GROUND BEEF (wrapped, frozen in 2 lb. pkgs.) $1.49 per lb. 50 lb. box $1.35 lb. LEAN GROUND BEEF PATTIES (wrapped, frozen in 2 lb. pkgs., 8 patties per pkg.) $ 1.59 per lb. 10 lb. box $1.49 lb. RUMP ROAST (wrapped, frozen, 3-6lbs.) $1.29 per lb. SIRLOIN TIP ROAST (wrapped, frozen, 3-6 lbs.) $1.29 per lb. RIB STEAKS (wrapped, frozen, bone-in, 2 steaks per pkg.) $2.19 per lb. LAMB CARCASSES (cut, wrapped, frozen) $1.09 per lb. Avg. Weight: 40-7-lbs.; sold on hanging weight basis WE ALSO HAVE A&M CREAMERY PRODUCTS FOR SALE: MALTS, SHAKES, ICE CREAM, MILK, CHEESE AND BUTTER Other beef, pork, lamb, sausage and dairy products are available. Prices effective through October 12. We are open for business Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. and 9 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. on OCTOBER * for the HOUSTON game. (Phone number: 845-5651). =r-i—saddle & Sirloin Club ARDtf staurant CANEJ! I Sunday W ) p.m. Buffet ^ *3" (reg. ay Evciu^ 1 f: 1313 S.J p.m. 822-7^ i p.m The Turkey Alternative Thanksgiving Hams Bone-in 18-20 lbs. $40.00 14-17 IbS. $35.00 Boneless 8-9 lbs. $35.00 4-5 IbS. $20.00 Order by Nov. 8 from any S & S member or call