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TAMU SUMMER STUDY ABROAD PROGRAMS INFO MEETING Thursday Nov. IJT 8:20pm ITALY ENGLAND ♦ * MSC fcnWOA MSC Rm IHO SfwnMred'tvcu^ 'iheCo(le«jB of Liberal /Vfe FOR MORE INFORMATION: STUDY ABROAD OFFICE 101 Academic BUg. SHS-OSHH olp \W m.... 5-Up are. our ino- ields aKige itag xtra :ion i pod a/5 II A? nent G 50 l on Technology^ Leading Edge Be a science or engineering of ficer in the Air Force. If you have a science or engineering degree, maybe you can qualify to join our dynamic team. See an Air Force recruiter today. Contact: SSgt Broadus at (409) 696-2612 Advertising in The Battalion Wednesday, November 14, 1984/The Battalion/Page 13 Photo by PETER ROCHA Hot shot Aggie tennis player Kimmo Alkio returns an opponent’s vol ley in the Westwood Invitational at Austin this past weekend. Alkio advanced to the quarter-finals in the singles competi tion and moved into the semi-finals in doubles play. The Ag gie Men’s Tennis team finished second overall behind Texas, and is currently ranked No. 11 in the nation. Five teams still chasing Cotton United Press International DALLAS — Five Southwest Confer ence teams still have a chance to rep resent the league in the Cotton Bowl New Year’s Day, but only one of them — the TCU Horned Frogs — has a chance to win that spot this weekend. If TCU downs the Texas Long horns this Saturday in Fort Worth and if’SMU should lose to the Texas Tech Red Raiders in Lubbock, TCU would win the Cotton Bowl berth no matter what the Frogs do in their Iasi regular season game against Texas A&M. The Southwest Conference by laws provide that in the event of a tie between two teams, the Cotton Bowl representative is determined by which of those teams won its regular season matchup. If more than two teams tie for the title, the first tiebreaking criteria is play among the tied teams. If one of them has beaten all the others with which it is tied, then that team goes to the Cotton Bowl. If no team has defeated all the teams involved in a tie, the Cotton Bowl representative is the club which has been away froin the bowl ihe longest. TCU has not been to the Cotton Bowl since 1959 and the other four teams involved in this year’s chase have been there since then. Going into this weekend’s games TCU has a 5-1 conference record, Texas is 4-1 and SMU, Arkansas and Houston are all at 4-2. TCU has al ready beaten Arkansas and Hous ton, but lost to SMU. If TCU beats Fexas, to advance its record to 6-1, only one thing could keep the Frogs out of the Cotton Bowl. That would be a two-way tie with SMU at 6-2, in which case the Mustangs would go. Texas can go to the Cotton Bowl if it wins its last three, games (against TCU, Baylor and Texas A&M), but a loss in any of them would likely knock the Longhorns out of the Jan. 1 bowl. Houston can make it to the Cotton Bowl if it winds up in a tie with Texas or SMU, both at 6-2, since the Cougars beat the Longhorns and Mustangs. Arkansas would make it if the Razorbacks finish in a tie with Houston because they beat the Cou gars this season. Cowboys reinforce thin receiver corps United Press International DALLAS — The Dallas Cowboys Tuesday signed wide receiver Duriel Harris, who had been waived 24 hours earlier by the Cleveland Browns. Cleveland coach Marty Schotten- heimer said Harris had been cut from the team because, “he wasn’t making the contribution we wanted from him.” Harris, the second leading re ceiver in the history of the Miami Dolphins, was traded from Miami to Cleveland during the offseason. He caught 32 passes for 512 yards duf- ing-his 11 games with the Browns this year. The Cowboys have been thin at wide receiver all year with the retire ment of Drew Pearson, the trading of Butch Johnson and injuries suf fered by both Tony Hill and Doug Donley. To make room for Harris on the rosier, the Cowboys waived punter John Warren. Warren had recently been added to the club because Danny White — who has spent much of his Dallas career as the team’s punter, had suffered a slight groin pull. White will resume his punting chores against Buffalo next Sunday. Harris dropped the; only pass thrown to him last Sunday in San Francisco’s 41-7 rout of the Browns and at his weekly news conference Monday Schottenheinier said he and his staff had considered cutting Har ris for some time. “This decision wasn’t made on the spur of the moment,” the Browns coach said. "His name has come up before in evaluating personnel. He has dropped too many passes that should’ve been caught. His perfor mance level wasn’t what it should ha ve been.” 15 % DISCOUNT with current A&M I.D. (repairs not included) ^ Use your student discount to purchase a diamond for your class ring. 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