' ■■■■■■■■■ Sorry, No vacancies this semester. However, We’re taking application deposits for a waiting list for Spring, Summer & Fall of 1985. • iCTH country place apartments UNIVERSITY J z 2 —i O 3902 College Main OLD COLLEGE 846-0515 2 T&! Moon left in fi 313-0. aether elicit to 1)1 {drive** om Mm Holstor ifEdwari tapped ti : to Sti iw on its o*: half. ntoWal rk 25 mi r kicked an out. (§ A COMPASS MANAGED COMMUNITY TLe Bryana Rotary presents the TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY SYMPHONIC BAND CONCERT a Tuesday, November 27,1984 8:15 RM. oT RuiMer AmHiforium TAMU Campus ALL STUDENTS $100 NON-STUDENTS $3.00 TICKETS AVAILABLE FROM ROTARY CLUB MEMBERS AMD AT RUDDER BOX OFFICE HOMECRAFT ELECTRONICS HAS A FULL RANGE OF SONY CASSETTE-CORDERS IN STOCK! Many feature AM-FM radio reception, special playback ^ features and headphones. 1* 95 SONY from “W ■ HOMECRAFT ELECTRONICS 693.80«7 1921 S. TEXAS-C.S. BUD WARD VOLKSWAGEN) -ONE STOP SHOPPING FOR ALL YOUR AUDIO A VIDEO NEEDS” Battalion Classified 845-2611 Monday, November 19,1984The Battalion/Page 11 TCU’s Cotton Bowl dreams all but gone MSG • TOWTVJ • TT AT ,T, Willie Nelson after Bonfire United Press International In what has been somewhat of a zany season in the Southwest Con ference, normalcy has made a sud den appearance. But there is no guarantee it is here to stay. Once again, the Texas Longhorns have managed to assert themselves. They dampened the TCU Horned Frogs’ season-long euphoria Satur day and put themselves in position to make yet another trip to the Cot ton Bowl. The Boston College Ea gles, with Heisman Trophy candi date Doug Flutie, have signed up as the visiting team for the New Year’s Day classic in Dallas. But there are a few more laps to be run in this year’s race and any sort of stumble by the Horns would create an impressive mess in the con ference standings. For now, how ever, Texas has earned the right to point out that they are still the bully of the SWC block. “TCU has been there now, but on the wrong end of it,” Texas offen sive tackle Greg Wright said. “They have to regroup and see what it takes to win a really big game.” The No. 9 Longhorns, with Terry Orr running for 195 yards and scor ing four touchdowns, brought TCU down from its momentum cloud, 44- 23. TCU had come into the game with the lead in the SWC, a six-game winning streak and the No. 10 spot in the national rankings. “Thank goodness there is another day,” TCU coach Jim Wacker said. “But we are still 8-2. I thought be fore the season started that we might be about 6-4 right now, so we still have had a great season.” A TCU win would have all but clinched a Cotton Bowl berth for the Horned Frogs. But Texas, even though it knocked off TCU, still has work to do before it can make the Jan. 1 appearance in Dallas. Texas has suffered one SWC loss this year, a 29-15 setback against Houston, and there are four teams still in the conference race with two losses. SMU (5-2) stayed in the picture with a 31-0 drubbing of Texas Tech Saturday and Arkansas (5-2) also had an easy time dispensing with the floundering Texas Aggies, 28-0. TCU is also at 5-2 and Houston, which had last week off, is 4-2. The only way Texas can wrap up the Cotton Bowl bid next Saturday is to defeat Baylor, which won a wild 46-40 contest against Rice last Satur day, and have Texas Tech upset Houston in Lubbock. If Texas loses to either Baylor or Texas A&M, the race could wind up in a two-way, three-way or four-way tie. The possi bilities are almost limitless, but Texas will be the decided favorite over both of its remaining foes. The question remains, however, whether Texas is the team that struggled and fumbled its way through a Five-week period of its schedule or is the team that ex ploded for 35 points in the second half against TC J. Texas coach Fred Akers insisted it was the latter and he also wanted it known that while TCU was walking away with all the publicity lately, his team deserved some as well. “TCU had momentum,” Akers said, “They deserved it. They have won some good football games. But just because you don’t put it on bill boards it doesn’t mean you can’t have momentum, too. We have played some good football games, too, and we played a good one to day.” Texas had turned the ball over a record nine times the previous week in losing to Houston and that embar- rasing loss apparently served to put the Longhorns in the proper state of mind Saturday. “We had a lot to prove,” Texas de fensive tackle Tony Degrate said. “This game meant more to me than any I can remember. A lot of people have really been down on us. I told coach Akers all week that I was going to have my best game ever and it just might have been.” The Texas-Baylor contest will have an early start next Saturday with a regional television commit ment having moved the kickoff up to 11:35 a.m. TCU will visit A&M, with the game starting at 2 p.m. I—-J TICKETS ON SALE NOW HR Thursday Nov. 29 9:00 p.m. C. Rollie White $13 50 $11 50 MSC Box Office 845-1234 STEAK ROOM TOKYO STEAK HOUSE: SPECIAL DINNER $4.95 with Student ID Sun - Thurs. 11th century Japanese recipe prepared at your table, by your own personal chef. TEPPAN-YAKI CHICKEN, TEPPAN-YAKI SHRIMP Japanese onion soup, special green salad served with Japanese vegetables, steamed rice, fortune cookie and tea. Lunch Special Ramen $1.90 Yakisoba $1.90 411 Texas Ave. 846-5711 Fried Rice $1.90 Across from Ramada Inn No.1 BYU could become the king of NCAA's football mountain United Press International The haul has been long and the terrain steep, but Brigham Young can see the top now. While five different teams have climbed to No. 1 in the national rankings this season and fallen, BYU has continued on an unswerving course to the summit and after an other weekend full of upsets, the Cougars look to be king of the hill. The No. 3 Cougars overcame five turnovers Saturday to defeat Utah 24-14, keeping the nation’s longest winning streak intact at 22. Mean while, No. 2 South Carolina was be ing beaten for the first time this sea son, a 38-15 thrashing by Navy, making BYU the lone undefeated Division I-A team. And when No. 6 Oklahoma upset No. 1 Nebraska 17- 7, even Cougar coach Lavelle Ed wards was talking No. 1. “I think we have a legitimate claim to the No. 1 ranking,” Edwards sai- dof his 11-0 Cougars, the Western Athletic Conference champions and host team in the Dec. 21 Holiday Bowl. The Cougars’ most likely chal lenger to UPI’s No. 1 ranking this week is No. 4 Oklahoma State (9-1), a 16-10 victor over Iowa State. No. 5 Washington (10-1) might also get consideration after its 38-29 win over Washington State. “I would think we should be rated No. 1 this week,” Edwards said. “I definitely feel we have a right to be No. 1 now. “But right now I’m more worried about Utah State next weekend. If we can get this Utah State game over with, and if we can win that one, then I’ll really stop and think about it if it works out that way.” Edwards has compiled a 116-37-1 record since taking over as head coach in 1972. Before he arrived BYU had managed just 13 winning seasons in its history and Edwards Figured there would never be a na tional championship. “If it happens at the end of this year, it would definitely be the high light of my coaching career, there’s no question about that,” Edwards said. Robbie Bosco overcame three first-half interceptions to lead BYU over Utah. He passed for 367 yards and three touchdowns, giving him 3,537 yards and 32 TDs this season. “I’m maybe more proud of this team than any other (BYU team) be cause most people fail to recognize that when things are going well, when you’re not throwing intercep tions or having fumbles, that it’s not as hard,” Edwards said. “But, when you’re not playing as good as you have been and things are going badly, when all the breaks are against you and you can still hold on to win against a very good team, that gives me a very good feeling.” At Lincoln, Neb., Tim Lashar’s 32-yard field goal in the opening minute of the fourth quarter and a brilliant goal-line stand by Okla homa with five minutes left held off Nebraska. It marked the sixth time this season the No. 1 team in the na tion was upset and the second time for the Cornhuskers. Quarterback Bob Misch passed for two touchdowns and Mike Smith ran for two more to key Navy’s shocking win. The Gamecocks are the highest ranked team the Middies have ever upset. USC’s John Lee’s five field goals, four of them from more than 40 yards, and Dennis Price’s 63-yard in terception return for a TD lifted UCLA over USC. Lee has kicked an NCAA-record 29 field goals this sea son. At Lexington, Ky., Florida gained at least a tie for its first-ever SEC championship. Bobby Raymond connected on six field goals to help secure the victory for the Gators, who set a school record with eight straight victories. Keith Byars, held in check by a tough Michigan defense, still rushed for 92 yards and three TDs to put Ohio State in the Rose Bowl. Field goal kicker Artie Cosby kicked three second-half field goals, including the game-winning 27- yarder with 1:15 remaining, to lift Mississippi State to its upset over LSU. fc, in4 tiuctoY4 in: GOURMET COOKING ASSERTIVENESS TRAINING TRIP PLANNING WATER SPORTS MASSAGE FOREIGN LANGUAGES OTHER ... FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL S45-1515 ASK FOR KAREN H RONE K