Pofu+'d, Pi^ya At Alfredo’s Come and Get it Aggies 16” Pizza Supreme Cheese $399 846-0079 Hours: 5-12 Daily We Make Our Dough Fresh Daily 846-3824 Open early Thurs. & Frl. Page 10/The Battalion/Tuesday, December 4, 1984 (Bnarwooa Apartments Now preleasing for Spring • Summer & Fall Shuttle Bus • No Utility Deposit • Covered Parking • Two Pools • Hot Tub and Sauna • Weightroom • Basketball & Volleyball courts A College Station tradition in fine living 1201 Harvey Rd. 693-3014 Tfnrri Manayed by Brentwood Properties Brinkman, Dofy make first team —- AII-SWC spikers selected United Press International DALLAS — Sherri Brinkman of Texas A&M and Kim Larson of Texas, who sparked their teams to first and second-place finishes during the season, were among those named Monday to the 1984 All-Southwest Confer ence volleyball team selected by the league’s coaches. Larson and Brinkman were joined by three other Lady Long- orns, another player from Texas A&M and one from Texas Tech’s third-place squad as first team conference standouts. Brinkman was a unanimous All-Conference choice for the second straight year, while Lar son was named SWC Player of the Year, after finishing as runner- £ up for that honor in 1983. Rice’s Anna Epperson was named SWC Newcomer of the Year and Texas Tech’s Janice Hudson was voted SWC Coach of the Year. Brinkman, Larson and Texas’ Sharon Neugebauer all won All- SWC honors for the second straight season, while Texas’ Di ane Watson joined the first team after being named SWC new comer of the year in 1983. The first team with first-team votes in parentheses, included: Sherri Brinkman, Texas A&M (6); Kim Larson, Texas (5); Diane Watson, Texas (5); Eva Murray, Texas (4); Sharon Neugebauer, Texas (3); Chemine Doty, Texas A&M (3); Karri Ohlana, Texas Tech (3). 6 U: A&M’s Sherri Brinkman A&M’s Chemine Dot) WAS tions ot monitor ment, bi cure hu death rr Court M I The the Foo properl; power t( 14 state JLayw ing in f thiil inji FDA h; Tike si not crue But j :ller t( would UPI Polls BYU holds on to final No. 1 rank Auburn and Texas tumbled eight spots each after losing Saturday. Au burn, ranked No. 1 in pre-season, fell 17-15 to Alabama and lost its chance to go to the Sugar Bowl. Texas was crushed 37-12 by Texas A&M. It was the second straight loss for the Longhorns, who were No. 1 for two weeks early in the season. United Press International not nly 1 op to a bowl. The Gators fin- WOULDN'T YOU REALLY RATMER STUDY ABROAD? TAMU SUMMER MANAGEMENT PROGRAMS INFO MEETING Wednesday) December 5* SCANDINAVIA ORIENT 73 Opi i 1W 730 t>rv\ 11 0 Blocker 111 Blocker SpoKSared "through- THE COLLEGE OF BUSINESS, ADMIWtSTRATlON Far more informaTibn Study Abroad Office IOI Academe Blda. NEW YORK — Idle Brigham Young easily held its No. 1 rating in the final regular season college foot ball rankings Monday, while two for mer top-ranked teams dropped to the bottom of the Top 20. Brigham Young received 24 of 35 first-place votes and 503 points from the UPI Board of Coaches as the first five teams — all idle over the weekend — remained the same. No. 2 Oklahoma received eight first- place votes and 479 points and the Sooners’ Orange Bowl opponent — No. 3 Washington — received one first-place vote. No. 4 Nebraska and No. 5 Ohio State round out the top five. going t ished first in the Southeastern Con ference but the SEC prevented them from going to a bowl because of a inR NCAA probation. pending Grid Top 20 The United Press Interna tional Board of Coaches Top 20 [college football ratings, with first-place votes and records in I parentheses (total points based on 15 points for first place, 14 for second, etc.): With only six ranked teams play ing over the weekend, the fact that BYU held the No. 1 spot for the third week surprises no one — ex- ua cept maybe Oklahoma Coach Barry Switzer. Switzer continues to lobby to have the Orange Bowl recognized as the national championship game. “When you go down Brigham Young’s schedule, who they’ve ;cf, I mean, it’s hard to believe,” playec Switze iwitzer said. “Where are the Texas’ and the Oklahomas and the Wash ingtons and the Nebraskas on that schedule? They’re not there.” Switzer claimed Kansas, which de feated the Sooners, was better than nine of the 10 teams on the BYU schedule.' 1. BYU (24) (12-0) 503 2. Oklahoma (8) (9-1-1) 479 3. Washington (1) (10-1) 383 4. Nebraska (9-2) 359 5. Ohio State (9-2) 343 6. Florida (2) (9-1-1)331 7. South Carolina (10-1) 325 8. Boston College (9-2) 311 9. Oklahoma State (9-2) 240 10. SMU (9-2) 204 11. Maryland (8-3) 139 12. LSU (8-2-1) 127 13. Miami (8-4) 73 14. USC (8-3) 68 15. UCLA (8-3)51 16. Florida State (7-3-1) 36 17. Wisconsin (7-3-1)26 18. Notre Dame (7-4) 22 19. Auburn (8-4) 20 20. Texas (7-3-1) 19 Florida used a 27-17 victory over Florida State to move up from sev enth to sixth, trading places with idle South Carolina. The rest of the top 10 stayed the same, with Boston Col lege eighth, Oklahoma State ninth and Southern Methodist 10th. Note: By agreement with the American Football Coaches As sociation, teams on NCAA or conference probation are ineli gible for the Top 20 and na tional championship consider ation by the UPI Board of Coaches. The teams currently on probation are Arizona, Clem- 1, Illinois and Kansas. Si !l_ GRAND OPENING FEATURING: Authentic M EXicAN Food, Folly Srocked Bar, ANd ourdoon Patio. HAppy koim From 11 a. m. - 7 p.w. CoMpliMENTARy llORsd'oEUVRES SERVEd From ? p.M. - 7 p.M. Tues. Dec. 4 MEXICAN RESTAURANT GenuIne MexIcan ArMospliERE wirk OUR OWN TORTllU MAchiNE on dispUy! Hours Mon. - Tuts. 11 a. m. ' 12 p. m. Th.-Sat. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Sun. 11 a.m. - 12 p.M. 4901 Texas Ave. Sourh in Bryan 846-^696 Untested Hoyos still in top spot lose the hold an dismiss; Tlf a Court o Columh ery fede rities an the Nat! ratings — and star guard MiltL|will b ner for six weeks withabroktn they dee — in a costly triumph over Virp; plaint. Commonwealth. "We’ll have to live with this,T Cardinals coach Denny Crum, one of our stengths was ouroutssB play. With Milt out it’s ] lot toi tougher.’ Ikristi Kltol issue 111 drugs United Press International NEW YORK — Top-ranked Georgetown, after spending the first two weeks of the season pounding three pushovers, remained the over whelming choice as the No. 1 college basketball team by the UPI board of Coaches Monday. The Hoyas, whose 3-0 record in cludes easy victories over Hawaii- Hilo, Hawaii-Loa and Southern Connecticut — hardly college bas ketball powerhouses — collected 40 of 42 first-place votes and 619 points to remain atop the ratings since bal loting began tnree weeks ago. DePaul, which came off a narrow victory over Northern Illinois to blitz UCLA 80-61 Saturday, received a top vote and 33 second-place selec tions, good for 572 points and the No. 2 rating. St. Johns escaped with a 58-57 victory over St. Bonaventure in the Lapchick Tournament to re main third with 446 points. Duke (430 points), Illinois (401) and.Mem phis State (397) completed the top six. Georgetown, which returned to the mainland with a victory over Southern Connecticut Saturday, gets to clobber St. Leo College (rla.) Wednesday before its first compet itive test — a nationally-televised en counter with No. 20 Nevada-Las Ve gas this Saturday. Duke moved up two slots with a 59-46 triumph over St. Joseph’s; the Illini remained No. 5 after their sec ond victory of the season over Okla homa; ana Memphis State advanced a spot by capturing last weekend’s Mid-South Classic. Rounding out the top 10 are No. 7 Louisville, No. 8 Washington, No. 9 Southern Methodist — which re ceived a first-place vote — and No. 10 North Carolina State. Louisville lost three slots in the Oklahoma plummeted from" af ter losing to Illinois 73-70, Kentucky and Arkansas were entirely. The Wildcats fell 66-ic Purdue while the Razorbacb« edged 85-84 by Ohio State. Hoop Top 21 The United Press Inierii^ ie ( j tional Board of CoachesTopJ^r 8 , college basketball ratings. Fsp. e,n I ) place votes and records thrc.:j|j| ons 1 games of Nov. 25 in rarsBr* 10 theses. (Total points baseaoiiiiB points for first place, 14 for*!; The ( ond.etc.): da\ wht gates vo 1. Georgetown (40) (3-0)61! team’s r 2. DePaul (1) (2-0)572 3. St. John’s (2-0)446 4. Duke (3-0)430 5. Illinois(5-1)401 6. Memphis State (2-0)397 7. Louisville (2-0) 350 8. Washington (2-0) 303 9. SMU (1) (1-0) 302 10. North Carolina St. (2-0)11 11. LSU (2-0) 122 12. Indiana (1-1) 109 13. Syracuse (1-0) 106 14. Georgia Tech (3-0)78 15. UA-Birmingham(4-1)77 16. Oklahoma (2-2) 72 17. Kansas (3-1) 71 18. North Carolina (2-0)64 19. Virginia Tech (2-0)60 20. Nevada-Las Vegas (1- ucation :tu with Tfiiey ar ■ratioi year am medual Note: By agreement with is National Association of Basle ball Coaches of the States, teams on probation )| the NCAA and ineligibleforli NCAA Tournament are ini' gible for Top 20 and nation championship considerations the UPI Board of Coaches. Original Victor inox Swiss Army Knives The standard of excellence against which all other packet Knives are judged. The Champion, the reigning champion of pocket 'eignmg knives. Unmatched in performance, quality futility Over 350 precision steps are requiredtamake this incredible knife which was selected by New York's Museum of Modern Art for excellencem contemporary industrial design. As a favoured gift, choose the right collection of blades to suit a friend. Over 25 different models in stock. .Open til 1 ) Whole Earth Provision Company V4V\ere QuAVity TVteK«.S LV\e 6\Wcr«iwc.e & * 105 Boyett College Station bhwm • Gi •St- • E* • Es swi on-