Page 12/The Battalion/Friday, September 12,1986 THE C AT U N I'lsi- Sli in l'|. urn s. In SKOUMS Daily 7:25 9:30 Sat. & Sun. 1:30 3:30 5:30 7:25 9:30 ■> INTERNATIONAL HOUSE of R^NCAKE, RESTAURANT All you can eat Daily Specials 10 p.m.-6 a.m. All You Can Eat Buttermilk Pancakes $1.99 Spaghetti and Meat Sauce with garlic bread $2.99 *Must present this coupon International House of Pancakes Restaurant 103 N. College Skaggs Center AMBASSADOR Our economy enamel paint service PRESIDENTIAL $169* Quality preparation & painting for those on a budget $259 9S BRYAN SUPREME Our most popular value S349 95 URETHANE SUPREME High quality look with extended durability $499 95 Free estimates on all bodywork. MAACO Auto Parts & Bodyworks are independent franchises of MAACO Enterprises. Shop Hours: M-F 8am-6pm. 1300 South College Ave. (1 Block Behind Gallery Nissan Datsun) 823-3008 'ZfWftV My fjO,- * 7-#r» "KuAW iWl-re Project if., 1^ ^KP... bZ.ssi ad vt. $ WIZARDS MID MITE 51,50... k©>- d.p. Cartoonist % MRk'- ■* Ken Sury Sports Editor Homer Jacobs Asst. Sports Editor Loyd Brumfield Asst. Sports Editor -. • Doug Hall Sports Writer - J r V i Danny Myn SportiWiltr I Texas AAM at LSU Aggies by 7 Aggies by 10 Aggies by 13 Aggies by 9 Aggies by 13 Aggies by Kl Arkansas vs. Mississippi Razorbactcs by 14 Razorbacks by 17 Razorbacks by 12 Razorbacks by 14 Razorbacks by 7 Razotbadabil Baylor vs. Louisiana Tech Bears by 14 Bears by 14 Bears by 21 Bears by 24 Bears by 10 Bears by 11 Rice vs. SMU Mustangs by 1 Mustangs by 6 Mustangs by 14 Mustangs by 7 Mustangs by 6 Mustangs by f. Texas vs. Stanford Longhorns by 3 Longhorns by 6 Longhorns by 10 Longhorns by B Cardinals by 3 Longhorns by 1 TCUatTulane Green Wave by 1 Frogs by 4 Frogs by 7 Frogs by 3 Frogs by 6 Frogs by 1 Texas Tech at Miami Hurricanes by 21 Hurricanes by 27 Hurricanes by 24 Hurricanes by 17 Hurricanes by B Hunlcanesti)^ Michigan at Notre Dame Wolverines by 7 Wolverines by 10 Wolverines by 3 Wolverines by 20 Fighting Irish by 1 Wolverlntsbl Alabama vs. S Mississippi Tide by 10 Tide by 20 Tide by 10 Tide by 14 Tide by 7 Tide by 21 Ohio State at Washington Huskies by 7 Huskies by 6 Huskies by 3 Huskies by 4 Huskies by 1 Buckeyes by 1 ! Houston Oilers vs Cleveland Oilers by 7 Oilers by 7 Ollen by 4 Oilers by 1 Oilers by 7 Oilers by 2 Dallas Cowboys at Detroit CowboysbyS Cowboys by 4 Lions by 1 Lions by 3 Cowboys by 10 Cowboys by i A&M-LSU game may invoke ‘deja vu BEWf 8EHII SO CfYOt OR I dp al By Tim Stanfield Sports Writer A sense df deja vu will greet A&M football fans when the Aggies open the 1986 football season this Saturday night against the Louisiana State Tigers irt Baton Rouge, La. Eighteen years previous, the last A&M team to have been to the C< the same man- cotton Bowl opened its season If! UAV. OO A AAV. A A A AAA A A ■ ner. Aggie Coach Gene Stal- Retrospective lings’ Aggies came ■mbhhhhbhvibmbhbmbhb igt^r Stadium on Sept. 20, 1968, carrying with diem a seven-game winning streak. A&M took a 12-0 lead utilizing a safety, two field goals by Charley Riggs and a two-yard touchdown pass from Edd Har (plus Riggs’ extra point). largett to Bob Long Riggs’ second field goal set an A&M career re cord (nine) breaking the old mark set by Mike Clark. LSU came back to take a 13-12 lead, but the Aggies marched 79 yards to the Tiger one-yard line before disaster struck. Hargett ran an option left and just as he was about to be hit at the one, he pitched out to Long. Long was hit hard near the goal line and fum bled the ball into the left corner of th end zone. He recovered the ball, but it had already gone out of bounds for a touchback. LSU got the ball at its own 20 and proceeded to run 11 plays, keeping the ball away from the Ag gies the rest of the game. Stunned, the Aggies never regained their 1967 poise and resourcefulness, finishing with a 3-7 re cord. Ironically, two years later A&M went to Baton Rouge and defeated the Tigers 20-18t that had originally been scheduled to season. However, the NCAA had granted iu to schedule an 1 1th game if theysodesir A&M pul Wichita State on its sch« one week before playing LSU, the A feated WSU, 41-14. That win was the Aggies’ Pint oper. win since they beat Maryland 21-13ini! Wide receiver Hugh McElroy scored ning touchdown on a 79-yard passplav 13 seconds left on the clock. McElroy’s touchdown was the (into by a bl ack plaver in A&M history. Unfortunately, the 1970 Aggies wo. more victories of any kind, losing thcii games. m EAST RL §§- Tony Cc ■own passes from fellov £ mes, as th at the Net dav night i: f st showdo The Patr Jets 26-14 la Wild-card ga the Super f . Chicago, ar Hone atop I Ulowed j us touchdowns “■The Jets, Ijteck Freem a right elbow He 1-1. Clu Ags fall to Illinois State in volleyball tourney SAN DIEGO — The Texas A&M volleyball team was on the receiving end of revenge in the San Diego State Tournament Thursday night. The Aggies, 4-0 and cham pions of the Illinois State Tourna ment last weekend, lost to Illinois State in their first match of the tournament, 15-13, 15-11, 15-12. Diego Wednesday which forced them to miss practice. A&M was scheduled to United States International versity in a later match Thursday and then Brigham Young Uni versity, ranked ninth in Volley ball Monthly, in a match today. Illinois State, although 0-4 going into Thursday’s game, were aided by the Aggies’ poor .112 hitting percentage. A&M Head Coach Al Givens said he felt the Aggies played flat due to delays in getting to San Several nationally ranked pro grams are among the eight teams in the tournament, which con cludes Saturday. In addition to Brigham Young, host San Diego State is ranked 10th in Volleyball Monthly and Western Michigan, which is ranked 13th in the publi cation. Aggie cross country grabs W W # W yard touche third in A&M Invitational r backTon By Doug Hall Sports Writer When Texas A&M Assistant Track Coach Ted Nelson predicted a third-place Finish for tne Aggie Cross Country team in Thursday's A&M Invitational, he hit the nail right on the head. The Aggies, paced by David Tre vino’s fifth-place finish, trailed Houston and Baylor in the team scoring but finished ahead of Blinn Junior College. With the inverse scoring process, Houston totaled 35 points, Baylor 49 and A&M 65. Trevino’s five-mile time of 26 minutes, 42 seconds was 29 seconds behind first-place finisher Stephen Clark of Baylor. Houston’s Jim Thorpe placed second with a time of 26:28. However, Cross Country Coach Steve Silvey was not cfa] with his young team'setton. “We ran pretty good f we’ve done," Silvey said, only get better as the season “Trevino ran way beyond has trained for,” he said." goes to show you his capabil A&M’s most promisinj runner, sophomore Calvin still is recovering from a time illness and pulled out 11 race before finishing. In the women’s threem the University of Houstoi nated the field by posting seven times. Barefoot runnti| elle Dekkers led the UHstf a time of 17:04 Freshman Julie Soukup first Aggie to cross the line to claim eighth place. 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