Flood Rents House In Spite Of Threat * Page 4 THE BATTALION College Station, Texas Wednesday, October 28, l Vi NOTES ToT MARTINEZ, Calif. (A>) —World Series star Curtis Flood took token possession Tuesday of a rented $35,000 house in nearby Alamo, despite an alleged shotgun threat to stop “any Negroes from moving in.” There was no trouble as the St. Louis Cardinals centerfielder, his pregnant wife, Beverly; their 4 children, 11 deputy sheriffs and 50 newsmen advanced on the house. A locksmith changed the locks “DACRON”® makes the campus scene with Higgins and the combination is Big On Any Campus. Tailored in traditional Yale and Trim Fit models of 65% “Dacron"* polyester -35% combed cotton for wrinkleless neat looks and carefree wear, atfj^ner Stores everywhere. '^Dupont's registered trademark V ' •iieoifcs SLcL Con wav & Co. j Downtown, Bryan which George Finn, one of the fighting Finn twins of Southern California litigation fame, alleged ly changed the day before to keep the Floods out. Seven white neighbors led by Mrs. Joseph Cone told the Floods they were happy to have a base ball star and his family in the neighborhood. Some had telephoned the Floods earlier offering help and baby sitting services. The Floods, after taking posses sion of their home, chatted with neighbors but didn’t stay the night. The gas and electricity hadn’t been turned on and their furniture still was en route. “We’ll be in in a couple of days,’ Flood said. As for George Finn, Robert Con don, Flood’s attorney, said: “I hear he’s in Nevada.” Condon did not elaborate There had been vague reports that Finn was in the neighborhood. He lives on the San Francisco peninsula, 50 miles away across San Francisco Bay. Flood’s suit asserted Finn and another man, armed with shotguns, parked his car across the home driveway and stood guard. and QUOTES frieti Bieu Whii By Spec Gammon ■ r •#* - l-Tl : r 1 ■ . '-w mmmi I ' % Mti 4. An Example Of Baylor’s Sticky Pass Defense? Aggie end John Brotherton is shown catch- the ball on the Bear 11-yard line. Defensive ing a nine-yard pass from Eddie McKaughan pressure is being applied by Bobby Maples against Baylor Saturday. The play came (88) and Jerry Ives (55). Looking on are with 2:14 left in the fourth quarter and put Robert Christian (25) and James Rust (88). Quarterback Charles LaGrange came off the redshirt list because of necessity last Saturday in the Baylor game. On the play before Jim Stabler scored A&M’s first touchdown, Aggie quarterback Eddie McKaughan was shaken up when hit by Jerry Ives and Bob by Maples . . . So, the next time A&M got possession LaGrange was sent into quarterback, for the first time this year . . . The Aggies held Baylor to 98 yards on the ground with two of their defensive starters out of ac tion. Guard Ronney Moore was kept out of all action so that a hurt knee would heal in time for the Arkansas game. Tackle Ray Gene Hinze, who was nursing an infected hand, saw limited duty very late in the game . . . Both are expected to be at full strength for the Arkansas game this week. Close doesn’t count in football, of course, but going back into the FROM THE Sidefit ineA By LAN I PRESS WOOD Aggie Coach Hank Foldberg was in a pensive mood at his weekly press conference Tuesday as he discussed A&M’s fast-approaching ball game with Arkansas. “There’s no question about it, Arkansas has a fine foot ball team,” said the Cadet taskmaster. “They’ll serve as a real test for us. They are a particularly outstanding defensive club.” Someone asked him about individual Razorback stars and quarterback Fred Marshall’s name was the immediate reply. “Marshall is the key to their offense and will probably be the key to the game Saturday. Their offense is designed to keep rival defense off balance. They have excellent line quick ness and real good backfield speed. “This Lindsey is really something in their backfield and Jerry Lamb is in Elkins’ class as a receiver.” Conversation then turned to the Baylor game and Fold berg responded with a rueful smile. “Take away Laurence’s interception and then look at the score. It seems like one screwball play has come up in nearly every game. “The Baylor game has to rank with the LSU one as our two best overall performances. “Our linebackers played well, I thought. So did Ermis, West and Caffey on defense. Pyburn and Kirchmer were opening up some good holes at times. “That fourth quarter drive after we got behind was the first time that’s happened since I’ve been at A&M. It was very heatening to see them move the ball like that with so little time left. “Our sophomores are more experienced now and are begin ning to play like juniors. We have faith in their ability and think that they are beginning to come.” The ruggedly built mentor then turned to a window and prophesied that “some heavy stuff is probably on the way. We’ll practice outdoors today though, regardless of the weath er. This is our heavy day in preparation for Saturday. Everyone was silent for a moment, as the thought of a practice field scene high in the Ozarks came to mind. Take 5... and swing out refreshed. Coca-Cola — with its bright lively lift, big bold taste, never too sweet — refreshes best. things gO better,^ .with Coke Bottled under the authority of The Coca-Cola Company by: BRYAN COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. Baylor’s Elkins Has Praise For Maroon Pass Defense By AL WARD SWC Information Director (Ed.’s note: The following is an interview of Baylor flanker Lawrence Elkins conducted by the Southwest Conference Infor mation Director.) Q. How does Terry Southall rate with Don Trull as a thrower? A. I think real well. It’s just experience mostly. Last year at this time Trull had about three more years experience. Q. Do they throw basically the same type pass ? A. I think Don’s passes came to me softer. They might have looked like hard passes from the stands, but he floated them in with the nose up. Q. Well, Coach Purvis drills all his passers on throwing a nose-up pass. Doesn’t Southall throw one? A. The nose is up, all right, but not as much as Trull’s. It’ll come in time. You see, Terry’s a strong er boy than Trull was. He can bench press 290 pounds, which is about twice as much as I can. He puts a lot of RPMs on the ball. Q. Everybody agreed that one thing that made Trull great was he had such a quick throwing action. Southall’s not as quick, is he? A. You mean releasing the ball? Yes sir, I think he is. He can whip his arm like a snake with almost no windup. I know you watch our films and Terry’s arm’s just a blur. Q. How about the rapport, the understanding, they always talk about between a passer and a re ceiver. Like you and Trull had. You couldn’t have this with South- all ? A. No sir, we haven’t worked together long enough. But we’re getting it. 'Course, Trull had an uncanny way of reading where I was going when I had to break a pattern. Q. You say Southall is ’getting’ this. In what way? A. Well, it’s my fault some. I’m seeing so much double coverage that I have to break a pattern to get open. Earlier this year, I prob ably caused a couple of intercep tions because we didn’t understand each other. But against A&M last week, I only caught three balls on regular patterns. The other four, I broke the pattern, he hit me. Q. Has he done this with the pressure on? A. Yes sir, against A&M. I was supposed to run an inside pattern and they had it covered, so I broke it and went outside. I just gambled Terry’d pick it up and he hit me for about 15 yards to the one. That set up our winning touchdown. Q. If Trull were playing this year, would you have caught more than 25? A. I wonder. I’m seeing so much double coverage this year and the defensive backs are a lot better. I don’t know if it’s platoon ball or not, but you'd be surprised how improved they are. Mike Pitman of A&M, now. He tackled well and he can stick with you. I guess oth er teams worked harder on pass defense or something. Q. A&M doubled you long and short all during the game. Did this leave you any area? A. About all I could do was run a slant-in over the middle in front of the first man or go deep and try to outrun ’em both. tailend of the 1963 season, sixi.:| A&M’s last eight defeats hai been by 5 or less points ... S 9-7 .. . Texas 15-13 ... LSU . . . Texas Tech 16-12, TCU 11 and Baylor 20-16 . . . When Phil Scoggin boomif that 64-yard punt that went o® on the Baylor 2-yard line, writer! began scanning the record bool for A&M’s all-time long pit Bobby Goff kicked one 86 yant against Texas Tech in 1944,, Scoggin also had a 70-yari| punt against Baylor nullified 1:| a holding penalty . . . McKaughan’s 39 - yard ru against Baylor was the bestai; Aggie has run this season ,. Linebackers Jerry Kachtik ani Joe Wellborn and halfback Ker. Caffey were the busiest Aggii tacklers against Baylor. Kadi had 9 tackles while Wellborn at; Caffey had 8 each . . . McKaughan is averaging 5i yards to carry not counting bis losses incurred while trying to pass . . . 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