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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 16, 1970)
FALION HE BATTALION Friday, October 16, 1970 College Station, Texas Page 5 tie and Ed Ebrom it the comer- nd Bob Creecl in the TCI' tackle Larry highly rated Dibbles is an- Zen Steel, and is Craig Fife, Junior letter- c will line up ary is led by Colbert, who secondary in olbert has in- ;es and has on four punt l 89-yarderfor week against Baylor Cubs edge Fish with late touchdown By JOHN CURYLO Assistant Sports Editor The Aggie Fish dropped a close game to the Baylor Cubs in Waco Thursday night 12-7. The Cubs used a good running game to win their first game of the season. Marcus Rogers and Bob Langham were the top rush ers for Baylor, whose rushing game netted 235 yards. The Cubs made 16 of their 19 first downs by rushing. Rogers gained 111 yards in 26 carries, while Langham had 90 yards and carried 25 times. Tim Trimmier was the leading passer for the Fish. He completed eight of 18 for 79 yards. His lead ing receiver was Roger Gaskamp, who caught four for 29 yards. The first quarter action con sisted of a pair of Aggie punts and the start of a possible drive by the Cubs late in the quarter. Ken Cooper completed a pair of passes, one to Billy Wilson for 23 yards and another to Ken Fosdick head coach wim Education from San Jose State College. He coached age-group swimming in the San Jose area for a number of years. He handled the freshman water polo team one year at San Jose State and then coached water polo five years at Santa Clara University. Last year he was handling Townsend for 14. A key play came on a third and one situation at the Baylor 4, when Rogers was met at the line of scrimmage by Billy Wiebold, but he fell far enough for the first down. A good offensive play for the Fish came in the first quarter, when Trimmier threw a screen pass to Garry Smith. Behind the blocks of Jimmy Pattillo and Richard Semands, Smith carried 13 yards for a first down. The Aggies made another first down, but the Fish were forced to punt, at which time Baylor began to move. The short spurt was ended early in the second quarter when Gary Davenport intercepted a pass at the Aggie 7. Trimmier then moved the Ag gies on passes, but the drive was stopped and the Fish punted. The Cubs scored after going 78 yards in 14 plays and 5 first downs. A 19-yard keeper by Cooper and a 9-yard run on a pitchout by Langham put Baylor well into Aggie territory. SWC standings Freshman swimming at the Maverick Boy’s Team W L Pet. PS OP Club in Amarillo. He also put on Tech 2 0 1.000 79 13 swimming clinics in Brazil last TCU 2 0 1.000 51 14 summer. Rice 2 0 1.000 61 14 “I’m very happy to be at Texas Texas 1 0 1.000 47 20 A&M,” Fosdick said. “The swim Baylor 1 1 .500 32 54 mers here are a hard-working Arkansas 1 2 .333 36 93 group. They want to be a good A&M 0 2 .000 14 45 team and it is a pleasure to work SMU 0 2 .000 13 51 with them.” This week’s results: TCU 20 ,/J/, XAS h St. 2-1572 •es tion i's Own rvice :ity Bank .TE Flavor ARY nes Pexas e Co. A.RE PAL iTS ige Aggies” DING Si IATION | Dennis Fosdick, 31-year-old California native, is the new Iwimming coach at Texas A&M. I The announcement was made iointly by A&M Athletic Direc- lor Gene Stallings and Dr. Carl ndiss, head of the university’s ealth and Physical Education ept. In addition to coaching iwimming, Fosdick will teach in he Health and Physical Educa- ion dept. Fosdick replaces Melvin Pat- ersonj who resigned recently to .ke the job of swimming coach t the University of Texas at IVustin, Fosdick, a bachelor, was born 5n San Diego, Calif., and was graduated from Palo Alto (Calif) High School. He received a bachelor’s degree in Physical Cubs upend Fish in tennis match The Baylor Freshman tennis team took a three-to-two edge in the singles matches in Waco Wednesday afternoon and then split the doubles to gain a 4-3 win over the A&M Fish. The loss dropped A&M’s fresh man mark to. 1-1. A highlight of the meet was in the number one match when the Aggies’ Dan Courson defeated George Moncadeo, 6-4 6-4. Mon- cado was on the of the state’s top ten rated netters last year. Courson and Bill Pecor grab bed a solid doubles win over Moncado and Dan Novak. The Aggies’ other win was by Mitch Barker over the Cubs’ Doug Vandefloegg, 6-1 6-3. North Texas State 7; Baylor 12 A&M 7; Oklahoma State 56 Ar kansas 0. Next week’s games: Thursday, TCU at Baylor; Friday, Rice at Texas. On fourth and one at the 28, Rogers went 6 yards for the clutch first down. On the next play, he took a pitchout and went 12 yards to the Baylor 10. Three plays and eight yards later, Rogers carried two yards for the touchdown. On the extra point attempt by Rhea Coppedge, Charles Billingsley blocked the kick. However, an offsides pen alty moved the ball one: and a half yards closer, and Coppedge tried again. This time Billingsley partially blocked the kick, caus ing it to be low and wide, and the score was 6-0 for the Cubs. The Fish couldn’t move after the kickoff, and Bill Nutt punted, with Baylor setting it up at their own 43. On the next play, Van Daniel, the right linebacker, knocked down and almost inter cepted a lateral intended for Langham. He couldn’t hold on, and recovered at the 35, putting the Fish in excellent position. However, two plays later, Tom Hoy recovered a Bobby Merren fumble at the 22, ending any threat by the Fish. The remaining 2:50 of the half had an exchange of punts and one first down by Baylor on the last play, making the halftime score 6-0 for the Bears. Baylor had a total of 173 yards in the first half, 136 on the ground. Trimmier completed five of 11 passes for the Fish, making 44 yards. Gaskamp, the Fish tight end, caught three of his aerials for 24 yards. The leading Cub rusher was Langham, with 56 yards on 12 carries. Not far behind was Rogers, who gained 54 yards while carrying 13 times. The Cubs were stalled on their first possession of the second half, as a penalty nullified a long gain by Rogers. Mike Stautzenberger and a gang of Fish threw Cooper for a seven-yard loss, causing Rogers’ 20-yard run on the next play to come up five yards short of a first down. The two teams then punted twice each, Nutt punting 54 and 61 into the end zone. Marc O’Hair’s punts were only for 21 and 20 yards, but the Fish could not capitalize, as both Trimmier and Mike Rigsby ran the team. Following a 12 yard punt to the Baylor 48, the Aggies started to move late in the quarter. A pass interference penalty gave the Fish a first down at the 31. Rigs by had trouble with a big rush, and was thrown for a loss of 10, and then lost 14, turning the ball over to the Cubs at the A&M 49. Cooper went back to pass, Carlen impressed with A&M spirit His first visit to Texas A&M as head football coach at Texas Tech left Jim Carlen impressed with Aggie disci pline and spirit. “I certainly want to con gratulate the A&M student body for their discipline and enthusiasm,” he wrote The Battalion. “The Aggie band was cer tainly an impressive group,” he continued. Carlen’s next sentence com mended the football players who fell 21-7 before the Red Raiders. “You have a fine team and we were fortunate to win,” the coach closed his letter dated Monday. but he fumbled, the recovery be ing made by Bud Trammell at the 46. Some short running plays gave the Fish a first down, and a 13 yard pass to Bobby Hughes at the 17 for another first as the quarter ended. Merren went over left guard for seven to the 10 and Trimmier went around left end on a keeper for 9 following a penalty, putting the ball on the seven. Pat Herring carried for two to the five, and Smith went over right tackle to the two before Herring went over left end for the Fish touchdown. Jeff Polli- coff’s kick put the Fish ahead, 7-6. Following an exchange of punts, the Cubs moved to the Aggie 12 on four first downs, but Lang ham fumbled, and Mark Benbow recovered at the 12 for the Fish. They couldn’t make the necessary yardage for the first down, and Nutt punted 38 yards to the Bay lor 46. Ten plays and four first downs later, Baylor went ahead 12-7 on a one-yard plunge by Rogers. Langham and Rogers carried the running on the drive for the Cubs, each carrying the ball five times before the score. The con version try for two points was no good on an incomplete pass. With only 1:53 left, the Fish ran four plays before giving up the ball on the Baylor eight. The Cubs ran one play to the four as the game ended. Game Summary: Fish 9 52 79 131 2 19 8 0 10.41.0 1-1 5-34 Scoring A&M Baylor Statistics Cubs First Downs 19 Yards Rushing 235 Yards Passing 74 Total Offense 309 Return Yardage 22 Passes Attempted 10 Passes Completed 5 Passes Intercepted 1 Punts, Average 7-27.9 Fumbles Lost 5-3 Penalties 6-37 0 0 0 7 7 0 6 0 6 12 Ags host TCU . . . Two unbeaten in TCSL The Texas Collegiate Soccer League moves into the back- stretch of its fourth season this week with three teams neck and neck and two more a step behind. The University of Texas at Austin Longhorns and St. Mary’s University Rattlers are undefeat ed in four TCSL contests, while Texas Tech, which has two losses, also has "four wins. Each team has eight points in the standings, based on two points for a win and one for a tie. Trinity University and the Uni versity of Texas at Arlington are right behind the leaders, with six points each. With forward Claus-Peter Poppe scoring six goals, UT- Austin whipped Midwestern Sat urday in Austin, 11 to 1, while St. Mary’s used three goals by Richard Cassinelli for a 3 to 0 victory over Rice in San Antonio. Trinity meanwhile dropped Ste- Se/7/o/?s % m Graduate. / MAKE SURE YOUR PICTURE WILL BE IN THE 1971 AG6IELAND YEARBOOK PICTURE SCHEDULE E - I OCT. 12-16 J-K- L OCT. 19-24 M-H-0 OCT. 26-30 P-Q-R NOV. 1-6 S-T-U MOV. 9-13 V-W-X-Y-Z NOV. 16-20 MAKE-UP WEEK —NOV.23-DEC. 11 phen F. Austin in Nacogdoches, 3 to 1. Texas A&M, with goalie Luis Martinez turning in his best game of the year, stalled Texas Tech, 2 to 1, Saturday in College Sta tion, but the Red Raiders got back on the track Sunday by handing Stephen F-.-AusUn, its second 3;to, l;,loss of the week-^ end in Nacogdoches. In non-league action, Texas- Arlington outlasted SMU in Dal- I las, 5 to 3. League activity this week finds Texas/Austin hosting Texas/Ar lington, Stephen F. Austin meet ing Rice in Houston, Houston taking on Midwestern in Wichita Falls, TCU challenging Texas A&M at 2 p.m. in College Station, and Tech in San Antonio for a Saturday game with Trinity and a Sunday game against St. Mary’s. Texas Collegiate Soccer League Standings after games of Oct. 11 Eg- W L T Pts. St. Mary’s 4 0 0 8 Texas/Austin 4 Texas Tech 4 Trinity 3 NOTE: Students needing pictures for job—applications or any personal use may come ahead of schedule. CORPS SENIORS: Uniform: Class A Winter - Blouse or Midnight Shirt CIVILIANS: Coot and tie. PICTURES WILL BE TAKEN from 8:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. NOTE: BRING FEE SLIPS TO university stuldio 115 No. Main - North Goto \j Phono: 845 - 8019 Texas/Arlngtn. 3 Texas A&M Houston S. F. Austin Rice TCU Midwestern FLOWERS ^ Complete Store Baby Albums - Party Goods Unusual Gifts Aggieland Fl6wer & Gift Shoppe 209 University Drive College Station 846-5825 HUGE & WILD DISCOUNTS ! STEREO RECORDS & TAPES SPEEDY SERVICE - SEND FOR YOUR FREE LIST THE STUDENT STORE P.O. BOX 64 REDONDO BEACH, CALIFORNIA 90277 NAME ADDRESS ^ PIZZA EAST GATE Open: 3 p. m. - Midnite Saturday ’til 1 a. m. SMORGASBORD ALL YOU CAN EAT Monday Thru Thursday 5 - 7 p. m. — $1.25 NORTH GATE FREE DORM DELIVERY Open 5 - 12 p. m. 846-4112 FOOTBALL ^ WEEKEND SPECIAL! 20% OFF BOTH IVA STARNES STORES HAVE REDUCED THEIR REGULAR STOCKS OF SPORT COATS 20 f /c FOR THIS FIRST “FOOTBALL WEEK END SPECIAL.” WATCH THIS SPACE EACH WEEK FOR MORE SPECIALS FROM BRYANS MOST FASHIONABLE MENS STORES. 3un Starnes Reg. Now $60.00 $48 00 75.00 $6000 120.00 $9600 turns meat 100 N. Main 329 University Drive