— THE BATTALION Tuesday. November 3, 1970 College Station, Texas Page 5 •land A Collep Jr. ol student: studies ed from :gree it ted civil in 1911 profes- 15 a,it: ll-knowi in will ical si- who is lairman I to als: ;o whicl ited, ortunitj gradu- n alon? : follow- e A» r ent ati Otwaj John S. uart K ignancj ifflicW aturdav Cathe- ed onli t when national the latf he lati ly. iend ol lovativi rdinal'i f-actioi f infill- enist, helpel Seconl ieclara- liberty c idal Hogs romp after early Ag miscues By CLIFFORD BROYLES Battalion Sports Editor Last week, before the Phila delphia Eagles lost their seventh straight NFL game, coach Tom Landry of the Dallas Cowboys said the Eagles were just in a rut a team gets in when it’s losing. He said they play hard but somehow they always give it away. The Texas Aggies suffered their sixth straight loss Saturday to Arkansas and are in a similar rut. They suffered four intercep tions and lost four fumbles, as well as finishing the day with minus rushing yardage, thanks to a devastating pass rush by the Hog defense. The death bell tolled quickly for the Aggies with the Arkansas offense, tops in the Southwest Conference, and their defense, second to Texas, not letting the Aggies have an inch of breathing room until Arkansas had a 38-0 lead at the half. Dave Elmendorf faded a cou ple of yards deep in the end zone to take Mill McClard’s opening kickoff and hesitated on whether to run the ball out. One of his feet nipped the white chalk line and he decided to run. Ten yards upfield he was met by a host of Arkansas defenders and when he tried to cut to the outside fumbled the ball and Bil ly Lively, one of 16 Razorback players who played high school football in Texas, recovered at the five. Three plays later, the Razor- backs’ All-SWC running back Bill Burnett, scored the first of his three touchdowns during the game with a one-yard plunge with 13:45 remaining in the first quarter. McClard’s next kickoff went into the end zone, but the Aggies decided not to run it out. Two plays later another fumble oc curred as Steve Burks lost the ball on a pitchout and Ronnie Jones fell on it at the 20. Six plays later Burnett tied the all-time Southwest Conference FOUR FORMER Texas A&M athletes were honored Saturday in pre-game ceremonies when they were inducted into the Texas A&M Athletic Hall of Fame. From left to right are John Wesley “Dough” Rollins; Dr. Sam Houston “Sammy” Sanders: Mrs. Margaret Rudder, who received the plaque for her husband, the late Maj. Gen. James Earl Rudder, and Arthur Dougles “Art” Adamson. (Photo by Steve Bryant) BROWN - ALLEN MOTOR CO. OLDSMOBILE SALES - SERVICE "Where satisfaction is standard equipmer^’ 2400 Texas Ave. Garcia, Covin represent A&M at billiards tourney James Garcia and Lawrence Covin will represent A&M in the upcoming Inter-Collegiate billiard tournament to be held in New Orleans on a date to be an nounced. Garcia, a junior finance major from Bryan, won the three cush- £ For all your insurance needs See U. M. Alexander, Jr. ’40 221 S. Main, Bryan 823-0742 v State Farm Insurance Companies - Home Offices Bloomington, 111. ion carom event of the annual three cushion carom and pocket billiard tournament held Oct. 18 in the Memorial Student Center Recreation Room. Covin won the 14-1 pocket bil liards, nine ball and one pocket events, almost sweeping the board at pocket billiards. According to Ed Bloese of the Former Students’ Association, Garcia is a disciple of “form” and “stroke” in three cushion billiards and will be an excellent representative of A&M in the New Orleans tournament. scoring record when he leaped in to the end zone from the three and the Aggies, having run only two offensive plays, already were behind 14-0. A start like that more than likely took any chance of an up set out of the Aggies. Two blows that quick really had to be an emotional blow to Aggie hopes. When the Aggies finally got their chance to run an offense, they moved for a first down, but senior defensive end Bruce James threw quarterback Lex James for a 9-yard loss on a third down situation. It set the tempo for the game, as Arkansas dropped the Aggie signal caller for 11 losses totaling 118 yards. Combine that with the eight turnovers and you can see why the Aggies never were in the game. Field position also hurt the Aggies as they started with the ball on the 20 the first four times they had the ball. On the other hand, Arkansas got the ball on the 5 and 20 of A&M after the first two fumbles. Two short punts, thanks in part to a wind out of the south end of Kyle Field, gave Arkan sas possession at their 46 and the A&M 34 the next two times. An interception by Rick Jones gave Arkansas the ball on the Aggie 28 and after McClard’s field goal try into the wind was wide A&M started again from its 20. A 9-yard punt return by Corky Cordell helped the Hogs start their next drive at midfield, and after Arkansas drove in for a touchdown with 7:23 remaining in the half their first offensive unit took the rest of the day off. Hugh McElroy’s 20-yard kick off return was a landmark for the Aggies. It was their sixth possession of the game and yet it was the first time they started a drive outside their own 20. They started this one from the 25. But on the first play McElroy took a pitch from James but ran into Jack Morris and lost the ball. Defensive tackle Rick Ker sey fell on it at the 25 but the Arkansas offensive second team was a little less reproductive than the starters and returned the compliment a minute later when Todd Christopher recovered Joe Ferguson’s fumble. A good example of what kind of first half it was for the Ag gies: they stopped an Arkansas drive at the 35 late in the half and Ken Curry lofted his punt five yards deep in the end zone but the ball bounced back on the field and A&M started from the four. Doug Neill broke through Sie/7/o/?s m tnrnco unibersttp men’s! to ear 329 University Drive 713/846-2706 College St«.ti<9n, Texas 77840 J. C. (Jim) Harris THE BUG SHOP, Inc. 1911 So. College Ave. Bryan, Texas 77801 Phone 822-5383 Bryan's Leading Independent Volkswagen Service COLOR PORTRAITS 1/2 PRICE Save 50% to 60% off the cost of studio pictures. Get professional qual ity at prices students can afford. 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