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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 29, 1975)
Page 12 THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY. OCT. 29, 1975 Win in overtime 10-8 Determined Ags slip by SMU By TONY GALLUCCI Contributor The Aggie water polo team es caped from a dangerous situation in Dallas and pulled away from a tough SMU squad in a second overtime period to gain their 22nd win of the year against one tie and no losses. Four Aggie starters, Bill and Sports Shorts Offensive guard Billy Lemons (6-5, 280, junior) sings at weddings . . . Linebacker Garth Ten Napel (6-2, 216, senior) races dragsters during the summer . . . During the sum mer, running back Bubba Bean (6-0, 195, senior) goes fishing with his 102-year-old great-grandfather . . . Center Henry Tracy (6-2, 227, senior) makes parachute jumps dur ing the summer for the National Guard ... In his first year for A&M, Woodard was the leading rusher against LSU with 106 yards in six carries, a 17.7 average with TD runs of 66 and 20 yards . . . Quarterback David Shipman (6-1, 200, junior) trains dogs in his spare time, and his wife (Debbie) trains horses . . . No. 2 quarterback Mike Jay (5-11, 179, senior) served in the U.S. Marines for two years before coming to A&M . . . No. 3 quarter back Keith Baker (5-11, 178, freshman) anchored his high school sprint relay team to the national high school record . Jim Yates, Steve Moore and Lee Davis, called up Coach Dennis Fosdick at ten minutes before game time to tell him their car had broken down in Corsicana south of their Dallas destination. With some difficulty, Fosdick rented them a car and the wait be gan. An hour and a half after the scheduled starting time, the four had not shown and with darkness creeping in the game began. Two other starters, Bob Leland and Don Reeser did not make the trip. At the end of the first quarter the Ags were behind 2-0 and had scored one in the second when the four finally arrived. The Ags man aged to score three more in the second quarter to get back in the game. Fosdick said the game “see sawed back and forth” with there being a 6-6 tie at the end of reg ulation time. After one overtime period the score was deadlocked again at 8-8. But the Ags scored two unanswered goals in the sec ond overtime to give Fosdick his 105 th win. But Fosdick couldn’t enjoy the whole game. “I got thrown out,” he said. “One of the referees was really incompetent, and I let him know he should read the rule- book, and he let me know that I could go outside the gate,” said Fosdick. The team has had prob lems with referees ever since the NCAA made rules changes and failed to get copies of the rules around. Fosdick said however that it was pretty dark, and it was hard to referee as well as see the ball. The game makes the Ags and SMU the one-two seeds in the up coming SWC championships to be held here on the SMU football weekend. Fosdick is trying to schedule the matches so that visi tors will be able to see some of the top flight action after the football game. The freshmen were to play this last night also, but St. Marks can celled. Basketball (continued from pg. 10) don’t play,” Metcalf added. The Aggie boss was pleased with last Saturday’s scrimmage. “I thought we looked pretty good,” Metcalf said. “We played without Barry who was in Missis sippi on a field trip and Gates who had an injury. “Sonny was the leading scorer with 32 points while Steve had 18, and Karl and Ray had 12. Godine was the assist leader and Ray was second in assists,” Metcalf said. In that scrimmage it was this year’s squad against some of last year’s Aggies, Mike Floyd, Cedric Joseph, Jerry Mercer and John Thornton. “That’s one of our big problems,” Metcalf said, “we don t have enough people out there to really work against so we had to get some of last year’s guys to come out there.” It should prove to be an interest ing season. Last year Metcalf and his assistants added to the squad three junior college transfers and molded them into a championship team. This year the task is the same except the new faces are just out of high school. The Aggies will scrimmage again this week, and it is open to the pub lic at no charge. It will be at 4 p.m. Friday in G. Rollie White. ARE & AMERICANS li| NATURALLY RELIGIOUS? Maybe they’re naturally in dustrious, inventive or frontier- oriented. But naturally religious? No. 85 million Americans have no expressed faith. Millions more don’t practice the faith they pro fess. Millions more, every year, drift away from faith altogether. If you believe in the power of the Gospel of Jesus and think His Gospel still has something to offer America, then maybe you should investigate the Paulist way of life. The Paulists are a small com munity of Catholic priests who have been bringing the Gospel of Jesus to the American People in innovative ways for over 100 years. 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