Page 10 THE BATTALION THURSDAY, JANUARY 26, 1978 Aggies halt Frogs’ losing streak 66-59 By MARK PATTERSON Battalion Staff Texas A&M men’s basketball team made it four in a row last night as the bumbling TCU Horned Frogs snap ped a 23-game conference losing streak by defeating the Aggies 66-59. But as A&M went down to defeat three questions came to mind. What happened to the team that took Texas into overtime Monday night? What has happened to the team that was one of the pre-season favorites to win the conference? What has be come of Karl Godine? From the opening throw-in it was an uphill fight for the Aggies. TCU jumped off to a 12-0 lead and held a 35-22 lead at the half. “That was the worst first half of basketball that an A&M team has played in a long, long time,” said coach Shelby Metcalf about the Ag gies first half of play. “We didn’t get off to a good start and we had to play catch-up basketball. And the way TCU was playing we just couldn’t. “When TCU brought the ball down on offense they ran a lot of time off the clock setting up their shots. It’s hard to catch up when you’re in a hurry.” And the Aggies never did catch TCU. A&M pulled to within six points with 1:35 left in the game. TCU freshman guard Wendell Bates hit both ends of a one and one to put the Frogs up by eight, giving TCU its first conference victory in more than a year. Texas coach Abe Lemmons said after the game Monday night that a team cannot play an entire season with the intensity that A&M had against Texas. If there was any ques tion to his thought, the Aggies proved Lemmons right last night. The intensity that the Aggies had shown against Texas was missing against TCU. “We played with a little intensity in the second half but we didn’t have Joe Namath retires a thing in the first half, ” said Metcalf. “But a good team can play with in tensity through an entire season. “But we re just not a good basket ball team. We just seem to play well enough to lose. All we can do is keep practicing and not quit. ’ Guard Dave Goff seemed to have the same feelings about the team’s play. “We’re good and we re talented as individuals but we re just not a good team. And I think one of our main problems is that we don’t know how to win. “But we can’t just say that we re going to turn the season around. We have to go out and do it out on the court. ” One member of the team that sat out last night’s game is Karl Godine. Since seeing 15 minutes of action against Texas Tech Saturday, Godine hasn’t set foot on the court except in warm-ups. And the junior guard doesn’t know how to improve his situation. “I don’t know what it takes to get into a ball game,” said Godine after watching the Aggies lose to TCU. “I just have to accept my situ They (coaches) dish itoutandl to accept it.” Coach Metcalf had little to Godine’s situation. “I’m putting the best pla have on the court. And 1 wil tinue to play my best peoplenoi ter who they are.” Standing 1-6 and last in I ference, the Aggies will try group for their Saturday ti game against Rice here at G White Coliseum. Game timei p.m. United Press International NEW YORK — It was sudden, but not unexpected. “Broadway” Joe Namath, the flamboyant quarterback who sparked the upstart 1969 New York Jets to victory in Super Bowl III, Wednesday announced his retire ment after spending a season sitting on the bench with the Los Angeles Rams. Namath, who signed with the Rams as a free agent after spending 12 years with the Jets, started a few games early in the season but lost the job to Pat Haden in the first month. “It was no fun being a second- string quarterback,” said Namath. “Sometimes it was a bit melancholy, looking around and knowing I wouldn’t be playing football any more. But other than that it was no big deal. All I can say is, ‘thank you, football fans. “I have no regrets, I’m not bitter about anything,” he added. “I played 13 seasons. I remember after my first knee operation, right after I signed with the Jets, my doctor told me I’d be lucky to play four seasons with my legs. But I played 13.” Namath has not indicated what his plans are, but they are not ex pected to include coaching. The 34-year-old star, who signed with the Jets in 1965 for a then-unheard of $400,000 bonus, has earned more than $3 million in his football career and says he is “solid” financially. In addition to his athletic earnings, Namath has played in three movies and has numerous contracts to pro mote men’s cologne and women’s pantyhose, among other things. “I don’t know for sure what I’m going to be doing,” he said. “But I’m not concerned. David A. “Sonny” Werblin, the man who signed Namath 13 years ago, says he thinks a movie career might be “the thing” for his ex-star. “He’s been taking dramatic les sons. He’s a real student,” said Werblin. “He’s got many careers ahead of him. ” Alabama Coach Bear Bryant, whose 1964 team Namath led to a national championship, says he hopes Namath will move back to Alabama, where he runs a restaur ant in Tuscaloosa. because at the start of this past sea son he figured Namath still was healthy enough to lead the Los Angeles Rams to a championship. “I’m just happy he’s in a position to retire when he wants to,” said Bryant. Weeb Ewbank, who coached the Jets when Namath starred, said he was somewhat surprised by Namath’s retirement announcement “I saw Joe in training camp in 1976 and I knew he wasn’t done then because he could still really throw,” said Ewbank. “And when he went out to Los Angeles this sea son I thought he would lead them to a championship. “I’m not questioning his decision to retire, though, because it would be unfair for me to make a judgment when I only saw a little of him this season. But I know he is the type of person who can’t stand to sit around the sidelines. It would kill him if he was on a team, but couldn’t play. ” \ Due 30C MIC IMIC OUC Women defeated by Lamar 66-59 OPEN COMPETITION INVITED GOLF SUPPLIES FRIDAY JANUARY 27 FROM 12 to 6 SATURDAY JANUARY 28 FROM 9 to 6 3513 PARKWAY TERRACE - BRYAN 846-2031 (Oft Carter Creek Parkway near Tanglewood Park) DISCOUNT PRICES SAVE NOW FOR SPRING X-OUTS TOPFLIGHT [GOLF BALLS] $c;25 k %Jdoz. TOPFLIGHT 1 IGOLF BALLS] £10?o 5 z X-OUTS PRO STAFFS [GOLF BALLS! TITLEIST FGOLF BALLS] X-OUTS TITLEIST fGOLF BALLS) . $ 6 7 ofz. .$1185 V I I DOZ.. $ 7o 7 o 5 z. WILSON 1200’ IRONS (2-PW) $195.00 (4) WOODS $129.95 WILSON STAFF IRONS (2-PW) $185.05 (4) WOODS $124.00 WALTER HAGEN (Ultradyne II) IRONS (2-PW) $195.00 (4) WOODS $109.95 LADY SPALDING SET IRONS (3-PW) $ i i qoo full (3) WOODS 1 10 SET BEN HOGAN (Legend Shaft) IRONS (2-PW) $219.00 (3) WOODS $ 99.95 POWER BILT IRONS (2-PW) $159.91 (3) WOODS - PERSIMMON $119.00 GOLF BAGS $iQ95 GRAFTEK, HOTZ, HOGAN 1 O WINCHESTER From PUTTERS, CHIRPERS, WEDGES BULLS EYE, PING $21.00 WILSON, ZEBRA, MacGREGOFi FROM ■ 1 1 1 1 1 ■■■■■ l Gloves - Tees - Clubs in Royal, Spalding, Ping, Titleist, MacGregor, Max Fli By DAVID BOGGAN Batlulion Staff Last night was not a good one for Aggie basketball; both A&M teams lost by identical 66-59 scores. While the men’s team was defeated by the TCU Horned Frogs, the Aggie Ladies were defeated by Lamar University in Beaumont. The women’s game was a nip- and-tuck contest until late in the second half. With a 34-31 deficit at halftime, the Aggies came out and played a tight second half, exchang ing the lead with Lamar several times. Lamar took total command with three minutes to go in the game and left the Aggies seven points behind at the final buzzer. Foul trouble plagued the Aggies early in the game. Von Bunn, the Aggies’ most effective court com mander, had four personal fouls with 14 minutes still left in the first half. This tended to render Bunn, who has been the Aggies’ leading scorer in six games, almost totally ineffective in A&M’s efforts to de feat Lamar. Sheree Christian took high scor ing honors for the Aggies with 14 points. Pat Werner added 12 points to the Aggies’ cause as the Ladies shot 45 percent from the floor and 72 percent from the charity stripe. Susan Kimbro proved true to form as she and Christian each pul led down nine rebounds for the Ag gies. Kimbro, who averages over seven rebounds per game, missed the Southwest Texas and the Texas Tech games with an ankle injury but came back against Texas and grab bed a season-high 17 rebounds. Leading scorers for Lamar were Connie Swearingen with 23 points and Sandra Thomas with 18 points. The Aggie Ladies will get a sec ond shot at Lamar when they come to College Station on Feb. 7. Friday night, Jan. 27, the Aggies face McLennan Community College in G. Rollie White Coliseum. Tip-off is at 7:30. All Texas A&M Organizations Are Invited To Compete In Open Boxing Competition 3 Weight Classes $35.00 Entry Fee MARCH 1 & 2 NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY ‘Dodger daughter has no cooties SPECTATORS WELCOME $1.00 at Door Beer & Food Available TGXflS R&m memorial /tudent Center cflmeRA commiiTGG By DEBBI PIGG Stephanie Staubach is the only girl in her third grade class who does not have cooties. Why? Stephanie, eight, is Dallas Cow boy quarterback Roger Staubach’s daughter. Her classmates at Prairie Creek Elementary School in Richardson think she is special. A third-grade boy told Stephanie that she was the only girl in the class who did not have cooties, Stephanie said. Cooties are imaginary germs that are transmitted from girls to boys by touch, she explained. “I don’t know if that’s because of my daddy or because I’m lucky and just don’t have cooties. I don’t really believe in them, anyway,” Stephanie said. “Boys always ask me questions about the Cowboys but the girls in my class don’t. They’re my friends and we don’t talk about football or the Dallas Cowboys. “My best friend Laura doesn’t watch football because she doesn’t understand it. She didn’t know who Daddy was, even after I told her,” Stephanie said. “I like to watch Daddy on TV but sometimes it gets boring. It’s fun when the Cowboys win, though. Everybody in my family jumps around,” she said. “My mom likes to watch Daddy on TV. She doesn’t scream or yell. She just holds on to the sofa and worries, ” the blond third-grader said. What does the Superbowl mean to Stephanie? “It means Grandmother comes and stays with us while Mom and Daddy are gone. Tanya and I get to stay up late every night and make popcorn,” she said. Tanya Staubach, 11, is Stephanie’s sister. just run around with the ball. Foot ball is for boys,” Stephanie said. “A lot of boys in my class ask me to their birthday parties and sometimes I’m the only girl there. But I don’t mind,” Stephanie said. L For More Information Call: Freeman Fisher 693-7652 or David Cook 846-3256 OCIC ZHtd Otic one ottc otic present/ jEntry fees 75C per print DEADLUIE x fTlARCH 1. 1918 For complete rule/, come by /tudei Progrom/ Office, room 2l6.fT)./J ^Ot ( h ;os :ted ;ers 'hu 'ers. iaye Ins I inty, (day According to Stephanie, neighbors hang spirit signs in the Staubach’s front yard before Dallas Cowboy football games. Occasion ally, they come to the door and ask her father, Roger Staubach, for his autograph. “Sometimes at recess, the boys want me to play football with them. I Now Better Than Ever. You Will Be Pleased With These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Foods. Each Daily Special Only $1.69 Plus Tax. “Open Daily” Dining: 11 A.M. to1:30P.M. — 4:00P.M. to7:00P.M. 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