THE BATTALION Page 13 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1979 Ag water polo team prepared for tourney 110 doubt on andtb f other al , l( ‘ W.. •'diet of tbf told repotti I will no: 4 ‘HI clS it gpr Gaza Stri; e CampD^ accords s the currei tinian sel loreh ot, raising sis war" i to ■ lers are ‘ationalist >c of ich is eoi 1 settlemi ritory. led the gal beeau! Arab land ilitary itended, battle battered Mustangs By MARK PATTERSON R Battalion Sports Staff jivest a dollar and buy a program 'A/7|;h( Texas A&M-SMU game vtl ir (] a y because it will be a dollar I spent. If you don’t, you won’t able to recognize the SMU hers. It Mers without some help. >ard the(Jp Mustangs limp into Kyle Hbr a battle between two of the al Shkodti! rans t ^ le Southwest Confer- he collisjSaturday. ABC-TV will air the as the test regionally, with the kickoff ■Lied for 11:50 a. m. ch car k" * s a shell of the team that almost In an t ^ le season - The Mustangs ‘verallw^B 56011 devastated by injuries, [.yj ngfive starters for the season. 10 mbers of the team have missed at her 2S i >1 one game this year. )er a Sov Ae most notable of the casualties n hoard All-America quarterback Mike estigatioi r d Ford was injured in the Mus- Balt, the '8 s second game of the year Is ofZeal; dnst TCU and is out for the sea- i with a knee injury. Before he s hurt, the Mustangs were 2-0 on difficulty Pifear, Since his injury, SMU is 1, said lb and 0-3 in conference play. Lstros sign janose Cruz United Press International LffldiUSTON — Houston Astros f vtvl'fielder Jose Cruz and his repre- itatives Thursday reached > TuesdavjBement on a five-year extension gates offs contract with the club, Astros ders. fsident and General Manager Tal brought hh announced. >st were are certainly pleased that the nstrators. l0r l e g a l differences have been npromised and resolved,” Smith cl after Thursday’s four-hour ho are fi , e tj n g w jth Cruz and his agent, junta t U Cildes, along with attorneys for Carlos [jj s ides. ed three ‘w e f ee j a u parties are satis- olence. Jwith the agreement, and we are iv theyl >st happy that we are assured of trv’s weal® 8 conti nued service,” Smith me Hilli'B ard. Coach Ron Meyer replaced Ford with sophomore Jim Bob Taylor. Taylor came on to hit 47 percent of his passes for 312 yards and four touchdowns before going down with hand and thigh injuries against Texas last week. Freshman Mike Fisher inherited the quarterback job and will be the starting quarterback against the Ag gies Saturday. Taylor will be bac kup. “Any time you lose and are on a bad streak, you get down,” Fisher said of the Mustangs losing four straight games. “But we’ve got to forget it and get ready for A&M. If we don’t prepare we ll be whipped before we get there. Other Mustangs who have been injured include All-America re ceiver Emanuel Tolbert, freshman running back Erie Dickerson and freshman lineman Michael Carter. Tolbert injured his thigh against Baylor and has been out of the lineup the past three weeks. He is expected to return to the Mustang lineup against the Aggies Saturday. “It (thigh) feels a lot better, much better than it has in a long time,” Tolbert said. “It’s not as sore as it’s been in the past few weeks. It doesn’t have the tender feeling that it had. “The Aggies will be hot coming off a big win over Rice. They’re like us in that they’re in a situation where they have to win and they probably figure they’ll beat us.” Tolbert, in his senior season at SMU, is considered one of the best receivers in the country. In his col lege career he has set the SWC mark for the most touchdowns in a season (11 last year), has been the leading receiver in the conference the past two seasons and is the lead ing receiver in SMU’s history. “I want to finish on a good note,” Tolbert said. “I’d like to get well, get on the field, work with the quar terbacks and get rolling. We can still finish with the best record we’ve had since Tve been here. Dickerson, the highly recruited back out of Sealy, has been injured since preseason workouts began. He’s been battling toe, thigh and shoulder injuries all season and has seen limited action. After holding him out of last week’s game against Texas, Meyer expects Dickerson to be ready for the Aggies Saturday. His replacement, freshman Charles Wagoner, is leading the Mustangs in rushing yards this sea son. Wagoner has gained 484 yards on 104 carries, for a 4.7-yard-per- carry average. “Charles Wagoner is an outstand ing running back,’’ Aggie head coach Tom Wilson said. “We, along with most coaches in the state, felt he was in the same caliber as Dic kerson and (Craig) James last year. “And James is playing well for them. He’s played a lot of different positions (fullback and tailback), but he’s a good back.” James has averaged 3.8 yards every time he’s handled the ball for the Mustangs this season. “Meyer predicted that they’d have a fine team, a competitive team, when the season started. They still have the same people that they started with, with the excep tion of Ford. And with the backs they have, they can be very danger ous. “I’m not surprised that this game was chosen (for television). It’s an attractive game. It ought to be fairly k ial Shannon e tooth child’s eai t were u® because S- Iv,” sothf al anestM Child care for TAMU FOOTBALL at French’s Care-a-Lot 900 University Oake College Station (Behind Woodstone) It Reservations Please 693-1987 DAY OR NIGHT < LXv vZxl. wTlrf cr. v X > CX- v X v v X > i~x ■« v XT v T v I j v X ^ JLi JL* v.X ■« vJL« vT> v « . as extras* ^ednesda) n thehosi IS ES) RS , in Elect"- you aboc| 3fessio" al ompute rS ' re contf® ation.a"' 1 dents ty of P srl y min u,eS with n\oi> ing ’ lra n! ploy" 16 " ow. WE TEACH YOU Professional Instructors Equipment Rentals Weekly Classes, Call Today Spectators welcome American Parachute Center Sat. & Sun. (713) 279-2161 Coll. Sta. Office evenings (713) 693-3317 competitive and exciting. I think it ought to be a very good football game.” By MIKE BURRICHTER Battalion Reporter The Texas A&M water polo team will host the Southwest Water Polo Championships this weekend and coach Dennis Fosdick likes his team’s chances of winning its own tournament. “I don’t think anybody will touch us, except maybe Santa Clara Uni versity,” Fosdick said. Last weekend the team travelled to New York for the National AAU Water Polo Championship, where they finished fifth in a 12-team field. Fosdick said he was very pleased with his team’s performance, since they had entered the tournament having played only eight games all season. “We needed more game experi ence and it showed at the beginning of the tournament,” Fosdick said, “but at the end we really began to play well.” Twelve teams from Texas, California, Arkansas, and Arizona will compete for the Southwest title this weekend. Not all Southwest Conference schools have teams and there is no league format set up in the SWC. In New York, the Ags opened the tournament with a 20-5 thrashing of Princeton. This game didn’t give the team the experience it needed, and it showed in the next game as the Ags lost to the tournament runner- up Bucknell, 9-3, in what Fosdick called the team’s only poor showing. Tournament host Fordham de feated the Aggies in their next game, 8-7. Fosdick said an error at the scorer’s desk enabled the Rams to win. “The player who scored their winning goal in the last minute had actually fouled out of the game,” he said, “but the desk evidently didn’t count all of his fouls. The same thing had happened to Slippery Rock the night before when Slippery Rock played Fordham.” The Aggies finished the tourna ment by winning three straight, over Slippery Rock, 8-4, a team coached by former A&M All- America swimmer, Dick Hunkier and two teams from the New York Athletic Club. The Ags beat the NYAC ‘B’ team first, 11-8. The Ag gies finale was against the defending national champion NYAC ‘A’ team, whom they beat 8-7. George Dallam, the team’s defen sive specialist, Vince Tavarez, the goalie, and Steve Sampson, the team’s leading scorer were all elected to the All-America team. The three are co-captains of the 1979 Aggie team. Fosdick was upset that Jim Yates was passed over by the All-America selection committee. “Jim did everything for us,” he said. “I would have expected him to be considered as the most valuable player of the tournament. If he was passed over, I really don’t know what the selection committee was looking for. The guys on the team are really upset about it.” Fosdick said the team’s play against tough competition in New York should enable them to win this weekend’s tournament. The 12-2 Ags open the tourna ment today at 2:30 p.m. at Wolford Cain pool. 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