sports Ags thrash Horns in G. Rollie By MIKE BURRICHTER Sports Editor A couple of students brought a ner to the basketball game at G. lollie White Coliseum Saturday. It itnber Jlacl: Beat the Hell out of tu, and irshipKgie Copeland.” e d49®' exas basketball coach Abe (s. Rmons said the Aggies must have Ipught the whole Texas team was pde up of Reggie Copelands. ; The Aggies, still maddened by the Rmory of their loss at Arkansas, blasted the Longhorns 84-61 Satur- | I Ky to keep pace with the Razorbacks •A 4w the race for the SWC basketball ^ Hwn. Not since 1959, when a team . Bched by Bob Rogers beat them had the Ags whipped the J ltorns so easily. IKopeland was the referree in Fayetteville Tuesday night who cal- E a charging foul on Dave Goff at ssolvedkq final buzzer. U.S. Reed sank the d and rl|fe throw to give the Hogs a 45-44 of this actory and a share of the league daily toifed. c bubMeiflt was great from the standpoint {bouncing back from the Arkansas 0 degrees Aggie coach Shelby Metcalf ie gas, ul aid “The team did a great job of ?1 mixtawf™!? themselves up.” enera! ^Vernon Smith scored 19 points na the Ags stopped the Longhorn H break and dominated the boards j lead at the half, 48-36. KThey were sagging back on Rudy, Ring me open to take those shots, ” ^ R Smith, who hit on 9 of 11 shots Bn the floor in the first half. “I felt 6 Rly good today so when I started J ftting them I just kept shooting. ” R^emon is a lot of fun to watch ?xecub' /hen he gets that shooting rythymn with $ fcwii, Metcalf said. Kie Ags shot 64 percent in the first irateca' jtlf and 59 percent for the game. The ds bigl 4ftghoms hit on only 40 percent for n force if game. The Longhorns also had ;aid thi ieir problems at the foul line, mis- overtu ing 10 of 27 free throw attempts, nembersffcur guys were dead, what else ing it mi you say,” Lemons said. “Just e. Togetfck up the stats and they’ll tell the activeg r ton'. We missed a whole bunch of -half the tee throws. ” 1 ProduclThe Longhorns, having won five of op 30 Fjeir last seven games, came into the Re given a fair chance to upset the percent iggies. But the only lead they could ted havejuster Saturday was when LaSalle tory la* Simpson had a three-point play to seven «|ve the Horns a 3-2 lead with less hi a minute gone in the game. ^With the Aggies leading 23-20 loundup United Press International Arkansas, which had to hold off the trkedly improved Rice Owls in mston, 77-73, and Texas A&M ve 12-2 league records with two mes left to go in the regular season Arkansas visits SMU Monday Jit and hosts Texas Tech next rday afternoon in its two final s while Texas A&M is at home inst last-place TCU Tuesday bt and visits the troublesome s :he IMoffc ible will Ik :ainc may!* ry 25 at tl* : from 9$ Teams muF piston Cougars Friday night, he three road teams for the tour- nent’s first round were finalized r the weekend. TCU (2-12), Rice 1) and Baylor (5-10) will be the prs on Feb. 25. laylor lost its chance for a home- lit advantage when it dropped a 58 decision at home to Houston lirday night. FORMAL FOR AN EVENING rk, hands ise Tuesda) re’ll be mi fhey all pi? Compet# :ch; distant] 18, orontf TUXEDO SALES & RENTALS formals leinthel' : for you, ups. EnW 1 Plav be? / 18 and"! 1 d Thursda! mts, match 6 vour racq“l 111 College Main 846-4116^ (he best jacket dressing. This implified, cropped jacket skims «r a sophisticated dress — McCall's pattern 7016 be made from many colors LINEN (50% polyester, 50% iyon) 45" width. $5 a yard. FABRICS D midway through the half, Smith hit a 23-footer from the top of the key. The Longhorns were never in the game after that as Smith and the rest of the team started popping in bas kets from all over the court. Metcalf also turned to his bench for help, sending in Tyrone Ladson, Steve Sylestine and Claude Riley to keep the Aggie tempo high. Lemons said he had nowhere to go in terms of bench strength. “Their bench strength was a differ ence in the first half, at least in the margin of their lead although it was still a poor performance for us,” Lemons said. Smith and David Britton entered the locker room before the game clad in maroon and white tuxedoes in a ploy to pick up the team’s spirits. “The team was still kind of down at practice Friday,” Smith said, “Me, David and two trainers saw these tuxes the other night. We wanted to put some spirit into the team so we wore them to game.” It must have worked. Metcalt said he was surprised to see the team play so well after a slow week at practice. “Wednesday we were really hurt,” Metcalf said. “Thursday we picked it up a little and Friday we picked it up by that much more. I wouldn’t have wanted to play anyone until today.” After his hot first half, the Lon ghorns guarded Smith more closely. He missed all five of his shots in the second half but still lead the Ags with 21 points. Court jester David Brit ton, whose spectacular Julius Erving-style dunk in the second half was one of the game’s highlights, scored 20. Rudy Woods had 15 points and Rynn Wright added 12. Woods, Smith, Wright and Britton combined for 27 rebounds, two more than the entire Texas team. The Ags pulled down 40 rebounds in all. Ron Baxter lead all scorers with 22 points. The only other Longhorn in double figures was John Danks, who had 11. The victory gave the Ags a confer ence record of 12-2 and tied them with Arkansas. Their overall record is now 20-7. The Horns fell to 8-6 in the conference and 15-9 overall. The Aggies play TCU next in a televised game at G. Rollie Tuesday night. Texas A&M’s Rynn Wright goes up for two against the Univer sity of Texas Longhorns in Saturday afternoon’s game in G. Rollie White. The Aggies WOn 84-61. Photo by Brian Blalock Staff photo by Lynn Blanco PROBLEM PREGNANCY? 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Youngsters such as SMU’s Michael Carter, Texas’ Herkie Walls and Arkansas’ Stanley Redwine de monstrated that they had would probably be producing some heroics during the next few years. There were quite a few surprises Friday night, not the least of which was Texas A&M’s victory in the team race over defending champion Arkansas. The Aggies won the meet for the first time in its seven-year history, piling up 103 points to Arkansas’ 95. Another surprise came in the 60- yard dash where Walls shot from the blocks with a fantastic start and ran the fifth fastest indoor 60 in history — a time of 6.09. Walls thus nipped Texas A&M’s Curtis Dickey, a world-class sprinter who had hopes of making the U.S. Olympic team this year before the American boycott was threatened. The Razorbacks lost precious points in the middle distances — having to settle for a second place in the 440-yard dash when Baylor’s Zeke Jefferson upset Arkansas’ Pat Mitchell. Redwine, a freshman from Dallas, won the 600-yard dash for the Hogs, but Arkansas failed to pick up as many points as it had hoped in the 1,000-yard run or in the 3-mile run. But there was no surprise in the shot put, where Carter made his de but in a SWC championship. Carter had been improving steadily during the indoor season and he improved again Friday night, throwing the shot 67-0 3 /4. That was the best effort in the world this year. “My goal has been to improve,” said Carter, “and that’s what I’ve done. I’m glad I got the record (his toss shattered the SWC indoor mark by more than four feet), but it was more important to have improved on my earlier best this year.” Two weeks before Carter had thrown recorded a 66-11 effort in Louisville, Ky. Texas A&M’s individual victories came from Randy Hall in the pole vault (16-6), Don Jones in the high jump (7-1%) and Mike Glaspie in the 60-yard hurdles (7.30). THE BATTALION Page 11 MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1980 MSC Political Forum presents John Sharp Texas Legislator speaking on "The Permanent University Fund: What It Means to Texas A&M and to You" February 20 Noon in 206 MSC Admission: FREE Battalion Classifieds Call 845-2611 Monday nite is COUNTRY NITE at the Studio All cowboy hats get in FREE 1401 FM 2818 — Doux Chene Complex Ya’ll Come! ANNOUNCING FOR TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY TREY HAMLETT LET YOUR SCHLITZ COLLEGE REP BE YOUR CAMPUS CONTACT FOR PARTY PLANNING AND FOR SPECIAL PROGRAMS THROUGHOUT THE SCHOOL YEAR. FOR INFORMATION CALL: G. F. Sousares Distributing 779-0208 JOS. SCHLITZ BREWING COMPANY, Brewers of: iMiLiiiijh*- SCHLITZ MaijLiquoiv Nahml PiJsncr fecr ERLANGER BEER © 1980 JOS. SCHLITZ BREWING CO.. MILWAUKEE, WIS. AND OTHER GREAT CITIES