)ri( e$ ed National ^ of the! he ram been Texas A8cM The Battalion Sports Friday, December 2,1983/The Battalion/Page 13 haluminL, lodifiQiioj 'iotheeail ‘dmoretli: summ Jins com a historic ire. Joseph!# Aggies hope to upset =seventh-ranked Tigers hKit 'lies were n. Js Histoiq 'ihyofathi I directs er of Hist® fechnolej 'selected I architect® lercial buj dian.Clart! imroclt a« Esearchasj ct, said estudyw rammunin ;red acr® on farms iding anii ‘betterinl 'said. “Old nore ) to ruin lit rvev empli of less thi and selem ieswithm nts. ey has shot a as young a lot can mldings.rt structuns ige theretl ored while I. The durable cm inning can The onal, but nerations, s funded l nihe Natie: igh the To ision. irchitect® Breisch chataddiii: needed. er by John Wagner Battalion Staff Todd Holloway was the first to admit he was a little disappointed, and he pulled a reporter aside to ask a small favor. The Texas Aggies had just defeated Prairie View A&M Tuesday night before a measly crowd of 2,397, and Holloway was wondering where everybody was. Is there any way, the fresh man asked in a whisper, you could put something in the paper asking people to come to our games? Simple enough. All Hollo way wants for Christmas is a few warm bodies in the stands. After all, it’s tough to get Fired up to play Division I basketball when you know you’ve been outdrawn by the Fifth floor of Sterling C. Evans Library. “Tell the people to bring us a packed house,” Holloway said, “and we’ll play a lot aetter.” In Holloway’s case, it may ae tough to play much better than he did Tuesday. The 6-0 freshman from Albany, N.Y., scored 23 points and dished aut six assists in leading the Aggies to their second victory igainst no losses. True, both wins have come against wimpy competition [Texas Lutheran and Prairie View), but the Aggies get a •T' chance to prove themselves Saturday when they host the seventh-ranked LSU Tigers n the Summit in Houston. Hame time is 8 p.m. For the Aggies, this is the irst real test in what could be a ong, hard season. The Tigers ire short on height but long an experience, and the Aggies lave neither. Against TLC, A&M coach Shelby Metcalf (iiild usd itarted three freshmen and ihiatethe! wo sophomores, and against ofstni® Prairie View it was just the pposite. The Tigers are 2-0, with wins over University of New Drleans and North Carolina Wilmington and a game pend ing with Washington late' Thursday night. Led by seniors Leonard Mitchell and John Tudor, the Tigers have folks in Louisiana thinking Final Four again (they made the NCAA quarterfinals in 1980). In fact, Metcalf said the Tigers may be nothing short of awesome. “We talked to the coach who had to play ’em last night,” Metcalf said, referring to NC-Wilmington’s head coach, “and he said LSU had the best material ever assem bled on a college team.” Quite a switch from A&M. In the Aggies’ case, you really can’t tell the players without a Claude, Tyren and Roy have been replaced by Winston, Todd and Phil. Reserve Rob Kirshner — a junior — has the most senior ity on the team. That’s because the Aggies don’t have any seniors. Sophomore center Jimmie Gilbert is the lone re turning starter. But A&M’s who’s who syn drome is only temporary. The Aggies are a scrappy little team, and four of the five will eventually come around. He’s even given his players a little hint on how to speed up the process. “Coach told us we have to win our fans back again,” Hol loway said, “and that’s what we’re going to do.” starting positions are pretty much up for grabs — which leads to some interesting bas ketball. “It doesn’t make any differ ence who plays,” sophomore But Holloway may have to wait to see a packed house. The 15,600-seat Summit is ex pected to be only half-full when the Aggies and Tigers tip off, and only 50 student tickets had been sold by late Thursday. scorecard. Freshman and sophomores fill the roster. Doug Lee says, “because we’re all about equal.” And Metcalf says the fans Tickets are available at all Ticketron or Ticketmaster outlets in Houston, or at the A&M ticket office at G. Rollie White Coliseum. Student tick ets are $6. Trouble LSU football coach Jerry Stovall on the hot seat after 4-7 season United Press International BATON ROUGE, La. — Stu dents protested on campus and sports commentators cringed, but the Louisiana State Univer sity Board of Supervisors seemed poised Thursday to fire fourth-year head football coach Jerry Stovall. Twelve months ago, Stovall could do no wrong. He was pre paring his 8-3-1 team for a trip to the Orange Bowl where the Tigers posted a respectable 21- 20 loss to Nebraska. Early season ratings in 1983 picked LSU in the Top 10 and its rushing offense was expected to be among the best in the nation. But Stovall’s team Finished the demoralizing season 4-7 and — for the first time in its history — LSU failed to win a Southeast Conference game. Rumors the board would try to buy out the remaining year of Stovall’s contract began surfac ing towards the end of the season. Two weeks ago, the board re fused to give the embattled coach a vote of confidence and asked Chancellor James Whar ton and Athletic Director Bob Brodhead to make their recom mendations at a meeting sche duled for early this morning. Students and fans fought the firing rumors with a rally in front of the athletic department ofFice Thursday afternoon and a Stovall pep rally in the stadium later in the evening. Brodhead has declined to dis cuss what he will recommend to the board Friday, but he has admitted talking to Bill Arnsparger, assistant head coach for the Miami Dolphins. LSU sources indicate a coach from the pro ranks with no Louisiana background may have trouble being hired by the board unless he came in a package deal with an assistant to whom the state’s high school coaches, alumni and fans could identify. To meet that criteria, the name of Clemson offensive coordinator Nelson Stokely has surfaced. Stokely, who coached fresh men and the offensive backField at LSU from 1968 to 1973, earned three letters as Tiger quarterback from 1965-1967. He was offensive coordinator at Virginia Tech before joining Clemson in 1980 as quarterback coach and chief recruiter. Men’s swim team sweeps three straight dual meets STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — The Texas A&M men’s swim team went on a three-meet tear of the East Thursday, defeating Penn State, West Virginia and North Carolina in seperate dual meets to run its season record to 4-2. The men snuck past Penn State 59-54, defeated West Vir ginia 70-43 and beat defending Atlantic Coast Conference champion North Carolina 65- 48. The 400-yard freestyle relay team, made up of Schmauch, Susan Marks, Goeking and Tan ner, became this year’s first Texas A&M qualifier for the NCAA championships by swim ming the cut-off time of 3:30.42. Both the men and the women will swim in the Penn State Re lays today and Saturday. Nine teams are entered in the women’s meet, 10 in the men’s. The Aggie women split their double dual meet, defeating West Virginia 90-50 and losing to Penn State 50-89. Aggie swimmer Kevin Lon- drigan set a school record in the 200-yard backstroke with a time of 1:53.78, breaking the old re cord of 1:54 .32, set in 1978. The men also swam to nine season bests. TCU slips past ETSU, 35-26 tematioul I United Press International TH,Kan'S FORT WORTH — Tracy k ted M M'txhell broke loose for 20 female p® points despite an East Texas wastrai Mate slowdown game and led -ral penitt the TCU Horned Frogs to a 35- fnstiuitim■() win over the the Lions Tiursdat Thursday. t Though the game was tied 16- 16 at halftime, East Texas State small leads throughout of the first and second alves and the Lions were up 26- with only 5:40 left in the However, at the 1:10 mark, Mitchell scored on a three-point play to give the Horned Frogs a 29-26 lead they never lost Mike Cunningham paced the Owls with 13 points and 10 re bounds. -Iding ii fertoai mm the ours W tiary’s® *e womai rd. -man ■ veal "’tieij! ■-ansferP 1 ■ease die the -je woman -meffli#] am coi" !| rue no otion 5 ' UTSA 72, RICE 56 HOUSTON — Derrick Gervin tossed in a game-high 21 points Thursday night to lead UT-San Antonio to a 72-56 win over the Rice Owls. Gervin also pulled down 14 rebounds as the Roadrunners, now 1-1, eased to a 31-26 half time lead and were never headed. The loss dropped Rice to 1-2. TEXAS TECH 64, USD 53 LUBBOCK — Senior guard Bubba Jennings scored 14 points and teammates Quentin Anderson and David Reynolds chipped in with 13 and 10 points respectively to spark Texas Tech to a 64-53 win over the University of San Diego Thursday. The Red Raiders fell behind 4-0 on a pair of layups by Anthony Reuss, but responded with seven straight points to take the leed for good with five mi nutes gone in the opening half. Tech opened up a 29-23 half time lead. The Raiders went up by as many as 16 points in the second half and never were threatened. Mike Whitmarsh led the Toreros with a game-high 17 points. The women captured nine of the 16 scheduled events from the West Virginia team, but only five from Penn State. The women recorded nine season best times and broke two school records. The 200-yard medley relay, comprised of Jody Tanner, Vicki Moir, Melanie Schmauch and Sandra Goeking, swam a 1:49.28, breaking the old record of 149.82. Schmauch also set a school record in an in dividual event, swimming the 100-yard butterfly in 58.05, .15 seconds faster that the previous school record. GAMERS / IMOX/A PRESENTS PEARL HARBOR REMEMBERED! SPEAKERS: DR. R. BEAUMONT DR. J.BRADFORD DR. M. MELOSI 301 RUDDER DECEMBER 5,1983 7:00 P.M. TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL 2AE ACACIA KX ©X nK MEN'S nKA ATO RUSH XX XE FIJI ATA AK Invites YOU To A Spring Rush INFORMATIONAL MEETING DECEMBER 7, 1983 AGGIELAND INN 6:00-8:00pm Call for more info