Tuesday, September 8, 1953 THE BATTALION Page 3 Aggie Football Team Loses Three Prospects The Aggie football team has lost three prospects as Head Coach Ray George guides the squad into its second week of practice. Malcolm Hammack, Arlington Junior college halfback, decided at the last moment to cast his lot with the University of Florida. T. K. Niland, two-year letterman tackle, will forego his last year of eligibility to assist Jim Bevans in directing the fortunes of the A&M Consolidated high school football team. Ed Hennig, quarterback, with three more years of football eli gibility, who came to A&M on a baseball scholarship, has decided to concentrate on the diamond sport. The remaining 50-odd squad members are responding to the one-platoon rule change, George says, and they are eager and en- Deer Hunters Missing Chance For Sure Kill One moment, Nimrod! Do you know what you are hunt ing ? Have you learned as much as you can about the habits of the animal you’re planning to shoot ? Thousands of optimistic young hunters will take to the woods Nov. 16 and afterward in search of the thrill that comes with their first big-game kill without even know ing the size ot appearance of the quarry they seek. Most young hunter’s have an idea that the deer they want to shoot is tall and red and has a sort of hat-rack of horn on the front end— and that’s all they know about it. Actually, the two kinds of deer in Texas—whitetail and blacktail-r^ don’t get much more than half as tall as most new hunters imagine them. And while there is some red in the coat it isn’t the kind of red which will stand out against a con venient green tree. Rather, it closely parallels the color of a fox squirrel and is not at all easy to tee in the brush. Dr. W. B. Davis of the wildlife Management department here says there are several other basic facts •ibout Texas deer which should stand the beginning hunter in good stead. Deer are habit-prone, just as people are. Unless he is very much disturbed, the average buck uses the same bedding ground night aft er night, and will feed and drink at the same places. The hunter who will spot his buck in advance, then watch him to study his feeding grounds and habit patterns, stands a good chance of making his kill without undue effort when the season opens. If there is good browsing—deer are browsers more than grazers— and good water available, along with a bedding-place on a small knoll or rise of ground, the legal buck probably won’t range off a tract approximately the size of a 40-acre field. He does his feeding from shortly before until about an hour after daylight, and from a short while before sundown until a little while after dark. Generally speaking, he gets his drink in the morning— just about at the break of day, and again late in the evening. When the sun gets up and the day’s heat starts to climb the deer bed down in a thicket or some other protected place. The whitetail deer, found wherc- ever there are deer in Texas, grows to something like 40 inches high at the most, while the blacktail, found in the Trans-Pecos and the far Panhandle country, grows a little taller. “Obey the game laws wherever you hunt,” Dr. Davis says. “Be sure you’re aiming at a legal buck before you pull the trigger. One other thing,” he adds. “—if it walks on two legs it isn’t a buck deer— don’t shoot it!” thusiastic about two-way football. At present a lively battle for starting center is being waged be tween Fred Broussai'd, fine-look ing sophomore 220 pounder, and Cooper Robbins, 170 pound senior. A starting line-up at present would probably show Marvin Tate and Sid Theriot, guards; Durwood Scott and Lawrence Winkler, tackles; Bennie Sinclair and Eric Miller, ends. In the backfield would be Don Ellis, quarterback; Joe Boring and Connie Magouirk, halfbacks; and Don Kachtik, full back. Other linemen making the start ers hustle are Ray Barrett, guard; and Donald Robbins, .Bill Schroe- der, and Norbert Ohlendorf, ends, while backfield prospects battling for a starting assignment include Ronald Robbins, Dave Smith, Billy Pete Huddleston, Bob Easley; and Johnny Salyer. The Aggies open the season with a September 19 night encounter with the University of Kentucky at Lexington. Sammy Baugh To Be Honored AtTCUKUTilt Sam Adrian Baugh, the lanky West Texan who be came one of football’s immor tals and greatest passers, will be honored at half-time of the TCU-Kansas game in Fort Worth the night of Sept. 19. Baugh, an All-American at TCU 1934-36 and top star of the profes sional leagues with the Washing ton Redskins for 16 years, has been named to the Hall of Fame. Dur ing the ceremonies here, he will re ceive a plaque from Jimmy Stew art of Dallas, a vice-president of the Hall of Fame Association. L. R. (Dutch) Meyer, TCU ath letic director and Baugh’s college coach, is in charge of the program. He is inviting all the Horned Frog players who competed with Baugh to be present. They will be intro duced to the crowd and form an honor guard as Sam receives his trophy. Baugh,, now assistant coach at Hardin-Simmons, has made ar rangements to be here for the fes tivities. The Cowboys will be play ing Oklahoma A&M in Stillwater that afternoon and Baugh plans to fly here. Cadets Will Face Kentucky Without 1952 Passing Ace Kentucky Wildcat fans who re member A&M’s last minute surge from their own 20 to the Ken tucky six-yard line last fall won’t have to worry any more about the leader of that thrilling, 74-yard march which almost handed the Aggies a victory. Ray Graves, all-Southwest con ference quarterback, was gradu ated from A&M this past spring. The skinny, rubber-legged runner and passer deluxe completed 19 of 26 aerials in that 10-7 Kentucky victory last year in College Sta tion. Graves passes his quarterbacking skill to Don Ellis, regular left half of the 1952 Aggie team. Ellis moves to quarterback for his senior year in 1953 and the way he oper ated the new, unbalanced T forma tion in spring training led many an observer to predict better things for the Cadets this fall. Ellis, who was married to Miss Rene Haupt this summer, operated this same offense at DeQuincey, La., high school and he’s a natural at it. The new formation at A&M is similar to the systems employed by Michigan State and Iowa. AGGIES!! We Have Food to Suit Your Taste Excellent Service Wehrman's Cafe Highway 21 West in Bryan City Limits f 1009 W. 25TH STREET Across the Highway from Bryan Tractor & Supply Co. The new formation, is the brain child of Dalton Faircloth, A&M’s ofensive backfield coach, who was Ellis’ high school mentor. As the Aggies wound up spring training here’s the way the start ing lineup shapes up for 1953. Ellis, qb; Connie Magouirk, Ih; Don Kachtik, fb; Joe Boring, rh; Eric Miller and Bennie Sinclair, ends; Durwood Scott and Law rence Winkler, tackles; Ray Bar rett and Sidney Theriot, gtiards and Fred Broussard, center. All are lettermen and played against Kentucky last year with the exception of Sinclair and Broussard. Sinclair was out with injuries in 1952 and Broussard was schol astically ineligible. A&M lost 16 lettermen and re turns 21 veterans. Included in the number lost is Leo Marquette, center, who was drafted for having low grades. Also, Howard Zuch, defensive end, and Hub Scott, de fensive halfback, quit football with the end of platooning. The 21 returnees also include a 1951 letterman—Bill Ballard—who did not play in 1952. Ballard is an end. In addition to Graves, A&M will miss Jack Little, all-American tackle, about as much as any of the ’52 regulars. Little was a de fensive demon last year and would have made a dandy one-platooner. In fact, he played both ways much of the 1951 season and was named lineman of the week after A&M’s 14-7 victory over Oklahoma’s Sooners that fall. WELCOME Fish and Upp erdassmen A. M. Waldrop & Co., is your jirst stop for a perfectly tailored uniform . . . and all accessories, tool Aggie Jewelry ★ Pennants and Stickers ★ Novelties of All Kinds ★ Aggie T-Shirts ★ Underwear and Socks ★ Army Footlockers ★ Towels ★ Collar Insignia ★ Ties ★ Webb Belts ★ Trench Coats SLACKS Hi-back 8.2 Cotton Hi-back Green Elastique Hi-back Pink Elastique KHAKI SHIRTS Mufti Poplin 8.2 Cramerton CAPS Dress or Overseas Cotton Khaki Green Elastique SHOES & POLISH Military Tennis Dress A. M. Waldrop & Co, has been serving Texas Aggies for the past 57 years, and with two stores in Bryan and College Station, we are better prepared to Serve you. Ask your Dad or any other Aggie about . . . d.TfJ. COalUlAop &Co. MENS CLOTHING* SINCE 1896 BRANDS . . . 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