Page 4 College Station, Texas Tuesday, Stepember 27, 1960 THE BATTALION Losing Streak Snapped As Tech Tied, 14-14 By JOE CALLICOATTE Battalion Sports Editor As history was in the making for Texas Tech on Kyle Field Saturday night as they made their Southwest Conference debut, there was a change in trend for the Aggies as fah as recent contests with Tech go. Saturday’s 14-14 tie with the Red Raiders was the first time since 1957 that the Cadets weren’t on the bottom end of the score. Although the Saturday night setting was typical of many week ends on the Aggie campus, it was by no means ideal for history- making, football or much of any thing as the rain poured in the 67-degree weather. 13,000 Fans However, the 13,000 faithful fans who viewed the A&M-Tech clash didn’t come out on the short end of an exciting evening. Texas Tech refused to believe the pre-game predictions that they were the underdogs and the first proof of this came as they drove to a first quarter touchdown resulting from an Aggie fumble on the nine-yard line. Jere Mohon was the man who pounced on the Powell Berry fumble that led to a score three plays later by. Dick Poison from four yards out. The extra point try was wide which left the score 6-0. The Aggies evened the score, plus a one-point lead in the latter part. of the third quarter as Sam Byer carried five straight times from the 15-yard line. Randy Sims’ sure-fire foot provided the 7-6 margin. Tech’s equalizer came later in the third quarter as the Cadet safety man w r as sucked out of position on a 38-yard pass play from Johnny Lovelace to Jay By rum. Tech’s only choice was to try for the two points, which they Lee Roy’s Ready Tech’s sophomore quarterback, Johnny and the Aggies fight to a 14-14 tie. Moving Lovelace, runs for a short gain in Saturday in for the kill is Lee Roy Caffey (34), Aggie night’s game which saw the Red Raiders fullback. Giddings Edges Consolidated In Hard - Fought Game, 14-8 Eight of Top Ten Schoolboy Grid Teams Escape Defeat By RUSSELL BROWN Battalion Sports Writer The Giddings Buffs rose to the occasion and toppled the A&M Consolidated Tigers, 14-8 Friday night in Giddings before a crowd of 2,000. The win was the 20-AA Buffs’ third in four starts including their second win against one defeat against District 19-AA foes. The Bengals, picked to cop the 19-AA crown in pre-season balloting, fell to their third loss in four outings. The larger Tigers contained the Buffs in their own own territory most of the night, yielding only 130 yards rushing and 17 yards passing to the hosts, but two breaks and the red flag, 100 yards worth, stymied the Maroon and White. While the defense was tightening, the Bengal offense moved the pigskin for 188 yards on the ground and 25 in the air, out-first-downing the Buffs 12-6. The first of the breaks came for the Buffs in the first quarter with only 50 seconds ticked off on the clock. Tiger quarterback Condy Pugh attempted a flat pass, but James Ponfick was there to swipe the toss and race 55 yards behind key blocking for the initial marker. Roy Schulz attempted the two-point conversion but failed, setting .the count at 6-0 early in the tilt. The Tigers came back undaunted with a ground attack that carried them 25 yards in seven plays be fore junior quarterback Russell Welch hit junior end Larry Ran dolph with a 25-yard pass to the Giddings six. Welch and Pugh then lugged it in, with Welch diving the final half-yard for the equalizer. Welch then ran the op tion to the right and plunged for the two points, giving the Bengals an 8-6 lead. Mississippi Holds Margin Over Syracuse in Football Poll By WILL GRIMSLEY Associated Press Sports Writer Mississippi clung to a narrow margin over Syracuse Tuesday in their tight two-team battle for the No. 1 position in the Associ ated Press’ weekly college foot ball poll. Washington continued as the only other serious bidder for first place although the two perennial pace-setters grabbed off 42 of the 48 top votes of the special panel representing all sections of the country. Mississippi, which smashed Ken tucky Saturday night 21-6 for its LEGAL NOTICE ORDINANCE NO. 304 AN ORDINANCE PROVIDING FOR THE REWARDING OF PERSONS WHO ARE INSTRUMENTAL IN BRINGING ABOUT THE ARREST AND CONVICTION OF PERSONS GUILTY OF THE CRIME OF ARSON. BE IT ORDAINED by the City Council of the City of College Station, Texas: Section I. The Mayor' of the City of College Station is hereby required, autho rized and empowered to offer a reward of not less than $250.00 payable to the person or persons who shall be responsible for the arrest and conviction of any person com mitting in said city the crime of ;mg : e is same is defined by State of Texas. II. Whenever arson the penal code of Secti as the the Mayor shall report of sai Marshal, and if said Marshal shall report that such fire was caused by the commis sion of the crime of arson, it shall become the duty of said Mayor to offer the re ward above described, which reward shall be in the form of a Proclamation duly issued by said Mayor under his official signature and attested by the seal of the City, and shall be posted up in a con spicuous place, one of which shall be at the City Office in said City in accordance with the regulations of the State Fire In surance Department. Upon the informa tion being given by any person who shall cause the arri persons so guilty rest ant uilty of person nd conviction of such )ecif- ew: ll Cl guilt rson for which said fered, and after the final conviction of said pecific crime of ard shall be of- rson or ch infoi persons, the pi motion shall be from sa II. on so givu tion shall be entitled to i id City such reward. Since the City has no arson ard ordinance, an emergency is hereby exist, Section II reward ordinance, an emergenc; declared to exist, and this ordi be in full force and effect immediately up on its passage and linance shall its passage and approv; PASSED AND APPROV ce tel; al. ED this the 22nd day of August, S/Ernest Langford Mayor ATTEST: S/N. M. McGinnis City Secretary second victory, was named best on 22 of the ballots and Syracuse, the defending national champion, on 20. Washington, in third place, received five votes and the other one went to Northwestern. Syracuse opened the new sea son with a caspal 35-7 triumph over Boston University — the team’s 12th straight and the 18th in a row for regular season play. Washington crushed Idaho 41-12. Illinois, 17-6 victor over Indi ana, held fourth place but below that position the weekly stand ings underwent a lively shakeup, featured by the rise of three Big Ten teams—Northwestern, Iowa and Ohio State. Kansas, which whipped Kansas State 41-0 as a prelude to its televised battle with Syracuse this week, rose from 11th to fifth. Then followed, in order, North- western, Clemson, Iowa, Ohio State and Georgia Tech. Top Ten Record Points 1. Mississippi 2-0 426 2. Syracuse 1-0 414 3. Washington 2-0 353 4. Illinois 1-0 235 5. Kansas 2-0 205 6. Northwestern 1-0 188 7. Clemson 1-0 137 8. Iowa 1-0 87 9. Ohio State 1-0 61 10. Georgia Tech 2-0 59 AGGIES GET YOUR BRASS LACQUER REMOVED AND POLISH AT Dobyne Jewelers Class ’42 North Gate The Tigers threatened again late in the second period, but four tries from the Buff 11 lost six yards and the Buffs took over. Playing top-notch defensive ball and punt-and-wait tactics, both clubs failed the counter in the third period, but Schulz’ 30-yard punt that rolled dead inside the Tiger one closed out the period. The Bengals worked the ball out to the three where Pugh punted to Schulz. The Buff speed ster lugged the mail to the 19. A fifteen-yard penalty set the ball on the Tiger 36 where R. J. Nitsche rambled for 29 yards to the seven. Schulz got three and senior fullback Eugene Goerlits rammed the final four yards. Nitsche passed to end Harvey Ardlt to set the final margin at 14-8 as the hosts ran out the clock. The Tigers play Crockett in Crockett Friday in another non district tilt before closing out their non-conference wars against Huntsville the following Friday in. College Station. By The Associated Press Eight of the top 10 teams in j Class AA schoolboy football re tained their unbeaten, untied rec ords last week although the “per fect” list was trimmed to 27. Sweetwater stepped down from Class AAA to administer the big lick, a 14-12 victory over fifth- ranked Stamford, which had a 19-game winning streak running. Brady, the 1959 champion by default, spoiled the other record among top ten teams. The Bull dogs, rated 10th, upset eighth- ranked Coleman 20-6. A couple of teams with perfect records, Electra and Jacksboro, lock horns this week in a Dis trict 9 game. Perryton sends its unbeaten mark against Class AAA Phillips in another of the week’s feature meetings. Olney, rated first and appar ently happily situated in the top slot, opens its district campaign this week against mediocre Iowa Park. Olney rolled to its third straight triumph Friday by crush ing Archer City 55-0. Hondo, No. 7, is the only other TYPEWRITERS Rental — Sales Service — Terms DISTRIBUTORS FOR: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines CATES TYPEWRITER CO. 909 S. Main TA 2-6000 Look your best at formal affairs Look your best on gala occa sions in formal clothes cleaned to perfection by us. Your “audience” will applaud! Try us soon. Campus Cleaners AGGIE KART-WAY (Every Ride A Race) BRYAN’S M MILE GO-KART RACE TRACK Highway 21 East—Across from Coulter Field Open Everyday from 1 P. M. until Midnight RACES EVERY SUNDAY AFTERNOON top team to move into district action. The south Texas power entertains Crystal City in its op ener, after preparing for league play with a 21-0 thumping of Uvalde. All in all, it was a pretty suc cessful week-end for the big boys. Second-ranked Taylor nudged La- Grange 19-12. Third-ranked Den ver City belted Abernathy 64-12. Hamlin, No. 6, blasted Rotan 44-0 and fourth-ranked Bellville clipped Lamar Consolidated 34-6. Gates- ville, No. 9, was idle. Despite the conference play and meetings of unbeaten teams, the spotlight this week will more than likely settle on Stamford, where the Bulldogs play host to Brady. Brady never has beaten Stam ford, although it was awarded the state championship last year when Stamford was found guilty of a recruiting violation. did well as Poison caught a Glen Amerson pass. One or Two Points? “It was my decision to kick after our 2nd touchdown because we had 14 minutes and the wind behind our backs,” was Coach Jim Myers’ reply after the Cadets were knocking on the doorsteps of the winning column with a score resulting from a 23-yard pass connection from Daryl Keel ing to Sims. Sims converted for a tie. There were varying opinions on Coach Myers’ decision on whether to settle for a tie or try for the win. Myers was told by one per son, “I don’t know whether to congratulate you or sympathize with you,” and the Aggie mentor replied, “Don’t congratulate me, we didn’t win.” FINAL TEAM STATISTICS First downs Rushing yardage Aggies 13 207 Tech 9 159 Passing yardage Total yardage Attempted passes Completed passes Punting average Fumbles 32 77 239 236 3 4 2 2 42 34 4 2 Fumbles lost 2 2 Yards penalized 15 10 A&M 0 0 7 7 14 Tech 6 0 8 0 14 Craig, Sims Lead Two Slat Columns The Aggies’ Babe Craig is lead ing the Southwest, Conference in punting with a 38.8 average and teammate Randy Sims is leading in punt .returns with a 21-yard average on five runbacks. Craig’s punting average was greatly aided Saturday night as he was on the sending end of four punts that traveled 161 yards for a 40.1 average. Sims also is averaging 1.000 at the PAT spot where he made the only two he has attempted against Tech. Four Texas College Teams Undefeated By The Associated Press Four teams are undefeated and untied in Texas college football as the campaign rounds out is first month. All 27 Texas colleges have now seen competition. Still with perfect records are Sul Ross, Howard Payne, Austin College and Baylor. Texas Tech, North Texas State and Texas A&I are unbeaten but have been tied. All of the unbeaten teams run the risk of losing their status this week. Baylor plays Louisiana State, Sul Ross meets Southwest Texas State, Howard Payne takes on A&I and Austin College hosts Standinga W L T Pet. Pts.OP Howard Payne 2 0 0 1.000 47 14 Sul Ross 2 0 0 1.000 40 14 Austin College 2 0 0 1.000 41 19 Baylor 1 0 0 1.000 26 0 Texas Tech 1 0 1 .750 52 28 Texas A&I 0 1 1 .500 14 14 N. Texas State 0 0 1 .500 16 16 Mississippi College. North Texas State meets Cincinnati and Texas Tech battles Texas. AGGIES NEED ANY WELDING DONE ? ? ? ? ★ BUILD FURNITURE, TRAILERS, ETC. ★ BUILD GO-KARTS ★ WELD ALUMINIUM HEADS & MANIFOLDS Call On SPAW’S WELDING SHOP VI 6-7209, Night VI 6-8367 (Next To Marion Pugh Lumber Company) Wes Roberts can tell you: “THERE'S NO CEILING FOR A SELF-STARTER IN THE TELEPHONE BUSINESS" JOYCES Charm & Modeling School IS HAVING TWO CLASSES FOR YOUNG MARRIED WOMEN Classes Start Thursday, Sept. 29th 7:30 to 8:30 P. M. — 8:30 to 9:30 P. M. “Offering Glamour For You” 6 Weeks Course—$5.00 REGISTER NOW AT JOYCE’S Classes Limited When Wes Roberts was nearing the end of his senior year at San Jose State College, he was looking for a job with a wide open future. He found it when he joined Pacific Telephone in San Francisco, Here’s how Wes tells it: “I remember one of my first jobs. The boss said, ‘Wes, I want you to work out a plan showing where we’ll need new field operating centers to keep up with Northern California’s growth over the next 10 years.’ I didn’t know whether I was more happy or scared.” Wes didn’t tell us (but his boss did) that he handled the report like a pro. And today, as a division supervisor, he’s holding down a key telephone job. Wes Roberts’ story is not unique in the Bell Telephone Companies. The telephone business is growing fast-and men are needed who can grow just as fast. Wes can tell you: “We get good training. But no one nurses you along. We hire managers —not errand boys. So far as I can see, there’s no ceiling for a self-starter in this business.” If you're a guy like Wes Roberts-if you like to bite off more than you can chew and then chew it—you’ll want to visit your Placement Office for literature and additional information. ‘Our number one aim is to have in all management jobs the most vital, intelli gent, positive and imaginative men we can possibly find.” Frederick R. Kappel, President American Telephone & Telegraph Co. © BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES