The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 24, 1961, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Page 4
College Station, Texas
Tuesday, October 24, 1961
THE B'ATTAtfON
Linnstaedter Kem^Is Off Long Gainer
. . . Frog-s lies (88) and Pinion (68) give chase
MEDWAY CORRAL
COMPLETE LINE OF WESTERN WEAR-FEATUR
ING AMERICAN AND BANDERA HATS.
3109 Texas Ave.
TA 2-1195
BEST IN SPORTS EQUIPMENT
PISTOLS—Roger, Colt, Smith-Wesson, High Standard
RIFLES & SHOTGUNS—Browning, Remington, Win
chester
SCOPES—Lyman, Weaver, Redfield, Bausch and Lomb,
Weatherby, Leupold
WE ALSO HANDLE
Archery equipment, fishing
tackle, reloading equipment,
binoculars, knives, game calls,
insulated underwear.
The Sports Center
911 S. College Ave, Bryan
Wilt Chambejrlain of the Phil
adelphia Warriors paced National
Basketball Association scoring last
season with an average of 38.8
points in 79 games.
TCU 7.7; AGS 14
Horned Frogs Still Aggie Thunder
With Fourth Period Field Goal
Lady Luck frowned on the Ag
gies last Saturday afternoon in
Fort Worth as the “shamrock-
studded” TCU H o r n ed Frogs
slipped past the Cadets in a thrill
ed, 15-14.
Trailing the entire game, the
Frogs pulled into the lead with
only 2:31 remaining in the game
on a field goal by reserve half
back Jerry Spearman. The three-
pointer covered 20 yards and was
the third of the year for Spear
man.
The play that probably broke
the Aggies’ back was a tip-of-the-
finger catch of a 44-yard touch
down pass from Sonny Gibbs to
Dale Glasscock. Ag Jim Keller
was in position to knock the ball
down, but it bounced the wrong
way into Glasscock’s hands.
Even in defeat the Aggies
looked outstanding especially on
offense. The second unit furn
ished most of the scoring punch
with the sparkling running of
Travis Reagan and Jim Linnstead-
ter. Time and again, they skirted
TCU’s ends for substantial gains.
Linnsteadter was A&M’s leading
rusher with 65 yards on nine car
ries. He gained another 15 yards
but it was called back because of
a penalty. •
Slamming Sam Byer and Rea
gan each gained 28 yards for the
day. John Erickson, the second
unit quarterback, led the Aggies
in passing with 5-11 for 63 yards.
On defense there was no doubt
who was outstanding for A&M—
Lee Roy Caffey. He blocked a
Frog extra point attempt and was
brilliant from his linebackiing po
sition.
After playing a scoreless first
quarter, the Aggies came alive in
the second stanza and marched
76 yards in 10 plays for the first
touchdown. The big play in the
drive was a 27-yard scamper by
Reagan. From the TCU 24, Linn
staedter carried to the six and
two plays later Reagan slid across
left tackle for the score. Daryle
Keeling kicked the first of his two
extra points.
With only three seconds left in
the first half, Mike Clark at
tempted a field goal from the TCU
14, but it was wide.
Field Goals Pacing SWC
Special To The Battalion
Only the field goal, a resur
rected weapon, rivals the stamped
ing University of Texas Long
horns in the Southwest Confer
ence statistics story midway of
the season.
Texas, the nation’s total offense
leader for two weeks, likely main
tained that torrid pace last week
by totaling 402 yards against title-
defending Arkansas. The Long
horns’ season average slipped only
to 437.2 yards per game as they
made shambles of a highly-rated
defense, and that mean is almost
18 yards better than runner-up
Mississippi claimed in the national
standings last week. Ole Miss
totaled 375 yards in its season-
inaugural conquest of Arkansas.
The field goal decider two of the
four conference games played last
week, with Texas Tech and TCU
each coming from behind to sal
vage victories. Tech edged Bay
lor, 19-17, on H. L. Daniels’ kick,
while TCU nipped Texas A&M,
15-14, on Jerry Spearman’s third
conversion of the season.
Rice also kicked a field goal in
its 10-0 conquest of Southern
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WANT AD RATES
?ne day S* per word
eh addltiontil day
2d per word each additional
Minimum charsre—40d
DEADLINE
4 p.m. day before publication
Classified Displn
per column
sch insertio
_ lay
80d per column inch
each insertion
PHONE VI 6-6415
FOR RENT
Furnished apartment. Foch and Asr
Apply at 4407 Aspen after 5. 2
Something: nice In one bedroom furnished
rtmei
hs, c
TA 2-78C0.
om
apartment, large room, plenty closets, 1%
baths, close in, garage. No dogs. Phi
one
133tfn
Room with private entrance and privab
ith or without kitchen privilege
6-4164 after 6 p. m.
bath with
Call VI
privilege.
131tfn
Bar-B-Q - Steaks - Sea Food
Home Made Pies
THE COUNTRY KITCHEN
2 , /2 Miles West of
College Station
Highway 60 (Jones Bridge Rd)
Mae & Frank Meads, Owners
HOME & CAR
RADIO REPAIRS
SALES & SERVICE
KEN’S RADIO & TV
303 W. 26th TA 2-2819
WILSON PHARMACY
Telephone VI 6-8020
3822 Texas Avenue
Bryan, Texas
EXPERT - GUARANTEED
REPAIRS
• Small Home Appliances
• Fans and Lamps
• Television (All Makes)
• Car Radios
• Electric Razors & Clippers
DOERGE RADIO &
APPLIANCE SERVICE
3212 Doerge Street TA 2-0223
(Behind Midway Repair Ser.)
FOR SALE
OFFICIAL NOTICES
1952 Ford, ftood transportation car,
$175.00. Apply at W-l-I Hensel Apt. 23t4
Official notices must be brought, mailed
or telephoned so as to arrive In the Office
of Student Publications (Ground Floor
YMOA, VI 6-6415, hours 8-12, 1-5. dally
Monday through Friday) at or before the
deadline of 1 p.m. of the day preceding
publication — Director of Student Publica
tions.
’57 Buick Century. 2 door hardtop, pow
er steering and brakes. Excellent condi
tion. $750.00. Phone TA 2-0395. 23t4
Whirlpool automatic washer. Steal—
$25.00. VI 6-5203 22t3
All Arts & Sciences students who have
transferred to A. and M. from another
school this year are requested to report
to the office of the Dean of Arts and
Sciences, 208 Nagle Hall, as soon as
possible. 16tfn
Violin and trombone, see at 406 S.
Sterling:, Bryan. 22t2
WORK WANTED
DEGREE FILING DEADLINE SET FOR
OCTOBER 27, 1961
Applications for degree (baccalaureate
and advanced) are now being accepted in
the Registrar’s Office from all students
who will complete their requirements for
graduation by January 20, 1962. Advanced
degree candidates must file application with
both the Registrar's and the Graduate
Dean’s office.
H. L. Heaton, Director of
Admissions and Registrar 13tl4
DAY NURSERY by the week, day or
hour. Call Mrs. Gregory, 502 Boyett
VI 6-4006. 120tfn
Our nursery fox children all ages. Pick
up and deliver. VI 6-8151. No answer call
back. 42tfn
SOSOLIKS
T. V., Radio, Phono., Car Radio
Transistor Radio Service
713 S. Main TA 2-1941
SPECIAL NOTICE
Electrolux Sales and Servles. G. O,
Williams. TA 8-6600. 80tf*
Now start your fall fishing and picnic-
jng right at Hilltop Lake, 9% miles South
of College on Highway 6. Itfn
• ENGINEERING AND
ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES
• BLUE LINE PRINTS
• BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS
SCOATES INDUSTRIES
608 Old Sulphur Springs Road
BRYAN. TEXAS
TV - Radio - Hi-Fi
Service & Repair
GELS RADIO & TV
TA 2-0826 2403 S. College
AGGIES NOTICE
For Your Auto Parts And Aces-
sories At A Discount See Us—
Gulfpride, Esso, Havoline,
Sinclair Oils 31c Qt.
RC Champion Sparkplugs 29c
DISCOUNT AUTO PARTS
Water Pumps - Generators -
Starters - Fuel Pumps - Brake
Parts - Carburetors. Just About
Any Part & Accessories You
Need For Your Car.
Filter - 40% Discount
AT JOE FAULK’S
25th & Washington
SAE 30 MOTOR OIL 15c Qt.
TYPEWRITERS
Rentals-Sales-Service-
Terms
Distributors For:
Royal and Victor
Calculators &
Adding Machines
CATES
TYPEWRITER CO.
909 S. Main TA 2-6000
Methodist. It was the fourth of
the season for Butch Blume, and,
ironically, none has determined a
winner.
A total of 15 field goals have
been kicked by SWC teams in 28
games played thus far, which
likely is an all-time record. Only
14 were kicked throughout the
1960 campaign and that was the
highest figure in the history of
the league statistics service.
Texas is the only member that
has not kicked one, and the Long
horns hardly have needed one with
a scoring average of 34.4 while
limiting the opponents to a 7.8
mean.
Like Spearman, Carl Choate of
Baylor has kicked three field goals.
The former has provided the win
nings margin twice—over Kansas
and the Aggies, and he had one
attempt against A&M bounce back
on to the playing field after strik
ing an upright. A Choate kick
was the deciding factor against
Pittsburgh, 16-13.
Daniels’ game-winner was his
second field goal in as many
games. Others who have scored
are John Richey of SMU, whose
boot overcame the Air Force
Academy; Mickey Cissell of Ar
kansas, who won the title for Ar
kansas with last-minute kicks
against Texas and Rice last year,
and Mike Claik of A&M.
Baylor wrested the passing-per-
game lead from Texas, but no rival
is even close at rushing. Nor is
anyone challenging Texas’ defen
sive leadership, although TCU,
A&M and Arkansas have limited
the foes to fewer yards overhead.
A&M and Rice lead in pass inter
ceptions, with 10 and 9, respect
ively.
Tech’s Bake Turner, one of the
league’s most versatile backs,
wrested team punting honors from
SMU as he lifted his team’s aver
age to 38.3, while SMU slumped
to even 37, Rice is now second
at 37.8.
Texas’ point total of 172 in five
games is five more than the Long
horns scored all last season.
In the second half, TCU Coach
Abe Martin decided to use his
injured quarterback—Sonny Gibbs,
who had three broken ribs. Gibbs’
masterful faking kept the Cadets
searching for the ball and broke
his receiver into the open. Even
though Gibbs played a limited
time, he completed 7-9 passes for
136 yards.
The Frogs pulled to within one
point of the Ags in the third quar
ter and this seemed to make the
Aggies angry. They took the
kickoff and . stormed 67 yards in
12 plays with Byer going over
right tackle for the final two
yards.
Then came TCU’s lucky break—
the pass from Gibbs to Glasscock,
but the try for the 2-point con
version was no good and the Ags
still led, 14-12.
Punter Babe Craig tried his best
to “cool off” the Frogs as lie
kicked 51 yards to the TCU one-
yard line with only 10:23 left.
From there Gibbs led the Frogs
98 yards in 16 plays to the A&M
one where Spearman won the
game.
Ray Pinion, the big guard from
TCU, ended the Cadets’ final
threat with an interception on the
A&M 43.
1 1 ■ ■ ri ri k itf ■■■■riHii'MH MTI llff]
“Sports Car Center”
Dealers for
Renault-Peugeot
&
British Motor Cars
Sales—Parts—Service
‘We Service All Foreign Cars"!
1416 Texas Ave.
■ if*
^70 K1 RD s m©
FOOTBALL A
CONTEST llO.X
(For games played Saturday, Oct 7)
1st
Prize
$100°°
CASH!
Eugene Byrd, Accounting Major, class of ’63, walked
away with VICEROYS first prize of $100.00 in the
first of four VICEROY FOOTBALL CONTEST for
the students of Texas A & M. Robert W. Hutchins
class of ’62 took second prize of $50.00, and Edwin
Farris, class of ’62 won third prize of $25.00.
Five runner-up prizes of $10.00 each:
5 PRIZES OF $10 EACH WON BY THESE STUDENTS ON CAMPUS!
S,V;’
Bernard Hoffart, Paul Martin, Charles W. Moore, M. A. Murillo, T. G.
Whiteley, .. . ^
—A carton of Viceroys to all students who got all the winners right, regardless of scores!
ENTER CONTEST
Here Are the Contest Rules:
Cash Available For Books, Slide Rules, & Etc
5,000 AGGIES CAN’T BE WRONG
LOUPOTS
I. Any student or faculty member on this campus may enter except
employees of Brown & Williamson, its advertising agencies, or members
of their immediate families. All entries become the property of Brown &
Williamson—none will be returned. Winners will be notified within three
weeks after each contest. Winners’ names may be published in this news
paper. You may enter as often as you wish, provided each entry is sent
individually. Contest subject to all governmental regulations. Entries must
be postmarked or dropped in ballot box on campus no later than the
Wednesday midnight before the games are played and received by noon
Friday of thesame week. The righttodiscontinuefuturecontestsisreserved;
2. Entries must be in contestant’s own name. On the coupon in this ad or
on an Official Entry Blank or piece of paper of the same size and format,
write your predictions of the scores of the games and check the winners.
Enclose an empty Viceroy package or a reasonable rendition of the Viceroy
name as it appears on the package front. Mail entry to Viceroy at the Box
Number on the entry blank, or drop in Viceroy Football Contest Ballot
Box on campus.
3. Entries will be judged by The Reuben H. Donnelley Corp., on the basis
ot number of winners correctly predicted. Ties will be broken on the basis
of scores predicted. Duplicate prizes awarded in case of final ties^
4. Winners are eligible for any prize in subsequent contests;
(Attach Viceroy package or facsimile here)
Viceroy College Football
CONTEST NO. 3
Here are my predictions for next Saturday’s games.'
Send my prize money to:
NAME CLASS
(please print plainly)
ADDRESS.
□
□
WIN
[D Texas
U. of Houston
Texas A&M
I | Sam Houston St. Coll.
[33] Lamar Coll, of Tech.
□ Rica
Q] Minnesota
[ I Notre Dam*
Q Illinois
□ U. C. 1. A.
SCORE WIN
n s. m. u.
Q U. of Tulsa (Nov. 11)
______ Q Arkansas
_____ QJ Sul Ross
^____ [] _] Texas A & 1
. , | ] Texas Tech;
Michigan Sf.
Navy
Purdua
California
SCORE
□
□
□
□
Contest open ONLY TO STUDENTS AND FACULTY ON THIS CAMPUS.
Mail before midnight, Nov. 1, to: Viceroy, Box seB Mt. Vernon 10, New York
Volun
G
FALJ
Jo
Ilf
Thirteei
journalist
I father oi
Im, Satu
joeting.
With al
rented,
iograms
Journalist
ipeakers
The {T 1
Incheon
i«, and
|ylor fc
Wives i
vill visit
time,
Mu
3rd
Irat
Charles
Igricultur
La Grang
ors in th
U. 4-H
test at t!
Was thi
Lehman
limn 22 (
lud Centr
“During
mctor op
he were
m ani
dthe sci
a to be p
In qua!
lehmann
minty, di
bp pr
livance o
&( agric
fartment.
Trophie
fet four
i! partici]
tere pres
Mias are
le Oil ;
thich sp<
Isas.
The wij
boll C
thile seo
Minson,
T (
ftchan
Antoni
Jnjum
fellow