i M m rejlin fqotbal iy{nigii r y on C^S ill Houze sfi fresle r handtei ouraged! y- s infom 'atalogi roverniw ; books s-'l making Renewed interest in handball at A&M since the completion of 14 regulation-sized courts in DeWare Field House has resulted in the reorganization of the A&M Hand ball Club. In the mid-50s, the Aggie hand- club played an active role in [intercollegiate competition in Tex- [as and sent players to the na tionals with above-average results. I The revived organization, spon sored by Eugene Evans of the modern languages department, held its first meeting Oct. 2 in DeWare Field House. Sixteen men were present at the gathering. Accomplished at the initial meet ing was a discussion of the aims and policies of the club, election of [temporary officers and drawing [for positions on a handball ladder. THE TEMPORARY OFFICERS [selected: Ed Merritt, president; iKimbrough Johns, vice president; [Paul Busch, secretary; Jerry Levy, [treasurer; Ray Allen, reporter; [and Jay Page, social chairman. | The club scheduled a second [meeting to be held on Oct. 16 at [7:30 p.m. on the north side of the [basketball court in DeWare Field [House. At this meeting will be [the election of permanent officers, [the drafting of a club constitution [and further discussion of club [policies. Anyone interested in [playing handball, whether he has [experience or not, has been in- [vited to attend. | Competition will begin Tuesday [Oct. 9 in the handball ladder, ac cording to Evans. The ladder will [contain 32 positions and will be [kept in the field house in the vi- [cinity of the new handball courts. Each member will be eligible to [challenge any of the three players I immediately above him on the lad der. THERE WILL be a perpetual round-robin turney for the 32 lad der members which will, include both singles and doubles divisions. This tournament will probably | proceed at the rate of one round ‘signed Hod a week. Exact details on the round robin competition will be worked out at the Oct. 16 meeting. Later in the year a team will be selected which will represent the club both in tournament play - jand competition with other ' a Jf. schools. This team will consist of from six to 10 men and the selec- Gymnastics Club Organizes Today The A&M Gymnastics Club will hold its first meeting Tuesday (to day) at 5:15 p.m. in Room 352 of the addition to G. Rollie White Coliseum. All students interested in par ticipating in the year’s activities of the gymnastics club should at tend this organizational meeting. Plans for the coming school year, Including exhibitions this fall and (ompetition next spring will be discussed at the meeting. Gymnastics instructor and team coach Henry Walton of the De partment of Health and Physical Education will work with the club again this year. Additional in formation about the club and team can be gotten from Walton. WESTINGHOUSE GOLDEN DAYS LAUNDEAMAT Washes Better Rinses Cleaner Fully Automatic $188.95 $10.00 Per Month K R AI T FURNITURE CO. BRYAN tion will probably be based on the ladder standings. As of now, the club plans to send the handball team to Texas University, Baylor, SMU, Rice and the Jewish Community Center in Houston. It is hoped that hand ballers from these organizations will also be able to schedule trips to the A&M campus for competi tion. In addition to the trips men tioned above, Evans said that the team will enter the Southwest Conference Handball Tournament at the YMCA in Houston. They also plan to enter six men in the NCAA tournament which will probably be either in St. Louis, Mo. or Miami, Fla. ALSO INCLUDED in the activi ties of the club will be the con ducting of handball clinics. One will involve basic instructions on form and regulations for begin ning players. The second clinic will be for players of limited experience and will have as its purpose making less mature players aware of the finer points of the game, accord ing to Evans. And, it will widen their experience to include possi bilities of the game not generally encountered during the first two years of playing. Mcliiiaiiy Runs 100 Yards To Put Ags In Win Column i?ice Soph Leads SWC In Passing By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sophomore Walter McReynolds of Rice took over the passing lead ership of the Southwest Confer ence last week when he flung 11 for 179 yards against Penn State. It was the only change in the major statistics as Billy Moore, Arkansas’ busy quartermack, in creased his lead in ball carrying and did the same as top man in total offense. McReynolds has completed 24 passes for 3.58 yards and two touchdowns but the leader per centagewise is the irrepressible Moore who has done .815 with 22 connections in 27 for 253 yards and. the runnerup sgot. Don Trull of Baylor, the leader last week, dropped down to third with 22 completions for 292 yards. Moore, leading in total offense, has compiled 487 yards on 60 plays for a average of 8.1 per play. Mc Reynolds is second with 337 yards on 67 plays, although he is minus 21 yards in rushing. Danny Mcllhany A 5-11, 180-pound sophomore from South Houston, this Aggie halfback, helped by teammates who threw do-or-die blocks,.put Coach Hank Foldberg’s footballers in the win column Saturday. The former quarterback covered 130 yards in 17 seconds on a 102-yard kickoff return in the last 19 seconds after a Tech field goal to pull a 7-3 victory out of despair. After Pre-Season Worries Hiller Is Suddenly A Hero By JOE REICHLER Associated Press Sports Writer NEW YORK ) — “All year I‘ve been fighting for my life,” Chuck Hiller was saying. “And suddenly I’m a hei’o. Baseball sure is a funny game.” For more than 1% hours after Monday’s fourth World Series game, a 7-3 San Francisco victory over New York, made possible by Chuck Hiller’s grand slam homer, the chunky little second baseman was surrounded by reporters, be sieged with countless questions. “Was I thinking of hitting a home run?” he • said. “Heck, no. All I was hoping was to get a piece of the ball. I don’t suppose you know I hit only three home runs all year. They’ve been so few and far between, I can remember the date, the pitcher, the inning, even the pitch. “I got one of them off a left hander, too, just like this time. It came off Dennis Bennett of the Phillies. The others were off Glenn Hobbie Chicago and Elroy Face Pittsburgh.” Hiller’s homer Monday was hit © STUDENT RATE MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS t6i6u$6, you* Cotfape Stone PUBLICATION SCHOOL TERM RATE 1 YEAR Atlantic Monthly 3.50 (8 mo.) 8.50 Downbeat 3.50 (8 mo.) 5.00 Ebony 2.00 (8 mo.) 3.50 Esquire 2.00 (8 mo.) 6.00 Fortune 7.50 Holiday 1.80 (6 issues) 3.60 Life 2.00 (6 mo.) 2.98 Look 2.00 Negro Digest 2.40 (8 mo.) 4.00 New Yorker 3.00 (8 mo.) Newsweek 2.75 (34 wks.) 3.50 Reader’s Digest 2.97 Reporter 2.50 (8 mo.) 4.50 Saturday Eve. Post 2.00 (25 issues) 3.00 Sports Illustrated rates go up 1-1-63 4.00 Time 3.00 (8 mo.) 4.00 A NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF COLLEGE STORES SERVICE To: THE EXCHANGE STORE CAMPUS Please enter my order for the following magazines on the current Student Rate. I am including the 2% State Tax current ly collectable. NAME St. Address or P. O. Box Number City State School .... Year of Graduation Amount The Exchange Store ‘Serving Texas Aggies” off Marshal Bridges, a left-handed relief pitcher. It came with two out, three men on base, on a 1-1 count in the seventh inning and snapped a 2-2 tie. Hiller, who first became a Giant in 1961, is still a Giant simply be cause they couldn’t get rid of him. They tried to trade him all last winter and early this season. Said the 27-year-old Hiller. “I had read all winter that the Giants were trying to trade me. Was I worried? You had to be dead not to worry. “No one can imagine my relief when Dark came to me early in the season and toid me not to worry.” By JIM BUTLER Battalion Ass’t Sports Editor Danny Mcllhany, soph halfback from South Flouston, stood on the Aggie goal line and in 19 seconds wrote a storybook ending that would make Alfred Hitchcock look like an amateur as A&M downed Texas Tech 7-3 Saturday night. With the scoreboard spelling Ag gie doom after a 23-yard field goal by Tech’s H. L. Daniels, Mcllhany took the kickoff and raced 100 yards into stardom. The run broke Joel Hunt’s record of a 97-yard return against Arkansas in 1927. Following - a 15-yard penalty prompted by the Cadet Corps stroming onto the field, Mike Clark booted the extra point from the 25 to end the scoring. RONNIE BRICE kicked short to the Tech 41 where Raider Ronnie McWilliams covered the ball as triple zeros hit the scoreboard and the Aggies had won. In a hard-fought game that no dangerous threats by either team unitl Daniels’ field goal, the Farm ers and Red Raiders exchanged punts, fumbles, and intercepted passes until thq. final deciding- minute. Tech won the toss and sent the kickoff far out of the end zone and the Ags took over on the 20. Mcllhany went over left tackle for nine, yards, Sam Byer tried right guard losing the first yard of his collegiate career; and Travis Rea gan, leading ball carrier for the Ags with 60 yai'ds in 6 tries, turn ed left end for three yards and a first down. TECH STOPPED A&M on the Aggie 36 where quarterback James Willenborg punted 50 yards to the Tech 14. With Johnny Lovelace at quar terback, Tech moved back to their own 34 where Richard Mahan punted to the Aggie 26. Halfback George Hargett returned to the A&M 29. Aggie control was short lived, however, as Tech’s Roger Gill in tercepted an Erickson pass and re turned it to the Tech 30. The Red Raiders moved to the Aggie 31 where on a fourth-and-two situ ation Tech elected to punt and Mahan kicked to the Agg-ie 17. The Cadets were unable to get rolling and Ronnie Ledbetter boom ed a 63 yard punt to the Raider two yard line. With the Raiders on the offense, Lovelace fumbled on the Tech 43 and Aggie Ken McLean recovered it. As the half drew to a close, A&M marched to the Tech 29 where Mike Clark’s 36 yard field goal at tempt was wide to the right. THE SECOND HALF was much the same as Tech kicked off and Mcllhany returned to the Aggie 20. Reagan broke through the mid dle for 43 yards, the longest Aggie gain from scrimmage. Following- an exchange of punts, Tech recovered a George Hargett fumble on the A&M 37. The Raid ers ran three plays without a gain and Daniels missed a field goal attempt from the Aggie 36. The Aggies took over and with Lee Roy Caffey, playing in his first game this season, doing the brunt of the work, A&M moved to the Tech 17. With a fourth-and-four facing the Cadets, Willenborg passed to Hargett complete for three yards and Tech regained the ball. The Ags and Raiders exchanged punts for a final time and with the clock running out, Tech drove 68 yards from theor own 25 to the Ag gie five. Hunt hit left tackle for two, Gill tried right tackle and got one. Tech QB Doug Cannon sent Gill around right end where the Aggie forward wall snowed him under for a loss of five. With four th down and seven yards to go, Daniels kicked his tie-breaker and Tech led 3-0. , THE CLOCK granted only 19 seconds of life as 20,000 silent fans watched the teams line up for the kickoff. Mcllhany took Daniels’ kick two yards deep in the end zone. A swath of Tech tacklers met him at the 22 but Mcllhany bounced a- round them and sped for the west sideline. A chain of blockers join ed him at the Aggie -30. Blocks by Melvin Simmons, Ronnie Cai’penter, and Jerry Hopkins sprang him as he crossed the goal. Clark kicked the point and the tale was told. .Jfispgg. Subscribe Now at Half Price * Distributed from BOSTON LOS ANGELES LONDON CHICAGO Objective Hews Reports • Constructive Background Material Literary and Entertainment Hews • Penetrating Editorials Clip this advertisement and re turn it with your check or money order to: The Christian Science Monitor One Norway St., Boston 15, Mass. □ 1 Year $11 □ 6 mos. $5.50 •i'This special offer available to college students. Faculty memb< ond college libraries also eligib when subscribing themselves. ers igible. A midwestern college audience recently heard this answer in a talk by A.T.& T. Board'Chairman, Frederick R. Kappel ‘’To us this is an important question because we hire nearly 3000 college graduates yearly. To get an answer we went to our own files and examined the records of nearly 17,000 people. We checked each man’s compara tive success against what he achieved in college. “As a group, the scholars won handily. Of the men who stood among the top third in salary for their level of experience, more than half were also in the top third of their college class. Only a quarter were in the bottom third. “And contrary to age-old beliefs, extracurricular activi ties proved a lesser indicator unless the individual had an outstanding achievement. Mere ‘joining’ was not enough. “The study indicates, at least as far as the Bell System goes, that there's little opportunity for college students who practice ‘diplomaship’ —the belief that a diploma automatically leads to job success. Such thinking will not make telephone service what we know it can be. “The men we want are men with intelligence plus those other attributes that give you the feel, the sense that they will make things move and move well—men who want to excel and are determined to work £t it. “Nothing short of excellence will do.” Frederick R. Kappel, Chairman of the Board American Telephone and Telegraph Company BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES