Pace 4 THE BATTALION Colleg-e Station, Texas Friday, October 2fi, 1962 Cadet Footballers Face Baylor Bears III Coach Hank Foldberg-’s Cadet gridders will travel to Waco Sat urday to play the Baylor Bears at 8 p.m. before a homecoming crowd. The seven-point underdog Ags will be out to spoil the cere monies. Both teams have won but a single game each and the victories Texas Needs 'm Mm m Gonnaily! ^—jmmm. Only lofirt Coiinalfy cart provide our state the cali ber of strong, responsible leadership to meet the problems and opportunities - •"*<**■***#’•* - ■ «--y^l»-Try: r- ~ A VOTE FOR JOHN CONN ALLY IS A VOTE FOR:. • Educational opportunity; • Better job opportunity. • Economy in government. • Increased attention to our elderly and depend ent REMEMBER! Democratic Texas has the lowest total per capita taxes of any major state in the nation. Vote to keep sound economical govern- jment ... j j . -*j~ IrVote for Democrat Tl I dohn i I Cbnnaily I for I Governorl S ' IBMBBBiBI were at the expense of hapless Texas Tech. The Farmers edged the Raiders 7-3 three weeks ago and the Bears handled them 28-6 last weekend. The other common opponent for the two squads was Houston,.which managed a 19-0 shutout over the Bears and barely got past' A&M, 6-3. IT LOOKS LIKE the defensive secondary of the Ags will never g-et any rest—certainly not Sat urday. In Baylor quarterback Don Trull, they face the SWC’s lead ing passer. Trull has made good 48 to 88 for 620 yards. He adds 40 more on 40 tries for a 5.4-yard per play average that is second in the league. Fish Slarl Even, End E\en Tie Kittens on Kyle, 14-14 1 . : ' ■ g t ■: 1111® 111 - mf! la|rai Baylor coach John Bridgers was far from satisfied with the team he will field Saturday night. “The Aggies probably offer more prob lems to our defense than any team we have played this season,” he said Tuesday. “They look like a team that has suddenly jelled, be gun to learn its offense and is ready to start beating people,” he added. BRIDGERS WAS referring to A&M's showing against the TCU Horned Frogs last weekend. Fold- berg’s ball control tactics nearly produced an upset and opened more than one eye around the SWC. CORRECTED SCHEDULE Outfit picture for the Aggieland will be made according to the schedule below. Uniform will be class A winter. Outfit C. O.s will wear sabers; seniors will wear boots. Ike jackets may be worn if all sen iors in the outfit can obtain them. Guidons and Award flags will be carried. All personnel in the outfit will wear the billed service cap issued by the col lege. The type of cap worn by underclassmen to and from the picture taking area is left to the discretion of the outfit C. O. Outfits should be in front of the Administration Building by 1230 hrs. on the appointed day. Arrangements should be made by the first sergeant with mess hall supervisors to allow the outfit to be admitted to the mess hall early. 25 Oct. A-l, B1 26 Oct. C-l, D-l 29 Oct. E-l, F-l 30 Oct. G-l, G-2 31 Oct. A-2, B-2 1 Nov, C-2, D-2 2 Nov. E-2, F-2 5 Nov. A-3, B-3 6 Nov. C-3, D-3 7 Nov. H-3, Sqd. 16 8 Nov. E-3, F-3 12 Nov. G-3, 1-3 13 Nov. Sqd. 1, Sqd. 2 14 Nov. Sqd. 3, Sqd. 4 15 Nov. Sqd. 5, Sqd. 6 27 Nov. Sqd. 7, Sqd. 8 28 Nov. Sqd. 9, Sqd. 10 29 Nov. Sqd. 11, Sqd. 12 30 Nov. Sqd. 13, Sqd. 14 3 Dec. Sqd. 15 4 Dec. M-Band, W-Band EAST TEXAS PULP AND PAPER COMPANY offers EXCEPTIONAL CAREER OPPORTUNITIES SENIORS AND GRADUATE STUDENTS New, modern, 400-ton bleached kraft pulp and paper plant, manufacturing pulp and paper for many of the well-known paper products you use each day. Major expansion program presently in progress, with October 1963 completion date. Good salaries, and all fringe benefits. CAMPUS INTERVIEWS MONDAY, OCTOBER 29th MECHANICAL ENGINEERS, CIVIL ENGINEERS CHEMICAL ENGINEERS AND CHEMISTS Ags Will Miss Jerry Rogers Junior fullback Jerry Rogers will be out for the rest of the ’62 football season. Rogers hurt his right knee in the Houston game and re-injured it last Saturday against TCU. The knee was operated on this week. Although A&M will miss his hard running on offense and his red-dogging linebacker play, the strong fullback corps of Sam Byer, Budgie Ford and Mike Kohlman will still maintain one of the deepest positions on the lineup. INTRAMURALS By JIM BUTLER Battalion Ass’t Sports Editor In a football game that showed more flip-flop ball carx-ying than flip-flop offense, the A&M Fish and the U. of H. Kittens struggled to a 14-14 tie on Kyle Field Thurs day night. A&M drew fmst blood late in the first quarter when guard Joe Wellborn x'ecovered a Houston fumble on the Kitten 33. Eight plays later, halfback Jim Stabler skix-ted right end for five yards and the touchdown. Bob Lee converted and the Fish led 7-0. Facing a fourth-and-four on the Aggie 25, Cooper passed to end Mickey Thompson who was hit immediately on the 11. Thompson fumbled and Kitten Allen Cecil covered the ball on the 4. . Following a five-yard offside penalty against Houston, Cooper passed to Thompson in the zone. A high pass from center foiled the conversion attempt and the Fish still led 7-6. With three minutes left in the first half, Wellbonx again got into the act and blocked a Kitten punt on the Houston 28. Center Jerry Crow picked up the loose ball and and ran 16 plays, x’eaching the Kit ten 13 before their half quarter x’an out. Houston took over and used the other half of the quax-ter for 14 plays which moved the ball to the Fish 13. The music stopped, the ball changed partners, and the Fish took over for 18 plays ending up on the Houston 35. The Aggies had run 34 plat; the half, so the Kittens % they had 20 plays coming tot? They took 21 plays and the a play made the difference. Halfback Bill Garrison mi right tackle and the goal linei 1:34 showing on the clock. Co passed to end Carl Cuminft for two points and the game er four plays later. Winners in the intramural horse shoe pitching games Thursday, Class B division, were Sqd. 4 over Maroon Band, forfeit; Sqd. 9 won over Sqd. 12, 2-1; Sqd. 2 defeated G-3, 2-1; F-3 heat Sqd. 10, 2-1; and D-3 won over G-l, 2-1. Winning players for D-3 were Dan Shax’p, Ken Wantzloeben, Kel vin Andrews, Gerald Stockstill, William Dowden and Robert Ma thews. Civilian basketball winners Thursday wex’e Vet Students over Walton Hall, 31-25; and Hart Hall over Milner Hall, 37-23. Results in the Class A handball games’: Sqd. 13 over’ Maroon Band, forfeit; G-2 beat C-2 beat C-2, 2-1; and E_1 defeated A-3, 3-0. Upperclassman winners for G-2 were Tom Arnold, Bob Mitchell, James Beamer and Don Vick. E-l’s winning players were Leroy Hoel- ting, Scott Mosty, Geoi’ge Keester, Dennis Newton, Mike Higgins and Herbert Kieschnick. *63 CHEVROLET IMPALA SPORT COUPE mzmmrnm N0W...G0 CHEVROLET FOR ONE-STOP SHOPPING IN ’63 ITS EXCITING! This is about the best thing that's happened to - buying - cars~sinco Chevrolet started building them—four entirely different kinds of cars to choose from at your Chevrolet dealer's One-Stop Shopping Center. If you're a luxury-lover, you’ll probably want to go no further, than those 13 plush new Jet-smooth '63 Chevrolets. Want to give your^ budget an even bigger break? Step over and see what's new with those 10 nifty models of the '63 Chevy II. Or maybe you’ve been eyeing sports-car caps, in which case have a go at a sporty new '63 Corvaifj (8 of them, including three snazzy bucket-seat Monzas and those big Greenbrier Sports Wagons). There's even something for the all-out sports-car set—the daring Corvette Sting Ray. Picking a new car ha$ never been easier. (Unless you’d like to own them all!) *63 CHEVY II NOVA 400 STATION WAGON CALL YOUR COLLEGE PLACEMENT OFFICE If you cannot be present for an interview, write for more in formation to: L. C. Menius, Personnel Director, East Texas Pulp and Paper Company, P. O. Box 816, Silsbee, Texas. NEW CORVETTE STING RAY SPORT COUPE ’63 C0RVAIR MONZA CONVERTIBLE ft's Chevy Showtime *63!— See four entirety different kinds of cafe at your Chevrolet Deafens Showroom i Sat Pul: Uni fugi Pol: P mix chi, ed