The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 01, 1962, Image 8

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    THE BATTALION
Page 8 College Station, Texas Thursday, November 1, 19(12
Ag Distancemen
Go For 3rd Win
A&M’s defending SWC champion
cross-country team goes after its
third win of the season this week
end at the University of Texas
Invitational Meet in Austin.
College teams throughout the
state, Oklahoma and New Mexico
will be competing.
The Aggies have won two
matches ag; i st three defeats
thus far. The thinclads have
beaten SMTT and ^exas to hold
first place in th ' CWC standings.
Then- losses ha.e come at the
,• 4 hands of the University of Hous-
ton, twice, and Howard Payne.
^ .' > %. The Cougars sport seven Austral
ian runners, including the younger
brother of record-breaking miler
fill
fntram urals
wmm wmm
1 . & I
ILHAN BILGUTAY
Close Investigation Illustrates
‘Good OF Days’ Gone Forever
By JIM BUTLER
Battalion Ass’t Sports Editor
“Remember the good ol’ days!”
This hue and cry of oldtimers
gathered together for class reun
ions or other special occasions ri
vals closely the Texas war cry,
“Remember the Alamo.”
Deciding that these “good ol’
_days” might justify a closer in
spection, it was discovered by con
sulting the 1962 A&M Press Book
that these long-forgotten years
really were the “good ol’ days.”
What Aggie could ever forget
A&M’s first undefeated football
team. The year was 1896 and the
Cadets won two out of three games
with one tie.
The Aggies trounced Houston
High School 28-0, squeaked by
Austin College 22-4 and fought
to a bitter scoreless tie with Gal
veston High School.
And if you think the present
day Farmers have it bad, pity the
poor Maroon and White of nine
teen ought-and-ought. They were
beaten by Texas twice in one sea
son—5-0 and 11-0.
The 1909 team evened the score,
however, with 23-0 and 5-0 vic
tories over the Longhorns.
In 1904, the Aggies must have
placed high in the balloting for
the most inconsiderate football
team. The Cadets silently drubbed
the Deaf and Dumb Institute, 49-0.
One can’t help but feel, though,
that the height of the good old
days came in the Ags’ opening
game 29-0 triumph in 1905. The
victim? Houston YMCA.
Class A basketball finals are
Thursday night at 7:30 in DeWare
Field House, Charles E. McCand-
less, intramural director, an
nounced Wednesday. The two fi
nalists will come from these four
teams: Sqd. 8, Sqd. 7, B-3 or F-l.
Three dates on the intramural
calendar: freshman football play
offs begin Thursday, freshman
basketball starts Monday and play
offs in Class B horseshoe pitching
begin Tuesday.
Winners in Class B flag foot
ball were B-3 over B-2, 26-6; D-l
defeated Sqd. 4, 14-0; Sqd. 6 won
over Sqd. 13, 6-0; Sqd. 2 beat 1-3,
13-0; and A-l smashed Sqd. 8, 32-0.
Winning players for Sqd. 6
were Dale Felps, Joe Stewart, Al
len David, Tom Ross, Richard
Chitwood, Dennis Elzner, George
Hausmann, Mike Gayle and Larry
Branham.
Players winning for A-l were
Jim Tatum, Bill McElroy, Scott
Benson, Jack Watson, John Clark,
Billy Perry, Ira McDaniel and Will
Campbell.
Sqd. 2 winners were James Hoo-
ton, Jim Crumbliss, Larry Hunter,
Dick Stults, George Johnson, Joe
Fant, Sydney Hall, John Stropp
and Chuck Sowell.
Civilian handball v/inners Wed
nesday were Walton Hall over
Legett Hall, 2-1, and Puryear Hall
over Mitchell Hall, 3»0.
w£®m%’Ewm
mmsT’mr
sponsored by the
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Herb Elliott.
Following the invitational meet
in Austin, the Aggies travel to
Brownwood for an invitational
meet there.
The Aggies finish the season
in Dallas with the Southwest Con
ference meet.
Leading the Farmers in the
three-mile race are two seniors—
E. L. Ener of Jasper and Ilhan Bil-
gutay of Istanbul, Turkey. >
Ener and Bilgutay tied for first
place in last week’s dual meet
against Texas. Their time of
14:16 was the fastest for either
runner this season.
Other Cadet runners are Herbie
Campbell, Earl Myers, Jim Sebas
tian and Larry Clancy.
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35
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Vienna Sausage 2 4. 39c
Kraft Miniature
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Pkgs. Wr
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Chocolate Morsels 12 ^ 39c
Good Value
Pink Salmon
Cap I 3C
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75
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Vol. No. 11 Golden Book
Encyclopedia
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