The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 27, 1963, Image 4

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Page 4 College Station, Texas Friday, September 27, 1963 THE BATTALI^)N
Whitey Ford Opens Series
For Yanks Against Koufax
By JOE REICHLER
Sports Writer •
NEW YORK (JP) — New York
Yankee left-hander Whitey Ford,
baseball’s biggest World Series
winner, will pitch the first game
of the 1963 October classic, prob
ably against Los Angeles’ Sandy
Koufax, at Yankee Stadium next
Wednesday.
Yankee left-hander A1 Downing
and right-hander Jim Bouton will
pitch the second and third games
for the Yankees, manager Ralph
Houk said today in making known
his series plans. He did not speci
fy the order of pitchers for the
second and third games.
HOUK SAID he would depend on
just three starters, thus assigning
NOTICE!
BOWLING LEAGUE
BEING FORMED
Mixed League Bowling On
Wednesday Night, October 2
Starting at 7:30
FOR: Faculty, Staff
and Students
All interested persons call VI 6-8721, Ext. 24, Memorial
Student Center, or come by Games Desk
In Bowling Area, M.S.C.
Ralph Terry, pitching hero of the
Yankee’s 1962 World Series tri
umph, over San Francisco, to bull
pen duty.
Houk also said he planned to
play his eight regulars, including
Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris,
in every game without resorting
to platooning.
“I UNDERSTAND the Dodgers
are going to go with three pitchers,
too — Koufax, Padres and Drys-
dale,” said Houk. “I talked with
Dodger manager Walter Alston
during a radio interview and he
came right out and said Koufax
would pitch the first game.
“He said his second game
choice lay between Padres and
Drysdale.”
FORD, WHOSE 24 victories
matches Koufax, will be seeking
his 11th World Series triumph in
the opener. He has lost five. Kou
fax, who has appeared in two
World Series games, dropped his
only decision in 1959. He was
beaten 1-0 by the Chicago White
Sox.
“Whitey, of course, is the
logical choice to pitch the first
game,” Houk said. “I’m making
no secret of that. My second game
pitcher will be either Downing or
Bouton. I’d rather not say who
right now.
The Yankees will work out at
Yankee Stadium Monday and
Tuesday morning.
SU MAC STAYS HOME
NEW YORK <A>) — Duke Rod
ney and Porterhouse probably
will compete in the Prixd’ Ameri-
que at Vincennes near Paris next
winter. But Su Mac Lad, winner
of the recent International Trot
at Roosevelt Raceway, will stay
home. Su Mac Lad is a gelding
and ineligible.
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WANT AD RATES
One day 3^ per word
2^ per word each additional day
Minimum charge—40^
DEADLINE
4 p.m. day before publication
PHONE Vl 6-6415
CHILD CARE
Child care on Foch, nice play area,
VI 6-7370. 140t8
Day Baby sitting in my home, 502-A
Dogwood, VI 6-4967. 138tl
Will care for infants through four years
in my home, $1.75 per day, previous ex
perience, C-13-D College View. 137t4
Will do baby sitting evenings, call Dian
Merica, VI 6-8076. 135t8
HUMPTY DUMPTY NURSERY, open
for football games. Licensed by Texas State
Dept, of Public Welfare. Children of all
ages. Virginia D. Jones, Registered Nurse,
3404 South College Ave., TA 2-4803. 61tfn
College View Child Care, C-13-C. 132tfn
Experience; reference, in my home, VI-
6-8608. 133tfn
Fifteen years nursery experience, two
fears up, near East Gate. Mrs. C. H.
Bates, VI 6-4152. 133tfn
Child Care 8 to 5, C-8-B, CV VI 6-7472.
132tf n
Will keep children near Project Houses
tn Highland St, experienced, VI 6-6294 or
VI 6-7960. 132t9
Will care for infants up to four years
Df age, near campus, VI 6-5975, VI 6-8620.
131tfn
Child care, call VI 6-4388. 131tfn
Child Care, 8 to 5, VI 6-6536. 131tfn
Will keep children, all ages, will pick up
and deliver. VI 6-8151. llltfn
MOVING?
Complete Moving Service
Packing—Transportation—
Storage
Beard Transfer & Storage
Agent For
UNITED VAN LINES
TA 2-2835
707 S. Tabor, Bryan
FOR RENT SPECIAL NOTICE
Two bedroom apartment, nice furniture,
draw drapes, water fan, pretty floors, tile
drainboard, 304 E. 22nd, TA 2-7430. 133tfn
! Fish and Picnic at original Hilltop lake.
| Shades, tables ovens, price is right. Rain
checks given. 9*4 miles south of College
on Highway 6. 134tfn
FOR SALE
OFFICIAL NOTICE
Senior boots size 10y>, calf 15 inches,
VI 6-7838 after 5 p. m. 139t2
Official notices must be brought, mailed
or telephoned so as to arrive in the Office
of Student Publications (Ground Floor
YMCA, VI 6-6416, hours 8-12, 1-6, daily
; Monday through Friday) at or before the
1 deadline of 1 p. m. of the day preceding
| publication — Director of Student Publica-
| tions.
1959 Rambler station wagon, factory air,
white wall tires, chrome luggage rack.
Must sell, VI 6-5800 or VI 6-8540. 137t4
1961 Chevrolet Impala, 2-door, hardtop,
standard transmission, radio, heater, excel
lent condition, VI 6-4559. 135tfn
i Students interested in applying for a
! Rhodes Scholarship should confer with
R. H. Ballinger, 302-C Academic Bldg.,
prior to October 9, 1963. 138t9
WORK WANTED
Ph- D. Language Examination
Examinations for meeting the foreign
language requirement for the Ph. D. de
gree will be given Tuesday, Oct. 1st at 6 :00
p. m. in Room 129, Academic Building.
Students wishing .to take this examination
should leave the material over which they
wish to be examined with the Secretary
in the Department of Modern Languages
not later than 5:00 p.m. Friday, Sept..27th.
Department of Modern Languages
J. J. Woolket, Head 134t7
Typing by experienced typist, VI 6-5347.
137tl6
Typing, VI 6-8320. 133tfn
Wanted ironing in my home, reasonable
rates, pick-up and delivery, call TA 3-
5071 after 6 p. m. I33tl9
FEMALE HELP WANTED
It is now time for all Student Organiza
tions to apply for Official Recognition at
the Student Finance Center, Memorial
Student Center. The DEADLINE is
October 15, 1963. 133U6
Wanted white lady live in, general house
work, some child care, room, board and
salary, call VI 6-6044, or write Battalion,
Box X, College Station. 137t4
MEAT SALES
Effective October 1, 1963 retail
sales hours for A&M Meats Lab,
A. I. Bldg-., will be Monday thru
Friday from 4 to 5 p. m.,
Saturday 8 a. m. to 12 noon.
i
HELP WANTED
Men or women needed in Bryan and Col
lege Station, part time, hours arranged,
apply 221-B South Main, Bryan. 13714
White male or female help wanted at
the Tastee Freeze across from the Western
Motel. 129tfn
TV - Radio - Hi-Fi
Service & Repair
GIL’S RADIO & TV
TA 2-0826 2403 S. College
IMPORT and DOMESTIC
AUTO REPAIRS
DOYLE’S GARAGE
2703 Villa Marie Rd. TA 2-8022
• ENGINEERING AND
ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES
• BLUE LINE PRINTS
• BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS
SCOATES INDUSTRIES
608 Old Sulphur Springs Road
BRYAN, TEXAS
SOSOLIKS
T. V.. Radio, Phono., Car Radio
Transistor Radio Service
713 S. Main TA 2-1941
HOME & CAR
RADIO REPAIRS
SALES & SERVICE
KEN’S RADIO & TV
303 W. 26th TA 2-2819
TYPEWRITERS
Rentals-Sales-Service
Terms
Distributors For:
Royal and Victor
Calculators &
Adding Machines
CATES
TYPEWRITER CO.
909 S. Main TA 2-6000
AGGIE NOTICE
To Rent Brazos County A&M Club For
Mixed Parties,—See Joe Faulk
SAE 30 Motor Oils 15£ Qt.
Major Brands Oils .... 30-33^ Qt.
For your parts ana accessories
AT a DISCOUNT See us—
Plenty free parking opposite
the courthouse.
DISCOUNT AUTO PARTS
Brake shoes. Fuel pumps. Water pumps.
Generators, Starters, Solenoids, etc. j
Save 30 to 50% on just about any part
for your car.
Filters 40% discount
AT JOE FAULK’S
25th and Washington
TYPEWRITERS
ADDING MACHINES
RENTALS
ASK ABOUT OUR
RENTAL OWNERSHIP
PLAN
OTIS MCDONALD’S
429 South Main St.
Bryan, Texas
Cash Available For Books, Slide Rules & Etc.
5,000 AGGIES CAN’T BE WRONG
LOUPOT'S
SPORTS
AIM FOR 1ST WIN
Ags Face Buckeyes
Coach Hank Foldberg takes his
squad to Columbus, Ohio, Satur
day looking for the first Aggie
win of the season.
A capacity crowd of 81,200 will
see the Cadets battle Ohio State
with kickoff time slated for 1:30
p.m. (EST), 12:30 p.m. College
Station Time. A&M’s record is
Passing Frowned On In SWC;
Conservative Football Is Rule
By HAROLD V. RATLIFF
Associated Press Sports Writer
Every year it is inevitable that
most of the coaches say “we’ll
pass more this season.” Their
intentions are good and they really
mean it. But they start looking
at the records, find that the teams
that pass a lot usually get beat
and wind up using the pass only
when they have nothing to lose—-
they are so far behind they have
to take risks.
Darrell Royal of Texas, the most
successful coach in Southwest Con
ference records, resorts to all out
passing only when he’s behind and
working against time. Last season
was a good example. He had only
minutes to catch up against Ark
ansas so Texas put on a wild pas
sing flurry and won the ball game.
ROYAL SAYS three things can
happen when you throw the ball
and two of them are bad. You
can complete the pass and that’s
good or you can fail to com
plete it or have it intercepted—and
those two things are bad.
There are two things bad about
running, too. You can fumble
or fail to gain. But the chances
are less that you will do those
two things than to throw a pass
incomplete or have it intercepted.
The fact remains that there has
been no undefeated, untied teams
in the Southwest Conference since
they cut out the pass as a major
weapon. The last three undefeated,
untied teams were Southern Metho
dist of 1935, Texas Christian of
1938 and A&M of 1939. Those
teams also were the last national
champions for the conference.
BUT THAT doesn’t indicate that
the conference should return to
passing. Development of the de
fense against passing was what
caused it to be abandoned. The
coaches just worked out ways to
stop it—or at least make it re
bound to the detriment of the pas
sing team.
There is only one conference
team that goes in strongly for
passing. That’s Baylor. But Bay
lor hasn’t won a championship
since 1924. In other words, Bay
lor hasn’t won a championship
whether it passed or not. So it
couldn’t be held up as an example
of what can happen to you if you
pass a lot. Baylor has done as
well throwing the ball as run
ning with it.
In the last five years passing
has decreased. Five years ago 39
per cent of the plays were passing.
Last season they were down to 35
per cent.
IN THAT span the teams that
pass the least have won the champ
ionship. Texas Christian, Texas
and Arkansas have been the
champions.
The league might have done bet
ter intersectionally had it done a
lot of throwing because other areas
wouldn’t know as much about stop
ping passes since they wouldn’t
know the patterns like the confer
ence teams know each other’s.
Take those years of 1935, 1938
and 1939 when Southern Methodist,
Texas Christian and A&M had the
last undefeated, untied teams and
national champions. In 1935 the
league had an 18-4-1 intersection
al record. In 1938 it was 11-11-1.
In 1939 it was 13-10-1.. The con
ference now can’t break even.
The Farmer’s will hold a big
weight advantage in the line with
an average of 226 to Ohio State’s
213. A&M’s backfield will be giv
ing up weight at the rate of 12
pounds per man with a 181 average
to OSU’s 193.
0-1, having dropped its opener to
Louisiana State, 14-6. It will be
the Buckeyes’ first game.
Ohio State will field the fastest
backfield A&M will face this year.
Halfback Paul Warfield runs the
100-yd. dash in 9.7 while Full
back Matt Snell travels the dis
tance in 10.0. Warfield is also
the Big 10 broad-jump champion.
The Buckeyes will have a young
team with only seven senior,
the roster. They will start
of them along with four jm
and three sophomores.
A&M starting lineup:
LE John Brotherton
Ray Gene Hinze
Mike Swan
Ray Kubala
Ronnie Moore
James Craig
Ronnie Carpenter
Jim Linnstaedter
Travis Reagan
George Hargett
Jerry Rogers
LT
LG
C
RG
RT
RE
QB
LH
RH
FB
NOTICE!
MIXED BOWLING LEAGUES
BEING FORMED FOR
STUDENTS ONLY.
at the
Memorial Student Center Bowling Lanes,
Call VI 6-8721, Ext. 24, or come by
Games Area Desk for reservations.
B
FIRST MEETING FRIDAY NIGHT,
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AGGIELAND!
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ON SALE IN THE STUDENT
PUBLICATIONS OFFICE
LOCATED IN THE BASEMENT
OF THE YMCA.
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