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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 3, 1963)
ark Dot v.v Commerce ani n’s Program, t determinatior, ig-i nation have "ree counseling by the prt| came at the 1, some interim ion or new itj were needei, ed needless is providing ijlj le progress ea;:; what we gir, ouragement h lings seem blatt ent New York ; Syracuse a sp igram booth sh ctive the unip ; counseling has some of the r yed: wear designed ity woman 4 m making kc 'abrics for her ;h sport subjetl Melvin Simmons brie boutique Simmons, 6-1, 209, right guard from Odessa, season. Simmons had a slight injury at the k book coven,V s starting tackle as a sophomore last beginning of fall workouts but is coming garette cases, lear. Coach Hank Foldberg moved him to along well, o pre-school guard to give the line more depth this mtting boards, h a n g i ngs pods, auces, developed i me recipe. VMS TAKE OPENER Koufax Sets Whiff Mark ice candies, rving trays i c layered overn es and flowers, nderland pup| lother of three wife of a unii iNEW YORK — Sandy Kou- broke a 10-year-old World pitching record and the ength Sl'l ults, Don gers hammered Whitey Ford Ifour runs in the second in- Wednesday as Los Angeles oled the New York Yankees Bin the opening game of. the ■Id Series. need to ufax struck out pinch-hitter y Bright, the last man to face in the ninth inning, for his strikeout of the game. It broke | World Series record of 14 llO years ago Wednesday by 1 ‘* t ea ' ! rl Erskine of the Dodgers, then lon,; Brooklyn, against the Yankees. e expected duel of left-handed ers fell apart in the second mat reacneaiit lg when a home rUn by catch ' re-school croJ? hn R °f ebor ° with two m " n on i • i. * ? e raped a four-run outburst. )s Angeles got to Ford, the . John F. Ke ong dress treii that reached i. I are oung adult, a tL leading pitcher, for four unt,l in them, -home bid entfiLos Angeles scored another run pie barbecue an ibnst Ford on three hits in the muumuus. iW inning and completed its y cake and fruit brocades aiidvi scoring before the Yankees made their first hit off Koufax. So completely did Koufax domi nate the game that he did not allow a hit until two were out in the fifth inning. The Yankees made six hits altogether, but they didn’t score a run until Tom Tresh hit a home run with Tony Kubek on base in the eighth inning just after Koufax had equaled the old record with his 14th strikeou.t MIGHTY MITE THE BATTALION Thursday, October 3, 1963 College Station, Texas Page 7 Reagan Totes Aggie Hopes “He’s a little guy with a lot of guts and determination.” That’s the way A&M footballers describe Travis Reagan. Twice last Saturday at Ohio State he almost broke loose on kickoff returns. Once he almost found daylight on a scrimmage Miller Dumps Yellow] ackets Edges Eagles ninth rank- 1 in Class Aggie Gridders Collide With Old High School Teammates LUBBOCK, — Julius Caesar’s “Et tu Brute!” may describe the reactions of three Texas Tech backs in the Red Raiders’ game with A&M here Saturday (Oct. 5) night. That’s because some of their friends who used to protect them frqm harm in high school will be trying to tackle them or block their kicks. Tech quarterback Ben Elledge will be confronted by the Aggies’ guard Ronnie Moore, a former Brownwood Lion teammate. Raid er halfback Billy Weise will be sweeping idea pants with velvet, and ump suits. ssifid ugh ush t ■ II i. Iget top irer lied \g Co. We all make mistakes. ' ERASE WITHOUT A TRACE ON EATON’S CORRASABLE BOND Typing errors never show on Corrasable. The special sur face of this paper makes it possible to erase without a trace—with just an ordinary pencil eraser. Results: clean looking, perfectly typed papers. Next time you sit down at the keyboard, make no mistake — type on Corrasable! Your choice of Corrasable in light, medium, heavy weights and Onion Skin. In handy 100- sheet packets and 500-sheet boxes. Only Eaton makes ^ Corrasable. A Berkshire Typewriter Paper EATON PAPER CORPORATION •‘E > ; PITTSFIELD, MASS. **K»* X * Purchase Your EATON’S CORRASABLE BOND Typewriter Paper from rhe Exchange store ‘Serving Texas Aggies’ opposed by an Austin High buddy, tackle Bill Ward. Marshall fur nishes Tech’s placekicker, fullback H. L. Daniels, and a guy whose as signment probably will be to rush him, end Ronnie Carpenter. Stinnett, in the Panhandle, fur nishes three backs Tech’s Don and Larry Anderson, A&M fullback Ken McLean. A&M can be excused for some righteous indignation, too. After all the Raiders’ head coach, J. T. King, twice pulled duty tours at Aggieland, and Tech assistant Jim Wright played quarterback for A&M under Bear Bryant. DALLAS (A 5 ) — Corpus Christ! Miller surged into the No. 1 spot in Class AAAA schoolboy football in the Dallas News poll Monday. Miller, which clouted San An tonio Jefferson 19-0 last week, pushed Port Arthur out of the top place and plunged the latter down to fourth. Defending state cham pion San Antonio Brackenridge held No. 2 and San Angelo moved up to No. 3. SOUTH OAK CLIFF, which beat Dallas Samuell, the No. 10 team, 20-7 last week, took over and Samuell fell out of the ings. Dumas continued as No. Class AAA, Denver City in AA and Albany in Class A. DUMAS AND Albany got all 10 of the sports writer votes. Miller pulled six first place votes and Brackenridge four in the Class AAAA poll. In Class AA Denver City had five, Stamford two and Sinton the other two and they ranked in that order. CLASS AAAA-1, Corpus Christi Miller. 2, San Antonio Bracken ridge. 3, San Angelo. 4, Port Ar thur. 5, Galena Park. 6, Midland. 7, Borger. 8, Wichita Falls. 9, South Oak Cliff. 10, Richardson. CLASS AAA-1, Dumas. 2, Grah am. 3, Nederland. 4, Bay City. 5, Corsicana. 6, Orange. 7, Jackson ville. 8, Hurst Bell. 9, Pharr-San Juan-Alamo. 10, Brownwood. CLASS AA-1, Denver City. 2, Stamford. 3, Sinton. 4, Rockdale. 5, Katy. 6, Olney. 7, Plano. 8, Mason. 9, Dalhart. 10, Pewitt. CLASS A-l, Albany. 2, New London. 3, Pearland. 4, White Oak. 5, Seagraves. 6, Ingleside. 7, Gold- thwaite. 8, Petersburg. 9, Hull- Daisetta. 10, Jefferson. PLANNING ON FANNING A NEW FLAME? Blazers are big fashion news—and H-I-S makes head lines with this flattering model! Slightly cut-away 3- button front gives you the new look; shoulders are natural, 3 patch pockets, lower 2 are flapped. Lapped seams, hooked vent, antique metal buttons. In fine 100 r /f Wool Blazer Flannel; handsome colors . . . $24.95 loupot's North Gate VI 6-6312 See us for convenient credit terms. play. Given a little open room he’s hard to catch. Reagan, a soft-spoken, highly regarded athlete from Wichita Falls, is probably the shortest starter in Southwest Conference football, standing only 5 feet, 8 inches. He’s hard to spot behind A&M’s 6-1 plus forward wall. He tips the scale at 170 and is one of the fastest men on the Ag gie squad. His running ability and detrmination earned him his second varsity letter last season and a starting berth this year. The 21-year-old senior was grad uated from Wichita Falls High in 1960. At Wichita Falls, a Dis trict 4-AAAA school, he was a three-year letterman in football, a three-year monogram winner in baseball and a two-year letterman in track. His other high school football honors included all-dis trict (junior and senior years), All-Southern (1959) and All-Amer ica (1959). He was sought after by scouts galore. All for the SWC schools except Arkansas contacted him and he received offers from Navy, Army, Air Academy, Georgia Tech, Missouri and Oklahoma. “Why did he pick A&M?” “My dad is an Aggie-ex, the class of ‘41, but that’s not the real reason why I chose A&M. I was most impressed by the school itself and I felt that I would like it better than the others,” he ex plained. When asked about his career here, Travis said: “I played my best offensive game in my sopho more year when I scored three touchdowns against Trinity. That same year I intercepted three pas- es in the Arkansas game.” “We have a good chance this year to go all the way. Our first unit is as good as any in the SWC, but we lack depth. We’re going to surprise a lot of people.” The Wichita Falls star is to graduate this spring with a math degree. He plans to enter dental school. W--* , NORTH TEXAS FLASH Halftrack Travis Reagan ready for Texas Tech. COACH NORTON’S PANCAKE HOUSE 35 Varieties of finest pancakes, aged heavy KC steaks, shrimp, and other fine foods. Daily .... Merchant’s lunch II to 2 p.m. **^***^*****^* DEPENDABLE SERVICE ALL WORK GUARANTEED CANGELOSIS Shoe Repair 2609 Texas Avenue SHOE REPAIR • SHOE DYEING REASONABLE PRICES ONE DAY SERVICE We Reserve The Right To Limit AH Sales. - GROCERIES - Snowdrift SHORTENING 3-Lbs. 59c Hunts—46-Oz. Tomato Juice 4 For $1.00 Hunts—14-Oz. Bottles CATSUP 3 For 49c Hunts—No. 2 , /2 Cans APRICOTS 4 For $1.00 Hunts—300 Size Peaches Half or Sliced .... 2 For 35c Nabisco—Premium CRACKERS 1-Lb. 29c Folgers—Instant COFFEE 6-Oz. 79c Folgers COFFEE 1-Lb. Can 59c Gold Medal Wondra Instant Flour 2-Lb. Bag 29c Mazola Corn Oil Quart 59c Regoes—Ground Black Pepper .... 2 - 4-Oz. Cans 59c Uncle Williams—300 Size Pork & Beans 3 For 25c Rosedale—303 Cans Green Limas 2 For 25c Star Kist—Reg. 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