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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 8, 1963)
igs Seek Third Win )ver Fry’s Ponies »uy at •ay in REG. 9.98 ALL WOOL :L SLACKS \ SIZES 29-42 is, men, the lack to team four favorite cet or sweat- ortable, cas- ays correct- 'ool worsted are extra because of ent-crease t. Charcoal, ay or olive, BY MARVIN SCHULTZ Battalion Asst. Sports Editor The Southern Methodist Mus ics invade Aggieland Saturday tamoon in quest of its first con- ence victory of the year. Meet- rdefeat against conference foes, x, Texas Tech, and Texas, the i and blue-clad Ponies, guided Quarterback Danny Thomas 0 seek to avenge two consecu- Aggie victories. Sleanwhile, the Aggies will also shooting for a win in the con- ■iiice after losses to Texas Tech, jlor, and Arkansas. They tied 1 Horned Frogs, 14-14. Quarterback Charles LaGrange itry to extend the Aggie win- streak to three over SMU. e Mustangs last win came in i5 when they edged the maroon dwhite, 14-11. The clubs fought scoreless tie in 1960 and the [jies have downed the Ponies the it two years by scores of 25-12 and 12-7, respectively. This battle will be the 46th meeting between these two schools extending way back to the first meeting in 1916. In that 1916 game the Cadets posted a whop ping 62-0 score, their largest mar gin of victory over the Mustangs. The Farmers lead in the series with 22 wins to 17 racked up for SMU. There have been six ties. Rounding out the Aggie back- field will be Budgie Ford at left half, Tommy Meeks at the right slot while Jerry Rogers will man the fullback post. On the line will be hefty Ray Kubala holding down the middle sector while he will be flanked by guards John Nilson and Ronnie Moore, and tackles Waylon Ward and Bill Ward. John Broth- erton and Ron Carpenter will be at the end positions. The opening kickoff is scheduled for 2 p.m. with a crowd of 15,000 expected. Starting Lineups SM In Brotherton 205 LE 216 SMU Tom Hillary avion Ward 216 LT 204 John Knee In Nilson 204 LG 197 Martin Code iv Kubala 249 C 198 Hardy McAlister pie Moore 208 RG 196 Ronnie Cosper i Ward 202 RT 205 Robert Oyler in Carpenter 213 RE 186 John Graves larles LaGrange 178 QB 184 Danny Thomas idgie Ford 178 LH 165 Billy Gannon limy Meeks 167 RH 182 Larry Jernigan try Rogers 207 FB 185 Tom Sherwin Consistent Regular Ronney Moore, 6-1, 208-pounder from Brown wood, is one of only four Aggies who has started every game this season. The junior right guard played his best game last Saturday in A&M's 21-7 loss to Arkansas. THE BATTALION Friday, November 8, 1963 College Station, Texas Page 5 Curington Leads A&M Fish To Victory Over Rice, 19-6 A&M’s freshman football team won its third game in a row Thurs day night, defeating the Rice Owl ets 19-6 in Houston. The Fish opened the scoring late in the first period marching 73 yards in 17 plays. Quarterback Harry Ledbetter passed to end Robert Plsek for the touchdown with 0:45 left in the quarter. Gary Kovar’s kick was wide and the Fish led 6-0. THE AGGIES made it 12-0 mid way through the second quarter following a recovered Rice fumble. Jerry Cox pounced on the ball at the Owlet 32. Eleven plays later, halfback Lloyd Curington scored the first of his two tallies on a three-yard burst over right tackle. John Poss kicked the extra point to make it 13-0 at halftime. RICE TOOK the opening kickoff of the second half and moved 65 yards in 11 plays to close the gap. L. V. Benningfield took a pitch out from quarterback Dennis Gann for the score. The Owlets faked a kick and tried to run for two points but failed. After completely dominating the first half, the Fish found them- Elston Howard Wins AL’s Most Valuable Player Award BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES day 3(t per word h additional day ii day ... . 2< per word Minimui !d per word each addition] imum charge—40<i DEADLINE 4 p.m. day before publication Classified Dispii column insertic Hficial notices must be brought or iled so as to arrive in the Office Student Publications (Ground Floor CA, VI 6-6416, hours 8-12, 1-6, daily iday through Friday) at or before the lline’of 1 p. m. of the day preceding iication—Director of Student Publica- »of the preliminary grade report on imber 11, 1963, may be used in satis- 't the 96 hour requirement. Those lints qualifying under this regulation e their names with the rinj ruary _ing clerk is on duty from * n. m. to 12:00 noon, Monday through livery on 1963. The ring clerk is on dm Si. m. to 12 :00 m day of each week. year. swept persons, single and under age Call today FARMERS INSURANCE #HIP, 3510 South College Road, Bryan, ®eTA 2-4461. 146U07 fiA and Picnic at original Hilltop lake, ides, tables ovens, price is right. Rain Kks given. 9% miles south of College 'Highway 6. 134tfn IE ET sea- otton vash- front. 5| **« Tsis BliSlSi lay SOd per column inch each insertion PHONE VI 6-6415 OFFICIAL NOTICE Itose undergraduate students who have of he hours passing at - ade ergr wester hours of credit may purchas, iA&M ring. The hours passing at th. eave their names with the ring clerk i registrar’s office in order that she heck their records to determine their ’ to order the rings. Orders for will be taken between November gh November 27 and December irill be icheck tl ibility to order the rings. Orders sen _ _ . _nd bough January 7. These rings w lelivery on or about Febi imed for delivery on or about Th tc ea H. L. Heaton Director of Admission and Registrar 161t25 SPECIAL NOTICE MOVING TO BEAUMONT AREA? i interested in sharing moving ex- Wses, call VI 6-5686. 162t3 WTO INSURANCE—place your auto Group TV-Radio-Hi-Fi Service & Repair GILS RADIO & TV U 2-0826 2 4 03 S. College AGGIES Ho you change your own oil—? —or work on your car—? then, why not save more on your parts at JOE FAULK’S DISCOUNT AUTO PARTS ftev-Fd brake shoes 36-68 List $6.85 H of 2 wheels $2.90 V choice—Enco, Gulfpride, Amalie, H“bil-Pennzoil, Conoco Qt. 33? taaco, Gulflube-Opaline Qt. 30C !AE 30-40 Recon. Oil Qt. 15<f Hit Belts 3.95 • l; lters-Save 40% *8 Spark Plugs Ea. 29tf Huffiers-Tail Pipes 30-40% disc. “•tilled for $1.00 ^teel Bearings 30 to 60% discount Jthave 96% of the parts you need at Ner price or less. j^tex inside paint Gal. $2.98 ! Galt $5.49 !.Hew 670-16 tires $36.00 plus tax *■14 $44.00 plus tax Kelly Springfield Nttc Vinyl trim seat covers ‘*■95 value now $13.88 .. $3.88, value now only absorbers as low as Not off-brand JjWite batteries 6V only $12.95 L ’ at dealer pried. jj^ty of Prestone at our usual lowest JOE FAULK’S 25th and Washington MALE HELP WANTED Need additional male help for night shift. Tastee Freeze across from Sands Motel. 160t4 FOR SALE Small green sofa, good condition, $22.50 ; piano bench $3.00, VI 6-6696. 162t6 BMW, Rolls Royce of Cycles, $475.00. A&M Mitchell 45. 161t3 LUZIER Cosmetic Consultant Mrs. Lynn Weedon, TA 2-4349 160t4 CHILD CARE Will keep children in my home during football game, C-13-D CV. 163tl Keep children during football games, also for yell practice, VI 6-7917. 160t4 For A&M games. Registered Nurse in charge, St. Thomas Nursery, ample park ing, walking distance to stadium, reserva tions if possible, VI 6-6384. 160t4 Will do baby sitting evenings, call Dian Mercia, VI 6-8076, call after 5. 146tfn 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 C-13-C CV, VI 6-7985. 132tfn Will keep children, all ages, will pick up and deliver. VI 6-8151. llltfn HOME & CAR RADIO REPAIRS SALES & SERVICE KEN’S RADIO & TV 303 W. 26th TA 2-2819 • 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 TYPEWRITERS Rentals-Sales-Service Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines CATES TYPEWRITER CO. 909 S. Main TA 2-6000 FOR RENT Room for gentleman, one block south of drill field. VI 6-5665. 157tfn WORK WANTED Maid wants part-time work or ironing, phone TA 3-2803, 1109 North Pierce, Bryan, Texas. 162t3 Typing - reports - thesis and manu scripts. Carbon copies and offset reproduc tion. Call VI 6-4059 or TA 3-5184. 162t4 Typing, experienced, VI 6-6900 156tfn Typing by experienced typist, VI 6-5347. 137t34 Typing, VI 6-8320. Male-Female Help Wanted Man or Woman OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS A new item. First time offered. Start in spare time, if satisfied then work full time. Refilling and collecting money from bulk machines in this area. To qualify you must have a car, reference, $500 to $1,000 cash to secure territory and inventory. (Deposit secured by written contract.) Devoting a few hours a week to business your end on per centages of collections should net above average income with very good possi bility of taking over full time. Income increasing accordingly. If applicant can qualify financial assistance will be given by Co. for expansion to full time position. Include phone in appli cation. Box NMC 162t3 TYPEWRITERS ADDING MACHINES RENTALS ASK ABOUT OUR RENTAL OWNERSHIP PLAN OTIS MCDONALD’S 429 South Main St. Bryan, Texas LET US SET A DIAMOND IN YOUR SENIOR RING. CAMPUS JEWELRY North Gate College Station WANTED: STUDENT SALESMEN Distributor firm wants limited number of student representa tives in College Station and vicinity to sell special Christmas merchandise and business gifts. NO INVESTMENT. Sample furnished FREE. Fine opportunity for the right people. Hurry! Write us NOW for full information. John B. Howell Advertising Products Co. 607-11 County State Bank Bldg. Box 927 Coleman, Texas 163 t4 CASH AVAILABLE FOR BOOKS, SLIDE RULES & ETC. 5,000 AGGIES CANT BE WRONG LOUPOT'S Beginning Monday, November 11, New Store Hours 6 Days A Week. 8 a. m. 'til 5:30 P. m. BY JOE REICH LER Associated Press Sports Writer TEANECK, N. J. hT) — Elston Howard has a very special reason for wanting to perform even bet ter in 1964 than he did last season —when he did well enough to win the American League’s Most Valu able Player award. “I want to do it for you know who—Yogi Berra,” said the dura ble catcher of the New York Yan kees Thursday, just after he had been accorded one of baseball’s greatest honors. Berra, who relinquished the reg ular Yankee catching job to How ard in 1960, was named manager of the club two weeks ago after Ralph Houk was elevated to the general managership. “I owe Yogi a great deal,” said Howard. “He helped me a lot— along with Bill Dickey—when the Yankees decided to convert me from an outfielder into a catcher. Now I’ve got a chance to repay him. “I’ve got to admit I was sur prised when Yogi was named man ager. But I guess I shouldn’t have been. He has real good baseball sense. I said four or five years ago that Yogi would make a good manager some day hut I didn’t think it would come so soon.” Howard led the Yankee hitters with a .287 batting average, and the 6-foot-2, 205-pounder paced the American League catchers with a .994 fielding average, was fifth in the league with 28 home runs and eighth in runs batted in with 85. Howard drew 15 first place votes and was named on all 20 ballots cast by a committee of the Baseball Writers Association of America. selves backed up to the wall time and again in the second half. The Aggies stopped a Rice drive on their own eight and another on the A&M 20. TAKING OVER on downs on the A&M 20, the Fish used just six plays to cover the 80 yards for the clinching touchdown. Two big plays figured in the fi nal score. Fullback Joe Weiss broke through the middle of the Owlet line and ran 46 yards to the Rice 30. After a gain of one yard, quarterback John Worst fired a 26-yard pass to James Wallace to the Rice three. CURINGTON TOOK it over from there. The attempted con version was no good when the pass from center bounced away. Weiss led the Fish in rushing with 62 yards in six attempts. Curington picked up 37 and Mike Phillips garnered 31. LEDBETTER THREW eight passes and completed five for 53 yards while Worst hit on one of five for 26 yards. George Schutze did all the punt ing for the Fish and ended up with a 38.3 average on six kicks. CAESAR (DUTCH) HOHN will be in the Exchange Store, Saturday, November 9, from 9 A. M. til 12, to autograph copies of his book, “Dutchman on the Brazos”. ^Jhe ^Ixcliancpe -Store “Serving Texas Aggies Since 1907” THE BELL TELEPHONE SALUTE: DON ESTES Seven positions in four years indicate Don Estes (B.S., 1959) is a man on the move. But as Don observed when he joined the telephone company —the future was unlimited — and he means to prove it. Don’s very first job carried the responsibility and chal lenge he wanted. As Frame Foreman, he was in charge of 12 people responsible for the connections which linked 50,000 telephones to the central office switching equipment. Don found more responsibility and greater job satis faction in larger assignments as he moved up to higher COMPANIES jobs —Plant Foreman, Wire Chief, Repair Foreman, Divi sion Records Engineer, Installation Foreman. Today, Don is Test Center Foreman for Southwestern Bell at Wichita Falls, supervising the work of 51 people. His work brings him in daily contact with some of the latest technical developments in the communications field. Don Estes, like many young engineers, is impatient to make things happen for his company and himself. There are few places where such restlessness is more welcomed or rewarded than in the fast-growing telephone business. BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES TELEPHONE MAN-OF-THE-MONTH