Image provided by: Texas A&M University
About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 14, 1963)
3nt u]d be appoint ;ers in all wall;! he language If s, absorption ol d when neces- ?w words. This iring this time ogram of the •en should not •lecting the cur. rage (language •eign rulers) in ■vel. There his i this direction esult that when graduated from and are ready md universities tent knowledge hich serves as tion at college 1 have in many ■ their ultimate N each of the ountries should roperly at sec- level the lan ding as medium allege and uni- : the period in the land is be- rve as medium ■ national feel- thy to the re- rule in our ; make us ne- e in secondary 11. t to forcefully erms into the i may result in even though it um of instruc- lary education and university s alien as any ige. It may re. nstruction and very different ; language of ot afford this, will in future instruction at level and col- level, should alent language ients nt Association ay Nov. 16, at Room of the ) nominate' a scuss annual jss, and make >ur. udent Asocia- ently installed j to office for Ahmad; V- i; Sec., Osmen Vadrud Mian; an; and S. M, leeting of the held Nov. 15, CA. has finished she Ph.D. de- ’ and is now Doctoral Pel- at the Uni- ; that all iuled by our club ilications possible ir club’s s), a list i picture or a full Peb. 14; ies, and oayment he same e home- , should 3ction Section Ole Miss Defense Nation’s Toughest NEW YORK (^) — Mississip pi’s football team has been among the nation’s defense leaders al most every year during the past decade. This season is no ex ception. The latest figures compiled by the NCAA Service Bureau and released Wednesday show that Ole Miss leads in total defense, rushing defense and defense against scoring. Texas Western has moved into the top spot in pass defense. IN TOTAL defense, Mississippi holds a commanding edge. The Rebels have allowed an average of only 121.0 yards a game while Kramer Passes frown’s Brown n Most Points NEW YORK (JP) — Jerry Kramer, the man who took over Paul Homung’s place kicking job at Green Bay, is the new leader in the National Football League scoring race with 75 points on 15 field goals and 30 extra points. Kramer passed Cleveland’s Jim my Brown over the weekend by kicking four extra points against Minnesota while Brown was held scoreless by Pittsburgh. Brown has 72 on 12 touchdowns. He is the only nonkicker among the first seven in scoring. Brown still is way out front in the rushing department with 1,293 yards, almost twice as many Jim Taylor of Green Bay, who is second with 676. With five games to go, Brown is almost cinch to break his own league record of 1,527 set in 1958. Y. A. Tittle, of course, remained out front in the passing statistics for the ninth straight week. The New York Giants’ quarterback has completed 140 of 224 for an amaz<- ing completion percentage of .625. He has thrown 23 touchdown pas ses and is closing in on the record of 33 he set last season. runner-up Southern Mississippi’s average is 149.5. Harvard is third with 164.9 follewed by Mem phis State, 165.6. The rushing defense lead changed hands for the third straight week as Ole Miss moved in front with a 64.1 average and Michigan State dropped to sec ond with 66.4. They are followed by Dartmouth 74.4 and Army 83.8. MISSISSIPPI’S advantage in scoring defense is much greater than in rushing. The Rebels have allowed the opposition 3.3 points a game in seven outings while Memphis State is second with 5.8. Mississippi has only two games remaining to play, against Tennessee and Mississip pi State. The pass defense ranking un derwent drastic changes as Tex as Western moved in front with a 41.4 yards a game mark. Ohio University, last week’s leader, dropped to seventh and runner- up North Carolina fell to fourth. Coach Thomas’ Runners Bound For SWC Meet Coach Charlie Thomas will take a seven-man team to Fayetteville, Ark., next weekend to complete in the Southwest Conference Cross Country meet which is scheduled for Monday, Nov. 18. Each school is allowed to enter seven runners but only the first five finishers from each school will count in the point totals. The race is for 3 miles. The seven-man Aggie squad in cludes Ilhan Bilgutay, senior from Istanbul, Turkey; Gene West moreland, sophomore from Lamesa, Tex.; Billy Turney, sophomore from Houston Lamar; Earl Myers, junior from Vanderbilt, Tex.; Ric hard Welters, sophomore from La Marque, Tex.; Jim Sebastian, jun ior from Houston Lamar and John Duran, sophomore from Wichita, Kan. Caffey Caught In A Twister Philadelphia Eagles Lee Roy Caffey, (34) learns something about flying as he is caught in a fancy twister by New York Giants quarterback Glynn Griffing in National Foot ball League game in New York’s Yankee Stadium. Caffey contributed to the Eagle scoring when he ran back a pass interception for 86 yards and a touchdown. Ex-Aggie Mike Clark added both extra points for the Eagles. THE BATTALION Thursday, November 14, 1963 College Station, Texas Page 5 AGGIE STATS Ford Paces Rushers For Fourth Week Through eight games, Budgie Ford continues to lead the Aggie rushing attack with 198 yards in 50 carries for a 4.0 average. Jer ry Rogers follows with a 2.7 aver age for 129 yards in 48 attempts. Sophomore flinger Charles La Grange has completed 26 passes for 386 yards for a .388 percent age. Jim Keller has completed eight aerials for 124 yards. Jerry Rogers has crossed the goal three times to lead the team in most points with 18. Keller and LaGrange have scored two each. RUSHING Ford Rogers Linnstaedter Meeks Att. Gain Loss Net Avi 50 203 5 198 48 129 0 129 46 176 74 102 Vvg. 4.0 2.7 2.2 83 3.2 Aggie Coach Praises Ward, Calls Rice 6 Strong Team 9 By JIM BUTLER Battalion Sports Editor Coach Hank Foldberg struck a blow for youth at his weekly press conference Wednesday afternoon. Singled out for special praise was sophomore tackle Bill Ward. “Ward’s done a fine job for us this year,” Foldberg said. “If there’s a better sophomore line man in the conference, I’d like to know where.” Aggies aren’t the only Ward fans. Matty Bell, A&M coach in 1929-1933 and now athletic di rector at SMU, said, “He played a better football game against SMU than did Texas’ Scott Appleton last week.” This is especially high praise considering Appleton is the num ber one tackle in the country and has two years experience and a 30-pound edge on the Aggie soph. Soph signal-caller Charles La- Grange also drew comment from Bit (BLUE BRAND NEW 4-PLY NYLON TIRES Shop till 6 Everyday Closed Sundays NYLONAIRE 6.70-15 Tu bed-type Blackwell Plus tax and trade-in tire off your car Other sizes proportionately low • Built with Safety-Fortified nylon cord body for extra mileage. Seven-rib tread grips the road with positive traction. PIRESTONE TIRES HAVE ©IIUKIEI (pronounced Di<een) THE MIRACLE TOUGH SYNTHETIC RUBBER TOR EXTRA LONG MILEAGE Tir*$tone double guarantee Is honored by more than 60,000 Firestone dealers and stores from coast to coast wherever you travel 1 LIFETIME GUARANTEE 2ROAD HAZARD GUARANTEE against defects in workmanship against normal road hazards (except repairable and materials for the life of punctures) encountered in everyday passenger the original tread. car use for number of months specified. Rtplacrmentt prorated on. tread wear and bated on Fireitone price current at time of adjustment Your Firestone GUARANTEE provides protection against tire failure from 0^1 Q dox prov a fro ozans ot road hazards Ilka thaaa -<11* Bottles Cant Curbs Chuckholas \ & i Mstsl ** Stonai All tires mounted FREE Just Say 'Charge It Priced a. shown at Firestone Stores; competitively priced at Firestone Dealers and at all service stations di.playina the Firestone sign. GEO. SHELTON INC. COLLEGE AVE. AT 33rd. FREE PARKING TA 2-0139 - TA 2-0130 Foldberg. “He is developing ac cording to expectations. He needs poise, but that can only come from experience.” Foldberg said that the same lineup that opened the game against SMU would start against Rice in Houston Saturday. The club is in good physical shape with the return of junior tackle Ray Gene Hinze. Hinze was injured against Baylor and missed the Arkansas and SMU games. “We’ve been penalized less this year, but they’ve hurt more. They all seem to come in key spots,” Foldberg added. Discussing the upcoming game with Rice, Foldberg expressed re spect for the strength of the Owls. “Rice is a pretty dam good foot ball team. Wayt (Russell) is as strong running fullback as we’ll 67 22 20 14 1 3 1 2 130 Hargrett Reagan Mcllhany McLean Uzzell Nichols Pitman Keller Kachtik Bates Willenborg LaGrange Totals PASSING LaGrange Keller Linnstaeder Mclhany Uzzell Willenborg Ford Reagan Totals INTERCEPTIONS Pitman Hargett Fletcher Keller Totals PUNTING Keller Willenborg Team (block) Totals RECEIVING Ford Hargett Reagan Carpenter Brotherton Uzzell Meeks McLean Whatley Stabler Drennan Mcllhany Overton Pitman LaGra Total 20 28 20 13 7 4 9 33 7 4 4 21 79 83 77 38 21 18 22 51 11 3 7 24 4 9 30 2 0 0 8 38 0 0 6 74 3.7 2.6 2.3 2.8 8.0 4.5 1.6 0.4 1.6 0.7 0.2 340 1026 251 -50—2.4 775 2.3 Att. Comp. Int. Yds. TD Pet. 26 8 10 8 1 1 1 0 55 7 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 10 386 124 92 72 5 5 3 0 687 0 .388 0 .363 0 .500 0 .671 1 1.000 0 .333 0 1.000 0 .000 1 .423 No. Yds. 4 40 1 57 1 26 1 25 7 148 TD. 0 0 0 0 0 No. 52 2 2 56 Yds. 2174 81 0 2255 Catches Yds. nge ils 11 11 8 5 4 4 3 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 65 154 133 99 100 44 37 22 27 16 15 13 12 7 5 3 687 Avg. 10.0 67.0 26.0 25.0 21.1 Avg. 41.8 40.5 0.0 40.3 TD. 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 PUNT RETURNS Hargett B. Ward Pitman Willenborg Reagan Totals KICKOFF RETURNS Hargett No. Yds. TD. Avg. 8 76 0 9.5 1 8 1 2 . 20 44 43 12 3 178 44.0 6.4 12.0 1.5 8.9 No. Yds. TD. Avg. 5 117 0 23.4 Reagan Ford Mcllhany Meeks IcL. ean itals 5 3 4 2 4 23 114 65 63 42 35 436 22.8 21.6 16.8 21.0 8.7 19.0 SCORING Rogers Keller LaGrange Lee Reagan B. Ward Totals TD. Pat. FG Total 3 0 0 18 AGGIE HIGHS: Rushing—31, Hargett (TCU) Passing—47, LaGrange to Carpenter (Tech) Punting—61, Keller (Ohio State) KO Returns—36. Ford (Arkansas) Punt Return—44, B. Ward (TCU) Intercept Return—67, Hargett (SMU) “Sports Car Center” Dealers for Renault-Peugeot & British Motor Cars Sales—Parts—Service We Service All Foreign Cars” 422 Texas Ave. TA 2-4517 COACH NORTON’S PANCAKE HOUSE 35 Varieties of finest pancakes, aged heavy KC steaks, shrimp, and other fine foods. Daily Merchant’s lunch 11 to 2 p.m. I Dyu • WE PRICES DOWN* (JyjeinactxztejiJA PRICES GOOD THURS., FRI., SAT. NOV. 14 - 15 - 16. In Bryan Only. We Re serve The Right To Limit. DO YOUk CHRISTMAS SHOPPING WITH BIG BONUS STAMPS...PLAY GEM AWARD MILLIONS OF FREE BIG BONUS STAMPS YET TO BE GIVEN ...Get Your Card Now! R | 5 Csl O All Veg. Shortening D ^ EGGS SUN FARM COFFEE J.W. SPECIAL PEACHES FOOD CLUB U.S.D.A. Grade “A” Large Doz. A Blend of 100% Pure Coffee — Lb. Can Sliced or Halve No. 21/2 Can f L U ^ FOOD CLUB Enriched 5 Lb. Bag 45 49 29 29 U. S. CHOICE HEAVY BEEF ROUND Steak»75 SIRLOIN Steak»79 T-BONE Steak»89 TURKEY TOMS r ^ 35 O H E E S E MILD CHEDDAR ..... Lb. 49 yv P P L E S WASH. RED DELICIOUS Ea. 5