Page 4 College Station, Texas Wednesday, December 4, 1963 THE BATTALIO ? ? ? Longhorns Are No. 1 ? ? ? UT’S CROSBY MISSES FIELD GOAL A&M’s Ronnie Carpenter (83) puts heavy rush on Steer kicker. Fish End Shorthorn String BY GLENN DROMGOOLE “And we’re going to beat them r "n PARDNER You’ll Always Win The Showdown When You Get Your Duds Done At CAMPUS CLEANERS three more times, too,” Ronnie Lindsey, Aggie Fish halfback, pre dicted following a 7-0 victory by the A&M Freshmen over the Tex as Yearlings on Thanksgiving eve. Lindsey had just been reminded that the Fish had defeated the Yearlings for the first time since 1954 when John Crow, Charley Krueger and company were fresh men. The future varsity gridmen whooped it up, then harmonized to the tune of “The Aggie War Hymn,” as they celebrated their hard-earned triumph. The one touchdown victory, which could very well be the turn ing point in Aggie-Longhorn foot ball relations, was preserved by a rugged defensive stand in the clos ing moments of the game. With only 18 seconds standing between them and victory, the Fish found themselves entrenched on their one yard line with the Short horns knocking on the door. Three plays later, however, Yearling quarterback Grady Her- old was dumped on the three as the gun sounded which ended the INVESTIGATE AT ELECTRONIC SALES ENGINEERING TRAINEES . . . will be selected by Texas Instruments to earn while training for rewarding Tl market ing positions. If you soon will receive your BS in EE or physics . . . and have a consuming interest in selling . . . this may be the important opportunity you've been awaiting. You will study on an informal, personally-oriented, custom-training program in Dallas for 12 to 1 8 months, following Tl products from de velopment and manufacturing stages through marketing. Ultimate assignment to choice of Tl offices in major U.S. cities. PLEASE AIRMAIL your resume to Personnel Department, Attn. BOB HENSLEE DEPT. 173 SEMICONDUCTOR- COMPONENTS DIVISION TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATED P. O. BOX 5012 DALLAS, TEXAS 75222 An Equal Opportunity Employer nine year stretch of expectation and anticipation by first year Ca dets. The Shorthorn offense seemed to crumble inside the Fish 25 yard line. Seven times that day the Yearlings got a good whiff of pay dirt, only to see their attack fail to penetrate the stubborn Fish lines. The Aggie frosh struck early in the second period when Lindsey marched 26 yards to climax an Aggie drive that went 77 yards in 11 plays. John Poss added the extra point, and with 10:49 left in the half the scoreboard read A&M 7, UT 0. And there the scoring stopped, but not the threatening as Texas tried and tried to avoid a shutout. The Shorthorns ran occasionally from a spread formation, with very limited success. Trull Guards Lead Against Miami Star NEW YORK OP)—Baylor’s Don Trull continues to lead in passing and total offense among the na tion’s major college football play ers, but George Mira of Miami, Fla., is posing a major threat. Trull leads the Miami Star by only 12 completions and 121 total offense yards, according to sta tistics released by the NCAA Tuesday. Each has one game re maining, Trull against SMU this Saturday and Mira against Ala bama Dec. 14. Through games of last weekend, Trull had gained a total of 2,115 yards to 1,994 for Mira. Roger Staubach of Navy, the Heisman award winner, is third with 1,738. In passing, Trull has completed 160 to 148 for Mira. The Baylor ace has picked up 2,047 yards on passes and has a completion aver age of .557. Mira’s figures are 1,854 yards and a .156 percentage. the IDEAL GIFT for CHRISTMAS This imported porcelain figurine stands 9" tall on a 3" x 3" black base. It is beautifully hand painted in true colors and is authentic in detail. Mom, Sister or Your Girl Friend Would Love To Have This Handsome Texas Aggie. MEMORIAL STUDENT CENTER GIFT SHOP Price: $3.95 (Add 35^ For Mailing) Heart-Breaking Effor Brought Cadets Clos The University of Texas has been voted No. 1 in the final UPI poll and only a week stands be tween the Longhorns and the na tional championship in the AP poll. But forever in the minds of Ag gies, Texas is No. 1 in luck only, and that is giving the benefit of the doubt to the officials for their supreme but ostensibly honest ef forts in behalf of the Steers. THERE WAS LITTLE doubt about which was the better team on a dreary Thanksgiving after noon. Though the Longhorns beat the Cadets statistically, the Aggies fought long and hard, and earned every one of their 13 points. It is ambiguous to cite any Ag gie for a hero’s role. All the Ag gies were outstanding. Joe Well born, Ronney Moore and Yancy Bounds played a great game in the defensive line and George Hargett and James Willenborg stood out in the secondary. JIM KELLER did a tremendous job as field general and Danny Mcllhany made several important plays from his right safety posi tion. But the near upset would have been impossible without a full team effort. And a memorable effort it was. No Aggie can feel anything but pride for the team that gave so much and came so close. AGGIE COACH Hank Fold- berg’s feeling on the game did an excellent job of expressing the opinion of most of the 38,500 fans in Kyle Field and several million television viewers. “This,” Fold- berg said, “is the greatest injus tice to a group of young fellows I’ve ever seen.” But despite the obvious evit (see page one) of poor official there is absolutely nothing can be done to reverse Texas'l; victory. It was strictly a jt% call on the part of the ofiit and is in no way subjectto versal. 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