Page 4 College Station, Texas Friday, September 25, 1964 THE BATTALION P; [ St. Thomas’ Episcopal Chapel 906 Jersey St. South Side of Campus Invites anyone interested in The Episcopal Church to to an INQUIRERS’ CLASS Sunday Evening 8:00 p. m. First Class October 4, 1964 Regular Service of the Episcopal Church Sundays 8:00 a. m. 9:15 a. m. 11:00 a. m.; 7:00 p. m. Wednesdays 6:30 a. m. 7:15 p. m. Canterbury Association - Supper 6:30 p. m. Wednesdays. PICTURE SCHEDULE AGGIELAND ’65 Outfit pictures for the AG GIELAND will be made accord ing to the schedule below. Uniform will be class A Win ter. Outfit C.O.’s will wear sa bers; seniors will wear boots. Ike jackets may be worn if all seniors in the outfit can obtain them. Guidons and award flags will be carried. All personnel in the outfit will wear the billed service cap issued by the college. The type of cap worn by under classmen to and from the picture taking area is left to the discre tion of the outfit C.O. Outfits should be in front of the Administration Building by 1230 hrs. on the appointed day. Arrangements should be made by first sergeants with the Mess Hall supervisors to allow the outfit to be admitted to the Mess Hall early. Bait Pix me S t U of H VS A+SA lV. O-o) FLXt. {/*-7) 7\x/c> S~f~. (n-o) F/&. (/T--7) Tc/kxs A+M fckJ-9) WoisK. (lS-9) Rice ArK. (30-3-) OhioSt. (20-¥) Fla.S*. (IH~&) (3.0-12) As Batt Editors See Them The five Battalion editors dashed Thursday editor Glenn Droomgole, new editors Mike into the wastelands of blind prediction and Reynolds and Clovis McCallister, and sports supposition when they decided to call their editor Tex Rogers will state their cases, own shots on Southwest Conference grid Once the season gets underway percentages tilts. A weekly tote board of “Batt Pix” will will be kept on each prognosticator who will be posted with the scheduled games, and either reap the glories of good guessing, or Battalion editor Ronald Fann, managing suffer the consequences for lousy calls. September October 28 — A-l, B-l 29 — C-l, D-l 30 — E-l, F-l 1 — G-l, G-2 2 — A-2, B-2 5 — C-2, D-2 7 — A-3, B-3 8 — C-3, D-3 9 — E-3, F-3 12 — G-3, H-3 13 — Sqd 1, Sqd 2 14 — Sqd 3, Sqd 4 15 — Sqd 5, Sqd 6 16 — Sqd 7, Sqd 8 19 — Sqd 9, Sqd 10 20 —Sqd 11, Sqd 12 21 — Sqd 13, Sqd 14 22 — Sqd 15, Sqd 16 23 — Sqd 17, Sqd 18 26 — M-Band, W-Band Meeks Had Future Cut Out With Big, Athletic Pattern What would you do in this situ ation? You have two older broth ers, both outstanding athletes in high school and then in college. Your main desire is to do just as good if not better than they did. Mix in a father who was former ly a coach and is now the equip ment manager for the team you’re pi ay in on. A&M’s Tommy Meeks solved this situation by becoming one of the top backs on this year’s Aggie club. Meeks, a rugged 6-0, 175-pound, two-year letterman from Bryan, is the son of A&M’s equipment man ager, S. M. (Monk) Meeks, who is in his seventh year at Aggieland. Tommy’s older brothers, S. M. Jr. and Charley, set up goals for him to reach and he has done an outstanding job in reaching them. Charley, the oldest, was both a track and a football standout at the University of Texas, while S. M. Jr. was an All-Conference cin- derman at the University of Hous ton in 1955. Tommy’s past, present and fu ture is just as bright. In his sen- SWC Football Preview Rice-LSU Possible 70,000 plus sellout in opener for Rice, a team strong in SWC and national picture . . . Game launches Silver Anniver sary season at Rice for Jess Nee ly .. . Guesswork is Rice to come out in I-Formation . . . LSU now using Baylor-style attack . . . Rice Quarterback Walt McRey- nolds under magnifying glass as man who must deliver if Rice title hopes stay alive . . . Game, considering Houston’s September heat-humidity, may also tell if Rice has enough depth to win in new era of platoon ball . . . Good Quarterback duel between Pat Screen, LSU’s run-pass master, and McReynolds, who has always had a good night against Tigers really come of age?; (2) How good are the Longhorns? . . Tech is fresh from 21-7 upset of Mis sissippi State, perhaps its biggest intersectional win since joining the SWC . SMU-Ohio St. plus as Huskies, rated best team in the west and figured for na tional rank, regroups after stun ning 3-2 upset by Air Force last week . . . Junior Coffey, 215- pound Huskie fullback from Dim mit, Tex., ran for 160 yards and heads Washington offense . Arkansas-Tulsa Expect capacity 81,000 plus for Buckeye opener . . . Ohio State popular contender for Big Ten crown and rated strongly nation ally, with 21 lettermen back from conference runner-up team of ‘63 . . . Buckeye line typically Big Ten size and conservative Coach Woody Hayes hints at more wide- open attack . . . Key Ohio State players are Halfback-Quarterback Tom Barrington and fullback Willard Sander, 212 . TCU-Florida St. rrr i rr Baylor-Wash. iech-Iexas „ J .. . „ , Record 43,000 due for this SWC opener, which should answer two popular questions: (1) Has Tech Season opener for Baylor, well- regarded SWC entry but a team of mystery because of unproven quarterbacks . . . Expect 50,000 Expect 25,000 for TCU’s home opener . . . Frogs almost scored major national upset last week in 7-3 loss to Kansas . . . Frogs fumbled on one-foot line in final seconds . . . This first test of Abe Martin’s new dual offense was big success as Jim Fauver rushed for 120 yards, best start for TCU back since days of Jim Swink, and Frogs ran up 279 yards total offense . . . Offense may falter this week with key passer Kent Nix sidelined (knee) . . . Randy Howard, a running type, will shoulder the load . . . Florida State dumped Miami, 14-0. Expect about 25,000 as Arkan sas, yet an uncertain SWC con tender, seeks to polish its offense for next week’s SWC opener with TCU . . . Razorbacks edged im proved Oklahoma State, 14-10, last week as ground game showed something of old-time form but passing failed to achieve consist ency . . . Starting quarterback Fred Marshall needed help from Billy Gray in game, but tender shoulder bothered Marshall’s ac curacy and he’s still rated No. 1 . . . Tulsa brings passing offense that has led the nation two straight years and set NCAA rec ord of 2448 yards last year . . . Key man is former SMU ace Jer ry Rhome, No. 3 passer nationally last year . . . This will be opener for Tulsa, a definite Missouri Valley contender with problems in interior line . . . Arkansas leads rivalry, 24-12, and is fav ored . ior year at Stephen F. Austin High School in Bryan he made the All- District 10-AAAA team and then the All-State Class AAAA elite eleven. As an Aggie freshman he caught five passes for 58 yards to lead his team in the department as well as scoring with 18 points. “Tommy is one of the finest blocking wingbacks I’ve seen in a long time. He’s a good ball« rier and a fine receiver,” saysj; gie Coach Hank Foldberg ak, his starting right halfback. Meeks, after starting agai: LSU last Saturday, had this to >: about the game: “We got off a slow start but bounced back the second half. Errors cost us tj game. We’re going to surprise lot of people this year. INCREASE - Compression 40%. 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