The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 13, 1964, Image 4

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    Page 4
College Station, Texas
Tuesday, October 13, 1964
THE BATTALION'
Trojans Find
The SWC: Statistically Speaking
SWC Individual Stats Through Oct. 10
Player & School
Donny Anderson, T.T.
Jim Fauver, TCU
Jack Brasuell, Ark.
Ernie Koy, Texas
Harold Philipp, Texas
James Zanios, T.T.
Jim Lindsey, Ark.
Johnny Agent, T.T,
Fred Marshall
BEST:
LONG :
RUSHING
Att.
73
58
85
61
40
47
38
40
37
Gain
387
299
271
244
220
218
222
189
180
rsnaii, rt.rK. 01 iou
164—Anderson, T.T. vs. TCU.
90—Anderson, T.T. vs. TCU.
Player & School
Dan Mcllhany, A&M
Terry Southall, Baylor
Kent Nix, TCU
Tom Wilson, T.T.
Fred Marshall, Ark.
Walter McReynolds,
;e Marshall, Baylor
any Thomas, SMU
Marvin Kristy-''- r "—
BES
PASSING
Att. Comp.
Walter McReynolds, Rice
Mike Marshall, Baylc
nas
styi
BEST: 19 of 38 for 23
LONG : 68—Tom Wilso
lars
Danny The
Kristynik, Texas
r 236
79
69
59
43
33
32
30
24
37
irds—
34
33
27
21
18
17
14
13
13
Lost
17
18
7
1
0
0
20
7
19
Int.
5
5
6
3
4
3
1
3
5
Net
370
281
264
243
220
218
202
182
161
Net
452
463
335
227
233
182
280
124
162
yards—Nix (TCU) vs. T.Tech.
to D. Anderson, T.Tech (Miss
TOTAL OFFENSE
Avg.
5.1
4.8
3.1
4.0
5.5
4.6
5.3
4.6
4.4
Pet.
43.0
47.8
45.8
48.8
54.5
53.1
46.7
54.2
36.1
(Miss. St.).
SWC Team Stats
Texas
Baylor
Arkans:
T.Tech
TCU
Rice
A&M
SMU
YARDAGE BESTS:
Rush:
Pass :
Total;
PER GAME OFFENSIVE AVERAGES
Passing Tot. Off.
83.8 294.5
247.7 289.3
95.8 288.0
60.5 263.3
122.3 217.7
62.0 202.0
120.0 192.8
82.7 178.3
Rushing
210.8
41.7
192.3
202.8
95.5
140.0
72.8
95.7
T.Tech 343 yards vs.
Baylor 327 yards vs.
T.Tech 385 yards vs
TCU.
Washington.
TCU.
Team
Texas
Arkansas
SMU
T.Tech
A&M
R-
PER GAME DEFENSIVE AVERAGES
Opp. Pass
Upp. Ki
113.3
89.8
133.3
105.8
177.5
Rice 176.0
TCU 190.8
Baylor 213.7
BESTS (Least Yards Allowed l
Rush: Arkansas 11 vs.
Pass : Texas 29 vs. T.Tech.
Total : Arkansas 94 vs. TCU.
rI) :
TCU.
pp. P
62.8
124.5
86.0
152.8
94.0
105.3
101.3
99.0
P- 7
176.0
214.3
219.3
258.5
271.5
281.3
292.0
312.7
Player & School
Terry Southall, Baylor
Fred Marshall, Ark.
Donny Anderson, T.T.
Dan Mcllhany, A&M
Jim Fauver, TCU
Ernie Koy, Texas
Plays
79
70
73
112
61
65
Net
Rush
— 34
161
370
— 83
281
243
CONFERENCE STANDINGS
Ernie Koy, lexas 65 243
BEST: 232 yards—Southall (Baylor)
Pass
Yards
Per Play
Team
W
L
T
Pts.
Opps.
12
463
429
5.4
Arkansas
2
0
0
46
233
394
5.6
Texas
T.Tech
1
0
0
23
0
0
370
6.1
2
1
0
41
45
452
369
3.3
A&M
0
1
0
12
16
20
301
4.9
Baylor
0
1
0
6
17
40
vs. Oregon
283
St.
4.4
TCU
SMU and Rice—No
0 2
Conference games
0
to date.
16
54
1939 Champions
Return This Week
Cricket Team
Wins, 66-32
The A&M Cricket team opened
the season with a 66-32 victory
over the Houston 11 in a five-
hour match here Sunday.
A. P. Kudchadker and M. V.
Kudchadker paced the Aggie at
tack. A. P., team captain, scored
20 runs as offensive standout, while
M. V. took 6 wickets on defense.
The team’s next game will be
at the Dallas County Cricket Club
in Dallas Oct. 25.
f ^
IWKDNER
you’ll Always Win
The Showdown
When You Get
Your Duds Don*
At
CAMPUS
CI.FAIVFRS
The 1939 Texas Aggies were un
defeated, untied, named National
Champions and went on to beat
Tulane, 14-13, in the Sugar Bowl.
This weekend members of that
great squad, their wives, children
and in some cases, grandchildren,
will hold their Silver Anniversary
reunion on the A&M campus. They
will attend the A&M-TCU game as
a group.
Headquarters for the reunion
will be the Sands Motel in College
Station. The group will be luncheon
guests of Coach Hank Foldberg and
the A&M Athletic Department
prior to the game. A buffet ban
quet is scheduled Saturday night
at Briarcrest Country Club in
Bryan with Morris Frank, colum
nist and humorist of the Houston
Chronicle, as master of ceremonies.
J. Howard Shelton, president of
the Texas National Bank in Tem
ple and center on the 1939 team, is
the general chairman, with Marion
Pugh, College Station builder and
lumber yard owner, co-quarterback
of the champions, serving as local
chairman.
Over a 10-game schedule this
team allowed their foes an average
of 76.3 net yards total offense, fig
uring down to 1.71 yards a play.
It was a team that apparently
could score at will but was con
tent with a three-touchdown mar
gin. In their six SWC games, only
a 6-2 sqeaker over SMU missed
that margin.
They were masters of ball con
trol. In the Sugar Bowl game,
nursing a one-point lead, they held
the football for the final 9:30,
winding up on the Tulane one-yard
line. Rather than risk another
kick return by Tulane’s great Bob
by Kellogg, Aggie captain Cotton
Price elected to run out the clock
rather than score.
John Kimbrough, tackle Rev. Joe
Boyd and guard Marshall Robnett
won All-American honors and the
majority of the starting unit won
all-SWC honors.
Homer Hill Norton, coach of that
great machine, will induct Kim
brough into the first A&M Hall
of Fame Friday night.
Buckeyes Gain
In Latest Poll
By The Associated Press
The
top ten teams with
first
place
votes in parentheses,
won-
lost records and points on
9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis i
a 10-
i.
Texas (30) 4-0
387
2.
Ohio State (7) 3-0
344
3.
Alabama (2) 4-0
307
4.
Notre Dame (1) 3-0
281
5.
Michigan 3-0
233
6.
Nebraska 4-0
142
7.
Syracuse 3-1
89
8.
Arkansas 4-0
86
9.
Louisiana State 3-0
59
10.
Florida State 4-0
56
zjCord
by Tulane at
Loupot's
cjCord
by Charles Meyers
at the
Open Mon. & Thurs. til 8:30
r sitl) SHo|
Achilles Heel
By LANI PRESSWOOD
Sports Editor
The Southern California Trojans allowed the Aggie wood
en horse a seven-point peek Saturday night, slammed the
gates shut and handed the cadets their fourth straight loss,
31-7.
Halfback Mike Garrett led the Troy offensive by slash
ing for 121 yards rushing and two touchdowns. The 178-
pounder was mercifully removed from the game early in the
fourth quarter by Coach John McKay.
The Aggies stunned the crowd of 42,295 by scoring on
the game’s sixth play. Cadet secondary ace Mike Pitman
picked off an SC pass before the Memorial Coliseum audience
got settled in their seats, and streaked 33 yards to the Trojan
seven.
Four downs later, tailback
Jim Stabler crashed over from
the one to score his second
TD of the season. Glen Lind
sey’s conversion made it 7-0, Ag
gies.
The next three quarters were
all Southern Cal.
First, Trojan quarterback Craig
Fertig engineered a 68-yard scor
ing drive which bore fruit with
14:26 left in the second quarter.
Garrett then sparked a drive
which played out at the Aggie five
when the Cadet defense stiffened.
Dick Brownell booted a field goal
from that spot and sent Troy home
at halftime with a 10-7 lead.
The second half added insult to
injury as the Angelenos completely
dominated play.
With 4:11 gone in the third
stanza, Garrett rambled through
a gaping hole in the Ag line to
put six more points on the score-
board.
Late in the fourth quarter, Ag
punter Phil Scoggin laid a kick
out of bounds on the Trojan 12.
It was only a matter of time.
Ron Sherman broke for 24 yards
and the officials tacked on 15 more
for piling on. Fertig took to the
air and drilled end Dave Morton
for 34 yards. Garrett then plunged
for the touchdown.
The final SC tally came after
the interception of a Dan Mcllhany
pass at the mid-field stripe. The
ensuing effort carried to the Ag
34. The Ags were charged with
pass interference in the end zone
on the next play and the ball was
placed on the one.
Two plays later fullback Ron
Heller crashed into the end zone
for thet game’s last tally.
A fumble recovery by tackle
Harvey Ermis gave A&M its only
possession of the football in Trojan
territory the entire second half.
Young Catcher
Vetoes Keane,
Wins Ball Game
By JOE REICHLER
Associated Press Sports Writer
NEW YORK UP) — Talk about
accidental home runs. Tim Mc-
Carver’s three-run homer that gave
the St. Louis Cardinals a 10-in
ning 5-2 triumph over the New
York Yankees in the fifth World
Series game Monday was the big
gest dent of all.
In the first place, McCarver was
supposed to bunt. That was
Manager Johnny Keane’s original
plan. But he vetoed it when he
thought Yankee catcher Elston
Howard was on to it.
Even when ordered to hit away,
McCarver was not swinging for
the seats. All he wanted to do was
get the ball past the infield to
bring home the runner from third.
“It was the biggest hit I ever
made in my life,” chortled Mc
Carver as the fun-loving catcher
re-lived the greatest thrill of his
young life. ’’But all I wanted to
do was get enough good wood on
it to score Bill White from third.”
“It was a squeeze situation and
we had one in mind,” explained
Keane. “I thought about it but
dismissed it from my mind when
I saw Howard watching me in
tently.
“He had been watching me all
game and I figured he had guessed
what I was up to. So we let
McCarver hit.”
McCarver, a .288 hitter during
the season, has been swinging a
hot bat in the Series. He had
two singles, besides his game win
ning homer.
Learning: about a European buffet.
25,000 EUROPEAN
10BS
Grand Duchy of Luxembourg
—25,000 jobs in Europe are
available to students desiring to
spend a summer abroad but could
not otherwise afford it. Monthly
wages range to $300 and jobs in
clude resort, office, child care, fac
tory, farm and shipboard work.
$250 travel grants will be given
to the first 5000 applicants. Job
and travel grant applications and
full details are available in a 36-
page illustrated booklet which
students may obtain by sending
$2 (for the booklet and airmail
postage) to Dept. O, American
Student Information Service, 22
Ave. de la Liberte, Luxembourg
City, Grand Duchy of Luxem
bourg.
“Sports Car Center"
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Holt, Rinehart and Winston, li:
Who are these Unitarians!
Unitarians are not bound by creed or dogma;
each reserves the right to formulate his own re
ligion, based upon his own intelligent reason
ing. As a religious group, they believe the deed
to be more important than the creed. Possibly
that is the reason so many outstanding humani
tarians were members of the Unitarian denomi
nation. These include Thomas Jefferson, Horace
Mann, Daniel Webster, Susan B. Anthony, Em
erson, Hawthorne, Longfellow, Maria Mitchei
and many others. Unitarians believe that the way
a person lives is the real test of his religion.
C. C
teer
riso
Eigl
at a
A
searcl
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Confe
Dr.
Direc
Verne
A. C.
sion
junio:
dents
UNITARIAN FORUM, Wednesday 14 October at|
8:00 p. m.
“The History of Unitarianism
Speaker: Mrs. Linda Pequegnat
Unitarian Fellowship Building
Near South Gate on Old Highway 6.
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Bryan, Texas
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