Page 4 College Station, Texas Tuesday, October 20, 1964 THE BATTALION ATTENTION All civilian dorm counselors and officers The civilian section of the Ag- gieland staff announces that the last date for scheduling group pictures (dorms) for the ’65 Ag- gieland will be 1 December 1964. Pictures are to be scheduled at the Student Publication Office, Y. M. C. A. Bldg. The final day for having pictures made will be 1 March 1965, at which time all other items to go on pages and payment ($55.00 full page, $30.00 one half page) must be turned in. We will appreciate your cooperation and any ideas. John Holladay, Section editor Ag Comeback Stymied CORPS SENIOR & 1ST SERGEANTS YEARBOOK PORTRAIT SCHEDULE CORPS SENIORS & OUTFIT FIRST SERGEANTS will have their portrait made for the “Ag- gieland ’65„ according to the fol lowing schedule. Portraits will be made at the Aggieland Stu dio, in CLASS A WINTER UNI FORM. EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND 1ST SERGEANTS will al so have portraits made in GH cap for the military section. COMMANDING OFFICERS will have full length portraits made in boots. PLEASE MAKE INDIVIDUAL APPOINT MENTS WITH THE STUDIO FOR THESE FULL LENGTH PORTRAITS. October 27-28 Maroon & White Band 28- 29 A, B, C, D-l 29- 30 E, F, G-l November 2- 3 A, B, C, D-2 3- 4 E, F, G-2 4- 5 A, B, C, D-3 5- 6 E, F, G, H-3 9-10 Squadrons 1-4 10- 11 Squadrons 5-8 11- 12 Squadrons 9-12 12- 13 Squadrons 13-18 By LANI PRESSWOOD Sports Editor A late Aggie comeback was un able to overcome two disastrous first half miscues Saturday as TCU’s Horned Frogs took a 14-9 decision from the Ags. The game’s opening kickoff set the mood for the rest of the con test. Maroon fullback Rubber Col lins received the ball on his own 20 and raced to the Frogs 45 but an offsides penalty rubbed it out. Two minutes later, Kent Nix dropped a bomb right in the hands of the lonesome Sanders for the tilt’s opening TD. The swift senior crossed the goal line untouched to complete the 27-yard scoring play. In the second quarter, Nix en gineered a Purple march which car ried to the Cadet 24. Maroon line backer Jerry Kachtik intercepted a Nix aerial at the 16 to temporari ly stave off the Christians. ATTENTION ALL HOME TOWN AND PROFESSIONAL CLUB REPRESENTATIVES The hometown club and profes sional club section of the “Ag gieland” staff has announced that the last date for scheduling club pictures for the “Aggie land” will be 18 December, 1964. Pictures are to be scheduled at the Student Publication Office, Y.M.C.A. Bldg. The final day for having the pictures made will be 1 March, 1965. Please make arrangements to have your pic ture scheduled before the dead line. Dave Baker, Section Editor Mike Rosbury I love a man in Van Heusen ”417”! You can tell he’s important, ready to move up. That "V-Taper” fits and flatters his rugged, rangy physique, and the executive styling of traditional button-downs or crisp Snap-Tabs should take him to the top. Broadcloth or oxford, in all the greatest colors, oh man ... that’s the shirt for my man! $5.00 vaisi heusen* younger by design V-Taper—for th$ lean trim look. Three abortive efforts later, the Aggies lined up in punt formation. Phil Scoggin fumbled the low cen ter snap and tried to run with the ball. Defensive end Joe Ball hit the Cadet kicker and shook him loose from the pigskin. Giant Buffalo Nayfa booted the ball into the end zone and gleefully settled his 231 pounds on it for six decisive points. The first half still wasn’t over, though. Blitzing Ag guard Jerry Pizzitola forced Nix to throw a wobbly floater which Sherman De- Busk plucked out of the air and re turned to the TCU 21. ,On fourth and eight, the Aggies came out of the huddle in their placekicking formation. Kicker Glynn Lindsey snatched the ball from holder Mike Phillips, though, and scooted for seven yards to the Frogs 12. The measurement showed the gain to be inches shy and the ball went over. The half ended 14-0 and the A&M cause looked dim. The inter mission entertainment perked the partisan crowd up however. The halftime show featured a tremendous performance by the Aggie Band, the recognition of the 1939 National Champion Aggies, and the attempted larceny of a TCU band hat by a daring Aggie freshman. The second half was a different ball game. With 10:05 to go in the 3rd quarter, Randy Howard threw a wild pitchout to Frog ace Jim Fauver. The sturdy half back recovered it and allowed him self to be stopped behind the goal line for an Aggie safety. With 5:30 left in the third per iod, the Cadets struck again. A pass interference penalty had given them new life on the Frog 14. Two plays later, Eddie Mc- Kaughan swung around right end, evaded a defender, and crashed in for the only Ag touchdown of the afternoon. The fourth quarter was score less. A&M substituted liberally dur ing the game and 47 men saw act ion. 20 of that number were sophomores. ★ ★ ★ Mcllhany Injured Aggie quarterback Dan Mcllhany was forced out of the TCU game Saturday with a knee injury and his playing status is indefinite. Mcllhany will miss the next two games and could be out for the season. Second-teamer Eddie Mc- Kaughan will probably step into the starting role. Wmmmmm Key Play Of Ag-TCU Game . . . Frogs recovered Scoggin’s fumble for their second touchdown. Cadet Soccer Team Opens With Victory The A&M Soccer team opened their season at home Sunday with a 2-1 victory over Juventus of Houston. The speed and stamina of the Ag squad was the deciding factor in the hard-fought match. The outweighed Cadets employed their typical fast break and low pass game to open up a 1-0 half time lead. A high wind favored the Juventus in the second half and helped them tie the score late in the game. Four minutes later, the Maroon offense raced to the deciding goal of the match. Team captain Jasson Gryzagori- dis praised the performance of each of his squadmen. He termed the victory a team effort and refused to single out any individuals. Sunday the Aggies meet Sam Houston State College in Houston’s Memorial Park at 1:30 p.m. Read Classifieds Daily brisk, bracing—the original spice-fresh lotion 1.25 ends drag, pull, speeds up electric shaving 1.00 helps "educate' your hair, grooms naturally, prevents drying 1-00 (Qld r^pucl ’ * * S * A. V f uO?' 0 ’' 5^^?-with that crisp, clean masculine aroma! Randy Wins Silver Mem ■Km .e ■■ VS* Aggie Sophomore Hits 66’3 Va ” Randy Matson is shown in action in the mate Dallas Long by five inches. (AH Olympic shot put in Tokyo. The Cadet photo) weightman placed second to U. S. team- Missed PAT Pass Receptio Deemphasized By Hog Coacl FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (A>) _ Even if Texas’ crucial pass for a two-point conversion in the waning minutes had been caught, Arkansas still might have come away with its 14-13 upset of the Longhorns Saturday night. The reason: Hix Green was racing along about the one-and not in the end zone-when Marvin Kristynik’s hurried pass fell to the ground behind him. “We could have made a stab at Green,” Arkansas Coach Frank Broyles said Monday after view ing the game films. “We were in position to tackle him but it would have been close. If it had been a good tackle, we would have had him.” Kristynik’s pass, the difference between victory and defeat with only 1:27 left to play, went awry when Arkansas’ Jim Finch charged through the line and put a hard rush on the Texas quarterback. Broyles, still elated after two days of pandemonium in this mountain university town, said game films showed him nothing he didn’t already know about the game. “It was just two good football teams playing a great game,” he Shoats And Wogs Gain Frosh Lead (JP) — Texas Christian and Ar kansas are tied for the lead in the Southwest Conference freshman football race with 2-0 records but only Arkansas risks it this week. The Razorbacks play Oklahoma State Friday. Southern Methodist beat Rice 27- 0, Texas Christian downed North Texas State 27-15 and Arkansas defeated Texas Tech 18-14 last week. The freshman standings: Team W L T Pet. Pts. OP TCU 2 0 0 1.000 67 36 Arkansas 2 0 0 1.000 24 14 Texas 1 0 0 1.000 10 7 SMU 1 1 0 .600 27 6 Texas A&M 0 1 0 .000 21 40 Baylor 0 1 0 .000 7 10 Rice 0 1 0 .000 0 27 Texas Tech 0 1 0 .000 14 18 said. Broyles said the Hogs did not work up anything new for the Texas game “outside of the little changes that you make for any game.” Arkansas, ranked eighth last week in the Associated Press poll, used an 81-yard punt return by Ken Hatfield and a 33-yard pass from quarterback Fred Marshall to end Bobby Crockett for its touchdowns. Tom McNelly kicked the extra points. Texas drove 70 yards for its second touchdown late in the game and Ernie Koy went over from the two to make it 14-13. Then Tex as went for the victory on the two- point conversion try. Broyles said he agreed with Tex as Coach Darrell Royal’s decision to go for the victory instead of a tie. “I don’t think any football coach in America would have done dif ferently,” said Broyles. Broyles said he had been a I telephone almost constantly I he returned from Austin ii | after midnight Sunday. “But I don’t mind,” lit “They don’t call you wk. lose.” Although the victory ran kansas’ record to 5-0, Broyles he still was not looking anyfl er ahead than Saturday he 1 nonconference game with I§ in Little Rock. By! Sen. 1 zona, sa Commun | cordial n ocratic i night oi strength vowed t “We 1 Broyles said Arkansas andK atomic i ry Lamb, who was injured ii I—and v Texas game, would not see sfs the Sovi against Wichita. “They have more speed anybody we’ve played,” he “They’re big and they use s 1 defense. It won’t be a krei | for us by a long shot.” I C Republic said. The Arkansas coach saiij tumultuous welcome the Hopl when their plane landed at.fi. etteville had him worried. SWC Individual Stats Stu To RUSHING Player & School Att. Gain Lost Net Avi Flayer & School Att Anderson, TTech 93 Koy, Texas Fauver, TCU Brasuell, Ark. Philipp, Te 486 p, Texs Agan, TTech Zanios, TTecI Lindsey, Ark. Bulaich, TCU 88 360 76 368 99 302 66 262 57 264 52 247 46 267 55 171 19 7 18 10 1 7 0 21 6 467 353 350 292 261 257 vg. 5.0 4.0 4.7 2.9 4.7 4.5 BEST: ’l64—Anderson, T.T. vs. TCU LONG : 90—Anderson, T.T. vs. TCI 247 4.8 246 5.3 165 3.0 PASSING Player & School Att. Com mthall, Baylor Soui...^.., Nix, TCU Mcllhany, 4.&M Wilson, TTech McReynolds, Rice Marshall, Ark. Thomas, SMU Kristynik, Texi 93 80 86 56 48 45 38 49 np. 46 38 36 27 25 24 20 18 Int. 6 9 6 5 5 5 3 5 Net 660 470 481 313 282 314 193 214 k, 1 exas BEST: 19 of 38 for 236 yards, Nix (TCU) vs. TTech. LONG: 68—Tom Wilson to D. Anderson, TTech (Miss. St.) PI Sou TOTAL OFFENSE Yds. Net Net Tot. Per ayer & Sch. Plays Rush Pass Yds. Pla >uthall, Baylor li2 Baylo on, T Marshall, Ark. 10 660 670 nay 6.0 4.9 92 137 314 451 4.9 Koy, Texas 94 353 65 418 4.4 Nix, TCU 90 —53 470 417 4.6 Mcllhany, A&M 123 —70 481 411 3.3 BEST: 24 yards—Southall (Baylor) vs. TTech. SCORING Player & School TD PAT Koy, Texas 70 0 McKnelly.Ark. 0 16 Conway, Texas _ 0 14 Anderson, TTech 3 0 Elkins, Baylor 3 0 Zanios, TTech 3 0 0 18 LONG: FG—51—Ken Gill, TTech (Miss. St.) FG 0 2 2 0 0 Tot. 42 21 20 18 18 RECEIVING Player & School No. Yds. Avj. j Campbell, TCU Elkins, Baylor Hodge, Baylor irson, TTech Ander Lindsey, Ark. Taylor, SJ Lane, Baylor Uzzell, A&M A&l BEST: 9 for 130—Campbell (TCU Player & School Thomas, SMU Latourette, Rice Koy, Texas Fauver, TCU PUNTING No. 17 er, Scoggin, A&M Anderson, TTi Anderson, TTech Whiddon, Baylor Nix, Ark. IN IX, A LONG Jim Fauver 82, TCU (Km INTERCEPTIONS Play* Roberts, TTech Gray, Ark. Six players tied LONG: 72, Ms No. 5 3 with two eack. aples, SMU (Ark.) PUNT RETURNS Player & School Yards Hatfield, Ark. 242 Taylor, SMU 123 Harris, Texas 120 Roberts, TTech 94 Ferguson, Rice 79 Dixon, Texas 63 LONG: 81, Hatfield, Ark. (Texas) “I he course t for it w said Dr, ered the Lecture’ the YM Kunki Agricull outlined fore he course < in the sciences When “both t dent wi ter. Th dent co the stuc have b< KICKOFF RETURNS Player & School Yards Hatfield, Ark. 201 Anderson, TTech 182 arson. Defee, Baylor Fauver, TCU er r Koy, Texas cKaugha 171 151 128 McKaughan, A&M 126 LONG: Fau auver (TCU 43 Yds. va. 4:1