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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 10, 1964)
Page 6 College Station, Texas Tuesday, November 10, 1964 THE BATTALIC Aggies Smash SMU To End Droutl DAN WESTERFIELD CHURNS FOR YARDAGE . . unidentified Pony hauls soph in after end sweep. Ag Dressing Room Noisiest Of Year The locker room vocabulary of the victorious Cadets Saturday con sisted of two words: “It’s great!” This refrain was echoed by the tired but happy Aggies as they were questioned by reporters and congratulated by well-wishes. Aggie mentor Hank Foldberg said, “I’m damn proud of the way these kids have kept coming back, week after week. They’ve been playing like this all year. The difference was that nothing serious happened to us this game.” Eddie McKaughan, soph quarter back who had an outstanding day, said, “This is great. This is what I was used to in high school. We’re going to beat Rice and Texas, and that’s for sure.” End John Brotherton, who played with his back shot full of novo- 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. November 9-10 Squadrons 1-4 10- 11 Squadrons 5-8 11- 12 Squadrons 9-12 12- 13 Squadrons 13-18 caine, talked slowly from behind a pair of puffed up eyes. “This was the best game of my life offensively. Those passes were there.” Speedy Lloyd Curington: “The line blocked great. Everyone played heads up ball. We finally got the offense and defense together. It had to happen. We knew it was coming.” 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 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 By LANI PRESSWOOD Sports Editor The Aggies broke out the cham pagne and danced in the streets Saturday night. Only hours earlier, the Cadets stunned a Cotton Bowl crowd of 32,000 by decisively clubbing SMU, 23-0. It was the worst conference defeat inflicted upon Coach Hayden Fry in his three years at the Pony reins. The statistics were as one sided as the game. The Ags led in first downs, 15-6. They out- gained the Mustangs 248 to 38. SMU wound up with -10 yards rushing. The statistics which mattered to Aggies, though, was the one on the scoreboard. It favored the Cadets for the first time in 51 weeks. The win over the Rice Owls last season had marked the most recent scoreboard triumph. The key name for the Farmers in Saturday’s sun-filled contest was Eddie McKaughan. The poised sophomore completed 8 of 16 passes for 83 yards and had four others dropped. He drove the Cadets to within field goal range in the first half and to their initial touchdown midway of the third quarter. An out-of-bounds injury forced Mc Kaughan out of the game in the fourth period. His performance during the three quarters he played earned him SWC Back-of-the-Week hon ors in the Dallas Morning News. McKaughan was one of a whole host of Aggies who played superb football Saturday. Senior end John Brotherton made several amazing catches to keep Ag drives alive. Sophomore wingman Ed Bred- ing logged as much time in the SMU backfield as some of the Pony ball carriers. Secondary per- ED BREDING . . . Aggie ends had. formers Jim Willenborg, Mike Pit man, and Mike Phillips all stood out. The Maroon offensive line pro vided flawless protection for Ag quarterbacks, who connected on 14 out of 24 passes. The Cadets defensive wall caused four fum bles with sharp tackling and com pletely stymied the Mustangs of fense. Placekicker Glynn Lindsey had his finest afternoon in an Aggie uniform. His kickoffs were much improved and his 29-yard field goal provided the Ags with a 3-0 hauftime margin Lindsey’s boot came with 7:06 left in the first half. It was set up by a Pony fumble on their own 25. Breding laced into tail back Jimmy Taylor and the ball floated free. Ag guard Sherman DeBusk pounced on it for the Maroons. McKaughan rifled an 14-yard pass to Brotherton on the Mus tang 13 on a 3rd and 12 play. Three efforts failed to gain, how ever, and Lindsey was called in to exercise his toe. Intermission was spiced by a brief flurry on the sidelines but cooler heads prevailed and no real trouble broke out. The second Aggie score came late in the third quarter. An other Mustang fumble preceded it. Reserve signal-caller Donnie Oefinger, playing with a wired- up broken jaw, fumbled on his own 29 and Breding was on the spot to claim the ball for A&M. Seven plays later, the Cadets pushed across for the TD. The key play was a 15-yard scamper by McKaughan to the one-yard line. Bubber Collins knifed in behind Jack Pyburn and Tommy Kirchmer for the tally. Lindsey’s conversion attempt was blocked and the third quarter ended 9-0. JOHN BROTHERTON . . . great day Saturday. DeBusk recovered a thinli bobble on the third stanza'; play which set the Ags inis again. On this drive, Charles Grange replaced the dazed Kaughan at the helm. It the Ags seven plays to negi the 43 yards. LaGrange: three passes on the drive arid; one found the mark. Two were snared by Br ton and were good for27ji The third was a touchdowns to end Billy Uzzell whichn thing of beauty. It was a 17-yard spiral: Uzzell hauled in over his sho: in the left corner of the ends The hungry Aggies *s through yet. In the fading; utes of the game, the Agssto| the Ponies on their own 47, Dan Mcllhany then mads first appearance since thtl game at quarterback. Hi placed LaGrange, who had! knocked out of commissionm same end sweep play on ii McKaughan had been injured; lier. Seven was the lucky no again for the Ags. Thafi number of plays it took Mcl to engineer the score. Lindsey’s placement finii the day’s scoring. Upen 8 A. M. close 8 F. M. 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