The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 17, 1964, Image 4

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Page 4 College Station, Texas Tuesday, November 17, 1964 THE BATTALI^DN
STORY OF THE RICE GAME
. . . Owls had what it takes up front.
Latest Schoolboy Poll Out
DALLAS (A 1 )—All the top teams
held their places but there were
some changes made down the line
in the Dallas News poll of Texas
schoolboy football this week.
Amarillo Tascosa rolled on as
No. 1 in Class AAAA where Corsi
cana plunged from the list and
Texarkana moved into the 10th
spot.
Dumas remained No. 1 in Class
AAA but Wichita Falls Hirschi,
which had held No. 10, fell out and
was replaced by San Marcos, while
two teams moved in in place of
McKinney, which also made the de
scent. Lake Highlands and Jack
sonville tied for 10th.
While Phillips remained No. 1
in Class AA, No. 2 Rockwall was
knocked out along with Gladewater,
No. 8, and Atlanta and Dublin at
No. 2, moving up from No. 3.
Coahoma and Midlothian re
placed James Bowie and Cedar
Hill respectively in Class A where
Hull-Daisetta held firmly onto the
No. 1 spot.
The rankings by classes:
Class AAAA—1, Amarillo Tas
cosa; 2, Victoria; 3, Garland; 4,
Dallas Hillcuest; 5, Galena Park; 6,
Spring Branch; 7, Wichita Falls
Rider; 8, Nederland; 9, Fort Worth
Paschal; 10, Texarkana.
Class AAA—1, Dumas; 2, Vidor;
3, Clear Creek; 4, Andrews; 5, Pal
estine; 6, Weatherford; 7, Sweet
water; 8, San Marcos; 9, Bonham;
10, Lake Highlands and Jackson
ville tied.
Class A A—1, Phillips; 2, Canton;
3, Denver City; 4, Hondo; 5, Iowa
Park; 6, Plano; 7, Palacios; 8, At
lanta; 9, Taylor; 10, Dublin.
Class A—1, Hull-Daisetta; 2, Big
Lake; 3, Clifton; 4, Three Rivers;
5, Jefferson; 6, White Oak; 7, Pe
tersburg; 8, Ingleside; 9, Coahoma;
10, Midlothian.
Cage Match Held
The A&M varsity basketball-
ers subdued the freshmen, 78-
73, in an inter-squad pre-sea
son game Saturday morning in
G. Rollie White Coliseum.
It was the third of five sched
uled matches between the two
squads. The Fish get their next
chance for revenge Wednesday
night at 8 p.m. The public is
invited.
Cadet Cricketeers
Finish Fall Season
The A&M Cricket Club has put
away its gear until spring after
posting a 2-1 record.
The A&M club hosted the Dallas
County Cricket Club here Sunday
in a rematch won by the visitors
with a 22-run margin. Earlier the
Aggies defeated Dallas. The Ag
gies also defeated the University
of Houston.
"They put on a very good show
and deserved the win,” A&M Club
President John F. Griffiths said of
the Dallas match Sunday.
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PARDNER
You’ll Always Win
The Showdown
When You Get
Your Duds Done
At
CAMPUS
CLEANERS
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
JOB OPPORTUNITIES IN
THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITY
SUMMER AND YEAR-ROUND
a lecture by
Mr. Frank X. Gordon, Executive Director
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT TRAVEL CENTER
Wednesday, November 18
7:30 P. M.—M.S.C. Assembly Room
Mr. Gordon is appearing in connection with the M.S.C. Travel
Committee’s “Travel Emphasis Week.” He will also be available
to answer personal questions. ISTC attempts to match the student
to the job. Earn and learn your way in Europe . . . ISTC, 39 Cort
land t St., N. Y. 7, N. Y.
THERMA-FAX SALES INC.
Invites You
To The Showing Of Its Latest Equipment
Nov. 18 & 19 At The M.S.C.
The Latest Electronic Equipment In The 3M Brand
Visual Communications System Will Be On Display In
The Memorial Student Center, 2nd Floor 8:00 a. m. unMl
5 : 00 p. m.
See . . . How Transparencies From Nearly And Original
Material Can Be Made In 4 Seconds . . . Electrically.
Student Papers, Charts And Graphs, Lesson Outlines,
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No Chemicals, Powders, Or Liquids Are Required.
See . . . The many and varied (50) classroom applications which
can be used in the following departments: Accounting, Art,
Biology, Business Education. Chemistry, Clothing Crafts, Educa
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See . . . “The Lemmons’ Method of Classroom Teaching”. One of
the finest learning and teaching methods in use today.
If you are dedicated to the field of Teaching and Education, you
will enjoy the show, Wednesday and Thursday. November 18 & 19,
1964.
Rice Aerial Attack Clips A
By LANI PRESSWOOD
Sports Editor
The Rice Owls took flight Sat
urday and used the airways for
a 19-8 decision over the Aggies
in Rice Stadium.
The head bomber’s name was
Walter McReynolds, who fired 16
times and connected on nine of
them. Two of his completions
produced touchdowns.
In between his aerials, McRey
nolds sent his infantry banging
down the middle for 191 yards.
The difference in the ball game
was to be found in the trench
fight. The Owl forward wall was
a rugged and aggressive unit,
both on offense and defense.
A&M’s lone consolation came
from being the first team to put
six points on the scoreboard at
one time in Rice Stadium this
year. The Aggie touchdown was
something that neither Texas
Tech, West Virginia, LSU, or
Texas had been able to do this
yards, required 19 plays, and con
sumed some eight minutes of the
third quarter.
Two key plays in the march
were pass plays from the arm of
senior Dan Mcllhany. One was
a 14-yard shot to reliable John
Brotherton, the other a 15-yarder
to halfback Lloyd Curington.
The TD play was an end sweep
by Jim Stabler. He headed left
from the two, cut to the outside,
and outraced the Owl defender
into the end zone. His dive in
side the red flag ruined the Owls’
unblemished goal line record.
It was Stabler’s fourth touch
down of the season. The conver
sion was a two-point pass from
Glynn Lindsey to Dan Wester-
field.
The Ag touchdown concluded
one of the finest examples of ball-
control football seen on any field
this year. The drive covered 80
The six-pointer cut the 13-point
Rice lead to only five points and
Cadet enthusiasm reached its
game peak. The Owls responded
by cranking up a 67 - yard TD
drive of their own, though, to ice
the game for the Houstoniansi
Sophomore Chuck Latourette
sliced eight yards for the tally on
the first play of the final stanza.
Latourette’s run capped the
day’s scoring. The Owls racked
Romo Paces Texas To Victory
In SWC Cross Country Meet
AUSTIN (A 5 )—Texas, paced by
Richard Romo and Ken Sunderland,
defeated Arkansas and Texas A&M
Monday for the Southwest Confer
ence cross country team champion
ship.
They were the only teams en
tered in the meet.
For the Longhorns, also last
year’s champions, it was the 23rd
SWC cross country title.
Texas finished with 20 points in
the meet where the team with the
lowest number of points is the win
ner. Arkansas had 41 and A&M 63.
Romo was the top individual
runner, completing the three-mile
course in 14:35, while Sunderland
finished in 14:43.
George Stroup of Rice broke the
Longhorns’ domination of the top
five places, grabbing the third spot
in 14:48. Two Longhorns, Ronny
Yates 14:53, and Mike Hennen,
15:03, finished fourth and fifth.
The top runner for A&M was
Don Smith, who came in sixth, and
for Arkansas, Robert Tennant, who
was eighth.
Baylor’s Rex Garvin, running
just for individual points, was high
for the Bears with a seventh-place
finish. The other runners in the
top 10 were Curtis May, Arkansas,
ninth, and Ronald Davis, Texas
Tech, 10th.
Thirty runners finished the race.
Texas Tech Eyes Bluebonnet Berth
DALLAS —The Dallas News
says it has learned that Texas Tech
will play in the Bluebonnet Bowl
at Houston if it beats Arkansas
Saturday.
The News said a loss by Tech
would cancel the Bluebonnet Bowl’s
commitment to the Red Raiders,
who still might make it to the Sun
Bowl.
If Tech does beat Arkansas its
opponent in the Bluebonnet will be
either Georgia Tech or Mississippi,
the News declared.
“If Arkansas beats Tech, as it
is favored to do, then the Bluebon
net Bowl will go for Tulsa,” the
paper added.
up two six-pointers in the first
half.
The first was a 20-yard acro
batic act by end Dale Callihan
after receiving a McReynolds
aerial. Three Aggies had shots
at Callihan but were unable to
corral him.
Minutes later Rice ground out
56 yards in nine plays for their
second score. The payoff play
was a pass from 13 yards out to
Gene Fleming, who cut to his
right and scored untouched.
A crowd of 40,000 watched the
contest unfold beneath threaten
ing skies. The sun broke out after
the Cadet touchdown but it
proved to be a false prophet.
The robust and rugged Owls
looked like a far better team
than their unimpressive record
Volt
would indicate. TheEiu
continued their dominati
series. The Aggies have!
this tilt only three tit
World War II.
Several Aggies contii;
consistently standout pi
nie Moore was in oni;
from his nose guard posit
fensive back Mike Pitt
credited with six unassis
kies. Curington and & CJ
again shined on offense, -
The absence of quartet
o TVT^» V on rrlican Vt o rttnnw.
Gn
die McKaughan hamper?;
attack, but he is expect;
turn to workouts this
He’ll need to be at full
for the last Aggie confej
season. It’s against
ranked Texas in Austin's
ial Stadium.
The
Faculty
monthl
faculty
researc
will be
day, Gi
announ
The
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depart
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