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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 4, 1964)
MION ;an pu’. road, well' :ale organi- ral Moton, bureau and :ional vie* iar t Hi utional” ts, and the i the Mb Sale $2.98, nd Sahara, in all their ural forces \ stranger- fauna, and ■n. Sale $2.98. D BIRDS, Burian. 31 oi ancient pterosaurs, s portraits nous natu- Sale $2.98. lALLERY. ig tn\tmt ficant, the century’s I, et ai-as Santayana, Sale $2.98. by F. J. nical book in clear, :are of the t all types ients, and :e on their ■nicrotome, p and pol- materials, ble aspect. iale $2.98. J. S. CAM- Tom Ma- otographit vith more [ pictures. dramatic s by Emil ria\ review ol Texas Schoolboy Semifinals Set PAUL TIMMINS . Ag defensive standout iADERS usan R' lume in . Jerusa- ,d fasci- se crea- . (7-12). Sale $!■ tLS. By , photo- |y writ- id from Til"- Iale $1- NURS- pvorites xquisite olor by iubasta. Iale GS, by jres by ne that ioy J 0T [rations in the rial $'• BOOK. ll er - £ rer lb® illy se ll! a« e r olds. ale $!• enses^ Catcher Skoda, sight, id how around >r iH 118 : animal ce A& e > 1 SI.®®' STMAS irle. A ss tale and re- all the utterly r with match t, idea' , $1.9$. tE. By olor il; ? autif u ‘ agedies ^tio® 5 r forty stories i with s and large. Id will 1 $2.9$. GE) 'yPi—Sixteen games Friday and turday bring- the long- Texas toolboy football campaign to its nifinals and if things continue they have, some faces not ex- cted to be there will show up for e penultimate round. Eleven unbeaten teams remain, th two of them having suffered is. None clash with each other it that merely means there is ore chance of an upset here or ere. Amarillo Tascosa, the highest ted of Class AAAA, gets two- ne loser Ysleta at Amarillo Sat- day and will be expected to win sily enough. Andrews and Vidor, the only un- feated, untied teams, play Wich- a Falls Hirschi and Lamar Con- lidated respectively in the Class A.A race and both will be favored come through. Denver City, a favorite in Class A, plays Stamford in a feature ime. Hull-Daisetta, the No. 1 team in ass A, tangles with dangerous gleside. Tascosa, Andrews, Denver City id Hull-Daisetta are champion- lip favorites but chances are that hly half of them will make it. [The schedule this week: Class AAAA — Friday night, Garland at Fort Worth Paschal, McAllen at San Antonio Highlands, HoTTston Jones vs. Galena Park; Saturday, Ysleta at Amarillo Tas cosa. Class AAA — Friday night, Bon ham vs. Palestine at Mesquite, Vi dor vs. Lamar Consolidated at Spring Branch, San Marcos at Kerrville; Saturday, Andrews vs. Wichita Falls Hirschi at Abilene. Class AA—Friday night, Denver City vs. Stamford at Snyder, At lanta vs. Marlin at Nacogdoches, Palacios vs. Los Fresnos at Brownsville; Saturday, Taylor vs. Port Acres at Houston night. Class A — Friday night, Archer City vs. Clifton at Arlington, Jef ferson vs. Rosebud at Athens, Hull- Daisetta vs. Ingleside at El Cam- po; Saturday, Stratford vs. Big Lake at Lubbock. THE BATTALION Friday, December 4, 1964 College Station, Texas Page 5 ‘Winning Is The Only Thing’ SMU Goes From Top To Bottom Aggie Soccer Team To Host Houston The University of Houston soc cer team invades Aggieland Satur day for a 2 p.m. game. The Aggies although hampered by small injuries feel that they will be ready for the game. Houston will be seeking revenge, as they have never beaten the Ca dets. By HAROLD RATLIFF Associated Press Sports Writer It’s wonderful to have a win ning football team. Red Sanders, the late coach of UCLA, said “Winning isn’t everything; it is the only thing.” But the reaction from falling off the pedestal and trying to fight your way back sometimes is worse than having never been there at all. In the late forties Southern Methodist rode high with golden boy Doak Walker, the mighty Kyle Rote and others who made statistics on the field and records in the stands. There was a year when SMU drew almost a half-million fans. The athletic department made so much money it gave a sizable chunk to the fine arts department. But the descent started in 1950 and reached the absolute low in 1962 when the average was 21,- 000 fans per game. There had to be cutbacks in other sports. Hayden Fry came along to win four games in 1963 and bring the average up to 34,718. Included was an upset of Navy and some good games that were lost but with a flourish. It seemed SMU was at last on the way back. Prospects for 1964 were excel lent. Some writers thought SMU would make it to the first divi sion of the Southwest Conference, maybe even fight for the title. But a lot of things happened to ruin SMU’s hopes. First the school was put on probation for recruiting violations. There was chagrin and humiliation but this didn’t seem likely to damage any ability on the field of play. That, though, was taken care of in other ways. John Roderick, the speedy young man who ran Navy into defeat, became scholastically in eligible. Mac White, a top quar terback, had to forego football because of a ruptured disc. Larry Jernigan, who might have been the best tailback in the confer ence, got acute arthritis and couldn’t play a down. Tom Hillary, a fine end, signed a professional baseball contract. David Wilson, an excellent line backer, dropped out of school to work. Buddy Miller chose to graduate rather than take his last year of eligibility. In the first game Danny Thom as, a senior quarterback, injured his knee. He played all season virtually on one leg. Donnie Oefinger, a sophomore, stepped in at quarterback and was doing a fine job when he got a broken jaw in the third game of the season—the only game SMU won. He didn’t get back until five games later. Southern Methodist lost and lost. Frustration and humiliation hit simultaneously when the Methodists took a 44-0 licking from Arkansas. But there was no clamor to fire the coach—something that would have been evident no more than three years ago. The fans and alumni, for once at least, were understanding. They didn’t go out much to see the games because they didn’t want to watch the Mustang’s lose. But they didn’t criticize the coach or the school for its trou bles. Fry was probably a little amazed but he certainly felt bet ter about the situation. “The peo ple have been wonderful,” he said. “There’s a different attitude in football these days anyway.” Fry could even get a little en thusiastic about next year’s pros pects with one of the finest fresh man teams coming up. And he’s hopeful that some of those good football players lost by injury and scholastic trouble will be back. “We could have a good team,” he said. Losing has hurt Fry more than the fans and alumni but he has found that losing isn’t so bad if the people understand and are willing to make allowances. One thing that brought this about came from the fact that Fry and his Mustangs didn’t quit. They tried just as hard whether the score was 44-0 or 16-13- ! 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SIXTY DAYS THAT SHOOK THE WEST —The Fall of France: 1940. By Jacques Ben- oist-Mecbin. Monumental study of the Wehr- macht’s blitzkrieg across the low countries and France. Every aspect of that terrible catas trophe, from the defeatism in the French ernment to the fall of Paris, brilliantly scribed in nearly 600 pages of high drama, living history, and profiles of the major diplo matic and military figures on both sides. Maps. Pub. at $7.95. Sale $3.98. 85. CHEMISTRY MADE EASY, by C. T. Snell. Well-written, thorough self-teaching course covering the three main branches of chemistry —general, inorganic, organic. Illustrated, with practical experiments, useful tables. Pub. at $10.00 Sale $3.98. 86. THE ROMANTIC SOUTH, ed. by Harnett T. Kane. 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