The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 19, 1965, Image 6

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    Page 6
THE BATTALION
College Station, Texas Tuesday, October 19, 1965
Ags Beaten Back
By Stubborn Frogs
By LARRY R. JERDEN
Battalion Sports Editor
The Aggies almost made a
beautiful comeback Saturday
night in Fort Worth against
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HUUBAUI)
TCU, but almost isn’t enough in
football and the Froggies won
it, 17-9.
TCU had built up a 10-3 lead
by the end of the third quarter,
and early in the fourth had driv
en down to the Aggie 16 before
having a field goal attempt par
tially blocked by speedster Ted
Nelson.
The dauntless Aggies were a
long 80 yards from pay dirt with
8:13 left, and their earlier offen
sive efforts had given little indi
cation they would be able to make
the long march. But march they
did.
They used five passes to cover
63 of the needed yards, including
the last 21 on a crucial fourth-
and-ten. The winning combina
tion was Harry Ledbetter to Ken
McLean, with the greatest drama
yet to come.
After the game, Head Coach
Gene Stallings said there was no
doubt as to what choice to make,
and TCU mentor Abe Martin said
he would have done the same
thing. But it didn’t work, that
two point try, and with the in
terception, the game was as good
as over for the Cadets.
A&M had taken the initial lead
in the second quarter when they
capitalized on an intercepted P.
D. Shabay pass and turned it into
three points. Grady Allen snag
ged the pass. Four plays later
Glynn Lindsay booted the pigskin
through the uprights from the
26 to put the Ags ahead.
A&M received the second half
kick-off, but held the ball only
two plays before Larry Perry
dropped on a Farmer fumble on
the Maroon 10. It took TCU only
three plays to push over for the
game’s first TD, all of them
dashes by Steve Landon. The
Frog’s top runner cracked the
Aggie line from the one to score.
TCU drove 55 yards in 13 plays
later in the quarter with Bruce
Alford kicking an 18 yard field
goal for the score that eventually
proved the winning margin.
Though the Frogs added another
TD in the closing minutes, had
the Aggies scored the two point
er, they should have been able to
hold TCU. Since they didn’t, they
had to gamble again.
The final gamble came after
an onside kick failed and TCU
punted to the Aggie 17. Ledbet
ter ran for three, then threw two
incomplete passes and was penal
ized five yards. With fourth and
12 the Cadets went for broke.
With a shade over two minutes
left it was the only decision that
would have any meaning. Led
better went to pass, but was
dropped for a seven yard loss,
and TCU took over on the A&M
8.
The subsequent “drive” took
two plays and the Frogs posted
another seven points.
Longhorns Bow
To Amazing Hogs
By LARRY R. JERDEN
Battalion Sports Editor
It’s a long, long way from Fay
etteville, Arkansas, to Austin,
Texas, especially if you have just
been rooted from your number
one standing for the second year
in a row by the same team.
It’s a long, long way from
Fayetteville to Austin, when a
TU fan can hear nothing but
“Soooey Pigs” for 500 miles and
knows that the Hogs have just
emerged the 27-24 victors of the
game of the year.
mmmmsm
RAMBLIN DAN EYES EXTRA YARDAGE
Dan Schneider, Aggie Fullback, breaks for against the Frogs. Blocks are thrown by
a few yards against TCU Saturday night. Robert Barnett (69) and Jim Singleton(57).
Schneider averaged 3.7 for 13 carries
And it’s a helluva long way
from those hills in Arkansas to
that unlighted tower in Austin,
especially when your undefeated
Steers have just been humbled by
a Razorback team many consid
ered to be a “paper tiger” be
cause of an “easier schedule.”
Coming out on top of statistics
is the hollowest of victories,
come-from-behind effort is next
to meaningless, the score tells the
tale. Arkansas 27, Texas 24.
TU managed to give the pig
skin away four times, twice on
fumbles and twice on intercep-
tiofts. Both of the fumbles were
by Phil Harris, and both were
converted to TD’s by the Preco
cious Pigs
The 42,000 in-person fans and
the TV millions alike were
shocked, either happily or other
wise, when the Porkers built up
a 20-0 lead. They returned to
reality with the Horns recovery
by halftime to lessen the margin
to 20-11.
It was a continuation of the
TU recovery program after the
half, and they finally managed to
lead 21-20. David Conway kicked
three long field goals, the last
putting the Horns up 24-20.
SALLEE NABBED FROM BEHIND
Ag wingback Bill Sallee is stopped after a night’s TCU game,
short gain by a big hand from the back and for the evening,
an enclosure of purple jerseys in Saturday
Sallee netted 26 yards
John Brittenum was the man of
the hour for Arkansas as he
made the previous three-and-a-
half quarters seem just so much
tearing up of turf. He drove the
Hogs eighty yards against a fu
tile, befuddled Steer defense, per
sonally going over for the win
ning score with 1:32 left in tilt
game.
So Texas is now number five,
Arkansas number one, and only
North Texas and the Aggiei
stand between Arkansas and tke
SWC’s longest winning streak,
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’64
College Master
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846-8228
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Hogs Grab No. 1
For First Time
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (A*)—
Arkansas vaulted to the top in
the Associated Press college foot
ball poll Monday after posting
what Coach Frank Broyles
termed the “greatest comeback
in the history of two great foot
ball teams.”
Charles F. Johnson
’62
College Master
Representative
Fidelity Union Life
846-8228
The Razorbacks attained the
No. 1 ranking for the first time
ever in the AP poll.
1. Arkansas (28) (5-0)
Michigan State (14) (5-0)
Nebraska (8) (5-0)
Southern California (4-0-1)
Texas (4-1)
Purdue (4-0-1)
Notre Dame (3-1)
Florida (4-1)
Louisiana State (4-1)
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10. Georgia (4-1)
3M
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Demonstration of the
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It locates microfilm data faster on 16 mm and 35 mm
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The Fasfback.
7
w*
The Squareback.
The Bug.
Introducing three newVolkswagens.
The rumors you’ve heard about a couple of new
Volkswagens are absolutely true.
There they are, on the top of this advertisement.
The rumors you've heard about the beetle biting the
dust are absolutely false.
There it is, at the bottom of it all.
We're calling the Volkswagen on top the Fastback
Sedan because the roof has a nice slope to it. It holds
5 in style.
We're calling the Volkswagen in the middle the
Squareback Sedan because its roof has no slope at all.
It holds 5, too. With less style, maybe, but with more extra
space than most sedans, even big ones.
Looks aside, the Fastback and the Squareback are
identical cars, and as Volkswageny as can be. (Why not?
They’re made in the same plant by the same people.)
Their engines are more powerful than the beetle's, but
still in back and still air-cooled.
Their bottoms are still sealed. They're still airtight. And
they have some nice features of their own, like disc brakes
in front, which most cars have yet to include.
The Fastback and the Squareback offer a little more
room and a little more power for a little more money.
(So if you want a Volkswagen that doesn't look like a
Volkswagen, you have but to pay a bit more.)
The Volkswagen that does look like a Volkswagen will
still sell for about the same old price.
And it will still have the same old look.
But it's actually the newest car of the lot; there are 28
changes for 1966, all inside.
The biggest change is that the engine is 25% more
powerful than last year. (It makes a surprising difference
in pickup with no surprising difference in mileage; you
can count on 29 miles per gallon.)
The other 27 changes do what Volkswagen changes
have always done: they make the car work better and
last even longer.
And they don't do what VW changes have never done:
they never make it go out of style.
We know that this system works for the beetle,- it was
the 5th best selling car model in America in 1965.
We hope that it will work out just as well for the
Fastback and the Squareback too.
We went to a lot of trouble to make all the new
Volkswagens as good as they are.
We hope that you’ll have
a lot of trouble deciding
which one to buy.
THOR1ZEO
DEALERS
HICKMAN GARRETT MOTORS
1701 South College • TA 2-0146
ONLY Authorized Dealer in Bryan
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