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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 20, 1965)
Page 4 THE BATTALION College Station, Texas Wedntsday, October 20, 1965 MmletArt Supply 923 So.ColUg* Avc>Bryan,T«c&f 1966 AGGIELAND Date: 15 October 1965 To: Unit First Sergeants From: Military Section, SUBJECT: Outfit Pictures Outfit pictures for the AGGIE LAND will be made according to the schedule below. Uniform will be class A winter. Outfit C.O.’s will wear sabers; seniors will wear boots and mid night shirts. Guidons and award flags will be carried. All per sonnel in the outfit will wear the billed service cap issued by the university. The type of cap worn by underclassmen to and from the picture-taking area is left up to the discretion of the outfit C.O. Outfits should be in front of the Administration Building by 1230 hours on the appointed day. Arrangements should be made by first sergeants with the Mess Hall supervisors to allow the outfit to be admitted to the Mess Hall early. October 25- A-l, B-l October 26 C-l, D-l October 27 E-l, F-l October 28— G-l, H-l October 29 A-2, B-2 November 1 C-2, D-2 November 2 E-2, F-2 November 3 G-2, H-2 November 4 Sqd. 1, Sqd. 2 November 5 Sqd. 3, Sqd. 4 November 8 Sqd. 5, Sqd. 6 November 9 Sqd. 7, Sqd. 8 November 10 Sqd. 9, Sqd. 10 November 11, Sqd. 11, Sqd. 12 November 12 Sqd. 13, Sqd. 14 November 15—M-Band, W-Band DAVID M. HONEYCUTT MILITARY SECTION EDITOR CHICAGO <A>) — Ed Rozy, trainer for the Chicago Bears, figures the club lost a total of 108 “man games” during last fall’s 19 - game pre-season and regular season. Rozy defines a “man game” on the basis of ’ a player missing an entire game due to injury. Melvin H. Johnson ’64 College Master Representative 9 Fidelity Union Life 846-8228 ATTENTION!!! ALL CLUBS Athletic, Hometown, Professional, and Campus Organizations. Pictures for the club sec tions of the Aggieland are now being scheduled at the Student Publications Of fice, Y.M.C.A. Bldg. CORPS FRESHMEN Yearbook Portrait Schedule: Corps freshmen will have their portraits made for the Aggie land ’66 according to this sched ule. Portraits will be made at University Studio, 115 N. Main in class “A” winter uniforms. Fish should bring poplin shirts, black ties, & brigade shields. DANGEROUS DUO “Big John” Beasley and Randy Matson, two of A&M’s brightest basketball prospects for the coming season, pre pare for the cage battles to come. Beasley, 6-9, was the SWC leading scorer in 1965 while Matson, 6-6, has just joined the team from the track world. Your picture is already paid for in your activity fee so make sure you have your activity book with you. Oct. 19 - 20 Sqd. 13 & 14 NOTES and QUOTES A&M Coach Gene Stallings (on the 2 - point conversion try against TCU) “If I had to make the decision again, after giving it serious thought, we’d do the same thing. We’re teaching our kids that the object of the game is to win and we had a chance to win. We didn’t go to TCU to play for a tie.” TCU Coach Abe Martin’s post game dressing room quote: “I thought they would go for two. I would have, too, under the same circumstances . . . They’ve got a pretty good ball club, one that is well-coached.” . . . Three Aggie footballers will be observing birthday anniversaries Saturday, the date of the A&M- Baylor football game at Kyle Field. Sophomore linebacker Rob ert Cortez of San Benito will be 21, as will split end Ted Sparl ing of Jal, N. M. . . . Offensive tackle Tuffy Fletcher of Kerr- ville will be 22 . . . Houston Post Sports Editor Mickey Herskowitz was on the move in order to be in Austin Sunday morning to MC the Gene Stallings TV show . . . He cov ered the Texas-Arkansas game in Fayetteville and had to drive to Oklahoma City, arriving at 3 a.m., in order to catch a plane for Dallas and then to Austin. We walked into the TV studio a half-hour before filming com menced with the quip: “And, somebody said it couldn’t be done.” . . . SWC sports is now minus an excellent chronicler as Frank Boggs has departed his desk at the Dallas Times-Herald to join a San Diego paper where he’ll cover the Chargers and do a column .... TOWN HALL RECORD SPECIAL at SHAFFER'S UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE THE ENTIRE SELECTION OF THE LETTERMEN $1.00 OFF featuring their newest THE HIT SOUNDS OF THE LETTERMEN We Have The Record You Want When You Want It DENTON, Tex. (A*) — So your team is going to play mighty Arkansas, No. 1 in the nation. Your team has won only one out of five and the opposition has scored 141 points on you. Texas Western rolled up 61. So, coach, what do you think about playing Arkansas ? Odus Mitchell, veteran coach of North Texas State, didn’t hes itate a second. “We were going to play them anyway and I’d rather it would be against the No. 1 team than anybody else. “We —• myself and my boys — consider it an honor and I am confident that we will give a good account of ourselves. I wouldn’t say that we could beat Arkansas but we sure are glad to get to play them. “You are judged by the com pany you keep and we want to be in the best company we can find.” Mitchell said he had pored over his scouting reports and just couldn’t find any weakness in the Arkansas team—either of fense or defense. “But my team has been im proving with each game. Last week it played very well against Tulsa, which beat us 27-20. Tul sa gave Arkansas a pretty tough game before losing 20-12. We are about as good as Tulsa and Arkansas says Tulsa is about as good as anybody they played. North Texas isn’t in the best shape possible, having lost a starting end and fullback in last week’s game. Girl Cheerleaders Banned At Yale NEW HAVEN, Conn. <A>) — Yale’s girl cheerleaders, spec tacular in their road debut last week, have been banned from performing in the Yale Bowl on Saturday. The cuties, recruited from Connecticut College for women at New London, showed up for the first time last Saturday for the Columbia - Yale football game in New York. Clad in short blue skirts and white “Y” sweaters, they were a big hit. The idea was to pep up the Yale crowds. The fact that Yale, an all male university, lost its third football game in four starts has nothing to do with the ban. from The Exchange ston, “Serving Texas Aggies’ DONl fight it. Get Eaton’s Corrasable Bond Typewriter Paper. Mistakes don’t show. A mis-key completely disappears from the special surface. An ordinary pencil eraser lets you erase without a trace. So why use ordinary paper! Eaton's Corrasable is available in light, medium, heavy weights and Onion Skin. In 100-sheet packets and 500 sheet ream boxes. At Stationery Departments. Ml mars comtASABizi rrnmm* papch \ Only Eaton makes Corrasable. EATON PAPER CORPORATION, PITTSFIELD. 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Western Electric’s wide variety of challenging assignments appealed to Tom, as did the idea of advanced study through full-time graduate engi neering training, numerous management courses and a company-paid Tuition Refund Plan. Tom knows, too, that we’ll need thousands of experienced engineers for supervisory positions within the next few years. And he’s getting the solid experience necessary to qualify. Right now, Tom is developing new and improved inspection and process control techniques to reduce manu facturing costs of telephone switching equipment. Tom is sure that Western Electric is the right place for him. What about you? If you set the highest standards for yourself, enjoy a challenge, and have the qualifications we’re looking for — we want to talk to you! Oppor tunities for fast-moving careers exist now for elec trical, mechanical and industrial engineers, and also for physical science, liberal arts and business majors. For more detailed information, get your copy of the Western Electric Career Opportunities booklet from your Placement Officer. And be sure to arrange for an interview when the Bell System recruiting team visits your campus. MYiPS ftt Electric MANUFACTURING and supply unit of the bell system AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER En^i C neerinB a Re? e ?rch n Cp , nw i p n *? 3 C L tieS ° 0 e eratin S ce "te r s in many of these same cities plus 36 others throughout the U.S. B g sea ch Center. P'-'nceton. N.J.DTeletvoe Coro.. Skokie. III.. Little Rock, Ark.DGeneral Headquarters, NewYorkCitv Both 80 per i Aggie Advan Advam layers’ A Salesn Aggie P: Cuion H Office, ] frr; Firs an l Can North G Oate; am Redn Tickets students ^dmissior SA1( H I si 'feck of } H in ear iiestly 'feaft caf Dawi feiver de x ' e re pili their wa those ex tlaitingo “nd lum into i ^ina Sf much V " Ifc >Xa m an ’foout,” ]