The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 03, 1965, Image 4

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    Bill Altman
’65
College Master
Representative
Fidelity Union Life
846-8228
Page 4
THE BATTALION
College Station, Texas Wednesday, November 3, 1965
HEAR, HERE!
ALL NEW FROM
©o:n"v;
%
Tape Recorders
BRYAN RADIO &
TV SERVICE, INC.
1301 S. College Ave.
SUPERSCOPE
FROM THE
Sideli
ined
By Larry R. Jerden
The score was the same in the
Arkansas game as it was in the
Baylor contest the previous week,
but that was the only similarity
in the two games.
WELEX
A DIVISION OF HALLIBURTON CO.
Will interview
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
PHYSICISTS
For challenging opportunities in providing
technical services to the petroleum industry.
Nov. 4, 1965
Contact Placement Office
Have You Entered Lou’s Contest?
You’ll Be Glad You Did
$50 Worth of Nationally Advertised
Clothes To Be Given Away Every Week
LOUPOT'S
Wimberly Ties, Esquire Socks, Gardener Shoes,
American Hats, Western Wear, Mesquite Pants
Winners To Be Announced.
QUEEN
2 Performances
Daily
2 P. M. & 8 P. M.
ADMISSION: STUDENTS — $1.00 ADULTS: $1.50 — $2.00
La Scala
“LA BOHEME”
DON'T FORGET...
Buy Your Tickets
NOW
Jan Peerce
FRIDAY - 8 P. M.
NOVEMBER 5
G. ROLLIE WHITE
COLISEUM
An MSC Town Hall Presentation
they have nothing to be ashamed
of.
There was no likeness whatso
ever in the two performances by
the Aggie team. From those who
made the journey to Little Rock
comes one clear comment: The
Ags looked good, very good.
In his weekly news conference,
Head Coach Gene Stallings prais
ed the effort of his team, and
asserted that when they played
the way they did Saturday night,
One Aggie who witnessed the
game said, “I might have been
happier if they’d won, but I’ve
never been prouder of an Aggie
team, or of being an Aggie.”
Stallings pointed out Gary Ko-
var, Jerry Nichols, Dude McLean,
Harry Ledbetter, Ken Kauffman
and Tom Murrah as standouts in
the Arkansas game.
“But,” he added, “that was last
week, and we've got a fine SMU
team to meet Saturday.”
Stallings said he considers
SMU to be as fast as Arkansas,
and described the Pony offense to
be one that concentrates “more
on the element of surprise than
on execution.”
Injuries still plague the Cadets,
with the non-playing roster for
Saturday’s game including Jack
Pyburn, Grady Allen, John Reyn
olds, Dan Westerfield, Lloyd Cur-
rington and possibly Bill Barker.
The Fish play the Rice Owlets
Thursday night in Houston, then
meet the Tech Picadors in Sweet
water November 13 and finish
their season in Austin the 20th
against TU.
There were about 50 students
out to greet the team when they
returned from Arkansas Sunday
morning at 1:30. Coach Stallings
said, “I don’t know what the
players think, but I, for one, was
impressed and appreciate it.”
For the team he said, “If I
coach a jillion teams, and I hope
I do. I’ll always have a soft spot
in my heart for this one. They’re
not very big, not very fast and
are short on ability, but they’ve
done the best they can. I don’t
have any complaints about these
boys. They’re my team and I’m
proud of them.”
But back to SMU, the Aggie
mentor said he thought it would
be a good, close ball game. He
gave the team the day off Mon
day because, he said, “The boys
are mentally and physically tired
from losing.”
“But morale is not a problem,
thank goodness.”
There is some question as to
when the first sports story was
written, but maybe it is the one
that starts, “In the big inn
ing'. . .”
STARTS TODAY
WILLIAM
WYLER'S
the collector
starring
TERENCE STAMP
SAMANTHA EGGAR
TECHNICOLOR*
CIRCLE
TONIGHT 6: 30 P. M.
Robert Taylor
In
“QUO VADIS”
&
Burt Lancaster
In
“THE KENTUCKIAN’
i ai a I 1
* A . m . _ _ __ r
» tHiiopfN uNDm?vtARs- rRct
TONIGHT 6:30 P. M.
Frank Sinatra
In
“VON RYAN’S
EXPRESS”
Ann Margaret
In
‘STATE FAIR”
Aggie-ex Masses
$15,850 In Golf
Billy Martindale of Jacks;;
ville took his second straight nc
nerup check from the professic
al golf tour this weekend, area:
ing $15,850 winnings in
weeks.
The Aggie shot a closing 69
a 275 total and second money
$3,850 last weekend.
jjiii mmi
8H|
AGGIES INVADE HOG HAVEN
Led by the wildcatting Yell Leaders, the Wellborn (55), John Nilson (71), Phil Scog-
Ag-gies charge onto the field in War Memo- gin (34), Dude McLean (81) and Roy Gun-
rial Stadium Saturday night to do battle nels (66). Yell leaders, left to right, are Joe
with the Arkansas Razorbacks. Leading Bush, Tommy Stone and Tiff Simmons,
the wedge of players onto the gridiron is Joe
Speed Record Broken
BONNEVILLE SALT FLATS,
Utah (A*) — A determined Craig
Breedlove, who survived one
crash last year and nearly had
another this year, set a world
land speed record of more than
555 miles per hour Tuesday.
“I never had to work so hard
for a record in my life!” said the
jubilant, curly-haired hot rodder
from Palos Verdes, Calif.
He drove a new jet car, the
spirit of America-Sonic I, and
was clocked at speeds of 544.382
and 566.394 m.p.h. The record
555.127 m.p.h. is the average of
the two runs.
Breedlove broke the mark of
536.71 set last year by Art Ar-
fons of Akron, Ohio, in another
jet-powered car.
It was Arfons who took away
the mark Breedlove set last year
and he probably will try to do it
again this year. Arfons has the
Flats reserved for next week.
Breedlove said he used only
one of the three afterburner
stages in his jet engine Tuesday.
Each afterburner adds 1,000 or
more horsepower.
Breedlove’s record was for un
limited-class cars, a category
recognized by the International
Automobile Federation only last
year. The record for piston-driv
en cars is 403.1 m.p.h. held by
Donald Campbell of England.
Joe Petrali, chief timer of the
U. S. Auto Club, said the record
average speed is computed by
taking an average of the time
for both runs, then converting to
miles per hour.
That way of computing, he
said, is required by national and
international rules.
That way of determining the
average is the reason Breedlove’s
official record speed is 555.127
m.p.h. and not 555.388 m.p.h.
which is the result of averaging
the miles per hour speed of both
runs.
la-de-da
snooty affairs
our specialty!
Ladies love meeting at Ramada
Inn! Fancy banquets, Club get-
togethers and Luncheons are just
more fun! Hold your next femme
fest at Ramada . . . whether lav
ishly formal or quaintly unre
strained. At Ramada it’s no secret:
we love ladies !
Try our fast, friendly
breakfast and luncheon
service.
RAMADA INN
Bryan - College Station
846-8811
WIN!
Enter Lou’s Contest
$50
Worth of Nationally
Advertised Clothes.
Drawings Every Friday.
Loupot’s - North Gate
r
n
VIET NAM MAP
The Battalion
P. O. Box 401
Teaneck, New Jersey 07666
Enclosed is $_
Name
.copies of map,
Street-
City & State.
cat ■
“■ttfc” in I®* m
Go ahead. Be rebellious. Demand more “big”
in your big car. And get it at a price that
won't take a big bite out of your budget.
By Dodge, you’ve got it. Polara! More
“big.” More “hot.” More of everything others
have not.
Ever see the likes of it? Neither has your
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club or the parking attendant who can easily
pick Polara from a lot full of “me, too” cars.
Polara's different, all right. Looks, drives,
performs like the elegant piece of machinery
it is. Covered by a 5-year/50,000-mile war
ranty.* Complete with ail these items that
used to cost extra: Outside mirror. Padded
dash. Variable-speed electric windshield
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signals. Seat belts, two front and two rear.
Insist on Polara at your Dodge Dealer's. A
beautiful new way to break old buying habits.
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dodge d. v .s.on Chrysler '£)£) Dodge Polara
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enough for such important protection.
: Chrysler
Join the Dodge Rebellion at your Dodge Dealer's.
-WATCH "THE BOB HOPE CHRYSLER THEATRE" WEDNESDAY NIGHTS ON NBC-TV. CHECK YOUR LOCAL LISTINGS.
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