Image provided by: Texas A&M University
About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 9, 1965)
Page 6 College Station, Texas Tuesday, November 9, 1965 THE BATTALION Read Battalion Classifiedi SMU Slips By Fiery Aggies, 10-0 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 when are 65% and 35% good marks? when they're 65% DACRON & 35% cotton in Post-Grad slacks by h.Ls. This is the fabric combo that makes music with cleek good looks and wash able durability. And Post Grads are the bona fide authentics that trim you up and taper you down. Tried- and-true tailored with belt loops, traditional pockets, neat cuffs. Only $6.95 in the colors you like...at the stores you like. *Du Font's Reg. TM (or its Polyester Fiber WIN ATRIP TO EUROPE Pick up your "Destination Europe” contest entry form at any store fea turing the h.i.s label. Nothing to buy! Easy to win! h.i.s offers you your choice of seven different trips this summer to your favorite European city by luxurious jet. Enter now! h.i.s Slacks Are Available At loupots By LARRY R. JERDEN Battalion Sports Editor Ranger scampered 26 yards Saturday and crossed the goal line, the only Aggie to do so dur ing the afternoon. Unfortunately he didn’t have the ball and the game had been over for two minutes. But for SMU it was different. John Roderick caught a Mac White pass in the fourth quarter to ice a long afternoon’s 10-0 vic tory after the Mustangs had held on to a slim 3-0 lead for the ma jority of the game. The three-pointer came with 10:18 left in the second quarter when the Ag defense stiffened on their own eight. SMU had rolled from their own 23 on four plays and after three attemps at the goal, place-kicker Dennis Partee came in to boot the field goal. Aggie speedster Ted Nelson charged in and deflected the ball, but it wobbled up, struck the cross-bar and bounced over for the score. In a strictly defensive battle, the Aggie defenders were superb, drawing applause from the 19,000 fans as they left the field for the last time. The staunch Cadet de fense held the Pony offense that rolled up 330 yards against TU the week before to 157 yards on the ground and 61 in the air. The defensive line of Jerry Kachtik, Ken Lamkin, Joe Well born, John Nilson and Tuffy Fletcher kept the pressure on White all day, limiting him to five completions of 13 attempts and busting up other potential pass plays before they could get out of the blueprint stage. Kachtik had one of his best days in leading the defensive charge from his end position with six tackles and three assists be sides breaking up one pass play after the ball had been thrown. - ■ ■wr- iia * **$*"■. i * 3 PONY GETS RIDDEN Defense tackle Ken Lamkin (52) puts the block off escape routes and move in for brakes on SMU tailback Jim Hagle behind assists as John Nilson (71) and Tom Mur- the line of scrimmage in Saturday’s game, rah (63) add Aggie pursuit. Ends Tuffy Fletcher (82) and Jerry Kachtik Wellborn contributed three tac kles and 10 assists and Lamkin had two tackles with 10 assists. Adding to the pressure placed on the SMU offense was the fine punting of Phil Scoggin coupled with excellent downfield cover age. Scoggin punted 11 times for a 49.6-yard average. Ken McLean took over the SWC receiving leadership by making eight receptions for 88 yards. This moved him one catch and one yard ahead of Tech’s Donny Anderson. McLean has a season total of 46 snares for 572 yards and one TD. The sputtering Aggie offense followed the “three downs and punt” schedule most of the day, finally catching fire in the closing minutes when quarterback Eddie McKaughan operated the offense for the first time this year. After SMU kicked off follow ing their touchdown, Jim Stabler returned the hall 19 yards to the Aggie 25 where McKaughan took McKaughan fired the pigskin like a shot to McLean on the 36 for an 11 yard gain and a first down. Two plays later he hit him again for a 14-yard advance and another first ont he 41. A four- yard shot to Stabler and another ten-yard toss to the Dude put the Aggies on the Mustang 31 with another first. A third down toss to McLean on the 17 then set the Aggies up for what was to be their final series of downs. 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. 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 Owlets Stage Comeback, Swamp Hapless Fish 9-7 The Aggie Fish reached for a win over the Rice Owlets in Hous ton Friday night, but ended up with a handful of tailfeathers in stead, as the Owlets danced away with a 9-7 win. Coach Jake Helms’ Fish showed a marked improvement over the previous one-sided losses to the TCU and Baylor freshmen teams. Plagued by a field that seemed more fit for water polo than foot ball, Fish quarterback Charlie Riggs mounted a drive which carried A&M to the Owlets’ 45 yard line. Gambling on fourth and three, Riggs was slammed to the muddy turf by the Owlets’ Mike Golden. While Rice was marching up and down after first down, a per sistent Aggie defense dug in to allow the Owlets only a three point lead at the half, when Frank Pustka split the uprights with a 37 yard field goal. Coming back with determina tion in the second half, Harvey Aschenbeck of the Fish picked up an Owlet fumble at the Rice 49. Aggie Quarterback Bob Long relieved Riggs, and spiraled a 37 yard pass to end Tommy Max well. With first down on the Owlet 12, Long slithered four yards to the eight. Exhibiting a knack for scrambling, Long added a first down for the Aggies at the two. Joe Wood bulled over for the lone Fish touchdown with 4:38 left in the third quarter. Riggs kicked the point after to put the Ags in front with a scant four point margin, 7-3. After an exchange of punts early in the fourth period, Rice began to sense disaster, as Gaddy Wells of the Aggies picked off Owlet Pascual Piedfort’s pass, and returned it to the Rice 30. A staunch defensive effort by Rice cooled the fired up Ags, and the Owlets took possession. Quarterback Robby Shelton, who played brilliantly on offense and defense for Rice despite a bad leg, brought hope back to the home crowd as he mounted a drive to the Aggie five with eight minutes left on the clock. A quarterback sneak went the distance for the score, as Rice put the lid on the Aggie Fish 9-7. The two-point conversion effort failed as the Aggies gang-tackled Shel ton short of the goal. Despite frantic Aggie efforts, the Rice defense lasted the eight remaining minutes to crush the Cadet hopes for ending a losing drought. Statistically Rice overpowered the Aggies, totaling 18 first dov/ns to the Ags’ eight. The Owlets dominated the offensive battle, picking up 148 yards in the air and 198 on the ground for a healthy 346 yards total offense. The Ags wound up wtih four passes for 67 yards, and a ground effort of 95 yards, for a weak 162 yard total. hm On Campus with MaxShulman {By the author of “Rally Round the Flag, Boys!", “Dobie Gillis” etc.) YOU, TOO, CAN BE INFERIOR The second gravest problem confronting college students today is inferiority feelings. (The first gravest problem is, of course, the recent outbreak of moult among sorority house canaries.) Let us today look into the causes of infe riority feelings and their possible cures. Psychologists divide inferiority feelings into three princi pal categories: 1. Physical inferiority. 2. Mental inferiority. 3. Financial inferiority. (A few say there is also a fourth category: ichthyological inferiority—a feeling that other people have prettier fish— but I believe this is common only along the coasts and in the Great Lakes area.) Let us start with the feeling of physical inferiority, per haps the easiest to understand. Naturally we are inclined to feel inferior to the brawny football captain or the beauti ful homecoming queen. But we should not. Look at all the people, neither brawny nor beautiful, who have made their marks in the world. Look at Napoleon. Look at Socrates. Look at Caesar. Look at Lassie. What I mean is you can’t always tell what’s inside a package by looking at the outside. (Sometimes, of course, you can. Take Personna Stainless Steel Blades, for exam ple. Just one glance at that jolly blue and white package— so bright and pert, so neat but not gaudy—and you know it has to contain blades of absolute perfection. And you are “...when it came to tying granny knots.’ right! Personna gives you so many shaves per blade it takes a math major to count them. And they are luxury shaves— smoother, comfortabler, kinder to the kisser. Moreover, Personna comes both in Double Edge and Injector style. And as if this weren’t enough, Personna is now offering you a chance to grab a fistful of $100 bills from a $100,000 bowl! The Personna Stainless Steel Sweepstakes is off and run ning, and you’re all eligible to enter. Visit your friendly Personna dealer today to get details and an entry blank.) But I digress. Let us turn now to the second category- mental inferiority. A lot of people think they are dumber than other people. This is not so. It must be remembered that there are different kinds of intelligence. Take, for in stance, the classic case of the Sigafoos brothers, Claude and Sturbridge, students at a prominent Western university (Dartmouth). It was always assumed that Claude was the more intelligent just because he knew more than Sturbridge about the arts, the sciences, the social sciences, the humani ties, and like that. Sturbridge, on the other hand, was ten times smarter than Claude when it came to tying granny knots. But no matter; everybody looked down on “Stupid Sturbridge,” as they called him, and looked up to “Clever Claude,” as they called him. But who do you think turned out to be the smart one when their granny almost got loose and ran away? You guessed it—good old Stupid Sturbridge. We arrive now at the final category, financial inferiority. One way to deal with this condition is to increase your in come. You can, for example, become a fence. Or you can pose for a life class, if your college is well heated. But a better way to handle financial inferiority is to ac cept it philosophically. Look on the bright side of poverty. True, others may have more money than you have, but look at all the things you have that they don’t—debts, for instance, and hunger cramps. Always remember, dear friends, that poverty is no dis grace. It is an error, but it is no disgrace. # # # © 1965, Max Shulman Rich or poor, you can all afford luxury shaving—with Per sonna® Stainless Steel Blades and Personna’s partner in shaving comfort, Burma Shave®! It soaks rings around any other lather and it’s available in regular or menthol. If this is a Station Wagon, this must be something else. All right, students, here’s today's lesson in Volkswagen logic. Everyone knows that a real station wagon looks like a bus, right? So everything else must be something else, right? Good. That's settled. Now, the "something else" in question is the Volkswagen Squareback Sedan. We call it the Squareback because that's what if is : a squared-off sedan that gives you lots of extra space that other sedans don't. But the differences between the two are tremendous: The bus carries people (9) or things (170 cubic feet). (No other station wagon comes anywhere near it.) The Squareback carries people or things, too. But not as many (51 and not as much (42.4 cubic feet). Basically, the Squareback is a sedan. And basically a Volkswagen. The engine is more powerful, but it's still in back and still air-cooled. Every other well-known Volkswagen virtue is there, too. Plus a few of its own (like disc brakes! that just aren't well known yet. The Squareback is just the car for people who want a Volkswagen with some extra room, extra power and nothing more. But the bus is still the bus for people who want nothing less._ HICKMAN GARRETT MOTORS 1701 Sooth College • TA 2-0146 ONLY Authorized Dealer in Bryan m AUTHORIZED DEALER