Aggies Drown Sips 10-4 CLOTHING Bardstown Merit SHOES Cole-Haan Edwin Clapp Florsheim FURNISHINGS Jayson & Wren - shirts Altman & Wren - sweaters Lakeland - jackets Briar & Ernst - ties Resistol - hats Robert Reis - underwear Alligator - all weather coats ELLEN’S clothing f< or men • DOWNTOWN - BRYAN Phone 822-6213 100 N. Main St. "Fashion on a Budget" DRESSES - SPORTSWEAR - LINGERIE FOR JR. PETITES - JRS. - MISSES GIRLS - BOYS - INFANTS CLOTHING Your Most Complete Maternity Department All At Popular Prices Joyce's 608 S. College 822-2864 Open Monday & Thursday Nights Until 8:30 I WAS TOO BUSY TO NEED A SAVIOR WTROM the very earliest ■I. days I can remember I was always caught in a whirl of activities. In school there were always things to do, then on into college the whirl of social and extra-curricularprograms. Then after college into busi ness. The struggle to get ahead combined with making all the contacts that are es sential to climbing. All of my life was one whirl after another, always going, never stopping long enough to think, until one day I had to stop and think about God. I was living in God’s world and I hadn’t even taken time to know Him. I was breathing God’s air, and I hadn’t taken time to thank Him. I was en joying God’s sunshine, and 1 hadn't even taken time to express my appreciation. But worse than all of these, I was breaking God’s law and I had been too busy to recog nize my sin until that day when God arrested me and I learned from His Word that He had sent His Son to die for ungrateful, sinful, busy people like me. I took time that day out of a busy life to take Jesus Christ as my Savior and My Lord, and now I’m busy telling others about Him.. FREE r*i / I THE REASON WHY J A (4-pag* booklet written for businessmen by a businessman. Send year request to the address below. Christian Business Men’s Committee of Bryan and College Station P. O. Box 3266 — College Station, Texas A&M’s water polo team de feated TU 10-4 in College Station Thursday night and extended its winning streak to 13 games. The Aggie second team didn’t fare as well and dropped its decision to the Sips 7-2. Jim Hooten led the Cadets in scoring with four goals while Bill Harriman and Tom Holder had two each. Jerry Keating and Charlie Colhoun were other Ag gies in the scoring column. Wor- rel, Langendoen and Hannay did the point making for Texas. The Aggies will have a return match with the Longhorns Dec. 2 in Austin. A&M and Texas are the only schools in the South west Conference that have water polo clubs. There is no league play and the only qualification for national matches is to do good in local competition. There aren’t many water polo teams in the South, and accord ing to Swimming Coach Art Adamson, New York, Chicago and Southern California are the main areas in which the sport is played. “One of our biggest problems is finding competition,” said Ad amson. Texas A&M started water polo competition in 1934, and since that beginning has compiled a record of 77 wins, 12 losses and 1 tie. Hall Of Fame Dinner Ducats Now Available Tickets for the second annual Texas A&M Athletic Hall of Fame Dinner have been placed on sale at various Bryan-College Station locations and are avail able by mail. The tickets, priced at $5 each, can be purchased at the Athletic Business Office and at the Form er Students Association office on campus, at Norton’s Pancake House in College Station, at Conway’s in Bryan and at all the banks in both College Station and Bryan. Out-of-town people can order tickets by writing the Former Students Association, Texas A&M, College Station, Tex. The second annual affair is scheduled for 8:30 p.m. Wednes day, Nov. 24, in the east wing of Duncan Hall. The location is ad jacent to the site of the annual bonfire on the eve of the Thanks giving Day football game with Texas. The five former Aggie athletic greats who will be inducted this year are the late Homer Norton who coached the 1939 national championship football team; the late Jack Mahan, captain and fullback of the 1920 team and an Olympian in track; Tyree Bell, football stalwart who captained the Aggies in 1912 and again in 1914; Walt (Buddy) Davis and Darrow Hooper, both Olympians in 1952. Davis won the high jump and Hooper was second in the shot put. Alec Chesser, who works with Kern Tips as the color announcer on Humble football broadcasts in the SWC, will be Master of Cere monies. Stock Reducing Sole WEDNESDAY — THURSDAY — FRIDAY KHAKI PANTS $3.95 Reg. 6.50 Heavy Good Quality Khaki Sizes 28 to 44 KHAKI SHIRTS . . $3.95 Reg. 6.50 Long Sleeves Good Quality Khaki Sizes 13y 2 to 18 ^ FATIGUE PAINTS Size 30 Waist Only — Regular $3.95 $1.95 TIES — Black - Long Military Reg. $1.50 85c Each SOCKS — Black Good Quality Cotton Reg. 55c .... 3 Pair 85c WE ARE CLOSING OUT THESE ITEMS ZUBIK'S UNIFORM TAILORS North Gate College Station FROM THE Sidelined By Larry R. Jerden Everyone is familiar with the old game of saying “Since Po- dunk U. beat Tadpole Creek 10-0 and Tadpole downed Gopher Canyon 3-0, Podunk should clob ber Gopher 13-0.” Some folks may doubt the val idity of such mathematical hand iwork, but some enterprising in dividual has taken the trouble to work this out to the point that A&M is a 141-point favorite over TU for the Turkey Day game! Our only complaint with this is he didn’t take the trouble or make the effort to work out his prediction to the fullest. The “Batt” editor, with help from yours truly, sat down Mon day and worked out the REAL formula for Aggie success come Turkey-eatin’ time. The way we have got it figured, the Aggies should be no less than 385 point favorites! Here’s how it works: The Ag gies beat Cougar High by 3 points, who defeated Kentucky by 17, who downed Vanderbilt by 34, who beat Tulane by 13, who beat Miami by 8, who beat Syra cuse by 24, who beat West Vir ginia by 22, who beat Pitt by 15, who slipped by Oklahoma by 4, who overcame Iowa State by 4, who beat Oklahoma State by 3, who beat Tulsa by 3, who beat Memphis State by 4, who beat Mississippi State by 20, who beat Florida by 5, who beat Georgia by 4, who beat Alabama by 1, who beat LSU by 24, who beat South Carolina by 14, who beat Wake Forest by 31, who beat North Carolina by 2, who beat Ohio State by 11, who beat Iowa by 38, who beat Oregon State by 20, who beat Illinois by 2, who beat SMU by 42, who, as we are well aware, beat the Sips by 17 . . . giving the Aggies their 385 point margin going into the game. It seems like, with these odds against them, the safest thing the Sips could do would be not show up and take a one point forfeit . . . but we hope they won’t! This is one game we’d all do well with our dates . . . just think ... over one TD per minute! And we note that there are five Aggie athletes among 36 seniors chosen for A&M’s nomi nees to “Who’s Who In American Colleges and Universities.” Among those chosen is gridder Tom Murrah, basketballers John Beasley and Billy Atkinson, base- baller Lance Cobb and former student assistant basketball coach. David Stiles. Murrah, a standout on defense this season, has a grade point ratio of 2.7 and is also a nomi nee for Academic All-American honors. Beasley, the All-American bas ketball star, has a 1.8 GPR and is joined by teammate Atkinson. Cobb is an All-American base ball player who contributed to the SWC-winning 1964 team. The Aggies regained their poise quickly Saturday to return to the winning column for the third time this year and gave Gene Stallings his first SWC win as a coach. So now the nine practice games are over and the real season is at hand. The Ags did well in these preliminary contests, and that 3- 6 is just a helluva lot better than the one win of last year. But each of those games counts one point in the Aggies’ hearts, and the next one counts 10. To win it and lose the rest would still read 10-9, and this year it can be 13-6 . . . not a bad year for a first year coach and his team that he has described as his “narrow shouldered, skinny leg ged little fellers.” Phil Scoggin should be given a lot of credit for his part in the Rice victory. Not only did he contribute his usual fine punt ing, but he gave yeoman service on defense, nailing the opposing quarterback for a loss and cov ering a fumble. THE BATTALION Tuesday, November 16, 1965 College Station, Texas Page 5 PLANNING AIR TRAVEL FOR THE HOLIDAYS MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS _NOW— AVOID DISAPPOINTMENT CALL 822-3737 Robert Halsell Travel Service 1411 Texas Avenue IF YOII’KH ONLY FOOLING, DILUTE IT l IUI»-Tim After-Shave, $3.50, Cologne $4.00 Available at these campus stores: Cl.TTj. COaCcbiop &Co. MENS CLOTHING- SINCE 189* If you re looking for a nice comfy place to work after graduation^ forget about General Electric. We don’t have any place where you can curl up and snooze away the next forty years of your career. There are no quiet little nooks in any of General Electric’s 130 oper ating businesses in 19 countries round the world. But if you’re the wide-awake type, G.E. can provide the excite ment to keep you that way. Your first assignment may be helping us find applications for a whole new family of plastics recently devel oped by G.E. Or you may be work ing at Cape Kennedy on the Apollo moon program. Or you may be working on the marketing team for a new home appliance. Progress /s Our Most important Product One thing is certain: You’ll be working. You’ll have plenty of re sponsibility. What you won’t have is a chance to doze off in the prime years of your career. Talk to the man from G.E. when he visits campus. Come to General Electric, where the young men are important men. GENERAL ELECTRIC