The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 16, 1965, Image 6

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    THE BATTALION
College Station, Texas
Page 6 Tuesday, November 16, 1965
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.
meeting
of the
don't minds
If you don’t mind having all the
details of planning a banquet or
convention taken care of for you,
call Ramada Inn. We’ll make sure
your meeting is trouble-free . . .
no matter what size your group!
Try our fast,
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and luncheon service.
RAMADA INN
Bryan-College Station
846-8811
LAST DAY
“AGENT 8 3/4”
STARTS TOMORROW
• •(•rrfng
z MARCELLO
: MASTROIANNI
• An EMBASSY PICTURES *•!••»» lrW<
: fRECOMMEMOED FOR ADULTS OHLVl
CIRCLE
LAST NITE
Patty Duke
In
“BILLIE”
No. 2
“TRAPEZE”
PALACE
Bryan 2'S$79
LAST DAY
“SECRET OF MY
SUCCESS”
STARTS TOMORROW
McQUEEN-ROBINSON-MARGRET
KARL MALDEN-TUESDAY WELD
■ MEJROCOIOR
KID
THE
CINCINNATI
. I MU ODtH uNDIG I? Yl AGS V R ft
TONIGHT 6 :30 P. M.
Peter Sellers
In
“WHAT’S NEW
PUSSYCAT”
No. 2
“GLORY GUYS”
Ags Rally To Drop Owls
i
STAFF PICTURES
Aggieland ’66
Group pictures of the staffs will
be taken according to the sched
ule listed below. Staffs will
assemble in front of the M.S.C.
on the appropriate day by 1715
hours.
The uniform will be Class A
Winter with G. H. caps. Style
of uniform will be left to the
descretion of the individual
staffs. However, uniformity
must prevail.
Mon.Nov. 15 1st Brigade, 1st &
2nd Batt.
Tues. Nov. 16 2nd Brigade, 3rd
& 4th Batt.
Wed. Nov. 17 Air Division, 1st
& 2nd Wing
Thur. Nov. 18 3rd Wing, Corps
Staff & Band
Staff
CORPS SENIORS &
1ST SERGEANTS
YEARBOOK PORTRAIT
SCHEDULE
Corps seniors and outfit first
sergeants will have their por
trait made for the Aggieland ’66
according to the following sched
ule. Portraits will be made at
the University Studio in class A
winter uniform.
Executive officers and first
sergeants will also have por
traits made in GH caps for the
military section.
Commanding officers will
have full length portraits made
in boots. PLEASE MAKE IN
DIVIDUAL APPOINTMENTS
WITH THE STUDIO FOR
THESE FULL LENGTH POR
TRAITS.
NOVEMBER
16- 17 Squadrons 1-4
17- 18 Squadrons 5-8
18- 19 Squadrons 9-12
19- 22 Squadrons 13-14
PARDNER
You’ll Always Win
The Showdown
When You Get
Your Duds Done
At
CAMPUS
CLEANERS
By LARRY R. JERDEN
Battalion Sports Editor
The Aggies won.
By the slimmest of margins,
and in spite of overwhelming Rice
statistics, the Aggies won, 14-13.
It was sufficient to give A&M its
first SWC victory of the year and
its third win of the ’65 grid sea
son.
Looking at percentages, the
Aggies did well for the afternoon.
To get the winning score, they
made 50 per cent of their com
pleted passes go for TD’s, and
following the six-pointers, Glynn
Lindsey made 100 per cent of his
PAT attempts. The Farmers al
so covered 80 per cent of Rice’s
fumbles, and converted the 5
per cent of the Owls’ passes they
intercepted into solid touchdowns.
Aggie heroes were numerous
Saturday afternoon. There was
Lindsey who kicked the winning
extra point, and Ken Caffey who
gained the largest hunk of Aggie
yards on the ground and blocked
the Rice PAT that saved the
game. And there were Ken Lam-
kin, Joe Wellborn, Scoggin and
Jerry Nichols, all of whom cov
ered fumbles, and Nichols again
intercepting the pass that set up
the winning TD.
But the day belonged to Eddie
McKaughan. He went into the
game to guide six series of
downs. Two of those he led for
touchdowns, and the last was for
one play to end the game.
The first Aggie score came
with 11 minutes left in the third
quarter on a McKaughan to Jim
Stabler pass that covered 32
yards. The Ags had taken the
ball on their own 33 after forcing
Rice to punt. McKaughan threw
two incompletes before hitting
Dude McLean on the 46 for a
first. Caffey dashed around
right end for eight and two
plays later McKaughan scram
bled around to his right for five
yards and the first down.
The sub quarterback kept to
the opposite side twice for six
and five yard pickups, threw in
complete for Caffey and then hit
Stabler for the score. Lindsey
made the conversion.
After the Owls and Ags ex
changed a fumble for an inter
ception, Rice was set up with
first and 10 on the 50. After
taking the snap from center,
quarterback Dave Furgeson
flipped the ball to Chuck Latour-
ette and the speedy tailback set
sail around right end for a 50-
yard scurry to paydirt. Richard
Parker put his boot into the pig
skin, but not quick enough to get
past Caffey. The big Ag sliced
in around the end and blocked
the point that was to save the
game.
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Here Are Two Outstanding Reasons Why Fidelity
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For Information Contact Your
Aggieland Agency At 846-8228
Rice had scored on the opening
series of the game when they
drove 84 yards in 12 playso n a
drive that was capped off by
Latourette driving over tackle
from the two and Parker kicking
the PAT.
The score remained 13-7 until
the last three minutes of the
game. McKaughan had been put
in and taken out again, but was
given the go-ahead with 3:25 left
in the game.
The Cadets gained possession
when Jerry Nichols intercepted a
Ferguson pass on the Rice 45. He
was headed for glory-land when
an Owl broke through the three
blockers in front of him and
brought him down after a 24 yard
return.
McKaughan took command of
the situation on the Rice 21 and
gave the pigskin to Caffey who
crashed through the right side
for 2. The next play was the big
one, and after seeing Stabler cov
ered, McKaughan spotted big
John Poss standing hungry for
the ball on the goal line and fired
it to him for the winning TD.
Lindsey came in and booted the
pressure-point for the margin of
victory.
After an exchange of drives,
the Owls took possession on their
own 27 with 38 seconds left. They
started on a do-or-die drive and
moved to the Farmer 48 when
the big play was launched.
They’d seen Georgia use it to
beat Alabama, and Tech had used
it to down the Ags, so why not
. . . ? They launched the bomb
to Tommy Tyner on the 38 who
lateralled off to Latourette. But
from there the script wasn’t fol
lowed, the pitch out was a little
off and Nichols was there to
cover the ball and clinch the
afternoon’s efforts for the Cadets.
Rice rolled up 446 yards total
offense to the Farmers’ 186, but
as someone has said, all the yards
gained between the 20’s amount
to just so much torn up turf. The
Fish Explode To Clobber Picadors 39-7
By LARRY UPSHAW
Battalion Sports Writer
A puny gust of wind rolled
from the Brazos Saturday night
and became a full-fledged cyclone
out on the plains of West Texas.
The Aggie Fish matured with
full fury, pounding the Texas
Tech Picadors into the sand and
sagebrush of Sweetwater by the
resounding score of 39-7.
With halfback Wendell Hous-
ley coming alive to match his pre
season notices to score four
touchdowns, the young Ags
whirled 300 yards on the ground
to 54 for the downtrodded Pica
dors.
Housley opened scoring mid
way in the first period with a
33-yard blast around right end as
center Mike Caswell left numer
ous Picadors sprawled on their
hindmost.
Charlie Riggs booted the extra
point for a 7-0 lead.
But Housley and Co. declared
germ's breath until the offensive
line blew large holes in the Pica
dor setup for Housley. He
pranced for scores of 4 and 1
yards, and Riggs flexed his toes
thrice, giving the Fish a 21-0
lead at halftime.
The storm continued in the
second half. Unloading the air
mail atop the hapless Picadors,
quarterbacks Bob Long and
Curley Hallman drilled Maxwell
with scoring tosses of 9 and 54
yards.
After halfback Roland Rainey
whizzed 60 yards with the kickoff
and Hallman spiked end Tom
Buckman with a 17-yard bomb on
the Tech 2, Housley hanged over
to cap the storm of points at 39-7.
Aggies’ passing effort was the
poorest of some weeks, but they
made the two big ones, and in
victory, all things are for good
to those on the winning side.
Caffey led Ag rushers with 53
yards on nine carries and Mc
Kaughan was right behind him
with 36 net yards on 11 carries.
Phil Scoggin, in addition to his
commendable defensive efforts,
booted the ball eight times for a
47.1 average. Ken Lamkin led
defensive efforts with 12 tackle;,
followed by Wellborn, and Kacii
tik with 11 each.
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