WMli drive a’67 DATSUJJ then decide THE COMPLETE SPORTS CAR1 96, h.p. All-synchro 4-speed. Ready tcu go —all you add is/un/i £2546 lit .. DEL. SPORTS-fl&IPt Stubblefield’s Imported Cars ipor 3219 Texas Ave. Phone 823-6428 — Nigrht 846-3605 " OPEN YOUR ACCOUNT NOW! fo 5 jtagJsSl Per Annum Paid Quarterly on INSURED SAVINGS AT FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS and LOAN ASSOCIATION 2913 Texas Ave. W Page 4 Colllege Station, Texas Friday, November 4, 1966 THE BATTALION Ags Go For Broke The last time SMU brought an unblemished Southwest Confer ence record against the Aggies (1956), they failed to win an other game and A&M marched on to the championship. AGGIELAND 1967 OUTFIT PICTURES 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 1 2 . 3 - 7 . 8 . 9 . 10 . 14 15 - 13 & 14 A2 & B2 C2 & D2 E2 & F2 G2 &H2 A1 & BJ Cl & Dl El & FI G1 & HI WHATABURGER 1101 S. College — Across From Weingarten “WORLD’S LARGEST PURE BEEF BURGER’ • 14 Lb. Pure Beef In Every Whataburger • MADE WITH 100% PURE BEEF GROUND DAILY AT WHATABURGER PHONE 823—1864 — Your Order Will Be Ready LET’S PLAY BILLIARDS Aggieland Recreation Center Behind Betty’s Fashions In Redmond Terrace Shopping Center BILLIARD TABLES NEW PINBALL MACHINES SNOOKER TABLES OPEN SEVEN DAYS WEEKLY 8 A. M. TILL MIDNIGHT LADIES PLAY FREE MONDAY THRU FRIDAY — 9 A. M. - 11 A. M. Register Free For Lifetime Pass — JOINTED CUE STICKS — AGGIELAND RECREATION CENTER REDMOND TERRACE SHOPPING CENTER Please don't zlupf Sprite. It makes plenty of noise all by itself. Sprite, you recall, is the soft drink that's so tart and tingling, we just couldn't keep it quiet. Flip its lid and it really flips. Bubbling, fizzing, gurgling, hissing and carrying on all over the place. An almost exces sively lively drink. Hence, to zlupf is to err. What is zlupfing? Zlupfing is to drinking what smacking one's lips is to eating. It's the staccato buzz you make when draining the last few deliciously tangy drops of Sprite from the beetle with a straw. Zzzzzlllupf! It's completely uncalled for. Frowned upon in polite society. And not appreciated on campus either. But. If zlupfing Sprite is absolutely essential to your enjoyment; if a good healthy zlupf is your idea of heaven, well...all right. But have a heart. With a drink as noisy as Sprite, a little zlupf goes a long, long way. SPRITE. SO TART AND TINGLING. WE JUST COULDN'T REGISTERED TRADE MARK KEEP IT QUIET. Will history repeat itself and help the Aggies return to their winning ways, or will the high flying Mustangs notch their fourth straight SWC victory and set the stage for a shoot-out with Arkansas ? This is the question to be de bated at 2 p.m. Saturday in the Cotton Bowl before a near-ca pacity crowd, including A&M’s entire Corps of Cadets and sev eral thousand other Aggies. The odds-makers say it's the Mustangs by TV2. Edd Hargett, Mo Moorman & Co., however, have recently been making the smarts wish they had figured a little longer and a lot better—excluding, of course, last week’s Kyle Field disaster. The game is a “must” for the Aggies if they are to stay on the championship trail — just as that fracas last Saturday was a must for the Razorbacks. A&M fans can only hope the Aggies are so inspired. “Mentally, we’ll be ready to play SMU, but I don’t know about the physical part,” Coach Gene Stallings noted earlier in the week. Injury reports later in the week were encouraging. Lloyd Currington, who has missed the last six games, should be ready to go, as will be Bill Sallee and possibly Jim Singleton. The encounter will be the 49th Mmlcofct Supplu 'pidtufce ptoMut*- 913 SfeCalU^Am-ftcyfliOfaM PALACE LAST 2 DAYS “TEXAS ACROSS THE RIVER” STARTS SUNDAY “BEAU GESTE” & SNEAK PREVIEW at 7:30 p. m. STARTS TODAY Peter Sellers In “WRONG BOX” SNEAK PREVIEW SUNDAY AT 9:15 P. M. & MONDAY AT 9:15 P. M. ^ThhOBIN UNOtBIZYtABS fR£E TONIGHT 6:30 P. M. “MACABRO’ & “ECCO” Added Attraction SUNDAY “JOHN GOLDFARB COME ON HOME” STARTS SUNDAY “BATTLE OF THE BULGE” CIRCLE LAST NITE At 6:30 p. m. “THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING” & “BIG COUNTRY” SATURDAY NITE BIG 3 No. 1 At 6:30 p. m. “TRUTH ABOUT SPRING” No. 2 At 8:42 p. m. “YELLOW STONE KELLY” No. 3 At 10:30 p. m. “ROBIN & 7 HOODS” STARTS SUNDAY Natalie Wood In THIS PROPERTY CONDEMNED” between the two schools, with A&M holding a 23-to-19 edge over the Mustangs, with six ties. SMU’s Coach Hayden Fry is all even with the Aggies in four previous meetings—but a Fry- coached team has yet to triumph over A&M in the Cotton Bowl. Last year, here at College Sta tion, the Mustangs blanked the Ags, 10-0. The Ponies will bring the league’s best per-game offense into the Dallas game. Stallings summed the squad up as having good personnel and good team speed. “I’d say their strong suit is the fact they have a lot of seniors playing,” he noted. “Mac White is a real good quarterback and he likes to run the ball more than Jon Brittenum of Arkansas.” He also had praise for the passing and receiving abilities of sopho more Jerry Levias. Coach Stallings expects to make no major changes in his starting lineup against the Meth odists. “We’re playing the best we’ve got,” he said. Sports Aplenty Fish Clobber Owlets, 31-3 BY BOBBY BATSON Batt Special Writer Texas A&M Fish displayed things to come, as they swamped the visiting Rice Owlets 31-3 on Kyle Field last night. The win boosted the Fish sea son record to two wins and one loss, while the Owlets are winless in four starts. Quarterback Barney Harris paced the A&M aerial attack as he hit target nine times in 15 at tempts for a total of 201 yards. The shifty quarterback and kick ing specialist, Mark Mosely, fig ured in on all the scoring, as Harris ran for one tally and passed for three more, while Mosely kicked four extra points and one field goal. The Fish scored early as they took the opening kickoff and drove 84 yards in 10 plays for the score. Harris, aided by a key sideline block by halfback Ross Brupbacher, rolled out 13 yards around left end for the tally. Mosely’s extra-point was good to give the Fish an early 7-0 lead. Rice fought back in the second quarter and drove 69 yards to the Maroon and White 11. Faced with a fourth and 7, the visitors chose to kick for their lone three- pointer. Minutes later, Harris capped a 59-yard, six-play march by flip ping an eight-yard scoring pass to halfback Brian Christen in the end zone. Moseley’s kick boosted the Fish to a 14-3 lead. Taking a dead punt on the 45- yard line, Harris lofted a first- down pass 43 yards to the out stretched arms of end Jimmy Adams who raced the remaining 12 yards for the score. Moseley’s point-after kick gave the Fish a 21-3 lead at halftime. It was Harris passing for a score again, this time in the third quarter to his ex-high school teammate Bob Young who cut inside the sideline flag. Mose ly upped the score to 28-3. Faced with a stalled drive on the Rice 17-yard line, the Fish called for Moseley to wrap up the scoring on a 25-yard field goal. Look For an EARTH SHAKING ANNOUNCEMENT from CARROLL'S CORNER North Gate Naval Research Laboratory WASHINGTON, D.C. An Equal Opportunity Employer The Navy’s Corporate Laboratory—NRL is engaged in research embracing practically all branches of physical and engineering sci ence and covering the entire range from basic investigation of fundamental problems to applied and developmental research. The Laboratory has current vacancies and a continuing need for physicists, chemists, metallurgists, mathematicians, oceanogra phers, and engineers (electronic, electrical, mechanical, and civil). Persons appointed receive the full benefits of the career Civil Service. Candidates for bachelor’s, master’s and doc tor’s degrees in any of the above fields are invited to schedule interviews with the NRL representative who will be in the placement office on November 9 Those who for any reason are unable to schedule interviews may write to The Direc tor (Code 1818), Naval Research Labora tory, Washington, D. C. 20396. 1 Escape! Get out from under this weekend. Fly some place—for half fare on Eastern. Visit a friend in another town. See an 'away" game. Change the scene. Leave late, come back late, enjoy a long weekend — without cutting classes. Use your Eastern Youth ID Card, or an other airline's version. If you don't have one —and you're under 22—you really ought to. To get your Youth Fare Card, send a $3 check or money order, proof of age (copy of driver's license, birth certificate or pass port) to Eastern Airlines, Department 350, 10 Rockefeller Plaza, N.Y.,N.Y. 10020 With your Youth ID Card, you can get an Eastern ticket for half fare. No advance reservations are permitted. But if there's a seat free at departure time, after passen gers holding reservations and military per sonnel have been seated, you can fly to any Eastern city in the United States. And look down on all the drivers. NUMBER ONE TO THE FUN