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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 24, 1967)
THE BATTALION Page 6 College Station, Texas Tuesday, October 24, 1967 Baylor’s Defense Girds For Aggies By JERRY GRISHAM The Baylor Bears have had two weeks off to prepare for Satur day afternoon’s game with the Texas Aggies and the emphasis in Bruin workouts has been on defense to stop the high-flying Ags. It is on defense that the Bears hope to break the two-game win ning streak of A&M. All Freshmen Make-up Pictures for 1968 Aggieland October 23 - 27 at University Studio North Gate BUSIER AGENCY REAL ESTATE • INSURANCE F.H.A.—Veterans and Conventional Loans ARM & HOME SAVINGS ASSOCIATION Home Office: Nevada, Mo. 3523 Texas Ave. (in Ridgecrest) 846-3708 Baylor’s defensive unit has sur rendered 51 points in five games this season but figures can be misleading. Only two touchdown drives have gone more than 50 yards against them. Colorado scored 27 of those 51 points but they had to go only seven and 30 yards for two of them. Syracuse drove 18 yards for its lone score and Arkansas went in from the 27. To stop the Aggies, it will be necessary to stop Edd Hargett, and Ken Casner, Baylor defensive line coach, is more than aware of the fact. “Hargett is the greatest passer in Texas A&M history,” Casner said in commenting on the Aggie field general. “What we are going to attempt to do is find out his tendencies.” “We are preparing the defens ive backs against his very ac curate passing,” Casner said, ac centing the word “very.” “We are preparing our defensive line to get a maximum rush in hopes that we can control his passing.” According to Casner, the Bears expect the Aggies to come out throwing, but, as he added, “They do have an adequate rushing game behind some good offensive blockers.” improve your library ... 2,000 PAPERBACKS 50% Crane: The Red Badge of Courage Hersey: The Child buyer Eaton: Henry Clay Wolf: Look Homeward Angel Green: Protestantism & Capitalism Hick: Philosophy of Religion Adams: Incredible Era Conrad: Lord Jim Koontz: Readings In Management Frost: An Introduction to Poems, Reviews, & Criticisms Payne: Gold of Troy Franklin: Autobiography & Other Whitings Hooton: Guestward Ho! Faulkner: Three Famous Short Stories Melville: Typee Lisitsky: Four Ways of Being Human Highet: The Art of Teaching Hemingway: A Farewell to Arms Metternick; The Coachman of Europe Muller: The Uses of the Past Ebenstein: Todays Isms Swift: Gulliver’s Travels Goldman: The Crucial Decade Orwell: Burm'ise Days Jewkes: Joan of Arc Gooch: Napolean III—Man of Destiny Cunlitte: George Washington Satin: The 1950’s: America “Placid” Decade Sinclair Lewis: Babbit Churchill: My Early Life Glasgow: In This our Life The Changing Metropolis McClennen: Masters & Masterpieces of the Short Story Twain: Roughing It Forbes: Paul Revere Glad: McKinley, Bryan & The People Shannon: The Great Depression Eatou: Henry Clay Almstead: The Slave States Crane: Benjamin Franklin Hays: The Response to Industrialism 1885-1914 Levine: What Happened in Salem Farrand: Framing of the Constitution Howells: The Rise of Silas Laphow Darrow: The Story of My Life Thurber: My Life & Hard Times Filler: The Crusade against Slavery Marguand: The Late George Apley Korg: London in Dickens’s Day Beardsley: Thinking Straight Eliot: The Waste Land & Other Poems Cox: Writing: Form Process & Purpose Rolvaag: Giants in the Earth Holbrock: The Golden Age of Quackery Austin; The Land of Little Rain Allen: Only Yesterday Lord: The Good Years Baker: The Essayist OFF Baker: The Practical Stylist Reaver: Fund, of Folk Literature Steinbeck: Grapes of Wrath Dreiser: Sister Carrie Hardy: The Mayor of Casterbridge Clarke: Track of the Cat Divine: The Reluctant Belligerent Hawthorne: The Scarlet Letter Sherwood: Winesburg, Ohio Conrad: Secret Sharer & Critism Downs: Molders of the Modem Mind Conrad: White Man in the Tropics Hemingway: Green Hills of Africa Sledd: Dictionaries & That Dictionaries Fitzgerald. The Great Gatsby Fitzgerald: This side of Paradise Fitzgerald: Tender is the Night Snow: The Affair Bronte: Wuthering Heights Lawrence: Sons & Lovers Dick: The Dixie Frontier Golding: Lord of the Flies Hardy: Tess the D’lerbervilles Thackery: Vanity Fair Mead: People & Places Salinger: Catcher in the Rye Twain: Life on the Mississippi Twain: Huckleberry Finn Dobie: The Voice of the Coyote Paton: Cry The Beloved Country Sedillot: History of the World Dean: The Nature of the Northwestern World Riesman: The Lonely Crowd Warren: All the Kings Men Erikson: Childhood & Society Conrad: Heart of Darkness Benedict: Patterns of Culture Devoto: The Year of Decision Conant: Modem Science & Modern Man Huxley: The Brave New World Melville Billy Budd Baker: Ernest Hemingway Critique Dunn: Heredity, Race, & Science LaForge: Laughing Boy Ardrey: African Geneisis Stefansson: My Life - An Eskimo Cespensky; Theory of Equations Wylie: Generation of Vipers Hoffer: The True Believers Hamilton: The Greek Way Orwell: 1984 Norris: The Octopus Dickens: Great Expectations Nelville: Moby Dick Carson: The Sea Around Us Milton: Paradise Lost Boswell: Life on Johnson Tolstoy: Anna Karina Chaucer: Canterbury Tales Lewis: Arrowsmith OFF 50% at Loupot's “The little store with the big savings” Tickets Available Some 5,000 seats are still avail able for this Saturday’s Baylor game. There is approximately 1500 seats in the North Horse shoe end zone and the rest are in the Southeast end zone area. Capacity for Kyle Field now is 40,000. West Is Best In AP Tally By The Associated Press West Coast teams had a mo nopoly on the top rungs of The Associated Press’ college foot ball poll Monday when Southern California was returned a unani mous first-place choice and UCLA wrested the No. 2 spot from Purdue. The Trojans, 23-6 winners over Washington for their sixth straight triumph last Saturday, were named No. 1 on all 37 bal lots submitted by a national panel of sports writers and broad casters. UCLA accumulated 303 points on a basis of 10 for a first-place vote, 9 for second etc. The Bruins, also 6-0 after defeating Stanford 21-16, drew 23 votes for second place, eight for third, four for fourth and one for seventh. Purdue tumbled all the way down to seventh, the result of an unexpected 22-14 setback by Ore gon State. The Top Ten, with first-place votes in parentheses and total points on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis: 1. Southern Cal (37) 370 2. UCLA 303 3. Colorado 283 4. Tennessee 228 5. North Carolina St 222 6. Georgia 143 7. Purdue 110 8. Wyoming 92 9. Houston 48 10. Indiana 48 AGGIE RUSH Aggies Rolf Krueger (74) and Bill Kubecka (49) put a rush on Texas Christian quarterback Danny Carter who is attempting a pass in third-quarter action of the Aggies’ 20-0 Saturday night win. Schoolboy Ranks Change After Weekend Action DALLAS (A*)—When Neder land beat Port Arthur 39-35 in an upset last week it started a chain reaction in the Class AAAA schoolboy football rankings of the Dallas News. Port Arthur fell from second down to 10th and most everybody else moved up. Abilene Cooper rolled on as No. 1 with the unanimous vote of sports writers assisting the Dallas News in the rankings. Victoria moved from third to No. 2 and everybody advanced a peg until Austin moved from 10th into No. 7. The biggest change came in Class AAA where Ennis lost its No. 1 spot to Nacogdoches. En nis, which barely beat LaVega Carver 16-14, dropped down as Nacogdoches 42-7 victor over Jacksonville, moved up with a rush. Nacogdoches got five first place votes, Ennis four, Odessa Ector one. Jacksboro stayed No. 1 in Class AA which had one new team—Kaufman took over for Mineola whom it beat 9-7. Seagraves continued to lead Class A but Troup fell from sec ond to third although beating Arp 14-12. Stockdale was a newcomer to A, taking the 10th spot as Spur, which had been No. 6, fell out of the list entirely on the heels of a 34-0 loss to Petersburg. OUTFIT PICTURES AGGIELAND ’68 Uniform will be Class A win ter. Oufit C.O.’s will wear sa bers; seniors will wear boots and midnight shirts. Guidons and award flags will be carried. All personnel 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 7:30 a. m. on the appointed day. Oct. 30 — A-2 & B-2 31 — C-2 & D-2 Nov. 1 — E-2 & F-2 2 — G-2 & H-2 3 — A-l & B-l Nov. 6 — C-l & D-l 7 — E-l & F-l 8 — G-l & Sqdn. 1 9 — Maroon Band 10 — White Band Nov. 13 — Sqdn. 2 & 3 14 — Sqdn: 4 & 5 15 — Sqdn. 6 & 7 16 — Sqdn. 8 & 9 17 — Sqdn. 10 & 11 Dec. 4 — Sqdn. 12 & 13 NOTE: Athletic outfits H-l and Sqdn. 14 will be scheduled for the first week of December by C.O. with University Studio. Astronomers, salesmen, designers, programmers, chemists, psychologists, writers, sociologists, economists, metallurgists, artists, accountants,physicists, mathematicians, etc,etc,etc. That’s what General Electric is made of. General Electric is made up of a lot more than just engineers — because it takes a lot more than engi neers to tackle the problems we deal with. Like helping to unsnarl traffic jams in our cities, fight ing air pollution or finding new ways to provide power for underdeveloped nations. It takes sociol ogists, meteorologists, astronomers, writers —in fact, it takes people with just about every kind of training. But, more than any of this, it takes people with nerve, gumption, intellectual curiosity- people who care about what happens to the world. So it’s not only your major we’re interested in. It’s you. Why not see our interviewer when he comes to campus and find out whether you’re the kind of person General Electric is made of. GENERAL ELECTRIC An equal opportunity employer Beverley Braley...tours...travel . . . offering a 30-day open Charge Account and accepting all Airline Credit Cards, American Express .... Diners Club Cards . . Tickets delivered to your home or office. etc. The Professional Travel Agency ... A Bonded ASTA Agent Airline Reservations and Ticketing . . . 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