The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 31, 1967, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Page 6
College Station, Texas
Tuesday, October 31, 1967
THE BATTALION
Packers Top Cards, 31-23,
In Come-From-Behind Win
ST. LOUIS ( A P ) — Travis
Williams returned a kickoff 93
yards for a touchdown and old
pros Bart Starr and Boyd Dowler
teamed on an 80-yard touchdown
drive as Green Bay rolled from
behind to down St. Louis 31-23
in a National Football League
game Monday night.
St. Louis, getting two long
touchdown passes from 23-year-
old quarterback Jim Hart, plus
two field goals by Jim Bakken,
had a 20-17 lead going into the
final period.
The victory gave Green Bay,
the No. 1 team in the Western
Conference’s Central Division, a
5-1-1 record. St. Louis dropped
to 4-3 in the Eastern Conference’s
Central Division. St. Louis, New
York and Cleveland now are in a
three-way tie for the division
lead.
Williams took the kickoff fol
lowing Bakken’s second field goal
and sped up the middle to score
in the opening minutes of the
fourth quarter.
St. Louis, still moving the ball
well against Green Bay at mid-
field, drove to the Packers’ 25
where Bakken tried another field
goal. This time the kick was just
wide to the right.
Then the Starr-to-Dowler com
bination hit on passes of 10, 18
and a five-yard touchdown toss
to put the game out of reach.
Herb Adderly scored the first
Green Bay touchdown on a 12-
yard pass interception. Elijah
Pitts bulled over from the seven
for another.
Hart hit rookie Dave Williams
on scoring passes of 49 and 48
yards for St. Louis’ only touch
downs.
OUTFIT PICTURES
AGGIELAND ’68
Uniform will be Class A win-
ter. Oufit C.O.’s will wear ss.
bers; seniors will wear boots anj
midnight shirts. Guidons anj
award flags will be carried. A1
personnel in the outfit willwei!
the billed service cap issued b
the university. The type of cap
worn by underclassmen to atj
from the picture taking area
left up to the discretion of tie
outfit C.O.
Outfits should be in front if
the Administration Building 1;
7:30 a. m. on the appointed dap,
Oct. 30 — A-2 & B-2
31 — C-2 & D-2
N„v. i _ 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 Sqdr.
14 will be scheduled for the fint
week of December by C.O. will
University Studio.
LOOKING FOR ROOM!
Agrg-ie quarterback Edd Harg-ett is looking for someplace to go in this third quarter action
of Saturday’s 21-3 win over Baylor.
Year - Old Porker Victory
Haunts Aggie-Hog Clash
HEADS FOR DAYLIGHT!
Aggie halfback Larry Stegent takes a handoff from quarterback Edd Hargett and heads
for a hole in the Baylor defensive line. It was one of many gains for Stegent, in Satur
day’s 21-3 Aggie victory.
By JERRY GRISHAM
Last year at this time the Tex
as Aggies were leading the South
west Conference with a 3-0 con
ference record and had just taken
a satisfying 17-14 win over the
Baylor Bears.
Then the Arkansas Razorbacks
came to town. The Hogs behind
the hard runing of David Dickey,
. How.to
interview
130 companies
in half an hour.
Talk to the man from General Electric. He repre
sents 130 separate GE “companies” that deal in
everything from space research to electric tooth
brushes. We call them product departments. Each
one is autonomous with its own management and
business objectives. That’s why a job at General
Electric offers the kind of immediate responsibil
ity you might expect to find only in a small busi
ness. Right from the start you get a chance to
demonstrate your initiative and individual capa
bilities. And the more you show us, the faster you
will move ahead. As you do, you’ll find that you
don’t necessarily have to spend a lifetime working
on the same job in the same place. We have opera
tions all over the world. Chances are you’ll get to
try your hand at more than one of them. Our inter
viewer will be on campus soon. If you’re wondering
whether it’s possible to find challenging work in big
business, please arrange to see him. He speaks for
130 “companies.”
GENERAL
ELECTRIC
An equal opportunity employer
dumped the Cadets, 34-0, and put
the first damper on Aggie hopes
for the conference title.
This Saturday in Fayetteville
the situation will be similar but
not quite the same when the Ag
gies and Hogs square off.
Instead of being rated ninth
in the nation as they were last
year the Razorbacks are listed
nowhere in the national rankings,
being saddled with a season 2-3-1
mark and a league record of 1-1-1
and facing virtual elimination
from the SWC race.
The Aggies, after four straight
losses, have rebounded with three
conference victories in a row and
sport a 3-1 in conference play.
But the Razorbacks are not to
be taken lightly. You see, the
Porkers still have Dickey. It was
Dickey, running like a greased
pig, who scored four touchdowns
against the Aggies last year and
was a major factor in the Hog
victory.
For those who like to look on
the dark side of things it could
be said that Dickey was getting
in shape for the Ags last Satur
day when he rolled up three touch
downs in leading the Arkansas
squad to a 28-7 shellacking of the
Kansas State Wildcats.
Dickey proved deadly down
near the Wildcat goal line as he
scored on two plunges from the
one and one from the two. Head
Coach Frank Broyles has moved
Dickey from his customary wing-
back position to tailback when
the Hogs get near paydirt.
Unlike the Aggies the Ozarks
Hogs are having trouble at quar
terback. Sophomore John Eichler,
who has had the most success
guiding the Arkansas attack, left
Saturday’s contest after the first
Hog touchdown with a severely
injured ankle. Ronny South who
was displaced by Eichler earlier
in the season is the best bet to
start at quarterback Saturday.
AMERICA’S
GREATEST
SLACKS
'•HAMILTON HOUSE"
TROUSERS
$16 TO $25
HUBBARD SLACKS
$10 TO $20
“BREECHES”.
PERMANENT PRESS
$7 TO $9
DUPONT* BLENDS INSURE
LONGER WEAR
/•V
/
SPECIAL
DINE, DANCE
and
SING ALONG
with the
“SOUND of the BRAZOS”
WEDNESDAY 8 -11:45
FRANKLIN’S
located between A&M and
airport on Fm Rd. 60
Open 4 p.m. - midnight Mon.-Fri.
Saturday ’til 1
Be sure to stop by after an
evening at U-HIT-M Range
PARDNER
You’ll Always Win
The Showdown
When You Get
Your Duds Done
CAMPUS
CLEANERS
UCCF
501 University Drive
WAR —PEACE SERIES
Wed. Luncheon (Lunch Provided For 25^)
Nov. 1 History of U. S. Foreign Policy in South East Asia.
Nov. 8 History Of Christian Attitude Toward War & Peace.
Nov. 15 History Of The Draft and Conscientious Objector.
Nov. 22 Some Proposels For Controlling War
COFFEE LOFT 8 -12
Nov. 3 The Morality of Our Involvement In The Vietnamese
War. The Dove Argument.
Nov. 4 The Morality of Our Involvement In The Vietnamese
War. The Hawk Argument.
Nov. 10. Informal Debate Hawks Versus Dove.
Nov. 11 Memorial and Films.
Nov. 17 & 18 Films.
J
FEATURING BLENDS WITH
DACRON?
POLYESTER
'DuPont registered trade mark
AIRLINE RESERVATIONS and TICKETIN
AT NO EXTRA COST-30 DAY CHARGE ACCOU
MEMBER
Airline Reservations and Ticketing . . .
Student Rate Air Tickets
Steamship and Cruise Reservations . . .
Custom Planned Foreign Tours ....
Authorized Representative Of All Tours'
Foreign Car Purchase and Rental
FREE TICKET DELIVERY - f
The Professional Travel Agency... A Bonded isTA Agent Convention and Conference Reservations
^ BEVERLEY BRALEY . . . tours . . . travel—BRYAN 823-8188—MEMORIAL STUDENT CENTER, A&M UNIVERSITY CAMPUS 846-7744