The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 20, 1969, Image 6
•"iy CANTEBURY BELTS iliin 5 turn c» unibertfitp men’s; tnear 32» University Drive 713/846-2706 Colle«re Station, Texas 77840 Pag-e 6 College Station, Texa(S Thursday, November 20, 1969 THE BATO AP’s Grimsley Picks Michigan Over Ohio Stal BON FIRE SPECIALS Was Now Company Sweatshirts $3.45 99 (discontinued Was Now T Shirts $1.49 49 Wm Now Gloves .49 Value 29 .69 Value 39 1.25 Value 719 Combat Boot New 12.95 loupots AIRLINE RESERVATIONS & TICKETS COLLEGE STATION MEMORIAL STUDENT CENTER BRYAN 312 E AST 25TH ST. 846-3773 823-0961 (f3everieu (f3r(tie tours travel Bonded ASTA Agent MEMBER By Will Grimsley AP Special Correspondent NEW YORK <A>) — Michigan to bust the Ohio State bubble. Don’t roll out the psychiatrist’s couch. The Ohio State Buckeyes are perhaps the greatest college foot ball team ever assembled—deep in material, resourceful, quick, well-coached. They are IS 1 /^ point favorites. But it’s still a game played by impressionable young men—flam ing desire, home field advantage and complacency on the part of the Buckeyes should produce one of the upsets of the decade. Last week’s score: 42-14, .755. Season: 477-115, .765. The week’s predictions: Michigan 27, Ohio State 20: The Wolverines slow up Rex Kern and Jim Otis with a swarming de- Texas 9 Backfield Power Extends To Third Team Cotton Tickets May Be Bought Cotton Bowl Athletic Associa tion officials have issued a re minder that public sales of the association’s quota of tickets to the New Year’s Day classic has ended and that tickets must now be ordered through the two par ticipating schools. Notre Dame Monday ended a 44-year bowl ban and accepted the guest spot against either Tex as or Arkansas, the schools that will meet in Fayetteville on De cember 6 to determine the South west Conference champion and host role for the Cotton Bowl game. Tickets may be ordered from Don Bouffard, Ticket Manager, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Ind. 46556. Tickets are $7 each and each order should in clude a 60-cent handling charge. The host school will announce its ticket sale opening at a later date. Notre Dame will bring an im pressive record into its clash with Arkansas or Texas, both ranked among the top four teams in the country. With a 7-1-1 record, the Irish boast the sixth most pro ductive offense in the nation. Notre Dame has gained 452.8 yards per game and limited op position to 217.6. Texas ranks fourth in the country in total of fense with a 489-yard average and has allowed 224.6. Arkansas is second to Texas in Southwest Conference totals with 409.5 of fensive and 267.1 defensive marks. Notre Dame is fourth nationally in total defense and Texas is sev enth. We all know that the Texas backfield of Street, Koy, Worster and Bertelsen is leading the na tion in rushing yardage and that SMU’s Chuck Hixson is the top passer in the country, but how many followers of the Southwest Conference can name the 63rd- leading rushing backfield in the country and the 27th-leading point producing backfield. Hint: It wears orange and white, too. Actually, it’s something of a trick question because the back- field is really two backfields— Texas’ second and third units. According to statistics re searched and released by National Collegiate Sports Services, Texas reserves have rushed for 1,273 of the Longhorns’ 3,056 yards this year—more yards than have been gained by 55 of the nation’s 118 major colleges. Texas reserves have also scored 19 of the Steers’ 43 rushing touchdowns, more than 91 of the Country’s 118 major teams have totaled. That’s how Texas’ second and third teamers stack up against the rest of the country, but how do they stack up against the Tex as first team backfield? The reserves have authored 43 per cent of Texas’ offensive plays this season and they’ve accounted for 41.6 per cent of the rushing total and 44.2 per cent of the scoring — putting themselves on an almost exact production par with the starters. NCSS assistant director Jim Van Valkenburg says the Texas reserves’ total is well ahead of any amassed by any other major College reserves in the country. Six of the eight reserve backs who have carried the ball this sea son are averaging better than five yards a try and four average between six and 11 yards. Leading ball carriers are soph omore quarterback Eddie Phillips of Mesquite and junior halfback Bobby Callison of Abilene with 235 yards each. Phillips is aver aging 6.4 yards on 37 carries and Callison 5.5 on 43. Speaking of Callison after Tex as’ victory over Baylor two weeks ago Texas coach Darrell Royal said, “He’s the best football play er we’ve ever had to not be a starter.” Reminded that his 1961 team included All-America runner James Saxton, Jerry Cook and Tommy Ford at the same position, Royal stuck by his statement. Things have progressed to such a point at Austin that a really ambitious offensive back may soon be setting his sights on mak ing the second or third team— that’s where half the action is. Well, 43 per cent of it anyway. fense and control the ball 1 the vicious stabs of Doughty and Billy Tayk UCLA 25, Southern CaS 19: Dennis Dummit is slight edge over Clarence with other factors about Notre Dame 33, AirFti The Irish, headed for theii bowl in 45 years, should 1* py and loose. Dartmouth 21, Princet«| The Big Green puts the touches on the Ivy Leaft; Oklahoma 27, Nebrash Another 100-yard-plus day for Heisman Trophy date Steve Owens. Duke 23, North Can Leo Hart’s passing will mild upset in another teeth-rattler. Stanford 28, California II; Big Game brings a fit max to a fine season dians. Southern Methodist 3D, 13: Chuck Hixson and Gary mond form a winning ball Yale 21, Harvard 18: is that the Harvard Crim: duplicate last year’s 29-29 tie. ei> :■ B&tta- ^1 ist, « pres» Apollo Maura « wrote ers axa in fligh.'t- but ri of bis life in Jy Bob lattalic “Apol iesd r rv Ole Miss Lineman Receives AP Vote OXFORD, Miss. <A>) — “I just gave it all I had on every play,” linebacker Freddie Brister of Mississippi said. “I had my mind on beating Tennessee and not how many tackles I got. We had to win.” Brister’s concentration on his job — a key factor in Ole Miss’ 38-0 victory over the third-rank ing Vols — earned him National Lineman of the Week honors from The Associated Press. “There were so many who gave it everything they had and played so well against Tennessee, I wish the honor could have gone to the entire defensive team,” he said after learning of his selection. The 6-foot-2, 208-pound junior linebacker from Mecomb, Miss., was credited with nine tackles, six unassisted, a key fumble re covery and stopping Volunteer back Bobby Scott when Tennes see had a first down on the Ole Miss eight. v m K vmm**** • ■: w. 7mm* U: m Venture: Purify water with the fiber that made men whistle. Nylon. Reverse osmosis. A fiber that started making girls’ legs more beauti ful some 30 years ago. And a process that's been around a lot longer. But when Du Pont scientists and engineers look at them in a new way, they combine into an idea that can change the world. Reverse osmosis is a purification process that requires no phase change. It’s potentially the cheap est way to desalinate water. Du Font’s innovation ? Hollow, semipermeable ny lon fbers much finer than human hair. Symmetrical, with an outer diameter of .002 inch and a wall thick ness of .0005 inch, with an accuracy of manufacture maintained at close to 100%. Twenty-f ve to 30 million of them encased in a precisely engineered unit 14 inches in diameter by 7 feet long. The result: a semipermeable surface area of about 85,000 square feet—the size of a 2-acre lot—and up to 10,000 gallons of desalted water per day. So far “Permasep”® permeators have been used experimentally to purify brackish and polluted water, and in various industrial separations. But the po tential to desalt seawater, too, is there. So Du Pont scientists and engineers are even now working toward improved fbers, units and plant designs that should make it possible to get fresh water from salt at a price that any town or nation can afford. Innovation—applying the known to discover the unknown, inventing new materials and putting them to work, using research and engineering to create the ideas and products of the future—this is the venture Du Pont people are now engaged in. For a variety of career opportunities, and a chance to advance through many fields, talk to your Du Pont Recruiter. Or send us the coupon. Du Pont Company, Room 7890, Wilmington, DE 19898 Please send me the booklets checked below. □ Chemical Engineers at Du Pont □ Mechanical Engineers at Du Pont □ Engineers at Du Pont □ Accounting, Data Systems, Marketing, Production Name- University- Degree -Graduation Date- Address- City -State- An Equal Opportunity Employer (M/F) ■ TIP TOE THROUGH THE TACKLERS Aggie Strong Tackle Andy Philley leads quarterbacks Self through the line in the first period of Saturday’s« test for a four yard gain. Philley and defensive g Van Odom were chosen to one poll’s sophomore AM ican List. (Photo by Mike Wright) A civi! noon v of the B As By Bob Hattalioi “May The s heavy n- shouts f more m with log were pu tween D mg area “Than A lou din, req Port to ■ “May The II high in the thirc “Than The f °f tired were he: e r> safet tack ou They w, els, anc i'igh, as SWEATER SHIRT Whether you call it a shirt or a sweater depends on the occ sion. This full fashion collar shirt (sweater?) takes! classification from the wearer. Either way it keeps you wart without weight. Pearly buttons and handsome heather tonii are definitely Lord Jeff. And the knit is soft enough to war next to your chest. Why don’t you? <jjiy gQ or Of] Lawn of 1947, Gradual tanistra Univers: Pusey, Foura re ctor o the Eds Dean C A na Pioneer ta usin TOWNSHIRE / BRYAN. TEXAS 77801 Unb "On t: