The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 12, 1978, Image 12

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    Page 12 THE BATTALION
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1978
‘The voice of Aggieland’
announcer
By SALLYANNE CORNELIUS
Battalion Reporter
Something is different about Kyle
Field this year. It has a new voice.
C.K. Esten has retired after 24
years as the public address an
nouncer at Texas A&M University
football games and 30 years teaching
here.
Esten was born in 1908. He at
tended Brown University and
graduated from Baylor University
with a master’s degree in English
and theater.
“I was working at a detective
agency while going to Brown, and I
met a fellow who was from Baylor
doing graduate work at Brown,”
Esten said.
“He asked me to come to Texas
with him, and I finally did. In enrol
led at Baylor.
“He got me a dorm room and a
job with the athletic department.”
Esten said he ran track at Brown
University, and he hoped to run at
Baylor, but “at that time transfer
students couldn’t run, even if they
had been there a year or more.”
Esten managed the track team
Esten said he teas ashed to he the
public address announcer be
cause “1 knew some football. I
had played it, coached it, re
fereed it, and watched it.”
and helped the coaches and trainers
while at Baylor.
Esten said Brown University was
“a tougher school than Baylor. After
Brown, Baylor was a breeze.”
After graduation, Esten became
principal and coach at a high school
outside Waco.
Sun Theatres
333 University 84e
The only movie in town
Double-Feature Every Week
Open 10 a.m.-2 a.m. Mon.-Sat.
12 Noon - 12 Midnight Sun
No one under 18
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Greyhound R x >
The cure for
college blahs.
It’s a feeling that slowly descends upon
you. The exams, the pop tests, the required
reading, the hours at the library, the thesis—
they won’t go away.
But you can. This weekend, take off,
say hello to your friends, see the sights,
have a great time. You’ll arrive with money in
your pocket because your Greyhound trip
doesn't take that much out of it.
If you’re feeling tired, depressed and
exhausted, grab a Greyhound and split. It’s
a sure cure for the blahs.
Greyhound Service
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2:30 P.M.
2:30 P.M.
8:50 A.M.
2:35 P.M.
7:35 P.M.
5:15 P.M.
9:50 P.M.
Students special to Houston & Dallas Friday afternoon. Call for Reservations.
(Prices subject to change.)
Later he taught at Gorman High
School.
“That’s where I met my wife. She
was teaching elementary school in,
Gorman,” Esten said.
Esten and his wife moved to New
England, where he spent 11 years as
a summer stock actor.
The couple visited relatives each
year in Texas, until “One year I
asked my wife if she wanted to move
back to Texas, and she said Yeah”’
Esten was offered two teaching
jobs in West Texas, but decided to
check with a friend at Baylor first.
The friend sent a recommenda
tion to Texas A&M, and Esten came
to College Station for an interview.
“Within five minutes, Dr.
Tommy Mayo said I had the job. I
never signed a thing. I always had,
an oral contract at A&M,” Esten
said.
Esten said he was offered a job a
few days later for a better salary,
but, “I stuck with A&M.
Esten said he was asked to be the
public address announcer because
“I knew some football. I had played
it, coached it, refereed it, and
watched it.”
“I knew the different formations,
and I spoke clearly,” Esten said.
Esten announced for Texas A&M
through nine different coaches, be
ginning with Homer Norton, he
said.
Esten said one of the games he
remembers was the “Hurricane
Game” against TCU in 1956.
“I’ve never seen anything like it
ever, either before or after.
“It was so stormy you couldn’t
see. TCU had the ball about a foot
from the goal line. The officials cal
led it a no-gain. I couldn’t tell, but
I’m sure the officials were right.
Battalion photo by Paige Beasley
After 24 years, C. K. Esten will no longer announce Texas A&M football games.
Those guys were right on it,” Esten
said.
The Aggies won the game 7-6.
Esten remembered the Texas
A&M-Texas game of 1963 because,
he said, of an official’s mistake.
A Texas A&M receiver caught a
pass near the back of the end zone
and the officials ruled he was out of
bounds.
“The problem was the wrong offi
cial called the play, and the referee
^imiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiii^
took the wrong official’s word.
“Each official has a certain area he
calls, and this guy was out of his
area.
“I’ve refereed a lot of ball games
and I know whose area is whose,”
Esten said.
Texas A&M lost that game 15-13,
and Texas became the Southwest
Conference champions.
Hank Foldberg, Texas A&M
coach at that time, said of the call
- “This is the greatest injustice to a
group of young fellows I’ve ever
seen.”
The Texas A&M-Memphis State
game this year was "the first time in
40 yers I’ve gotten to sit with my
wife,” Esten said.
Since he retired, Esten has taken
two European trips. Presently he is
considering a trip to the Holy Land.
Esten spends considerable time
gardening at home on his two lots.
The Texas Municipal Power A
will allow timber for the N#
bonfire to be cut at the site 0
Gibbons Creek Steam Elen
Station.
Aggies who build the center
for the annual bonfire will pm
labor, equipment and truckst
and haul logs off the project s
The students will be alk
work in a 300-acre tract ofthel
osed Gibbons Creek cooling
and dam site, which mustbecli
of all vegetation prior to i
struction.
Most of the bonfire cutting "L I
done Nov. 11-12 and 18-19 U '
dents will have access to the!
project site over designated r
Stacking, on the drill fields#
Duncan Hall, is scheduled for
26-30.
Robert O. Luedeker, k
chairman, will direct thecuttiii
stacking of the bonfire this)
is a senior agriculture majorl
New Ulm.
“This is an opportunity f#
public entities to act jointlyldi
mutual benefit,” said Hi;
Smith, mayor of Bryan andl
board president. “We needlti
the land cleared at the plantst
Texas A&M University student
make beneficial use of the hi
We see this as an opportunityl
volve ourselves in the conn*
and to support a fine Univeni
Jerry Mainord of Texas. 1
Department of Student Adam
the TMPA cutting area is i
ideal. It is one of the closestt
recent yean-Ui
i itliwest
m
southeast of College Station
MAMA'S PIZZA
A DELIVERS
11 A.M.-11 P.M. DAILY
PIZZA, SPAGHETTI,
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($5.00 MINIMUM)
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A&M investigator studies
severe weather condition
imes.
'ed 374
iggies
into the
n there’!
■uite up
ilt’ii Rice
76 Ov
la game a
: yTTai'/r I j
|8^l
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112 Nagle
846-1774
GO GREYHOUND
Getting
STAY AHEAD
WITH
SPEED READING
Student Class Starts
October 23 rd
Business & Communication Services
846-5794
BRAZOS
BOTTOM
A Texas A&M University
meteorologist wants to look at
weather information from the last 80
years in the United States and
Canada to determine if it can warn
us of the severe winters suffered in
late 1976 and January 1977.
James McGuirk says there is a re
lationship between certain kinds of
colder-than-usual winter weather
and a phenomenon known as
stratospheric sudden warming that
occurs miles above the earth’s sur
face.
Very cold winter weather is not
always tied to conditions in the
stratosphere; further, stratospheric
behavior is not completely under
stood.
Huge distortions in the jet stream
develop, explains McGuirk, and at
any time may warm up Alaska, caus
ing trees to bud, while snow falls in
Florida.
These distortions, which accom
pany stratospheric sudden warming,
apparently have occurred in about
half the years since weather and un
seasonable conditions.
By examinig pressure and temp
erature data compiled sice 1900,
McGuirk hopes to determine the re
lationship of stratospheric
warmings to what happens a|
ground.
If patterns emerge, they
serve to warn scientists
stratospheric sudden warmin|
their probable results on the
surface.
In plotting weather sunn
maps, McGuirk has
monstrated that the 1977 re]
snow in Florida, warm weal
Alaska and dry weather in the lis Dicke
all had similar counterparts c |g Jay j n
January of 1958, 1963 and 1971 itr Texas
of stratospheric sudden wa:|l g ame
disruptions.
Sng line
)hio Stat
|e of 280
only an
1st rushin
Iswc th
lould top
Arkansas
l, while
35.7 yai
individa
tarn: are cl
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Have It Ready
REGULAR HOURS MON.-SAT. 11:00-9:00
SUNDAY 12-8
CHICKEN FRIED STEAKS
BURGERS • BEER • SANDWICHES
NOW
Free With This Coupon A Small Tea or Soft Drink
(OfferThrough Oct. 27 With Purchase of Dinner, Burger
or Sandwich.)
OPEN FRIDAY-SATURDAY
SERVING SANDWICHES, NACHOS
COLD PLATES & BEER /
Battalion Classified
Call 845-2611
Come join the MSC Arts
Committee for
A Night of Fun
& Animation
a series of 8 experimental
animated films
October 16
8:00 p.m.
MSC Basement Coffeehouse
the price: a mere 50c
&
tOlBSON’S
DISCOUNT CENTER
9 A.M.-9 P.M. MON.-SAT. 10 A.M.-6 P.M. SUNDAY
1420 TEXAS AVE.
100% COTTON ‘NO FAULT’ DENIM
WRANGLER JEANS
IN BOOT FLARE
FLARE LEG &
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$Q88
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6-PACK CANS
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$-| 49
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— Built in Ni-Cad
Batteries with
Charger
— 8 digit LED
Read Out
exas
$ 19 95
Instruments Incorp.
OLD
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PEPSI-COLA
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lexos Instruments
Slimline 25
— Full Statistical ,
c,. n ^i Ano — Log & Trig Functions
- SHm Une Styling ~ 8 ^ LCD Dis P la V
$24 95
The
Battalion
King ii
now tl
is gain
eight yar
uchdowi
dies the
s Mike
lead w
Number Onf
In
fwise, T<
in five c
n d defen
! n to pacii
tod rushin]
n total del
rushing
defense
defense
Aggieland E™ in 2
MSC ARTS COMMITTEE
presents
A NIGHT OF FOETR'
WITH
days i
ord’s 36
most ev
in a gar
I anothe
another
Hixson h
es in 19(
s 57 att
[rth most
passing
best.
if
took ind
at 20.’
md in ti
Steve Sn
•terback,
es at 16
DAVE OLIPHANT
THURSDAY
8-00 p.m.
OCTOBER 12
MSC BASEMENT COFFEEHOUSE
ADMISSION: FREE