Fish Sock It To Pics, 16-13 THE BATTALION Intramural...

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mj(l| g; : Fish Sock It To Pics, 16-13 By RICHARD CAMPBELL The Texas Aggie Fish convert- ed a late fourth quarter fumble recovery into their fourth con- secutive win of the year as they edged past the Texas Tech Pica- dors, 16-13, in Jones Stadium in Lubbock Thursday night. Middle Guard Mike Fuller pounced on a loose Picador fum- ble at the Tech 32-yard line with only 4:54 left in the game as the defensive line jarred the ball loose from Tech quarterback Dale Rebold. Pass defense was also the or- der of the day as the Fish swiped four more passes to add to their previous total of eight before the game. Rebold was victimized twice and reserve quarterback Charles Napper saw two of his passes taken away by the hungry Fish. IN THE first quarter, neither team could move the ball effec- tively until the Picadors recov- ered a Fish fumble by quarter- back Mike Hunger on the Fish 45. At this point, the Fish de- fense led by linebacker Steve CANTEBURY BELTS umbersttp men'g to&ar 329 University Drive 713 / 846-37061 College Station/ Texas 77840 Greyhound Bus Lines 1J00 Texas 823-8071 Inexpensive Charter Service for student groups or classes. Group accomodations arranged. Luebbehusen, stopped the Pics cold and Rebold was forced to punt. But Edwin Ebrom dropped the ensuing kick and the Pics were in business on the Fish 22. But the defense stiffened again and Techs Clifton Curtis made good on a 33-yard field goal and Tech took the lead, 3-0. Second quarter action found Tech stifled again and Rebold punted to the Fish 43. Two plays later, alternate Fish quarterback Joe King hit wingback Billy Joe Polasek with a perfect 50-yard scoring strike with 10:43 left in the first half. Billy Martin tacked on the extra point and the Fish led, 7-3. TECH STARTED another drive on their 25 following a fine 42-yard punt by Joey Herr. But on the second play, the AggiesLuebbehusen intercepted a Nap- per pass intended for John Klein- ert at the Tech 38 and returned it to the 22. After three unsuc- cessful plays, the Fish parlayed the opportunity into three quick points off of the toe of Richard Baldeschwiler who put a field goal through from the 17. With 5:53 left the Fish were ahead 10-3. But on the next drive, Tech got to the Fish 23 and were threatening until David Hoot picked off a Rebold pass at the one-yard line. But Herr had to punt and Tech took over on the A&M 43 with 32 seconds remain- ing in the half. Rebold hit split end James Denton for 18 yards to the Fish 25 and with only 10 seconds left, Napper came in and threw his second interception. Corky Sheffield grabbed the er- rant throw on the 27 and the half ended. THE THIRD QUARTER be- longed solely to the Picadors as | a King pass intended for John (^nhiihOYWJ?, Representing: The Travelers Company For Complete Insurance Service Dial 823-8231 Ray Criswell, Sr.; Ray Criswell, Jr. Insure Well With Criswell2201 S. College Ave., Bryan, Texas Perfect symbol of tbe love yon sluare Being with each other, doing things together . . . knowing that your affection is growing into precious and enduring love. Happily, all these cherished moments will be forever symbolized by your diamond engagement ring. If the name. Keepsake, is in the ring and on the tag, you are assured of fine quality and lasting satisfaction. The engagement diamond is flawless, of superb color, and precise modern cut. Your Keepsake Jeweler will assist you in making your selection . . . Hes in the yellow pages, under “Jewelers.DIAMOND RINGS LEE CROWN Rings from $100 to $10,000. Illustrations enlarged to show beauty of detail. ® Trade-mark reg. A. H. Pond Company, Inc., Est. 1892. HOWTO PLAN YOUR ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING | Please send new 20-page booklet, How To Plan Your Engage- | j ment and Weddingand new 12-page full color folder, both for j | only 25c. Also, send special offer of beautiful 44-page Brides Book. f-68 j Name-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- I J Address______________________________________________________ j I City__________________________________________________________ I State_____________________________ Zip------------------------------------- j I KEEPSAKE DIAMOND RINGS, BOX 90, SYRACUSE, N. Y. 13201 I__________________________________________________ I Keepsake Diamond Rings Available at Douglas Jewelry 212 N. Main, Bryan 823-2963 Gardner was swiped by Techs Ken Perkins on the Fish 45 and returned to the one. Two plays later, Rebold sneaked over for the score. The PAT was good and the two teams were knotted at 10-10. With 7:03 left in the third pe- riod, Rebold was caught on the Fish 18 after a long gainer by Miles Langhennig and a 15-yard penalty set them up on the 24. Curtis again limbered up his kicking toe and booted a 34-yard field goal through and Tech led, 13-10. The Fish seemed to lose their momentum at this point and the game began going in Picador fashion. But near the end of the third quarter, the Fish got new life as David Odom returned a Rebold punt 40 yards to the Tech 36. But the drive stalled and Herr punted to the Tech 13. From here, Rebold cranked up the Pic offense and began to move as he hit flanker Gary Kennedy with a 26-yard pass to the Fish 44 as the period ended. BUT ON the first play of the final stanza, a Rebold aerial was wide of its mark and Fish line- backer Clifford Thomas inter- cepted it and returned to the Tech 19. But three times QB Bunger failed to move the Fish and Martin attempted a 37-yard field goal. It sailed off to the right and the score remained un- changed. After several unsuccessful drives, Herr punted to the Tech 35 where the Picadors took over. At this point, Fuller came up with the football after Rebold was jarred loose from it while looking for a receiver. On the first play, King lofted a pass too tall for Gardner and it was sec- ond down and 10. On the next play, hard-hitting fullback Doug Robbins took a handoff from King on the draw play and knifed his way to the 22 and the important first down. Again King called on Robbins and this time the 210-pounder picked up 6 yards to the 16. Robbins picked up two more on the next play and got the second first down with a 5-yard jaunt on the next play. From here, King made a beautiful fake to Robbins and handed off to tail- back Steve Burks who sliced nine yards into the end zone un- touched with 2:43 left in the game. The extra point play was fumbled and the score stood 16- 13. A&M KICKED off to Rebold and he returned to the Tech 30 where things got rough for the Picadors. On the first play, Re- bold faked, dropped back and was then buried by the fierce onslaught of defensive tackle Van Odom for a 13-yard loss. On the next play, Napper faded back but was trapped and downed by Odom and Clifford Thomas on the 12 before he could get the pass away. With 1:58 left, Nap- per rolled to his left, shot a long pass which was deflected by Hoot into the arms of Kennedy, who had it for a split second and then dropped it. Rebold dropped back to punt with 1:39 left and boomed a 62- yarder to the A&M 27. After Robbins and King tried the mid- dle with no success in three plays, Herr retreated to his goal line to punt with just 0:48 left. On the first play of Techs pos- session, Napper hit James Den- ton with a pass to the Fish 48 with 20 seconds left. Napper then rolled out looking for a re- ceiver and fumbled the ball but tailback Scott Brady picked it up and carried to the Fish 43. On the last play of the game with 13 seconds left, Napper hit Ken- nedy on the A&M 25 but a Tech penalty was declined by the Fish as the game ended. Rodeo Prize Won By Grad Student John South, graduate student from Bryan, was named all- around champion cowboy and awarded a trophy saddle Satur- day night, before a crowd of 350 at the All-Aggie Rodeo. First place winners of the sev- en events were: Bareback bronc riding, Lionel Lane; tie down calf roping, Bryon Hedges; saddle bronc riding, Warren Moore; and bull dogging, John South. Other first place winners were: Ribbon roping, Mike Herrington; barrel race, Francis Parker; and bull riding, Warren Moore. In the specialty events. Com- pany A-2 won the panty race, while Company B-2 won the goat sacking and ribbon race. Winners of each of the regular events received belt buckles and trophies were awarded in each of the specialty events. Stock contractor was Donald Chapman of Deer Park. f \ Graduating engineers You can be part of the man-in-the-sea program or help build the next generation of nuclear submarines at the San Francisco Bay Naval Shipyard. Enjoy unmatched potential for professional growth. At the San Francisco Bay Naval Shipyard you may help build a new vehicle for the man-in-the-sea pro- gram. Or work on other deep submergence vehicles such as the deep-diving bathyscaph, TRIESTE II. You may build nuclear submarines or convert aircraft car- riers. Or you may develop systems and equipment for cargo replenishment-at-sea. Apply your talents to important programs in nuclear power, ship structures, electrical systems, electronic systems, marine design, mechanical design, welding, quality assurance, and plant utilization. Live in the famed Bay area. San Francisco Bay V THE BATTALION Page 6 College Station, Texas Friday, November 8, 1968 Intramural Round-Up S: In Class B football, A-l and F-2 fought to a 0-0 tie but A-l took it on penetrations. They got inside F-2s 20-yard line three times but could not score. D-2 edged A-2, 6-0, while G-2 beat B-l on penetrations in a scoreless duel. Squadron 10 whipped Sqd. 7, 14-0, and Sqd. 9 topped Sqd. 11, 7-0. In the most lopsided game of the day, H-l rolled over Sqd. 6, 29-0. Class A horseshoes results went like this: Sqd. 10 beat Sqd. 1, 3-0; Sqd. 2 took Sqd. 5, 2-1; Sqd. 11 beat Sqd. 3, 2-1; F-l shut out C-l, 3-0; E-l forfeited to B-l; and A-l forfeited to D-l. Basketball in Class C started Tuesday afternoon with Davis Hall meeting the Lions and Phi Delta Sigma going against Hotard. Phi Delta Sigma rolled to an easy victory over Hotard, 44-9, with Rinehart leading the winners with 14 points. Conger also contributed 10 points for Phi Delta. In the second game, the Lions topped Davis Hall, 22-15. In the evening action of Class C basketball, AYI de- feated Keathley Hall, 30-20, behind the 17-point effort of Reiling. In the second game, Meteorology downed the Mexico Club, 34-27. There has already been two forfeited games, so check your schedules closely. Liston ChaUenges WBA King Ellis PITTSBURGH Sonny Liston, the former heavyweight champion, said Thursday he ex- pects to get another shot at the title within six months. Liston, who started a come- back attempt a year ago, said he is taking on any fighters to keep going but the top-ranked contenders wont face him. He said he was going to start putting the pressure on the World Boxing Association to force a match with its champion, Jimmy Ellis. Nobody wants to fight me,said Liston, who came to Pitts- burgh for a 10-rounder with Rog- er Rischer next Tuesday. Liston has won 10 fights by knockouts since he decided in September of 1967 to try again for the title. However, only one opponent Henry Clark, was rank- ed. He was seventh at the time. Listons most recent fight was a second-round knockout by Wil- lie Earls in Juarez, Mexico, last Sunday. Liston, ranked fourth by the WBA and fifth by Ring Maga- zine, said he felt he was as sharp as he was when he quit in 1965 after the second Cassius Clay fight. Unbeaten Joe Frazier defends his five-state heavyweight boxing title Dec. 10 in a scheduled 15- round bout against Oscar Bona- vena, one of only two opponents to go the distance with the cham- pion. Promoter Lou Lucchese an- nounced Thursday the 24-year- old Frazier would defend against Bonavena of Argentina at the Spectrum in South Philadelphia. Frazier won a split decision over the South American Sept. 21, 1966, after twice being decked. The only other fighter to last with Frazier was George John- son of Los Angeles in May, 1967. Frazier, 1964 Olympic Games heavyweight gold medal winner from Philadelphia, won recogni- tion as champion in New York, Maine, Massachusetts, Illinois and Pennsylvania, by knocking out Buster Mathis at Madison Square Garden last March. He already is training at Pleasantville, N. J., for the Bonavena rematch. A nuclear submarine going down the ways at the San Fran- cisco Bay Naval Shipyard in August, 1968. It was the 509th ship to be launched at the Mare Island facility. Naval Shipyard has two work sites 40 miles apart: Hunters Point in San Francisco and Mare Island in Vallejo, California. Each location has ready access to the cultural advantages of San Francisco. All types of recreation from surfing in the Pacific to skiing in the Sierras are within easy driving distance. Tuition payment plan for advanced degrees enables you to continue your professional growth by attending classes at one of the many outstanding colleges and universities located nearby. Full Civil Service benefits with regular salary increases. Representative on Campus Tuesday, November 12 for interview, contact your placement office. An Equal Opportunity Employer. U. S. Citizenship Required. y w\ Stationery, books, cariil baby albums shower invitations baby announcements shower centerpieces napkins, cups, plates etc. AGGIELAND FLOWEl AND GIFT SHOPPE [ 209 University Drive k % VO attention ALL CLUBS Athletic Hometown Professional and AH Campus Organizations. Pictures for the club tions of the 1969 Aggielt are now being scheduled) the Student Publications^ fice. 216 Services Bldg. PALACE Br i/.in 2'$#? NOW SHOWING Peter Sellers In I LOVE YOU ALICE B. T0KLA5 Coi in ear QUEEN ( DOUBLE FEATURE GIRL CALLED FATHOM& Dean Martin In MURDERERS R011 cm/m Sit John \ N. M.; and D sou cadei Fu: the th ision : the Da Ser I. B. C Jackso pus Cl lieu of Aggie TODAY & SATURDAY the pu James Garner & George Kennedy In PINK JUNGLE Th< Grove son of STARTS SUNDAY DOUBLE FEATURE “VIOLENT 4_^ un n e vl ftts tW TONITE AT 6:15 PJI PLUS TWO LATE SH01' WHITE LIGHTNfl ROADAt 8:30 p. m. GIRL FROM TOBACCO ROAD Dr. the Gi tics, v Thursi versitj Dr. geoscii the U tee, se memb< partic: Har s'gn c At 10:25 p. m. RESPUT1N THE Ml I MONKAt 12:00 a. m. THE REPTILEADDED ATTRACTIONS! Racquet Welch as FATHOMCIRCLI LASTNITE AT 6:15^ ANZIOWith Robert Mitchufl At 8:35 p. m. WHERE ANGELS TROUBLE FOLLOW OUR SAT. NITE BIG 3 At 6:15 p. m. Jim Reeves In “KIMBERLEY JIM At 8:30 p. m. Dean Martin In TEXAS ACROSS RIVERAt 11:35 p. m. Jack Lemmon In HOW TO MURDER YOUR WIFEAggi thou; Sena to tl ?am<

Transcript of Fish Sock It To Pics, 16-13 THE BATTALION Intramural...

Page 1: Fish Sock It To Pics, 16-13 THE BATTALION Intramural Round-Upnewspaper.library.tamu.edu/lccn/sn86088544/1968-11... · Perfect symbol of tbe love yon sluare Being with each other,

mj(l|

g; :

Fish Sock It To Pics, 16-13By RICHARD CAMPBELL

The Texas Aggie Fish convert­ed a late fourth quarter fumble recovery into their fourth con­secutive win of the year as they edged past the Texas Tech Pica­dors, 16-13, in Jones Stadium in Lubbock Thursday night.

Middle Guard Mike Fuller pounced on a loose Picador fum­ble at the Tech 32-yard line with only 4:54 left in the game as the defensive line jarred the ball loose from Tech quarterback Dale Rebold.

Pass defense was also the or­der of the day as the Fish swiped four more passes to add to their previous total of eight before the game. Rebold was victimized twice and reserve quarterback Charles Napper saw two of his passes taken away by the hungry Fish.

IN THE first quarter, neither team could move the ball effec­tively until the Picadors recov­ered a Fish fumble by quarter­back Mike Hunger on the Fish 45. At this point, the Fish de­fense led by linebacker Steve

CANTEBURY BELTS

umbersttp men'g to&ar329 University Drive 713 / 846-37061

College Station/ Texas 77840

Greyhound Bus Lines1J00 Texas 823-8071

Inexpensive Charter Service for student groups or classes.Group accomodations

arranged.

Luebbehusen, stopped the Pics cold and Rebold was forced to punt. But Edwin Ebrom dropped the ensuing kick and the Pics were in business on the Fish 22. But the defense stiffened again and Tech’s Clifton Curtis made good on a 33-yard field goal and Tech took the lead, 3-0.

Second quarter action found Tech stifled again and Rebold punted to the Fish 43. Two plays later, alternate Fish quarterback Joe King hit wingback Billy Joe Polasek with a perfect 50-yard scoring strike with 10:43 left in the first half. Billy Martin tacked on the extra point and the Fish led, 7-3.

TECH STARTED another drive on their 25 following a fine 42-yard punt by Joey Herr. But on the second play, the Aggies’ Luebbehusen intercepted a Nap­per pass intended for John Klein- ert at the Tech 38 and returned it to the 22. After three unsuc­cessful plays, the Fish parlayed the opportunity into three quick points off of the toe of Richard Baldeschwiler who put a field goal through from the 17. With 5:53 left the Fish were ahead 10-3.

But on the next drive, Tech got to the Fish 23 and were threatening until David Hoot picked off a Rebold pass at the one-yard line. But Herr had to punt and Tech took over on the A&M 43 with 32 seconds remain­ing in the half. Rebold hit split end James Denton for 18 yards to the Fish 25 and with only 10 seconds left, Napper came in and threw his second interception. Corky Sheffield grabbed the er­rant throw on the 27 and the half ended.

“ THE THIRD QUARTER be-„ longed solely to the Picadors as

| a King pass intended for John

(^nhiihOYWJ?,Representing: The Travelers Company

For Complete Insurance Service Dial 823-8231

Ray Criswell, Sr.; Ray Criswell, Jr.“Insure Well With Criswell”

2201 S. College Ave., Bryan, Texas

Perfect symbol of tbe love yon sluare

Being with each other, doing things together . . . knowing that your affection is growing into precious and enduring love. Happily, all these cherished moments will be forever symbolized by your diamond engagement ring.If the name. Keepsake, is in the ring and on the tag, you are assured of fine quality and lasting satisfaction. The engagement diamond is flawless, of superb color, and precise modern cut. Your Keepsake Jeweler will assist you in making your selection . . . He’s in the yellow pages, under “Jewelers.”

DIAMOND RINGS

LEE CROWNRings from $100 to $10,000. Illustrations enlarged to show beauty of detail. ® Trade-mark reg. A. H. Pond Company, Inc., Est. 1892.

HOWTO PLAN YOUR ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING| Please send new 20-page booklet, “How To Plan Your Engage- | j ment and Wedding” and new 12-page full color folder, both for j| only 25c. Also, send special offer of beautiful 44-page Bride’s Book.

f-68

j Name-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- IJ Address______________________________________________________ jI City__________________________________________________________ I

State_____________________________ Zip------------------------------------- jI KEEPSAKE DIAMOND RINGS, BOX 90, SYRACUSE, N. Y. 13201I__________________________________________________ I

Keepsake Diamond Rings Available at

Douglas Jewelry212 N. Main, Bryan

823-2963

Gardner was swiped by Tech’s Ken Perkins on the Fish 45 and returned to the one. Two plays later, Rebold sneaked over for the score. The PAT was good and the two teams were knotted at 10-10.

With 7:03 left in the third pe­riod, Rebold was caught on the Fish 18 after a long gainer by Miles Langhennig and a 15-yard penalty set them up on the 24. Curtis again limbered up his kicking toe and booted a 34-yard field goal through and Tech led, 13-10.

The Fish seemed to lose their momentum at this point and the game began going in Picador fashion. But near the end of the third quarter, the Fish got new life as David Odom returned a Rebold punt 40 yards to the Tech 36. But the drive stalled and Herr punted to the Tech 13. From here, Rebold cranked up the Pic offense and began to move as he hit flanker Gary Kennedy with a 26-yard pass to the Fish 44 as the period ended.

BUT ON the first play of the final stanza, a Rebold aerial was wide of its mark and Fish line­backer Clifford Thomas inter­cepted it and returned to the Tech 19. But three times QB Bunger failed to move the Fish and Martin attempted a 37-yard field goal. It sailed off to the right and the score remained un­changed.

After several unsuccessful drives, Herr punted to the Tech 35 where the Picadors took over. At this point, Fuller came up with the football after Rebold was jarred loose from it while looking for a receiver. On the first play, King lofted a pass too tall for Gardner and it was sec­ond down and 10.

On the next play, hard-hitting fullback Doug Robbins took a handoff from King on the draw play and knifed his way to the 22 and the important first down. Again King called on Robbins and this time the 210-pounder picked up 6 yards to the 16. Robbins picked up two more on the next play and got the second first down with a 5-yard jaunt on the next play. From here, King made a beautiful fake to Robbins and handed off to tail­back Steve Burks who sliced nine yards into the end zone un­touched with 2:43 left in the game. The extra point play was fumbled and the score stood 16- 13.

A&M KICKED off to Rebold and he returned to the Tech 30 where things got rough for the Picadors. On the first play, Re­bold faked, dropped back and was then buried by the fierce onslaught of defensive tackle Van Odom for a 13-yard loss. On the next play, Napper faded back but was trapped and downed by Odom and Clifford Thomas on the 12 before he could get the pass away. With 1:58 left, Nap­per rolled to his left, shot a long pass which was deflected by Hoot into the arms of Kennedy, who had it for a split second and then dropped it.

Rebold dropped back to punt with 1:39 left and boomed a 62- yarder to the A&M 27. After Robbins and King tried the mid­dle with no success in three plays, Herr retreated to his goal line to punt with just 0:48 left. On the first play of Tech’s pos­session, Napper hit James Den­ton with a pass to the Fish 48 with 20 seconds left. Napper then rolled out looking for a re­ceiver and fumbled the ball but tailback Scott Brady picked it up and carried to the Fish 43. On the last play of the game with 13 seconds left, Napper hit Ken­nedy on the A&M 25 but a Tech penalty was declined by the Fish as the game ended.

Rodeo Prize Won By Grad Student

John South, graduate student from Bryan, was named all- around champion cowboy and awarded a trophy saddle Satur­day night, before a crowd of 350 at the All-Aggie Rodeo.

First place winners of the sev­en events were: Bareback bronc riding, Lionel Lane; tie down calf roping, Bryon Hedges; saddle bronc riding, Warren Moore; and bull dogging, John South.

Other first place winners were: Ribbon roping, Mike Herrington; barrel race, Francis Parker; and bull riding, Warren Moore.

In the specialty events. Com­pany A-2 won the panty race, while Company B-2 won the goat sacking and ribbon race.

Winners of each of the regular events received belt buckles and trophies were awarded in each of the specialty events.

Stock contractor was Donald Chapman of Deer Park.

f \Graduating engineers

You can be part of the man-in-the-sea

program or help build the next generation

of nuclear submarines at the San Francisco Bay Naval Shipyard.

Enjoy unmatched potential for professional growth.At the San Francisco Bay Naval Shipyard you may help build a new vehicle for the man-in-the-sea pro­gram. Or work on other deep submergence vehicles such as the deep-diving bathyscaph, TRIESTE II. You may build nuclear submarines or convert aircraft car­riers. Or you may develop systems and equipment for cargo replenishment-at-sea.

Apply your talents to important programs in nuclear power, ship structures, electrical systems, electronic systems, marine design, mechanical design, welding, quality assurance, and plant utilization.

Live in the famed Bay area. San Francisco Bay

V

THE BATTALIONPage 6 College Station, Texas Friday, November 8, 1968

IntramuralRound-Up

S:

In Class B football, A-l and F-2 fought to a 0-0 tie but A-l took it on penetrations. They got inside F-2’s 20-yard line three times but could not score. D-2 edged A-2, 6-0, while G-2 beat B-l on penetrations in a scoreless duel. Squadron 10 whipped Sqd. 7, 14-0, and Sqd. 9 topped Sqd. 11, 7-0. In the most lopsided game of the day, H-l rolled over Sqd. 6, 29-0.

Class A horseshoes results went like this: Sqd. 10 beat Sqd. 1, 3-0; Sqd. 2 took Sqd. 5, 2-1; Sqd. 11 beat Sqd. 3, 2-1; F-l shut out C-l, 3-0; E-l forfeited to B-l; and A-l forfeited to D-l.

Basketball in Class C started Tuesday afternoon with Davis Hall meeting the Lions and Phi Delta Sigma going against Hotard. Phi Delta Sigma rolled to an easy victory over Hotard, 44-9, with Rinehart leading the winners with 14 points. Conger also contributed 10 points for Phi Delta. In the second game, the Lions topped Davis Hall, 22-15.

In the evening action of Class C basketball, AYI de­feated Keathley Hall, 30-20, behind the 17-point effort of Reiling. In the second game, Meteorology downed the Mexico Club, 34-27. There has already been two forfeited games, so check your schedules closely.

Liston ChaUenges WBA King Ellis

PITTSBURGH — SonnyListon, the former heavyweight champion, said Thursday he ex­pects to get another shot at the title within six months.

Liston, who started a come­back attempt a year ago, said he is taking on any fighters to keep going but the top-ranked contenders won’t face him.

He said he was going to start putting the pressure on the World Boxing Association to force a match with its champion, Jimmy Ellis.

“Nobody wants to fight me,” said Liston, who came to Pitts­burgh for a 10-rounder with Rog­er Rischer next Tuesday.

Liston has won 10 fights by knockouts since he decided in September of 1967 to try again for the title. However, only one opponent Henry Clark, was rank­ed. He was seventh at the time. Liston’s most recent fight was a second-round knockout by Wil­lie Earls in Juarez, Mexico, last Sunday.

Liston, ranked fourth by the WBA and fifth by Ring Maga­zine, said he felt he was as sharp

as he was when he quit in 1965 after the second Cassius Clay fight.

Unbeaten Joe Frazier defends his five-state heavyweight boxing title Dec. 10 in a scheduled 15- round bout against Oscar Bona- vena, one of only two opponents to go the distance with the cham­pion.

Promoter Lou Lucchese an­nounced Thursday the 24-year- old Frazier would defend against Bonavena of Argentina at the Spectrum in South Philadelphia. Frazier won a split decision over the South American Sept. 21, 1966, after twice being decked.

The only other fighter to last with Frazier was George John­son of Los Angeles in May, 1967.

Frazier, 1964 Olympic Games heavyweight gold medal winner from Philadelphia, won recogni­tion as champion in New York, Maine, Massachusetts, Illinois and Pennsylvania, by knocking out Buster Mathis at Madison Square Garden last March. He already is training at Pleasantville, N. J., for the Bonavena rematch.

A nuclear submarine going down the ways at the San Fran­cisco Bay Naval Shipyard in August, 1968. It was the 509th ship to be launched at the Mare Island facility.

Naval Shipyard has two work sites 40 miles apart: Hunters Point in San Francisco and Mare Island in Vallejo, California. Each location has ready access to the cultural advantages of San Francisco. All types of recreation from surfing in the Pacific to skiing in the Sierras are within easy driving distance. Tuition payment plan for advanced degrees enables you to continue your professional growth by attending classes at one of the many outstanding colleges and universities located nearby. Full Civil Service benefits with regular salary increases.

Representative on Campus Tuesday, November 12for interview, contact your placement office.An Equal Opportunity Employer. U. S. Citizenship Required. y

w\• Stationery, books, cariil• baby albums• shower invitations• baby announcements• shower centerpieces• napkins, cups, plates

etc.

AGGIELAND FLOWEl AND GIFT SHOPPE [

209 University Drive

k%

VO

attention

ALL CLUBSAthletic

HometownProfessional

andAH Campus

Organizations.Pictures for the club tions of the 1969 Aggielt are now being scheduled) the Student Publications^ fice.

216 Services Bldg.

PALACEBr i/.in 2'$#?

NOW SHOWING

Peter Sellers In

“I LOVE YOU ALICE B. T0KLA5

Coiinear

QUEEN (DOUBLE FEATURE

“GIRL CALLED “FATHOM”

&Dean Martin

In‘MURDERER’S R011

cm/m

Sit John \ N. M.; and D

sou cadei

Fu: the th ision : the Da

Ser I. B. C Jackso pus Cl lieu of Aggie

TODAY & SATURDAY the pu

James Garner &

George Kennedy In

“PINK JUNGLE

Th< Grove son of

STARTS SUNDAYDOUBLE FEATURE

“VIOLENT 4”

_^

un n e vl ftts tW

TONITE AT 6:15 P JI PLUS TWO LATE SH01'

“WHITE LIGHTNfl ROAD”

At 8:30 p. m.“GIRL FROM

TOBACCO ROAD

Dr. the Gi tics, v Thursi versitj

Dr. geoscii the U tee, se

memb< partic:

Har s'gn c

At 10:25 p. m.“RESPUT1N THE Ml I

MONK”At 12:00 a. m.

“THE REPTILE”ADDED ATTRACTIONS!

Racquet Welch as“FATHOM”

CIRCLILASTNITE AT 6:15^

“ANZIO”With Robert Mitchufl

At 8:35 p. m.‘WHERE ANGELS TROUBLE FOLLOW

OUR SAT. NITE BIG 3

At 6:15 p. m.Jim Reeves

In“KIMBERLEY JIM

At 8:30 p. m.Dean Martin

In“TEXAS ACROSS

RIVER”At 11:35 p. m.Jack Lemmon

In“HOW TO MURDER

YOUR WIFE”

Aggi thou; Sena to tl ?am<