Friday, October 2, 1953 THE BATTALION Page 3 Power-Laden ‘Fish’ Swamp Tarleton 34-0 Stranger Wore a Gun i—imn—a rram A COLUMBIA PICTURE ADULTS : CHILDREN 3-d GLASSES ^ Fancy-stepping Bobby Keith scored 22 points and a massive line held the Plowboys to four first downs as the A&M freshmen blank ed John Tarleton, 34-0, last night. Keith scored from the 12-yard line in the first quarter, fi’om the eight in the second and from the nine in the third. He also kicked four out of five extra points. The freshmen rolled up 15 first downs, almost all by rushing. The game was marked by frequent pen alties, with the freshmen losing 125 yards and Tarleton 115 yards. Fullback John Pardee, a bull-doz ing fullback who plowed for yard after yard, bucked over from the three for the third Fish touchdown of the first half. Pardee set up the first touch down on a 56 yard run to the Tarleton 14. Quarterback Charles Scott, a brilliant T-formation play-caller, scored from the one in the fourth quarter for the last score. End John Ray had blocked a Tarleton kick, with Eugene Stallings recov ering on the one. Keith’s first quarter score fin ished an 82-yard drive. His second quarter six-pointer ended a 75-yard march. Pardee’s touchdown cli maxed a 62-yard march. fimcria Bryan Z'SSW TONITE 11 P. M. focon or NOW SHOWING Starring AUDIElj jBBBfrSTBilJNS iifflCdilJttS aNMMMr PUliERLEE A UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL PICTURE C* . --.' % *\ , y r QUEEN TODAY & SATURDAY HOWARD HUGHES "OBERrNHTXHUM LINDA DARNELL JACK PALANCE „ r mm mm ah EDMUND GRAINGER prod™" V SATURDAYPREV. 11 WtOM RICHARD CARLSON BARBARA RUSH ^ CHARLES DRAKE RUSSELL JOHNSON KATHLEEN HUGHES CARDWELL Flight Academy • Flight Training 'jt Airplane Rental ® Airplane Sales On Highway 21 East LAST DAY «ioGGfh»(o»i mitua «cwmid\ SATURDAY ONLY \\ THE DAY . THE SUN PLUNGED , TOWARD 4 THE v EARTH/ — 7 m THE v ^ trade Fatima CRANE WILBUR and JAHES O'HANLON, OtwtcTco »y JOHN BRAHM-xuatcar max at. SAT. PREVUE — 10:30 P.M. DORIS and CSORDON y DAV M AC RAE J "ByThe JJ Light of The Silvery Moon Warner BROS-mcoioKsvlECHNicoLOR billy gray fisaaa o-bsien m !rving eunson ™ - DAVID BUTLER The Fish took the second half kickoff and went 63 yards. Don Carpenter, Scott and Keith worked the ball to the nine and Keith broke over right tackle for the score. Scott’s ball-handling, running and passing were outstanding. Car penter and Pardee ran with sensa tional power, bouncing off tackier after tackier. Russell Moake and Bill Grandberry reeled off nice gains. Guard Lloyd Hale was in on tackle after tackle. Tackles Bob by Lockett and Houston Green opened up gaping holes on offense and were seldom moved out of the play on defense. Guards Ben Bloomer and John Kuchler and center Walker Griffith also shone in the line. Score by quarters 12 3 4 A&M 7 13 7 7 Tarleton 0 0 0 0 ’Mural Divers Qualify for Monday Finals Qualifiers for intramural diving were selected in P. L. Downs Jr. natatorium last night. Upperclassmen who qualified were Coughran, dormitory 2; Mar shall, squadron 15; Lee, squadron 13; Averitte, A armor; Sinclair, squadron 2; and Mitchell, A ord nance. The freshmen who qualified were Martin, squadron 25; Khoury, E field artillery; Daniel, squadron 17; Janak, squadron 21; McCul lough, company H; and Hendrix, squadron 19. Officials for the diving meet in cluded Emil Mamaliga, A&M div ing coach, diving referee. Bill McCulley, assistant professor of mathematics, Bobby Johnson, ’53 two year varsity diving letterman, and Bill Tutor, Aggie varsity div er, were the judges. Finals in all swimming and div ing competition will be held Mon day night in the pool. Intramural tennis and basketball for upperclassmen will begin Mon day and Tuesday for the freshmen. Around Southwest Conference F ootbal I * W inner s’ Of Week Selected By JERRY WIZIG Battalion Sports Staff For the first time this season rail of the Southwest conference teams will be playing on the same week end. This is the SWC schedule for this weekend: Baylor and Miami at Miami. (Friday). Rice and Cornell at Ithaca, N.Y. TCU and Arkansas at Fayette ville. Texas and Houston at Austin. SMU and Georgia Tech at At lanta. A&M and Georgia at Dallas. Miami, 27-0 victors over little Florida State last week, is primed and ready for the high-flying Bears. Over 50,000 fans are ex pected in the Orange Bowl for the contest. The Hurricanes have a good passer in Don James, who completed nine of 16 last week. He broke the school passing record last year. Frank McDonald is one of the four fine pass cb'tching ends on the team and is a good blocker and defensive player. However, in spite of their fine passing attack and the home ad vantage, Miami just does not fig ure to have the defense to stop Baylor. And it will have to be the defense which stops the Bears, for few teams in the nation are able to trade touchdowns with a quartet like Francis Davidson, Jer ry Goody, L. G. Dupre and Allen Jones. The pick here is Baylor by 12 points, about 26-14. Rice’s Owls, despite spotting Cornell a long trip, are a solid two touchdown favorite over one of the top teams in the East. Cornell, 27-7 winners over Col gate last week, has a fine fullback in Guy Bedrossian. He rushed for 248 yards and a 3.7 yard average per carry last year as a sopho more. Guard Len Oniskey is one of the finer linemen in the East. With a two week gap between the Florida and Cornell games, the Owls should be in top shape and in good spirits. It’s hard to see how the Big Red can defeat a team with the fine offense of Rice. 22nd ANNUAL PRISON SPECIALTY ” ACTS FEATURE \ ATTRACTIONS Another intersectional win for the Southwest conference, Rice 21, Cornell 6. Mai Fowler will be back in the lineup when the Frogs take on Ar kansas in the first conference game of the season. He was ineligible against Kansas two weeks ago. A good starting backfield and a potentially powerful line make the Frogs one of the dark-horses of the conference. Backs like Fowler, Ray McKown and Ron Clinkscales make any team a dangerous con tender. Aikansas does not have the depth, but that home advantage should hold down the margin of victory for TCU. The Horned Toads should win by 14-7. Texas has lost its starting left halfback, Delano Womack, but end Carleton Massey will be back in the lineup against Houston. The Longhorns look like they are on the way up now after a miserable start against LSU. Houston, de spite the fine work of the school’s publicity department, now does not measure up to the brand of football played in the SWC. The Cougars do have a poten tially strong team and should give the Longhorns a hard test. If the Houston seatbacks run against Texas like they did against A&M, there could be an upset. Texas 27, Houston 14. The Ramblin’ Wrecks of Georgia Tech, undefeated in 28 straight games, rate a two touchdown edge over SMU. Coach Woody Woodard and his crew face one of the best teams in the country in this one. The Ponies could make it close because they have a deep array of fine backs. Although tied by Florida last week, Tech roundly outplayed the ’Gators and should have won. Their explosive runners, Billy Teas and Leon Hardeman, should give SMU’s untested defense a strong test. Tech 27, SMU 13. The Aggie-Georgia game could be the highest-scoring game of all six. Anytime two of the leading passers in the nation play in the same game, there is bound to be a lot of offensive fii’eworks. Georgia 20, A&M 14. MOVING OUT:—Bobby Keith (No. 23) sprints 23 yards on a punt return in the fourth quarter against John’ Tarleton behind three blockers. Taking the ball on his own 34, Keith cut down the right sideline, bounced off tacklers twice and put the ball on the Tarleton 43-yard line. High-Scoring CHS Tigers Battle Hempstead Tonight A&M Consolidated’s rampaging Tigers, highest scoring high school football team in central Texas, square off against the Hempstead Bobcats tonight in Hempstead. It will be fourth non - district game of the season for the Tigers. In their first three games, unde feated Consolidated has amassed 152 points to seven for their op ponents for a 50.7 point scoring average. The Tigers will have a highly- experienced, smooth-playing start ing eleven, a fine defensive platoon and three of the leading scorers in central Texas. Ten seniors will probably staid against Hempstead on the offense. The lineup will be: ends, Bob Car ter and Bob Jackson; tackles, Charles Johnson and Melvin Free; guards, George Sousares, and Jim my Bond; center, Pinky Cooner; quarterback, Fred Anderson; half backs, William Arnold and Bobby Joe Wade; fullback, David Bonnen. Johnson is the only non-senior. The air-tight defense has given up only 222 yards in three games, an average of only 74 yards per game. Madisonville was stifled on only four yards in the entire game. Consolidated carries a record of 973 yards picked up offensively an average of 324.3' yards per game. Fish, Varsity Tankmen Meet Next Week Meetings of the freshman and varsity swimming teams have been set by Swimming Coach Art Adamson. Freshmbn swimmers and anyone interested in trying out for the Fish team will meet at 5 . m. Tues day in the stands of P. L. Downs Natatorium. Varsity team members will meet at 5 p. m. Wednesday in the stands of the natatorium. Anyone in terested in trying for the team is urged to attend, said Adamson. Swimmers interested in gaining Red Cross instructor’s certificates will meet at 5 p. m. Monday in the natatorium. To qualify, swimmers must have passed the Red Cross test and all advanced swimming tests and must be 18-years-old or over, said Adamson. Wade is the^sixth leading scorer i The Bobcats hold a two year old in central Texas with six touch- jinx over the Tigers, tying them downs for 36 points. Arnold and in 1952 and ’51. The scores were Bonne have scored 24 points on 6-6 and 7-7. Katy beat Hempstead, four touchdowns each. 14-6. last week. Fresh Large Eggs doz. 70c Fryers ....... lb. 52c A&M Meat Line Hens lb. 49c Turkeys (8 -12 lbs.) . . . lb. 50c - 56c Frozen Barbecued Chicken . lb. 75c A&M POULTRY FARM This Side of Easterwood Airport PHONE 4-9044 Hrs. — 7:30 - 5:30 Sat. — 7:30 - 12:00 Good Luck . . . AGGIES! Visit Us After the Games and Enjoy A Real Treat with B-K ROOT BEER — Also Try Our — • HOT DOGS • CHILI DOGS • CHEESE DOGS Bil - Bera Drive - In 2704 College • Across From Country Club Lake RESERVEDflK^J 4A TAX SEATS | N c. Send Check Oifr-MbhiEY order To prison Rodeo Ticket office OCTOBER 4-11-18-25 PRISON STADIUM HUNTSVILLE, TEXAS $2.40 Meet the College Crowe/ at LOUANN'S . . the collegiate favorite for GOOD FOOD & DANCING every night for the past 14 years EM - 2688. Dallas Greenville Ave Off Central Expressway