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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 23, 1953)
Friday, October 23, 1953 THE BATTALION Have Scored 288 Points Page § igers Seek Seventh Straight Season Win GLENN FORD — COLOR “Man From the Alamo” YVONNE DeCARLO “River Lady” CIRCLE 4-1250 LAST DAY 0 ATTLi TOWN iilillllh-lnMIUMUlB SATURDAY ONLY \THE WILD NORTH ~' ^ ‘ ^ ^ AN SCO Coi-oR - Stewart GRANGER • Wendell COREY — A I, S O — W THE BIG TREES” — W I T IT — Kirk Douglas Patrice Wymore li Bryan 2*5S79 TONITE — 11 P.M. '^xaaawsr • • (SisS w**. The ' / s 'Gringo I' T was ora a Rampage.^. I Filmed in Mexico and presented by WARNER BROS. I' CO STARRING | WRITTEN BY Music Composed end OlRCCTFD BY .WILIP YORDAN conducted by Dimitri Tiomkin HUGO f REGONESE » UNITED ST/«:$ PICTURES eeooucnoN hj cistRisutto by WARNER BROS. iWarnerPhonic Sound NOW SHOWING QUEEN NOW SHOWING Mickey Rooney AND Elaine Stewart” I N “Slight Case of Larceny” By CLIFTON BATES Consolidated Correspondent The Tigers of A&M Consolidat ed high school go after their seventh straight win and third dis trict victory tonight at the ex pense of the Katy Tigers. The game will be played in Katy at 8 p. m. It will be the first time that Consolidated and Katy have met in football. Holding the best record of any central Texas high school team, Consolidated has rolled up 288 points to seven for their opponents. A defense that has allowed an average of only 86 yards per game has played a large part in the Tiger success story. Katy has a' record of two wins, two losses and a tie. They defeat ed Hempstead and Waller, lost to Sugarland and Magnolia and tied Eagle Lake. Consolidated received a heavy blow in their 49-0 win over Waller last Friday when tackle Melvin Free suffered a broken vertebra. He will miss the remainder of the LAST DAY THE GLORY AND THE FURY OF THE A UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL PICTURE SATURDAY ONLY st TECHNICOLOR StarnngVOU^l/W.llDL cONg/^NCt SMITH' PREVUE SAT. 10:30 P. M. Also Sunday and Monday 2a ntury-F< SUSAN HAYWARD CHARLTON HESTON .. IRVING STONE’S best-seller thePRESIDENT’S LW Tackle Pete Hickman, out with an injured hand, will replace Free on offense. Center Pinky Coonef will play the position on defense. The probable starting offensive lineup for Consolidated will be: Bobby Carter and Bobby Jack- son, ends; Hickman and Charles Johnson, tackles; Gourge Sousares and Jimmy Bond, guards; Cooner, center; and Fred Anderson, Bobby Joe Wade, William Arnold and David Bonnen, fullback. On defense will be: Carter and Jimmy Richards, ends; Douglas Norcross and Coon er, tackles; Johnson and George Litton, guards; Roland Beasley, Robert Cleland, Wade, Bonnen and Anderson, secondary. Fencers Will Meet Tarleton in MSC The A&M fencing team will hold its second meet of the year in the Memorial Student Center assembly room with Tarleton State college at 8 a. m. Saturday. Both the varsity and prep meets will be held in the three weapons, foil, epee and sabre. Probable starting team for the Aggies will include Bob Braslau, Jerry Ramsey, Ken Jones, foil; Gus Wulfman, Walt Anderson, Jim Rigg, epee; and Art Garner, Bill Huettel, Carroll Forrester, sabre. Other meets in the near future will be with Southern Methodist University and Texas Christian University, which have recently be come a part of the Southwest con ference picture in fencing. The A&M fencing squad will at tend the invitational meet sponsor ed by the Dallas YMCA on Decem ber 10 for all Texas schools. TODAY and SATURDAY SKt-men imvsL 'Audrey TOTTER• Maureen O'SULLIVAN \ A COLUMBIA PICTUBE PREVUE SATURDAY SUN. — FRIDAY •Bmm GUY MADISON • FRANK LOVEJOY BREN WESTCOTT • VERA MILES • DICK WESSOM , A WA8NER BROS. PICTURE ADULTS 50 3-D GLASSES . . .15 CHILDREN 25 QUEEN SATURDAY PREVUE 11 P.M.—STARTS SUN. ,Based on the play by Donald Bevan and Edmund Tucinjki WILLIAM HOLDEN' »■ DON TAYLOR ^ f OTTO PREMINGER 1 Produced and Directed by eitiY wilder; 7 Written for the screen \jf BILLY WILDER and N rsS2as EDWIN BLUM A Paramount Picture i SWC Predictions Ags Over Baylor, Rice To Take UT, TCI Will Win By JERRY WIZIG Battalion Sports Staff The A&M-Baylor meeting at Kyle Field tomorrow heads a Southwest conference schedule heavily spotted with inter sectional games. > . Three of the five games on the schedule are intercon ference matches. Here are this week’s predictions: A&M over Baylor. Rice over Texas. ^ SMU over Kansas. TCU over Penn State. ' Mississippi over Arkansas. One of the largest crowds of recent seasons is expected to jam Kyle Field for the meeting of the only two undefeated teams of the conference. It will match Baylor’s “Fearsome Foursome” against A&M’s outstanding line, the quarterback ing of Don Ellis and an amazing amount of hustle and spirit. ★ ★ ★ The Baylor backfield of Francis Davidson, L. G. Dupre, Jerry Goody and Allen Jones has been called one of the best combinations in the nation. However, Jones and Dupre are a bit weak on defense. A&M’s line, especially on de fense, appears stronger than Bay lor’s. Ellis and Davidson are almost equal in statistics. What doesn’t show up in the figures is Ellis’ al most uncanny ability of late to call the right play at exactly the right spot. One of the best defensive backs in the conference, he is a The Rice Owls, smacked in the teeth by a last ditch win by SMU last Saturday, will be fighting for survival in the title race when they meet Texas in Austin. Texas, still plagued by quarter back trouble and hit hard by in juries, is not likely to play a top game this week. Bill Long, start ing fullback; Howard Moon, end; and Don McGraw, guard, will not play. This one looks like an Owl vic tory as the Institute eleven bounds back. SMU, riding high after their 12- better ball-handler, runner and leader than Davidson. The Bears don’t have C. O. Brocato to kick extra points this season. He booted three in the 21- 21 tie in ’51 and kicked the winn ing point in last season’s 21-20 Baylor win. Don Kachtik scored all three touchdowns for A&M last year. This will be one of the toughest games played this year in the SWC. Playing at home for only the second time in six games, the Aggies will stamp themselves as the team to beat in the conference. An Aggie victory by six points. 7 thriller over Rice, tackles a mediocre Kansas team in Lawrence. The Jayhawkers were mauled by Oklahoma, 45-0, last week. Coach Woody Woodard formerly coached in Kansas, and his boys will be out to make him look good before the home folks. The Ponies, first in the country in defense, have terrific backs in Jerry Norton, Frank Eidom, Roy Pace, Sammy Stollenwerck and Duane Nutt. This explosive back- field talent should be good for a two touchdown victory without too much trouble. ★ ★ ★ TCU, smarting after a decisive be the first Frog game in the East loss last week to the Aggies, will in 12 years and figures to be a face a potentially dangerous Penn winning one. TCU’s wide open of- State crew. tensive style will be too much for Penn State defeated previously State, although the passing of unbeaten Syracuse, 20-14, last week Tony Rajos might cause TCU in the last minute of play. This will some anxious moments. Lamar Mcllan, Arkansas’ one man team, will not be enough to offset a 20 pounds per man weight advantage in the Mississippi line. McHann leads the SWC in total offense, but the Rebels have three good backs in Lea Paslay, Harol Lofton and Billy Kinard. This game, which will be played in Memphis, Tenn., will be one of A&M Rifle Team Faces Bears Here A&M’s rifle team will fire a match with Baylor here today. The Aggie team breezed over TCU last Saturday by 119 points. M/Sgt. J. T. Collins, coach of the team, said the six men to fire Friday have not been picked. These six men will be chosen from the 22 out for the team. Sgt. S. O. Lucky is assistant coach. the four games to be partly televis ed by the National Broadcasting Company. The Reb line will average 209 pounds per man to 189 for Ark ansas. Mississippi ran through a good Tulane team to a 45-14 win last week. Chalk up another for the Rebels. Fish Rifle Team Trials Start Mon. Try-outs for the Freshman Rifle team will begin Monday, said Sgt. S. O. Lucky, freshman team coach. Each man will turn in a set of targets fired on the same day. A score of 240 or better will qualify the shooter for team membership. Try-outs will end Tuesday, Nov. 3. M/Sgt. J. T. Collins, varsity team coach, said some very prom ising material is out for the fresh man team. H Beats Sq. 17 In Tight Game, 15-14 Jerfy Fletcher of company H scored 11 points to help his unit squeeze past squadron 17, 15-14 in intramural basketball yesterday. Allen Acre sparked squadron 17 with 5 points. B company, led by Ronnie Bretz who secored six points, outran squadron 19, 19-3. Adrian Helms and Jack Bate man scored 6 points and helped squadron 20 outlast company C. Dick McCaslgnd was high point man for company C with 6 points. Football Curry passed the Leggett hall squaj to a 7-6 victory over Post Graduate hall team in intramural football. The Hillel club vised a safety to eke out a 2-0 win over the Range and Forestry club. Dprmitory 2 edged out College View, 7-0. Tennis Roy Holiday, Andy Beakey, Gene Andrews and Bob Sanders of A field artillery won matches to beat squadron 5, 2-1. Gaines Godfrey and Ken Richmond won a match for squadron 5. Squadron 23’s Bunnig Forester, Robert Cogbum, Rod Smith, Jack Steel, Edward Wyatt and Harold Warnick won their matches to blank company K, 3-0. Tom Toudouze, Bob Graze, Jer ry Bridges and Carl Wagner of company E won their matches to blank squadron 22, 2-0. The fish band won all its matches to beat squadron 25, 3-0. Squadron 24 edged a win over company L, 2-1. Harriers Duel Steers Today A&M’s cross-country team meets Texas in Austin today in a match that will he their toughest test of the year. The seven man team is made up of James Blaine, Dale DeRouen, Verlon Westmoreland, Franklin Whitwell, William Cook, Robert Boles and Carl Wilmson. Their coach is Ray Putnam. The Aggies defeated Oklahoma and Arkansas in their first two meets. The next match will be with SMU on Nov. 2 in College Station. Frank (Col. Andy) Anderson, A&M track coach, said that the ' battle for the cross-country champ ionship will be between A&M and Texas. The team will leave by bus for Austin at 11:30 a. m. Friday. will conduct PERSONAL INTERVIEWS on campus October 29 & 30 Boeing has many positions open for graduating and graduate students. These opportunities are in all branches of engineering (ae, ce, ee, me and related fields). Also needed are physicists and mathematicians with advanced degrees. Fields of activity include design, research, and production. Your choice of location: Seattle, Washington or Wichita, Kansas. A group meeting, first day of campus visit, will precede personal interviews. Details of openings, nature of assignments, company projects, etc., will be explained. Married students are invited to bring their wives. Come and learn about these excellent oppor tunities with an outstanding engineering organiza tion—designers and builders of the B-47 and B-52 multi-jet bombers, America’s first jet transport and the bomarc F-99 pilotless aircraft project. PLACEMENT OFFICE Seattle Wichita Meet the College Crowd at LOUANNS . . the collegiate favorite for GOOD FOOD & DANCING every night for the past 14 years EM-2688, Dallas Greenville Ave Off Central Expressway