'MT Friday, October I, 1954 THE BATTALION Page 3 Consolidated Tries To Rebound Tonite AgainstHempstead Cross Country -Season Starts A & M , defending conference champs, opens its cross country season today in a triangular meet on the Aggie course against Texas and Texas Tech. The running over the 2.6 mile course west of the stadium across the railroad tracks will start at 4 p.m. Coach Ray Putnam announced the Aggie harriers will run in the following order based on time tiials this week: Verlon Westmoreland, William Cocke, Edwin Blake, Robert Boles, F. R. Rul, Carl Wilmsen and Bob Hooper. SINGLE ACTION COLTS A few good ones HILL CREST HARDWARE LAST DAY ADDED ATTRACTION AT By MAURICE OLIAN Consolidated Sports Writer Seeking a comeback after last week’s 12-7 loss to Navasota, A&M Consolidated meets unscored on Hempstead tonight at Tiger field. Game time is 8 p.m. Hempstead opened the season with a 40-0 win over Orchard and battled to a 0-0 tie last week with Katy, a member of the Tigers’ district. Consolidated’s chances re ceived a heavy blow in practice this week when tackle George Lit ton hurt his knee. He won’t play tonight. Linton r ij* Start Edward Linton, 150-pound jun ior, will start on offense in place of Litton. Defensive changes find Manuel Gax-cia shifting to line backer, Jack McNeely to guard and J. B. Carroll into the second ary. Coach Jim Bevans has spent much time this week on the Tiger pass defense. Navasota completed 6 of 8 passes for 79 yards. In their three games, the Tigers have averaged 216 yards per game rushing, to their opponents’ 223.3. Their total offense average is 239.7 per game, their opponents’ is 244. Engelbrecht Leads Tigers Travis Engelbrecht leads the team in rushing, with 237 yards on 31 tries, a 7.7 yard average. On offense, CHS probably will start Jerry Oden and Dick Hick man at ends, Edward Linton and Henry Phillips at tackles, McNeely and Garcia at guards, Norman Floeck at center, Carroll at quar terback, Engelbrecht and Tommy Barker at halfbacks and Bobby Joe Wade at fullback. Frosh (Continued from Page 2) Dudley, Trimble and Marshall Whichard as he raced down the sideline, cut in, got a block from end Joe Bright, which erased the last man, and went all the way with two seconds left in the half. The Fish took the second half kickoff and went 64 yards in 5 plays. Longest gainer was a 30- yard dash by Crowe around right end after a pitch out from Wright. On the next play, Wright dashed to the left, then pitched out to Dudley who scored untouched on a 23 yard run. Houston was com pletely suckered by Wright’s fake. In the fourth period, Houston fullback Bill Wynn, punting from his end zone, had his kick blocked by guard Gene Baker, Meeks re covering. Eighteen players on the Fish roster were from outside Texas. BATTALION CLASSIFIED NO ADVANCE IN ADMISSION "•* Official Films -WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP HEAVYWEIGHT FIGHT MARCIANO - CHARLES See blow by blow on our giant wide screen BETTER THAN A RINGSIDE SATURDAY ONLY BUY, SELL., RENT OR TRADE. Rate* ... 3c a word per InHertlon with a 16c minimum. Space rate In- classified section .... 60c per column-inch. Send ill classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE. All ads must be received In Student Activities Office by 10 a.m. on the lay before publication. • FOR SALE • 1948 WILLYS JEEP. Good mechanical condition, $300. Contact Joe Warrick, 62 Mitchell, Box 6303. •EASY SPIN DRYER washing machine. Call 4-5781 after 5:30 or see at 205 Fairview. ONE RECONDITIONED 1946 ringer type Maytag washer. Come by 907 Enfield St., Bryan, and make an offer. USED STOVE and refrigerator. Call Barry at 4-5978 or Box 2493 College Station. Admiral 17 inch TV complete with antenna and console base $100. Phone 6-5303. • SPECIAL NOTICE • Students living in college apartments: We will board your dog or cat until June or longer at special low rates. Inspect the Bayard Kennels on Highway 6, south of college. 6-4121. • FOR RENT • THREE-BEDROOM home in Bryan. Quiet neighborhood, large trees, pretty lawn. Close to shopping district. Will qualify for G. I. Loan. Call Col. Whitney, 2-5723. TWO BEDROOMS with private bath. For gentlemen. Call 6-6864. PRIVATE ROOM and bath in guest louse. 4-79j>8. c ; • FOUND • A WONDERFUL place to buy or sell. Battalion classified ads. Call 4-5324 or 4-1149 for prompt courteous service. RICHARD DENNING - ANTONIO MORENO A UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL PICTURE PLUS MARCIANO - CHARLES FIGHT FILMS P^EVUE SAT. NIGHT 10:30 Also Sunday & Monday rJOHN WAYNE ...They called him _”Honcjo"_ »« 3 Dimension WarnerColor WARNER BROS. AND INTHOOUCINS GERALDINE PAGE •vtTM WARD BONO • MICHAEL PATE • JAMES^ARNESS ^ • .OBt.T rilLOWS * JOHN FARROW tw«YMfcuQwsMoovc”oN c'.ibuico«• WARNER BROS CALVES for your deepfreeze. Make your own selection. Phone 6-5802. Rely On Us for Superior Service When you put clothes in our hands, you know they’ll be returned clean, well pressed and in top form. Our reputation rests on your satisfaction. DYERS-FUR ATOP ACE HATTERS OriCO-XT. Official Notice The engineering drawing department is interested in receiving applications for stu dent teaching assistants for E.D. 105. In terested seniors and graduate students should apply Room C, Anchor Hall, im mediately.. W. E. Street Head, E. D. Dept. Any student who normally expects to complete all the requirements for a degree by the end of the current semester should call by the Registrar’s office NOW and make formal application for a degree. November 1st is the deadline for filing an application for a degree to be conferred at the end of the current semester. This deadline applies to both graduate and un dergraduate students. H. L. Heaton, Registrar Dr. Carlton R. Lee OPTOMETRIST 803A East 26th Call 2-1662 for Appointment (Across from Court House) • Blue line printa • Blue prints • Photostats SCOATES INDUSTRIES Phone 3-6887 : : s $ SPECIAL SEA FOOD PLATTER $loo AGGIE SPECIAL $loo Chicken Fried Steak (Armour Style) Viviano Italian Spaghetti Romano Cheese and Salad Kelley's Coffee Shop & Corral “GOOD FOOD — THAT’S ALL” 201 S. Main m S P O R T o H O R T >3 By JERRY WIZIG Battalion Sports Editor This week Southwest conference schools start playing for keeps, with surprising TCU and dark-horse Arkansas opening conference play at Fort Worth Saturday night. Last week’s prediction didn’t turn out completely right (we got three of five), but where there is life, there is hope, and here is how this week’s games should go. A&M 19, Georgia 14. Baylor 21, Miami 7. Rice 26, Cornell 14. Georgia Seven The Bulldogs are rated seven point favorites over the winless Aggie, and since they’re playing in Georgia, that looks about right. Coach Wally Butts, as usual, has come up with a fine passing at tack, complemented by a running game that appears pretty good too. A&M, on the other hand, is fourth in the nation in pass de fense, according to the latest NC AA statistics, but the Aggies’ op ponents haven’t exactly filled the air with footballs. Oklahoma Georgia Tech 14, SMU 7. TCU 20, Arkansas 14. Texas 28, Washington St. 7. Point Favorite A&M threw only three passes, and Texas Tech tossed nine. Coach Paul Bryant probably will start the same lineup that opened last week, which means the Ag gies again will be outmanned in experience and size. In practice, Don Ellis picked apart the Cadet pass defense, so it looks like a busy afternoon for the Aggie sec ondary. However, Bryant undoubtedly will have some kind of offensive trickery cooked up, and it’s time the Aggies got tired of being pushed around. Bears May Be Mad Baylor barely got past an in- Jones continues to amaze Bear spired Vanderbilt team last week, and that squeaker might have been just what the doctor ordered to arouse the Bears. George Sauer is likely to start two sensational sophomores in the backfield after their spectacular play last week. They are Bobby Jones at quarterback and Delbert Shofner at halfback. supporters and leads the SWC in passing and total offense. He has quarterbacked the team to 12 of its 13 touchdowns. Shofner has averaged over 8 yards per try on the ground and has caught two passes for 117 yards. Add to this twosome L. G. DuPre, the confer ence’s leading rusher, and the Bears look awfully good. Cornell Has DeGraaf Rice, idle last week, meets Cor nell, rated one of the best in the East in pre-season forecasts. In Bill DeGraaf, Cornell has one of the best quarterbacks in the East, and since the Owls have been troubled by injuries in practice this week, the stage may be ready for an upset. However, Dicky Moegel is hale and hearty, and Morris Stone should capably fill the fullback spot, left vacant by knee injuries to Mac Taylor and Jerry Hall. SMU, which starts later and finishes later than any other SWC team this season, has a rough job on its hands. Georgia Tech was upended last week by Florida, and figures to be fighting mad this week. SMU still has something of a question mark at quarterback, where Duane Nutt and John Roach have been battling it out, and ap pears thin in experienced linemen. TCU may have reached its sea son peak against Oklahoma last week, but you just can’t tell about sophomores, and the Frogs have plenty of them. Arkansas will be the first single wing team TCU has played since last year, so the Hogs seem to have a fair chance of winning their first game in Texas since 1948. Texas was disappointing against Notre Dame last Saturday, squan dering several promising scoring opportunities. Washington State has 23 lettermen and an unfamiliar single wing attack. Steer tackle,' Langford Sneed is out of the game with an injured shoulder, and quarterback Charlie Brewer and halfback Delano Womack both may be slowed as a result of practice injuries. Even with these disadvantages, the Longhorns should be able to handle the Cougars without too much trouble, since the game is at Memorial stadium. GUN DIGEST Complete gun review by experts HILLCREST HARDWARE Off To A Weekend Football Game? Better see to that oil change BEFORE you leave! Long, hard driving re quires fresh, clean oil for efficient en gine operation and longer wear. Our change-overs are made in a jiffy. See «s NOWI McCALL’S , HUMBLE SERVICE STATION “Where Service Is First” _ r v EAST GATE PHONE 4-8884 # ,r ~ Highway 6 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS WASHING & LUBRICATION ROAD SERVICE STUDENTS! Got Lucky Droodle your no SEND IT IN AND MAKE FIREPOLE FOR FALSE ALARMS Want to pick up $25? Make up a Lucky Droodle and send it in. It’s easy. If you want to find out just how easy it is, ask Roger Price, creator of Droodles. “Very!” Price says. Better yet, do a Droodle yourself, like the ones shown here. Droodle anything you like. And send, in as many as you want. If we select yours, we’ll pay $25 for the right to use it, together with your name, in our advertising. We’re going to print plenty—and lots that we don’t print will earn $25 awards. Draw your Droodles any size, on any piece of paper, and send them with your descrip tive titles to Lucky Droodle, P. O. Box 67, New York 46, N. Y. Be sure your name, address, college and class are included. While you’re droodling, light up a Lucky —the cigarette that tastes better because it’s made of fine tobacco . . . and “It’s Toasted” to taste better. DROODLES, Copyright, 1954, by Roger Price “IT’S TOASTED” to taste better! IN TURKEY ACCOMPANIED BY VERY UGLY FRIEND © A. T. Co. PRODUCT OF