V The Battalion Number 27: Volume 55 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1955 Price Five Cents World News By the Associated Press PARIS, — v Forecast is clear to partly cloudy and continued cool. Temperature at 10:45 a.m. was 69 degrees. High yesterday was 95 degrees and last night’s cold fi*ont dropped the tem perature to 59 degrees. By BARRY HART Battalion Sports Writer Led by the fine all-around play of quarterback Luther Hall and the sparkling* run ning ct halfback Joe Pascuzzi, the Aggie Fish broke loose in the second half to smother the TCU Wogs, 27-6, on rain-swept Kyle Field last night. Hall showed the talent that gained him all-American fame as a Dallas schoolboy. He hit three of four passes for 42 yards and one touchdown, scored once himself on an 11-yard jaunt and set up both other scores with his fine faking and ball-handling. Pascuzzi, a 25-year-old ex-serv iceman from Avella, Pa., was the game’s leading ground gainer with 50 yards in three trips. Joe haul ed in a touchdown pass, scampered 24 yards for the final score and kicked three extra points. Paul Delfeld, left halfback from North Dallas high school, picked up 44 yards on four carries, in cluding a 33-yard sprint to the double-stripe for the second Aggie tally. “I thought the A&M quarter backs, especially Hall and Hathorn, looked particularly good,” said Bill Van Fleet of the Fm*t Worth Star Telegram. Jackie Hathorn, Port Neches two-year all-statei*, com pleted two of three pass attempts for 37 yards, and ran the option play well. Held in check by three 15-yard penalties in the first 25 minutes of play, the Fish capitalized on a TCU fumble for their first score. With a first and 15 on their own 26, Wog fullback Johnny Gregory was hit hard and fumbled the wet pigskin. Fish tackle Clarence Hays, Gregory’s teammate at Fort Worth’s North Side high school, re- Game At A Glance Fish Wogs First Downs 15 15 Rushing Yardage . 246 195 Passing Yardage . . 79 46 Passes Attempted . . 7 10 Passes Completed . . 5 4 Passes Intercept, by . 0 2 Punts 4 2 Punting Average . . 26.5 48.5 Fumbles 4 5 Yards Penalized ... 95 68 covered for the Fish on the TCU 23. On the second play from scrim mage Hall hit Delfeld with a pass right into the brunt of the rain for 16 yards to the TCU five, and on the next play passed to Pascuzzi two yards deep in the end zone for the score with 4:35 left in the half. Pascuzzi’s try for the extra point was low and the score re mained 6-0 at the half. The first-year Aggies had anoth er touchdown before the fans got settled in their seats in the third period. Fish tackle Leo Wotipka, from Baytown, recovered a TCU fumble on the Wog 37. After pick ing up five on first down, Delfeld took Hall’s pitchout and raced 33 yards behind Pascuzzi’s block to pay dirt. Pascuzzi split the up rights and the scoreboard read 13-0. TCU put together four first downs after the ensuing kickoff and marched to the Aggie 25 be fore Fish fullback Barney Smith picked off Hunter Enis’ pass on the Fish 15. Paced by quarterback Hathorn and halfback Larry Minaldi, A&M moved to the Wog 27 on six plays but a 10-yard loss and an incom plete pass stopped the drive. Aggie halfback Gene Jones got things started early in the fourth quarter as he swiped Enis’ pass and returned 10 yards to the Wog 35. Five plays later, Hall, now at left halfback, took a hand-off from quarterback Hal Sandeur and shot over left guard untouched for a touchdown with 12:20 remaining in the game. Pascuzzi converted. Bobby Murray recovered an Ag gie fumble for the Wogs on the Fish 26. Eight plays later TCU had its only score as quarterback (See FOOTBALL, Page 3) MSC Film Society Schedules Movie The MSC Film Society will pre sent “The Thing” as its second movie of the year at 7:30 tonight in the MSC Ballroom. The show, a science fiction film, stars Kenneth Tobey, Margaret Sheridan, and Dewy Martin. Admission is by Season Tickets, or single admission of 25 cents. THE WINNER—Winning* sign this week was that of A Infantry, with this dilly that is enough to make you “flip your lid” or “blow your top.”