Masterful Aggies Crush 40-7 Before 26,000 in Kittens in Hearne Tonight Hapless Tech Cotton Bowl The Battalion .... College Station (Brazos County)', Texas Tuesday. October 9, 1956 PAGE 3 SW€ Standings Consolidated’s Kittens open non district grid activity at 7:30 to night in Hearne. District stand ings for the Kittens stand at 1-2. Condy Pugh will start at full back for CHS, weighing 135. Rus sell Welch is slated for quarter back duty. Welch weighs 104. Joe Olian, 95, is starting at left halfback and Cyril Burke, 112, is first choice for right half. Other starters are: Bobby Ad ams, 109, left end; Alex Quisen- berry, 158, left tackle; Bob White, 109, left guard; Charles Roeber, 112, center; George Outlaw, 117, right guard; John Pedigo, 109, right tackle, and Jack Armistead, 117, right end. Starting for the defense will be Howard Mayhugh, 120-pound tack le, Fred Wright, 136-pound tackle, and Ronnie Rea, 125-pound half back. VOLLEY BALLS SOCCER BALLS FOOTBALLS BASKETBALLS PLAYGROUND BALLS STUDENT CO-OP Team By The Associated Press SEASON STANDINGS W I. T Pet. P (s. 0|>l>. A & M .... 3 0 0 .000 68 13 Baylor . .... 3 0 0 .000 4K 6 Kiee . . 2 0 0 i.ooo 43 27 T C U . 9 0 0 L.GOO 73 6 S M U . .... 2 1 0 .667 59 49 Arkansas 2 1 0 .067 46 54 Texa!s . . . . . 1 2 0 .333 33 57 LISTEN DAILY (Except Sunday) to KORA at 11:55 A.M. THE WRITE-IN CANDIDATE W. LEE Thompson’s SINCLAIR Service Station He Cures Home Ills ONE CALL SERVICE When You Call DOCTOR FIXIT For Home Repairs Contracting a carpenter here, a paper hanger there, a. brick layer elsewhere is the hard way . . . and generally more costly. One call to Doctor Fixit does it all. He is a qualified specialist in house repair. He is courteous and competent and offers easy monthly payments. Free estimates—no job too small or too large: Marion Pugh Lumber Co. Old Wellborn Road VI 6-5711 THE SUGARLAND FLASH IS BACK IN FORM—Ken Hall (right) goes for 26 yards to the Texas Tech 14 midway in the first quarter to set up A&M’s second touchdown as the Aggies murdered the Raiders, 40-7, in the Cotton Bowl Saturday night. Blocking for Hall (left) is Richard Gay, playing his first ball game for A&M. —Photo by Noble Eden WATCH THAT BALL , OR I'LL TAKE YOU, PAL! / J ITS WORTH THE LOSS IF I WIN THAT GAL! YOU RE A PIPE SMOKING MAN ? THEN YOU'RE FOR AAE ! SIP WALTER RALEIGH’S SLEKID OF CHOICE KENTUCKY BURLEYS IS EXTRA-AGED TO GUARD AGAINST TONGUE BITE. 24-PA6E BOOKLET ON PIPE CARE . JUST WRITE TO : SIR WALTER RALEIGH DEPT. 785-J LOUISVILLE, KY. By BARRY HART Battalion Sports Editor Not unlike a hurricane smashing against the coast with all the fury of the sea itself, A&M swept through the Cotton Bowl Satur day night blowing the unprotect ed Red Raiders back into West Texas. The score was 40-7 and it could have been worse. The awe-inspiring Aggies struck before the crowd of 26,000 got settled in their seats, capitalizing on Tech’s first mis take with only 5:45 gone in the first period and the slaughter was on. Ironically, Tech’s Ronnie Herr turned in the longest run of the evening on the opening kickoff, returning Bobby Conrad’s boot 45 yards to the A&M 46, one of the four times the Lubbock bunch managed to punch into Cadet territory. As powerful; as the A^gie scor ing machine was Saturday, the adjectives must go to A&M’s un penetrable defense—with “superb” coming the closest. With guards Jim Langston and Jim Stanley making the middle next to im possible to navigate through, and Bobby Keith, John Tracey, Bebes Stallings and Bobby Marks turn ing down everything that came their way at end, the Aggies held Tech to but four first downs, only one of which came in the first 30 minutes. The Red Raiders could find only 62 yards on the ground, with another 89 coming via the air ways. Jack Pardee led the Aggie rushers with 90 yards in 14 tries to push into the number three spot in SWC ground gainers. Pardee has moved for 198 yards in 37 carries for a 5.4 average. For the night A&M rushed 354 yards and gained 55 more through the air. Roddy Osborne sliced for 52 yards and Ken Hall, looking more like the runner he’s supposed to be, pick ed up 50 more. TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY “ON THE THREHOLD OF SPACE” with GUY MADISON —PIust— “HOW TO MARRY A MILLIONAIRE” with MARILYN MONROE Thru WEDNESDAY “MAVERICK QUEEN” BARBARA STANWYCK For A Complete Line Of . BUSINESS MACHINES Free Demonstration of Any Machine In Your Office! • Printing Calculators • Adding Machines ® Posting Machines ® Dictaphones ® Typewriters DAVIS OFFICE EQUIPMENT -SALES— See ROBERT L. DAVIS —SERVICE- N. Gate VI 6-5026 LI’L -ABNER By A1 Capp (Pol. Adv. Paid for by W. Lee O’Daniel) Remember Power-X Gasoline Is AAA Endorsed Texas at North Ave. Between Miller’s and Orr’s After an exchange of punts gave the Red Raiders the ball on their own 26, Herr fumbled on the first play and Stallings recovered for A&M on Tech’s 13. Pardee plunged for one and Jimmy Wright’s pass to Don Watson fell incomplete. John Crow burst through the mid dle untouched for 12 yards and the touchdown with 9:15 left in the first quarter. Loyd Taylor, out with a shoulder injury, came in to con vert and made it 7-0. Quarterback Don Williams re turned Conrad’s kick to the 29 and, after three plays had gained seven yards, punted 14 yards out of bounds at the midfield stripe. Con rad, running at quarterback, kept for three and Hall got seven and a first down. Hall broke past the startled Tech linebackers for 26 yards on first and 10 to the 14, where Conrad kept again to the four. Conrad made the Raiders look bad with a good fake and a bootleg into the end zone on first down with not a Tech man within 10 yards for the second score. The clock read 4:27 remaining. Ed Dudley made it 14-0 and Aggie fans were going wild. The Red Raiders couldn’t move after the kickoff and A&M had picked up two firsts to the Tech 43 when Jimmie Knox swiped Wright’s pass. The break was short-lived, however, as Williams dropped the snap from center on a punt attempt and the Aggies took over on the 10. One play did it with Watson making an almost impossible catch of Wright’s pass for the six-pointer. Taylor kicked good and the scoi’e read 21-0. 12:42 remained in the half, but that was all for a while. The Red Raiders kicked off to open the second half. 11 plays later, the Aggies had scored again, mov ing 84 yards in 5:14. Pardee got 32 of those yards as did Crow with (See AGGIES, Page 4) EYES EXAMINED GLASSES PRESCRIBED DR. E. DUDEMANN DR. G. A. SMITH OPTOMETRISTS • BRYAN OPTICAL CLINIC mmm DD Dial TA 2-3557 A&M MENS SHOP 103 MAIN NORTH GATE AGGIE OWNED CIRCLE LAST DAY “The Searchers” John Wayne — A L S O — “Bobby Ware Is Missing” TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY OF! GnemaScoPE COLOR by DELUXE • Stereophonic Sound (Next to Lewis Shoe Store) 105 N. Main Bryan, Texas LIFE INSURANCE FOR PILOTS And All Other Flying Personnel Under a new Federal law, there is no more Government life insurance for persons entering the Armed Forces after January 1, 1957. Neither on a free nor a pay-for basis. . . . Many insurance companies will insure military GROUND forces at stan dard rates—so will we. There has been a rather universal rule, though, that fliers have to pay considerably more for their life insurance than do the strictly mundane creatures who keep their feet on terra firma. One of the reliable life insurance compan ies which I represent has found, based on several years of ex perience with all types of military personnel, however, that it can insure pilots and student pilots AT STANDARD RATES and still make a profit for its stockholders. The company does make this reservation—since military flying is recognized in insurance circles as being an extra hazard, and particularly so during the training period: If the insured pilot is killed in an aircraft accident before his age 26, then the amount payable to his bene ficiary is only one-half the face amount of the policy. If killed after age 26, the policy pays off in full. . . . All flying personnel, other than pilots, are insured at standard premium rates, with full payment in event of death at any age, any cause (excepting suicide in the first two years). . . . With flight training now for ROTC students at A&M, we know that many of them will want life insurance that will cover them throughout their flying career. They can buy the very low premium Ordinary Life, or 20 Pay Life, or other plans through my office at standard pre mium rates, AND MAKE THEIR PREMIUM PAYMENTS OUT OF THEIR ROTC CONTRACT CHECKS EVERY THREE MONTHS. Premiums run as low as $3.00 per month, depending on how much insurance the student wishes to have—and can af ford. . . . Call EUGENE RUSH at VI 6-6006 or VI 6-5656 for an appointment to talk the matter over, or come by his office above A&M Photo Shop at the North Gate, College. No obligation to buy. Statement of Condition of College Station State Bank College Station, Texas at close of business, September 26, 1956 RESOURCES: Cash $ 841,427.60 U. S. Government bonds 757,872.70 Municipal bonds 64,823.40 Stock Federal Reserve Bank 4,800.00 Loans 1,270,272.66 Bank Building 30,796.65 Furniture & Fixtures 16,703.65 Prepaid Insurance 1,500.00 Other Real Estate Owned 1-00 TOTAL RESOURCES $2,988,197.66 LIABILITIES: Capital $ 100,000.00 Surplus 60,000.00 Undivided Profits - 53,639.23 Deposits 2,773,508.43 Reserves 1,050.00 TOTAL LIABILITIES $2,988,197.66