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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 26, 1956)
League Lead at Stake As Aggies Battle Bears WHO WILL REPLACE PARDEE? — (top to bot tom) Richard Gay, Kenneth Hall or George Gillar. One of the three will be at the fullback post for A&M to morrow if Jack Pardee is unable to play. By BARKY HART Battalion Sports Editor A&M goes against the talented Baylor Bears in Waco tomorrow night in the battle for the South west Conference lead before the largest crowd ever to witness a Bear game in their home town. Upwards of 45,000 fans will be on hand for the unbeaten Bap tists’ Homecoming and the 53rd meeting between the two arch ri vals. It’s a game that will have a tremendous bearing on the na tional standings with the Aggies seventh and the Bears eighth in the country’s football elite. Coach Sam Boyd’s powerful ani mal aggregation were screaming the blues Wednesday with an epi demic of food poisoning in which 40 Bruin footballers were strick en. Word from Waco, however, shows no ill effects of the panic and Baylor will field a team that outweighs the title-hungry Ag gies by 10 pounds per man in the line. Jack Pardee, A&M’s potential all-American linebacker and full back, will see limited action, if any, in Waco. “The trainer tells us Pax-dee will be able to play some,” said Coach Paul Bryant, “But that we’d better not count on him. We hope and pray he’ll be ready, but I just don’t know.” As to the starting fullback in Pardee’s absence, it’s too eaidy to know for sure. Second-stringer Richard Gay was injux-ed in the TCU game and hasn’t been at full speed this week. With both Pardee and Gay unable to start, it’ll prob ably be either George Gillar or Ken Hall. STARTING LINEUPS A&M Baylor Bobby Marks Tony DeGrazier Left End Charlie Krueger Bobby Jack Oliver Left Tackle M. Trimble or D. Powell Bill Glass Left Guard Lloyd Hale Larry Cowart Center Dennis Goehring Dugan Pearce Right Guard Bobby Lockett Bill Parsley Right Tackle John Tracey Jerry Marcontell Right End R. Osborne or J. Wright Bobby Jones Quarterback John Crow .. Del Shofner Left Halfback Loyd Taylor Farrell Fisher Right Halfback 1 Charley Dupre Fullback FRIDAY THEY KILLED MORE WHITE MEN THAN ANY OTHER TRIBE IN HISTORY wmmn st GnemaScqPE: color , deluxe Co-starring KENT p Starring DANA G ANDREWS'Smith iIndaCRISTAL * si v A ' Release!! lh|U UNITED tallSTS Also AQUALUNG DIVERS IN DEATH^ STRUGGLE! ~ SAT. PREVUE—10:30 P.M. Also Sunday & Monday WARNER BROS. "^1 ..-f i4*r present Helen I ofTrjjKT r Cinemascope andWarnerColor starrinf .ROSSANA P00ESTA- JACK SERNAS *lw starring SIR CEDRIC HARDWICKE- STANIEY BAXES » NiALl MaeGINMS ROBERT DOUGLAS ■ TORIN THATCHER Price Still Coach After TlJ Hanging AUSTIN, UP) — University of Texas sources said Thursday no one in a, responsible position had considered the replacing of head football Coach Ed Price. Earlier today, the univex-sity’s poor football record this season apparently caused the hanging in NOTICE! Closed Saturday to See A&M BEAT BAYLOK AeM MENS SHOP 103 MAIN NORTH GATE AGGIE OWNED CATERING FOR SPECIAL OCCASIONS Leave the Details to me. LUNCHEONS BANQUETS WEDDING PARTIES Let Us Do the Work—You Be A Guest At Your Own Party Maggie Parker Dining Hall W. 26th & Bryan TA 2-5069 LISTEN DAILY (Except Sunday) to KORA at 11:55 A.M. THE WRITE-IN CANDIDATE W. LEE (Pol A<H. Paid for by W le* OTJonieh CIRCLE FRIDAY “Top Gun’ Sterling Hayden —ALSO— “World Without End” Hugh Marlowe SATURDAY ONLY “Track of The Cat” Robert Mitchum — A L S O — “Storm Fear* Cornell Wilde effigy of Price on a business build ing across from the campus. A sign attached to the dummy, made of discarded clothing, said: “So long Ed. Thumbs down.” The effigy drew a small crowd in which some turned their thumbs down and a few held them up for the coach. One col lege source who asked not to be named said he understood it was “just a college pi’ank.” “There is absolutely nothing of ficial to all this,” said Claude W. Voyles, Austin member of the board of regents. “Price has not tendered his assignation and we have not been asked to act upon it.” Herman Jones, president of the Texas Ex-Students Assn., said, “I have not heard of any one in a responsible position that has made a move toward getting a new coach. His present contract has another year to ran,.” Pi-ice has a three-year contract at $12,500 a year 1 . Slight Mishap BECKLEY, W. Va. LP)—When Bill Robinson’s ear collided with a passenger tiain at nearby Mont calm, he was hurled thi’ough his windshield, into a narrow opening between two bridges and down a 15-foot embankment into Crane Creek. He waded out with only a scratched finger. COL. JOHN F. GUILLETT Field Representative United Services Life Insurance Co. 1625 Eye Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 2518 Great Oaks Parkway Austin 5, Texas — Phone: GL. 3-6420 thru SATURDAY “The Killing” Burt Lancaster — A L S O — “Sleeping City” Richard Cunte — FRIDAY — ‘THE CREATURE WALKS AMONG US” with JEFF MORROW — Plus — “THE COMMAND” with GUY MADISON — SATURDAY- OAKY COOPER NIGHT — 3 HITS — “Return to Paradise” “Blowing Wild” “Springfield Rifle” Ronnie Rea Leads Kittens Past Navasota Fangs, 21-13 The IhttinUnn CntfegG Station (Bfusos County), T<$xa$ Friday, October 26, 1956 PAGE 3 Ronnie Rea was the power be hind the Kitten’s 21-13 triumph over Navasota’s potent Fangs last night. Rea scored first, late in the initial quarter and intercepted a Navasota aerial before scamper ing 45 yards and the game’s third TD just before halftime. Condy Pugh accounted for two extra points and Joe Olian capped the third one on an end sweep. Russell Welch .capped a 78 yard drive with a 16-yard pass play to Condy Pugh, for the Kitten’s other TD. CHS dominated the first half of play with a 21-0 lead and 146 yards with seven first downs. But the Fangs stole the show in the last half as Frank Falco and Joe Fultz scored for the Navasota team and boosted their total yard age to 158 and 10 first downs. TUNING & REPAIR GRAY PIANO CO. 314 N. Main — Bryan TA 2-1451 — TA 2-4148 GOOD SCHOOLS jfhcfoicte m g * wot® NOVEMBER GOOD TEACHERS 6 TEACHER RETIREMENT AMENDMENT (Paid Political Adv.) 1 in Engineering,.. Physics... Mathematics i A ircraft Corporation California Division * Georgia Division Lockheed Representatives of the California || Division and the Georgia Division 11 will be on campus Mon. & Tues,, October 29 & 30 pi You are invited to consult your placement officer for an appointment Separate interviews will be given for each division. Both divisions of Lockheed are engaged in a long-range expansion program in their fields of endeavor* ■ California Division activities in Burbank cover virtually every phase of commercial and military aircraft. Seventeen different models of planes are in production, including cargo and passenger transports, high Mach performance fighters, jet trainers, radar search planes, patrol bombers. B. S. graduates who wish to attain a Master’* Degree will be interested in the California Division’s Masters-Degree Work-Study Program. In the program, participants achieve their M.S. while working concurrently on Lockheed’s engineering staff. ■mmsm At Lockheed in Marietta, Georgia, new C-130A turbo-prop transports and B-47 jet bombers are being manufactured in the country's largest aircraft plant under one roof. The division is ailready one of the South's largest industries. Moreover, * new engineering center is now in development as part of the division’s expansion program.. In addition, advanced research and develop* ment are underway on nuclear energy and its relationship to aircraft. A number of other highly significant classified projects augment the extensive production program* This broad expansion program is Creating new positions in each division* Graduates in fields of: Aeronautical Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Mathematics and Physics cu e invited to investigate their role in Lockheed's expansion. . Aircraft Corporation / California Division, Burbank, California • Georgia Division, Mariettas Georgia y