i ‘Hogs Best Well Play’ Says Bear of Porkers BY BARRY HART Battalion Sports Editor A&M puts their undefeated re cord on the line against the up and coming Arkansas Razorbacks here Saturday night before a regional television audience. “We expect Arkansas to be the best team we’ve played,” commented Coach Paul (Bear) $40.00 CASH PRIZE PLUS ONE CARTON OF LUCKY STRIKE CIGARETTES Just Pick Football Winners of Nov. 3 □ A&M vs. Arkansas □ □ Baylor vs. TCU □ □ Rice vs. Utah □ □ SMU vs. Texas □ □ Texas Tech vs. Ok. A&M □ □ Alabama vs. Georgia □ □ Ohio St. vs. No’western □ □ Yale vs. Dartmouth □ □ Georgia Tech vs. Duke □ □ Kentucky vs. Maryland □ PROBABLE SCORES (These scores to be used by judges only if two or more persons tie on the above. If no winners, $10.00 will be added to next week’s prize.) Tennessee N. Carol!. Oklahoma Colorado Deadline for This Week’s Entries Is 5 P.M. Friday, Nov. 2 Bring Your Contest Slip to The Student Co-op Store Name Box Number Address City State.. NO WINNER LAST WEEK Bryant. “Anybody that can beat Mississippi must have a terrific ball club.” The Razorbacks are the only Southwest Conference club besides Texas to hold a series edge' on the Aggies, with a 14-12-3 lead. A&M hasn’t beaten Arkansas since 1952, when they scored a 31-12 victory on Kyle Field. Led by Lamar McHan, the Hogs slaughtered the ’53 Cadets, 41-14, edged Bryant’s first A&M team, 14-7, on their, way to the league title, and played to a 7-7 tie last year that knocked the Aggies out of a championship share. Assistant Coach Elmer Smith, who scouted Arkansas against Mississippi, reports the Razorbacks to be “. . . a team with muscles.” Coach “General Jack” Mitchell, in his second year as Hog head man, brings a team that is very similar to the Aggies in statistics and style of play. Primarily a rushing team Ark ansas has gained an average 252 yards on the ground through six games while passing for only 44.8. Like the Aggies they pursue the A NEW IDEA! A new idea in men’s fashions has just hit the local market! The new idea is in the form of a sport shirt with adjustable sleeve lengths and is produced by Sea Island. The shirt has adjustable cuffs which are quickly and easily ad justed. It’s a good buy at only $4.95, especially for those of you who have “bull” necks and short arms or thin necks and long arms, since the trouble in getting the proper sleeve length to correspond with the neck size is eliminated. The'A&M MEN’S SHOP, located at North Gate, is currently hand ling these shirts and from all re ports, they’re selling like “hot cakes”. Incidentally the A&M Men’s Shop is run by an Aggie, Dick Rubin, ’59, from Tyler, Texas. Drop on by the first chance you get and ask him to show you some of these shirts. (Adv.) THERE’S A CHANCE TO GROW WITH B&W imp SEE YOUR PLACEMENT OFFICER FOR THE INTERVIEW THAT OPENS YOUR WAY TO A BRIGHT CAREER WITH BABCOCK & WILCOX ON NOV. 1 & 2, 1956 DIGRIIS Mechanical Engineering Ceramics Engineering Chemical Engineering Civil Engineering Electrical Engineering Engineering Physicists Physicists Fuel Technologists Industrial Engineering Metallurgical Engineering Metallurgists Business Administration and Engineering Chemists Nuclear Engineering Mathematics BOILER DIVISION TUBULAR PRODUCTS DIVISION REFRACTORIES DIVISION ATOMIC ENERGY DIVISION RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT Background in any of the fields listed in the left-hand column is all you need to begin your career with B&W. Check the activities you want to talk about with the B&W representative when he’s on your campus. He’ll be glad to see you... and you’ll be glad you talked to him. "VICOJC • . ,!*! JM'42*4 St., New York IK H. Y» •.;4. . . . i ball and are very quick on defense. Fullback Gerald Nesbitt, 200- pounder from Big Sandy, Texas, paces the SWC rushers with 437 yards on 75 carries for a fine 5.8 average. A&M counters with All- American candidate Jack .Pardee, whose 331 yards place him fourth in the league with a 5 - yard average. Quarterback Don Chiistian, who took over for two-year regular George Walker before the season started, has come strong and now stands seventh in the conference in total offense on the strength of 267 yards rushing and 147 through the air. Christian picked up 122 rushing yards in Arkansas’ 14-0 win over previously lOth-ranked Mississippi last Saturday. “I’m very much concerned with stopping Nesbitt and slowing down Christian,” said Bryant after Tues day’s long workout. The Aggies are at full strength for the first time this year, come- ing out of the Baylor game with only minor injuries. “We’re in better shape now than a week ago,” commented Bryant. SWC STANDINGS I The Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas Wednesday, October 31, 1956 PAGE 3 As SWC’s Finest Tackle Charlie Krueger Coming Into Own A&M’s CHARLIE KRUEGER—who turned in another out standing game last Saturday night against Baylor after being chosen Lineman of the Week by the Dallas Morning News the week before. School Won Dost Tied Vet. Pts Op. A&M .... . . 2 0 0 1.000 26 19 SMU .... . . 1 0 0 1.000 14 13 Baylor . . 1 1 0 .500 27 26 Rice . . 1 1 0 .500 41 21 TCU .... . . 1 1 0 .500 47 13 Arkansas . . 3 2 0 .333 45 69 Texas . . . . . 0 2 0 SEASON .000 21 60 School Won Dost Tied Pet. Pts. Oi». A&M .... . . 5 0 1 .917 108 46 Baylor . . 4 1 0 .800 75 31 Arkansas . . 4 2 0 .667 99 96 TCU .... . . . 3 2 0 .600 102 33 Rice .... . . . 3 2 0 .600 84 55 SMU .... . . . 3 2 0 .600 79 76 Texas . . . 1 5 0 .167 54 162 College View Slaughters Leggett, 33-11, in ’Murals UT’s Ed Price Sets Up Defense With 3rd Effigy AUSTIN—(/P)—Texas foot ball coach Ed Price pointed Tuesday to a near annihilation of his 1953 freshman team as the major factor in the Long horns dismal season. Texas - once the bully boy of the Southwest - now finds itself rolling straight toward its worst season since 1938 when the Steers lost eight of nine games. And for the third time in little over a week, Price was hanged in effigy from a tall light standard on a practice field less than two blocks from his office. A card board sign on the dummy said: “Take a hint Ed. Go.” Admitting “we’re pretty thin in depth,” Price said his boys “have not or never will turn loose. We are trying our very best day by day and game by game.” Dink Carson and Joe McCarter led College View to a 33-11 romp over Leggett Hall in Tuesday’s Intramural Class A basketball action. Carson took high point honors with nine followed by McCarter with eight. Leggett’s Villarreal had six. Bob Bostic, with 10 points, led his team to a 16-8 victory over Sqd. 20. The A armor star was helped by teammates John Smith and James Stephens to the win. Paul Carroll paced Sqd. 21 to a 33-15 win over B Armor with 14 points to take honors. Dicky Cow ley with scored seven and Tommy Keith meshed five for the winners, while A. M. Lowden got six for the tankers. Sqd. 24 boasted two big guns in its attack against A Ordnance as 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 Tommy Neuman scored 15 and Harry Stiteler dropped in 14 as the air force outfit took a 36-27 victory. P. Biune, with eight, and D. Woodard, who scored nine, were high for.the losers. “Sixty minutes of top - notch football is the only way to beat a top-notch team,” asserts alert Ag gie tackle Charles Krueger chew ing over last week’s 19-13 Baylor game. Krueger, la^t week selected by the Dallas Morning News as Line man of the Week, is the type of gridder who speaks from ex perience. The 218-pound, 6-4 “Gib- ralter” was a constant threat in the Aggie wall against Baylor, opening holes on the left side all night for Crow and Hall. In Baylor’s final series of downs, the Bears moved from their 13 to the 22 before abandoning the aerial routine when Del Shofner’s fumble was seized by the alert Krueger, enabling the Aggies to retain possession for the remainder of the game. “We knew the Bears were going to be a rough and-ready-type ball club,” drawled the easy going Cald well Junior, “They always are. But we tried to meet them on even A terms. Sometimes their desire to win the game seemed to over shadow good judgement,” added Krueger. The nineteen-year-old pile-driver had high praise for the “good old Baylor line”, but relegated it far below the faster, harder - hitting TCU aggregation which succumbed to A&M a week before. “Shofner was probably their most potent runner,” declared the 6-4, 218-pound stalwart, “But everyone had his moments I guess. We had a lot of bad luck on the offensive side early in that game several times when we got within scoring distance.” “Houston is the toughest team we’ve met all year”, mused Krueger, “But I don’t think we were ever worried over one game any more than the next. It pays to be worried about them all, soi’ta’ keeps you keyed up.” “Arkansas is a soundly-coached team,” said Krueger with reference to Aggie scouting reports. “We’ll have to watch that quick line of theirs. It’s hard to pick any turn ing point in the season’s play, but I don’t think anyone else will give us the fight we’re expecting from those Razorbacks.” Soccer Team Beaten by AF A&M’s Soccer Team lost a close 2-1 game to Lackland Air Force Base last Sunday in San Antonio. Jaime Quesada scored the Aggies single point. The Lackland team, made up of exchange pilots from Germany and Colombia, has won its four pre vious games in the newly formed San Antonio Soccer League by large margins. 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