The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 08, 1957, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    '
■08 County), Texan
-'Jllii
ittalion Staff Photo
borne (12), Jim
s (75) and lien-
•IEl)
er Dance Club
for remainder of
events scheduled,
e. Deadline noon
necks to R. J. Bal-
Wildlifc Manage-
it.
*
* J
NOTICE
>r repair jobs and
become expensive
DOCTOR FlXIT
nail jobs and all
epair, remodeling,
Call DOCTOR
ON PUGH LUM-
Y. Phone VI-
27t4
size job), mimeo-
te office facilities.
RETARIAL AN-
/ICE, 3408A Tex-
/I 6-5786. 15tl8
ie-Land Nursery,
ryan, TA 2-6076.
26tl7
D INSECT CON-
rouble with bugs ?
spray gun ? Now
have your home
, ants, moths and
6-6649, 7 a.m. to
)23 after 6 p.m.
19t30
Ags
By JIM CARRELL
The Aggies began preparing for
Saturday night’s game with the
powerful University of Houston
Cougars by going through an hour
and a half sweat-suit drill stressing
offense sharpening and defense
against Houston plays.
The Cougars, the only team to
blemish last year’s record with
that 14-14 tie in Houston, appear
to be as good as last year and may
very well be the best team the
Aggies face this season.
“Houston is proving that they
have two fine teams and their
strength, depth and speed, is our
weakness,” said Coach Paul Bryant
yesterday.
Houston holds wins over power
ful Miami, which manhandled Bay
lor 13-7 Saturday, and Cincinnati.
The 7-0 victory over Miami gives
a better picture of Houston’s
* ♦ *
Tailor Made
FRESHMAN
GREENS
$23.00 -
ZUBIK’S
North Gate
prowess than does their last week’s
14-6 loss to Baylor when they suf
fered from a siege of flu before
the game that sent half their team
to the hospital. The Cincinnati
score was also by a 7-0 margin.
‘ Again, for the third week in a
row, A&M finds itself hampered in
practice by flu and colds.
John Gilbert, Bill Darwin,
Charlie Miistead and Charles Sand-
ford, all running temperatures,
bring to 28 the number of footbal
lers to report into sick bay in the
past two weeks with either flu
or serious colds.
After reviewing movies of the
Missouri game, which the Aggies
won 28-0, Coach Bryant said, “The
first group played much better
defensively than they have been
playing. However, the offense still
has no explosive speed in the line
or in the backfield.”
“Charlie Krueger played real
well and did everything you could
want him to do,” Bryant remarked.
“Roddy Osborne again played a
fine game, and John Tracey and
Bobby Marks played real well,
particularly in the first half. John
Gilbert played a good game.”
“I was disappointed in most of
the reserves,” he further comment
ed. “They couldn’t move the ball
and Missouri whipped us in the
fourth quarter.”
After a moment’s silence, Bryant
continued, “We still haven’t got
that all-out team effort for 60
minutes.”
“The play of our guards as a
Avhole was disappointing,” he said,
“But Bill Godwin showed us some
improvement.”
Loyd Taylor worked out
day for the first time in over two
weeks, jogging around the practice
field in sweat clothes and getting
in a little light workout. He will
not play against Houston.
A short interview after practice
with Coach O. A. (Bum) Phillips,
who scouted Houston last week,
turned out to be a frightening ex
perience and as far as A&M fol
lowers are concerned Saturday
night could be quite a nightmare.
The Cougars like to thrive on
“Aggie Red” as the Houston papers
put it and Coach Phillips will add
a quick second.
“They have as fast a backfield as
any in the nation,” warned Phillips,
“And Dickie Lewis and Claude
King are as good as any backs we’ll
face this year.”
Further admonitions of Phillips
revealed that “they are a well-
conditioned and well-coached ball
club. They don’t have a lot of
letterman but they are real poised
and play like veterans.”
Missouri was not much of a
test for the Aggies as the game
result indicates but therels not
much doubt about the Cougars pro
viding a very serious threat.
esigss mmm
&&&&•&$ l&vRv&vwS §&&&&)§
parents! Here
your child. Good
5und and reason-
e by and see us.
u did. Weaver’s
"y, 225 Lynn Dr.,
9tfa
ation, hot meals,
!. 25$ an hour.
2600 S. College,
6tfn
! Corn’s Barber
lege, specializing
ew-cuts. 24t4
Practice
makes perfect—
meanwhile, count on EATTON’S
erasable CORRASABLE
Yes—Eaton's Cor-ra-sable Bond—the amazing typewriter paper that
erases without a trace. Just a flick of your pencil eraser and typing errors
vanish. No smudges, no scuffs. Your work has that finished, professional
look; and th*e steps (or missteps) leading up to it are a secret between
you and erasable Corrasable. Knowing this, you approach assignments
more calmly, do a better job, make fewer errors. Remember the name—
Eaton’s Corrasable Bond. Only Eaton makes it;
your stationery store sells it.
Try Eaton's Corrasable Bond in this handy
100-sheet packet. When you're ready for
more, you’ll want to buy the economical
500-sheet ream box. Available in four
weights—from onionskin to 20 lb. bond—
providing a perfect typing paper for every
kind of work.
EATON’S CORRASABLE BOND
A Berkshire Typewriter Paper
EATON PAPER CORPORATION PITTSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS
zmm ssma mmn mmt emssa mum mma mm* ssmm msm msm emm
'bile you shop at—
lOWN’S
RETTE
AOIMTION
STATION
ishing, drying
service!
ND
SUPFRIES
E PRINTS
• PHOTOSTATS
DUSTRIES
Springs Road
TEXAS
i R. Lee
TRIST
t 26th
r Appointment
ourt House)
AGGiES, GET YOUR ....
EATON’S CORRASABLE ROND
AT
THE EXCHANGE STORE
“IN ITS 50TH YEAR OF SERVING TEXAS AGGIES”
The Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas
'Fo v.hy. Ccl.oher 8, 1957 PAGE 5
CM8 'lEgera
A&M Consolidated tush d defeat
for the third time this s, n, as
they bowed to the Gioklings Buffa
loes in a road game F i ay night.
A smooth runnng G ■usings offen
sive machine scored two 1 ueh-
downs early in the fracas and then
leaned back and coasted to a 19-0
victory.
Giddings led in first downs as
they racked up 21 as compared to
, ten for the Tigers. Consolidated
was unable to penetrate the Buff-
to Giddings
alo 20 yard line during the night,
while Giddings made 5 penetra
tions.
Billy Kavanaugh, bruising 170-
pound fullback was the shining
! star in the Tiger backfield, as he
racked up ,99 yards in 14 tries, an
[average of 7.07 per carry. Kava
naugh was also outstanding on de
fense as well. Many times he
rushed in from his linebacker post
to spill the ball carrier before he
could get back to the line of scrim
mage.
Off and Running
Bobby Joe Conrad, senior halfback from Clifton, finds
an opening and scampers into the Missouri secondary Sat
urday in' one of the runs which netted him 92 yards in
13 carries.
Aggies Climb Sack to 3rd Place;
Razorbacks, Owls in Second Ten
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Texas A&M surged back into
third place as Oklahoma and Mich
igan State reniained 1-2 in the
weekly Associated Press poll rank
ing college football teams.
At the same time Arkansas,
previously unranked, jumped into
11th place and »Rice gained an
other spot for the Southwest Con
ference with 15th in the standings.
But weekend losses dropped Texas
Christian, Baylor and Texas out
of the top 20 teams.
There also was some other shuff
ling among others in the first 10,
with Army moving in and Navy
bowing out.
The Top Ten teams with points
on 10, 9, 8,-7, C, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 basis,
with first place votes and won lost
1.
Oklahoma (65) (2-0)
1,047
2.
Michigan St. (2.1) (2-0)
906
3.
Texas A&M (3) (3-0)
698
4.
Minnesota (5) (2-0)
557
5.
Duke (5) (3-0)
493
6.
Michigan (2-0)
469
7.
Oregon State (2) (3-0)
423
8.
Iowa (4) (2-0)
385
9.
Auburn (5) (2-0)
351
10.
Army (2-0)
251
Second Ten
11.
Arkansas (4) (3-0)
135
12.
Notre Dame (1) (2-0)
124
13.
N.C. State (3-0)
114
14.
Mississippi (3-0)
79
15.
Rice (2-0)
76
16.
Wisconsin (1) (2-0)
46
17.
Georgia Tech (1-0-1)
35
18.
North Carolina (2-1)
28
19.
Tennessee (1-1)
22
20.
Pittsburg- (2-1)
20
DW.R.5- FUR STORAGE HATTERS
Phone TA 2-1585
Bryan, Texas
LOOKING FOR A GOOD-FITTING JOB?
Ready to debut as a practicing engineer? Then here's a suggestion.
Whatever your engineering specialty, see what Vought offers to men with your
training. See how Vought can help you find the field you're cut out
for. See how your whole career benefits when you start with the right job.
SEE THE VOUGHT REPRESENTATIVE IN YOUR PLACEMENT OFFICE
OCTOBER 21-22
C H A N C
fNCORPORATtO . DALLAS, T f X A O
‘He gets a lot to like-filter, flavor, flip-top box. ” The works.
A filter that means business. An easy draw that’s all
flavor. And the flip-top box that ends crushed cigarettes.
JM.ADEJN RICHMONq, VIRGINIA, FROM .A PRIZED RECIPE)