i^n routine of short lat I think is in /orth this week- l to be mad yet students acted -eeted by a mob ;ing their child- .ide to stand by i and ignore it 3 only after the encouragement ! rallied to the r and asked me ing your buddy g-etting mauled y acting like a many problems else fails, kend and every vn from years rowdies. This ' trouble. Only positive action. T. and TCU— i best interest, tn light of the tart anything. Slated ;udents ft’oing’ un- ict at the begin- ng semester will at 4 p.m. in the sa Hall. ;nt type exam, is given by the line general in- A score of 115 f students desir- s for a contract. fON ZEPHYR 10:08 a.m. 12:47 p.m. . 7:28 p.m. . 9:15 p.m. WORTH and iR railway CRYAR, Agent 15 • NORTH ZULCH TERS LJTl tion Schulz Capp I he battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas Tuesday, October 22, 1957 PAGE 3 By JIM CARRELL Finding cohabitation with Rev eille on Kyle Field not to un pleasant, the Aggies .turned to other animal friends for shelter by staging Monday’s drills indoors on the turf of the Animal Husbandry Pavillion arena, after rain halted outdoor work. The workout was a light one with the varsity in sweatsuits and a review of the TCU game movies found Ken Beck, Richard Gay, John Crow, Roddy Osborne, John Gilbert and Charles Krueger making the big plays. Gay and Krueger were respon sible for Lasater’s fumble that Ken Beck recovered on the 10 to set up A&M’s touchdown. Gay made “a jillion” tackles and was perhaps the outstanding defensive player for the day. Crow with 40 yards gained half of the Aggie rushing total, recover ed two fumbles, and made a timely pass interception at the A&M 8 to stop a serious Froggie threat. 1 Osborne threw the TD pass and Gilbert and Beck played, fine, con sistent football throughout. A scouting report on the Baylor Bears by Coach Pat James served notice to A&M players that again they will be in for the fight of their lives and from a far more experienced ball club this time. “For Baylor this will be their do-or-die effort,” said James. “Tex as, victory over Arkansas put them back in the running for the SWC crown. It was a great morale booster for the Bears. “In the Miami game the whole Baylor squad suffered from the flu and nine of their ball players didn't make the trip to Lubbock to play Texas Tech,” James continued. Baylor defeated Villanova, 7-0, in their first game' of the season; downed Houston with ease, 14-6; lost to Miami, 13-7; allowed the de feat to get the best of them and lost to Arkansas, 20-17 and then bounced back to whip upset-minded Texas Tech, 15-12. San Angelo Forfeits, “Conduct Improper TRINIDAD, Colo., Oct, 21 (2-2) 53 Navy (1-1) 53 18. Oregon (4-1) 35 19. Texas (3-2) 34 20. Michigan (3-1) 33 Sport slantS By GARY ROLLINS Batt Sports Editor Time after time, Texas Christian University heard opportunity knock in the contest last Saturday after noon in Fort Worth, but they never had the power necessary to open the Aggie portals. The Froggie offense was as frustrated as an Aggie senior with out a date as they assaulted the Cadet double stripe on three oc casions and received nothing more than did Texas Tech and Missouri. GAME AT A GLANCE First Downs 7 Rushing Yardage 80 Passing Yardage 42 Passes 4-5 Passes Intercepted by 1 Punts 8-37.8 Fumbles Lost 2 Yards Penalized 10 Statistically, the Horded Frogs ra nthe mighty Aggie team out of Amon Carter Stadium, but the all- deciding factor, (and rightfully so) the score, spelled another victory for Coach Paul Bryant’s Farmers and left Abe Martin and Frogs once again looking forward to next year —for the third year in a row. CHS Wins 33-6 By JOHNNY BARGER CHS Sports Correspondent CHS ran its win streak to two Friday night as they socked the Navasota Rattlers, 33-6. Although the Rattlers seriously threatened to give the Bengals a real battle in the first half, the Tigers came back strong and coasted to a well-earned victory in their first district out ing. Bright spot for the Tigers was the fine running of halfback Alton Arnold, who picked up 142 yards during the night, and the excellent passing of quarterback Edgar Feld man. Arnold had himself a field day as he scored three times on runs of 12 and 86 yards and on a three- yard pass from Feldman. Feldman was instrumental in two other Bengal scores as well. He ran 42 yards on the second play from scrimmage for the first Tiger score and during the latter stages of the game, passed 23 yards to Dee Smith for a TD. Coach Dick Gardemal praised Arnold and Feldman as well as center David McNeely, and full back Steadman Davis. The Tiger mentor felt that “the offense, as a whole, showed great improvement over earlier demonstrations.” He was well pleased with the Tiger pass defense. The Bengals relaxed at home Monday as they enjoyed their first day off from practice. The reason: the Tigers have an open date this weekend. Merle Matthews, Bobbie Shaler, Gwen Hyduke, Dottie Crouch, Bet ty Phillips and Chiyo Tashima com prised the only women’s team in the Inglewood Majors bowling but they won the Los Angeles Tourn ament by two games. — Battalion Staff Photo by Francis Niverr Finney’s Pass to Lasater Too Tall TCU’s sophomore back Marvin Lasater (23) reaches high in the air to snare a pass from Frog quarterback Dick Finney but it sails over his head and out of the end zone. Ag gies contesting for the pass are Marks (88), Gay (30), Crow (44) and in the background, Conrad (40). For The Finest In FRESHMAN GREENS SEE LEON B. WEISS (Next To Grannie’s Restaurant) Mums for the Game only $ 1.50 CO ON See Your Dorm Bepresentative—■ Or Come by Floriculture Building Thursday, Friday or Saturday