The Texas Aggie. (College Station, Tex.) 1921-current, December 01, 1943, Image 1

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CAMPUS
FROM THE
———
REVIEWING STAND
A. & M. In The Library of Congress
The opening at the Library of
Congress, Washington, of an ex-
hibit, “Military Colleges”, has been
announced by Archibald MacLeish,
the Librarian of Congress. The
display is located in the main ex-
hibition halls of the Library, and
may be seen from 9 a.m. to
p.m. weekdays and from 2 to 10
p.m. Sundays. ‘ :
“Military Colleges” is an exhi-
bition composed of eight separate
parts, each devoted to a different
school and showing its early his-
6 | Virginia
tory, outstanding graduates, and
current activities in connection with
the war. The colleges represented
in the exhibition are: The U. :
Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md.;
the U. S. Military Academy, West
Point; Texas Agricultural and Me-
chanical College, College Station;
Polytechnic Institute,
Blacksburg, Va.; Virginia Military
Institute, Lexington, Va.; Clemson
Agricultural College, Clemson, S.
C.; The Citadel, Charleston, S.C;
and Norwich University, North-
field, Vt.
Thanks To The Humble
The Texas Aggie shies from
commercials but can’t resist ex-
pressing appreciation to the Hum-
ble Oil and Refining Co. for its
magnaniinous action in making
possible the broadcasting of the
Thanksgiving game both nationally
and by short-wave to the fighting
forces overseas. The Company an-
nually buys the rights to broad-
cast conference games, paying
each conference team a substantial
sum for that privilege. The com-
pany finds it good business.
This year the company further
offered to pay all costs incident to
making the game available to the
men and women overseas. For this
to be done all commercials had to
be deleted, wires bought for trans-
mission to east and west coasts for
the short-wave, and numerous
other incidentals. The Company
gave up its commercials and paid
all the bills. A. & M. and Texas
men overseas helped make it pos-
sible by making request that the
game be sent them. Paul Franke,
22. and E. M. “Buck” Schiwetz,
'21, of the advertising company
handling the Humble Radio pro-
gram, played a part:
To them all, and particularly to
Humble, The Aggie expresses the
thanks and appreciation of the
thousands of Texans who were
thus able to enjoy the big game
wherever they were Thanksgiving
afternoon.
What a Story He Didn’t Tell
Box 113
Gainesville, Texas
Nov. 15, 1943
The Texas Aggie
Howdy, Folk:
Just thought I better drop you
a line to let you know I am no
longer among the missing. My
wife tells me that the last she saw
in THE AGGIE concerning my
whereabouts was that I was
“missing in action.”
I was missing from July 14 to
Sept. 16. The plane I was flying
was shot down over enemy terri-
tory on the above date. My crew
and I were forced to hit the silk
when the Jerries made our plane
“too hot to handle.”
Since I am not sure yet where
I will be stationed, you can keep
sending my AGGIE to Box 113,
Gainesville, Texas.
Before closing, I want to send
my hearty congratulations to the
Aggie football team. From all the
information I could gather about
them in the U. K., I expected to
find a very uninteresting confer-
ence set-up when I returned to
the States. Aggies all over the
world are proud of the great rec-
ord those kids have made this fall.
Good luck to all.
Floyd B. “Doc” Watts, '39
Capt. USAAF
Up and Down the Military Walk
Where they got it no one knows,
but the Cadets piled the largest
and heaviest bon-fire on the old
drill field in the long history of
that custom; and a thousand
freshmen guarded it with high en-
thusiasm and danger to any casual
passers-by who looked suspicious.
One passing chuckle; Those thous-
and Fish functioned at night. In
the cold light of early morn their
chore was taken over by campus
guardians Walter “Sarge” Holden
and “Mr. Mec,” McDonald, long-
time members of the Commandant’s
staff. . . . Most common sight on
the campus these days is marching
"men. All service men march to
classes and from classes, with only
the 2500 Cadets going their indiv-
idual ways. . . . Classification of
the marchers, First, the Aviation
Student Detachment who put on
the best close order performance
ever seen on the campus. Second,
the Aggie Cadet Corps. Third and
fourth without preference the Navy
and the ASTP. At times there's a
marching column headed in any
direction you look. . . . They all
add up to a total of more men
than have ever before been quar-
tered, fed and taught on the A. &
M. Campus.
Signs of Progress: The new Cot-
ton Oil Research Lab going up,
the new two-lane parkway high-
way to Bryan, the added paving at
Easterwood Field, and the remodel-
ing of Goodwin Hall into a class-
room building.
Richard Jenkins, Leader of the
Singing Cadets, has resigned to be-
come head of the Music Dept.,, at
NTAC. ... D. W. Williams, A. H.
Dept. Head, sworn into the army
as a Major but not yet called. . .
. The campus gets its first Wim-
min soldiers in a pair of WAVES
attached to the Navy Detachment.
AMONG
A. and M.
OE
PIONEERS
0
D. R. PEARESON, 89, is still at Rich-
mond, Texas. 1900
C..E. TOBERMAN sends his gift to the
Development Fund from 6763 Hollywood
Blvd., Hollywood 28, Calif. He is an old-
timer in southern California.
1902
SILVER TAPS:—Thomas R. Batte.
Addresses of ’02 Aggies taken from
recent correspondence: EMIL L. KLOSS,
811 Fulton Ave., San Antonio; J.
LEWIS, 2025 Ethel Ave., Waco.: C. A.
“BO” STRIEBER is a member of The
Ration Board of Dewitt Coutny, York-
Ag 1904
T. D. COBBS is City Attorney of San
Antonio and is also President of the
Texas City Attorney’s Association. He is
located in 716 Brady Bldg . . . . BERT
E. HULL, of Houston and “Big Inch
Pipeline” fame, moved into the “Grand-
pappy’’ class with the arrival of a grand-
daughter recently, born to CAPT. AND
MRS. BERT E. HULLL, ’37, at Bryan,
Texas. Capt. Hull is stationed at the Bryan
Army Airfield . . . . GUSTAV H. PAPE
is head of Pape, Williams & Co., P..O.
Box 828, Waco . . . ALEXIS MCCOR-
MICK lives at 921 Ocean Drive, and has
offices in the City Hall, Corpus Christi.
R. W. MEEK has offices in the S. P.
Houston . . . . H. RUBEN-
1120 Northwestern Ave., W.
Building,
KOENIG,
Lafayette, Ind., will complete 30 years
at Purdue next summer. He is Prof. of
Ry. Mech. Eng. there, and was senior
member present at the San Jacinto Day
Rally in Indinanpolis this year.
1905
W. H. MUNRO is President of the
Munro Dry Cleaning Company, Beaumont.
A son, PVT. R. E. MUNRO, ’46, is in the
ASTU at Stanford Univ. . . . A.M.
BAILEY lives in Karnes City . . . .
The address of T. W. BLOUNT is Box
63, San Augustine, Texas.
1908
/ Announcement has been made of the
appointment of OSCAR C. BRUCE, vice-
president of the Republic National Bank
of Dallas, as a member of the national
committee on investments of the Ameri-
can Bankers Association. Serving as an
official of a Willis Point bank before going
to Dallas in 1920, Mr. Bruce is widely
known in banking circles . . . . C.:M.
«g7’ EVANS has gone back to the Texas
and Pacific Ry. as Gen. Agric. Agt., head-
quarters in Dallas. He left the T & P on
leave of absence nine years ago to develop
the U. S. Farm Security Adm. program in
the Southwest. When he assumed his old-
MEN
new job, he was asst. to the national
administrator in chargt of food for free-
dom in 16 southern states. In his present
capacity, he will be working with Aggies
boosting food production and doing post-
war planning.
ROYAL PENDLETON is still at Strat-
ford, Texas . . . . A. L. CORNELL, 430
W. Hull St., Denison, has a son in the
Southwest Pacific, flying a fighter plane.
1909
ALBERT C. GIESECKE still lives at 111
Snively Road, Duluth, Minn. . . . W. D.
ROSEBOROUGH, 622 No. Winnetka, Dal-
las, is working in the Engineering Depart-
ment of the City of Dallas. His two sons
are in active service: Wm. D., Jr., being a
Lt. in the Navy and J. C. an instructor in
M. | basic flying. Wm. D., Jr., was cited for
brevery when the Japs sank the U. S. S.
Chicago last January.
1910
H. L. PEARCE is an electrician and
asst. postmaster at Sterling City. His two
sons, LTS. H. L. PEARCE, JR., ’36, and
R. B. PEARCE,
services.
’38, are in the armed
Col.
James L. Mcllhenny
COL. JAMES L. MCILHENNY was
recently promoted to that rank, and is
commanding officer of the Clinton Prisoner
of War Camp, Clinton, Mass. He is an
Army veteran, having served since re-
ceiving his commission at the first Offi-
cers Training Camp at Leon Springs in
1917 in the FA. He saw overseas service
in World War I with the 90 the Division,
and went into Germany with the Army of
occupation. Col. and Mrs. Mcllhenny have
a son in the Army, a daughter with the
Area Engineers at Ft. Sam Houston, and
a daughter-in-law also in war work.
(See A. & M. Men, Page, Col. 4)
If this paper is not called for
return postage is guaranteed
by publisher.
THE TEXAS AGGIE
RETURN
POSTAGE
GUARANTEED
~~
Published Semi-Monthly Except During the Summer Months when issued Monthly by the Association of Former Students of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas
VOLUME XII
COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1943
NUMBER 56
Texas Aggies at Camp Ritchie, Maryland
In the group, left to right, are: CAPT. G. W. DUNN, ’34; LT. COL. C. R. WORNDORF, ’21;
MAJOR T. J. GUERDRUM, ’36; MAJOR FRED GRIMMEL, ’34; CAPT. HENRY “BEARTRACKS”
HAUSER, ‘41; CAPT. JAMES FRANK CREWS, ’37; FIRST LT. JOSEPH C. HICKERSON, ’38.
CAPT. JAMES “JERRY” MANN, ’40, did not attend the group picture as he was on duty.
All of the group are on the Staff and Faculty of the Camp Ritchie, Md., with the exception of
Captain Dunn, who has returnd to his Cavalry Unit at Ft. Clark, Texas, after completing the Camp
Ritchie course. The picture and a report of the dinner were sent by Capt. Henry F. Hauser, ’41, Com-
pany “D”, Camp Ritchie, former Aggie football star. He reports his marriage in July, 42, to Jane
Freeman, daughter of Col. and Mrs. T. W. Freeman of Camp Wolters, Texas. Capt. Hauser has com-
pleted the Command and General Staff School at Ft. Leavenworth. Lt. Col. C. H. Worndorf, an Army
regular, entered the service as an honor graduate in 21. Major Grimmel is a former member of the
Animal Husbandry Department staff of the College.
Geo. Lacy Heads
Houston Aggies
Haile Gets Help
George H. Lacy, ’13
Geo. H. Lacy, ’'13, Chief Engi-
reer, Gulf Oil Corporation, Hous-
ton, has been elected President of
the Houston A. & M. Club. Other
officers of the Club include Char-
lie Blumethal, ’21, Vice-President;
Red Chapman, Secretary; Newt
Settegast, 17, Sergeant-at-Arms;
and perennial Charley Haile, ’12,
as Sergeant-at-Arms and with an
associate like Settegast business is
due to pick up at the Houston
Club’s meetings every Monday
noon, at the Rice Hotel.
Meredith H. James ’13, is the
retiring President and Lacy and
Blumenthal were advanced from
Vice-President and Secretary re-
spectively.
President Geo. Lacy majored in
Civil Engineering at A. & M. and
has been with the Gulf Oil Corpora-
tion for nearly 20 years. He has
been an active member of the club
for many years. He is a red hot
football fan. Through the years he
has quietly helped a number of
boys attend A. & M. College.
Orange Club Enjoys
Ladies Night Party
It was ladies’ night at the quar-
terly meeting of the Orange A.
& M. Club held on the evening of
October 28 at the Holland Hotel.
Twenty members of the club and
their wives attended the dinner.
J. B. BEST, 43, secretary of the
Club, serving as toast master.
Principal speakers were club pres-
ident, H. L. INGRAM, ’10, and
ERNEST L. BRUCE, ’94, Orange
attorney.
Lawson to Braniff
Wm. J. Lawson 24, immediate
past president of the Association of
Former Students and former Texas
Secretary of State has been ap-
pointed special representative for
Braniff Airways. His headquarters
will be at Braniff’s Dallas base. He
will spend the greater part of his
time traveling among those cities
not now being served by Braniff
but located on routes proposed by
that air line. Long interested in the
aviation field, Lawson, is enthus-
iastic over his new work.
Under his leadership last year
the Association of Former Students
launched successfully the Texas A.
& M. Development Fund. Before
serving as Secretary or State he
spent several years in the State
Capitol, at Austin, as Secretary
of the Parks Board and Secretary
to Governor O’Daniel.
TO THE POINT
“Inclosed find check to cover
contributions to the Develop-
ment Fund as follows: CAPT.
W. A. BALL, JR. ’40, Base Hq.,
Signal Section, APO 600, (in-
care) P. M. New York, N. Y.;
JOHN BALL, ’41, (incare)
Blackstone Hotel, Fort Worth,
2, Texas; LT. RULAND A.
BALL, ’43, 231st Armored Fielc
Artillery Bn., Camp Cooke, Cal.;
WALTER E..BALL,. 45, _ Box
2614, College Station, Texas;
W. A, BALL; 212," "Box -226,
Uvalde, Texas.
W.. A. Ball, 12
Uvalde, Texas”
Dean Kyle Recently
Elected as Member
0f Ag Committee
Dean E. J. Kyle of the school
of agriculture is a recent appoint-
ment as a member of the advisory
committee on inter-American co-
operation in agricultural education
to assist the State Department in
its program of cultural relations.
The appointment was signed by
E. R. Stettinius, Jr., Acting Secre-
tary of State.
Several years ago under the aus-
pices of Co-ordinator Nelson Rock-
efeller’s Office of Inter-American
Affairs Dean Kyle made a 25,000
mile tour of Central and South
America and since has advocated
intensive educational cooperation
with Latin America.
Purpose of the agricultural ad-
visory committee is to advise the
State Department concerning agri-
cultural education and to stimulate
interest of American land grant
colleges in inter-American studies
and students.
St. Louis Plans
Regular Meetings;
John Grace, President
Meeting at the Mark Twain
Hotel in Downtown St. Louis on
the evening of Nov. 10 the St.
Louis Club decided to meet regu-
larly each month on the second
Tuesday evening. The meeting
place will be the Mark Twain.
John R. Grace, ’25, was chosen
President of the Club, succeeding
Wm. J. Ray, ’18. Leonard Faure,
'23, was named Vice-President and
Drexel Turner, ’28, Secretary-
Treasurer.
All A. & M. men living in the St.
Louis area and any Aggie visitors
to that city are invited to attend
the club’s meetings on the second
Tuesday evening of each month.
Phones of the president and secre-
tary are as follows: Grace, office,
Grand 2894, home, Parkview 8147;
Turner, who is with the Bell Tel.
Co., Chestnut 9800.
Present for the club’s November
meeting were the following, Eu-
gene E. Barrard, 12, P. E. Bret,
28, T. H. Daniel, 27, L. L. Faure,
’23, John F. Grace, 25, T. Lewis
Jones, ’23, Dr. Dan H. LeGear, ’40,
Capt. A. B. Norton, ’38, Wm. J.
“Jack” Ray, ’'18, and Roy A. Wil-
- re
fy Th Tu
son, 27.
Beaumont Prexy
E. L. Robbinse ’21
E. L. ROBBINS, ’21, has been
installed as President by the Beau-
mont A. & M. Club. He is with
the Gulf States Utilities Company
at Beaumont, and has long been
an active member of the Club.
He succeeds GEORGE MORRIS,
qs,
Other new club officers include
TOM KELLEY, vice president;
GEORGE B. MORGAN, ’18, treas-
urer; WILLIAM WENDT, 27, sec-
retary; and C. H. WALLACE, 43,
sergeant-at-arms.
The new Board of Directors of
the Club is composed of: DICK
CAREY, ’'11; W. S. TURNER, 22;
J. C. RUDD, 26; W. J. BALMER,
236: G. W.--' GLBZEN,. 27; . LEB
PARISH, 23; JOE BLIEDEN, ’29;
A. SID JOHNSON, 22; and G. C.
MORRIS, ’18.
Aggies Form Club
At Bomber Plant
An A. & M. Club has been or-
ganized among Aggies at the North
American Bomber Plant at Grand
Prairie. W. H. Ingram, 23, is
president; O. G. RIVOIRE, ’39,
vice-president; and J. FRANK
ROGERS, ’40, secretary-treasurer.
Rogers’ address is 1619 Alaska,
Dallas, and he and other officers
would like to get in touch with all
A. & M. men working at the North
American Plant. The Club held a
night meeting on November 15 at
the Oak Cliff Y.M.C.A.
THE BRUNDRETT
CHAPTER
CAPT. WARNER M. BRUND-
RETT, ’40, USAF, Kelly Field, Tex-
as, was a recent visitor to the cam-
pus, and brought news about the
several members of his family. He
is one of four sons of MR. and
MRS. GEORGE T. BRUNDRETT,
’08, 311 N. Windomere, Dallas, in
the armed services. CAPT. GEO.
C. BRUNDRETT, ’33, is a Japa-
nese prisoner, having been cap-
tured in the Philippines; FIRST
LT. FRANK BRUNDRETT, ’37,
is attached to the U. S. Medical
Corps in Australia; Avn/S JACK
BRUNDRETT, ’45, is in training
at Santa Ana, Calif. Cousin LT.
HEROLD M. BRUNDRETT, JR,
42, is a son of H. M. BRUNDRETT,
’14, and is at the U. S. Air Base
at Eagle Pass. H. M. Brundrett is
with the U. S. Department of Agri-
culture at Uvalde, and he and Geo.
Brundrett, ’08, are brothers.
A gallant squad of 17 year olds,
Texas Lend-Lease Power
Beats Aggies 27-13 After
Great Battle Before 30,000
giving away more than an average
of ten pounds per man and two years age and football experience, lost
their big game Thanksgiving but enthroned themselves in the hearts
of football fans of the Southwest.
the courage and spirit of the youthful Aggies held it to that margin.
A powerful, veteran, speedy backfield, supplied the Longhorns by their
Naval Reserve, was the big difference. 30,000 fans were in the stands
and the game was broadcast over a nation-wide hook-up and by short-
wave to the fighting forces over-seas.
Texas scored twice early in the first quarter, their big veteran, Lend-
Lease backs literally running over and outspeeding the Aggie defenders.
The game had the ear-marks of a rout with Callahan the great star
from Texas Tech teamed with three Texas U. veterans, Magliolo, Parks
and Ellsworth punching big holes and gaining yardage in big chunks.
The score was 27 to 13, and only
Bowl.
even the score.
Cadets In Orange Bowl
The Aggies are Bowl Bound again, this year to play L. S. U. in the
Orange Bowl at Miami, Florida, on New Year’s day. Announcement of
the game was released by Homer Norton immediately after the Thanks-
giving Game. The Longhorns, as Conference Champions, will play in
the Dallas Cotton Bowl. Acceptance of the Orange Bowl bid makes the
Aggies perhaps the outstanding “Bowl” team of the nation. Since Jan.
1st, 1940, when they beat Tulane in the Sugar Bowl the Cadets have
played twice in the Cotton Bowl and now will appear in the Orange
Orange Bowl authorities announced early that their selection of teams
would be made from schools with college teams, as compared with
schools represented by service teams. Among such teams of the Nation
the Aggies undefeated. L. S. U. bowed to the Cadets in an early season
game at Baton Rouge, but the Tigers have announced they are out to
The Cadets will rest ten days before resuming practice.
The Beardless Aggies swept
aside the Rice Owls, 20 to 0, in
their final game before Thanksgiv-
ing, playing before the season’s
largest crowd at a conference
game in Houston. The Cadets
scored early on a drive featuring
fine running by Hallmark and
Flanagan. Additional tallies came
in the third and fourth periods.
Norton’s youngsters crossed up the
Owls by relying on a strong run-
ning attack for their scores instead
of the air-lanes that have been
their chief route in previous games
this season. The Cadets completed
cnly one pass out of nine attempts.
Memphis Aggies
Hold Meetings
A. & M. men at Memphis, Ten-
nessee, have been enjoying the in-
formal meetings and activities of
their club up there. The group went
to see WNBL in a body as guests
of Sebe Miller ’38, who is with the
Paramount Picture organization at
Memphis. The more recent meet-
ing of the club was held at Hotel
Gayso, at the Variety Club. Those
present were: Sebe Miller, ’38 and
wife, Lt. and Mrs. Lamar W. And-
erson ’38, W. E. “Buster” Keeton
’26, and wife, Dr. Sammy Sanders
’23 and wife, Mr. and Mrs. William
Uttz ’32, of Covington, Tenn., Har-
eld Mp8 Jinks," U.S. N.R., ‘and Mr:
and Mrs. Allen Smith ’28.
Allen Smith ’28, one of the old-
timers at Memphis, is with the Per-
kins Oil Company in that city and
lives at 225 Ridgefield Road, Mem-
phis, 11. W. E. “Buster” Keeton
'26, lives at 527 E. Davant St. All
visitors and newcomers to the
Memphis area can get full infor-
mation about A. & M. plans by
giving either of them a ring.
Yukon Aggies Warm
Up at A&M Meeting
From Whitehorse, in the Yukon,
comes word of an Aggie meeting
which for an evening at least went
far to temper the Yukon’s famous
cold weather. The party was held
in one of the mess halls and fea-
tured a fine steak dinner.
Present were three men from the
Bechtel-Price-Callahan  Construe-
tion Company and three from the
army. The group hopes to get
together as often as practical. All
of the mare engaged in construc-
tion work in the Yukon area.
Those present included CAP-
TAIN WALTER H. PARSON, JR.
’30, Area Engineer, Canal Project;
CAPTAIN DALLAS 1. CRIS-
WELL, ’39, Alaska Highway; LT.
HOWARD H. WEBB, ’40, Assis-
tant Area Engineer, Western Area,
Alaska Highway; N. L. PETERS,
’17, B-P-C Area Engineer, White-
horse; W. H. FOWLER, ’20, Civil
Engineer. Among the Aggies in
that area who were unable to at-
tend the first meeting of this
group are: MAJOR JAMES SEL-
LERS, ’383; «CAPT.  SCHOLTE-
MER; LT. GEORGE ADAMS,
’38, and LT. HUFFAKER, ’40.
The meeting was reported by W.
Henry Fowler ’20, whose mailing
berta, Canada.
—10,000 IN *44—
—10,000 IN ’44—
—10,000 IN ’44—
—10.000 IN ’44—
Texas A&M 20-Rice of
address is Box 336, Edmonton, Al- |r
The Aggies Come Back
But when it looked like they
would be completely submerged the
Cadets came storming back. Little
“Red” Burditt, on a trick play that
was the darling of Brahma Jone’s
football life a few years ago, picked
up the ball from the ground and
twisted 25 yards for a tally. The
drive started on the Cadet 37. The
score was tied a few minutes later
when another Aggie drive carried
to the Texas 34 and Hallmark shot
thru the line, out-maneuvered the
Longhorn secondary and scored.
The tie was short-lived. Callahan
and Park combining to tally and
putting the Steers ahead 20 to 13
at the half.
Thru the second half of the
game the Aggies were fighting
with their backs to the wall and in
the final period the Longhorns
iced the battle with a last touch-
down after a roughing penalty put
the ball on the Cadet’s one yard
line. Only a never-say-die fighting
spirit in that tough last half pre-
vented the Longhorns scoring fur-
ther since the cadets were deep in
their own territory with the excep-
tion of one passing splurge that
carried deep into Longhorn terri-
tory but which was broken by a
pass interception. The Cadets suf-
fered badly when Marion Flanagan,
spear-head of their offense and
Field General, was injured.
Great Day, Anyhow
“It was a great day, anyhow”
was the general feeling of the thou-
sandh of A- & M. men who return-
ed to the campus for the game. The
pre-game bon-fire was the biggest
in memory, the weather was per-
fect, there were old friends to be
seen and visited with and although
they lost the game the Aggie team
gave a performance that made its
followers happy and proud. For
neutral fans the game was one of
the greatest offensive battles in
the fifty year history of the classie.
It marked the fourth straight year,
however, that the Steer has tri-
umphed over the Aggies, a string
that brought no pleasure to Aggie-
and.
Texas Texas A. & M.
Harville L. E. Geer
Phillips L.<T. Bryant
Wetz Ll. 'G. Turley
Marhsall C. D. Wright
Simons RG: Tassos
Plyler B.'T. Monecrief
MeCall R. E. Settegast
Ellsworth Y.2H. Hallmark
Magliolo Q. B. Flanagan
Park R.‘H. Burditt
Calahan FB. Turner
Texas 13 7 0 7—27
A. & M. 76 0 0—13
Texas scoring Touchdowns. Park 2,
Calahan 2: points after touchdown, Cala-
han 2 (placements). Andrews (for Cala-
han) (dropkick).
Texas A. & M. scoring: Touchdowns,
Burditt, Hallmark ; point after touchdown,
Turner (placement).
Substitutions :
Texas—Ends, Coleman, Maurer; tackles,
Kishl, Merritt; guards, Bolin, Butler, Tra-
cy; center, McGinnis; backs, Main, Rados,
Perez, Canady, Robinson, Andrews.
Texas A. &M.—Ends; McCurry, Wiley,
Darnell, C. Wright; tackles, Eberle, Gran-
zin ; guards, Neville, Brown, Hohn, Overly ;
center, Gary; backs, Butchofsky, Beesley,
McAllister, Callender, Gunn, Deere.
Officials: Referee, Ray McCullough, (T.
C. U.) ; umpire, Jimmy Higgins (S. M. U. );
head linesman, Jack Roach, (Baylor);
field judge, Charley Swartz, Rice).
First downs 13 14
Net yards rushing 93 258
Net yards passing 169 27
Passes attempted 36 8
Passes completed 13 2
Passes intercepted by 0  §
Punt average 34 36
Yards lost by penalties 51 65
Ball lost by fumbles 0 2
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