J. . F i iu r Aggies Swamp Pirates 48-0; tangle With Tech Saturday ! ! ' • By Larry Goodwyn 3 Indian matt, Texaa Tech atyle, wan the main courae on » menu of cunveraatlon on Kyle Field today, aa a victor- ua Aggie football aouad began making plana for Bat encounter with the Red Raldere In San At Saturday' Antonio'e Alamo " w «» rr ^ v'z Afth.. took Mock of th« unual P*nod to the final fun, the PI- poat-gaim Injurif* and bogan 1 out^aaned aad oet- fought. Duaekt Korlng daah cap- pwl a 51 yard auataiaed drive that jihtd only ala plays to com thlnhlnf about various methods of Uialnt the aplrltod Wvst Ttxapa. This latter fsat, rspecially in ths •yes of the Antes coaching Maff, may he a rather tough aMiumnent and drills this week will feature Improving the Aggie running at* thek and defense and working on Tech play i. Head Coach Homer Norton said Sunday in discussing the Farmer's coming clash with Tech, that ae- .eerdlng “to the scouts report, Tea- Teen had a fine chib, offensive- and the seen rose to 11-0 at tim half. la the third period, the roof fell in on the viaiiors from George town. After a brief eaehann oi fumbles following the second-half htekoff, ths Aggtsi got ths but their own 18. On the first play, sek bullsd ovsr tackle, shook off a tackier or two and fBllopo k 00 * the second of six straight pable of playing bettor ball th*n « tr » Pomt* for th* Aggie! they did, both defensively aad Jo* Sacra's recovery of another catching passes " ; fumble on the Southwestern As far as Southwestern was 26 set* up the game’s third marker, concerned, the Aggu *. indeed must the peyoff coming on Hollmig'a have looked more than just “pretty running pass to Jennings Ander - good." From the time Ed Duaek son from eight yards out Ballen smashed 18 yards for the game's i tine trotted oa, paused, trotted off taBy, Buryi Baty salt than took ovsr S Battalion FOR MONDAY, SEPTEMBER t2, IM7 Page 3 V SubtKTiption to the HOUSTON CHRONICLE Dullvered to your room Evening 4:30 lun. — Sunday 8:00 a.m. • 91.00 IVr .Month Aggies' passing gam* and ly tossed a 26 yard asrial to who made a one-hand stab on th* Fir*tee' four. Ralph Daniel pU>» ed across and, when Ballentia* eon verted, it was 81-0. A flashy 50-yard punt return by Uuode on a handoff from Ander son sent the Aggies on their wa; to touchdown number six. Ths play carried to ths Buccanqst 28. Three plays later, Goode circled cad from the 12 to score standing up. Center Garrett Guly accounted for th* game's final scare in the fourth period, hauling down a mis fired Southwestern pass and lop ing 70 yards behind excellent downfield blocking. Ballantine's try for his seventh straight conversion was wide. Standing out for the Aggie* wa* the backfield play of Hollmig (he hit only three of 10 tosses but had three others dropped), Goode and Kader* aad the passing of Cash ion (three completed of four) and Baty (three fur three). In the line, Jim Winkler, Odell Stautsenberger and Charki Over ly stood, out. For Southwestern, it can be said that they never quit trying, but they simply didn't have the man power. Arthur Sweet looked good at times, but his line gevs woeful protection end most of his peases were hurried end ineffective. Ttcheta for th* Texaa AAM- Texas Tech (eelhall gam* ia Baa \atenl* Saturday will go on sate at the YMCA, Tueeda) moralag at • Jl a.m. Thirty-five huadred Btuduut ticket* have been cent te the caltog* aad will he priced at 11.18 each, busiaoee manager Hoiug HONDO, TEXAS Rooie Tailback TV Speed, Cleverness'SZl'tX Swamps Red Raiders™ AUSTIN. TEX-. Sept. 22—(AP)—Sporting dazzling HDeed, tricky running, and clever field genarelahip, the Univereity of Tezoe Longhorna smothered Texas Tech i Red Raider*, 33-0, here Saturday before 99,000 shirt-eleeved fan*. Two left halfback*, Byron Cillery and Billy Pyla, ntole the ahow with burning, swirling run* oa both two up Try out* for th* dirinf team he held at the P. L Downs atatorium at I p ut., Art Adam- iwimnalng coach, has announc- f Fres^mea at the Aaaes will try out at a date to he annoeaesd later. All students interested should report to Adamson at the sched uled time. Uyaes Box 11M6 StY J. N. PARKS , College Station, Texaa uhea huyini mast he preeeated UelieU. Sam HoiimIoii BuaU Louisiana Gillege HUNTttVILLK, TF.X , kept 8I~ (AP)—Muidoph Wclhcr pared Sam Houston State Teachers Get- leg* to s U-0 victory over Louis iana State College Friday night. To Be Dressed Dp When You Rest Dp ConPLETEO 11 OF 28 FOR 178 YD’S IN 1746, AND HAD punting average of 43.3. Threw TOUCHDOWN PASS IN LAST YEARS r. U GAME. ELIGIBILITY LEFT— 3 YEARS. yank Kansas-TCU Play Scoreless Tie On Rain-Soaked Field KANSAS CITY, Sept. 28-(AP) —Kansas University's Jayhawkers and Texas Christian fought each ether and the element* Saturduy U. of H, Defeats Centenary, 19-7 HOUSTON, TEX., Sept. 22- (AP)—A stout defense and ver- satilt attack gave the University of Houston Cougars a 19 to 7 victory over the Centenary Gentle men here Saturday night but it was Jame* Francis, smallest man on the Louisiana team that nearly night without a decision aa thslr i ,U J*V l h* , . . opening football game ended in a Outmanned, both in weight and g H. [ experience, ths visitors, big mom- Some 15,000 rain-soaksd fan« • nl »*• ,n th » watched the fifth annual tusaip Jf, r F r * nc,i Cougar Boy between the Big Six and South- U punt on his own 15 and waat Conference Hbak Tonight's Tulsa 20. Weut Two. IS But it was enoa that let the _ as soiling it* touchdowns but one, and* the Longhorns did not click so smooth ly when he was out oi tbs gome T«xa» drove 74 first touchdown on sat up ths score bullet oast to right end Sch kopf, the play traveling 84 to Tech's 2-yard lure. Uyns west across on a quqr ! tmmaajk sneak tw* plays later and kicked tke extra point to put Ttoi- a* out front, 7 to 0, at the end of eight minutes. The next time the Longhorns laid hands on the ball, Pyle took a lateral from Layne and went 47 yards for a touchdown aa block ers cleared the path. Gillory duplicated Pyle’s feat on a 58 yard run. hurdling one man and out distancing three others as blockers put him in the dear. Layne added another point to push the score to 20 to 0. - Texas coasted in th* second quarter, using second, third and fourth string mixtures, but o; up once more in the second It wa* Pyle again aa he picked up 25 yard* on one sprint, took a paw from Layne for nine yards to Tech’s 2 and then plunged for the touchdown. > The second time Gillory got the hall he went spinning off left tackle to the left sideline aad sprinted 41 yards to the double ■tripe. Layne converted for the third time Texas scoring: Touchdown, Uyne, I’yle 2, Gillory 2, point af- , Laya* 3. T DO NOT have to pay mart* ter touchdown, tie was ths second series and 1 \ T. C. U. won the other three. Kansas outrushed th* Horned Progs, 26 yards to 12. and T( l' ■imputed one of two forward pa*» attempt* for a gain of nine yard* The Ion* Kansas asrial fell incom plete. Each team managed to make one mild sonring threat, TCU In the second quarter and Kansas m the first minute of the last period Carl Knox, a 110-pound TCU quarterback, bested Hoyt Baker of Kansas in a punting duel, and the Frags got ths ball at midfield in the second canto. Backs John Sherrod and Pete Stout pecked ■way for ■ first down and Sher rod hit end Bob Moorman with an 18-yard forward pass for a first down on the Jay haw k*' 36. Tom Scott, third string Kansas quarterback, intercepted Sherrod's next pa«*. Kansas kept the ball in T. C. U. territory most of the third per iod and then made its best bid for a score. Knox went back to kick on the first play of the fourth period. Hugh Johnson, Kansas tackle, barreled through the line to block the boot. Kansas' fullback, Frank Pattce, fell on the ball on the TCU 38. But the Jayhswk backs couldn’t go from there in the heavy footing. Bay Evans, brilliant Kansas halfback, was just another figure offensively but played a stout de fensive game, until he left the field with s wrenched knee in th* second quarter. T. C. U. 0 0 0 0—0 Kansas 0 0 0 0—0 point to te 13-7. low kicked (h* extra dure Houston's lead to It was not an ordinal y broken field run, Franfls wa* swarmed by (Vugars three time* but on the Cougar 4<) he turned eompleti around among a mass of tacNlet* and found himself in the eiear. TULSA, Okie., Kept 22 (AIM The University of Tulsa's Golden Hurricane overtamr a tenacious West Jqgas Stats eleven Saturday niunt to open its fiMitball season wfth a 86-18 victory «n a rain swept field before 8,000 soaked spcrtStor*. CLOTHES MADE TO YOUR MEASURE too ”i j »• < AdHtllLli 7 Y SatU^actiOH. * -line* you choose Ht# cloth & the stylo from tho wide vorioty ON DISPLAY AT CORKY-BIRD i •• I Ti’lT d ^ , EKS . 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In the siand* until ths snd, whtah ram* earlier than scheduled as the third and fourth quarters were rut to 18 minute* earh by agreement of lh* twe teams. Arkansas, whirh won ■ share of the Routhwrst title last year with | an iron-clad defense, turned loose an offense which was smooth dcs- aite the looee footing and wet ball. IU defense was good enough to hold the Demon* to a net gain of minus two yards and no first downs. Arkansas registered 17 first downs, rolled up 603 yards rush ing, and completed two of three forward passes for 24 yards. The Raxorback* were never forced to punt Coach John Barnhill kept his Raxorback starter* under wraps, playing them no more than ten minutes. But they managed to score five times in their short lived efforts. Fullback Leon Campbell and little Kenny Holland, reserve qoar terback, led the storing with three touchdowns apiece. Halfback Clyde Scott sprinted for two tallies and helped set up another with a 25- yard gallop. 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