» i S Battalion n PORTO MONDAY, OCTOBER 6,1M7 E I’auo 3 Aggies Drop Oklahoma Tilt 26-14 After Early Lead — T *“ ;; tSboiUH* Kdd Kiin". Short Pasurn Bring Steers Swamp Strong Tarheel Eleven 34-0 Vi ^ ^ ^ ^ After the Ball is Over • • • • PRESS PASS m SPORTS By Aady BUtuU *d over the gn*«i hi U move it • Ur. The attempt % auteuaful, hecauM after air paaaM ever the new the gravel starU gratting i itaeif and pretty *eeo we ha ririag; thja doat, unforti doe sn’t come back down w surted from, and aoon the gimrel if all Worn away, ae well at the Ur, and we’re hack where we atart- ed from. (fcice a ball game is played and | from gumming op the score i$ lifted in the rviordjtn aome apoU, a t haokf, Aggies are prone to call K Matory and look forward wjQv re- njwed vigor to the negt cor test. That’s good psychology; la .acuta of all the cracker bmrel gatner- i«g|, barroom arguments, and Ml aaasions with their and**, ifa, add bat's the moving finger has writ. Ifa uae trying to erase it. ^ But for the sake of this article, fat's Uke a little postmortem on Saturday’s game. It wae,hbt at ; Owens Stadium; the bteexe (hat prevailed at practice aession drop- oad completely at the kick off, leaving the fans baking in the 90 degree heat and the players sitt er! ng around in their own sauce on the field. Substitution were K ralent, men couldn’t last very | in the sweltering weather, la the second half, this he- C * evident as the Mg Aggie men stayed longer on the heach while the second and third team spelled them on the field. The tackle* werea't charging aa fast, the secondary was alewer •t 1U feet, the ends weren't I - Mating their paasea M hen the turn toUl was added up. the hoys the preae bos attributed the sfeat ta lack of reaenea. there was another reason earn » KllM defeal But the reported and «porim*mere 'lidn’t figure on, My self admks- alan from membara of the » m. 'lulfa h fewboys were ■h eolda ^gte _ edlda The common, everyday variety nf cold, that tkJ« up your nose, or make It run, mlats your < )r< •, and shortens your breath. Ivat a good thing for a football taom to have where it egpecU ta play top notch ball. iPWell, It'a a sure thing that the hoara didn't leave their pullman car wmdowa open on the way to Okla homa. In other worda, they caught their colds right here on the cam- pos, where everybody el»c h»» been catching his recently. And the eBte. 'Maybe you've noticed, that re- cggitly Military Walk and its ad jacent streets have been subjected to an amount of construction (that's what h aays here in small flhe print; as far as this -article it qpneerned, it’s indiHInguishabl.- from destruction). This construc tion consists of laying a layer of > In the meantime, the dust stir red up by the cam, track*. m«- toracootera, etc, ha» drifted about a bit ioetiag far a place to settle dowa. Hart Halkd)ow»- Mm the Agd* athlete* ir sito- atad ia aa ideal apet far all this doat te gather, the hoys raa’t* Wet their doom aad holt the win dow* now-a-days, ae they Just have to take it . .. aaaelly right up the ease. Result; pert of them retch colds, become shortw laded, Ime hell games. Now who is to blame for this sorry st#t« of affairs- We could teV a guess sad aay that some one or some person*, a rank or so below tiod himself gave the order to start this construction (hot we wouldn't dare eay that th* paard of Diiwlort Is rooaonalM* tar the Aggioi tawing a tall game. Por that we would be llae4y durnpod into the Rrasoe liver wRhout heitaflt of HUver Tape). The Administration had nothlnfyto do with this we are certain; the Administration, aa you \kmm astqr, • oa Oioah wdHtU Heat Han Marked Effect on ViHitors By PAUL MARTIN * Texas University moved up aru other notch this week by deetaioe* ) l^dnshbing the vtaktag North jCaroliaa Tarheels *4-0. This, tied the defeat of L8U by (who was beaten by tR# rieels last week) and Rice’s tie A the Southern Cal Trojans and V week’s defeat of the Owb by 1 Tigers Should mean a revision the estimates of Texas as a na tional power fckhgh Carl Snavely ad- after lie game that the Ataeifc were JuflB «• roaches psaahtg arm of Bobby Layne ae* counted for the victory. ■■■■ Layne set up the first Longhora tally with a 44-yard pass to lef* ha'fback Byron Gillory who wsmt acioss standing up. This climaxed s W-yard sustained drive in which fullback ToA Landry had piek»4 op IS and pr LSlTu Talented Touchdown Tower were Ju*t too fast, as had Tagas Tech and Oregon tea previously. That, and tRo arm ' “ en yard gains. Early in the second quarter, the Steen again hit pay dirt when siftaj stltule fallback Raymond Jones passed to substitute right end Pap py Blount who went high in the air to snare the ball and then fell, across the goal line. Landry slashed IS yards to aet up tRu ne*t counter and after Gil* tafy, pulling the old statue of lt» eijty around loft end to thr thro* drove the remainder to give th* host* a *0-0 load at the naif. Early in the second half, Landry runs anil Uyne-Ui Gil lory paaers tool the I/»nfhoms t» the Tarh*e| one whqN tfi* vis! on itawna. Texas' fourth TD was Initiated ! v Jones who mtereeptari a North I'srollna pass behind his own goal line and ran It bark to the 14. Randall Clay carried the mail on the final tally with the Texas l **ww |w *» Handball Entries Fur Tournament Due OetoberS By Lorry Ooodwya A hard-fighting Aggie football team went down before 1 Oklahc Oklahoma ta teams and Oklahoma heat Saturday aa lack of •trength showed to be the chief wenkne** in the »M-14 kM| at the hands of the Big Red squad from TEXAS-BOHN YrMwetau Abraham TUiie, Jr„ bettor known Ilf bear Ihr Tiger offeneit* hwrdeu fer the live year. Uni year the big uwerterhank mow • In 4* artrmpta fer Ml yards aad II teurhdowaa. aa Y fearth m ptrted 4* Mr ata« l mistake. You can't blame the sta- pprond team using straight power donts for catrhing cold; they did I plays, not have a damn thing to do with It. Well then, who’s to blame. Scanning the list of college of ficials, we fuid that Mr, T} R Spence Is the official In charge of college construetioa ia the man who waned the order that caused the team td catch cold. Obviously hia order had a direct bearing on Saturday a gome.. iEu.™ you In Football Ranks wiU be burned ia effigyl at the I w, if n North Carolina was given a alight edge in this fray as many predicted the newly-initiated T formation wouldn’t dick under ymesaara. Favorites Tumble Thanksgiving bonfire, if npt er. Why must you be blamed? A* we said, last week's game By AUSTIN BKALMEAR Sideline Sideli^litt tar, the slippery, black kind that j is history. Now Mr. Spence, all we amdla like a refinery, on the \ ask you to do is wet down Military street; immediately over this is Walk, ao- ths team can dear its r id a layer of fine gravel. Thi*,' heads and stand on even chance suppose, is to keep the tar; with LSU next week. , -If I don't bring hasno Dantyno drawing Gum, thoy attack!" j r -•ay! Do Asm kids wake wy life wwerahlo if I forget tho Doatyoo Chowiae Gum! I Seat hlswo tho littlo thovora, thaagh. Pw as kooa as .thoy aro oa that rofroshiog, taag-Usti«g •woee. Aad Dantyno bolpa hoop thoir tooth whits, too. Doatyoo Coos—Modo Oaly by Ada ass OPEN AT 5 O’CLOCK No cover charge for dining DINING & DANCING Food prepared by chef from Balinese Room ‘ Serializing in Sea Foods and Mexican Foods 114 NEW YORK. Oct 6 (AP)-One of these days the folks who have been too busy following the World Sefiea to police college football are going to find that the grid season already ia well under way and that the action to date has resulted in such impressions ns these; 1. Notre Dome, Michigan, Texas and Georgia Tech look like the teams most likely to battle it out for the mythical national crown. 2. The title chase in the Pacific Coast Conference threatens to be the dixsiest of them all. 3. Army refuses to roll over and pby dead, even though Glenn Da vis and Doc Blanchard are no long er on the premises. Netre Dame, the nation’s No team in 1944, arrived on the scene Saturday and, although somewhat tardy, picked right up where it left off last year by crushing Pitts- burith, 40-6. Michigan, which entertains Pitt Saturday, lambasted Stanford, 49- R whiU Georgia Tech blanked lane, 20-0, and Texas troanced North Caralaa. 34-0. ruining the Tar Heel*' bid for an all-victorious si ason with one of the outatand ing performance of the day. Meanwhile, Washington State dumped Idaho, 7-0, and Oregon State stopped Washington, 14-7, in » couple of surprisee on the Pa cific coast while UCLA bowed to Northwestern *7-M, Nevada upset Oregon, 1S-4, and Haathera Cali fornia was held ta a tie by lire. U. Army, unbeaten aince 194S, waltiad merrily along with a 47-0 breete through Colorado, indicat ing that the Cadets aren't going to be pushed around this year de4 spite personnel losses! Army's true strength will be tested Saturday when the Cadeta risk their 80-game undefeated rec ord against Illinois, 3&-12 con qm ror of lowa, at New York In the East’s foremost attraction. Oklahoma, 24-14 conqueror of Teaes AIM. and Texas collide la their annual game at Dallas aad Arkaoaas will W. at Baylor te the Southwest confereace. - Duke, 19-7 winner over Ten- ^' i , plays Navy at Baltimore I while Columbia, which stopped Na vy, 18-4, entertains Yale, 14-0 win-! ner over Cornell, in on Ivy League I contest. Notre Dame this week invades Purdue, surprise 24-20 winner over Ohio State, while Ohio State en tertains Southern California and Wisconsin plays host to California. Andy Matala In spile of defeat the Aggies looked good. At least Curt Uowdy of station KOMA in Oklahoma City thought ae. Curt is a six foot tad, young In radio but he has a big league l go places via the ether waves^ta handled the Aggie-Sooner game over 200 •tationa of CBS Saturday. Curt used to play basketball for Wyoming University, mode All American too. He liked sports so well, he stuck rteht with them, over tne airianet. Ur even handles his own game of basketball better than football. Gowdy had high praise for big Stan Hollmig, whose kicking, though * Uttle oft, and passing, chat was deadly in the first half, had a partisan Oklahoma crowi their feet moat of the game Gowdy's Job over the air Saturday, was to sell Southwest football, the razxle-dexile, wide open, anything goes kind, to the rest of U\e coun try. In that respect, Hollmig’s passing came through with flying colors, coast to coast. Odell Suutzenberger wan Gow dy'* praise as an All American passe* or a quick kirk. They didn't heed hia warning la the first Half and big Stan caught them napping with a spiral one time and threw plenty of paoaee that ate ap yard age and set up a touchdown. Watt instructed his halfback, George Brewer, By CUPP ACKERMAN The first of the Intaamaral open tournament* will ' gat underway this week with handbell. Entries are due by Wednesday, October K All studenU tele res ted in eaMrtnf should see their Athletic Offteet or Team Manager or come ta the Intramural office and fill out aa entry blank. Chlckea Rerbecee Tonight AH Athletic Officers, Teem Men- ti amrnm Teatwwswmsiwml u *v*4 ■gwVy anvrwTnurni mmi Officials are reminded of the Mg feed tonight at the Grave at •:!&. Hah League Meets Tuesday Clubs interested in entering this new Intramural league shouidhave a representative present at a m^-t ing to be held Tuaoday at [l te Room 301, Goodwin Hail. Thursday Results Tranter Btxsell won from Law Hall. 2 to 0 te tw6 closely contacted matches. Coleman and Overton, Swenson and Hudgins made ap the wianlag team as they won their matches rack 84 from the teems of Bynea and Collins, Batten and Mouger. ! With the score ttad at 1 ait in matches Cole and Cox came thrsnth with an 1-4 win over Ham bright and Guthrie to give A Air Force n I to 1 victory over K Fluid. ■aahathslli A Ate Force edged cut a l paint vtataiy from A tnfaairy 80 to If. Tkt scorn ah if ted bask and forth with Usman of A Infantry being high point man hHtlng the backet for 18 tallies. Per Ura winner* Hcett scored 7 points while Hooten followed with L Dorm 7 swamped Hart Hall to the tuns of 40 to 88 in one of the highest scoring games on record in Intramural basketball Futr and Libby ran up 29 points for the win- nors scoring 18 and 14 points re- speetivey. Quiery was high point runner's 36- rty-two thousand people, one of the teraratftavwds aver So see a game tfW state of Oklahoma sat in oa the battle, which was all.AMMO te the Ant half and all O.U.’a te the last taro periods. U was- jnst a ease of getting there “fasteat"—but not havtag the “mosteet” that's essential to I winning football games. Continu-1 ally throwing fresh manpower in to the game, the the Aggies’ early lead and won going away. At the end, the Ag gies we** an exhausted and thor Wallace converted and k vraa 14- 18. Ia the test two minutes of the period, the Aggies chugged 64 yards te five plays with the half* time gun halting the effort on the O.U. five yard line. Early in the third period*, the t tnlets made their final bid of the afternoon, driving 42 yards ta I the Sooner 12 before a fumble overcame them From that point on, it was all 0.tJ. The first team sagged under the 90 degree heat and the reserves Ja>t couldn’t cope from the -w a far cry' Ju ..^ ..„.j with O.U.’a speed and the very “jrrrfis «■«■»<■ touchdowns and was on its way to 42 yards for i lowing an in- jr Aggie aerial, t promised three yard a Mitch* to always kick out of bounds ta the Aggiea. After seeing man for the’ losers with 18 potnta the Aggias against Texas Tech. Taking an early lead Dorm 16 Walt knew the abilities of either stayed out ia front to beat Dorm Barney Welch or Bob Goode. Mustangs ShelWk Missouri 35 to 19 9 29 te II. Pet Perkins with 8 points and hts teammutc rogcll with 4 helped the winners to their victory. MachemeR score 4 points for the losers to aet the para for his team. FIN FEATHER CLUB Fin Feather Road Ph. 2-1673 prospect in the line. That Mg Sooner line usually got pretty well fouled up trying to go through, over, under or around Stauz. Bob Gary certainly gave him plenty of becking up, and Barney Welch, who played juat about the entire game, got in more than his share of touchdown saving tackles. But the Sooners had two lads who were practically their whole team. Tuck Mitchell, their QB, and who the Aggies were told to watch, is about the only guy who can walti through a football defense. Mitchell aeems to play with bollet slippers on; he's not fast, relies i on atopa and starts to weave hia I way through unbalanced tackier*. Several time* he ran Into his own Interference te be stopped. The Sooner'* big John Ranees was their defensive maiaatay. He raught on to the Aggie passing attack In the second half and intercepted two pasam and recovered a fumble that-turned the breaks to the loon- «a and helpod them to win. Walt Hargtaheimcr, asaistant coach for Oklahoma, had high ra- r for the Aggies. Walt ia an Minnesota hand who really knows footbaO. During the game he manned th# field phones. When Stan Hollmig came in he would warn his backfield to watch for Doak Walker took the spotlight again aa SMU ran rough-shod over df- Missouri in Dallas Saturday night on to the tune of 35-19. Walker put the visitors back in their own territory with a 40-yard quick kick after the Missourians marched to the Pony 36. In a quick return, the Mustangs took their ball on their own 38 end marched downficld with it to the Missouri two. Walker took it across and then made the conversion. Missouri quickly tied it up after Frit* recovered a fumble on the Quirk SMU 20. Entsminger and drove aeroas on five plays. Following, Walker took s hand- off on the Methodist 24-yard line and ran 74 yards for pay dirt. This completed the first nalf.H In the third quarter, the Ponies took the ball on kick-off and marched to their third TD. A series of short plunges carried the visitors to the SMU 10 from where a pass from Quirk to Hulse resulted in a tally. Array Stages 47-0 • Win Over Colorado WEST POINT, N. Yn Oct.-4— (AP)—Coach Earl Bloik and hU Array football team staged an ex periment Saturday at the ex pense of a big but lumbering Uni versity of Colorado squad, Enter taining a crowd of 21,000 by roll- ing up a 47-0 score. Btaik used 46 players, including 18 backs. Moat of thsai, gained ground through and over the bulky Colorado line, which was able to stop the Cadets only once. Owls Tie Trojans 7-7 in California Georgia in 35-19 CpHet Over Tigers ATHENS, GA., Oct 4—(AP)— Georgia tied a knot in the tail of the mighty Tigers from Louisiana State here Saturday and then kicked them all over Sanford Field for a surpriae 85-19 victory—the Aral in eight attempts—biforv 40,000 fana. Coach Jeaa Neely’s Bice Owls ended their fray with the South ern California trojans with a 7*7 tie after holding a lead until the closing minutes of the game. Deapita last week's defeat by LSU, the Owls entered the tilt ■light favoritas. The end of the Ant half found both teems sco lea* but the Owb came back after the intermission to walk the kick off 74 yard* for a tally. The tro jan touchdown climaxed an 81 yard match. ALTERATIONS INSIGNIA CLEANING and PRESSING Faat & Reliable Service ^ < Daily Delivery Service SMITH’S North Gate / Phone 4-444 a third when hatted by the clock. 1 The Sooner* font railed the bell throughout moot of tne game, aad therein probably lien the chief rea son for the Agiges’ cyesing out on the short end if the'score. Okla homa had possession; of the ball on .to oat of the 163’plays of the game with the Aggies in sion Ip only 48 plays, 12 of which were punts or kickoffs |S Tha Oklahomans Started out is they were going to take thd Aggie* apart The second time they got their hands on the ball, tjht'boonegfi UghBaltad 49 yards for s touchdown, Bob Goad taking a flat paaa (a play which fooled thr Aggies at crucial point all day) and stepping 18 yards for the score The play covered 19 yards with Jack Mitchell, who was the best bath on ths field, on the throwing end of R. Dart Wallace, who beat AAM with a last inlnuie field goal In' ’44, mlsaad the point and Oklahoma 1 held • 44 i*ad with eight and a halfjnlmitea gotw In ths opening Alt tha Aggies test little lime la getting back te tha ball game. Turn plays following ths Oklahoma klrknof, Stan Hollmig played for the breaks and quick •kicked to the O.U, 81. And the bmk came. One play later, Geoffl Tlioina* lum- log Roll Good fell on the boll on the 38 and the Aggies wore off. Jim Caehion passed to Bafney Welch fer four, sent Ed Dusek through ths middle for throe more and then hit end Norton H in the dear down the middle, an 18 yard heave for a first on the O.U. 10. Goode swept jo the ;wo, getting help from Ralph, Dan iel, who threw one of the most vicious Meeks thb writer hai ever seen. On the next play, Duseq pow ered across. John Ballentine trot ted on and booted the point, send ing the Aggies in front, 7-b. Following th.i kickoff, O.U. got off a poor punt, carrying only to the Sooner 29, and the Aggies were on their way again. FoMwing a backfield in motion penalty, Welch crashed through to the 23 and Goode circled end to the 16 for first down. Then Holmig calm heaved a long pass to Cotton How ell deep m the end aone tor the tally. Ballentine’s point made 14-6 and things looked rosy for the Farmers. But the Sooner’s vaunted offense was still to be heard from. Mid day through the second period, the Oklahomans struck like lightning, moving 67 yards in two brilliant play*. From the Sooner 48, Thom as cut through end and danced through, the whole Aggie team be fore being downed frota behind aft er a 24 yard jaunt. Then, Darrell Royal worked the Aal pa**, this time to Mitchell, and the fleet quarterback scampered all the way. npletely. lifferent Oklahoma went 42 their third score fol tereeption of a stray Thome* hitting the promised tend oa a buck from the three yard line. In the fourth, a Mitchell to Brewer jlst pan carried 24 yardi for the fame’s Anal score, climax ing a 48 yard drive. In the waiunj; moments of the game, A A MV highly-regarded passing game, which had bulteeyed on tta first fir* attempts, failed com] They Just played two d games. AAM rightfully won the first one 14-18 but was pushed around in ths second one, 18-0. Stars of the first half war* nu- mtrous: Cashion, Dusek, Goode, Overly, Howell. Thera were no stars in the second half, Just a tir ed bunch of Aggies who had too mush to handle. AAM O.U. Net yards gained rushing 111' 857 First downy 8 II Forward paste* atlptod if 1 9 [ Forward passes emptied Yards forward passing Forwards Intercepted by Yd* gnd run-bark tntplna Punting average Total yda all kirk* retd Opponent fumble* reevd Yards lost by penalttsa I 0 87 I It 0 I 1 40.9 I Mi 8 I 0 76 Okta. Tyree Paine Burris ...... Ra;*aca ..... Andros' Walker Goad Mitchell Sarratt Thomas Kreick 7 0 0-14 7 4 7-26 AAM Howell .H. Basra Lf*.*.... Btautabrfar ...Lf 4ary —«... C Overly R.G Winkler -M, Biggins RE Daw Q.B. Welch LH Goode —,L.H«-... Dusek R3 Texas A. A M....-..7 Oklahoma 6 Texas AAM scoring: Touch downs, Dusek and Howell; points after touchdown, Ballentine 2 (for Cashion). Oklahoma scoring: Touchdowns Good, Mitchell, Thomas and Brvw- tr (for Sarratt); points after touchdown, Wallace 2 (for Thom as). Substitutions: Texas AAM: Ends, Wright, Prokop, Pollock, Whitaker; tackles, Greiner, Sacra, Settegaat, Routt; guards, Greiner, Dupree, Turfy; center, Ellis; becks, fashion, Hollmig, Diuiiel, Hall mark, Ballentine, Burditt, Airier- son, Smith, Yates, Bety. Oklahoma: Ends, Ownes, Heape; tackles, Morris, Bodenhaiher; guards, Trotter, West, Husak.-Mc- Nabb; center, Tillman, Dowell; backs, Parker, Wallace, Royal, Brewer, Mauley, Jones, Davis, U. 8. JTROOP8 LEAVE ITALY ROME, Oct. 6 —(AP)—Ameri can occupation troops will, begin pulling out of Italy today, U. S. Mediterranean Theater Headquart ers announced at Leg bora Tho last troops, except for small liqui dating units, will sail Dec. 1 —■ HATTERS •olid* hi s writ range of colors CORKY 4 HURO |ta j | t • ■ 4* ♦ • • CLOTHES Wfeslminsler SOOtt «5cto$L85 Lion B. Weiss Look at our Prices . . . Examine our Materials ... And you will be surprised at Our Tailor Made Clothes. T i I - r' y. '• ( vi v , Suits - Slacks - Sport Coath The Store of Personal Attention 2 BLOCKS NORTH OF FOOT OFFICE