The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 17, 1949, Image 3

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 17,164« ’ f ,,
TU Comes Ba,
WinOverHogs
Little Rock, Ark., Oct. 15 (AP)—Favoi
■ r
of about 30,000 Which
lltr In War Memorial Stacllumt-r—-- r
hni the insnlred Raaorbackit
LrknnNap napUallia <m broake
to kwh a 14*0 leait In the flrot 17
minutee.. • 1
it wa« Camtiltell ami Tex*
Xh [from then on,
<!Nun|)bell not only pitched two
toUcbdown puMXoH, but It wnn bln
t*lx Htraltfbt cumjiletlonB; In the
fV. ,
\' A
eedund quarter which anajpped the
I,onghornx out of their eiirly leth-
nray and opened pp the rnr.orbnck
defenae an that the Tcjcaa run
ning attack would click, too.
[ 14 Out Of 28 I
Campbell connected on 14 of 2.1
toieea for 257 yards. j
l)on Log tie. sophomore; quarter
back, produced both Arkansas
touchdowns, sneaking through right
guard four yards for the first near
the end of the opening pjeriod and
passing sbiryfcrds to end Pat Sum-
merall for the other in the second
quarter. i
Arkansas suffered a tough blow
wlien it lost its powerhouse Full
back Leon (Muscles) Campbell!
tjhfough an injury while Still lead
ing in the third quarten
Texas outhished Arkansas by
s' yard, 150 to 149, but just
ouldn’t ‘have been in game with-
Paul Campbell’s throwing and
thte ever-present ability of his re
ceivers^ to get intovthe clear.
The Te*as Quarterback thread-
id a bullet toss down the middle
18 yards to Paul Williams for t he
visitors’ first touchdown.
I ; * TtJ Trails in Third
i -. Trailing 7-14 going i into the
third quarter, the Texans rushed
V2 yards to another score after in-
lintercepting an Arkansas pass. Hy
mn Tbwnsend went the | final two
yards, but' Randall Clay’s kidk
was blocked and the RazorbackS 1
still led by a point.
■ After a minute of the final quar-
ter, Campbell passed 25 yards to
more yards untouched. Six minutes
liters Texas intercepted another
Arkansas toss on the Razorback
f SC and was on its way again.
Lewis Levine drove five yards for
■ ; uie wore. f j ■
Clay booted Texas ; three-extra
l»ointH. Hc-also was the Longhorns’
■ Ipading ball carrier, lotting 84
^ yards on f3 tries.
; f THE LINEUPS
-I
TEXAS
CenteiN- -Kowup, Millor.
IHlght (luwikll— Wotfa,
I'k ikon him.
Texas, shock-
Hlght tnuklcsi-
Ahtold. ;
Klght hml |
Adams, Cell try | j
i iQuMttcrhkckaM
Toiftpklna.
Left hiklfbaclja—Pyle,
send, Sumujels, t
Klijjht hulfbac!
Mayes.
Fullback* Use
Kljf,
Ittckami, li]lpmlnir,
Paul William*,
Allred.
.Paul Campbell,
Town-
lion.
a—Clay, Shands,
man,
• *
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ARKANSAS
Levine, Born*.
• it
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Left ends—Hi), Summcrall.
Left tackles—fLunney, Hanner,
Eckert:
Left guards—I oborts, Milam
Centers—Ferguson, Smith, Grif
fin.
Right gttards-tj-Reiderer, Broun,
Rowland. |;
Right tackles—-StanciL, Fred
Williams, Thornton.
; Right ends—F|schel, Linebarrier,
Butts. ; j •’
Quartertecks—fLogue, Rinehart,
Temple. j'li
Left hhlfbacj ts—Parks, Bass,
Rogers. jji j | j '
Right hplfbanks—^Duke, Ruro,
Scott, Du Jan. ,
Fullbacki — Leon Campbell,
Schaufele, ,Mazz inti, Baldridge.
Score by peril ids:
Te^as ■3 ...U 0 7 6 14—27
Arkansas ...
7 7 7
0—14
Texas scloring, Touchdownfe, Paul
Williams, Town! end, Proctor, Le-
virle. Poirjfs ^fter touchdowns,
Clay 3. j j
Arkansas scoring: Touchdowns.
Louge,„ Summei all. Points after
tpuehdowns, Thjrnton (2).
Five Lettermen On
Owl Cagt Squad
Houston, Oct| 17 ||i/P)—Riye let-
Co^ch
Don Sumhn as (basketball pjracticc
teitmen
Ijeft ends—Stone, Proctor, Bau-
man, Menasco.
Left tackles—McP'addin, Vyku-
k;il, Wilson.
Left guards—Lansford, Hurt.
wpll report today tb
man as basketbal
begins at Rice flnstitufe.
Last year’s ti'am finished ib a
three-way tie for the I Southwest
Conference championship.
Returning leJtertnen are Cjapt. 1
Warren ISwitzer, Joe McDeinw|tt,
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Over Tech 28-7
;te k 4SenM A
leven, playing wide awake ^
[I ■ ,
eleven, playing wide; awake
football and sparked by the
iggywhip arm of Quarter-
baick Adrian Burk, smashed a fight
ing, but outclassed, Texas Tech
team |28-7 before 18,000 homecojm-
ing fans here this afternoon. ]
.Mf | Bears fought off ttl|
HM .....
orte scoring threat posed by
raiders, who were afflicted with
fumhlcitls almost every time they
leached scoring territory; The
Raiders scored their lone tally on
u Ol-yard pass rflny from Qimr-
turhucH Krncst Hawkins u> End
Jack jkvls In the second miarfer^
After that! the Bear* kept them
„ or opened the sebrlng In pie
first period, when they reached
i Mylar
first perum, wr
pay dirt twice, rants
two etansna and chulki
the next
f .
Intnutiqral basketball got Into full swing' Inal that the Intramurul Department may schedule
Week with hot competition between all warns. more gumes each afternoon.
New Courts have been laid out at the Groves so
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Rice Owls Upset SMU Ponies
41-27 In Wild Scoring Game
Well bottled up when it counte
, itaniai ^ 4 . rT ^.,
ery air of touchdowns
canto.
Coach Bob
held the edge over lh*
every phase of the game,
winners had 20 first downs to 14
for Tech. They rolled up 207 yards
rushing, net, to 142 for the Raid
ers. They completed 16 of 24 pg»«
attempts for 134 yards.
Woodruff'll
jver the Hal
Dallas, Oct. 14 '#>—Southern to make; during the^ night.
Methodist’s Southwestern football
empire crashed tonight before the
power Of the Rice Owls 41-27. ;
The team th|at had won two
SoutheWest Conference champion
ships in a row and lost only one
game in two and a half seasons
took a terrific beating from a Rice
team, sparked by Passer Tobin
Rote and driving, twisting runs of j Rice fell
Bobby Lantrip and Gordon Wyatt. I odist 46.; Wyatt and;Laritrip ham-
SMU hasn’t lost a conference
Three in Third i game since being beaten by Arkan-
Rice came out for the third per-, iSUS i n 1946 until tonight,
iod with the drive of a locomotive. J; LINEUPS
In ten minutes the Owls had three] j; RICE '
touchdown^- The first was on a 53-
yard march with Lantrip hammer-! Ueft ends—Williams, Allen,
ing over from the three. On the | tackles—Stones tree t, Wy-
kick-off, the ball hit Charles Perry, map-
But" it was the payoff pitching
reel
fensive most of the time. The gi
of Burk that kept
and Joe Watson of
SMU tackle,
op the ball on fhei Meth-
(.'lujrlie Tight, land Jim GerHai'dt^
Tommy Hudgens, who letter-i]
r
an
ed in 1$47. , , , , .. .
Squadmen Rex Proctor^ Jack;
Wolcott and So my McCurray pro
bably will report
Jl
4
Relax and Enjoy Your
SEINE’S BLEND
•IM.L) o
• »w 0,
The StnoRing; Tobacco
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ith an M.
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Finest guaranteed work done
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t. j
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Available for replacement in most
Eights. : • ' i
*M*d« of "Elctlv” mmUl. Potent B«niH».
Rice i-oared back from a 6-14
half-time deficit . to all but run
SMU j Out of the Cotton Bowl
where 72.000 fans—the largest
crowd ever to see a Southwest
Conference game — Watched the
awesome power of the men in blue.
Not since 1945 had any team
ficcfred as many as 41 points on
Southern Methodist. The great
Randolph Field team of that time
turned the trick. It wias the most
points ever made on SMU in a
conference game. SMU has been
in the obnference since 1918!
Walker Injured n,
Kity did it with] All-AmCricu
Doak Walker sideHned most of ,t^e
last half. Walker was injured in
a pile-up ort the sidelines, being
knpckefl.j into a wheel <mair in
which a wat veteran was watching
the game. Rice was penalized. 15
yards for roughness. Walker play
ed little afterwards and never did
carry the ball again,
Southern Methodist entered the
game rated tenth nationally and
RicC, Which hhd lost to Louisiana
State, Was the underdog. SMU was
a seve|i and one-half-point favor
ite.
But While Walker played his us
ual AUrAmerica game while, Rice
had the better team and deserved
to win.
Rote completed 10 passes out of
21 thrown for 162 yards while his
mates whammed the line and ran
the ends for 164. Southern Meth
odist hj&d 163 on the ground and
226 in i the air. I ■
Lantrip Leads
Lantrip led in ball-carrying with
1 yards on 19 bull-like rushes.
Walker got 54 on 17 runs and com
pleted [three passes for 43 yards.
mered down to the 27 from where
Rote passed to Williams for a
touchdovyn. The next Rice touch
down wak on an 80-yard run by
S. J. Roberts, big guard, with an
intercepted Walker pass. It was on
the kick-pff that Walker, who took
the ball,] was injured.
Southern Methodist camp back
fighting. From the Rice 47 Ben
ners passed to Johnny Champion,
fleet SMU back, who took it on
the 12 arid raced ^across. Bill Sulli
van kickpd the point.
Rice then staged a 73-yard
surge fori another touchdown. The
counter Came on a seven-yard pass ] Forester, Adkisson
from Rote to Jack Wolcott in the [ Centers— Wood, Hightower,
end zonei , , Goodwin, Davis.
Another Intercepted pass set up Right guards—Wales, Lipke.
• Left guards—Roberts, McPhail,
Lerwood Lee.
Centers—Watson, Price.
Right guards—Schwarz, Win-
Ship, Delwood Lpe. *
Right tackles—Weatherly, Mur
phy, Giroski.
Right ends—Wolcott, Howton,
McCurry.
Quarterbacks—Riley, T. Rote,
Glass.
Left halfbacks—Wyatt.
Right halfbacks—Ballard, Pugh.
Fullbacks—Proctor, Lantrip.
SOUTHERN METHODIST
Left ends—Milam, Folsom! Wal
lace.
Left tackles—Cheney, Collier.
Left guards—Welch, Halliday,
:h on the rie-
t
field general completed all pusses
that Baylor did complete today
and was responsible for all [the
yardage.
Burk had assistance from seve
ral good running backs, including
Fullback Jerry Mangum, a hard
running line smasher, and half
backs James and Dudley Parker,
Lyle Blackwood and Jimmy Jef
frey. Their occasional line smash
es and end runs kept the Tech de
fense busy trying to stop both
their running and Burk’s passing.
Baylor scored the first time it
held the ball, going 48 yards in
two plays. Mangum went for 12
yards on U pitchout from Burk and
on the next play Janies Parker
took a pitchout and went-around
right end, cut back and behind
great blocking ambled 36 yards for
the first touchdown. Henry Dick
erson, an end, booted the first of
his fouri Successful conversions to
bring his total for the ye.ar to 13
i of 14 attempts.
! Late Sri the first quarter Bay
lor marched 59 yards on nine plays,
climaxed by Burk’s pass fo James
Parker in the end zone.
Tech broke into tl)e scoring; late
in the second qiiarter to cut the
Baylor lead to 14-7 when. Quar
terback Ernest Hawkins passed to
[end Jack Davis fori a touchdown.
the final Rice score. Lee Stone-1 Right tackles— Perry, Vann, Halfback Tim Hutch converted,
street, Rjce tackle, gathered in a I Franklin. j j Neither team could score in the
Benners’! throw and ran to the] Right ends—Blakely, I. D. Rus- third pei’iod, but nearly in (the
SMU 22. The Owls quickly scored j Bel, White, C. Russell. fourth quarter, Baylor opened a
with Rote ramming center from ] Quarterbacks—Walker, Bennerii. ] march from its qwn 30-yard mark-
the! one for the counter.
Lust SMI’ Gasp
Then Southern Methodisjt made
ite last gasp, taking the kick-off
and rolling 66yards for a touch
down scored on a three yard plunge
by Henry Stollenwerck. Sullivan
missed the conversion. Rice i was on
the one-yard line with three downs
to go as the game ended.
4
R. L. McCarty
HoINIi’Sblcnd
~f kU| mill PIPE TOBACCO
JEWELERS
(Across from the Bus^Station)
WUH TOMCCOCO,41 'rMwatM.
I • Mighty Satiaf;
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74 yal
I got 54 on 17 runs and
Jthree passes for 43 y
Fred Ijleners, Southern Methodist
sophomore, produced 91 yards
nine tljirows when he took over
the SMjtj passing with Walker in
jured. |
’SMUj started out like it was go T
ing toibatter Rice to a pulp. The
Methoqiists took the ball on t heir
25 aftiEm recovering a Rice fumble
and fro hi there roared to a touch
down W)th Frank Payne passing to
Kyle B^ote for the score from the
SMU 49-yard line. As soon as
SMU Had the ball again it put on
an 86-|j , ard march that brought an
other iouchdowh. The pay-off was
a 15-yard pass from Walker to
John pMilam. Walker kicked both
extra points.
Ric* got to moving late in the
first period. Van Ballard ran the
kick-off to the SMU 46 and the
passing of Rote carried the Owls’ to
! the score. Rote passed to Janies
Willianis from the SMU. 20 for the
touchdown. Williams missed the ex
tra point—the only one he failed
Notre Dame,
Army Win Over
Tough Teams
New York, Oct. 16 (AP)-i-
Notre Dame, Army and Okia-
homa—rated the nation’s top
three football teams in the
Associated Press poll this
w’eek-eefnented their honors to-[
day by Aiassacring top-fl)ght op-1
ponpnts. |l | - 'll I
Left halgbaeks—K. Rotp, H. N
Russell, Stollenwreck.
Right Halfbacks—Payne, Rich
ards, Knight, Weatherford.
Fullbacks—McKissaek, Slillivan,
Blackburn.
Rice ! 6 0 21 14—41
Southern Moth 14 0 7 6—27
Rice scoring: Touchdowns—Wil-
iliams 2, Lantrip, Roberts, Wol
cott, Rote.
/ Points iafter touchdown—Wil
liams 5 (placements).
Southern Methodist scoring:
Touchdowns—Rote, Milam, Cham
pion, Stollenwerck. Points after
teuchdown— Walker 2 (place
ments), Sullivan (placenfent).
er that <>nded |n the third touch
down. The Bears covered the dis
tance on eight plays with Lurk
passing successfully for three ong
gains and Blackwood romping 12
yards on a pitchout from Burk to
cross the double stripe. Automatic
Dickerson again converted.
The failure to score apparently
took thc^starch out of the Raiders*
and Baylor Inarched 76 yardk on
eight plays for its final counter.
Burk again was the sparkplug,
completing three passes, the i last
of which hit Ison on the two-yard
stripe. Ison dragged a Tech tick
ler over the goal. Dickerson con
verted and the score stood at 28-7.
WJWYWWJWWi
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Count
3647
Six;
will be
tforkoutiv in DeWt
House here this af&rl
iopn, r K .! if • [].
Forward Hill Turnbow of Fei-
team is
outfit
ced four.
Julian
g ol
- er »
temq
AAl
e to||
thhb
ers 4
firsjj
ne.. . : j
the Oklahoman’a'
finlnied the two-mlle
ahead of tjhe rest of
a lime of 9.33.
V ilnq Texas A AM
»s!j tne finish line,
rin, whiin)i' of throe varsity mf
frton*, hi»a(ls the list of roll
lug vhterana
Will of W»
«. Others are John
u« itt’oco, one of the tH'id
sopluMqoro eogers In the league
lost season; Jewel Meilowelt^dfi
Amarillo, Wallaee Moon of]Hay,:
Ark,, ami Marvin Martin of |(tj)uii*i
Coach Marty Kaiow, whoso Ag
(1* hoopiteri open against laiqg;
slund University In Madison
• Dec. 1,
in c
rday
Oklahom
ifirran
the nati
f its rujiners ihead
‘eriring ' <*«( firs| TeXan I to croesi
A; finish!
event wel
JhaJpack i
j ijHerrlngJ (the first
{uimer to brossj the
dldi the. I Wtl milea )n U:
Texas A4M al o had ntnne
come lii siith, «8ghth, nimth
l«akh plaJs, T
IV AA|M Crons Country team's
next tilt ill with Oklahoma Unb
vei;slty's teem hare in Coll
trim heatT iaturilay after
[ the teams will eemiieto iwforo
ha start (i the AAM-llsylor fool*
*! pp
[Uare Garden on
, Ctlng some res t , M1 ,
"height" and groaning depart-
mants from squadmen] and players
just up from the Freshmen team.
Included in this group aiej |, ,
| iBquadmen—Kenneth Sutton, 6
foot 7 inch center or forward-
from Alice; Glenn Williams, 6; foot,'
2 inch junior cojlege transfer Trom:
Amarillo; Carlton Batten of J^ry-:
an; Ben Evans, 6 foot 4 inch for-;
ward from Dallas, and >Sydon
Hrachovy of Ellinger.]
Sophomores (lettered on 1948-49]
Freshmeri team)—Walter (Btxldy):
Davis, 6 foot, 8 inch center from]
Nederland; Eddie Houser of Bigl
Spring, Raymond Walker of Pal-:
estine; Bobby Farmer of Amarillo,;
Ed Sandlin of Moody an^i: Pick'
Bentley of Austin. «
’Mural Cage Play
Keeps Improving
caution-
All athi^tlu officers are. c
i*d to check all ppyers for eligltill-
ntraw&ural playj If there
isjiiany question pn a member, i the 1
, mck WitK the I iv-
tnsmiiral Jpffice jjbefore the sched-
wjill: be
the
The basketball teams; continued to
shape up last week in hard match
es. Better and more tricky ball;
handling are shown |n eacp sue-;
ceeding day of play fok each of]the;
teams. ' ' - r |.' • |
Keen Colley led the fightirig A
Ordnance team to a close 10-8 vic-l
tory over D Infantry. Colley *cor-j
ed eight of the Ordnance points;
while George Du Bose was highman]
for the Infantry.
The Senior Company lost a hard 1
game to C Flight by a score of;
14-15. Outstanding plajier for the;
day was Mike Kingston foi(| thei
C Flight team, j
Raleigh Epps paced a smooth,
C Infantry team to a 20-13 viOtorjf,
over D.i Flight : by scoring lj2 ]o:
the Infantry |K>inte, A Cavalry
in the remaining game of the] day]
took an easy Win over hap
Flight, k
On the tennis courts, f:
(See -MURALS, Page
i effort has been ‘made
ie Ii
Wfi
fleer should
.jiinijral jpffic. __
ulcd mat(ih. No Lxceptlona wjl
mkde oh ;] the field of afte-
game has started. !
Any omj with "a varsity Rt|.ek in
a! sport is ineligible in that s|)^rt
blit only,j in tjiat sport. If a
Ifreshman ](letter p earned, the man
nifty play] againjl but only] after a
lapse of (ine year. ■ \
Beginnjhg M
wi|l be pjpyed
day! four isportsj j
once. In [view of ]
this, athletic of^cers should check
their schedule fpr conflipts. These
cbnflicts I should be tel
orice arid! 1 a re-.*heduR
these, but due ite the number of
sports being, pla
mistakes! have
yed at on
i«n made,
! SCHEDULES! FOR MONDA.
BA.SKETBALL-Militity
Team vs! Teani| Courts Time t (
F AK B ENd - ■ 1 ! 4:30 ‘f 1
E AF
A AF
E AF
A TC
ASA
QMC v _ ,, , ,
B VET G 4 "i J
5
„ ;
PENNIf—Militftgy
Courts
1 J • ' \
Team v* Teai
D INF !A CAIV l,2,3j
p VET B AtH 4,5,6
A COMP A Oil) 7,8,9
A CWS] H T[7 10,11,11
)C VET i B C\ 13,14,1/
H AF i I A T 16^17,18
FOOTBA -L—Military
Team vl
.
Time
ini EllINF , A Ft V1 '5:10',
(8^6; NEWS, Page
1 HIGH STANDING
S IN EVERY STADIUM
EUGENE It
bmorrow
National Insi
J^H, U.T. ’33;
111 • r M* ^ Tk‘, VI
'j; I Above Agg
ii- M
Today , *
irance Co. \
G.W.U., ’42 f
eland Pharmacy
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VFOP LETS Mr PLAY.WITH MATCHES.”'
'U J , 1 ^ i 1 '• './mnoiwi
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HOMER APAMS,
INSURANCE [ LOANS
1 N. Gate
v
estate
Notre Dame, |clei)ated to the
first rung for the first tjime this
season, forced Tulane to secede
fromj its No. 4 spot, 46 to 7. The
game hadj been billed as the week’s
best but JO minutes after its start
the 59,0()0 apectatoi's kn|ew that
it wasn't! By that time halfback
Larry Gourte had scored three
times. ':i ' ‘M
!• m < 1 1* 1 I •
Army, [which had sucltj a hard
time with Harvard a year ago,
expected more of the same today.
But ailing Gil Stephenson 1 rammed
over three touchdowns and the ca
dets won, 54 to 14, with reserves
playing the second half. 1
(See N6TRE DAME, Page 4)
l ' ii
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