The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 02, 1956, Image 5

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    The Battalion .... College Station (Brazos County)', Texas
Friday, November 2, 1956
PAGE 5
Battles
gs Krueger Placed
On All-American List
By BOB HOOBING
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Stanford tackle Paul Wiggin and Pittsburgh end Joe
Walton are examples of the fine crop of All-America line
candidates emerging from the penalty-ridden Pacific Coast
and maligned East in the current football season.
In between the continental extremes, the always-pro-
ductive areas boast such outstanding performers as Jim
Parker, Ohio State guard, Kentucky tackle Lou Michaels and
Jerry Tubbs, the Oklahoma center.
But one of the surprising features of the grid campaign
just entering the November home stretch has been the wealth
of line talent which has risen in the wake of the conference’s
Hclampdown on the Pacific Coast.
ti|P| The same is true in the East
■where the reputation of the
college game has suffered in
■recent years.
t John Witte of Oregon State,
Dick Day of Washington and John
Nisby of the non-conference Col-
illcge of the Pacific rate just half
|a step behind Wiggin according to
the regional Associated Press All-
America board in the Far West:
From the hard-hit Bruins of
ICLA come guard Esker Harris
land center Jim Matheny whose
brilliant work anchors a forward
wall dotted with new, inexperi
enced faces.
The Southwest offers Baylor
guard Bill Glass and tackles Nor
man Hamilton of Texas Christian
and Charles Krueger of the Texas
Aggies. All are standouts. So is
tackle Dalva Allen from Houston
of the Missouri Valley Conference.
Other top linemen include:
Ends — Jerry Leahy, Colorado
and Bill Floyd, New Mexico A&M.
Guards—Jim Martin, Missouri; Ed
Brown, Arizona; Wayne Coble, Ok- !
lahoma A&M; Jim Herlocker,
Wichita; Lloyd Day, Tulsa.
Aggies Put Conference Lead
Up for Grabs on Kyle Field
By BARRY HART
Battalion Sports Editor
a 14-7 win after Watson’s 87-yard most powerful running backfield
punt return was called back for in the conference. Jack Pardee,
A&M puts its undefeated, once- cli PP in &- Osborne and John Crow
tied record on the line tomorrow Arkansas shows the lightest for- have picked up 929 yards among
night at 8 p m on Kyle Field war d wall in the league, but their them and rank fourth, sixth and
against the Arkansas team that de P th more than offsets the lack eighth in the ground gaining de-
knocked Coach Paul (Bear) Bry- of weight. The Hog second team partment.
ant’s Aggies out of a Southwest Punched over the first touchdown Nesbitt and Christian own 704
Conference title share in 1955. ]n their 14-0 victory over Missis- yards between them with Nesbitt’s
Only A&M’s Don Watson has s ’PPi last Saturday and moved the 437 leading the league. Christian
seen an Ag'gie vun over the double pigskin to the one-yard line on the has added 147 yaids thiough the
tough Razorbacks, and that was in way to the second. air to stand seventh in total of-
1952 when Watson was a freshman. “We haven’t done much this lense.
This will be the third time in as week,” commented Coach Bryant.
Hog Cross Country Team
In Dual Meet With Aggies
STARTING LINKUPS
many trips to Kyle Field that the
Hogs are under the reins of a dif
ferent coach. In ’52 Otis Douglas
brought his team to a 31-12 shel
lacking at the hands of the Aggies.
In 1954 Bowden Wyatt’s confer
ence champions slid out alive with
“I don’t know whether we’re ready
to play or not. And I’ll tell you
if we don’t get ready we’ll get
whipped.”
A&M counters the Razor-
backs’ one-two punch of Gerald
Nesbitt and Don Christian with the
A&M
ARKANSAS
388
Marks . .
. . LE .
.... Burns
185
216
Krueger .
. . LT .
.... Smith
202
189
Powell . .
. . LG
.... Martin
179
191
Hale . . .
. . C .
. . Donathan
386
193
Goehring .
. . RG .
.... Perry
183
198
Kockett . .
. . RT .
. . . Bequette
218
202
Tracey . .
. . RE .
. . . Souter
3 70
174
Osborne .
. QB .
. . Christian
165
200
Crow . .
. LHB .
. . . Overbey
146
365
Taylor . . .
. RHB .
. Underwood
185
198
Pardee . .
. . FB .
. . Nesbitt
187
Arkansas’ thinly-clad aggrega
tion invades Aggieland tomorrow
afternoon sporting an undefeated
cross country record with every
thing to gain from another win.
If the Porkers can take the
lightly-regarded Aggie distance
men in Saturday’s meet, chances
are they will be in for a showdown
later with the Texas cross-country
team during the final SWC title
contest.
“We don’t have a chance of win
ning Saturday,” declared Coach
Ray Putnam, “We are merely play
ing out our schedule for the year
and have a good chance to fin
ish in last place.”
“I’d say Arkansas is probably
the number two cross-country
team in the Conference,” assert
ed the Aggie mentor, “and they’ll
have some mighty good boys down
here tomorrow.”
A Razorback press release con
cerned primarily with Saturday’s
gridiron activity stated briefly,
“Arkansas’ primary chances for
success against Texas A&M this
weekend appear to be in cross
country.”
Running for A&M are: Ed
Blake; Jack Heald; Robert Mc-
Knight; Eddie Bussa; Ronald
Kirkpatrick; Bass Redd; and John
nie Roberts.
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OPTOMETRISTS
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JN5T the Constitutional Amendment empowering the Legislature to revise theexis
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end universities supportea^fafHft^jJartly by the State, authorizin^^jf0f^^^otate s contributions
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Tfoney accruing to the retirement fund*
TRI-CAPTAIN LLOYD
HALE — A&M’s starting
center for the third consec
utive year finds himself on
top of the race for the honor
post in the SWC despite his
comparatively light 191
pounds.
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