The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 13, 1956, Image 5

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    The Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas
Tuesday, November 13, 1956
PAGE 5
Crush Stumbling Ponies, 33-7
Hornets Blast Tigers, 20-0
Caldwell’s speedy Hornets power
ed over CHS’s futile efforts Fri
day night, handing the Tigers their
third consecutive District 23 A A
loss, 20-0.
Led by the bull-like rushes of
fullback Bill Kavanaugh, the Tigers
managed 80 yards on the ground
and would have netted considerably
more had it not been for heavy
losses from repeated fumbles in
the backfield. Consolidated’s over
head attack was good for six com
pletions in 15 attempts for a total
of 33 yards.
The Tigers mounted their best
drive of the night midway in the
third quarter. Moving from their
own 20 deep into Caldwell terri
tory, they racked up five first
downs in the process. The drive
bogged down after reaching Cald
well’s nine-yard line, as the Tigers
again showed a lack of the scoring
Mustangs Never in Game
After Cadets Quick Score
more sportcoat for your money
when the label says it’s
Look at the sport coat — then look twice at the
price tag. It's that kind of value! You see it m
the up-to-the-minute styling — the narrower
lapels, the natural shoulders, the easy, flattering
lines of the cut. You see it in the skillful tailoring by
Berkray, in the Armo canvas interlining that insures
shape retention. And you see it in the fine tweedy
woolens that assure long wear. No wonder you have
to look twice at the price tag.
$19.95 to $24.95
5L
cinae
St
ore
“Serving Texas Aggies”
AND AWAY WE GO—A&M’s fine quarterback, Roddy Os
borne, races 19 yards after faking a punt in the first quar
ter of last Saturday’s 33-7 win over SMU. Osborne led the
game’s rushers with 1 yards in 12 carries.
— Photo by Don Bisett
*9
SDo ‘■
Of course. ’Most everyone does —
often. Because a few moments over
ice-cold Coca-Cola refresh you so.
It’s sparkling with natural goodness,
pure and wholesome — anA
naturally friendly to your figure.
Feel like having a Coke? (
BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY B*
BRYAN COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO.
-Coke" is a registered trade-mark. © 1956, THE; COCA-COLA COMPANY
LI’L ABNER
By A1 Capp
By BARRY HART
Battalion Sports Editor
It took five minutes and 50 sec
onds for the bruising Aggies to
show 62,500 Cotton Bowl viewers
who is the best team in the South
west Conference Saturday after
noon as A&M crushed SMU, 33-7.
Up to that time the Mustangs,
undefeated in conference play, had
entertained visions of grandeur and
a possible victory over the na
tion’s fifth-ranked eleven, but
they were never in the game after
the opening kickoff.
PAUL (BEAR) BRYANT’S
Aggies produced another crushing
ground victory with enough passes,
four for four and one touchdown,
to keep it balanced. The Cadets
ground out 277 yards rushing and
another 59 through the air, while
SMU managed a meager 83 yards
on the ground and 126 in the
sky. Quarterbacks Charley Arnold
and Larry Click tried 32 passes
and completed 12 as the Aggies
stole three.
The Ponies’ biggest mistake
came when they called the flip
wrong and had to kickoff. That
put them immediately six points
behind and they never recovered.
John Tracey returned SMU’s short
kick to the Aggie 30 where the
slaughter began. Despite two
penalties totaling 20 yards, the
Aggies scored in 10 plays.
Loyd Taylor, playing a tre
mendous game on both the offense
and defense, was stopped for no
gain after an offsides penalty.
John Crow, establishing himself as
one of the nation’s finest backs
game after game, swept left end
for 12 and Taylor dove for two.
Roddy Osborne got beautiful block
ing on a fake punt and rode for 19
to the Mustangs 42 on fourth, and
one.
CROW AND JACK PARDEE
got three apiece and Osborne, who
led both teams with 71 yards in
12 trips, kept for the first on the
30. Crow used an old Oklahoma
play, fumbling for nine yards as
John Tracey recovered, but the
Aggies lost 15 for clipping.
Taylor cut through left tackle
for 15 to the 15 where Crow
crashed through right tackle un
touched for the touchdown. Tay
lor’s try for point failed with 9:10
remaining in the opening period.
An exchange of punts gave SMU
the ball on their own 41, but Bobby
Conrad picked Arnold’s pass out
of the ozone on the A&M 45 on
third down and returned it 20 yards
to the Pony 35. Richard Gay made
five up the middle and Conrad kept
on the option for seven and a first
on the 23. Don Watson raced
around left end and seemed sur
prised to find not a Mustang in
sight as he loafed over to make
it .12-0 with 2:48 to go. Taylor
missed, but nobody cared.
The second quarter saw much
action, but no scoring until close
to the intermission. Conrad kicked
to Click who returned to the SMU
31. The jittery Mustangs fumbled
twice, the second covered by Jim
Stanley on the 35. Pardee and
Osborne moved the ball to the 13
in five plays where Crow, on the
same play he had scored on pre
viously, ripped through half a
dozen Ponies into the end zone.
This time Taylor’s kick rode true
and A&M led 19-0 with 1:09 left in
the half.
The biggest crowd this year in
the Cotton Bowl watched the Mus
tangs ci’own their Homecoming
Queen, then sat back to see the
white-clad Aggies continue their
massacre. It took 10 minutes to
score again. Charlie Jackson kicked
out to Watson who returned to the
SMU 44. On the first play from
scrimmage fullback George Gillar
broke through the middle, cut in
side, then outside and raced un
touched down the sideline for the
touchdown with 4:25 left in the
quarter. Conrad converted to make
it 26-0.
MIDWAY IN THE FOURTH,
Gene (Bebes) Stallings gathered in
Arnold’s errant aerial and return
ed it 34 yards to the SMU 28.
Jimmy Wright lost nine trying to
pass, Watson hit guard for a pair,
and two Wright passes to Watson
and Carlos Esquival for the first
on the eight. Wright flipped a true
strike to Don Smith who took it
away from two Pony defenders for
the final Aggie score and Wright
kicked good.
SMU moved 71 yards against the
Aggie third team with Jackson
driving over from the five for
the score wdth 1:17 remaining.
I NEED THESE USED BOOKS
History 106
Physics 203, 204
M.E. 212
Descriptive Geometry 106
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