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The Austin American from Austin, Texas • 17

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Austin, Texas
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17
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(r Loin Throucilhi Airkatni oy Qinip ay Drove Walker Leads MU 14 to Texas Controls Ball Throughout Game of Offense Rice Triump ir- Owl Passing Game Falters in Pinches Layne Completes 4 Of 5 Passes Despite Weather Handicap (Continued from Page 1.) Cherry had the boys ready for it In light rainproof pants. Layne made the most or tne nrmer rooting near the two sidelines, hugging the left side of the field from start to finish and sending his backs to that side instead of the treachous middle zone. What made that strategy even smarter was the fact that Arkansas Ammr an Austin, Texas, October A By JIMMY BANKS American-Statesman Sports Staff DALLAS, Oct. 18. Superman -or Walker, who sparked a brilliant crew of SMU Mustangs to a convincinc 14-0 victory over the highly-heralded Rice Owls here Saturday afternoon in Ownby Stadium before 23,000 slightly-jstunned fans.

9' defensive line consistently over 1 Superman propels his body CU Runs Over necessary, but the 175-pound Walker does just as much good for football purposes by chunking the pigskin to one of his red-shirted v' km tattamatt 19, 1947 Page 17 26 to LINDY BERRY Scored two touchdowns as TCU upset the Aggies. Leon Joslin to Jackson. Johnny Sherrod almost gave the Frogs another touchdown in the waning minutes of the game. He romped 35 yards on one play, but the Frogs drive was stopped for a few seconds until it started up again and they were on the ten-yard line when the game ended. Howell, LE; Tullis, LT; Stautzenberger, LG; Gary, Overly, RG; Winkler, RT; Higgins, RE; Burditt, QB; Welch, LH; Goode, RH; Smith, FB.

Texas Christian Moorman, LE; Pitcock, LT; Bloxom. LG; Malone, Hicks, RG; Marable, RT; Gaddy. RE; Berry. QB; Browning, LH; Rogers, RH; Hunt, FB. Texas 0 0 0 0-0 Texas Christian .0 7 13 628 Texas Christian scoring: touchdowns.

Berry 2. Jackson (for Rogers), Bloxom. Points after touch-, down: Pitcock 2 (placements). Substitutions: Texas Prokop, Whittaker; Tackles, Hook, Routt, Settegast, Sacra; Guards, Bennett, Geriner Dupree, Turley; Centers, Ellis, Guly; Backs, Dew, Greene, Goff, Anderson. Holl-mig, Daniel, Kadera, Hallmark.

Baty. Texas Christian Ends, Bailey, Rogers, Alford, Bonl; Tackles. Edwards, Brown, Cook. Kilman. Henderson; Guards.

Caffey, Ixwc. Edwards, Pike; Centers. BrightweH, Lincoln. Eubank; Back. Joslirv Knox, Sherrod.

Bishop, Bloxom, Montgomery, Stout, Vaini, Jack? eon. Cotton Bowl Limits Ducats, 4 to a Person DALLAS. Oct. 18 (UP) A limit of four tickets per application was set on Cotton Bowl game tickets Saturday by the Cotton Bowl Athletic Association, which also revealed that all tickets in the 45,500 capacity stadium would be the same price this season. James H.

Stewart, executive director of the association, said that applications will be accepted by mail only and that all applications received between Nov. 1 and Nov. 4, inclusive, would have an equal chance in a drawing for the approximately 20.000 tickets available for public sale. All seats will be $4.40, with the exception of 1.500 box seats, which will be sold at In previous years, end zone seats have been sold for $3, with sideline tickets at $4.80. Ticket applications must be accompanied by checks, and include a 25 cent mailing' fee, Stewart said.

Penn State Crushes Syracuse, 40 to 0 STATE COLLEGE, Oct 18 (INS) Penn State's gridiron juggernaut finally got rolling Saturday and crushed Syracure 40 to 0 before 20.000 homeground rooters. Penn State was blanked in the opening quarter and held to a 13-0 margin at halftime, but picked up speed in the second half. Southwest Conference Standings or ver has very little on this guy Doak through the comic strip air when mates. Walker accounted for 53 yards in the 80-yard drive for SMU's first touchdown here Saturday, said drive starting on the Mustang 20 when Rice's opening kickoff sailed over the goal line for an automatic touchback. It took Coach Matty Bell's galloping Mustangs 16 plays to get to pay dirt with Walker gaining 33 yards running and 18 more on a pair of passes, one for 13 yards and one for five both to end Sid Halliday.

Walker finally plunged over for the tally from the one-yard line, and booted the extra point. Backs Dick McKissack and Paul Page helped materially in this early drive, which knocked a gaping hole in the bottom of the dope bucket. The game had been widely, advertised as a tossup affair, with Rice slightly favored by the few folks who dared pick the winner. SMU's victory left the Mustangs as the No. 1 challenger for Texas' mighty Longhorns, who entertain this same Rice team in Austin next Saturday.

Owls Not in Game Rice's defending co-champions were really never in the ball game at all Saturday. The Muetangs' first touchdown took the wind out of the Owls' sails, then Coach Jers Neely deflated 'em some more by benching his first team early in the fourth quarter. The Rice regulars seemed slightly more than somewhat steamed up when they returned to the game in the fading minutes to stage a pair of touchdown threats on the passing of Tobin Rote, but Walker clipped both of those drives short aeiidis uwn 1 1 i lld ZOI1C SMU's forward wall played brilliant defensive ball with Halliday, end Dick Reinking and tackle Joe Etheridge leading the way. Rice gained most of its 152 yards rushing against Mustang reserves while Walker and company tore up the Rice regulars for most of their 263 yards rushing. Walker only ran with the ball 12 times, picking up 87 vital yards on the ground.

He completed four passes out of five attempts, for 33 yards and played a sparkling defensive game. Tony Subs Drive Walker. McKissack and Page softened up the Rice line so much that a mixture of SMU second and third stringers were able to drive 77 yards before the Owls finally held them for downs three yards away from a third Mustang touchdown. That drive started late in the third period, and immediately preceded Rice'e desperate aerial efforts in the closing minutes. The Mustangs had doubled their seven-point lead in the middle of the second quarter, going 36 yards in two plays after guard Walter Roberds recovered a fumble by Rice'e George Walmsley on the Owls 36.

Back Gilbert Johnson tossed two passes, the first to end Raleigh Blakely for nine yards. Blakely was downed on the Rice 27, then Johnson toseed one to Reinking, who made a beautiful catch in the end zone for the second touchdown. It was Walmsley who went up with Reinking for the ball, which found a home in the latter's red-jersied arms. Walker then calmly booted the second extra point and that was the ball game, as dar as the scoring goes. Owls Bewildered The Owls seemed more bewildered than the fans.

For the most part, they're the same bunch of lads who defeated Texas, 18-13, last season to share the Southwest i (Continued on Page 18, Col. 3) I VPI Penn 34, Western Michigan 14, Iowa State Teachers 0. Hanover 14, Manchester 6. Marietta 20. Kenyon 6.

Omaha University 39, Sioux Falls (S. 0. Georgetown 12, Tulsa 0. Emporia State 7. Southwestern 7, Iowa Wesleyan 26.

William Penn 2. Cornell 19. Coe 6. Hillsdale 26, Albion 0. John Carroll 28, Baldwin-Wallace 19.

Bowling Green 2, Ohio University 0. Ohio Wesleyan 7, Case 0. Akron University 19, Mount Union 14. Wichita University 7, Abilene Christian 0. North Dakota 25, North Dakota State 20.

Lawrence 27, Grinnell 0. Augustana 12, Knox 7. Carthage 12, James Millikin 6. Indiana State Teachers 26, Illinois Wesleyan 13. Butler 14.

Wabash 0. Valparaiso 55, Great Lakes 0. Franklin 7, Earlhar.i 0. Mission House 20, Concordia (111.) 0. Todelo 14.

Dayton 13. Kansas 13, Oklahoma 13. Ohio Northern 7, Wittenberg 0. Wheaton 38. Elmhurst 0.

North Central 13, Lake Forest 6. Georgia 20, Oklahoma 7. Bears Trample Tech Raiders Baylor Outclasses Lubbock Team, 32-6 GAME AT A GLANCE Baylor Tech 16 First Downs 6 323 Net Yds. Gained 16 11 Passes Attempted 16 5 Passes Completed 6 54.... Yards Forward Passing; ....137 2 Forwards Intercepted by 1 42...

Yds. Gained run-back 10 37 Punting A vera Be 37 86.... Total Yds. Kicks 77 1. Fumbles Recov 2 40 Yds.

Lost Penalties 25 LUBBOCK, Oct. 18. (P) The Baylor Bears ran wild at the expense of the Texas Tech Red Raiders here Saturday to win 32-6 and remain undefeated and untied. Fullback Ben Hall scored the first touchdown in the opening period with an 18-yard jaunt around right end. Louis Leal booted the extra point.

A 15-yard roughing penalty against Tech set up the second Baylor score. Baylor got possession of the ball on the Tech 12 and two plays later Jack Price passed to G. M. Nevill in the end zone. The try for point was blocked.

Tech Scores Tech's came with the speed of lightning. On the second try after the kick-off, Freddy Brown passed to Halfback Zee Henderson on a play that covered 74 yards and carried to the Baylor four. Earl Jackson smashed left tackle for a touchdown. Ralph Earhart missed the conversion-. Seconds before the half ended, Baylor drove from its 35 to a touchdown in nine plays, Jerry Mangrum going over for the counter from the -Tech three.

Leal's try for extra point was blocked. Baylor got another touchdown in the third period after Guard Charlie Stone recovered Ernest Hawkins' fumble on the Tech 42. Hale Johnston made five and then raced off tackle the remaining distance for the score. Henry Dicker-son converted. Last Tally The final Baylor score came in the last ten seconds of play and capped a 43-yard drive.

George Sims threw a 13-yard running pass to J. D. (Ison in the end zone. Dickerson missed the extra point. Baylor had a tremendous edge in the statistics, rolling up 314 yards rushing to Tech's 16 and making 16 first downs to Tech's six.

The Red Raiders held the edge in passing, however, completing six for 137 yards while Bay- lor connected on five for 54. GEORGE WALMSLEY Rice scat back wi carry the mail against Longhorns in crucial game in Memorial Sta dium Saturday, when Owls make bid for championship, Steers Anxious For Rice Game Revenge for Past Upsets Spurs Texas For more reasons than one and only one is necessary the Texas Longhorns anxiously await their meeting here next Saturday afternoon with the Rice Owls. Just a year ago, the Owls destroyed Texas' dreams with a well-managed 13-18 victory that cut off a brilliant undefeated record and turned aside Longhorn hopes for a. 1946 Southwest Conference cham pionship. Some 47,000 fans will be.

on hand to see what happens in Memorial Stadium come 2:30 p. m. Saturday. The game has been a sell-out for weeks and should produce the year's biggest football assemblage in the Southwest. Other Reasons Besides that 18-13 matter, there are other reasons, namely, 7-6 in 1945, 7-0 in 1944, and the fact that a lot of Longhornsr among them Bobby Layne, have still to win from a Rice Team.

By the same 1 token, a number of the Owls have never been beaten by a Texas squad. Aside from championship con siderations, there are sufficient points of interest to make it one of the most colorful games of the year in this section. But its im portance in the Southwest Con ference scramble likely will be a story in itself. Tarty On the basis of performances to date, it will be a match of two potent formation offenses, alike in some respects but basically different. Jess Neely's style employs power, while the Texas of Blair Cherry functions around Bobby Layne's magnificent passing and a fleet set of backs.

Last year, the Rice power game won for the Owls' possession of the ball for a full 48 minutes of the game. Despite this, Layne's passes had the Longhorns in the ball game till the last play and a long dis tance aerial in the final minute came within inches of being successful. Over a period of 33 years, Texas has won 20 times, Rice has taken 13, and there have been no ties. The complete series record: '14 Texas 41, Rice 0 '30 Texas 0, Rice 6 '31 Texas 0, Rice 7 '15 Texas 69, Rice 0 16 Texas 16. Rice 2 '17 Texas 0, Rice 13 '32 Texas 18, Rice 6 '33 Texas 18, Rice 0 '34 Texas 9, Rice 20 '35 Texas 19, Rice 28 '36 Texas 0, Rice 7 '37 Texas 7, Rice 14 38 Texas 6, Rice 13 '39 Texas, 26, Rice 12 '40 Texas 0.

Rice 13 '41 Texas 40, Rice 0 '42 Texas 12. Rice 7 '43 Texas 58, Rice 0 "44 Texas 0, Rice 7 '45 Texas 6, Rice 7 '46 Texas 13, Rice 18 18 Texas 14, Rice 0 '19 Texas 32, Rice 7 '20 Texas 21, Rice 0 21 Texas 56, Rice 0 '22 Texas 29, Rice 0 23 Texas 27, Rice 0 '24 Texas 6, Rice 19 25 Texas 27, Rice 6 '26 Texas 20. Rice 0 27 Texas 27, Rica 0 28 Texas 13, Rice 6 29 Texas 39. Rice 0 Ohio State Rallies To Tie Iowa, 13-13 COLUMBUS, Oct. 18.

(INS) Ohio State, whipped to a frazzle for more than three periods, exploded with two long touchdown drives in the last eight minutes of play to salvage a 13-to-13 tie with Iowa Saturday. The Bucks came from behind on thouchdown drives of 80 and 72 yards with Bob Brugge, injured half back who was making his first appearance of he season, sparking the assault. SCORES: Notre Southwest Texas Christian 26, Texas 0. Southern Methodist 14, Rice 0. Texas 21, Arkansas 6.

Baylor 32, Texas Tech 6. Abilene Christian 0, Wichita 7. East Texas State 33, of Houston 7. Trinity 27, Sam Houston 0. McMurry 14 Texas 14 (tie) North Texas State 13, Stephen F.

Austin 7. Brownsville Junior College 18, Corpus Christi Junior College 7. Austin College 14, Howard Payne 13. Lamar JC 27. Paris JC 14.

Arizona 14, Texas Mines 13. East Amherst 13, Colby 7. Army 40, Virginia Tech 0. Navy 38, Cornell 19. Purdue 62, Boston University 7.

Dartmouth 13, Brown 10. Princeton 20, Colgate 7. Pennsylvania 34, Columbia 14. Maine 13, Connecticut 7. Harvard 7, Holy Cross 0.

West Virginia 40, New York University 0. Rochester 14. Tufts 0. Western Maryland 41, Washington College 0. Wisconsin 9, Yale 0.

Wesleyan 40, Swartmore 7.1 New Hampshire 21, Springfield 17. ii fa. i CANADY His JIM drivi slashing a ripped Porker line, Here Is How Texas Crushed Porkers, 27-6 MEMPHIS. Oct. 18.

(Spl) Frowning blue-gray clouds and a light drizzle greeted the Long horns as they followed red-shirted Arkansas into Crump Stadium. The field, worn almost bald down the middle. W2s in pretty sad-looking shape to start with. Most of the Texas players wore "rain pants" of a dark slicker-like material. They had on white jer seys.

Co-Captain Ray Jones called the coin flip and chose to kick off. The stands were well filled with a rain coated crowd of around 28,000 as the teams lined up. Firt Quarter TEXAS: Harris kicked off to Scott on the five-yard line and he re turned to the Arkansas 27. ARKANSAS: Magliolo was in on a couple of line plays that gained only two yards for Arkansas and Cox kicked to Pyle. He made a short return to the Texas 32.

TEXAS: Jones got five yards in two midline tries. Thomas and Mi nor stopped Gillory on third down and Guess punted out on the Ar kansas 35. ARKANSAS: Scott came wide at right end for five, but Magliolo and Kelley stopped the next two plays and Cox got off a fine kick that rolled out on the Texas 15. TEXAS: Gillory swept right end for six but a five yard penalty set the Longhorns back. Guess kicked short and out on the Texas 47.

ARKANSAS: Scott broke over his own right tackle, slid away from the Texas linebackers and bursting into the clear, went 47 yards for a touchdown. Holland's kick for extra point wTas wide. Arkansas 6, Texas 0 ARKANSAS: Reichert kicked to Pyle on the six and he returned to the Texas 27. About six minutes were left in the first quarter." TEXAS: After Canady got four yards in two plays, Arkansas" Jim Minor drew a 15-yard penalty for roughing Layne. Texas had the ball on its 47.

two line plays and Layne's quick pass to Bumgardner got the firstdown on Ar kansas 35. As Gillory faked into the middle, Layne haded off to Canady going wide at left end. He went to the 15-yard line where he was chased out of bounds. Clay got only three yards in two blasts and Layne intentially passed out of the end zone when he could find no receiver. On fourth down Roberts solved Texas favored delayed buck and threw Clay on the 13-yard stripe.

ARKANSAS: Scott got five cut ting back over left tackle. Holder and Jones played him nicely com ing back on the other way and he gained nothing. Second Quarter ARKANSAS: Cox booted to Gil lory on the Texas 45 and he re turned to the Arkansas 25 a 30- yard return on which he nearly got away down the side line. TEXAS: Clay went over right tacule for eight, on the same play dashed 14 more, to the Arkansas 3. In two surges over the middle Clay scored.

With Raven holding Guess kicked the extra point. -Texas 7, Arkansas 6 TEXAS: Play was two minutes deep into the second quarter and rain was coming down hard now. Tatom and Fry covered the wickoff fast and threw Troxell on the Arkansas 16. ARKANSAS: Holland got five and then quick-kicked to the Texas 43- TEXAS: The Longhorns drew a motion penalty. Through a nice hole at left tackle, Jones went driv- (Continued on Page 18, Col.

2) 1 RANDALL CLAY Line ramming helped Texas down shifted to the long side of the field. Thus the Longhorns were driving all afternoon Into the weaker, side of the defense. The best Arkansas stand came late in the first quarter when Texas bogged down on the enemy 13. In the late stages Arkansas adjusted to meet the Texas attack, but Texas kept running there just the same. Thorn as Stands Out Billy Thomas, Arkansas center, did a good line backing job or Texas would have romped for many long gains.

The Longhorns specialized in short spurts of two, five or six yards. Gillory broke away once for 23 yards, the longest Texas gain, and Bubba Shands powered for 17. A stadium full of people, officially termed a crowd of 28,000, braved the elements. Most of them huddled in slickers and rain hats as showers fell through the second and third quarters. Less fortunate was a bevy of beauties sitting in front of the Arkansas band Miss America, Miss Arkansas and Miss Texas (Lynn Mc-Clain of Lufkin) and their courts, who sat through the game in once-gay formal dresses.

Governors Beau-ford Jester of Texas and Ben Laney of Arkansas had the pleasure of presenting chrysanthemums bunches to their states' respective Queens in a half-time ceremony. Gov. Jester stopped here en route to Ashe-ville, N. for a Southern Governors' meeting. With their first conference game safely stowed away, and their ninth straight win over 1946 co-champion Arkansas in the record books, the Longhorns headed Saturday night for Austin and a date with Rice.

Arkansas Texas first down 18 71 yards 307 net yard passing- ..88 K. attempted. .6 4., forward completed 4, 0. forward intercepted 1 89.39 average 686.6 fumbles 3 lost on .0 number of penalties 8 30 yard 61 Lineups: Texas Bumirardner, le; Harris, It; Magliolo. Ik Williams, Wolfe, rg Kelley.

rt McCall. re Layne, qb Gillory, lb Ca-nady, rh Jones, fb. Arkansas McGaha, le; Lively, It; Roberts. Ik; Thomas, Franklin, rR Minor, rt Canada, re Duke, qb Scott, lh Pipkin, rh Reichert, b. Texas 0 14 0 721 Arkansas 6 0 0 0 6 Texas scoring; touchdowns.

Clay (for Canady). Jones points (for Canady) Jones points after touchdown, Guess (for Gillory) 3 (placement). Arkansas scoring: touchdown, Scott. Texas substitution: Kin it. Watson, Holder, Black: tackle, Petrovich.

Fry; guard, Vasicek, Magliolo, Halfpenny, Heap back. Clay, Guess. Landry, Shands, Raven, Campbell, Allen. Arkansas substitutions: end, J. Cox, Daugherty: tickle, Richards, Lunnery, Atkinson, Halstead, Thornton, Whittaker; guard, Lambright.

Jackson, Counce, White, Franklin; center, Crafton Pritch-ard, Holland, Henson, Troxwell, Looney, Bass, Duke, Hughes, Cox, Long. North Texas Raps S. F. Austin, 13-7 DENTON. Oct.

18 (UP) The defending champion North Texas State Eagles scored a 13-7 victory over Stephen F. Austin College in their Lone Star confer ence football opener Saturday. All the scoring in a surprisingly close game was packed into the first two periods. North Texas scored first when Bill Cromer broke loose from scrimmage for 70 yards and a first quarter score. Billy Dinkle converted.

The Austin eleven tied it up in the second period on a blocked punt. Guard Baker Denman slapped down Richard Nutt's punt, gathered in the loose ball and scrambled 37 yards for a touchdown. Bobby Lee Smith made the extra point Cromer put the Eagles ahead to stay minutes later when he laid a pass in Joe Abbey's arms, good for 45 yards and the final six points of the game. East Texas Stops Houston 33-7 HOUSTON, Oct. 18.

(INS) The East Texas Lions defeated the University of Houston Cougars 33 to 7 in Houston Saturday in a Lone Star conference football game. The Lions completely dominated the first half, and resisted Houston attacks in the second successfully. Jim (Cargo) Batchelor, East Texas' great back, was the chief difference between the two teams. He scored once, passed for another touchdown, and accounted for much of the yardage on drives for the others. East Texas tallied three times in the first period and twice in the second.

A 94-yard march gave Houston its lone tally. TRIPLICATE WINS ALBANY. Oct. 18. (An Fred Astaire'a Triplicate, with Jockey Longden up, won the Golden Gate Handicap Satur day.

Hymeabond was second and Autocrat third. Aggies, GAME AT A GLANCE TCU A4M 9...,..,... First Downs 6 134 Net Yards Rushing 3 50 Net Yards Passing 96 11...... Forwards Attempted 33 6 Forwards Completed 12 4 Forwards Intercepted by 0 11 for 34 Punta Ave. IS for SO 0 Ball Lost on Fumbles 4 Fumbles 0 35.

Yards Penalised 15 By WILBUR MARTIN FORT WORTH, Oct. 18 (JP) With Lindy Berry in the starring role, the Texas Christian Horned Frogs upset the Texas Aggies, 26-0, here Saturday. Thirty thousand fans jammed TCU's stadium for the 50th anni versary of the two schools' grid rivalry and saw the Horned Frogs break a listless defense duel by scoring once in the second period, twice in the third and again in the final quarter. Berry chalked up the first of his two touchdowns, skipping around right end for six yards to finish a drive that had started on the Aggies' own 29-yard line. The underdog Horned Frogs scratching paydirt for the first time in conference competition this year held the big Aggie team well in check, keeping it bottled in its own territory most of the game.

The Christians threw a monkey wrench into the passing attack, one minute and 58 seconds after the third quarter opened. Shankle Bloxom, big TCU guard, grabbed Stanley Hollmig's long toes and lumbered 44 yards for the second touchdown. Five minutes later TCU scored again, Berry pitching a 23-yard touchdown pass to Charlie Berry, climaxing a terrific defense day for the Horned Frogs, finished the. scoring with the longest run of the game a 60-yard runback. of one of Buryl Baty's desperate fourth quarter passes.

Wayne Pitcock kicked the extra point after the Frogs' first and third touchdowns. Texas offensive display was sadly lacking. A quick kick in the first period put TCU on its own one-yard. That was as close to the goal as the Aggies came, gained only three yards on the ground and 96 in the air out of 33 attempted passes. Pete Stout had helped set the stage for the Frogs' touchdown along with a nine-yard pass from Schuelke Is In Critical Shape Leroy Schuelke, Lockhart football player who was seriously injured Friday night in the third quarter of the Lockhart-San Marcos game at San Marcos, was reported by the attending physician at Lock" hart Hospital late Saturday as "doing as well as possible" in view of the very serious internal injuries he suffered.

Schuelke, an outstanding defensive end for the last three years at Lockhart High School, was injured early in the third quarter of the San Marcos game but played out the rest of the game with none of his teammates knowing he had been Only in the dressing room after the champion Lions had chalked up a 26-6 win in their first Dis- trict 35A test did Schuelke reveal that he had been injured. Columbia 14 Missouri 47, Kansas State 7. Wilberforce 101, Wright Field 0. Missouri School of Mines 14, Central Missouri Teachers 7. Washington University 40.

Aa-kansas State 14. Far West UCLA 39. Stanford 6. Montana State 13, Montana 12. Oregon 6, Washington 0.

California 21, Washington State 6. Southern California 48,. Oregon State 6. Colorado 9, Brigham Young 7. Idaho 20, Portland 14.

Wyoming 33. Utah State 19. Colorado 28, Colorado College 7. Wyoming 33, Utah State 19. Utah 13, Denver 7.

Alameda Naval Air Station 55, Whidbey Island (Wash.) Naval Air Station 0. Idaho Slate 19. Western State 9. HIGH SCHOOL District 4AA El Paso Bowie 28, Phoenix, Ariz. 7 District 7AA Fort Worth Taschal 39 Fort Worth Tech 0.

District 8AA Dallas Woodrow Wilson 13, Dallas Crozier Tech 13. District 13AA Houston Milby 13, Houston Jeff Davis 26. (Denotes conference games). Texas Freshmen To Meet Owlets Shorthorns Polish Running, Defense The University of Texas' fresh- 1 1 i ii. ni.

..4 1 fnnihall Ihp Shorthorns. iWi Innitmichel will be polishing-up their running attack and stressing more rugged-ness on defense this week preparatory to their game with the Rice Owlets here Friday. Oct. 24, at Memorial Stadium. The Owlets have one game under their belt, a 19-7 licking from the SMU Colts.

Both teams run off the formation. Lewis (Bud) McFadin, the six-foot, four-inch. 240-pound lad from Iraan, has switched from fullback to tackle on his own accord. After cinching a starting fullback role at the first of the season, the burly youngster switched to tackle in order to strengthen the middle of the Shorthorn line. Coach Buddy Jungmichel said, "McFadin did a fine thing for both the team and himself.

With his speed and weight we will have a much smother offensive line than at the first of the season. He's got the makings of a great tackle." After three weeks of gruelling workouts, much of which being used in working against the varsity, Coach Jungmichel has set a tentative starting lineup. At the end positions will be George Gentry and Mike Struber. At tackles will be Gene Vykukal and Bud McFadin with R. A.

Moon, Pat Evitt and Brad Armintor substituting. Guards will be Herman Foster and Kenneth Jackson with Barth Pendleton coming in for Foster on defense. Alvin'Meyers will hold down the center position. Milton Price seems to have the fullback position sewed up. Halfbacks will be either Don Cunningham, Sam Rhoades.

Arlyn Stro-man or Bobby Baurnan. Coach Jungmichel commented on the striking improvement of two young halfbacks, Wes Pokluda and Lewis Levine. "If those boys keep coming along at the pace they are going, they will be giving the starters plenty of trouble." Bill Allen, promising passer from Waxahachie, will probably start at the quarterback position. Game time is 2:30 p. m.

South Carolina State College 28, daflin University 0. Quantico Marines 57, Camp Lee 0. Cherry Point Marines 13, Pensa-cola Naval Air Station 6. Fort Valley State College 21. Edwards Warters College 0.

Western (Ky.) 15. Bradley University 13. Mid-West Georgia 20, Oklahoma 7. Iowa 13 Ohio State 13 (tie). Michigan State 20, Iowa State 0.

Kent State 13, Kalamazoo 28, Wooster 0. Miami (Ohio) 6 Xavier 6 (tie). Oberlin 20, Hamilton (Clinton, N. 7. Ashland 42, Bluffton 6.

Bates 12, Northwestern 0. Bowdoin 14, Williams 0. Brooklyn 39, Wagner 14. Rhode Island State 20, Massachusetts 13. Vermont 33, Norwich 0.

Penn State 40, Syracuse 0. Lafayette 27, Bucknell 7. West Virginia Wesleyan 27, Carnegie Tech 6. Clarkson 27, St. Lawrence 12.

Notre Dame 31, Nebraska 0. Illinois 40, Minnesota 13. Indiana 41, Pittsburgh 6. Michigan 49, Northwestern 21. San Francisco 34, Marquette 13.

Carleton 26, Depauw 0. I Dame 31, Nebraska Army 40, Rutgers 36. Fordham 6. Trinity 25, Hobart 7. Niagara 27, Waynesburg 7.

Mississippi State 34, Duquesne 0. Delaware State 11, Johnson C. Smith 7. Florida AM 6, Morris Brown of Atlanta 0. Western (Ky.) 15, Bradley 13.

Ithaca College 20, Campson 0. Glenville 14, Concord 13. Arnold 20, Lowell Textile 6. Grove City 25, Hiram (Ohio 0. Allegheny 14, Westminster (Pa.) 7.

Lehigh 9, Gettysburg 7. Slippery Rock State Teachers 7, Shippensburg (Pa.) State Teachers 0. Haverford 33, Drexel 6. Johns Hopkins 19, Penn Military College 6. Dickinson 33, Susquehanna 27.

South Georgia Tech 27, Auburn 7. North Carolina 13, William and Mary 7. Duke 19, Maryland 7. Alabama 10, Tennessee 0. Richmond 21.

V. M. I. 20. Virginia 32, Washington and Lee 7 Mississippi 27, Tulane 14.

Kentucky 14, Vanderbilt 0. Davidson 49, Hampden Sydney 9. Randolph-Macon University 0. 35, Catholic Ttmtn rpt n. Opu.

Tftxa ,..1 A 0 1 lion it SMU 1 0 0 l.ooo 14 9 Kay lor ..1 0 l.OftO 17 TCU I 1 0 .500 28 Rice 0 i 0 .000 0 14 AAM 0 1 0 .000 0 2 Arkansas 0 2 0 .000 IS S3 1.

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