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W Southom Moth o4it tdffd down troddtn T«xurA and M 90*14 Saturday by the trace of tht football (odt end Doah Walker.Tht flfhtlnf Agfltf, playing 'their htat game of the teaaon and .outpasflna the celabratad Met ho-dint alriaT clrcut, had a crowd of 53,000 roaring M they held BMU Jon thf* de fen a I ip moit of the finalf«erlod and continually knocked at ouchdown door.It waa All-America Walker who waved the day for a Methodist team that was favored by four touchdown* over an Aggie outfit that had lost ten straight game#.With the icore tied 1ft the third period, Walker personally conducted the Mustang* 95 flMhtng yards to the score that won the game. Pi rat he ran the kick-off back f«8 yard* to tho Aggie 37, he then passed to John Milam for eight and when nobody else could nwc through the line hanged guatd for a first down. He pitched to Dick MrKlasack for sLx ami to Raleigh Blakely for a first down on the Aggie 12 Then he used the same tactics he’* employed to win other game* for 9MIf—he faced a pans at he ran to the right, then §p«d around the left end to a touchdown.Th* victory kept Southern Methodist unbaaUn In the Southwest Conference championship race in which the winner will become host team Ln the Cotton Bowl, where Saturday’a gam* wa* playedWalker accounted for all the Southern MethocllPt point*. H« pas*, •d to McKlisack for the first touchdown, set up when 8MU recovered an Aggie fumble on the A and M J7; he *cor*d the t*cond on i 40* vard burst through the line, and he not only got the final counter but saved an Aggie touchdown In the last minute* with a great piece of pa*« defense behind the Meth* odlit goal line. Walker also kicked two point* after touchdownThe Aggie* rolled up 16 first down* to ll for Southern Methodist but the Mustangs made more yardage on the ground—143 to 69. Ths Aggie* beiied SMU In the airiaa to iso.To Rice.25-6RoNaAN1gangchine before fan* 1 almoeOwls SmashHogs BehindStrong LineLITTLE ROCK, Ark lt;U P) A versatile and powerful ground attack sprinkled with enough passes to open tip the defense carried Rice to a 25*6 victory over Arkamas Saturday before 34,TOO persons.The loss was the third of the Southwest Conference for Arkan*march, Kelly played the same rol« in scoring the final time.Behind the hard, punishing play of a line sparked by Janes (Frog-gie) Williams, Rice racked up 20 first downs to 10 for the Raior* backs and picked up 202 yard* rushing to 160 for Arkansas.Arkansas got off to an early lead although neither team seemed to want to make the first offensive*a«Using passes only in overcoming an eaiiy six-point Arkansas lead. Rice depended mostly on the running of 170-pound Gordon Wyatt, John Kelly and Bobby Lantrip.it vaa Wyatt who roared almost singlehandedly to Rice’s third score In the third period, carrying five out of six times In the 60*yardmove.But after an exchange of four punts landed the ball on the Ar* xaims 32 ard line, the Razor-back* took over. Seventeen play# later—three of them in the second period—Ark an* aa* Clyde (Smack* over) Scott had drifted gently over the goal line on an end run from the two-yard line.During the drive Scott alternated with Leon {Muscles* Campbell in carrying the ball eight times ln runs of 29, 18 and 11 yardsAltogether Scott carried the ball 16 times for a net gain of 92 yard? on the ground.Hal yaar.t ke*t 1 Mlddi paa#elt; pi on* Na\ ly, pi only third ln the posts.Th« euilvlt; Sailor sea so: •core.The dies j time* took : they Ort. aenaa 4D yn and v burg last sM WllUnkan (AOU Routs MizouTigiMissouri FallsBefore GreatScoring SurgeA DL.UBy SKIPPER PATRICKNORMAN, Okla. OP) Slippery Jack Mitchell and a brutal Oklahoma line powered the Sooner* to a 41-7 victory over a bewildered Missouri football team before a crowd eftimated at 38,690 here Saturday.Showing their iharpest attack of the eeajon before the largest gathering ever assembled for a football game in Oklahoma, the Sooners turned the game into a rrut by icorlng four touchdowns in elevenTennesseeGa. Tech,1ATLANTA t*P) The Tennessee Vol* the unbeaten ranks Saturday 13-0 as line continually operated in the Tech hi A sellout crowd of 38.000 fans at r nesaee linemen outhit Tech's and dchtrc The light, high-speed Tech backr-— were forced to run instead o' oas?Their fumbles sot up one T^ nlt;»sset score and ended several tve.ita U U The los? was ft major ujet. Teel-being * two-touchdown pick before the Southern Conference gamo Twicc*beaten Tennessee was out-G(a« ♦« arnntd on the tfrourd lflfl iwrdt to