! j.f- _r! v l :r-r ^ In iliJ ! I ' H Tf u K-l t MISSING M< LOCATED Ol _ PORT ARTHUl The missing vess reported saft fuel 10 milefa s( La Bar. The fishinj reported to iSabii that she was givj sufficient} gas to tomorrow aft The Vessel! left Honduras, Ncjv. ll 50 tons of ort ter at El Pf here last Monday. The Lone Stai pany of Port.* the ship, said y< not alarmed Over rive on schedule, ply might have trouble or squall si! MARSHALL GAS NOW UNDER ~ B k p w ike ’Orapge by i I i ! 1 ! 1 lerto Cortez, rithla cargo of led fora smel- jx. Ji rwaa due • - ' ■ * ' . j Shining Cam- agents for laji they were s failure to ar- iey teid it sim- ^red motor &ER I , »6l , h{ov. 20 1 — marshall, ^ . (£*>—‘The Stapolin|( Oil k! wild gasser in thqlfCart iage Field was brought l und«r i coniUrol Satur- day. I * fil| • 1 frr-Ui. The well—-first ;?to rdn wild in the nearly IB yeftts of? he Garth- age (las Di*tlllute*JFleli in Panola County-^-wuH killed ufUiiJ being out of control for a‘ It went out of day at 10 u. in, / 10 n. m. Satdrda stalled and mud wull, I-RAIRIE ViEW If HAVE 1NAVGU PUAIUIK —(/P). btLiormally president of Gas Co., layw. :>ntn> laft Sun- irew]qompd it at t Tubfi ig was iiiv Ifumpii4l into the 1 I • ' I Volume — ■ * . i -'i .I Mello AAUP on i Oppo^M Wm Tip! Nov. 22 -Dr. Edwora B.! Ivnim will insttt)|ed S the first fie View Stiufce College Dccejmbepp. 1 The promotion olimux(|H 27 years of service to th|l§ stiiue’s Negro teacher training Snd kik ri cultUral school. Dr. EvanBi Swaslaanied act ing head of the School ton the re tirement of yf. Hi Bail its in Atig ust, 1947. :■ | 17 Until this year;TdHe d^winisfira- tive heads of the Ijiichocfl have held the title of iimtodtttl. i! .1 Dr. Evans :camd; to Eiairie View from Iowa State' ]>C6lU| :e in lpl8 and has served ^ontihiiously ;e*- • cept for two yfa r s.j At One time he was a(Jn)jnistri tor of the. state’s extension program for Ne groes. - ; ! | r— CATCUS JACK 1 OCTOGENAitLAji UVALDE, Tex.^No John Nance Ga ' ‘ "i \ 22 ~m~ 32nd vice nitejc from|public life tion dt his suc- |i i president of J^ie Unitlitf States: is 80 years old- fodasi. 11 Since he retire with the ihaugur|jtion :df his auc . cessor, Henry VfWlacel ih 1941, Garner has lived egiietlji! here. • • He has said he Wanted to live to be 93, so that more tb^n halfihis life will have beeH speWt as a Pri vate citizen. j ! |] 1 Tj Mrs. Ettie Gariipr, hH wife, died in August this yuir. |] 'I the “grand- old mairbf politics” has had many visitors,since he: re turned to Uvaldeji Ampfig’the lat est was PreaidenJI Ha: who stopped by?'and with Garner while|cam the presidency tH*s ye Addr n Research I-: ■ ’ |] ■j • '• if- ' I ‘ .'V ! . i i i ■■ • /r* : i h ! • 4 >V •f r |;! : .1 ill' >! f )] ! *> it •!!('. * i -L / rf 7 i ■W ■ W I r / llv 1 IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland),|TEXAS~S oxAX4v/iv xi^ wnvAY, NOVEMBER 22, | ^ Fish Defeat Texl i * V . . «w n ■ rw. ftlf- IH •: i ties l\ i The advuntageg| and disadvan tages of lalf-time research by teaching personnel of the college were discussed by Dr. A. W, Mel- loh at thq last meeting ment for half-timi research inj cdnjunction with teach ihg duties gives the Eicperimen Station thd utlvantage of the acu domic background of the stafj member, Meljoh pointed out, increases the [value of the teacher’t eervice in the classroom. The teach or is in » (better position to' train turn rcseuiih personnel. ; One disddvhntage he mentioned is the lack of continuity In the methods oflrcecaroh due to changeii in the personnel of the staff, and the. increased length of tliho re quired to jDOmplete a project due to part-tinie Work. Mclloh j closed by meeting ofj professors that l telli hat periment sitation has been getting t the e ex!- wm <&■ ■ ■M- > m I- l|;r i rf 1 - m : J m mm 1 || n [ b Ih'ii /•'••I k* Injuries Hurt Both 1 Lippman Out of Gann in« Lineups; tire Period ! y B, SAW SPOKPE ..j. .,'-4 An underdog and outweighed Texas Aggie frftshman footbjul |eam rose to a peak of gridiron efficiency Saturday to eclipse the Texas UhiversityfreHlingen Sho thorns on Kyle Field 14-0. As the sun disappeared behind an ovepdi^t of clouds, ; s4 the vainted Yearling ground game faded before a harder charging, better coached Rltoeam. j ; Fourteen thousand five hundred fkns, the largest crowd eveh i) witness a freshman game in the Southwest, were in the stands. f if -1 1 I '-Hi —■'■[ to-.. Tf T . —-ti# Bfllthhteams Into the game REA Official Stresses At Supervisors’ Conference , ; “Safety is an automatic by-prodijet of the cbtbct per formance of any jobj” Ralph A, C. Hill told rural jelwetric co operative managers anti supervisors at Friday’s! session of the second annual training and safety! conferencexiitf Texas Latin American conauls are pictured above at the Infantry Regimental Review held in honor Of I Neighbor Week. L ft to right they are THOMAS 1). SUTHERLAND, executive aecretary, Good Neghbor (’ommiHslon, Austin; ANTONIO PONTE VALERY and R. R. CAVIL A, Venexuela; ALVARO M1NGUEZ, Mexico; Nt, Colombia; 11. YBAI itesldent F. C. BOLTON;! H. tADO, .Chile and I'eru. J. WILKINSO. Argentina ALFONSO QU1JA- N«w Off the Presses enough m^ney for research proj ects but isi handicapped by lack of sufficient jnejn to do the work. Foreign Consuls See ‘A’ Infantry Win Honor Review Tasty Turkey dbits Treat Football, Ugly Man Featured oops Today In November Commentator A Infantry wain first place i the Infantiry Regimental Revie' held last Tuesday in honor Good Neig tb >r Week. The gues of honor a: t|he review were Lati American coqnsuls stationed at Houston. Pitosident Bolton and y Trunjan, ireakfasted Signing |for ,, , \ CALIFORNIA ENDUt ANCE JAIN ^; Iov.j|22 —(ffl— luitis took FLIERS BACK! |H‘ ), qaiidfNo Dick Reidel and'fBIlK INDIO, Dick Jtelueli and: fwili Barns took off from thd airport hole Satutjdny afternoon in nnjittenlft to break tho world’s flpit enflur- I! nitco record, “ |JI . inir t plane flyurs over afternoon ojT JnH of 42 daysj or I .went aloft gt 3:1 I j members ojf the faculty of the col lege were also present in the re viewing sthnd. . The consuls were accompanied by T. D. S iU|erland, executive sec retary of 1 hei Good Neighbor Com mission in Austin. The honor guest included Antjbnio Pontevalery and R. R. Davila, Alvaro Dominguez, Alfonzo Qnijimo, and H. Ybftrra<^o. B and 1) Infantry tied for sec-! ond place ini;the review; C Infan try took third, and E Infantry placed fifth. 1 Points were awarded as follows; A received 8, B and D received 5[ egeh, and C received 2, and E was! not awarded any points. The Mafoqh and White bands re ceived 2 pbirfts each for Itheir per formance »t the review, in lieu of what the} would have ^ger nmno- ruotlonU the In the air Until! the 1, If49, a tiotal »8 Itinirs. They l Ml p m.; PlpT. ; 1 j ' ij • I* —- ( /P> Con- Saturday h HOUSTON BA GET BIG BOOST HOUSTON, ff|(v. 21 tracts were. sigHhd hi for television ;bjrouddhsts ofj all hotite games nojt season for the Hoiuston Buffs qf tho ^Texas Lea- ! ' k u «‘ ; I i 11 1 ( • Buff Presidetffe 'A^n Ruksell said he bellevcz jt to pe the first such contract slined iby a Cllass- AA Baseball Club. ,1 Russell signediithe impers in the office of W. Albprt L»)c, ownefr of station KLEE-TV whidh is to open formally January 1 following tests . which begih Dei: 15. f “We recognize! thatibnly a limi ted number of television pets will be in the HousWn arjta next sea son but we arq fpartidilarly inter ested in brjngjng baseball to shut- ins and other, people Avho. will be unable to attend; the djames,” Rus sell said. aMI formance jat By H. C. MICHALAK Txlay is Turkey Day as far as the college mess-hall is concerned. H C tdets and non-corps (students eati ig at the mess-halls will have thei: school Thanksgiving dinner— irlp perhaps, but, judging from „ ie menu, none the less sufficient, te The^ wih sit down to allheal of ih bakd turkey stuffed with gravy ■ and smeared With cranberry sauce. T lat in itself will be a far-cry Iron the usual meal-time fare around here, but it will be by no mesns the only palate-pleasing tid bit for the occasion. The]students will also find giblet gravy, pandied yan s, green peas, hegd lettuce with tho isand island dressing, rolls witi butter, assorted fruit, and gol< en brown pumpkin! pie. It sho dd take either an extreme pes- sim st or someone afflicted with Fpicjlay The Port Artl have a Thanl dance Friday di can Legion H Drive in Pprt jr A4M Glubi will ivii t aj. , ^ Lakeshore rhurjGene Brous- e dub, an- sard, president: pf nounced today.;, 5 ! > | He said the'- danc^ would 1 last from 8 to 12 p^n. arid asked Ithat “We wiuM combine intelligence received rojm all of the branches of the se vices, and make it avail able to all. We had engineers, geo graphers, jvdo experts, linguists, and anyone else that had some form of specialty we could] use in the outfitj, regardless of his .branch Of I teirvic*. Hence the name, Joint Army-Na /y-Intelligence Corps,” he added. 1 1 j-L all members attepd. f . - Whofilcaok tag m.,.(Monday; Ag ture j Room. LC^UB, 7 p.rn. ouage.YM- )UN FFA, 7:30 Engineering HOUSTON. Monday. BxiSl | HOUSTON . CLUB, 7:15 p.drt., Mmday, M, Academic Buildii g. zm§ •li! v!' . * - A&M Room I u* of Ben w. nuje. Corajici C. I. Pa dee ganlzation. Navarro Club Plans M Party;! N; ivdrt§-.County AAM Cldb will hold it^ Anmial Thanksgiving y November 26, at the honle McKee, west 7th Ave- ia, T«xas, according to * * Ihe or- . Exporter for :xa« ami/the Na- -rr— and tlw varro Cojunly Club at A&M. •i ■ . : ■ H • ,• k. By ALLEN SELF ! |[ ! ) Now running off the presses is the November issue of the Com- mentator} , sports - humor - fiction niagazine entering its second year of life. It will soon be in the mail ajid on sale at the newsstands. The cover, penned in brown and b)ack by Gene Dubose, represents the dominant interest of the fall season—football. “Razzle-Dazzle League” a fea ture on 3WC mayhem by Chuck Cabaniss leads off, presenting an excellent i short history by league football. The author somewhat aca demically) divides our time into the Organization Period, 1915-1924 Transition Period, 1925-1934 and Recognition Period, 1935 to pres- :rn Pacific to j Speak T. M. Spencif, general manager of the Southern Pacific railroad, will speak an 'IRnilroud Operation and Its Fjitiire" ntt 7:3tt p, m. Tues day, November 3d, in the YMCA Chapel. This is the seventh in a series of seven ptmolH on: railroad operations and problems brought to the cam pus by Southern Pacific officials. The Economics, Business, Engineer ing, and Journalism departments and their student organizations have cooperated With the railroad in presenting those„ panels. The Management Engineering Society will be host at the November 30 meeting. ! - H j ' .!] ent. But don’t let Ithat. scare you away. “The land df the forward pass and the short-lived champion” is interesting reading. Another football; article, “The Thanksgiving Storjr” by Larry Goodwyn, Commentator associate editor, recounts 54 years of Aggie -Longhorn rivalry. Goodwyn’s tart picturesque style makes this timely gleaning of Turkey Day happen ings worth the price of the mag azine alope. Big noise this fall was the Com mentator’s Ugly j Man contest, which generated lots of enthusiasm on the campus. Charlie Munden, the victor] should feel jhsulted by his photo, run with a picture of Lena Hyena in a two-page spread. Mnnden, for my hiopey actually looks handsome. ; ’ tor Wild West devotees among Aggies, a rousing: blood-and-guts, incorporating fist fights, cussing, drinking, and fast pistol action will rouse you from football-failure lethargy. 1 j [ j j j •» Harry Gooding,! fiction editor, leads the reader .into the over worked field of fantasy with “The Ordeal of Sclotz.” Sdotz gets hold of a formula for turning humans into beasts, and y!ou can take it from there. In the. highbrow department we find an illumlnatiqg dfacussion of Aldous Huxley, English author of “Point Oountorpoiht” and other novels. Larry Gjoodwyn traces Huxley’s: intense cynicism, satire ami sarcasm in a lively and schol arly fashion. Layout,, cartoomt, and advertis ing are 100% better than Inst years offerings. lii fact, the November Commentator approaches the best in collegiate magazine publication. REA ffroups belnjf held on the campuk. Hill, labor relatlprm and safety specialist in the management di vision of the REA national head quarters, WaMhlr)gtoti,j D. C^ talk ed oh the national program of Job and safety training. HUt said that job safety and production efficiency are direct results of job training. He atr tributed last year’s 30 per cent decrease In fataliti,eH to improved • workmanship. The group was welcomed to A& M by H. W. Barlow, dean of engi neering. E. L. Williams, director, Industrial Extension Service, gave a short talk. The Industrial Ex tension Service is. ; the agency through which the Texas prograrh is being conducted by four field instructors. i n ;; •ill Williams stressed the fact that most accidents resulting in in jury or death are caused by in correct, therefore unsafe, job practices. He said that only two percent of accidents can be call ed accidents in the sense that fhey are acts of nature. The foreman’s responsibility for training and safety was the topic of an address by T. D. Hughstoh, field safety engineer; for the Texas Power and Light Company. Stres sing the leadership principle appli ed to supervision, Hughston urged foremen to be sure that they set tip top examples in the matters of workmanship and safe practices. The afternoon session featured a talk on pole contacts and carrier telephone equipment, by Monford F. Foster, Southwestern Bell. Tele phone Company and REA job training as carried: out in other states by D. B. Bidle, instructor, Illinois REA job training and safety program. Abilene Club Plans Thanksgiving Hop Plans for a Thanksgiving party will be discussed at tlie meeting tof tho Abilene Club, Monday, at 7:15 p. m. In< the Reading Room of the YMCA, Bob Holowell, president of the club, announced: Other officers of I the club are David Bowers, vice-pwzident; Jer ry Trickey, 4 secretnry-t reiiHuror, mid Don Campbell,; social chair man.. I i ■ • -m Brazos County Begins Sale Of 1948 TB (Seals r ? - If I [ ' ||H 'j|j : /f - •.‘• •j The 1948 ChrfXtmU fenls will be delivered Monday ijh the morn ing mail to residents df Brazos County, Mrs. Mit Daniby, -seal sale chairman in the county said. The seal features a pajuma-clad child seated before a blazing fire place, waiting patiently for Santa Claus to arrive, she said. Proceeds from the sale, which will continue until CHriStjmas Day, will make possible the Brazos County Tuberculosis ; Association’s 1949 tuberculosis prevention and control program, Mrs; Dansby con tinued..-L'| , M /'!' In her Statement the said that the nationwide fight gainst tu berculosis today is jdst as import ant as it was in 1907, the year of the first Christmas 1 seal sale in the United States, j \ Although tuberculosis has drop ped front first to seventh place as the cause of deaths in America since 1907,. the disease still kills nearly 50,000 Americans annually. I j n 11 Applications For Degrees Must Be Filed December 1 Buddy Can You Spare • - • ? ! 1 I / I Jester spent several: months pri >r to the end of the War in and arqund Japan, confining; ">f his activities to the Island of u- shi, in the cities of Negisaki, Sa iebo, and Karajtsu, Here the uni t located all prison camps and mapped their positions ; so that thejre would be no chance; of bomb ing and killing the prisorie^s. They had every prison camp located in Japan prior to the cessation of powuities. j j j , .fter the war ended, Kiester aid ed In locating and evacuating freed ners. He evacuated : mostly and Javanese prisoners, ver, he did find 60 surviv ors! of the Bataan; Death March, sril that were left alive in that area. Most of them were members of [the West-Texas and New Mexi co j Rational Guard Unit! that was captured on Bataan. Moist of the’ prisoners in that area wjei|e living in the coal mines, working in the mines or at the docks in Kjaratsu. Kiester was in the fipst group of Americans to land in Nagasaki at the end of the war, and spent about a month aiding in the evacu ation of the prisoners. Holder of several commenda tions, the Asiatic-Pacific i ribbon with 14 battld stars, the European ribbon with one star, the Purple Heart, Presidential and N*vy Unit citations, Kiester is well qualified, by virtua of kill experiences, to Many Methods Mentioned of Making Money for Migration on this subject ’he talk .^tTpuSA cibiicts id 0 ”’ pre,id * n ' ^ " ' i it the Y |. v 7.7. By FRANK CUSHING , (Editor’s Note: The writer has been selected after careful consid eration as jthe man best qualified to write this article. He once lived for a month upon his GI subsist ence check. He was awarded the “Financier Extraordinary” Medal while in the; hospital suffering from malnutrition.) No doiibt about it, the Pilgrims just didn’t have 'the^ spirit Why else wopld! they have declared Thanksgiving in the same month with the SMU game. Yet, it’s need less to cry over spilled Corps trips. The problem facing us is Austin and the necessary money that goes with the mass-migration to the plaaL ) T T J : An Aggie sans money doesn’t give up.J Empty pockets mean nothing. (Where there is a will] there’s definitely a will. Any one of the following solutions can solve a student’s problems. The Aggie’s Chase National, known to outsid ers as pawn shops will be open Sunday itotj all night prior to the game Thursday. For those naive enough to have had no dealings with sue) establishments, the principle is simple. You take some thing of fcivat value to the pawnee and he gives you] some negligible amount of cash. ; The better circles frown upon hocking , anything; but one’s own possessions. For this reason loan sharks iri the Aggcieland area have established a policy of not grant ing lettuce on field artillery pieces, tanks, flag poles, Sully Ross’s sta tue, or the bugle stand. Mechanically minded individuals might end their troubles by con- tructing a printing press and run ning off their own private issue.; This quick-cash method was quite successfully employed by one am bitious student fast year. Presum ably he would still be flush had he not been foiled by cupid. Love clouded the fellow’s usual ood vision. He started printing bathing suit flOO bills With :a _ picture of his girl:upon them. Nat urally would-be-receivers of the bills thought the: qngraving more upon thi easy upon the e; wanted Franklin’s it they still ce. y poverty neeivably earn For in-* Students absolutpl; stricken might com money doing odd tazks. stance shining senior’s boots, typ ing themes, and washing cars. How ever such things must be classified as work and such h morbid thought has no place here m I ; %ry K Borrowing from friends and feL low students is an ever-popu|ar method of financing one’s pleasure journeys. Two things eliminate: that revenue raising: idea from this discussion. First the loaners wish to be paid back and often make themselves quite obnoxious in dun ning for the ‘debt. Second, and. far more important, they too are broke; and seeking the root of all evil at this time. Everyone knows hpw to conduct raffles and charity collections. Both of these schemes might nor mally be a solution. However the empty-pocket malady which has stricken the campus makes them useless. Stealing certainly should not be stooped to. No lad of honor would even consider thej plan. Besides, everything of value [hiui nther been hocked or the room? ate locked up. Such upusual method? as selling one’s body for a cada attempted at the stu tion. , \«Jndoubtedly the m true way to asseMb ■t needed potatoes cribed. Take one and write never believe it r must be it’s discre- ~ '■ 1 • jf '' ij ; tried fcnd the muc 2* > J I - 'Hi, ■i' 1 r’ Vt *• December 1 is tho iflnal deadline for filing applicntioila for decrees current iqmeater, ILl L; Heaton, the to be conferred at the dnd current semester, itl L, registrar, said yestoiiday^ This (loadline upplieii to both graduate and iiiwler^rad.uato stu dents, he »iaid. ThosqfjjtjJucnta.wno have not already dj)$«! -.so should make format lippHiiiitlon in the RegistrnfH Office ij(qnu)diatoly, Virgjl G Chfaway Leaves Toiiorrow For Chicagp Meet Virgil d. Caraway,] president of the Agronomy Society, and treas-. urer of the American Society of Agronomy, will leave Tuesday to attend the National Convention of the Student Section bf the Ameri can Society of Agronomy in Chi cago, November 26-27). . this convention if held each year in conjunction With the Na tional Grain and Livestock Expo sition. Nineteen Agronomy Socie ties from various ^pafts of the country will be represented at this convention. ![ '. tojl, .■] I-' ' While in Chicago, Caraway, also managing editor of; the Agricul- «• with whit, werb t«an| JaroS' •' & tion re pi IT eltip r J Lift ' CamjKi: thin H gain scr‘ I ie i impa red ;! by injuries ick B, »b Hal^X m»d end ama ol [the orange anil wJ.Hsing tl 0 game. The Fi*h hauler hil ; than the Texas 'th ends itulph Dresser mid eta ulus, guard Herbert arenee ''BulIT' lawson aiid n Pfeff irkorn missing a(- pletely. . ■ I . V ; : r. )ly ! tho haijdast loss to inm win iFis i gtar, Glenn Th# cJ limk r lad from Kl layod < nly a HttKi mow en mliiiites at the entire le qiiT «d |ho Imll niijy es whin ho Was In the plukodj iip Hlx yards fro)n thei v..w„, iifWl ,^»„ i .. v Jqni Yeallittgp -irouh come out [Ukjlit was Ithat, Ihe ex])(‘cted diiel? between ilppman and. the star] of : the To cus team, Byron “Smjtojnp’’ Tow wend, didn’t pin ouLlTfte Fish itur was Injured Thufsdtiy aftori'soon while practlc- ing Jpjick kicks against the ineli- tflolf jteund. Li ipmnn’a foot wjis injufe(ritts he kicked; liito the side of aj t&gmniate i * Tfle ‘ElHh used agafist the Sho: tl .like . 25 defensive plays in tepetoirc , Sometimes s the of! the huddlo With a two man line facing therfl and six-line backers and the’ next! time they voulcjl face u seven diamond defensn, The orange for wards [Would op m ghping holes in thqsFIzji front line;only to.have the last Aggie secondary close In to 4°11 the.play' before any dam- agojwaa ddhe. is defense kept the little Sips lielt end of the field for the nei?i for one lie Znnle eni of the field, piul dov n, vfith ten yurda l.’.for a first wi dpwn, Kennfeth of >CM] f Uu> game ' fiq < "TirffyV Shobe of CoriHis Christ!, thl)jMkr of ^ho gi >1h off oust n hil way t) the 19 and four di If 1 «. for the Flah ohlfboith offahsq and defense, dod newod ihe downs with . _ .jack am uk to tho nine, m :the next play BHtibe took tkifbft)! from 8ow»rt, sliced over: kiLt|tekle, plckiul up'a few needed i I . • -Mlii Houston County Club Meet fCalled The Houston Coiihty A&M Gub Plans teill be ,d: Thanksgiving Party] to Houston County dujri«if the days, Bradshaw said: J 1 y ' 1 1 Tilr i k ' -Ii ' ■ ir^ Hi for a hold in holi- Hi r Hdnri- quest agreed regent ' iy to try, % pr«m in the go T* | I h 1 MENT -<*> Paul ing ;to the w- PHhfe Charles, 1 Consolidated Sells ttBuUdihg Consolidated Independent f district sold its bonds for ifttv high ichool buildings last . according to Supt. A. M. renda Which were for $12j),WO, brought an average m- Mre»t ,rate of r 2.946f> percent and i Dittmar ajnd Co. of S*" , th;f b -- | in fielf end entire! first ha f except drlwjit the chd of the second quarter. In the second half the Texls team recovered a Fish fum ble jm! the |Cadet 19 and drove to the^nine before back Joe .Minor fuirfcire and Aggid tackle Sam Molfcs 'recovered'for the Fish on ill jj; - i • . WitH^six mirutes and ten sec- ; bnaij ffone in the firist quarter the Aggie#Scored their first TD—the fim time that they had possession of. the'ball. Thi y tcok over after GorhUIkMilleSl