The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 28, 1950, Image 3

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    Vi'
"
| Eight Champs Crowned
r !1-
Ending ’Mural
i\ {'
m
■*?
By NICK MAtVITZAS 4
W ith the end of the moet suc-
ccteful intramuml boxing tournn-
ment ever held ut Aggielend, throe
militury outfits were tied in the
top spot for the team champion
ship. A Infantry, the Army Se
curity Agency, and A Quartermas
ter were the three winners which
will each receive 21 2/2 points,
binding in second placo was A
Ordnance, who before the start of
the finals was the leading team in
the race, .jj]
The boxing tournament Just con
cluded was also the largest held
with over 200 participants In the
eight divisions. AUhotuih 10-ounce
gloves and head guards were used
this year for the first, time, the
fights continued to be' as action
packed as ever.
Barney Welch, who refereed the
entire tournament, together with
^ his intramural Staff, helped to
make this the best contest pre
sented by the intramural activ
ities. Judges (biased or not) for
the final two rounds were Burt
Littlejohn, C. K. Esten, and Leigh
ton Lomax.
' Jones Winner
In the 179-pound* division Joe
Pate of F Air Fonje and Hershel
Jones of E Infantry, furnished the
most action for the nighti and
the top- fight. Both fighters were
in fair shape and the lead swayed
back and forth the entire bout.
Jones: downed his bpponent in a
three- round bout . decision fight
that left Beth boxers too weak
to talk at its en(i. I’ate seemed to
hold the edge on his opponent the
first round, but Jones came back
jin the following rounds to win the
J J crown.
i Credit should be given where
— .credit is due and Curly Marshall
j | of C/ Cavalry deserves it. Marsh
all enteivd the 159-pound division
only as, a substitute, replacing one
of his putfit buddies who was to-
default u match, and defeated the
favorites in the same class.. His
big win came -in' the sejni-fjnal
round where he downed Bdb Schu
bert of A QMC and then entered
the final round as the underdog
ugaipst Killer Timmons % A In-
fgptiy. i %- .
Tintmona’ start in the first round
stfpmod tp bear all, proof that
-rM*rahall was definitely not up to
' par us ho- easily took tho first
i round. Mat shall, who didn’t seem
to bo in the best <>f ahapo, eked
out the aocopd round and cleaned
j hopBO In the third to win the
! crown, 1 * r -
4toyder l(ap« Parkcy
Toni Iloydnr of f. Field Artil
lery polished off Ucrntc Purkey
.i of A Ordnance in flno style using
his regular style, ttoyder, n hard
I Inside fighter, always pressed
Parkoy seeming t<i stay on top
■
Boxing
of his opponent and ending every counter-punching that kept Brim-
f berry on the defense.
Curtia Champion
The 129-pound class champion
that was decided last night, was
David Curtis of E Air Force who
had little trouble in defeating
Dwight. Kemper of A Ordnance.
Don Hickman of A Infant
managed t<» keep away from 'Pom
Ball’s crushing clinches to d
his much heavier opponent in their
thiee roiind bout. HickmanV
straight In punches gave him the
necessary points for the heavy
weight crpwn over Bail of B In-
fantry. ;
j 1 Handball Playoffs
PluyoffS in tho Intramural hand-
| ball tourney to determine the team
champion begins today with three
d matches. A Flight meets
Quartermaster, B Field Artillery
takes on A Athletics, and C Infan-
tangles with A Flight.
little entanglement to his advan
tage to win the 149-po«nd cham
pionship.
Tho 139-pound championship was
pot up to tho expected quality, al
though Sklppy Johnson of the A.SA
barely won over Jimmy Kidd of
the White Bund. Both fighters
were determined from stnrt to fin
ish, although Johnson-’-who well
deserves the name Bklppy for the
manner in which ho eluded the. ma
jority of Kid’s attempted punches
—was never able to really hurt
Kidd who gave the champion a hard
time. . / .-■[ ,|
A (mud Ueate Brown
Sumlny Aboud of A Quarter
master regained his punches alter
a slow first round to outpoint Don
Brown of A Ordnance for the 169-
pound tittle.
A v
the firi/t fight of thd night
was
IA
slow first round started
of the night for
the 119-pound crown that was won
by Ed Fincias of tike ABA in /the
final two rounds:,of the bout over
Boyce Brimberry of I: Air Force.
Brimberry, who had the height
and reach advantage over his op
ponent, never seriously threatened
the small champion who seemed
to- strhin every time he hit his
opponent in the face. Fincias was
a clear cut winner with his clever
-!
Battalion
i SPORTS
Tuesday, March 28, I960, Page 3
■t-
/
Texas Wins First SWC
• ' \ • /. i f''!' -j J * i | Jj { T: j ■ ’ * J/'
Recreational Club Meet
■f
PALACE
Bryafi
STARTS TODAY
nmwsiHMLqi>»»oM*TKiwwivin
'W Hi' +
neiress
i
TOflyarW*
f:
i,:-
I
QUEEN
LAST DAY
.jMrrn uw^f mwoi ,
«tns ns w «
WKD. and THURS.
Double Feature
iiagg
----————— .
• I
fareweli
ARMS
!
D-
K
alan —-
V 1
111W U HCiBINSON
IIIRHTA YOllNn
By NICK MANITZAS
A&M grabbed only one win and
a tie in the first Annual SWC Re
creational-Clubs Meet held here
last week while the University! of
Texas'ran off with the meet win
ning the gymnastics, wrestling,
and splitting with the Aggies on
the handball event. The Cadets only
‘dear win came in the weight lift
ing contest where the home team
edged the visiting Longhorn* 15-14.
The Texan’s wrtstlers won
eight of the fifteen divisions to
wallop the hqme team 37-17, while
the top gymnastic squad from the
University easily downed the Ag
gie tumblers 92-51. ! j ,
Volleyball and softball games be
tween .Texait #nd A&M still Ire-
muln to be played 1 in the near fu
ture At Austin, Intrupimal Direc
tor Burney Welch said yesterday.
This meet' will be ic|n|ate(l next
year with the hope tKafr nil liho
teams Iri the conferenee, which
were Invited this year iMl.il partici-
‘pate next year and in like It moru
successful, Welch added
kore beat the Farmer’s entry in
the 166-pound class—Sykora, Wil
ly of A&M tied with Dillon (128),
Texas’ Walker tied Ricketts (175),
and Rogers and Squires (90) of the
university fought it out for the
final j\ draw of' the day,
Brimberry, Carlson, Keeland,
Holmes, Penn, Word, Rogers, and
Schubert are this year’s weight-
lifters downed their opponents, the
University strongmen took-four
fjr&t places to the victors one.
Bobby-Moore took the Cadets only
first place victory in Winning the
llio-pound class. Texils entered
ohly one man in each division and
t|he Aggies gained their 15-14
win by-taking the remaining top
five places in each division.
Other vviners in the weightlifting
event were Milton Ricketts (123),
Ijlll Kastman (148), Oeorge Kwltig
(!1X1), J. II, Weymouth (11WT).
: Darrell William* of Du I Ins paved
the' way /for Til's 9S[i5l victory
lii gymnastle competition, He
placed first la tumbling, high bar,
pursHcl burs, long horse, flying
rings, and free exercises; sec
ond In side horse and third in
t/ampollpirr ^ ;
Baylor Leading In
Conference Race
, By The Associated Press
Baylor’s Bears roll along at the
tp in Southwest Conference base
ball-—the only undefeated team
H-ft.
The Bears have won four games,
two of them from Rice in the con
ference championship race.. Bay-
los licked the Owls, 10-4 and 7-1,
last week in the only games in
conference play. Rice had earlier
downed Sam Houston State, 3-2.
Southern Methodist, A&M, Rice,
and Texas Christian all bit the
dust last week, SMU lost to Ohio
State, 3-2, after having defeated
the Buckeyes |twice—8-7 and 7-6.
A&M licked Ohio State twice—
J4-8 and 11-9—but lost one game,
10-9. The Agjgies also dropped
one to Minnesota 10-9 after hav
ing beaten both the Gophers, 13*
j 9. and Oklahoma, 12-5,
V
McDowell Wfi»f,
In the Imnilbull eontpnt. Jewell
McDowell beat TU’it Ty Cobb 21-9
ami) 21-16, 'fop Pappus lost
to jDori Smith 16-21 and. 12-21, and
tBuit Layne edged Austinite Lyold
Hampton 20-21, 21-^4, knd 21-17.
A&M’s duo of Layne and McDowell
Was nudged in the fjlial points
of the final two games to lose
to Cobb and Simth 21t17, 19-21,
and 19-21.
The fifteen wrestling matches
Were scored on the basis of five
points for a win by pinhing, three
points on decision, and two points
for a draw. Although the visitors
collected eight clear wins, the home
team gained only (three victories
with three draws: Spotting the
event. 4 1 i ■'; ]
Carlson Outstanding
Bobby Carlson of C Infantry Was
• probably the most: outstanding
wrestler of the entire day when
he pinned Jindrtch ^jf Texas. The
previous week Jiixhich pinned the
Natfqnal AAU wrestling Champ in
the 145-pound class. ! j
■Bob Schubert oi " A QMC de-
cisioned Tom Coker in the 165-, . ,
pound division, and Laing of A&M ! ,,, , ? :as Christian lost one to
outpointed Milton RichCtts for the \ pk lah °mf. 3-1, and split with Ok-
Cadets other wins in the! wrestliig. , 1 “ hbraa A&M - "inning the first of
Other results in the, wrestling the series, «-6, but dropping the
included Jim McClJirig’s! win over | se ™ n< ’
Roycc Brimberry of tho home squad |. The conference^ looked good in
in the 121-pound class, Jack Tyr-1 mtersectional play last week, win-
t' rr\r r a. •..u i 1 ?ninfr it* wntlr* Tovnc
Baseball fans will tell you there’s quite a bit of similarity between
Houston’s Henry Canderali, of the the Aggies pictured above, and
“Yogi” Berra, playing now for New York Yankees. Both boys are
of the same stature, the same height (5’ 7”) and; pack a lot of
punch at the plate. In Saturday’* contest Candelsri, who holds
to bopaF
down the hot corner, slammed two
three fliir the season.
Coin’, Coin’, Gone!}
home runs
;t his total to
f i
et Sam
Sam
will bo
enta of
thia
time
Hon
y On Kyle Field
IBM .beaten BeorkaU. aix straight afternooni op Kyle*
[•a -i. * Taking four of their last six Field. Die Aggies took two from
a wi
The Farmers, at last freed
eelt of dai:
aa favorites
Bears
beaten Bcarkat*.
Taking four of theii
games during last week’s com-
oppon-1 petition, the Aggies, after three
> nine days rest, ahould be ready to goc
Came!(:„« 0 h Marty Karew v T
i town yesterday to di
choice for a starting
tlon, reign Wx Strai
the. thrice* Playing six
tLUl VUIK I* IJ I l|!
sight Games
■tmight Igar
ears JJrop Contest
ToNYIn Semi-FiSaU
\ i , e i iP->'tIiB
ropta for 30 per eont. j
Baylor, a 14-point underdog also
me tKrough with a 39 per cent
“ ff^E
seven and a
27—MPk—
Braves
New York, Msrch _
Bradley’s vimgjeuneu-hsnt
will get another chance Tuesday
night to break up City College of
New York’s post-seuslon basket
ball honeynvoon after topping Bay
lor, 68-66, Saturday. 7 . >
Neither team was able to gain
a commanding advantage as the
score was tied eight times in the
first half, which ended with Brad
ley ahead 36-32, and three times
in the second period before 1 the
Breves smashed through for their
victory. ! ' '1
Bradley, which \ hit 41 per cent
of its shots in the first half, wound
up with 25 field} goal* in 68 at-.
\
Accident Started Ag Discus
Kingpin Kadera on His Way
ner of TU outpointed pare Koe-
land (135), Keith Webster dropped
Aggio Max Word (156), Sidney
Kacin gave tho Texan* their third
pin in matting Pat llolrties (175),
Rob Freedman also!matted A&AtTs
heavyweight «itruh(—Maxwell, W.
Jindrlch defeated C, W. Penn (136)
of the Cndctajj Toxg#' Davis oJit-
Otis By-
poilito
Mnlcofihi ( 155
sea
m
?
CALL 4-5324
i -
|ning 12 while losing 6. Texas also
added to its stature by licking Mil
waukee of (he American Associa
tion 6-5, after defeating Minnesota
! twice, 10-2 and 15-9. Oklahoma
split witli tho Steers, however,
w inning 7-5 lifter Texas hud claim
ed an initial 6-6 victory.,
| Four conference game* take,the
; spotlight this week. Baylor and
I Southern Methodist play ut Dallas
and Texas Christian and Texas
; tangle at Austin WtiilnoNilny.
Thursday TCI| plays Texas at
Austin again. Hal unlay Baylor
W!>d Taxas A&M tangle at Warn.
mjl*MSMlMSSRjflh*fmMMNlS4imiM*'UM|MSMUWim£>MMMaaMMNSSXmaSB*Sl(iMlksa*tS | MI
By F. E. SIMMEN, JR.
Batt Sports Feature Editor
Accidents do happen.
An accident did happen in the
case of A&M’s top track field
eventer, jGeorge Kadera one day
in the spring of ’42. “One day
after school,” said George, “one
of the Rbagan trackmen threw a
discus at. me.” It seems the big
Houstonian got a little mad, and
proceeded to chuck the discus
back.
That’s the way it all happened—
they had! *uch a hard time even
finding tlie plotter after such a
heuve that the truck coach asked
"Big OeoS'ge" to conic out for the
track team. „' j
Heaving without i* full Hum and
standing Flat-footed Ktircdn pitched
the round flat place of metal far
enough to finish third In the Hous
ton City/ Track Moet th* same
year. ^
It dldnU take long far the. 226-
pounder Ho try his hand at the
other flejd event*. By the ettd of
three yeftrs of track competition
he hail set three records, two of
which aid still standing, and placed'
first in the shot and discuss in
district and won the state discus
heave at ; 156’ 10”.
Not Only A (inderman
Jumping, over to football, we
find Kadera on the All-City, All-’
District Houston football team as
a standout Reagau High tackle.
He also lettered in basketball at
Reagan on another district cham
pionship team.
“Probably my greatest thrill was
playing against such gridiron
greats asjHarry Gilmer, Frankie
Sinkwich, Pippy Jones and many
other pio footballers when I was
in the Ait Force,” commented Ka
dera.
Kadera; entered the service in
’44 and sCr.-ed for nineteen months.
While Jin the army he played
many a game of service football,
and contributes much of his grid
iron knowledge to those two sea
sons under expert Army tutelage.
Tinally Decided
After several enticing offers
from Texts, LSU, Baylor and
Rice, the I then 20-year-o!d lad de
cided on Coming to Aggieland, said
Kadera, f‘f was going to either
A&M or Kicp, hut tho Aggie-exes
sold me oil the idea of coming here,
*o here I|i m.”
Before l ish Kadera knew what
hail happened he was playing sec
ond stiing behind 1 Aiggie-graut
After two season* of college
giidlron e< mpetitlon tho Bayou
City, inde i ftor much pcrsusuRion,
jutiipml uvnr to truck, ami saUlud
•*»"" i,
Jontf* Mon rief on u Homer Norton
^Khfim ti uin.
UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON
Nuniiucr Centcrx of Mpxic<i-( tmtcinaiu
ATTKNTION: A. & M. College siudentn. Combine
Vacation with Study and IMeaxure. Attend our Sum
mer Center* in:
)
Vi
Mr
is, mo
7”
A
lexlcb City, Jim* H ‘ • Jun*
leklco-Guatemaia, July 20-Augwst >4, 1050
For students of nil level* and departmeh»
required or essential .. . Low-cost, uilo-xpl
. . Veterans pay only travel-living coats
elective credits.
-2 llrnli
is . . . .Spanish not
nse arrangements .
Earn six hours
Uniqus Supervised (iroup; Trsvdl
—Numerous Visits and Side Trips —
■JL-Va STT.-R , ,
Write for Bulletin to:
( ;^ - ! Di*. Joseph S. Werltn, Director
y University of ltouMo i
A
Tv
International Study Centers
Houston, Texas
and Study —
for the cinder sport alone.
In his first yeirl of competition
With the Aggie tricksters in ’47
Kadera captured jtHe discuss, shot
qnd javelin crowds at the confer
ence meet. • The ! niext season be
Captured the shot put and discus
<*rowns and has been doing so in
Numerous meets arid relay compe
titions ever sincei,
•48 Was The Year
His second year was probably
bis greatest so far; In '48 the big
trackman heaved ths discus 173’ 3”
-i
m
George ’Kadero
in a dual meet against the Okla
homa Aggies, This is the best
heave ever recorded on the books
for a member of a Southwest Con
ference track teabi.
That same yeay |he was ranked
third in a world discus rating and
the following year, ’49 he was
ranked third in 1 a world discus
rating and the fdllbwing year, ’49
he was ra/ikod nin|;h. Kadera was
third in the NCAA’ in ’48 and was
named to the All-American track
team. He barely : ''
pic team spot in
issed an olym
U. S. try
outs the same year. Also in 1949
Kadera made the Collegiate track
Honor Role, a ranking of the top
five performance!! in every event
throughout the track year.
The 23-year-old prepent Aggie
track team co-captain is a mem
ber of the Scholarship Honor So
ciety, a Distinguished Student,
Physical Educatibn Major Club
prexy, publicity director of Tho
Aggie “T” Ajsspciatibn, and * a
member of the Houston A&M Club;
Named On “Who’ll Who
His most reciint award came
three weeks ago when the Cadet
Corpii major was selected for an
It '
is puling tjie cultural touch on
"Who’s Who" award,
so seems the opposite sex
it toucl
A&M’* top field eventijr.
Kutleru, engaged since Feb. ^11
to attractive Texas U voice major
Elsie Dvorak,, has since become
interested ip cultural arts and
classical music,
■ Boon To lie Hitched
Tho couple plan to be married
In Houston upon His fiancee's grad
uation in June of '61.
"Guess my interest in music and
the arts kind of springs from this/’
commented Kadera in anything
but an cm bar rased tone.
The 6’ 2” PE major would prefer
a coaching assignment in or around
Houston upon graduation in June
of this year. ' '
We sincerely hope that after
graduation “Gigantic George”
scrapes up enough time after at
tending cultural music revues, bp-
erar, operetta!) and concerts 'to
teach our younger generation the
art of attaining athletic abilityv^-
and then sends tjiem to A&M,
;• I I ‘ (O
Louis Signs With
Touring Circus | _
Waco, Tex., Msrch 27——Jbe
Louis played with J. K. Homer for
four rounds Friday in what he said
would be his la it fight of any
kind in North America.
Louis signed a contract at a min-
c*me
average, making 24 of
The score was tied
time at 55-all with
half minutadv left. Then came
Bradley’s drive\ with Gene Mel-
chiorre, A1 Prcece and Bud Grov
er carrying the punch.
^ Heathington Tops S
Don Heathington, star of Bay
lor’s 1948 western champions, led
the scoring with 26 points, ye was
the big gun in BayloX’s dritm of
the last three and a half min
that had the Sonthwesternefs clbl
to one of the bigger upsets of the
year. ' ■ j j.
The betting is that Bradley won’t
be able tp top CCNYf—that city’s
amazing Beavers, haVing proved
they’re no “flash id '“the pan,”
will go down as the first team in
history to win both the 6*2 na "
tional tournaments in a single
season. t ''- • jj
Bradley, No. 1 in the (rational
ratings, and CUNY, unranked and
unnoticed until they caught fire
M
ught
two weeks ago, will dash at Madi
son Square Garden for the NCAA
championship. Baylor and 1 North
Carolina State meet in a consola
tion preliminary.
Conditions Have; Changed
The conditions wiljl be different
than March 18 whep they played
ifnf
dley,! the team
ili4hcd veterans,
tation. That time B
of poised and
six
Fieli
the
ono to get w..., ■ .. w ■
The next PM Oklahoma fell to tbej/
Plato-powered Aggie), in another
wild scoring gamo.
i Minnesota manuged a split ilo-
cisiou with the Farmers, winning
, while dropping
series underway;,
ihoma fell to thej
—, ...a: FarmerOt
ISMff?•‘[•H A «*.
Sam Houston, loaded with new
material, field* a rough, but young
‘r fm»t wlrt I J
V'
their fust win of the soa*(m
rogt. I M I, ’ H ;
Hoto-Jfelp* Defeat HH
Kyle Rote, cbnVerted catcher
of the Mustangs, after being ab
sent from the first Dourkut-M**-
tang meeting because of bust mad
duties at Doak Walter’s wedding,
returned Um: hext , nfteruuon 4t»
bang out a grand slam homer en
abled his team to beat the Hunts
ville I lads ih the lust frame. ' .,
The Beafkats will probably
start Nowa. , a sophomore froth
South Bend;] Indiana at first, Webb,
a Willis Texas second year base-
bnllfer at second and Craft, fresh’-
man from Edom at short.
Freshmen N|ime
Don “Co ton” Gottlob,
both, fans and coaches at
season with his spectacul
GotUob, tt freshman, hai
Galveston where he was
of many teams ranging
scliool to Semi-pro-units.
The sandy haired third
: twp hits against
first meeting and i
collecte
in theii
in theii
ly in
cond, white hi
el TCU fray.
'man
of nine
es, three jurtiprs
iore.l
Bearkut
>e fresh
rtiprs.
for top^onors in thej'national Invi
ne B
1 pbl
was a favorite. But It was CCNY’s
enthusiastic sophomores wljo woh,
60-61. # [ ' i I 1 ^
Since than Nat Holman
late*, wearying perhaps
.Ion ,to
Golfers In
larcos Match
4;'
tmum of $1,000
days beginning May 24 to tour with
Dailey Bros. Ciinus,-.following a
C!,.■,♦ L A *.1.
South- American
per day for 94
exhibition tour.
ath-
wearying perhaps, have
shown no Incllnaticin to fade or
grow stale, They won the pastern
NCAA playoff* Satprijay night at
th# Garden by boutingju very good
North Carolina .State team In the
finals, 78-73. ] , Ij T
Brigham Young defeated! UCjUA
for third placet In tho
play. Friday night Bayjor
Brigham Young, 56-56, ami
loy wiped out a savuiupo at do
flrlt In tho lulu ihinutis to do-/
feat UCLA, 73-39. In Now York
Holy Cross and Ohio 8Ut|», flrat
round losers, met for thin'
in the Eastern tourney.
Irll place
1
Cancer. Societ
Prairie View
College Station, | The ! Artierican
Cancer Society, Texas! Division,
he jsecond
Mitj to/ aid
^ ut jPrairie
View A&M College according to
President E. B. Eyan*.
has pi'ovided $!)00j us
and final part of jia
the cancer progr
u ll j ' r ,, r ■
A&M’s Kaluxy of ! golfers< are
in Sam Marcos today and wtIL
/face Mu* Southweit; Texas StaUf
Bobcaif thia afternobn in a return
match. . I •
//.fh#/Aggies previously defeated
the Bobcats, 4-2 on tho Bryan
Country Cluh links IMareh i8. Th#
mas* today will, murk a&M’h last
warm up affair before optsrtng
IS I k /
. . _ . Wrf&ri
euiMorence com petition.
I’uecd bv Genu - Darby who .Is
yyt to bo Jafeated in sluglii* com-
ftltloa tills year, the Aggie unit
fih open Its iWtMampajgn here
[’’ilihty, playing host to Haylor,
toil M.,...
elUh, Who wll
Him Marcos.
The Iqcafi ]
Thajtoatn Is boachMl byltlallhur
Nowell, duh pro rtt thp Biydli
no will take tho qilnirtet
arco*. ii,
tecalj link*ters boast a C
J record, dropping a mat
University of Houston, ,4.
the only
A&M has dociaivdy beateh Sam
Houston State twice, and took Its
opener from SWTSC, toda/s op
ponent./ The foursome has also
played their understudies, the Fish
team, and soil idly threshed them,
5-0, on the Brya
club^ w'lio will take tho qtiartet to
»l'cos. . l_; , .
local; link*ters boast a 8-1
seaaonal record, dropping a match
to thW University of Housten, .4)5,
with Darby bringing in the only
Codat triumph.
M has (lu'isivciy beate
■KW was MB Gam. (EBassns
Bywakas a twtar apof dMt- as taWftvaftoocMora.
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