The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 19, 1951, Image 4

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    Page 4
THE BATTALION
Monday, November 19, 1951
S WC Roundup
(Continued from Page 8)
SMU’s Fred Benners once more
gave his right arm a good work
out as he lead the Ponies in an
easy victory, 47-7.
The Porker line was still strong
but could not stop the aerials from
connecting behind them as the
Mustangs threw a total of 35 pass
es and connected with 21 of them.
Benners, a somewhat abused
young man since he demolished
Notre Dame five weeks ago, found
the Razor-backs easy pickings and
threw 13 strikes and four touch
downs.
Jerry Norton, the sophomore tri-
ple-threater and the Mustangs’
rushing leader, joined the overhead
pai-ty \i r ith 6 of 10 for 131 as SMU
rolled up 421 yards passing. The
Ponies, running only as a last
resort, had a net loss of nine yards
aground.
McHan Gets Bounced
Arkansas tried more passes 41 to
35, but connected on just 16 for
198 yards while the Ponies were
intercepting eight.
Lamar McHan, the Hogs’ hei’-
alded sophomore quarterback, was
just another number. In particular,
he was Bill Forester’s pigeon, the
SMU defensive tackle and line
backer spending an enjoyable af
ternoon bouncing McHan around
like a rubber ball.
Forester exerted terrific rush
ing pressure on McHan and his
relief, Ralph Troillett, and the
Razorbacks had to hurry their
plays all afternoon. Linebacker
Dick Hightower had one of his best
days, and Ends Jimmy Hawn and
Bob Hooks, Tackles Harry Dean
and Jerry Clem and Linebacker I.
D. Russell performed stoutly in
the SMU defense which limited
Arkansas to 91 rushing yards.
Arkansas got the first break
when SMU Fullback A1 Hansen
fumbled on the game’s first play,
Floyd Sagely recovering on the
Mustang 23.
Bill Forester then started his
hounding of McHan, crashing to
dump the quarter-back for a two-
yard loss on first down. Next Mc
Han hurriedly passed incomplete,
then overshot his man again with
Val Joe Walker intercepting in the
end zone and returning to the 24.
Off went the Mustangs for 76
yar-ds in 13 plays, Norton at the
helm. He hit on passes of 39 and
22 yards to End Dave Powell who
took both away from Arkansas
defenders, but the Ponies stalled
with fourth and 10 on the Arkan
sas 12. Then Benton Musslewhite,
holder in a field goal formation
leaped up and back and screened-
passed to Bill Forester-, a fullback
on offense. Forrester r-ipped down
the right side to score at 7:12. Sam
Stollenwer-ck booted the first of
five str-aight conversions and the
rat race was on.
Game at a Glance
Arkansas SMU
18 First Downs 11
91 Yards gained rushing -9
198 Yards gained passing 421
16 of 41..Passes completed.,21 of35
2 Passes intercepted by 7
5 Number of punts 6
158 Punt yardage 275
9 for 22 Penalties 6 for 30
Baylor 42, Wake Forest 0
Baylor held up the SWC honors
against Wake Forest as they once
more used Lary Isbell with his
passing, punting, running, and play
calling abilities.
Isbell scored once. Baylor End
Stanley Williams made a bril
liant catch of one of Isbell’s sec
ond-quarter payoff pitches and
threw key blocks all afternoon as
Baylor gave Wake Forest its worst
drubbing and only shutout of the
year.
Linebacker Cosimo Brocato also
shared much of the Baylor Bears’
glory, picking off two Wake Forest
aerials to start Baylor goalward
and kicking all the extr-a points.
Rare Penalty
But Isbell, with his fancy fling
ing, fine running, great punting
and cagy generalship was the big
show. His one-yard sneak for a
last quarter score was almost in
cidental. He hit the button on 13
of 19 passes for 155 yards. He
romped through the line for 22 and
he punted seven for a 39.4 aver
age.
Isbell fired five and seven yards
for- the first and third tallies to
Harold Riley and Williams, his
favorite receiver-.
A rare 15-yard penalty against
Wake Forest helped Baylor move
to pay dirt the first time. Wake
Forest Back Larry Spencer was
hit in the head by his teammate’s
punt, interfering with the Baylor
safety’s chance to receive a punt,
and Baylor got possession on the
Deacons’ 18.
Fullback Richard Parma pile-
drived to the five, and Isbell found
Riley in the end zone.
USE BATTALION CLASSIFIED ADS TO
5HJY, SELL, BENT OR TRADE. Rates
.... 3c a word per Insertion with a
35c minimum. Space rate in classified
section .... 80c per column-inch. Send
all classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES
OFFICE. All ads must be received in
Student Activities office by 10 a.m. on the
day before publication. „
• FOR SALE •
TWO army officer blouses, approximate
size 32-34. One army officer short coat,
• size 40. Call 2-1963. M-Sgt. Fisk.
5 FOOT Frigidaire. Good condition. $40.
30-X Vet Village.
TURTLES, TROPICAL FISH,
GOLD FISH, BIRDS, DOG
AND CAT SUPPLIES
Gilkey's Pet Cottage
301 E. 28th St.
• FOR RENT •
FURNISHED two-bedroom house in College
Hilis for faculty member, family. Ph.
6-6146.
• WANTED •
VOUNG married woman, no children, to
operate concession stand at CAMPUS
THEATER.
• FOUND •
ONE WHITE and tan long-haired dog with
Fort Dodge vaccination tag, number
197-837. Franklin’s, Airport road.
tmw.
\gtovmsn k
^yitontmr
SAFE-T-WAY TAXI
Phone 2-1400
LOST
RED LEATHER billfold containing money
and identification in or near Pruitts
Thursday afternoon. Reward. Phone
6-6041.
Directory of
Business Services
ALL LINES of Life Insurance. Hoiner
Adams, North Gate. Call 4-1217.
Official Notice
Third installment, payable November 1-21:
Board to December 18 (Thanksgiving
recess excluded) $31.70
Room Rent to December 18 9.00
Laundry to December 18 2.90
Total payable to Fiscal —
Department $43.60
Fourth installment, payable December 1-18:
Board to January 26 (Christmas
recess excluded) $33.00
Room Rent to January 26 13.00
Laundry to January 26 (Christmas
excluded) 2.65
Total payable to Fiscal
Department $48.65
TOTAL, FIRST SEMESTER. ...$254.45
The U. S. produces some 400
feature movies a year.
More than 2,000 feature films
are released by world movie studios
Texas Pelicans
A Texan displays one of four gray, ungainly pelicans, enroute to
Britain, as they paused on their long plane flight at Newark Air
port, New Jersey. The birds, a gift of Texas, traveled to St.
James Park, London, where the last of the jark’s famous pelicans
has died. IThe replacements were in charge of James T. Carter
(above), news editor of the Galveston News. Airline employe
Sylvin de Boer looks on.
Owls Stomp Ags
(Continued from Page 1)
kicked a 48 yard boot which rolled
dead on the Rice five yardline.
Starting a drive from here, the
Owls used 17 plays with Billy
Burkhalter running and Drake
passing to cross the goal stripes
on a pass from Drake to end Sonny
McCurry with 50 seconds left to
play. The extra point was good
and the half ended A&M 7 Rice 7.
The Owls kicked off to stait the
second half and Smith almost broke
away for a TD as he returned the
boot 38 yards to midfield.
An exchange of punts gave Rice
the ball on their own 49 yard line
where they started a drive which
ended with Drake’s pass to How-
ton in the end zone.
Smith Almost Breaks Loose
Smith received the kickoff on
the five and almost broke loose
again as he ran 35 yards to his
own 40.
The Cadets were stopped again
and Lary booted the pigskin 37
yards to the Owl 17 yard line.
Pete Mayeaux intercepted a pass
intended for Riggs on the Aggie 44
to- give A&M a new lease on the
game.
Ray Graves passed to Lippman
and Hodge and sent Smith through
the middle for 15 yards to the 24,
as the quailer ended.
A pass to Hodge in the end zone
by Graves put the Aggies back in
the ball game 1 14 to 13.
Riggs Scampers
Riggs’ scamper put Rice out in
front to stay as the Cadets never
could get up steam.
Gardemal passed to Bernard
Lemmons as the time ran out in
game.
Head Coach Ray George of the
Aggies praised Drake by saying
he called a good game. George was
asked to make a comparison of
Rice, Baylor and TCU and com
mented that there was not much
difference between the three. :
For the Cadets, Smith was the
leading runner with 70 yards in 10
carries, while Hodge was the lead
ing scorer with 12 points.
Game at a Glance
A&I
First downs 11
Rushing yai-dage 149
Passing yardage
Passes attempted 16
Passes completed 8
Passes intercepted
No. of punts
Punting average 42.5
No. of penalties 6
Yards penalized 46
Fumbles 7 4
Ball lost on fumbles ..3 2
A&M
Rice
... 11
15
...149
289
... 90
94
... 16
13
... 8
9
... 1
2
... 5
5
... 42.5
36
... 6
7
... 46
51
Hogan ‘Golfer of Year’
By PGA Annual Poll
Chicago, Nov. 19—(A 5 )—Probably
surprising exactly nobody, Ben Ho
gan, the little guy with the magic
fairways touch, again has been
named “golfer of the year.”
The national open champion got
164 votes, about 85 per cent of
those cast, in the Professional
Golfers’ Association annual poll of
sports writers and broadcasters.
When filter turns
brown—in Medico
Pipes or Cigarette Holders—throw it
away, with the nicotine, juices, flakes
and tars it has trapped. Insert fresh
filter for cooler, cleaner, dryer,
sweeter smoking. Imported Briar.
NEW: MEDICO CREST—53.00
Medico's Finest! Rich Burgundy finish.
9 MEDICO V.F.Q. — $2.00
MEDICO MEDALIST—$1.50 v
Wide variety of styles and sizes.
Write S. M. Frank & Co., N. Y., for Booklet 0
MEDICO CIGARETTE H0LDERS-$1 •
Dr. Carlton R. Lee
OPTOMETRIST
303A East 26th
(Across from Court House)
Call 2-1662 for Appointment
RADIOS & REPAIRING
'Kf Ca/l For and Delivery
STUDENT CO-OP
Phone 4-4114 ’
COME
BY
TODAY!
MOST TREASURED YULE GIFT
AGGIELAND STUDIO
• OFFICIAL AGGIELAND PHOTOGRAPHER •
Allies Turn Back Furious
Chinese Red Counterattack
Seoul, Korea, Nov. 19 — (A 1 ) —
Chinese Reds furiously conterat-
tacked in Central Korea today but
couldn’t budge a dug-in Allied div
ision which had smashed them back
three miles in a .two-day line
straightening offensive.
British forces beat off a 12-hour
Communist attack on the Western
end ef the battle line.
Two Hills
In the East, U. N. command
troops were knocked off two hills,
but recaptured one a few hours
later.
Allied fighters swept cloudless
North Korean skies without spot
ting one Communist plane up to
noon.
A pair of daring American Sabre
jet pilots Sunday shot up eight Red
MIG-15 jets on the ground at an
air base in Northwestern Korea—
the first time enemy jets have been
caught on the ground. Seven oth
er MIGS were reported hit in three
air battles.
The Allied division which shoved
Stock Show
(Continued from Page 1)
breeds and then, from these three,
the grand champion steer of the
Southwestern Exposition and Fat
Stock Show is selected, with gold
and glory as the reward for the
exhibitor! And this exhibitor might
be a Future Farmer or 4-H Club
boy—hence the interest that fol
lows each step of the steer com
petition in the boys’ show.
Lambs and Pigs
Similar requirements and pro
cedure are followed in the boys’
lamb and boys’ pig competition
and, with some variations, the jun
ior dairy show. The winning entry
in the lamb and pig competition
likewise will bring a substantial
harvest of premiums and a large
reward in the auction of champions.
W. L. Stangel of Texas Tech is
superintendent of the boys’ steers
show (as well as the open steer
show) and the superintendent of
the boys’ lamb show (as well as
the entire sheep department), is
Johnnie Vestal, Armour and Com
pany, Fort Worth. F. I. Dahlberg,
Texas A&M, as superintendent of
the swine department, directs the
boys pig show and A. L. Darnell.
Texas A&M, is superintendent of
the boys’ dairy show and of dairy
cattle.
the Communists off a series of
ridges southeast of Kumsong on
the Central front was hit three
times Sunday night and Monday
morning by counterattacking Reds.
A Chinese battalion tried for
three hours to dent the Allied line
but the atackers were thrown back
and finally quit the battle shortly
before dawn, the Eighth Army
said. Two other counterattacks
also failed to dislodge the dough
boys, the Army added.
Allied infantrymen pushed the
Reds off still another hill on the
nine-mile divisional front east of
the Pukhan River.
In West
In the West, the Chinese threw
self-propelled guns and foot sol
diers into the 12-hour fight to dis
lodge the King’s Shropshire Light
Infantry of the British First Com
monwealth Division from a stra
tegic hill west of Yonchon Sunday
night. A dawn the Britons still
were atop the hill and the Reds
pulled back.
The British recaptured the hill
Sunday after being knocked off by
a Chinese attack Saturday.
U.N. command troops were
shoved off two hill positions South
of Kosong in Eastern Korea Sun-
d a y night, but counterattacked
Monda ymorning and recaptured
one of the peaks.
Jet Strike
Sunday’s bold Sabre jet strike
was aimed at the Red air base at
Uiju, just south of the Yalu River
border with Manchuria.
The U.S. Fifth Air Force said
four MIGS definitely were de
stroyed, a fifth probably was de
stroyed and three were damaged.
Maj. William Waltman of Grand
Rapids, Wich, Fifth Air Force
spokesman, said the MIGS were
caught completely by surprise and
not a shot was fired at the Sabre
jets.
Camera Club to Meet
Members of the MSC Camera
Club will meet tonight at 7 p.m.
and hold a print exhibition.
The exhibition will be divided
into two parts, Henry Cole, presi
dent, announced. • One division is
for the advanced, photographers
an dthe second for the .junior pho
tographers.
Two winning prints in the Jun
ior division automatically puts the
member in the advanced group.
The meeting will be announced
on the MSC Bulletin Board.
The pilots in the attack were
Capt. Kenneth D. Chandler, Comp
ton, Calif., and Lt. Dayton W. Rag
land ,Kansas City, Mo.
Three Red Fields
In addition to the Uiju base, the
Reds are building three other air
fields 50 miles inside Korea. They
are at Namsi, Taechon and Saam-
cham. However, nightly raids by
B-29 Superforts have kept the
fields unusable.
The Fifth Air Force said one
MIG’ was shot down, one probably
destroyed and five were damaged
in Sunday’s aerial fights. One
U.S. F-84 Thunderjet was knocked
down, but the pilot bailed out over
the Yellow Sea and was rescued.
The Allied offensive on the Cen
tral front wiped out a “dog-leg”
in the battle line along the upper
Pukham River. Now U.N. troops
are dug in on ridges ranging up to
3,000 feet on a generally East-
West line southeast of Kumsong.
The attack opened Saturday
along a nine mile front defended by
two Communist regiments. T h e
Allied division commander said 932
Chinese bodies were counted and
99 prisoners taken during the two-
day offensive.
Baylor
In Statistics
Dallas, Nov. 19—(^—Bay
lor has the best season record
of all the Southwest Confer
ence teams and the figures
show why. The Golden Bears
lead in team defense and are tied
for first in offense. *
Statistics for the season to date
show the Bears and Texas A&M
to have gained an average of 336.1
yards per game. Baylor has given
up 225.5 yards on defense, com
pared to 228.4 for Texas.
In other words, the Bears can
go and they can stop the other
side from going.
And Baylor players dot the in
dividual statistics, too. Larry Is
bell, the great Bear field general,
tops in total offense. He has roll
ed up 1,176 yards on 209 plays of
rushing and passing. He leads
Fred Benners of Southern Metho
dist, who shows 1102 yards on 195
plays although ho has a minus 10
yards rushing.
Stan Williams of Baylor is the
leading pass-receiver. The big
wingman has taken 33 throws fob
548 yards.
Isbell is a close second in pass
ing. Benners pushed back into
first place with his exhibition *
against Arkansas Saturday. He
has gained 1,112 yards on 91 com
pletions in 170 throws.
Yes, Dearie ... I Know It’s
Hard to Believe . . . But
That’s What “Shorty”
said . . .
ONE DAY
SERVICE
ON CLEANING
IN BY 1:00 1\ M. ONE DAY . . .
OUT BY 1:00 P. M. THE NEXT
New
Substation
JUST FOR YOUR
CONVENIENCE IN . . .
Til lie's at IN, Gate
W. E. (Shorty) HALBROOKS
CLEANERS & TAILORS
204 S. Parker
Bryan
City Oi (
]olle2
;e Station,
Texas
Combined Balance Sheet of All Funds
ASSETS
JUNE
General
30, 1951
General
Property
Utility
Cemetery
and Debt
Fund
Funds
Fund
Fund
Total
Cash for current operations . . .
$ 75.00
$
$ 497.72
$
$ 572.72
Cash for capital outlay
200.00
200.00
Cash for debt service
2,197.86
784.76
2.00
2,984.62
Cash for construction
72,141.83
72,141.83
Cash for perpetual care fund . . .
997.40 v
997.40
United States war savings bond . .
Accounts receivable less estimated
740.00
740.00
uncollectible accounts
Taxes receivable less estimated un-
976.00
10,785.56
11,761.53
collectible taxes .
1,238.16
1,238.16
Due from cemetery fund ....
9,042.78
9,042.78
Deposit with A. & M. College . . .
100.00
100.00
Inventory of supplies for current use
Inventory of construction materials
316.35
6,604.28
6,920.63
purchased with proceeds of bonds
issued
5,978.49
5,978.49
Fixed assets
202,017.26
11,493.55
70,518.06
284,028.87
$14,886.15
$298,312.15
$12,990.67
$70,518.06
$396,707.03
General
LIABILITIES and SURPLUS
General
Utility
Cemetery
Property
and Debt
Fund
Funds
Funds
Fund
Total
Bank overdraft
Accounts payable for current
$ 1,471.60
$ '
$
$
$ 1,471.60
operations
1,765.34
7,172.13
8,937.47
Accounts payable on construction .
38,850.29
38,850.29
Income tax withheld
233.40
233.40
Due to general fund
9,042.78
9,042.78
Customer’s deposits
Matured warrant interest coupons
100.00
4,149.00
135.00
4,384.00
payable
68.00
68.00
Commissions payable
Taxes due A. and M. Consolidated
187.60
187.60
Independent School District . .
1,787.87
1,787.87
Notes and warrants payable . . .
7,598.81
3,149.32
1,900.00
16,474.89
29,123.02
Bonds payable
Interest collected on sale of bonds
146,000.00
146,000.00
during current year
284.76
284.76
Reserve for perpetual care ....
997.40
997.40
$12,957.02
$199,605.50
$12,330.78
$16,474.89
$241,368.19
Surplus
1,929.13
98,706.65
659.89
54,043.17
155,338.84
$14,886.15
$298,312.15
$12,990.67
$70,518.06
$396,707.03
STATE OF TEXAS
COUNTY OF BRAZOS
I, Ran Boswell, being Assistant City Secretary of the City of College Station, solemnly
swear that
the foregoing statement of condition is
true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
RAN BOSWELL
(Seal) Subscribed and sworn
to before me this 26th day of October, 1951
Florence Neelley, Notary Public,
Brazos County Texas