The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 12, 1952, Image 3

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    Friday, December 12,1052
THE battalion
Page f»
Cron iid Force Coach
Little Pleased Over
Squad Workouts
“The team is coming along very
good,” said head coach of the
Ground Forces eleven, All-Ameri-
ca Jack Little.
“They have a lot of hustle and
spirit, and learn their plays fast—
faster than I expected,” Little con
tinued.
Little and his coaching staff,
consisting of Alvin Langford,
■•Connie Magouirk, Herb Scott, and
Howard Zuch, were all pleased
with the way their respective
groups were doing.
Langford was pleased with the
linemen, praising their versatility.
Langford stated that all the line
men knew how to play every posi
tion in the line.
Too Early to Tell
“Its too early to tell yet who
will start,” said Little, “we go
into pads Monday. We have a lot
of good boys and they are coming
along fast.”
The Ground Forces squad which
will run from the tight T had three
offensive groups going through
their paces. Although they were
minus pads, the Ground Force men
were making vicious blocks and
running hard.
The main worry of the Ground
Force coaching staff is bad weath-
Vr for the workouts next week.
“If it rains or gets real cold it
will be rough practicing,” mention
ed Little.
* “The team as a whole is pretty
— LAST DAY —
Kirk Douglas
“BIG SKY” — and
Marilyn Monroe
“CLASH BY NIGHT”
—SATURDAY ONLY —
“BAREFOOT MAILMAN”
“CALIFORNIA CONQUEST”
mm;.
CIRCLE
4-1250
Children Under 12 FREE when
accompanied by an adult
TONIGHT LAST NIGHT
“The Big Sky”
—ALSO—
“Holiday Affair”
fast,” commented Little,” they
hustle all the time.”
Little who finished up his eli
gibility with the Aggies this year
was , named to several All-Ameri
can teams this year and almost all
the All-SWC teams. Little was
a double duty man in 1951 but
concentrated on defense this year.
Named to Grey Team
His six feet three, 220 pounds
was a bulkhead of defense for the
Aggies. Proof of this fact was
his being on almost all SWC mem
bers All-Opponent team.
Little has also been named to
the Grey team which will play the
Blue team in the Blue-Grey game
played in Montgomery, Alabama.
Rice Wins Opener
Against Rearkats
HUNTSVILLE, Dec. 12 — <A>) —
Gene Schwinger played only 33
minutes last night, long enough to
lead Rice to its opening victory, a
foul-filled 75-59 triumph over Sam
Houston State’s Bearkats.
Schwinger left the game on per
sonals after scoring 22 points.
Rice led by as much as eight
points in the first half but Bill
Collier and Tom Latoof pulled the
Bearkats into a 44-44 tie with four
minutes gone in the third quarter.
SCORES AGAIN—Leroy Miksch, who scored 18 points
against the Cougars, is shown leaping through two Coug
ar defenders during the second quarter. Miksch dropped
in 9 points in the second period to bring the Aggies into
the lead after trailing during the first quarter.
Blaine Leads Harriers
Into Invitational Meet
By BOB BORTSKIE
Battalion Sports Staff
The Aggie cross country team
will toe the starting line in Hous
ton at 11 Saturday morning for
the Bill Williams invitation cross
country meet.
Track Coach Frank G. Ander
son said the team members who
will enter the senior division event
will be James Blaine, Dale De-
Rouen, Charles Hudgins, Verlon
Westmoreland, Joe Criswell, and
Franklin Whitwell.
“Blaine has made sensational
times yi the cross country this
year,” Anderson said, “but no
body believes it, but the watch
es keep showing it.”
The Aggies have won this in
vitation meet for all four years
that it has been held.
It has not been learned wheth
er Oklahoma A&M is entered this
year (they are the only victors
over the Aggies this season), but
the Ags have beaten two teams
who later defeated the Oklahoma
Aggies.
Anderson also said that the
Aggie track team would enter
contestants in the Sugar Bowl
LAST DAY TODAY
SATURDAY ONLY
m
Starring
ROBERT khd
MITCHUM i
JANET
LEIGH
SATURDAY ONLY
.Bznd
1 0F
"2 THE
mvm
—ALSO—
“Little Egypt”
MARK
STEVENS
and
RHONDA
FLEMING
v. ; ALA-HHA/L
CLAUDETTE MACDONALD ZACHARY
COLBERT CAREY SCOTT
IT IteAL
*
Also
“The Lion and
The Horse”
PREVIEW 11 P. M. SAT.
Also Sunday & Monday
D OOOOOOOOOOQOQOOOOOC^Qj^^.-^**
§ ''"starring TONY MARTIN • JANET LEIGH
3 GLORIA DcHAVEN.EDDIE BRACKEN
§ wltt ANN MILLER jUkg
O Barbara Lawrence DOB CROSBY •Tha CHARUVELs'^'
o booooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo.
Tigers Leave For Tourney
With Three Starters Ailing
With three starters ailing with
bad colds, Coach O. V. Chafin
takes his Consolidated High School
Tigers to Madisonville today to
4-1181
TODAY & SATURDAY
—Feature Starts—
1:31 - 3:27 - 5:23 - 7:19 - 9:15
'SCHMCOlq#,
•COLUMBIA \
HCTUR6S;
LOUIS HAYWARD • PATRICIA MEDINA
NEWS — CARTOON
PREVUE TONIGHT 11 P.M.
^iwni i Hi C ouoa pv " 1
lECHNlCCLOR
it'**
I liESTO?!
L SBMMKM* . ■'
play in the annual Madisonville
High School invitation basketball
tournament.
Bobby Jackson, football all-dis
trict offensive and defensive end,
has a cold but will probably start.
Joe Motheral and Byron An
drews have bad colds, but will
make the trip unless they get
Worse. -
Chafin is thus faced with the
problem of three doubtful players
out of six regulars on the squad.
Fred Anderson, David Bonnen,
and Pinky Cooner round out the
list of starters.
Other squad members who will
make the trip are J. B. Carroll,
Roland Beasley, Travis Engle-
brecht, John Manthei, and Noel
Stanley.
“This is our first time in the
tournament,” said Chafin, “but we
are favorites along with Jewett
and .Madisonville. We’re going up
there to win.”
Jim Bevans, who handles the B
squad, will also make the trip
to Madisonville.
The Tigers play their first dis
trict game next Tuesday night
with Milano at the Tiger gym,
followed by a non-district encoun
ter with Hempstead Wednesday
night. Thursday night they go to
Hearne for a return tilt with the
Hearne Eagles.
Houston Aggies Honor
Cadet Players Tonight
'The Houston A&M Club will
honor Aggie football players to
night at their annual semi-formal
dinner and dance at 6:30.
All members of the Cadet trav
eling squad are to make the trip,
and the dinner will be held in the
Shamrock Hotel.
Members of the A&M club in
and around Houston sponsor the
banquet each year, and the pro
gram consists of the meal, the
speaker, presentation of honors,
and the after-dinner dance.
track meet on Dec. 28 in New Or
leans.
Entered in the mile relay event
will be Carol Libby, Gerald Stull,
Frank Norris, and Bobby Rags
dale, with Wallace Kleb as alter
nate.
Blaine, DeRouen, and Kleb will
vie for the one entry in the 880
yard run.
Three hurdlers will contest for
one. place in the 120 yard high
hurdles. They are Glenn Bfake,
Tom Dollahite, and Harley Har-
tung. «
Hooper Throws Shot
Darrow Hooper is entered in the
shot put event, and Olympic cham
pion Walter (Buddy) Davis, who
last year set a new conference
mark in the high jump at 6-10%,
will be there leaping for the seven
foot mark, Anderson said.
Hooper managed to shatter the
conference discus and shot put
records last spring, and teamed
with Davis in last summer’s Olym
pics in Helsinki, Finland, to write
the name of Texas A&M o]i the in
ternational sports records.
Anderson Credits Williams
Anderson credited the Bill Wil
liams meet and the Sugar Bowl
track events with stimulating
track interest at Aggieland, and
thereby producing greater track
stars.
“I have 100 boys out for track
right now,” Anderson said, “and
only Hooper is here on a high
school track scholarship. Of
course, I’d give one for another’
boy like Darrow, but my 15 track
scholarships are used for the boys
already here who earn them.
WINTER ENGINEERING
GRADUATES
CONSIDER YOUR FUTURE
IN AVIATION
MR. D. L. BUTLER
v ' Representative of
NORTH AMERICAN AVIATION, INC.
of
Los Angeles, California, and Columbus, Ohio
designers and builders
of the
F-8G “SABRE”
«
will be on campus
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1952
For information, degrees desired
and
interviewing schedules,
Contact
Director, Placement Office
North American Has Built More Airplanes
Than Any Other Company In The World
fume see
; NEWS — CARTQON '
PREV SATURDAY 11 P.M.
mi spiY \
starring ■*
(arleton (AfePM VIA
Jan STEPLING
g Keenan WYNN
NEWS — CARTOON
Fans, Madrid, Africa,
the whole world its canvas,
Ernest Hemingway's
greatest love story of
a man in search of
his lost soul...
:
20‘“ Century-Fox prerent*
Gregory Susan
Ava
El
Now Showing —
QUEEN
ERNEST HEMINGWAY’S
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TECHNICOLOR
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Produced by Directed by Screen Play by
DARRYL F. ZANUCK • HENRY KING • CASEY ROBINSON
— ADMISSION —
Matinee 80c
Night $1.00
Children 25c
Students—All Time . . . . . 80c
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