The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 07, 1953, Image 3

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Wednesday, January 7, 1953
THE BATTALION
Page 3
Baylor Stomps Farmors
In SWC Opener 60-44
WACO, ‘Jan. 7—<A>)—Baylor
downed A&M 60-44 last night in
a Southwest Conference basketball
opener. The Cadets led 23-10 in
the second quarter.
Baylor won on its brilliant de
fensive work and ball-hawking in
the last half. The Bears, down 23-
27 at the start of the second half,
held the Aggies scoreless for five
minutes of the fourth quarter,
pouring in enough buckets to pile
up a commanding 48-34 bulge.
Leroy Miksch
TODAY thru SATURDAY
—Features Start—
1:18 - 3:05 - 4:39 - 6:26
8:13 - 10:00
L "V
If
fills-
LAST TIMES TODAY
THE MliTj
BOLDLY BEGINS
WHERE THE
SENATE
CRIME
COMMITTEE
LEFT OFF!
an EDMUND GRAINGER production
STARTS THURSDAY
BOB DOROTHY
HOPE-
The Bruin defense also sparkled
in the third quarter when the Ag
gies collected only seven points
while Baylor, on the hot shooting
of Tommy Strasburger and Bailey,
was getting 16.
Buckets by John Starkey and
Murray Bailey earned Baylor an
8-7 lead after five minutes. Then
the Cadets spurted on the goaling
of Leroy Miksch and,Don Binford
to go in froht, 18-10, at the quar-
ter. The Aggies rolled on to a 23-
10 lead.
Baylor stormed back on a bar
rage of baskets by Starkey and
some fine ball-hawking by Kenny
Morgan to outscore the Cadets, 13-
9, in the second quarter.
Starkey of Baylor led the scor
ing with 19 points. Bailey of the
Bears got 16 and Miksch of the
Cadets 13.
* ' Directed by DAVID BUTLER
& Screen Play by Harry Kurnitz
Re-released through RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.’
Davis’ Sugar Bowl
Jump is New Mark
Walt (Buddy) Davis, former
Aggie track star, inaugurated the
high jump as a new event at the
recent Sugar Bowl track and field
meet.
Davis, who played a basketball
game the night before for the Ada
Oilers, had no competition in the
event, worked the bar up to six-
eight, cleared it and made no ef
fort to go higher.
Aggie tracksters entered in the
meet v/ere Darrow Hooper, who
finished second to USC’s Parry
O'Brien in the shot put; Glen
Blake, who finished third in the
120-yard high hurdles; and the
mile relay team which finished out
of the money as Oklahoma won
the event.
CIRCLE
4-1250
Children Under 12 FREE when
accompanied by an adult
TODAY LAST DAY
OUNT PICTURt
ALSO
‘The Eagle
And the Hawk”
Starring
John Payne &
Rhonda Fleming
STARTS THURSDAY
'T'eC8c Ji C°l- 0 R'
QUIET RUN
\ ' !l)HN ■ ' MAIIHEFN BARRY
L Wtt-lllM- M
ALSO
Walt Disney’s
“NATURES HALF ACRE”
PALACE
Bryan Z‘8S79
TODAY & WEDNESDAY
“Million
Dollar
Mermaid”
—with—
Ester Williams
QUEEN
TODAY & WEDNESDAY
“Just For
You”
with
Bing Crosby
and
Jane Wyman
In the preliminary game the
Baylor Cubs defeated the Aggie
Fish 62-43.
ARgies
fff
ft
Pf
tp
Johnson ....
....1
1
1
3
Pirtle
...0
0
5
0
Miksch
....5
3
1
13
Martin
...,i
5
1
7
Addison
... i
0
1
2
Liinford
....3
4
5
10
Ho ft
....2
0
0
4
McCrury
0
0
3
0
Hardgrove
.0
0
0
0
Murray
. 0
0
0
0
Gallemore .
.0
3
1
3
Williams .
...0
2
0
2
Totals ....
..13
18
18
44
Baylor
fs
ft
Pf
tp
Bailey
...6
4
0
16
Morgan
1
2
4
4
Dickson
. ...0
0
1
0
Brown
. .0
5
0
5
Starkey
... 0
7
2
19
Quillen
0
0
1
0
Wielantl
1
2
2
4
Strasburger
.. 4
2
1
10
Dalton
0
1
0
1
Parker
0
1
2
1
Blackwell
...0
0
3
0
Totals ....
..18
24
Hi
60
Score at
half:
A&M 27, Baylor
23.
Free throws missed
: Johnson, “Miksch,
Martin 3,
Williams 2
, Gallemore,
Bailey
2, Brown,
Starkey
3, Strasburger 3,
Parker.
Officials:
Lee
and
Lawson.
•
Cubs
fg
ft
Pf
tp
Raines
....4
1
4
9
Parker
....3
1
3
7
Gottlieb
....3
4
1
10
Chapman ..
0
3
1
3
Beck
...0
0
0
0
Estes
. ...3
8
3
14
Her
1
1
1
2
Jordan .
...2
1
2
5
White
(1
2
0
2
Connally . .
, .1
4
1
6
Simpson ...
0
0
0
2
Steineker
1
1
3
• 3
Tillotson ...
0
1
1)
1
Totals
...18
27
19
63
Fish
fff
ft
Pf
tp
Fortenberry
... 8
4
5
20
Hearne
. 1
2
5
4
Lewis
n
1
0
1
Jenkins
. 0
0
1
0
Kennedy ...
...i
3
5
5
Clark
0
0
0
0
Vines
... (i
0
1
0
Wood
Miller
...3
...1
1
1
1
2
7
3
Bredthauer
...1
1
5
3
Totals
15
13
25
43
Seore at
half:
Baylor Cubs
34,
Aggie
—LAST DAY—
Peter Lawford
“YOU FOR ME”
—2ND SHOW— •
Wayne Morris
“DESERT PURSUIT”
—THURSDAY & FRIDAY—
“SOMEBODY LOVES ME”
“HAREM GIRL”
Cooper Robbins
+
Robbins Quits
As Fish Coach
For Odessa Job
Cooper Robbins, Aggie fresh
man football coach, has signed a
contract as head football coach at
Odessa High School.
Robbins, who reportedly signed
a three year contract at $7,000 a
year, will replace Julius Johnson,
who recently resigned.
“I hate to leave Texas A&M,
where 1 replaced the late Klepto
Holmes, but I feel there is greater
opportunity in Odessa than at
A&M,” Robbins said.
With one son, Cooper Robbins,
Jr., already playing Aggie foot
ball, he brought twin sons, Ronald
and Donald, along to bolster the
fish football team. They both play
ed outstanding ball last season and
will furnish much strength to the
varsity squad next season.
He piloted Breckenridge to a
Class AAA championship last sea
son, and this year watched the
team repeat as state champions.
During his 24 years of high
school coaching, Robbins’ teams
have won the mentioned state
championship and on one other
occasion they won the regional
championship. His teams have won
bi-district titles five times and
were district champs four times.
He was graduated from A&M in
1928 and took his first coaching
job at Humble High. He went to
Northside of Fort Worth in 1930
and in 1933 went to Diamond Hill,
Fort Worth. In 1939 he coached
Technical High, Fort Worth and
returned to Northside in 1942.
Tigers Nip Badgers 53-32;
Team Eases Out Faculty
A&M Consolidated ran over the
Buckholts Badgers last night in
the Tiger gymnasium 53-32 with
Bobby Jackson and David Bonnen
pouring in 12 points each to pace
the winners for their second dis
trict win.
The Tigers started the scoring
and led throughout the game with
out being pressed at any point. The
halftime score was 29-10, and
Coach O. V. Chafin’s crew led the
visitors all the way with a more
than comfortable lead.
Buckholts failed to bring their
“B” team for the game, so the fac
ulty of A&M Consolidated substi
tuted and played the Tiger “B”
squad.
The game turned out to be the
LOUANNS
DALLAS
MATINEE DANCE
EVERY SUNDAY
2:00 P. M. tp 6:00 P. M.
Greenville Ave. & Lovers Lane
CHS (53)
fg
ft
pf
tp
Andrews, B
...2
1
2
5
Motheral, J
...6
1
2
11
Jackson, B.
...5
2
3
12
Bonnen, D
...4
4
1
12
Cooner, P.
...1
0
1
2
Anderson, F
...5
1
1
11
Total
Buckholts (32)
.22
9
10
53
fg
ft
pf
tp
Ezzell, R
...1
5
5
7
Porter, K
...2
0
1
4
Raney, L
...3
3
1
9
Jungmann, E
...1
2
1
4
Jungmann, J
...0
0
0
0
Chudig, R
...4
0
1
8
Total
.11
10
9
32
Halftime score:
Tigers, 29-
■ 10. Referees,
DeWitt and Sutton.
High
point
men :
CHS, Jackson and
Raney, 9.
Bonnen, 12 ; Buckholts,
&
“B” Team (32)
fg
ft
Pf
tp
Garcia. M.
...<)
2
0
14
Carroll, J
. 0
3
0
3
Floeck, N
...1
1
2
3
Hickman, P
...1
0
0
2
Free, M.
...1
1
1
3
Beasley, R.
...1
2
0
4
Engelbrecht, T
...1
1
0
3
Total
.11
10
8
32
Faculty (22)
fg
ft
pf
tp
Wood, J
...3
1
1
7
Scheafer, H.
...2
0
1
4
Ryan, T
.0
0
0
0
Richardson, L
..2
0
3
4
Forsyth, J
...0
0
2
0
Boone, R.
.0
1)
0
0
Chaney, J
.1
0
4
2
Total
10
2
11
22
Halftime score:
Faculty
18-15.
Ref-
crees, DeWitt and Sutton.
High
point
men: “B” Team,
Garcia,
14; Faculty,
Intramurals
A sparkling running and pass
ing performance by C. K. Crowley
that accounted for all of his team’s
points, lifted Sq. 6 to a 13-0 vic
tory over AAA in Tuesday’s stand
out intramural football attraction.
Finding his receivers blanketed
by an alert secondary on a pass
play, the shifty back picked his
way through a broken field and
went the distance for a touchdown.
Later, Crowley hit Bill Wilkinson
with a scoring pass after Wilkin
son had gotten behind his defend
er, then kicked the conversion.
A stout Sq. 6 defense held AAA
to only one penetration, and that
was to the 40-yard line.
A high-powered offense and a
stubborn defense brought Sq. 14
a 20-0 win over A TC. Playing
with only seven players, A TC
failed to score a single penetration
as it saw the winners roll up five
(See INTRAMURALS, Page 4)
feature event of the week as this
see-saw battle kept the fans won
dering about the outcome till the
last minute.
Jim Bevans coached the junior
team to its win over the grown
ups 32-22. The faculty led at half
time 18-15, but the young men
came out and held them to only two
points during the entire second
half.
The “B” boys caught on fire to
add to the effectiveness of their
defense, and dumped in 17 points to
wind things up at 32-22.
Both teams play their nert game
Thursday night at 7:00 and 8:00
p.m. against Dimebox.
Graves Sparks Bowl Gaines;
Little, Rush Are Standouts
The Aggies weren’t invited to
any post season bowl games, but
three of the Cadet’s senior stars
carried the maroon and white col
ors to classics during the holi
days.
All America Jack Little, Ray
Graves, and Marshall Rush played
for the South in the annual Blue-
Grey game, and Graves and Little
participated in the Senior Bowl
for the South.
In the Blue-Grey game, they
were playing under their own
coach Ray George. Little and
Rush were outstanding on the de
fensive team while Graves was
number one quarterback.
Graves had a, great day, passing
and running the South team to
victory. Little was highly com
mended by George for his out
standing play on defense. He
showed his usual fine form by
practically holding up the right
side of the line.
Rush also drew praise for his
defensive halfback work. He had
been a fine defensive artist dur
ing the regular season, and this
game was no exception.
(See BOWL GAME, Page 4)
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