The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 03, 1953, Image 3

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    Tuesday, March 3, 1953
THE BATTALION
Page 3
,1J Downs Ags
» Cagers 4 "lose
53 Season Play
i'ls as
L <ivanta
ier ffiMilcsch and Don Heft
better, 1 dollts as the Aggie bas-
v es t. team wound up season
£ht I 'fiinlt TCU in DeWare
woulij-isej Saturday night.
ungitjOhlen and Ray Warren
s 52-48 win which gave
iX. Kn(i'd-9 record in conference
•nia C|U, [who has occupied the
. season, jumped a half
* hadlwith a 79-74 win over
The Mustangs record is
* ' one game to play,
jl 117 led for three quarters
Lee the Frogs rally for
tattalio; hi the last period while
jruariT'h® l i5L g'>?‘ es to 9. The Ca-
ion-m a t halftime 28-24 and at
onorcr the last frame 39-24.
stowed^hlpn and Warren fouled
v- .tries White entered the
ho pdead the late period rally.
{.q maxed the fourth quarter
coileg-'h three field goals in the
and one-half minutes of
■men 2 '
penisg scorers for TCU were
tudem'dh 14, and Warren gath-
iallo\
fount, J
uni/o
Pcrs
S r gav
ippoini
ling eiDAY LAST DAY
dentlyts~-l:35 - 3:16 - 4:57
n't \vit!6:38 - 8:19 - 10:00
es who*
e add-i
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17 GijS
HoM GEORGE
ering 12. Miksch led the Aggies
with 13, followed by Pirtle with
12.
The conference season is at an
end for A&M, Baylor, and Arkan
sas. For the other four, it will end
tonight.
Big game of the night will be
at Fort Worth where Texas meets
TCU. The Longhorns and Frogs
are tied wdth Rice for the confer
ence lead. The Owls meet SMU in
Dallas.
NCAA Tourneys
The Southwest Conference rep
resentative will go to Manhattan,
Kan. March 13 and 14 for the
regional NCAA meet. Also attend
ing that meet will be the Missoma
Valley champion, Big Seven cham
pion, and one team to be selected
at large. Winners of each regional
meet will go to Kansas City to
play for the NCAA title March
17 and 18.
Basketball coaches will hold
their annual convention in Kansas
City beginning March 16.
TCU
Ohlen
Warren
Allen
Swaim
Lampkin
Hoyt
White
Brumblcy
Brown
f«: ft i>r ti>
S 4 0 14
0 0 0 0
2 2 2 (i
A&M
Miksch
Pirtle
Martin
Blnford
Heft
Addison
Johnson
fK ft i>r ti>
3 7 3 13
0 10 1 Totals 14 20 15 48
Totals 20 12 22 52
Score by periods:
TCU 8 16 10 18—52
A&M 11 17 11 9—48
Free throws missed—Ohlen 2, Warren 2,
Swaim 2, White, Brumbley 2, Brown,
Miksch 7, Martin 3, Binford 2, Addison .2.
Koenifi
MONTGOMERY
PALACE
Bryan 2'$879
SKY HIGH—Leroy Miksch outjhmps a frog in the final
qharter of the Aggie-TCU basketball game Saturday
night. This was Miksch’s last game for the Maroon and
White. He will graduate in June.
Odessa Loses Two
Meets in Ag Pool
'GHNlws - Cartoon
. felis—
AndeRTS WEDNESDAY
CIRCLE
4-1250
•en Under 12 Admitted
} When Accompanied By
dult.
QUEEN
JPT & WEDNESDAY
TODAY & TUESDAY
“Disc Jockey”
COMING — FRl. I REVUE
DlNY THOMAS-PEGGY LEE
JjTI’L ABNER This Is The Forest Primeval
A&M Freshmen and Brazos
Comity High School swimmers
beat the Odessa High School tank
men at P. L. Downs Natatorium
Saturday.
Odessa met the Brazos team in
the morning, but came out on the
short end of a 48-26 count. In the
afternoon, Odessa swam against
the Fish but lost 66-9.
Results of the Odessa and A&M
freshman match are as follows.
i.
TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY
NICK CRAVAT • ROLAND K1BBEE - HAROLD HECHT
ROBERT SI0DMAK-* NORMA PRODUCTION
( DISTRIBUTED S* WARNER BROSn W
Forty ward freestyle—Thassian
(P 1 ), Stawiki (F), Kemp (0).
100 yard breaststroke — Goff
(F), Allen (F), Stubbs (O).
200 yard freestyle—Devilbiss
(F), Barlow (F), Marx (0).
100 yard backstroke — Baird
(F), Kirkpatrick (F), Bush (0).
100 yard freestyle—Klipple (F),
Whellcr (0), Sherwook (F).
120 individual medley—Klipple
(F), Stawicki (F), Cannon (0).
180 medley relay—Barlow, Kirk
patrick and Goff (F).
160 freestyle relay—Setel, Al
len, Sherwoodj Percifield (G).
Divers—Percifield (F), Stawicki
(F), Cannon (0).
Results of the Brazos and
Odessa meet were as follows:
40 yard freestyle — Shuffler
(B), Kemp (0), Mitchell (0).
.100 yard breaststroke —Pen-
berthy (B), Stubbs (.0), Fox (O).
200 yard freestyle—Albert (B),
Draper (B), Wheeler (0).
100 yard backstroke—Barlow
(B), Kinchen (0), Bush (0).
100 yard freestyle—Boyett (B),
Flecher (B), Borger (0).
120 individual medley—Stevens
B), Swindell (O), Dinchen (0).
180 medley relay—Barlow, Pen-
berthy, Boyett (B).
160 freestyle relay — Shuffler,
Flecher, Thompson, Broper, (B).
Divers—Cannon (0), Kenrick
(0).
TONITE & WEDNESDAY
Stewart Granger
Technicolor
“PRISONER OF ZENDA”
‘ THE RIVER”
By A1 Capp
TI L ABNER A Shrewd Plan
By A1 Capp
C-AAJ'LL UUMPOFr /AS-PO BOTTOMLESS *)
p/7;a^'jlook at /t oa/ th' wav
DOLV/VS/’— THEM me: AH’TH’PITCHER'LL
be: outa hhh H&ACH.rr-J
Ten Semifinals Unreeled;
Finals Set Today
tunau copped the fisk^io? pound
Fish Mat
Seven berths in division finals
were filled yesterday as 13 bouts,
including 10 semifinals, were un
folded in the intramural wrestling
tourney. Finals in the freshman
class will be unreeled today, in
stead of on Fite Nite.
Title berths in the following
divisions were decided: One in up
perclassman 137 pound, both final
ists in upperclassman 177 pound,
one in upperclassman 191 pound,
both finalists in fish 137 pound,
both in fish 177 pound, and both
contenders for the freshman 191
pound title.
Two vital upperclassman heavy
weight matches, both of them
semifinals, were postponed. They
were Davis, Co. C—Huff, E FA
and Winkler, A Ath.—Maxwell,
A Arm.
Benefield Scraps Granton
John Benefield, Sq. 11, jumped
into the upperclassman 177 pound
final with a hard-fought 3-2 de
cision over Murray, A Arm. He
meets Granton, A Inf. The tall,
rangy Benefield got off in front
of his stubborn foe, with a take
down at 1:50. Murray counted at
2:55 to make at 2-1, then Bene
field scored the winning point at
3:05 as he broke Murray’s hold.
Murray made it 3-2 at 4:20. Gran
ton, the other 177 pound finalist,
pinned Braswell, A Ord., in 2:51
after building up a 4-1 lead on
points.
In a crowd-pleasing upperclass
man 191 pound bout, Shaw, Sq.
3, gained the finals with a 4-2
decision of Gerloff, A Sig. Shaw
fights the Kilgore, Sq. 9—Van
Hoosier, C FA winner. Kilgore
took Meier, A Arm. in 1:14.
Forcing Gerloff to the mat at
1:00 on a take-down, Shaw record
ed a 2-0 lead, but Gerloff knotted
it at 2:30 on a near-fall. At 3:02,
Shaw scored the winning points
on another take-down.
Fast Fish Bouts
Two quick falls decided the
freshman 191 pound finalists. Mc-
Carn, Co. A, pasted Keith, Sq. 20,
to the canvas in 54 seconds. Viv
ian, Co. I, snai'ed a decision from
Holstein, Sq. 24 in 1:12.
Dodd, Sq. 11, pulled out all the
stops as he pinned Hughes, AAA,
in 1:27 to gain the upperclassman
157 pound finals against Johnson,
A Ord. Dodd pulled ahead, 210,
in points with a near-fall at 1:29.
In an upperclassman 137 pound
semifinal, Rowland, Sq. 11, gained
the finals with a 2:41 fall of Burk-
head, Sq. 7. He battles Andrews,
B FA, in the title match. Rowland
spurted in front in the first 35
seconds and led 6-0 at 1:50 on two
take-downs and a near-fall.
Parker in 177 Final
John Parker, Co. C, one of the
most promising grapplers of the
tourney, pinned Zefnial, Sq. 21,
to vault into the fish 177 pound
title scrap. He takes the mat
against Sofge, Co. H, who deci-
sioned Moore, Co. A, 6-4, Leading
4-3 at the end of four minutes,
Sofge counted the winning mar
gin with a near-fall at 4:10.
Shaw, F FA, pinner Ai'eher, Co.
D in 57 seconds and Roberts, Sq.
24 pinned Roots, D FA in fresh
man 147 pound bouts.
Ferrell, D FA, and Crow, F FA,
sneaked into the fish 137 pound
finals without losing any sweat.
Ferrell got a forfeit from Tachi-
bana, Sq. 19, and Crow wa3 cred
ited with a default ovbr Petty, Sq.
24, when Petty was unable to make
the weight.
Friday Results
Following is a summary of Fri
day’s matches:
Upperclassman
147 pound—Henson, Sq. 5, over
Seth, ASA, by default. Henson
thus meets Pyle, Sq. 7, in the
fight for the crown.
167 pound—-Loustaunau, Bizzell,
over Hayes, C FA; Webb, A Ord.,
over Milton, A Cml. This sets the
stage for a spine-tingling battle
for the 167 pound crown. Webb
captured the upperclassman 157
pound diadem in 1952 and Lous-
Weight Lifters
Meet At Little Gym
The meet in Dallas March 7 will
be the topic for discussion when
the Weight Lifting Club meets to
morrow night at 7:30 in the lit
tle gym, club president Bobby
Fletcher said today. He strongly
urges that all members attend.
crown.
Freshman
123 pound—Gonzales, Co. I, over
Whither, Sq. 24; Allen, Co. H,
over Fuchs, Sq. 23. The two win
ners meet for the title today.
130 pound—Tommye, Sq. 21,
over Smith, Co. C, by default.
Tommye battles Pinsh, Sq. 17,
for the championship.
137 pound-Crow, F FA, oyer
Keeter, Sq. 22; Tachibana, Sq. 19,
over Stewart, Sq. 22;
Heavyweight — Evans, Fish
Band, over Bonarden, Co. A; Gan-
tier, Co. G, over Sanders, F FA,
by default.
Soccer Team
Blanks BAFB
In Fifth Win
The Aggie Soccer team won
their fifth game of the year by a
score of 4-0 over Bryan Air Force
Base.
Captain G. Cardenas scored all
four goals for A&M to send him
into the league scoring lead with
15 goals.
A&M’s first goal came on a
free kick by Cardenas. On a free
kick, the ball is placed 12 yards
in front of the goal posts with no
one but the goalie given a chance
to block the kick.
The second goal came on a pass
from the right wing to Cardenas
who booted it between the posts.
Early in the second half, the
Bryan goalie made an attempt to
catch the ball a little too far from
the goal and Cardenas kicked the
ball over his head for the third
Score.
The fourth goal came just 10
minutes before the end of the
game on a strong 20 yard kick
by Cardenas.
“The team is improving all the
time, and the new members are
x’eally showing up fine,” said Cai'-
denas.
Allen Academy comes to A&M
for the next game on March 4.
The Aggies wind up regular sea
son play against Texas.
jpA' > : r ■
J
#5
When Grover talks to his dreamboat — something clicks
A call from Dreamboat always clicks with
Grover. And an Automatic Message Ac
counting machine has been clicking too —
down in the telephone office — busily
punching impressions on a paper tape.
You may be interested in what this
ingenious recorder does. It keeps track of
what telephone number you called, how
long you talked, and records this informa
tion in such a way that another machine
can automatically prepare a monthly bill.
The development of this new automatic
work by Bell Telephone Laboratories,
Western Electric and the telephone com
panies. Telephone people working on this
and other interesting and important proj
ects were in college just a short time ago.
Perhaps you’d like to join them.
Your Placement Officer can give you de
tails about employment opportunities in
the Bell System. Or write to American
Telephone & Telegraph Company, College
Relations Section, 195 Broadway, New
York 7, N. Y., for a copy of the booklet.