The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 26, 1953, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Hooper, Nelson,
Pirtle
Win ‘Most Valuable’
Darrow Hooper, Jerry Nelson
and Rodney Pirtle received Friday
night most valuable player awards
for A&M track, baseball and
basketball.
They received the Lipscomb—
Colson awards at the annual spr
ing sports barbecue honoring over
200 Aggie athletes in every sport
except cross country and football.
The later two sports are honored
at the annual winter sports ban
quet.
“MY PAL GUS”
Richard Widmark
— and —
“JOHNNY HOLIDAY”
Sunday—“IVANHOE”
TODAY & WEDNESDAY
An Arrowhead Picture • Released thru United Artists
HETEHl
Bryan 2 m 8$19
LAST DAY
QUEEN
Hooper is from Fort Worth, Nel
son from Beaumont, and Pirtle
from Coleman.
HOOPER WON the shot put
and discus events in every track
meet this spring, Nelson, a sopho
more pitcher, was the lone Aggie
and only unanimous all-Southwest
Confei-ence choice while Pirtle, al
so a sophomore, was cited for his
steady play on the Aggie cage
team.
Leroy Miksch, senior forward
from Waelder and Charles Leiss-
ner, junior second baseman
from Austin received the Ted
Mohle awards presented annual
ly to the players in baseball and
basketball who contributed most
to team play.
Lipscomb - Colson awards also
went to the captains in three
sports—Miksch, basketball; Bob
by Ragsdale, Junction, track and
Bill Munnerlyn, Houston, baseball.
VARSITY SENIOR Don Heft
of Corpus Christi and frosh eager
John Fortenberry of North Little
Rock, Ark, received the Reed Wip-
precht awards for free throw ac
curacy in varsity and freshman
basketball.
Don Crawford, junior back-
stroke from Corpus Christ, was
named winner of the Jimmie Kiel
swimming trophy, while sopho
more Richard Weick of College
Station was named outstanding
varsity swimmer.-
•
LOUANNS FOR HAPPY MUSK
•
’pH
L0UANNS
r
>
Every Friday
cr
o
o
Happy Music W : ith
S
in
Cell Block
>
**
<
o
ci
Seven
MUSIC
•
Make
•
3
Your Reservations
t-
o
NOW
>
HAPPY
Call EM-2688
n
+T*
o
o
L0UANNS
>
Greenville and Uovers I.ane
•t!
c
at Central Expressway
MUSIC
•
EOUANNS FOR HAPI’Y MUSIC
• ■ „
CIRCLE
4-1250
TONIGHT & WEDNESDAY
Children under 12 admitted
FREE when accompanied by
an adult.
RICHARD TRAVIS • SHEILA RYAN
ON STAGE IN PERSON
Friday Prev. II P.M.
TODAY LAST DAY
—Features Starts—
1:36 - 3:42 - 5:48 - 7:54 - 10:00 |
NEWS — CARTOONS
STARTS WEDNESDAY
Tyranny Drove
' Him to Piracy!
_ Prwcsof
*WlRAT£S
!0HN DEREK - BIRBAP*. RUSH
NEWS — CARTOONS ■
P. L. Downs Jr., official greet
er at A&M and founder of the
varsity swimming pool, was given
an award as the “layman who con
tributed most to the swimming
team during the past year.”
ROBERT BRASLAU, junior
from Galveston, received the Da
vid U. Van Buskirk trophy, given
annually to the person who most
promotes fencing at A&M College.
Jerry Robinett, junior catcher
from El Paso, was cited for the
Maltz Brothers award he received
here Mother’s Day as the baseball
player with the most efficiency in
baseball and military.
The Brazos County A&M Club
annually sponsors both the winter
and spring sports events.
Aggies to Play
LSI! In Series
A two-year football series be
tween A&M and Louisiana State
University for 1955 and 1956 has
been announced by Barlow (Bones)
Irvin, director of athletics.
The two rivals last played in
1949, an 8-game series ending that
year, but the rivalry goes back to
1899 witlv the entire 20-game series
all even. Each team has won nine
games with two having been tied.
LSU has the edge over the Ag
gies in the final series winning six
games and dropping two. The Ag
gies won more games in the earlier
days of the rivalry.
The 1955 game will be a night
affair, Sept. 24 in the Cotton Bowl
in Dallas. The return contest will
be in the afternoon of Sept. 29,
1956 at Baton Rouge.
•
A&M and LSU Record
1899 A&M 52-0
1906 A&M 22-12
1907 A&H 11-5
1908 LSU 26-0
1914 Tie 7-7
1914 A&M 63-9
1916 LSU 13-0
1917 A&M 27-0
1920 Tie 0-0
1921 LSU 6-0
1922 A&M 46-0
1923 A&M 28-0
1942 LSU 16-7
1943 A&M 28-13
1944 A&M 7-0
1945 LSU 31-12
1946 LSU 33-9
1947 LSU 19-13
1948 LSU 14-13
1949 LSU 34-0
Golf Course Opens
Summer May 31
A Mixed -Scotch foursome May
31 will open this year’s summei;
activities of the golf course, said
Joe Fagan, golf course manager.
The course will be operated as
usual with a $.50 charge for stu
dents and $.75 chai-ge for faculty
and former students.
A summer school membership
fee of $7.50 will allow students to
use the course anytime, Fagan
said.
FOR S') VOUR
yg! •'
MADE IT the FAtCEE FEN CO., U.E.A.
Every graduate wants a new
Parker Flaminaire. Lights hot
with cold iso-butane gas.
French styling plus Parker pre
cision. A thrilling gilt. $1050
In smart gift case. bo
The Exchange
Store
“Serving Texas Aggies
Tuesday, May 26, 1953
THE BATTALION
Pa&e 3
Hooper and Davis Will Highlight
Star-Laden A A l Meet in Houston
Olympic star Darrow Hooper
will compete Saturday night in the
Texas AAU track and field meet in
the Public School Stadium in Hous
ton. .
Hooper won second in the shot
put in Helsinki last summer. Wal
ter (Buddy) Davis, class of ’52,
also will compete for honors in
the meet.
Dean Smith, 1952 sprint champ
ion of the SWC, ineligible this
year, competed at the Coliseum Re
lays in Los Angeles last week and
will enter this stax-laden track
event.
In addition, the outstanding
high school freshman and collegi
ate performers in the state will
compete. A women’s division will
be held, with competitors entered
from Angleton, Dear Park and
Rosebud in addition to the Houston
girls.
The SWC championship Aggies
will take a team to the meet. Run
ner-up University of Texas will
be there, along with Rice, U of H,
DALLAS
87 Minutes
TCU, Texas Southern, Prairie View
and Victoria Junior College.
Ellington Air Force Base and
Camp Hood also will send teams.
Star freshman teams from
Rice and Texas will compete on
an equal basis with the varsities,
and Coaches Clyde Littlefield of
the Longhorns and Emmett Brun
son of the Owls plan to combine
their varsity and freshman units
in some relay events.
Hey ..TAXIl
Maddening on a rainy day, isn’t it,
when it won’t stop? Maddening or not,
the years won’t stop either. Don’t wait
until you are past the years of in
surability to begin planning a secure
future. Call me today to discuss per
sonal retirement protection.
A. H. ••Hecter” Winder ’52
336 Jersey St.
Phone 6-5011
INSURANCE ^ COMPANY
Serving Since 190S
LIFE • ACCIDENT • HEALTH • HOSPITALIZATION • GROUP
The Brains of the Team
Teamwork can work miracles. In a football game the man
who sparks these miracles is the quarterback. He’s the man
who calls the signals. There’s a man who calls the signals
for an Air Force flying team, too!
They call him an Aircraft Observer.
Do YOU have what it takes to become an Aircraft Observer?
It isn’t easy. It’s tough. You have to be a MAN to qualify
as an Aircraft Observer. But when you are one, brother,
you're SOMEBODY! The success or failure of a mission in-
volvinc over a million dollars worth of flight equipment
depends on you.
THE AIRCRAFT OBSERVER IS THE SOMEBODY WHO:
As Bombardment O fficer, is number one man on a bombing
run, the man who controls the plane in the target area!
As Navigation Officer, is the pilot’s guiding hand on every
flight!
As Radar Officer, is master of a new science and operator
of the device that sees beyond human sight!
As Aircraft Performance Engineer Officer, is the one who
“keeps the plane flying’’, the man who knows his plane in
side and out, who keeps it fit for the skies and sees that it
stays there!
If YOU can accept a challenge ffke this, you’ll take your
place beside the best—you’ll find your future in the clouds!
TO BE QUALIFIED you must be single, a citizen, between 19
and 26 l /2 years old, have had at least 2 years of college and
be in tip top physical shape. If this describes you, then
YOU, too, can qualify. Today!
HERE'S WHAT YOU’LL GET! The world’s best training. Good
food and plenty of it. Uniforms, flight clothes, eguipment.
Medical and dental care. Free insurance. Flight training in
Uncle Sam’s greatest aircraft.
AND THEN, AFTER GRADUATION, you’ll win your silver
wings, and earn more than S5000 a year as an Air Force
Lieutenant. You’ll enjoy an adventurous, exciting career
with a hand-picked crew of real men. You’ll be THE BRAINS
OF THE TEAM. A TRIPLE THREAT MAN . . . as a Bombard
ment Officer, as a Navigation Officer, as a Radar Officer, as
an Aircraft Performance Engineer.
THE SOONER YOU APPLY, THE SOONER YOU FLY!
GIT THE details: Visit your nearest Air Force Base or Air Force Recruiting Officer. Or write to Director
of Training. Headquarters, USAF. Washington 25, D.C., Attention: Aviation Cadet Branch. If you are
in a school that has an Air Force ROTC program, see your Professor of Air Science and Tactics.
New Aircraft Observer Cadet Training Classes Begin Every Two Weeks
S-AijTfo*
*
AIRCRAFT
OBSERVER PROGRAM