The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 17, 1954, Image 3

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    Wednesday, February 17, 1954
THE BATTALION
Page 3
Addison Scores 26
Mexico To Bring
Cadets Lose 66-49 Fi f teen Champions
James Addison piled up 26
points last night in Austin but
Texas rolled to a 66-49 victory over
the Aggies and a shai'e of the
Southwest conference lead with
the Rice Owls.
With starters Gib Ford and Fred
Saunders out most of the game
with colds, the Steers raced into a
16-7 lead at the end of the first
quarter. Jim Richardson, 6-4, took
Saunders’ place and sparked the
Longhorns with 23 points.
Addison, after his 36-point pei’-
formance ' against SMU, now has
scored 62 points in his last two
starts and leads Ag’gie scoring
with 226.
The Cadets were in front only
once in the entire game, holding
a 5-4 advantage in the opening
minutes. Richardson, 6-5 Billy
Powell and 6-7 Bob Waggener soon
erased the margin and put Texas
ahead to stay. Powell scored 14
points.
The smallest crowd that has
watched a conference game this
season in Gregory saw the taller
Steers control the backboards and
hit 21 of 60 shots from the field.
Texas had a 44-22 edge on the
backboards and held the Cadets to
just 12 field goals in 46 shots.
Texas led 30-17 at the half and
a comfortable 50-32 lead when the
final quarter began.
Bryant Makes
Appearance
At Dallas
Paul (Bear) Bryant, A&M’s
new head football coach and
athletic director, last night in
Dallas made 'one of his first
public appearances in the state
since accepting his new job.
Bryant was presented at the
annual Sports Achievement
dinner of the Saturday Morn
ing Quarterback club at Dal
las’ downtown YMCA.
Darrow Hooper, former Ag
gie track and Olympic star, re
ceived a special award as the
Southwestern Amateur Ath
letic Union’s nominee for the
1953 Sullivan award.
Cooper Robbins sr., former
freshumn football coach and
father of three Cadet grid-
sters, was given an award as
the High School Coach of the
Year by the Texas Sports
Writers association. He coach
ed Odessa to the state 4-A
finals last season.
Addison was the only Aggie to
score over 6 points. Both Roy
Martin and Pat McCrory had a
half dozen points.
Texas coach Slue Hull used his
entire team of 14 men, and 13 of
them bz-oke into the scox-ing col
umn.
A&M plays TCU in Fort Worth
Saturday night.
Ag Box Score
A&M <«!)) fgr. ft. fi. fp.
Addison ^ 12 5 26
Fortenberry 1 1 d 3
Martin 2 2 3 6
Ilardgrovc 0 1 2 1
MoCrory 2 2 3 6
Kennedy 0 2 3 2
Boring 0 2 1 2
Mcllhenny .....0 0 0 0
Homeyer 0 1 0 1
Hearne 0 2 1 2
Miller O 0 0 0
TOTALS 12 25 24 49
TEXAS (66) fg. ft. fl. tp.
Waggener 1 2 2 4
Powell 5 4 2 14
Richardson 7 9 5 23
Kidd 1 1 4 3
Stewart 1 1 2 3
Schmid l l 4 3
Buchanan 1 0 2 2
Warren 1 0 2 2
Gage 0 1 0 1
Ford 1 1 1 3
Howard 1 1 1 3
Warwick 0 0 0 0
Saunders 1 0 2 2
Bradshaw o 3 1 3
TOTALS 21 24 28 66
Score by periods:
A&M 7 10 15 17—49
Texas . 16 14 20 16—66
Free throws missed: Martin, Addison 9,
Fortenberry, McCrory, Kennedy, Homeyer
3, Waggener, Kidd, Richardson 7, Powell,
Schmid, Bradshaw, Ford, Stewart, Howard.
Officials: Shaw and McAllister. i
Earle, Castillo
Leave to l ight
In CG Tourney
Two Aggies—James Earle
and Ed Castillo—left today to
complete in the state Cotden
(iloves tournament at Fort
Worth.
The tournament begins tonight
and will be completed Monday
night.
Earle won the open 135 pound
title at the Waco regional tourney
last week, and Castillo replaces
Aggie Paul Terrill as the region’s
open light-heavyweight contender.
Victorious in 3 out of 32 fights,
Earle was named the Waco tourna
ment’s outstanding boxer in the
open class. He scoi'ed two first
round TKO’s in the meet and lias
a I'ecord of 17 KO’s or TKO’s in
his cai'eer. Both of Earle’s losses
have been spit decisions.
A pole vaulter on the track team,
Earle also draws the Cadet Slouch
cartoons for The Battalion.
Castille lost a decision to Ter
rill in the light-heavyweight finals
at Waco but “had obviously coast
ed in order to make Ten-ill look
good,” said the Waco News-Tri
bune.
The paper repoi’ted that Terrill
protested the decision vigorously,
saying that Castillo had “held off”
during the entire bout. .
Mexico s champions in 15 events
will run, throw and jump Satur
day when the Aggie track team
meets the Mexico national all-stars
at Kyle field.
Tickets are 50 cents for adults
and 25 cets for students. The meet
is sponsored by the College Sta
tion Kiwanis club. Season athletic
tickets will not be good.
Mexico is scheduled to bring a
29-player team, including a 20-
man male squad. The men’s team
would be Mexico’s Olympic squad
in an Olympic year. All events will
be staged in metric distances under
Olympic rules and regulations.
The Mexican girls will met the
Gulf Coast AAU women’s team.
Aquirre Holds Three Records
The meet wiR start at 2:30 p. m.,
when field evehts begin. Running
events will begin at 3.
Jorge Aquirre holds Mexico’s
high jump, broad jump and hop,
step and jump records. He has a
6-1 high jump, 22-6 broad jump
and 46-8 hop, step and jump.
Dash champ Sergio Higuera has
the equivalent of a 9.7 100 yard
dast &,nd a 21.8 220. He holds the
257-634.
Here are the All-Star' league
team totals going into Thursday's
games:
Team
W
L
Faulks Auto
43
14
Conway & Co.
40 Vi
16 Ms
Student Co-op
38
19
Coca Cola
28 Pa
28 Vs
Riverside
27 y 3
29 Ms
Carrol s
20
37
Brueggcman
19 Ms
37 Mi
Wallace
11
46
Danny Thompson rolled an
893 high series (five games)
and Hal Wallace bowled a 233
high game, when two teams
of members from the All-Star
league matched with teams in
Alice, Saturday.
Friday morning in the BAFB Of
ficer’s Wives league, Helen Fill-
ingham of the Tigers, had high
game with 172, and tied with Cara-
bcl Weston, of the Shooting Stars,
for high series with 451.
Last night the Parker Astin
team held first place, beating
College Station State Bank in
national records in the 100 and
200 meters.
Javier Souza Diaz, Mexico’s
champ in the 400 meters, has
covered that distance in 48.9, the
eqivalent of a 49 second 440. i
The team from south of the
border also will present Mexico’s
three best milers — Heliodoro
Martinez, Raul Osornio and
Rosendo Guzman.
Martinez and Osornio have a
mile equivalent of 4:28, and Guz
man has a 4:30.
Guillermo I’opoCa is Mexico’s
best in the 400 meter hurdles with
a time of 56.3 seconds.
Mexico’s champ in the 5,000
meters and the 3,000 meter steeple
chase—Eligio Galicia—also will be
here. His time in the 5,000 meters
is 15:52.8. Galicia will run the, 300
meter race, the nearest distance to
our two-mile run.
Two of Mexico’s girls hold five
national records between them.
Villalon holds the marks in the
50, 100 and 200 meters. Amalia
Yubi is the national champ in the
80 meter hurdles and the javelin.
She also will compete in the high
jump.
gte, a i *
three games. Ernie Elder had
both high game and series with
a 177-470.
These are the present standings:
Team
W
L
Parker Astin
..13
5
Youngbloods
..11
7
Miller’s
..10
8
Davis Auto Supply ..
.. 8
10
Foodtown ;.
.. 7
11
Col. Sta. State Bank..
.. 5
13
SEXLESS SEX REPORT
NEW YORK CP)- An eastside
shopkeeper Wanted to boost sales
of a magazine with articles on the
Kinsey report, but didn’t know how
the church-going family neighbor
hood would react. He compromised.
The placard advertising the
magazine read “Kinsey’s report on
behavior of the American family.”
and had a hole cut out above “be
havior.”
Customers who didn’t know al
ready could buy one of his maga
zines to find out that the type of
behavior Dr. Kinsey was reporting
on had to do with sex.
PALACE
TODAY thru FRIDAY
%. ttSBsmn., _ You'll find him where there's
I The
COLO.. . and a
W0MAH!
Starring Lloyd BRIDGES
Lee J. COBB • Marie WINDSOR • Luther ADLER
Down the Alley . . .
Bowling With Bill
By BILL SHEPARD
Battalion Bowling Writer
Here is a little more news of what bowlers of the College
Station - Bryan area did for the week and what is planned
for the future.
Wednesday night, Corkey Crowley rolled both high game
and series for the A&M Bowling Club with a 210-552. The
next night, John Geiger, of the Student Co-op team, howled
high game and series for the ABC All-Star league with a
Tigers Outclass
Tom ball 49-28 Here
In Series Opener
Playing before a wild, standing-
room-only crowd in the Tiger gym,
A&M Consolidated high school last
night battered Tomball, 49-28, in
the opener of a two-out-of-three
series to decide the district 25-A
basketball title.
Tomball is the east zone champ,
and Consolidated finished on top in
the west zone.
The two teams play again at 8
p. m. Thursday in Tomball. The
third game, if needed, will be play
ed in Sealy at 8 p. m. Friday.
Consolidated, sparked again by
Center Bobby Jackson, clamped an
air-tight defense on their opponent
and led all the way. The Tigers
gave up only 7 points in the first
half, leading 27 - 7, at the halfway
mark.
Jackson pushed in 20 points for
high scoring honors after scoring
55 in the three game Bellville
series. He now has an 18.7 scor
ing average in the four playoff
games.
Roy Ford led Tomball with 13
points. David Bonnen and Fred
Anderson each scored 11 for Con
solidated. Ford was the only Tom-
Tiger Box Score
Consolidated
( 19)
is-
n.
Ji.
Cooner .
. . . B
i
h
Beasley .
. . O
(i
2
0
Bonnen . .
. . B
7
1
X 1
Floeck . . . .
. . 0
0
0
0
Jackson .
... <>
s
0
20
Oden
. . . 0
0
0
0
Anderson .
... 5
1
2
33
Carroll . .
. . 0
0
0
0
0
2
'
TOTALS
. . . 16
37
14
49
Tomball (28)
ffT.
ft.
11.
ti>.
White . . . .
... i
a
2
5
Cannon .
. . . 0
i
1
3.
Tanner . . .
. . 0
0
2
0
Rodgers .
. . . 0
3
0
3
Pyle . . ..-A
... 0
0
a
0
Nicholson .
... 2
1
a
v>
Ford
. . 5
a
J.i
. . . 0
a
a
2
TOTALS .
... 8
12
ir>
28
ball player who made over 5
points.
The Tigers vaulted into an 11-3
first quarter lead, made it 27-7 at
the half, and 41-18 at the end of
the third period. Consolidated now
has a 21 - 3 season record.
’Mural Matmen
Unreel Openers
Intramural wrestling started
yesterday with matmen in four
divisions grappling in opening
round competition in the little
gym.
Each match consisted of three
two—minute rounds, with a time
limit of six minutd&s per match.
Results are: 147 pound class:
squadron 7’s Rudy Hdnson pinned
A quartermaster’s Richard Bailee
in two minutes; squadron 4’s Bill
Thiessen pinned D. W. Smith, ATC,
in 1:42; Bob Beale, B field artil
lery, won over squadron 9’s Charles
Harrison in 1:57.
Squadron 3’s Jack Shewing won
over R. L. Francis, squadron 14,
in 2:09; A chemical’s Norman Lab-
hart won over Jerry McKinney,
ASA, in 1:52; Ken Mays, squadron
13, won over 1’etc Ramirez, squad
ron 10, in 2:21.
157 pound—ASA’s Snxokey Todd
beat Roy Wodle, A armor, in 1:09;
squadron 5’s Charles Fisher won
over squadron 4’s Farnk Drury in
1:40; Jim Cook, B field artillery,
pinned Tom Brown, A iijfantry, in
44 seconds; squadron 3 : 4’s E. F.
Biehunko won over A. 1 . W. Seth,
ASA, in 2:08; and Pane ho Patter
son, squadron 11, decisioncd George
Parr squadron 6 in 4:30. \
ENGINEERING
SENIORS ...
North American
Aviation
Los Angeles
will interview here
MARCH 31
FRIDAY NIGHT PREVIEW—11 P.M.
THE STORY
OF A LOVE
THAT MADE
WONDERFUL
MUSIC !
JAMES STEWART
« JUNE ALLYSON
ft GLENN MILLER STORY”
jins THta
GUNN W 0
cKKTi ^ ^ CHARLES DRAKE
GEORGE TOBIAS • HENRY MORGAN
VUtKU^r ~ 0 ant ^ Ihtt* Muticpl "Gr*ot»"oi Gvesf Sforjf
rSANCES LANGFORD • LOUIS ARMSTRONG-GENE KRUPA-OEM POLLACK-THE MOOEJWAIRK
QUEEN
LAST DAY
“YANK IN R.A.F.”
STARTS THURSDAY
How the! stars sot started..
Qrmfact/Wi
Kdrlie Saulcr and Bill Finegan,
leaders of America’s most excitingly-
different dance band, met in 1939
as struggling young arrangers.
Ed had studied trumpet and ft
drum at college, worked / ^
up to arranging for
“name” bands; Bill
had studied in Paris,
won a spot with Tommy
Dorsey. After 13 years
of pooling new ideas,
they formed their
own band. It clicked!
F5r MifoOmd'
O^J FfotA/WL