Friday, December 17, 1954 THE BATTALION Page 3 Army Trounces Air Force 27-0 Line, Sanders Lead the Way A big, sharp blocking line opened up holes for fullback Bob Sanders and stifled the air force offense as the army ground out a 27-0 win on Kyle field yesterday in the third annual 12th Man Bowl football game. The victory before about 4,000 was the second for the army, following a 0-0 tie last year and their 6-0 win in 1952. Sanders scored the ’52 touchdown. Sanders, a 185 pounder from A field artillery, was the big offensive gun, scoring twice, on 5 and 21 yard runs, and gaining 81 yards on 14 carries. Quarterback Jimmy Morrison displayed some sharp ballhandling and running for the ground force, but in the final analysis, it was the ex- WATCH OUT BEHIND—Air force quarterback Charlie Ritchey carries for eight yards to the air force 30 yard line in the first quarter of the 12th Man Bowl game. Army end Ken Bridges (86) is in hot pursuit as official C. G. (Spike White follows the play. 3-A, 4-A Grid Finals Set This Weekend By HAROLD V. RATLIFF Associated Press Sports Editor Two games tonight get the Tex as schoolboy football campaign off on its biggest weekend of the fading season. Both games are in the lower brackets—Killeen vs. Freer at San Marcos in Class AA and Albany vs. Paducah at Wichita Falls in Class A—and the big showdowns come Saturday when champion Five Trackmen Go To New Orleans Five Aggie trackmen will com pete in the Sugar Bowl meet Dec. '•31 at New Orleans. Coach Frank Anderson announc ed sophomore Jim Hollingsworth — Willie Mays, the acrobatic center fielder who won the National Lea gue batting championship and helped the New York Giants sweep the pennant and World Series, yes terday was voted most valuable player in the league. Down in San Juan, where Mays is leading the Puerto Rican winter league with a .428 average with the Santurce club, Willie’s com ment was a characteristic, “that’s good.” Mays took the award in stride, commenting that he though John ny Antonelli, his Giants’ team mate, had a good chance of win ning it. “Antonelli, he could have got it,” said Mays. “He won 20 games.” Support Faded Antonelli, however, didn’t re ceive as much support as some Links On The Lake LON GLAKE, Mich. (/Pi-Wai ter Hagen, many times a golf champ, makes his summer home here. Hagen spends a lot of his time hunting and fishing, but oc casionally he whiles away an af ternoon driving golf balls into the lake. Soccer Team Opens League With Ellington The A&M Soccer team, de fending- champion of the Tex as International Soccer league, will start regular sea sonal play here Feb. 20 against Ellington air force base. The Aggies have won the league title the last two years, and only three members of last year’s first team were graduated. Playoffs for the championship will be a double robnd-robin. Other league members are Bryan air force base, University of Houston and Allen Academy. Juan Letts is captain of the Ca dets, and his assistant is Aristide Casas. Team manag-er is Olegario Chiai'i-Barrelier, and Raul Lousta- unau is publicity man. Paul An drew is sponsor. Members of the 20-man squad include: Goalies — M. Maishounot, Pedro Carrillo; backs, Emilio Med ina, Ernesto Pabon, Cyril Larti gue, Mantandros; half—Charles Horgan, Jorge Ducos, Guy Fernan dez, Jesus Vega, Mauricio DeMad- reros, Letts; Wing—JDersidal, V. M. Artecona, Lee Blocker; inside—Jorge Hidal go, Mauricio Lesag’e; center — Robei’to Ildarraz, MacDowell. thought he would get. The final totals of the vote by the 24-man Committee, three fi-om each lea gue city of the Baseball Writers Asso. of America, rated Mays, Cin cinnati’s Ted Kluszewski, Anto nelli, Brooklyn’s Duke Snider and New York’s Alvin Dark in that or der. Mays received 1G of the 24 firsts and Kluszewski, who led. both lea- g-ues with 49 homers and 141 runs batted in, drew seven fh-sts. The other first-place vote went to Dark. On the basis of points, 14 for first and then 9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1, Mays had 283, Kluszewski 217, An tonelli 154, Snider 135 and Dark 110. Musial Sixth Stan Musial of St Louis, winner in 1943-46-48, finished sixth with 97 points, followed by Philadel phia’s Robin Roberts, 70, Milwau kee’s Joe Adcock 60, Brooklyn’s Pee Wee Reese 53, and Gil Hod ges, 40. Roy Campanella, winner in 1951 and 1953 but handicapped by a hand injury during ’54, didn’t get a single point. Neither did team mate Jackie Robinson of Brooklyn who won in 1949. Hank Sauer of Chicago, who won in 1952, receiv ed only one point. WBI-TW-MST-WCTURN-PUN’’ ■wia DRIVE IN . ^Theatre CHILDREN UNDER 12 YEARNS tnn — First Drive In Showing — Robert Taylor — Color “VALLEY OF THE KINGS” Plus — Esther Williams ‘DANGEROUS WHEN WET’ — SATURDAY ONLY — Robert Stack — Color “SABRE JET” — Plus Shelly Winters in “TENNESSEE CHAMP” today fewptms s fi Witch! Woman! 8URGt , s . 5 ., •/ c .Meredith