The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 11, 1955, Image 3

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    Page 3
Friday, March 11, 1955
THE BATTALION
A&M, Texas Battle
At Border Meet
With fast-improving Tom Bon-
orden and Herman Johnson bent
on replacing the loss of Bobby
Gross in the shot put and discus,
A&M again challenges University
of Texas for the Border Olympic
title.
A 20-man squad left for Laredo
this morning with Coach Frank
(Col. Andy) Anderson to compete
against top tracksters from UT,
Rice, SMU, TCU, Baylor, Arkan
sas, Oklahoma A&M, University
of Houston and Texas Tech.
jLast year, the Steers ended a
five year A&M reign of the an
nual event.
Bonorden, a junior, and Johnson,
a “ sophomore, are good bets for
one-two finishes in the shot and
discus, with Gross out with a hurt
LAST DAY
ALLIED ARTISTS presents I
1
Techmcoiok
starring
STERLING
HAYDEN
COLEEN
GRAY
KEITH LARSEN
:;,4 TOM TULLY
JIMMY WAKELY
with
Tudor Owen
Lee Van Cleef
SATURDAY
Double Feature
Be Crazy flbont
— Hus —
COSMIC
FRANKENSTEIN
TERRORIZES
EARTH!
JW '
R.l.ot.d thru United ArtUtt
Cinemascope
Demetrius ami
knee. They finished two-three, be
hind Parry O’Brien, world record-
holder, at the Pan American games
warmup in Houston, and Johnson
took third in the discus, behind
O’Brien and Fortune Gordien.
Cadets going to Laredo are:
Bonorden, shot and discus; John
son, shot and discus; Fritzie Con-
nally, high jump; James Jackson,
pole vault; Lee Newman, discus;
Joe Schiraldi, javelin and high
jump;
Winton Thomas, pole vault;
Bill Cocke, two-mile; Carol Goyer,
440-yard sprint relay and 220-yard
dash; Harley Hartung, high and
low hurdles s and 440 relay; Bill
Holloway, 440 relay, relay mile,
440; .
James Hollingsworth, high and
low hurtlles; Wally Kleb, mile re
lay, 880; Bob McKnight, mile re
lay, 440; John Roberts, mile relay,
440; Don Watson, 440 relay, 100
yard dash;
Verlon Westmoreland and John
Whitwell, mile; Dale Elmore,
broad jump; John Henry, javelin.
Six A&M Golfers
Six A&M golfers left yesterday
by car to compete in the Border
Olympics at Laredo this weekend.
Coach Joe Fagan went with them.
To play for A&M are Bobby
Briggs, Bill Franklin, Tommy Cox,
Gary Fletcher, Marcelino Moreno
and Dave Vandervoort.
CIRCLE
LAST DAY
— A L S O —
‘’“Laughing Annie”
Wendell Corey
SATURDAY
“Return of The
Texan”
Dale Robertson
— A L S O —
O’Henrv’s
“Full House”
nrrKTja
Bryan Z’8879
TONIGHT FREY. 11 P.M.
SKIN DIVER ACTIOmS
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TODAY and SATURDAY
WILD AND WICKED
EARLY CALIFORNIA!
CORNEL WILDE YVONNE DeCARLO
PREY. SAT. — 10:30 P.M.
Sunday and Monday
n BEGINS INHERE ^ “r-X^ohp " LEFT OFF!
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SATURDAY PREY.—11 P.M.
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JUPlTERS
DARLING
M-G-M ••CSCHTS
; the love story
OF THE BEAUTY
AND THE BARBA
IN COLOR AND
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Z KEEL- CHAMPION
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Abbott & Costello
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Texas jumps to Lead
In S\VC Swim Meet
Texas’ Charlton Hadden shoved
the Longhorns off to a flying start
in the Southwest conference swim-
UCLA’ Wins
20-19 Football
Scrimmage
“U C L A” used its single
wing power five months too
early yesterday and defeated
A & M’s 1955 football team,
20-19.
Head coach Paul Bryant sent his
squad through a 60-minute game-
condition scrimmage on Kyle
field and paired off the boys who
figured to do most of the playing
next fall against a team of 1954
squadmen and freshmen using
UCLA’s offense.
“UCLA” even wore the Uclans’
light blue jerseys.
Scoring developed this way:
1. Ewell, a 5-9, 170-pounder, cli
maxed a 53 yard drive with a 16
yard scoring burst over left guard,
on the first play of the second per
iod, then kicked the extra point.
Wingback Bob Stolusky started the
march with an 18-yarder through
thq left side and Hall passed to end
Tommy Strait for 15 yards on a
fourth down play to keep it alive.
2. Ewell carried six times in a
50 yard drive after a Red fumble,
leaping over from the one. He
contributed runs of 11 and 8 yards.
Hall chipped in a 13 yard gain off
tackle.
Ewell converted.
3. On the first play after the
kickoff, Grant ran 17 yards to the
“UCLA” 33, then sped the rest of
the way on an option on the next
play. Loyd Taylor converted.
4. End Hollis Pollard intercep
ted a Hall pass and returned it 15
yards to the scrub 27. After a
five-yard penalty,! Grant, again on
a pitch-or-keep option, rambled 32
yards off left tackle to score. The
snapback on the PAT was high,
hitting Taylor in the face.
5. Ewell dove over center from
the two on the last quarter’s third
play, ending a 51-yard, 14-play
drive. A fumble recovery set it
up. Ewell carried on 11 plays, in
cluding an 18-yarder off right tac
kle. He missed the conversion af
ter a 15-yard penalty.
6. Center Lloyd Hale intercep
ted a pass to start a final 59-yard
Maroon scoring drive. Huddleston
reeled off 21 and 11 yard gains,
Kettler threw to halfback Carlos
Esquivel for 16 on a fourth down
play with 15 needed.
That put it on the 4, and Kettler
(See FOOTBALL, page 4)
ming meet here last night, churn
ing to a new A&M pool record of
20:36.6 in the 1,500-meter free
style.
Ed Johnson and Pat Patterson
of Texas finished behind Hadden
in that ox-der to give the Longhorns
13 points in the first event of the
meet. It was the only event staged
yesterday.
Hadden missed breaking the
SWC x-ecord, which he set last year,
by 49.6 seconds.
Gayle Klipple of A&M came in
fourth with a time of 21:51.2 to
give the Aggies thx-ee points.
SMU’s John MeElhaney and David
McComb finished fifth and sixth,
respectively, to tie A&M with thi-ee
poixxts.
This afternoon at 2:30, prelimi-
nax-ies are on tap in the 50-yard
freestyle, 200-yax-d backsti-oke, 220-
yard freestyle, 200-yard oi'thodox
breaststroke, one-meter diving and
400-yard freestyle relay. Finals
in these events begin at 8:30 to
night. ;
Dick Hunkier and Don Home of
A&M, along with Phil Vaiden,
SMU, and Robex-t Bell and Dave
Fennekohl, Texas, are favorites in
the sprints. Hunkier has beaten
both the SMU and Texas entries
in earlier meets this season.
In the 200-yard backsti’oke,
A&M’s Norman Ufex - has outdis
tanced both Richard Snelling of
SMU and Bo Baker of Texas, and
stands a good chaxxce of setting a
new pool record. He swam the
distance in 2:19.4 against SMU at
Dallas. The pool record is 2:20.5
set by George McMillan of SMU in
1952.
Richard Weick of A&M has cop
ped both the bi’eaststi'oke and in
dividual medley against all SWC
competition this year axxd wrote a
new medley pool record hex-e re
cently in 2:17.5.
Texas’ Richard Lawler and Louis
Million rate tops in conference div
ing, followed closely by SMU’s Jim
Groves and Jim Roberts.
Satuxday at 2:30 p.m., prelimi
naries in the 100 yard backstx-oke,
200-yard buttex-fly bi-eaststroke,
100-yard freestyle, 440-yard free
style, 200-yaxd individual medley,
three-meter diving and 300-yaxd
medley relay are scheduled. Finals
in these events ax - e at 8:30 p.m.
Saturday.
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Ag Tennis Team
Wins Second, 5,1
Sweeping the four singles mat
ches, A&M’s varsity tennis team
yesterday won its second straight
decision of the season, defeating
Southeastern Oklahoma 5-1 here.
A&M won the singles and one
doubles in straight sets. Gene Kin-
ax-d downed the visitox-s’ Cecil
Duncan, 6-1, 6-1, and Aggie Bob
Kei’r beat Jimmy Walker, 6-0, 6-1.
A Campus-to-Career Case History
1?
“This is what I did yesterday”
4 T like a job tbat keeps me jumping,”
says Bill Jermain, C.E. from Marquette,
5 52. “And my first management assign
ment with Wisconsin Telephone Com
pany does just that. I’m Service
Foreman at Sheboygan, with nine install
ers, and that means variety of responsi
bility. But judge for yourself. Here’s
a quick run-down of what I did yester
day, on a typical day—
8:10—“Checked day’s work schedule.
One of my new men was putting in a
buried service wire, and I went over the
job specs with him to be sure he had
things straight.
8:30—“Answered mail while my clerk
checked time sheets from previous day.
9 :30—“Out to supervise installation of
the first aluminum Outdoor Telephone
Booth in my exchange. Reviewed the
assembly instructions with the installers,
then arranged for special tools and bolts
to be delivered to the job.
11:30—“Drove across town. Made a
complete ‘quality inspection’ on a tele
phone we installed last week. Everything
checked O.K.
12:00—“LuncK. ‘ ^
1:00—“Picked up film for next day’s
safety meeting. Watched the film, made
notes for discussion. I
2:00—“Met with moving company
manager to estimate cost of telephone
cable lifting for a house moving job.
Drove the route he had planned and
worked out schedule for construction
crews.
3:30—“Returned to aluminum booth In
stallation. Went over wiring specs with
the electrician.
4:00—“Stopped at Central Office to
pick up next day’s orders. Met installers
at garage as they checked in and assigned
next day’s work.”
d v
Bill has been In his present job about a year, and is
looking forward to new responsibilities as bis expe
rience increases ... as are the many young college
nym who have chosen telephone careers. If you’d be
interested in a similar opportunity with a Bell tele
phone company ... or with Bell Telephone Labora
tories, Western Electric or Sandia Corporation ... see
your Placement Officer for full details.
BELL
TELEPHONE
SYSTEM
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