The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 28, 1956, Image 4

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Page 4
THE BATTALION
Tuesday, February 28, 1956
s
’MURAL WRESTLERS have a go at it in yesterday’s “grunt-and-groan” session in De-
Ware Field House. Refereeing the match (at left) is Barney Welch, hard-working di
rector of intramurals.
The Richards, Maurice and Hen
ri, are the ninth set of brothers to
have played for the Montreal Can-
adiens in the National Hockey
League.
SOFT BALL
EQUIPMENT
Masks, Balls, Bats
CAPS & SHOES
Student Co-op
Store
NORTH GATE
Tankers Blast UT;
Face Rice Saturday
A&M’s swift swimmers move
into Houston in quest of their ninth
straight victory Saturday when
they match strokes with the Rice
Owls in their final dual meet be^
for the Southwest Conference af
fair in Austin, March 15-17.
Coach Art Adamson’s terrific
team battered down them number -
one nemesis, the Texas Longhorns,
46-38, last Saturday to run their
convenient,
comfortable.
1 hr.
40 mins.
4 hrs.
25 mins.
DALLAS
LUBBOCK
LOS ANGELES
*Via Connecting Airline
Call Continental at Victor 6-4789.
8 hrs..
52 mins.
Continental
uGLMX*. JLMWJEJSi
1956 win streak to eight straight.
The Aggies, led by sprinter Dick
Hunkier and middle-distance ace
Tetsue Okamoto, took seven of 10
firsts against the strong Texas
tankers.
Hunkier won the 50 and 100-yard
freestyle .events while Brazil’s
Okamoto easily took the 200 and
440-yard races.
A&M’s Dick Weick set a new
pool record of 1:27.3 in the 133 Va
yard individual medley. Weick
broke the week-old record of team
mate Rip Woodard, who swam a
1:29.5 the previous Saturday.
Norman Ufer, Gayle Klipple and
Weick joined forces to win the 300-
yard medley relay with a time of
3:02.1, and Ufer splashed to a
first in the 200-yard backstroke.
The Longhorns took first and
second in three-meter diving and
captured firsts in the 200-yard
breaststroke and the 400-yard fi’ee-
style relay.
Texas’ Shorthorns out-swam the
Aggie Fish, 49-28, taking seven of
the nine events. Only Joe Steen,
winner of the 100-yard backstroke
and Don Pever, who won the 100-
yard backstroke, could break the
Shorthorn’s hold on first places.
John DeVoe, Princeton baseball
captain, and his brother Steve, who
also is on the Tiger team, both are
6 feet 3. John is 21 and Steve 20.
They come from Indianapolis,
AGGIES!!
“HOME COOKING”
at prices you can afford.
GRANNIE’S
Next to Campus Theatre
- CLOSED SUNDAYS —
In Fish Basketball
Sqd. 10, Sqd. 16
In Quarter-Finals
By JOE DAN BOYD
Squadron 10 and Squadron 16
broke into the quarter-finals of
freshman basketball yesterday.
Sqd. 10 defeated B-AAA, 18-16,
and Sqd. 16 downed powerful Sqd.
20, 16-12, ending their unbeaten
streak.
A1 Williams paced the Sqd. 10
quintet with eight points. John
Crews and Chuck Brown chunked
in three each while Joe Parten and
Leonard Clark added one basket
apiece. Wayne Boyd and Herbert
Taylor each scored seven points
for Sqd. 16 and Paul Martin wrap
ped it up with two.
Donald Cunningham pinned
Dwayne Williams in a 130-pound
upper-classman wrestling match.
Cunningham is from Sqd. 19 and
Williams is in A-AAA. In the
167 division. Red Stimson of A-
Ordnance outpointed B-AAA’s
Hardy Barr, 8-6. Dorm 16’s James
Doss defeated Frank Demuth, A-
Infantry, by a 6-3 margin.
Roy Millen took a quick victory
for B-Field Artillery by pinning
A-FA’s Don Fisher in the 177
bracket. John Ochterbeck manag
ed a decision from Sqd. 21’s Janies
Voorhies after an evenly matched
tussel with neither of the 167
pound grapplers scoring.
In football Leggett blanked Col
lege View B, 7-0, A-Armor romp
ed over Sqd. 5, 25-0, and Walton
drew a forfeit from Law.
’MURAL STANDINGS
CIVILIANS
Teams
Points
1.
Leggett Hall
...470
2.
Milner Hall
...225
Walton Hall
...225
3.
Mitchell Hall
...170
4.
College View
CORPS (Class A)
...120
1.
Squadron 10
...440
2.
Squadron 17
....422V2
3.
Maroon Band
...4071/2
B-Engineers
....4071/2
4.
Squadron 7
CORPS (Class B)
....395
1.
Squadron 12
....365
B-Engineers
....365
2.
C-Infantry
....355
3.
B-Field Artillery
....3521/3
4.
B-Infantry
....345
CHS Holds ‘Sports NighC
Tonight at 7 in Tiger Gym
Basketball, badminton and tumb
ling will be the feature attractions
of A & M Consolidated’s first
“Sports Night” to be held tonight
in Tiger gym beginning at 7 p.m.
Admission is 25 cents- for adults
and 15 cents for students.
Tumbling opens the activities
with Wayne Thompson, John Ham-
ner, Bo Linton, Bill Hite, Susan
Dowell, Ann Hite, Bobby Huff and
Helen Klipple performing for the
high school.
Eighth grade tumblers are John
Martinez, Billy Ball, Jan Winder
and Patsy Wilkins. Performing for
the seventh grade will be Manuel
Martinez, Morris Stone, Shirley
Rogers and Gayla Christensen,
while Russell Welch, Joe Olian,
Kay Andrews and Allyn Roth are
the sixth grade gymnasts. J. B.
Carroll and Manuel Garcia are the
clowns.
A WELCOME PLUNGE is taken by Emil Mamalig-a,. Aggie
diving coach, after the Aggies had trounced the Univer
sity of Texas swimmers here Saturday. The Cadet tank
ers celebrated the victory by throwing their coaches. Art
Adamson and Mamaliga, into the pool.
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