The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 11, 1957, Image 3

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    iolator
oposed
ainst the officers of com-
^anized under state laws.
1 is designed to correct
ality and make filing of
ements a penal offense
of whether the company
ed under Texas law or
n corporation,
rson violating the pro-
this bill could be im-
a the penitentiary for a
>t less than one year.
ision Service
ers Honored
anblossom and Miss Sa-
d received special praise
>cas Agricultural Work-
:t last night as the 1956
le Year in agriculture
n of the Year, respec-
re handed placques by
tier, editor of the Pro-
armer that makes the
irds.
aid of Miss Hatfield,
ral homes have a mil-
worth of beauty made
her efforts.”
tfield is specialist in
Improvement with the
ervice.
;om’s award was pre-
“conspicuous service in
y marketing in the
nblossom played a lead
helping Texas farmers
on more for their eggs
ul efforts toward put-
eggs on a graded ba-
■ said.
By A1 Capp
Walt Kelly
U-
'HAS A
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TURNIN'
TO
WAffM.
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Ag Boxers Score One
Victory in First Round
By CONNIE ECKARD
In an open welterweight scrap
Alton Allen of Bellaire Recreation
Club stopped Texas A&M’s Paul
Adams with a right hand upper
cut to the heart 1:06 deep in the
second rounds to close the first
night’s action of College Station
Lions Club Boxing Tournament.
Adams dropped to his knees and
rolled over on his back Catching
his breath he pulled himself to
his feet but referee Barney Welch
ruled that it was all over for the
boy from Port Arthur, awarding'
the fight to Allen.
After a night ruled mostly by
split-decisions, 203-pound John
McDonough from Bryan Air
Force Base stepped into the
ring and 45 seconds after the
opening bell was leaving after
flattening Dan Duncan of Waco
Boys Club with a series of head
blows followed up by a smash
ing left hook to the chin.
Fourteen bouts were reeled off
in the opening night of the three
— FRIDAY —
“I’ll Cry Tomorrow”
with SUSAN HAYWARD
— Plus —
“Serenade”
with MARIO LANZA
— SATURDAY —
HERO NIGHT — 3 BIG HITS
“THE BOUNTY HUNTER”
“SPY CHASERS”
“HEADLINE HUNTERS”
night tournament in DeWare Field
House. Major John Birkner said
about the same number will be
fought tonight beginning at 7:30.
Lone victory for the host A&M
Boxing Club scored in the novice
welter-weight division by David
Johnson who pounded out a three-
round decision over Fred White-
head of Bellaire Recreational Club.
After a cautious first round John
son opened up in the second and
decked his opponent with a right
to the chin. Johnson’s nose bled
throughout the fight.
Another Bellaire boy, Buddy But-
telmann showed boxing savvy to
spare as he showed a load of ring
form in outpointing his southpaw
opponent in a high school feather
weight battle. Buttlemann came
away looking like the boy to beat
for the title.
David Henge of the A&M Box
ing team put on a third round
stand but his novice lightweight
opponent, Stanley Jurman o f
Bryan Field had built up too
big margin for him to over
come. Jurman opened the fight
with a series of hooks to the
body and head and didn’t let up.
Middleweight Buddy Hopkins
from Cut and Shoot powered his
way to novice decision over Texas
A&M’s Paul Carroll who fought a
defensive fight throughout.
Two of Bellaire Recreation Clubs
We’Need
SLIDE RULES
Post or K & E
LOUPOT’S TRADING POST
GLUON HALL
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
+.
f-
r LC,".
///
* 1
•+
. Its new wide Superscope Screen
changes its size before your very eyes frorn
magnificent spectacle to intimate detail #
. . Its new Stereophonic Sound
will embrace you as though it
were being played for you alone.
iValt Disneys
flashiest boxers gave the crowd of
300 a show of boxing ability in a
three round exhibition. Charlie
Cox at 127 matched blows with his
teammate, 137 pound Jack Fair.
Fair and Cox demonstrated boxing
at its finest for three complete
rounds.
COMPLETE RESULTS
Higrh School Division
Flyweight—Clarence Vaughn—108 — Cut
and Shoot; default over Bobby McGlaun
—100—Bellaire.
Featherweight — Buddy Buttlemann —
127 — Bellaire; decisioned Sammy Piccolo
—125—Bryan.
Lightweight — Pete Thompson — 133^—
Bryan; decisioned Brenner Sayers — 135
—Consolidated. Perry Vaughn — 132
Cut and Shoot; decisioned James Kemp—
134—Bryan.
Welterweight—Benny Ellison — 139
Bryan; decisioned Cary Rector — 147 —
Waco. Victor Fuentes — 147—Waco; de
fault over Don Johnson—148 — Bellaire.
Middleweight—Charles Philips — 160—
Waco; decisioned Robert Brown — 152
Cut and Shoot. Morris Burkhalter—155—
Bryan decisioned Jim Wright — 150—Con
solidated.
Novice Division
Flyweight—Wayne (Killer) Vaughn —
95—Cut and Shoot; decisioned Sam Gong-
ora—109—Texas A&M.
Lightweight —- Stanley Jurman—136 —
Bryan AFB; decisioned David Henge —
135 — Texas A&M.
Welterweight—David Johnson —• 148 —
Texas A&M; decisioned Fred Whitehead—
143—Bellaire Boys Club.
Middleweight—Buddy Hopkins — 161-
Cut and Shoot; decisioned Paul Carroll
157—Texas A&M.
Light heavyweight — Kenneth Diggs
173—Bellaire; decisioned Dick Crane—173
—Waco Boys Club.
. Heavyweight—John McDonough — 203
—Bryan AFB; knocked out Dan Duncan
—185—Waco Boys Club — 45 seconds of
the first round.
Open Division
Welterweight—Alton Allen — 147—Bel
laire; TKOed Paul Adams—147 — Texas
A&M — 1 minute 6 seconds of the second
round.
Wilt-the-Stilt
Leader in 2
NEW YORK, OP)—It is not true
the NCAA Service Bureau directs
publicity for Wilt The Stilt Cham
berlain.
It just seems that way.
In today’s release, latest statis
tics show the big guy at Kansas
not only has retained his scoring
lead averaging 32.9 points a game,
but that he also has become the
rebound leader, with a recovery
rate of .264 per cent.
The Battaiion College Station (Brazos County), Texas
Friday, January 11, 1957 PAGE 3
Bears, Giants, Lions Get
Five Each on AP All-NFL
NEW YORK—6P)—End Harlon
Hill of the Chicago Bears and
tackle Roosevelt Grier of the
champion New York Giants were
unanimous selections Thursday on
The Associated Press National
Football League All-Star team,
which was dominated by the Bears,
Giants and Detroit Lions.
Hill, the pass-catching wizard,
was named to the first offensive
team by each of the 28 AP sports-
writers, all of whom covered the
NFL, participating in the voting.
i CATERING for
SPECIAL
OCCASIONS
Leave the Details
to me.
LUNCHEONS
BANQUETS
WEDDING PARTIES
Let Us Do the Work—You Be A
Guest At Your Own Party
Maggie Parker Dining Hall
W. 26th & Bryan TA 2-5069
REFEREE BARNEY WELCH—surveys the action in the
high school welterweight class bout between Cary Rector of
Waco and Benny Ellison of Bryan. Ellison edged his op
ponent in the Thursday night action. Boxing continues
tonight at 7:30 in DeWare Field House.
Tigers Lose Opener
Bellville’s Daniel Bi-ast dropped
a pair of free throws with 12 sec
onds to go giving the Brahmas a
thrilling 54-53 victory over the
Consolidated Tigers in the District
25-AA opener last night.
Bellville’s “B” squad ended a
Tiger four-game winning streak
with a 40-28 win in the night’s
first contest.
Brast, who took scoring honors
with 22 points, calmly meshed both
gratis shots after the Tiger’s Al
ton Arnold had pushed Consolida
ted into the lead with 15 seconds
remaining, 53-52.
The Tigers made a tremendous
second-half comeback, scoring 20
points in the third period to pull
to 40-37 after being behind at the
intermission, 31-17. Bobby Potts’
set shot at 6:15 of the final quarter
gave CHS the lead for the first
time.
From there on the lead changed
Adamson Takes 16
PREYUE SATURDAY — 10:30 P. M.
Also Sunday and Monday
“THE SEARCHERS”
With JOHN WAYNE
Ags Defend Title
At UT Saturday
Coach Art Adamson takes 16 of his Aggie swimmers to
Austin Saturday to defend their 1956 crown in the eighth
annual Southwest Conference relays.
A&M won their first relays title last season scoring 66
points to the University of Texas’ 64, SMU’s 62 and Rice’s
30. The battle for top honors Saturday will be another three-
way affair between the “big
three” who have monopolized
SWC swimming for the past
decade.
Adamson, who begins his
22nd season at Aggieland, took the
Aggies to a new scoring record as
they swept past the Steers and the
Ponies to the conference champion
ship last year.
Making the trip for A&M are
Bruce Gard, Walter Godfrey, Hen
ry Goff; Bob Barlow, Dick Hunk
ier, Roger Burton, Ray Cook, Ro
land Baird, Jimmy Dye, Jose Mer
ino, Jerry Mount, Norman Ufer,
Rippy Woodard, Chuck Price, Wal
ly Penberthy and Bruce Martin.
The Aggies will be without the
services of Tetsuo Okamoto, the
junior Brazilian ace who has been
out of school this semester in
South America where he competed
for his country’s Olympic team.
Hunkier captured firsts in the
50 and 100-yard freestyle races and
anchored A&M’s winning 300-yard
medley in the 1956 conference
meet. Ufer took the 200-ya,rd
backstroke, finished second in the
100-yard backstroke and swam a
lap on the winning 300-yard med
ley relay.
Woodard, the workhorse of the
splashers, took fifth in the 1500-
meters, second in the 200-yard
backstroke, and second in the 200-
yai’d individual medley behind Ped
ro Galvao’s (SMU) record.
Merino, from Lima, Peru, finish
ed fifth in the 22-yard freestyle
and second behind Okamoto’s rec
ord in the 440-yard freestyle.
★ JANUARY SALE A
We’re Overstocked . . .
WE have lost the lease on our USED CAR LOT
on Texas Ave. & Burnett St. .. .
OUR INVENTORY MUST BE REDUCED — SO SEE
US TODAY FOR SPECIAL SALE PRICES AND
TRADES ON ALL —
NEW CARS
NEW TRUCKS
A/I USED CARS
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415 N. Main St.
208 W. 24th St.
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TA 2-1333
TA 2-7136
Your Friendly Ford Dealer
CADE MOTOR COMPANY
hands 11 times before Brast put
the game on ice from the foul line.
Billy Mac Miller paced the “B”
five with nine points as the Con
solidated bunch lost their second
game in six starts.
Box Score
Tigers (53)
Fg
Ft
J’f
Tp
Avera, c
4
3
3
11
Potts, f
8
3
3
19
Kavanaugh, f ....
2
2
4
6
Holland, g
1
2
5
4
Martinez, g
0
2
2
2
Miller, f
0
0
0
0
Arnold, g
4
3
2
11
Totals ...
. . 19
15
19
53
Brahmas (54)
Fg
Ft
Pf
Tp
Tange, g
1
1
2
3
Deutrish, g
1
2
2
4
Brast, f
8
5
1
22
Barrett, f
5
3
2
13
Geisendorff, g
3
5
2
11
Hopkins, c
1
0
3
2
Totals . . . .
. . 19
16
12
54
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&
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WE BUY ’EM
WE SELL ’EM
STUDENT CO-OP
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USED
ED GARNER, ’38
mnaw
ROD & GUN
Winner of “Big Buck” Contest
and Model ‘71’ Winchester —
JOE SONLEY of Bryan who bagged a
117 lb., 9 point Buck
For the Best in Sporting Equipment —
See JIM AENCHBACHER
HILLCREST SPORTING GOODS
& HARDWARE
2013 So. College TA 3-3299
HERE ARE THE CORRECT
ANSWERS TO THE OLD GOLD
TW2
Check the record of your answers against these, to see /
eligible to compete in the tie-breakers.
f you are automatically
1. Smith
7. Oberlin
13. Stephens '
19. Georgetown
2. Purdue
8. Harvard
14. Princeton
20. Middlebury
3. Tulane
9. Colgate
15. Dartmouth
21. Johns Hopkins
4. Beloit
10. Stanford
16. Wellesley
22. Brigham Young
5. Rollins
1 1. Bryn Mawr
17. Notre Dame
23. Western Reserve
6. Rutgers
12. Grinnell
18. Vanderbilt
24. Northwestern
Enough entries have been checked to show that many players have correctly solved all
24 puzzles, thereby creating a tie for all prizes.
If the record of your answers to the first 24 puzzles, mailed on or before December 19,
conforms with the correct answers published herein, you are automatically eligible to
compete in the tie-breaking puzzles. The series of tie-breakers will be published in this
paper, commencing on or about February 1st. Watch for the tie-breakers!
Please note Rule 2 as published in the official Tangle School rules at the beginning of
the contest. . . which reads as follows: |
9 Rule 2(b) In case more than one person solves correctly the same number of puzzles, the
prize tied for and as many subsequent prizes as there are persons tied, will be reserved and
those so tying will be required to solve a set of tie-breaking puzzles, to determine the order
in which the reserved prizes will be awarded.
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