The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 26, 1957, Image 3

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The Battalion College Station (Brazos CountyJ, Texas
Tuesday, February 26, 1955
PAGE 3
Aggies Break 34
r Jinx
With 61-55 Win Over UT
Brian Harrison, Professor of History at the
University of Hong Kong, Will Discuss:
“Problems In Southeast
Asia Today”
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26
8:00 P.M.
M.S.C. BALLROOM
Great Issue Tickets Will Be Honored
REGULAR ADMISSION $1.00
Presented By
The Great Issues Committee of The
Memorial Student Center
By Jim Carrell
Assistant Sports Editor
Pennies flew, whistles blew and
the undaunted Texas Aggie basket-
bailers broke still another Texas
University tradition.
Whipping the Longhorns 61 to
55 in Gregory Gym in Austin for
the first time since 1951, Texas
A&M set a precedent of being the
first Aggie basketball team to
twice defeat Texas in the same
season since 1923.
Jim McNichol, the 6-6 sopho
more sensation from Philadelphia,
playing magnificently, again pro
vided needed impetus to the Aggie
attack, leading scoring with 24
points on fine goaling from the
field and a near perfect eye at
the free throw line.
Pennies from irate Longhorn
fans came only at a time when
defeat stared their team in the
face, serving only to send home
richer the Aggie players who scoop
ed coins from the floor.
Accuracy at the free throw line
proved the difference with the
Ags cashing in on 27 of 34 gratis
tosses. Texas led in field goals
21-17.
This game, an all-out effort by
the Aggies, saw Ted Harrod, Ken
Hutto, Neil Swisher, Ernie Turner,
and McNichol play the entire 40
minutes without relief.
George Mehaffey, leading Aggie
scorer, sat out the game on the
bench in street clothes, still
hampered by an ankle injury suf
fered in Arkansas.
McNichol, starting only his sec
ond game this year, consistently
hit from the outside with a long,
flat-trajectory shot, sinking eight
of 17 field goal attempts and
bucketing eight of nine free throws.
Ken Hutto scored 16 points,
mostly on a long, left handed jump
shot from the left side to tie for
runnerup honors in scoring with’
Ray Downs of Texas.
Downs, the offensive ace for the
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Ag Swimmers
Take UT Twice
With Tetsuo Okamoto and Orlando Cossani each winning
two events, the Aggie swimmers blasted the University of
Texas twice Saturday afternoon in Austin.
The varsity dunked the Longhorns splashers, 50-36, and
the Fish took the measure of the Shorthorns, 46-31.
Okamoto, pushed by Texas’ Eddie Johnson, won the 220
and 400-yard freestyle races while Cossani set a new pool
record of 59.7 in the 100-yard butterfly and also captured ihe
150-yard individual medley. The old record 1:00.9, was set
in 1951 by Stanford’s Bob Frojen in the NCAA finals.
Aggie tankers Norman Ufer, Dick Hunkier and Rippy
Woodard took firsts in the 200 backstroke, 100 freestyle and
2 0 0 butterfly, respectively,
then combined with Bob Bar-
low to race to a first in the
400-yard medley relay
The Fish swam away with
both relays while. their varsity
cousins were taking six of the 10
events.
Although the Steers’ Don Chum-
ney captured the three-meter div-
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ing, with 233.1 points, A&M”s
Bruce Martin and Dubby Godfrey
took second and third, with 190.8
and 171.8 points, respectively.
VARSITY SUMMARIES
400-yd. Medley relay.—1. Texas A&M
(Norman TJfer, Bob Barlow, Ripley Wood
ard, Dick Hunkier); 2. Texas. Time: 4:07.1.
220-yd. freestyle — 1. Tetsuo Okamoto,
Texas A&M; 2. Tonimy Smith, Texas; 3.
Eddie Johnson, Texas. Time: 2:16.2.
50-yd. freestyle—1. Joe Lee Neal, Texas;
2. Dick Hunkier, Texas A&M; 3. Jimmy
Dyer, Texas A&M. Time: 0:23.6.
200-yd. butterfly — 1. Rippy Woodard,
Texas A&M; 2. Jerry Mount, Texas A&M;
3. Tracy Word, Texas. 2:31.2.
3-Meter Diving—1. Don Chumney, Texas,
233.10 points; 2. Bruce Martin, Texas
A&M, 190.80; 3. Dubby Godfrey, Texas
A&M, 171.80,
100-yd. freestyle—1. Dick Hunkier, Tex
as A&M; 2. Joe Lee Neal, Texas; 3. Jim
Barden, Texas. Time 0:51.6.
200-yd. backstroke — 1. Norman Ufer.
Texas A&M; 2. Ray Cook, Texas A&M; 3
Joe Gilbert, Texas. Time: 2:25.7.
400-yard freestyle—1. Tetsuo Okamoto
Texas A&M; 2. Eddie Johnson, Texas; 3
Tommy Smith, Texas. Time: 4:55.0.
200-yd. breaststroke—1. Tracy Word, Tex
as; 2. Bob Barlow, Texas A&M; 3. Henry
Goff, Texas A&M. Time—2:35.7.
400-yd. freestyle relay—1. Texas (Jim
Barden, Jerrell Holder, Tommy Smith, Joe
Lee Mill), 2. Texas A&M. Time 3:39.7.
Final score: Texas A&M 50; Texas 36.
OppoAiunift&i LoJi G’tuowUv
Burl Hulsey, Texas A&M ’39, is superin
tendent of transmission of Texas Electric
Service Company, supervising the operation
of the company’s high voltage electric trans
mission lines and substations.
...INA GROWING COMPANY
Capable young men and women have extra opportunity
in a growing company serving a growing area. During
the past ten years, Texas Electric Service Company has
increased its power generating capability to more than
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And the company is continuing to build its organisation
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Mr. Burl Hulsey and other representatives of Texas Electric
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FEBRUARY 27-28
ENGINEERING — Electrical, Mechanical and Civil
An appointment can be arranged through your Placement Office.
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I Longhorns, was ably defensed withA
i a sagging zone, backed by Mc
Nichol, limiting his effectiveness at
the basket. Downs, doing most of
the defensive work on McNichol in
the Texas zone, found the Aggie
ace hot to handle, fouling out with
1:17 left in the game.
It was also McNichoTs tremen
dous effort under the backboards,
that paid off with 11 of A&M’s 32
I’ebounds and froze out Downs,
UT’s leading rebounder, with only
one for the night’s work, his lowest
rebounding total of the year.
Overcoming an A&M half-time
lead of 30-28, the Steers bolted to
a seven point lead of 45-38 with
six and a half minutes gone.
The stunned Aggies, shocked out
of their lethargy, began to catch
up on point-making by Swisher and
Hutto, pulling to 44-45. Then
jump-shot from the corner by
McNichol followed by Hutto’s lay
up pushed the the battling Aggie
cagers into the lead which they
never relinquished.
Aggie stalling tactics with seven
minutes left brought Texas out of
its zone and with 41 seconds re
maining A&M led 59-51.
McNichol, fouled by Ken Cleve
land as the game ending buzzer
sounded, and with a wild throng of
Aggie fans and players gathered
at the circle, calmly sailed the ball
through a hail of coins twice,
providing A&M with its second
jinx-breaking athletic victory in
Austin this year.
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