El Campo Leader-News (El Campo, Tex.), Vol. 98, No. 54, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 29, 1982 Page: 14 of 37
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ftafttMl El Campo Lander-Nows, El Campo. TX. Wed., Sept. 29, ltn
Leader-News Peerless Pigsk
in Prognosticators
Fred
Barbee
(32-13)
Chris
Barbee
(32-13)
Jonathan
Feigen
(33-12)
Gerard
Pym
(34-11)
Jerry
Aulds
(31-11)
Tom
Minnick
(3A1S)
TCU vs. Arkansas
Arkansas
Arkansas
Arkansas
Arkansas
Arkansas
Arkansas
lfs—lao va. Baylor
Bayler
Baylor
Houston
Baylor
Hons ton
Baylor
Texas vs. Rice
Texas
Texas
Texas
Texas
Texas
Texas
N. Texas St. vs. 8MU
SMU
SMU
SMU
SMU
SMU
SMU
Tx. Tech vs. Ts. AAM
Texas AAM
Texas AAM
Texas AAM
Texas AAM
Texas Tech
Texas AAM
OMe St. vs. Florida St.
Okie Slate
Okie Stale
Okie Stale
Okio Stale
Florida State
Ohio State
Florida vs. LSU
Florida
Florida
Florida
FterMa
Florida
Florida
Georgia vs. Miss. St.
Georgia
Georgia
Georgia
Georgia
Georgia
Georgia
Georgia Tech. vs. N. C.
Norik Carolina
Norik CaroUna
Norik CaroUna
North CaroUna
North CaroUna
North CaroUna
Ankara vs. Nebraska
Nebraska
Nebraska
Nebraoka
Nebraska
Nebraksa
Nebraska
Pills, vs. W. Virginia
PUlakwrgb
Ptttsbnrgk
Pittsburgh
Ptttsbnrgk
Pittsburgh
West Virginia
N. Dame vs. Mich. 81.
Noire Dame
Noire Dome
Noire Dame
Notre Dame
Michigan St.
Noire Dame
Aulds Ties The Kid’
For PPP Leadership
Pioneers Roll To First-Half Title
The St. Philip’s
Pioneer volleyball team
won the first half of zone
play in the Catholic
Schools League.
The seventh graaers
clinched their first half
championship when they
topped Yoakum’s St.
Joseph 15-4,154 Monday.
Brenda Balcar had eight
points in the first game
while Elissa Quintero
added four points.
Heather Hancock led
the way in the second
game with seven points.
Yvette Benavidez added
three points.
seventh grade
team is great,” Coach
Kelley Ralnbolt said
Brenda Balcar scored
four points in the first
game and 10 in the
second. Elissa Quintero
had six first game points.
The first win of the
Pioneers’ league season
came a day earlier when
they topped Nazareth
Academy 15-1, 15-8.
Quintero led the way in
the first game with seven
points while Kim Pesek,
Caroline Grahmann and
Balcar all added two
points.
Merideth Moreno had
11 points in the second
game while Grahmann
cMpped in two.
1110 011
hardest,” Rainboit said.
’"Ihcae girls were fun-
dementally sound. The
points were very long.
The girls showed they
could win long points.
Our weakness is the
inconsistency of our
serving.”
That weakness did not
slow the Pioneers down
too much, however as
Yvonne Quintero had
eight points in the first
game before Dyleen
Cada had five points in
the second.
Nicole Speck played
her ’’best game” in the
first contest and scored
three points. Kris Put-
nam had four points in
the second game.
Cada led the way
against Our Lady of
Victory as she scored
eight points in a 17-15
struggle and six points in
the second game, a 15-5
St. Philip s win.
Quintero had four
points in the first game
and five points in the
second as Kriss Nilson
added “some good
spikes,” according to
Rainboit.
The Pioneers also
struggled in he first game
with Nazareth Academy
before winning 15-14,15-7.
Janet Wishert had six
points in the first contest
while Quintero added
five. Speck, Quintero,
Wishert and Cada all had
three points in the second
game.
reepoii
‘TMa
eighth graders are
“They work ml) toMUttr
and never give up. No one is, 154 victory over St.
can bo singled out Josenh in one of the
toughest games of the
seaon for the Pioneers.
“The game with St.
Joseph was by far our
because all the girts give
lOOpercent.”
The Pioneers topped
Our Lady of Victory 154,
154 last Wednesday as
Cantu Leads 9
In Brazosport Meet
The Ricebird cross
country team ran in the
Brazoswood Cross
Country Meet Saturday
with every member of
Ino Cantu’s five-man
squad turning in personal
records.
games teoturs teams Iron*
eoatsrsocas imio the atg
Tan. Sec 10. atg 8. SIC one
Soutbwost Conference
pms mejo> moependentt
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Hiran Cantu led the
Ricebirds as he finished
third among the 55
varsity runners. The El
Campo sophomore
earned a trophy for his
16:07 time.
“Hiran is now con-
sidered the front runner
in district competition,”
Ino Cantu said. ‘‘He
pushed the first and
second place runners and
was within four seconds
of both.”
The top finishers were
from district 104A while
the Ricebirds compete in
district 12-4A.
Eddie Escamia also
earned a trophy in
Brazoswood as he
finished in 12th place in
the varsity competition.
The other El Campo
trophy winner was Larry
Walton who took fourth
place in the freshmen
race with a 12:09.
“Larry learned a lot
from his first race last
week,” Cantu said.
“Hard work paid off.”
Pat Escalona and Bill
Sanders are also new to
the cross country com-
petition but both did well
and showed great im-
provement according to
Cantu. Escalona finished
19th among 50
sophomores with a 19:36.
“‘Pat improved
tremendously over
previous week,” Cantu
CAR WASH
TOONS
B\ Wilson It Ijwrcmr
said. ‘‘He will be a big
help in the district meet.”
The varsity runners
ran three miles and the
freshmen and
sophomores ran two.
Disc Jockey Jerry
Aulds, whose less than
intelligent professional
football picks (he kept
thinking the Oilers were
going to win) kept him
somewhere between first
place and the cellar the
past three weeks, took
advantage of the NFL
strike to move into a tie
for first place with
Leader-Newsman Gerry
Pym this week in the
Peerless Pigskin
Prognostications.
Aulds, who now boasts
a 34-11 record on the
young season, admits
that he doesn’t know a
heck of a lot about NCAA
football, either, but he
said after tying Pym, “I
certainly knew better
than to go against those
USC Trojans.” Pym
made the mistake of go-
ing with the Big Red OU
Sooners.
week with Chris Barbee
into sole possession of
second place (with a tie
for first, some folks
might call it third, but
we’ll give him the benefit
of the doubt) was Leader-
News sports editor
Jonathan Feigen.
Feigen, now 33-12,
joined Aulds with only
two misses for the week.
He and the entire panel
made the understandable
mistake of calling for a
Michigan win over
UCLA. They all paid for
their nearsightedness
Feigen also let press
clippings from previous
years lead him to choose
Oklahoma, but he was the
only panelist to choose
Penn State over second
ranked Nebraska.
“I never go against
Penn State. They’re
great,” the New Jersey
born and Delaware (as in
Blue Hens) educated
Feigen said. The rest of
the panel is considering
following his advice in
the future.
Moving up a notch with
only two misses to tie
Chris Barbee at 32-13 was
Fred Barbee, publisher
and check writer. Last
week Chris was tied with
Feigen; this week with
his old man, uh, father.
Tom Minnick, who
moved up a notch with a
commendable 8-2 record
for the week, remained in
the cellar two games
behind the Barbees with
a 30-15 mark. Minnick
said he is still pacing
himself. “I prefer to
sprint in the final
stretch,” he remarked
casually.
Beginning with this
week’s prognostications,
the panel will choose 12
college games. This will
continue until the NFL
strike ends, if it does.
Next week the chart
will feature one of the
hottest games in the
country—Delaware vs.
Massachusetts. Feigen
said the team with the
home field should have
the advantage This
presents a problem for
the panel, however, as
Feigen possesses the only
Delaware schedule in the
office.
Spikers
(Continued From Pg. 1-B)
Calhoun,” Matula said. “She was very consistent with
her overhead serve.”
Cheryl Rucka and Kim Novak led the way in El
Campo’s opening round 154, 15-9 victory over Van
Vleck. They had five points each against the Lady
Leopard’s junior varsity.
“The JV played very well all weekend,” Matula
said. “I was very pleased. They were very consistent.
“The tournament went very well with some well
matched teams. Everything went very smoothly with
some good volleyball action.”
The Ricebirds traveled to Bay City last night and
will host Brazosport Thursday in Ricebird Gym-
nasium.
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Barbee, Chris. El Campo Leader-News (El Campo, Tex.), Vol. 98, No. 54, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 29, 1982, newspaper, September 29, 1982; El Campo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1006895/m1/14/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Wharton County Library.