The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 111, Ed. 2 Wednesday, October 6, 1954 Page: 18 of 28
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North Texas Seeks Tst Win
In 13 Years Over Cowpokes
Special To The Reporter-News
DENTON, Oct. 6 — Efforts to
sharpen up their offense occupied
the North Texas State gridders
Tuesday..
They’ll host Hardin - Simmons
at Fouls Field here Saturday
night
Coach Odus Mitchell said he is
In three meetings since Mitchell I Freshman Garland Warren has
became, coach in 1946, NTSC has moved into the number two center
come close to victory, but lost | slot, following Saturday night’s in-
nevertheless in 1949, 1952, and [ jury of Bobby Stansel. Stansel suf-1
1953. I fered a fractured foot bone and
This year, however, the Eagles may be out for the rest of the
stand a good chance of breaking season. •
that string. They managed to look 1______...___..... ..
respectable in losing to Ole Miss, make a capable hand at the pivot.
STRONG UP THE MIDDLE — The McMurry Indians
are well-manned at center for their Saturday night tilt
with Midwestern at Indian Stadium. Left to right are
sophomore Bin Houston, 205, of Hermleigh; senior Allen
Holladay, 185, of Waco; and junior Bill Curry, 195, of
Plainview. Holladay will probably start, with Curry
dividing time between center and guard.
'Sun Shines Brighter
In My Old Aggieland'
., By HAROLD V. RATLIFF
Mitchell said that Warren will COLLEGE STATION un—Texas
-------" -------A&M already has won more than
expecting a rough battle with the 35-12, and impressive in upsetting but that he s:ill lacks experience I AA
Cowboys from Abilene Mississippi Southern last Satur- and has a lot to learn Warren expected one
“They have a well-balanced day, 15-7.
! game-but Coach
Paul (Bear) Bryant says his boys
Club, and are always tough," be
observed, even with the rough
schedule they play.”
It has been 13 years since the [
Eagles were able to take Har-
din-Simmons They won 7-3 in 1941,
but lost the following year. 34-0. 1
Stanford Center
day, 15-7., backs up Fred Way, 205 - pound can do better man r-. TS
Mitchell said that the North Tex- starter from .Amarillo doubetter than that I can
as offense didn’t look quite as good Fullback Gene Bahnsen still & them believing they can
as he had hoped against South- maintains a place on the Eagle beat anybody.
ern. “We just didn't seem to have ailing list. Bahnsen's leg injured The Aggies, most thinly manned
enough zip," be stated "Of course, in the season opener Sept 17 has 1 squad the Southwest Conference
those big linemen of theirs were failed to come around satisfactor- * *
pretty hard to move around. | ily. Doctors were contemplating
■ putting the leg in a cast for the
week, to see if a total rest would
get them to believing they can
The Aggies, most thinly manned
Lineman of Week
By TED .METER
-Associated Press Sportswriter
Jerry Goldberg. 20-year-old Stan-
named the Southern Conference
“Player of the Week."
A 192-pound, 20-year-old junior
ford senior center, was selected guard from Georgia Tech. Frank-
today as the first Associated Press lin Brooks was outstanding
“Lineman of the Week" for the against Southern Methodist. He
1 . football season. I was credited with II tackles,
Goldberg, a 60-minute man, blocked a punt and recovered two
played a major role in Stanford’s fumbles, one leading to a field
surprise 12-2 victory over Illinois goal.
in Saturday's nationally-televised
Jim Nelson, of Duke, who kicked
the deciding point for Duke s 7-6
victory over Tennessee, and Ear!
game from Palo Alto. He was the
man mainly responsible for keep-
ing Illinois’touchdown twins. J. C. i Shumaker of Penn State were
Caroline and Mickey Bates, bottled among the other guards who turn-
Gene -Brel LaMone West Vir-ed M fine performances.
ginia guard, turned in a spectacu I Army Tackle Howard Glock and
far game against South Carolina Navy End Ron Beagle drew com-
and in recognition of his feats was pliments for their smashing play
_ against Michigan and Dartmouth
do some good. .
But whatever the doctors’ deci-
sion, it appears that Bahnsen will
be sidelined for the biggest part
of the Hardin Simmons coolest.
Mitchell said that the Eagles'
passing attack has shown steady
improvement since the beginning
of fall workouts. Against Southern.
North Texas connected on seven
of 15 attempts, good for lit yards
and two touchdowns.
Both scoring hears came from
the combination of quarterback
Don Baker to end Charles Mc-
Gurty. Mitchell said that McGinty,
who hauled in four aerials for the
night, played better Saturday than
at any other time in his stay at
North Texas.
I has seen in years, Saturday top-
pled unbeaten Georgia 6-0 to the
surprise of most everybody. They
outplayed the Bulldogs and showed
perfect condition. -They had to.
"We used only 29—that‘s all the
traveling squad—and the boys
played hard all the way despite
hard-nosed boys who want to play"
in starting the season. A&M took
a 41-9 licking in the opening game
from Texas Tech, but the Aggies
did better the next week although
still losing 14-6 to Oklahoma A&M.
That they had improved immense-
ly was attested by the fact that
Oklahoma A&M led Texas Tech
last week 13-13
one of the hottest days I ever
Then came the Georgia game |
“I thought we might win it,” said
Bryant Which made him one of a
very few.
Bryant has a traveling squad of
30 if the boys are all in shape. He
carries along the student manager.
Troy Summerlin, who was pressed
into service when Bryant ran short
have seen." Bryant observed.
Not an Aggie came off with an of centers. Troy weighs a dripping
injury. “Of course,” quipped the wet 165 and ^ quite willing. But
coach, “you never get hurt when Bryant hasn't had to use him yet.
you win.” It’s nothing new for Bear to have
Bryant came to A&M this year | 8 team lose several games to start
from Kentucky at the highest the season, then come back bril-
salary ever paid an Aggie coach—liantly. At Kentucky, for instance.
$15,000 a year—in an effort to re-he had teams drop their first three
build the football fortunes of what games yet become good enough
once was a Southwest Conference for bowl appearances. The Ken-
power. lucky outfit that won the Cotton
A number of players quit under Bowl in 1952 was like that,
the tough work Bryant gave them .Saturday night the Aggies play
but he had what be called “the
Just Looky Here
KALAMAZOO. Mich. -Twelve-
respectively.
I Other linemen nominated:
Guards—Bud Brooks, Arkansas
Mississippi Southern Runners
Led by Fullback Bolt’s 107
Special to the Reporter-News | Herring. Smallwood now leads the
University of Houston. Bryant isn’t
predicting that his team will win
because he says Houston is much
better than its showing against
Baylor. Baylor won 53-13 might
indicate. But he's hopeful.
The A&M freshman team opened
the season last week with a 31-6
year-old Linda K. Grinage’s mare, ;
Sunshine, wandered away from |
h»me to • farm eight miles away.
The mare was missing two days. I
Then a farmer returned Sunshine
plus a colt born the day before. I
Tom Bettis. Purdue Jim Cloney,
Temple. Lamar Lundy, Purdue.
Ends—Bill Liptack. Fordham
John Kernic, West Virginia. Bill
Hickey, Lehigh
Centers—Chuck Beemus. Col-
gate.
WOODSON RAMS PLAY VERNON
IN DISTRICT OPENER AT 8
The Woodson High Rams, with a 2-2 record to date,
clash with the Booker T. Washington Rams tonight at 8
at Fair Park Stadium in their District 1-AA opener
Woodson has w ins over Odessa and San Angelo while
Waco and Wichita Falls tamed the locals. Vernon beat
Wichita Falls in its only previous contest.
Starting tonight for 'the Rams will be Q. C. Tyler
and Freddie Spearman at ends; Ira Black and E A
Suns at tackles; F. L. Stevenson and Otis McLinn at
guards: James Tate center; Robert Kelly at quarter-
back: Louis Kelly at fullback: Theatlas Reagor at right
half and Leroy Bell at left half
Tyler is the team's top scorer with seven fouchdow ns
while Louis Kelly and Reagor are second with three
each.
HATTIESBURG, Miss., Oct. 6.— scorers with 12 points.
Mississippi Southern, knocked Dallas Whitfield, a talented soph-
from its unbeaten perch by North IreATo" and LSirt ^
Texas State, gained 186 yards rushing department. Brooks Tis-
against the Texans, which is be- dale, who has scored nine points
low par for a team that in recent' to rank as the number two scorer,
years was one of the most potent has gained 57 yards, carrying only
offensive teams in all Dixie once against the Texans, as did
The Southerners gained 97 yards | Smallw ood.
in the air and 89 yards rushing in Senior Jackie Howard and soph-
the 15-7 losing effort, with Carl omore Eddie Cardenas are dead-
. Bolt, the team's leading ground locked with 42 yards to round out
gainer, high with 22 yards for the the leaders.
night. Bolt saw little action in the
final half against the Texans Ted
Trenton, who also plays left half-
back, picked up ■ yards in four
Ends Leonard Williams and Hub
Waters have caught four passes
each, while senior Bill Boling has
tries for the next best effort
Bolt has now gained 107 yards,
while Trenton and fiery Fred
| Smallwoodare tied with 62 yards
apiece. Smallwood scored the lone
touchdown on a 36-yard screen
I pass from quarterback George
latched onto three Waters' recep-
tions were good for 65 yards, while
Williams and Boling’s were good
for 49 and 38 yards, respectively.
The Southerners face unbeaten
but tied Abilene Christian Saturday
night at Faulkner Field in their
fourth test of the year.
Moegle-Ameche Battle
Looms for TV Watchers
Great Gator-
cola
by Pap’
/D4S
VP FULL
By JOE MOOSHIL
CHICAGO an - The Big Ten's
kick for regional television appears
out of bounds these days. Three
conference teams have already
appeared on the national scren
with a fourth and possibly the best
coming up
Two weeks ago TV fans saw
Iowa whip Michigan State. Last
week Stanford bumbled Illinois and
on Saturday's menu is ths Wiscon-
sin-Rice encounter.
Not only will the TV-viewer see
a Big Ten favorite up against the
Southwest Conference defending
cochampion and Cotton Bowl vic-
tor. but shaping up is a contest of
individuals:
Wisconsin’s Alan (The Horse)
Ameche vs. fabulous Dicky Moegle
, of Rice.
telling the Chicago football writers
about Moegle yesterday, brought
out that Dicky was quite a player
even before the bowl game
“He was sixth in rashing nation-
ally last year with S33 yards," said
Whitmore. "Of course he was in
the shadow of All America Kosse
Moegle is the same youngster
whose runs so infuriated Alabama
in the Cotton Bowl last January
that a 12th man got _ _ -___
to tackle the Owl speedster when
victory over Houston Some of the
best prospects seen in years strut-
ed their stuff. Bryant's recruiting
apparently has been about as good
as his coaching.
The sun is beginning to shine
once more on Aggieland
Temple Nine Seeks
Big League Tieup
TEMPLE -Temple, which
lost money operating in the Big
State League last season, is in-
terested in playing again in 1955
but wants a big league tieup in
order to do it.
WILLIAMSON SAYS
ACC 92nd,
H-SU 106th
ACC ranks 92nd, Hardin - Sim-
mons 100th and McMurry drops
clear out of the picture in the
weekly college football ratings re-
leased by the Williamson System.
ACC has the same rating. 87.6,
as Memphis State, which tied the
Wildcats, 6-6, last week but the
Tennessee eleven is 91st.
This week Hardin - Simmons
meets 55th - ranked North Texas
State, ACC plays 79th-rated Mis-
sissippi Southern, and McMurry
takes on Midwestern, 117th.
Williamson’s top ten are Purdue,
Wisconsin, West Virginia, Rice,
Mississippi, Notre Dame, Iowa.
Duke, UCLA, and Maryland.
Elsewhere in the Southwest.
Texas is rated 13th, Texas Tech
17th. Arizona 24th, Arkansas 27th,
SMU 36th, TCU 37th. Baylor 38th,
Texas A&M 53rd, Houston 64th,
Tempe State 82nd, Texas Western
Tech 135th.
BEST AVERAGE 100.0
1 Purdue ....................
a Wisconsin ..................
a West Virginia .............
4 Rice .......................
a Mississippi ................
6 Notre Dame ...............
7 Iowa .......................
9 UCLA..............
M Maryland ........
11 Oklahoma ........
12 Southern California
15 Texas
14 Minnesota ........
15 South Carolina
16 Stanford ..........
Texas Tech
IB Okla. A&M ........
19 Tennessee .........
20 Colorado .........
21 Ohio State .........
22 Florida ...........
23 Miami. Fia. ........
24 Arizona ...........
25 Army .......
26 Michigan State ...
17 Arkansas .......
28 Georgia Tech ......
29 Alabama ..........
30 Auburn ...........
31 Navy ...........
32 Penn State ........
33 Michigan .........
34 Missouri
35 Northwestern
36 SMU
37 TCU . .
38 Baylor
39 Miami, Ohio
40 Illinois
41 Cincinnati
42 Washington .......
43 Marquette
44 VPI
45 California
1 46 Indiana
47 Boston University
48 Utah
5 Boston College
51 Nebraska ..........
1.220regon .........
52 Texas A&M
34 Kansrs State .....
55 Colgate
56 Mississippi State ........
57 Princeton
SB Wichita ........
59 Temple ..........
60 Washington State .......
62 Kentucky
43 Brown
64 Houston
65 North Texas
66 Detroit
67 LSU
48 Tordham
69 ceorgia
70 Wake Forest
71 Vanderbilt .....
72 Cornell
73 Pittsburgh ......
74 Oregon State .....
75 San Jose ......
76 Delaware
77 Iowa State .....
78 Rutgers
79 Mississippi Southern
a Wyoming
81 Davidson
82 Tempe State
83 Trinity, Tex.
84 Pacific College
85 Clemson .....
86 Massachusetts
- 87 Denver
88 William & Mary
89 Tulane
90 North Carolina
91 Memphis State
9. Abilene Christian
93 Youngstown
94 Eras Western
95ine. Cross......
9C-0@mbia .....
97 Kinsas
93 VMI
99 Dartmouth ,
A D THE ABILENE REPORTER NEWS
4-5 Abilene, Texas, Wednesday Evening, October 6 1904
OLIVER'S TWISTS
By DON OLIVER
THE NEXT TIME THERE’S A FOOTBALL TRIP
scheduled for Memphis, Tenn, were going to let another
member of the sports department take over.
We ve been to Boss Crump’s metropolis twice during
our scribbling career, and both games resulted in a tie. The
first time was a 7-7 affair Baylor had with Mississippi State
back in 1948, and the other last week end’s 6-6 ACC-Mem-
phis State standoff.
There’s not much use rehashing ACC’s showing
against the Tigers. One might have taken it from our game
report that we weren't very pleased with the outcome
The thing we’ve got on our mind at this writing is the up-
coming game with Mississippi Southern.
8 Wildcat Fumbles Enough for Season
North Texas State didn't do the
Wildcats much of a favor in dust-
ing off the Rebels Saturday night
by a 15-7 count in Denton. South-
75 ern now will return home to the
7.4 friendly confines of its own sta-
1 dium to do battle with the Chris-
tians—and with blood in its eye.
And, the Wildcats are certainly
Mi
3
1
going to have to learn to hold on
to the football if they’ve got any
hopes of pulling an upset. Those
eight fumbles against Memphis
State should be enough for the
rest of the season.
Fighting our way through the
high-sounding adjectives in the
Mississippi Southern brouch ure,
we finally find that Coach Pie
Vann has 16 lettermen returning
from last year’s wrecking crew.
And there isn’t a little feller on
the entire squad roster.
Heading the list of returning vet-
erans are a pair of giant tackles,
251-pound Buzzy Clark and 248-
pound Don Owens. Giving this
pair lots of help are 'a couple of
"little boys," 234-pound Jim Da-
vis and 221-pound Hugh Mitchell.
The guards are 228 and 202
pounds, with the center at 204 and
the ends 201 and 197,
In the backfield1 are a 191-pound
quarterback, a pair of iso-pound
halfbacks and a 198 fullback.
As one can see, the Southern-
ers aren’t going to be pushovers.
Southerners Have Won 21 of Last 24
Mississippi Southern has won 21 walloped mighty Alabama twice
of its last 24 starts. Losses came and Georgia once
to Memphis State during the reg-
ular season and to Texas Western. . ___
in the Sun Bowl last year, and to Southern’s productive publicity
North Texas State Saturday night man, points out that in spite of
But, during this span 'they’ve current humors, the school doesn’t
|--------------------| play “outlaw” football.
Jimmie McDowell, Mississippi
Scal’orn Defeats
Defending Champ
In Senior Golf
| McDowell writes that Mississippi
Southern's athletic scholarships
are the same as those offered by
Southeastern Conference teams,
and that accredited Southeastern
Conference officials work all home
games. Transfer students must
pass a minimum of 36 quarter
hours before they can participate
for the Southerners.
SAN ANTONIO WP—The Texas
: $1.3 ; Senior Golf Tournament was with-
#3/out a defending champion today
!i i but the man who was runner-up sissippi, has an enrollment of over
. 91.1 a year ago, John Marston, plowed 2,000. Only seven years ago the /
»11 ahead, enrollment was only 500 and no-.
... 90.7 Marston defeated Tom Ahern, body outside of Hattiesburg knew
205 1-up yesterday in the first round, that the school had a football
. 90.4 while Col W. R Stickman. who team
% J beat him last year for the title. Today it is one of the top in-
took a l-up drubbing from H L dependents in the nation. ACC's
m Scallorn of Abilene in a 19-hole-footballers are going to have their
match. .I hands full come Saturday night
so 5 The medalist, Gene Ames, also But. we smell an upset a-brew.
was ushered out. He fell before ing!
Louis Douglas of Houston, l-up. I
* 5 The top golf shot yesterday was
Mt by Jack Blalock of Houston, who
The school, the only state sup-
ported institution in Southern Mis-
sissippi, has
Res
By
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Soo
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1 101 F-stern Kentucky
1 102 Manova ............
] 103 Furman ______
, ’ 105 Dippecticut
1 106 Hardin Simmons
197 Utah State
101 Vir Finis *****
. 109 Southeastern Louishna
110 George Washington
111 Kent State ....
Ill New Mexico
113 Richmond .............
114 New Hampshire...............
Miro University" ............
116 Montana ...........
117 Midwestern *..........
18 L.rhich
I Florida State
• Howard Pavne
North Carolina State
| Colorado AAM
i John Carroll eeeee
C.resio Taeouisiane
, -: emmar Man. ........=
C. D. Brown, president of the " *
club, told league president Howard 130 Pennsylvania
Green efforts were being made for Twivette ,
such a tieup. I is nseue Kentucky ...........
Green pointed out that Big StateIf Adds Tennessee . ..........
League clubs now had a better ’* Florence state :":“:'"•""
chance of agreements with the big . Amber exto
leagues because they were hewing I 1 PendenS LEDE
to a (alary limit and using more
rookies and limited service men.
The salaries are not high and the
2 Finds
3 Tyler
4 Boise
big league clubs can place their
players
Time was that the big league
clubs couldn't compete with the
independents because players on
Big State League clubs were mak-
ing more than the majors wanted
to pay.
Runaway Reptiles
Johnson, our fullback last year May Tanelhas
Johnson rushed for 944 yards but Pdy VET logeinler
he had 73 more carries than *
Moegle.”
Whitmore said be believes the
Wisconsin game wiO be a matter
of Rice offense against Wisconsin
defense, qualifying that he wasn’t
selling the Badger offense short
Wisconsin’s answer, of course, is
Ameche. But that's not ill Badger
quarterbacks Jim Miller and Jim
Haluska are passing at a 760 clip
this season.
Tampa to Give Lopez
JIT LAC DUEZX Hero’s Welcome
| he was clear and away to a 95-
| yard touchdown jaunt
Moegle hasn’t let up since
Against Rice victims Florida and
TAMPA, Fla —This is Al Lo
per day in. Tampa, the day of the
official welcome for the manager
of the Cleveland Indians.
Lopez returned yesterday but
city officials agreed to give him a
day at home before putting on the
big celebration.
Dedication of Tampa’s new base-
Cornell this year, be has averaged
13.7 yards in 16 carries. The first
four times he got his hands on
the ball against Cornell, he swept------.
for touchdown runs of 18,40, 10 and ball park as Al Lopez Field
78 yards. r-
Rice publicitor Bill Whitmore, grams.
. 1 was
the first event on the day’s pro
AI Fair in Dallas
DALLAS Vn—A couple of runa-
ways. back in comfortable capti-
vity now, may become fast friends
at the State Fair of Texas, Oct.
9-24.
They're Phyllis and Pete, the
pythons
Clif Wilson, owner of Phyllis,
invited Pete over from Fort Worth
in a telegram to Pete’s proprietor,
Harry Jackson.
Pete is probably the most tarn
ous snake since Phyllis notoriety
died down in the 1930‘s. He ran
away from the Fort Warth see and
returned of his own accord Sunday
morning after a two week’s ab
sence
Back in 1936 Phyllis was known
as the Sandusky Monster and was
just as famous a runaway as Pete,
Wilson said He said that was the
year Phyllis broke out of her cage
at a Michigan fair and, somehow, J
made it to Lake Erie.
#71 was one under par for 17 holes
57.s in beating Joe Halligan, 2 and 1.
sts * - J
E: South Junior Eighth
#: Clips Stamford, 27-0
87-3
#: The South Junior, Eighth Grad-
#7.2 ers defeated Stamford, 27-0. Mon
UJ day night with fullback Bobby
1 Helms leading the way?
Helms intercepted a Stamford
Mi pass and returned it 35 yards 1
as 1 for one touchdown, then added al
5:20-yard scoring scamper from
as.s scrimmage
5; Halfback Stanley Cosby tallied j
sui a TD on a 25-yard run and full- I
Lj back Ronald Conklin scored on a
2: 5-yard plunge
: Helms, Cosby and Conklin each
Ji ran across one extra point
E -
2 Sum 5-Yc* TEAams Y "
2 Fort Ore .........A**
| 3 Boiling AFB ...........: *9
4Fort B-ior ...............9′1
5 Little Creek .............20
• Parris I«’"M ,.................21.
7 Fort Jackson *................25
: Brooke AMC :
10 Pacte Amphbe 22
“Lnemaker P:as 300
Winners 4th Time
SAN BRUNO, Calif. (-For th.
fourth time in five years, jockey
Willie Shoemaker has toe
winners. But he’s far behind the
phenomenal world record of 485 he
set last year.
Silent Shoe rode four winners at
Tanforan yesterday to total 301
• year A year ago h, had
He won, 38s races in 1950 and
315 in 1952.
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The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 111, Ed. 2 Wednesday, October 6, 1954, newspaper, October 6, 1954; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1649606/m1/18/?q=%22~1~1~1%22~1&rotate=90: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Public Library.