Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 240, Ed. 1 Monday, October 10, 1955 Page: 2 of 8
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t,Wri
1
Sports
eaking
of
r
Reflections from a busy weekend of football:
The talk of Sweetwater fans about the "new" football
team that so soundly defeated Lamesa here Friday night.
Actually, with the exception of three positions in the line,
where changes have been necessitated through injury, tne
Mustangs that deflated the Tornado Friday is the same
that started the season against Abilene.
The Mustang coaching staff, un-
der Elwood Turner, realized quick-
ly that theirs was a job of taking
an extremely green and inexper-
ienced team, and bringing it slow-
ly through extremely tough open-
ing games, testing personnel and
having the team get accustomed to
game conditions, then turning it
loose to shoot the works—which it
did Friday night, much to the con-
sternation of Lamesa.
The impression is steadily grow-
ing that if the Mustangs continue
that improvement through the next
few weeks, and that if mistakes
are kept to a minimum, this de-
termined bunch of youngsters will
be welded into a salty and able
crew, ready to tear into any oppo-
sition.
One pre-season favorite and two
upstarts seem ready to divide the
Southwest Conferences spoils be-
tween them as the seven teams
get down to the business at hand
next week.
Rice, the pre-season favorite,
was extremely impressive in its
Rushing Records
Are Endangered
By Jimmy Swink
DALLAS UP)—Jim (the swanky)
Swink, Texas Christian's man in
motion, has hurried to 484 yards
in one of the greatest ball-carrying
exhibitions of Southwest Confer-
ence football history.
Swink rolled up 139 yards last
week against Alabama to push his
total far in front in the conference.
He has averaged 121 yards per
game and 9 yards per run.
Swink's rushing also makes him
21-7 victory over an excellent Clem-
son team, following an indifferent
21-21 tie with LSU. Wily old Jess
Neely may be tought to corral from
here on.
But TCU and Texas A&M, of all
teams, rate serious consideration.
In their first four games, the Frog-
gies have been unthreatened and
not even extended with the excep-
tion of a lethargic first half against
Alabama. The suspicion keeps
growing that TCU may be heading
toward an undefeated season, some-
thing extremely rare for a South-
west Conference team.
The Aggies, after that opening
loss to UCLA, have looked better
and better. The eager sophomores
of Bear Bryant have cultivated a
taste for victory, and are apt to be-
come downright greedy. The Ag-
gie-TCU brawl this weekend shapes
up as a real rip-snorter.
TCU-Texas A&M Battle Heads
Full S'west Conference Slate
Bv THE ASSOCIATED PRESS four of five games against outside
The Southwest Conference, its foes to bring the season record to
11 victories, G losses and 1 tie.
Betty Jameson
Wins $5,000
Richmond Open
RICHMOND, Calif. UP) — Betty
Jameson of San Antonio won the
| $5,000 Richmond Women's Open |
Golf Tournament yesterday, post- j
54- I
ply unnecessary pressure on Tex-
| as runners when they were al-
! ready down, or on Clements when
he had already loosed his pass,
the total offense leader but his ' The Sooners are much too good a
lead in that department isn't near- jleam t° have to use such tactics,
ly so pronounced as it was last
week. John Roach, Southern Meth-
odist's hard-working quarterback
who passed for 159 yards against
Missouri, has moved into second
place just 24 yards back of Swink.
Roach has 163 rushing and 297
passing.
Henry Moore of Arkansas still
is second in ball-carrying with 302
yards.
Joe Clements, Texas' lanky soph-
omore quarterback, is the passing |
leader with 452 yards on 39 com- SPORT SHOTS
pletions in 62 attempts. He threw
for 153 yards against Oklahoma
last week. Roach is second with
his 297 yards on 21 connections in
51 throws.
Gerald Nesbitt of Arkansas leads
the punters with an average of 47.6
yards while Ed Dudley of Texas
A&M is second with 44.8.
Ken Wineburg of Texas Christian
tops the punt returners with an
average of 18.5 per run and Don
Christian of Arkansas the kickoff
returners with an average of 27.7.
Catching intermitten glances at j
the Texas-Oklahoma game on TV,
one was impressed by the impo- | _
tence of the Texas running game,
and the extreme success of OU on !
the pitch or keep options of quar-
terback Jimmy Harris.
The Longhorns, in turning almost
solely to Clements and his pass-
ing threat, seem to have forgotten
an extremely important item in
making for a good overhead game
—a good running threat to keep the
defense honest.
Except for an occasional burst
by Womack on the fullback draw | ing a 71 for a 220 total in the
play, the Longhorns' running game i hole contest.
was extremely woeful. j Mary Lena Faulk, who needed a
Oklahoma, unfortunately, seems j par 5 on the 501-yard 18th hole to
to have adapted some of the tactics j tie, shot her third stroke into a
of Notre Dame, another power that 1 trap and finished second with a
has forgotten how to lose. Many 1221.
times the Sooners seemed to ap- ! This tournament ended the sea-
! son for the touring women.
Patty Berg ended as top money
j winner with S16.492.34 collected i:i
i 22 of the 28 tourneys. She also
! won the Vardon Trophy with a
! round average of 74.47. It was the
! first time any woman has won both
the money and the trophy.
Louise Suggs won S13.736.49 and
had an average of 74.79.
Fay Crocker won 811,796.17 with
a 75.76 average.
Yesterday's victory boosted Bet-
ty Jameson to fourth money, S10,-
593.17. Fifth was Mary Lena Faulk
with S10.386.50.
CONFIDENCE PAYS OFF—Shortly before the Sweetwater-Levelland football game, during a week
when coach Elwood Turner had been sidelined with illness, the Sweetwater School Board voted to
extend Turner's one-year contract through 1956. In a surprise gathering, the Board presented Turner
with the extension at Mustang Bowl. Since then the Mustangs have tied Levelland and defeated
Lamesa. Shown presenting the contract to Turner is Board President Wade Forester. Left to right are
board members Dr. June Young, Jack Lambert, J. M. Lawrence, Hudson Lincoln and Kirby Kinsey
and Superintendent Olaf South. (Staff Photo.)
chest puffed out over a gaudy in-
tersectional record, enters all-out
championship play .this week and
the light of the Texas Aggies
against mighty Texas Christian
headlines the football schedule.
TCU, only unbeaten, untied team
left in the league, takes on the re-
surging and surprising Aggies at
Fort Worth Saturday afternoon. It
will be the big test of the season
for the audacious sophomores of
Aggieland, who have smart-alecked
their way to consecutive victories
over Louisiana State, University of
Houston and Nebraska.
Tcsas Christian will be favored, j
of course, but there are those who j
think the Aggies will make it a ■
ball game.
While this features the week's j
schedule, two other conference
games of importance are coming !
up Saturday. Rice, unbeaten but j
once-tied, and Southern Methodist, j
which finally won one last week, !
get together at Dallas in a night
gama that will serve as the con-
ference opener for both.
Up to Little Rock, Texas, winner
of only one out of four .so far,
clashes with Arkansas. It means
Southern Methodist beat Missou-
ri 13-6 for the Methodists' first vic-
tory in three starts, A&M walloped
Nebraska 27-0, Rice toppled Clem-
i son from the unbeaten ranks 21-7
and Texas Christian slammed Ala-
bama 21-0.
The lone loss was to Oklahoma,
which took Texas into camp 20-0.
In the only conference game
played. Baylor outlasted Arkan-
sas 25-20. It was the Bears' first < j
game counting in the champion-
ship standings.
Jim Swink, Texas Christian s
mighty runner, made three touch-
downs against Alabama to take a
long lead in conference scoring.
Swink now has 62 points, 38 more
than second-place Walter Fondren
of Texas.
SWEETWATER VS MONTEREY
Big Spring-Levelland Game
Highlights 1-AAA Schedule
r)
PONIES PREP FOR MONTEREY
Booster Club Schedules
Surprise For Meeting
This corner is glad to offer, at j
no charge to Southwest Conference I
coaches, the solution on how to [
stop TCU's great halfback, James
Swink, who nobody has come close j
to halting this year.
If each coach will have his team j
Sanforized he will keep his team
from Swink-ing. (Choke!)
Sweetwater Reporter, Texas, Monday, October 10, 1955
Baylor Once Lost Title
On Ineligibility Case
By HAROLD V. RATLIFF
Associated Press Sports Editor
The Southwest Conference thinks
it has troubles, what with coaches
start officially awarding champ-
ionships. until 1922 and it really
didn't matter except for the rec-
ord. Oklahoma, which left the
Menan Schriewer of Texas, who ; hauling athletes around in viola- Southwest Conference in 1919 and
snagged seven passes against Okla-
homa, is the pass-receiving leader
with 14 for 176 yards. Marshall
Crawford of Rice is second with
120 yards on six.
Texas Christian leads in total of-
fense with an average of 373 yards
per game while it also is the best
In defense, giving up only 143.5.
Phillips Looming
As Standout Team
Of AA Grid Race
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Slowing down the wild charge of
Phillips toward a second straight
Class AA schoolboy football cham-
pionship is bothering the best
minds in the division.
Thus far the BlacK'nawks haven't
had a good workout while romping
to 296 points in five games.
Dalhart is the trial horse this
week and it's a conference game
in District 1 where Phillips slam-
med Hereford 73-27 in the opening
of championship play.
While none of the teams appear
capable of severely testing Phillips
in the drive toward the finals,
Stamford, Terrell, Gladewater, Kil-
leen. Weslaeo and Nederiand are
the top teams of their sections.
All of these are undefeated hut
Nederiand has a tie on its record.
Beaumont South Park of Class
AAA succeeded in holding Neder-
iand to a scoreless deadlock.
There are 25 undefeated, untied
tion of the recruiting rules, doctor-
ing the letters of intent and alleg- j
edly committing other peccadil- j
loes that caused the league to hire
detectives for an investigation.
Why, the conference started off
with its biggest ineligibility case.
That was in 1915 when Baylor won
the football championship then
gave it up when it was found that
the quarterback of the Golden
Bears had previously been on an-
other college football squad.
Little is known today of the
Stonerod case. In fact, Baylor
never was officially penalized for
it although voluntarily surrender-
ing the championship. Today Bay-
lor is listed in conference records
as champion in 1915, It appears
the champion should have been
Oklahoma.
Stonerod was admitttd by Bay-
lor on credits from a Pittsburgh
high school. He came out for foot-
ball and easily made the team. He
was the possessor of a strong,
firm voice, one of the major re-
quirements in those days to be a
quarterback. They yelled the sig-
nals then; there was no huddle.
Baylor lost only one game, a
nonconference affair with Sew-
anee. It beat Rice, Southwestern
and Oklahoma A&M, three mem-
bers of the conference. A team
didn't have to play a round-robin
then in order to be eligible for the
championship. Three conference
games were enough.
L. Theo Bellmont, then athletic
director of the University of
Texas, was thumbing through
some college annuals. He came
across the picture of a football
team. Right smack dab in the
teams in the division and they in- i mj^dle was this Stonerod. who had
elude Crane, Dumas, Spur, Aber-
nathy, Ballinger, Winters, Kermit,
Pecos, Graham, Seagoville, Com-
merce, Mt. Vernon. New London.
Livingston, Gonzales, Crockett,
Refugio, Port Acres and Mercedes.
Abilene Defeats
Mustang B Team
The Sweetwater Mustang B
team absorbed a 51-0 shellacking
Saturday night from the Abilene
High School Eaglets.
Several Mustang B team regu-
lars were unable to see service be-
cause of having seen action against
Lamesa Friday night. Several oth
er key players, including fullback
f.eon Fitts and quarterback Robert
Neeper, were sidelined by injuries.
"Abilene had a fine ball club, and
we have no excuses. We just got
beat," coach Billy Savage said.
Fumbles and lack of man-power
hampered the Mustangs, who made
only two first downs and never
mounted a scoring threat.
quarterbacked Baylor's title d ive.
Bellmont called Baylor's attention
to it. C. P. Mosley, the Baylor i
coach, investigated. He says that
Stonerod revealed that he had
been on a football squad at an-
other college before coming to
Baylor. It wasn't unusual for such
things at the time but Mosley
would have none of it. He told the
I Southwest Conference he was for-
feiting the championship. Where
| Stonerod is today isn't known, at
| least in these parts. It isn't known
| either by Carnegie Tech of Pitts-
I burgh, which listed Thomas M.
| Stonerod as a letterman in 1912.
In that 1915 season Oklahoma
1 was undefeated and untied and
j ran up 370 points to 54.
It. played Texas, Arkansas and
! Oklahoma A&M as its conference
: games, a schedule as tough as
Baylor's. Why Oklahoma, which
1 wound up in a tie with Baylor for
first place, wasn't awarded the
championship in view of Baylor's
default is one of the mysteries of
conference football.
However, the conference didn't
lias won many titles of its particu-
lar league since then, probably
won't mind the snub.
The conference has a different
kind of problem from that of its
early years. Then, it was largely
the question of ineligible athletes,
fellows who played at various col-
leges over the country — the so-
called "tramp athletes" you don't
hear about these days. Now the
big trouble is from the alumni—
the old grads, who, through pride
in the school, go out and try to
buy the athletes. They offer fan-
tastic benefits to the high school
boys who run like Kyle Rote and
pass like Sam Baugh.
This is a more difficult problem
to solve than anything that ever
has faced intercollegiate athletics.
Obviously it never can be solved
completely. The alumnus just
can't be caught up with in every
instance of proselyting.
The conference took the only
step it could possibly follow when
it handed down a decree the other
day that in the future the school
itself would be held responsible
for the doings of its alumni. In
other words, if an old grad pays
an athlete on the side the college
to which he is going will be pen-
alized whether it knows of the
shady doings of its alumnus or not
—that is, if the old grad is caught.
The colleges are going to in-
struct the alumni on what they
can or can not do. Most ex-
students will heed the warning and
stay stay within the rules. They
wouldn't want to do anything that
might hurt the old school.
Many ex-students don't know
the recruiting rules and the col-
lege itself is responsible for the
condition. It should have seen to it
that the alumni had a knowledge
of in-bounds proselyting.
The way college athletes are
publicized and the facilities pro-
vided for an accurate check on
athletes prevents another Stone-
rod case cropping up. But the
i troubles with the alumni will go on
and on.
One of the largest turnouts of the
season is expected tonight at the
meeting of the Mustang Booster
Club, to be held at 8 o'clock at the
Newman High School auditorium.
"We are planning a big surprise,"
President Lloyd Smith announced,
"and we hope that we will have a
full house for the meeting.
In addition to the surprise plan-
ned, two films will be shown.
Movies of the Sweetwater-Lamesa
game, won by Sweetwater 33-13
here Fri. nighi will be shown, and
"Southwest Conference Highlights
of 1954," color films of outstanding
games of the previous grid season
of the Southwest Conference, will
be presented.
Coach Elwood T u r n e r will
review the Lamesa game, and
scouts will give their reports on
Monterey High School of Lubbock,
the Mustangs' next opponents, who
will play here Friday night.
Smith will announce Booster
Club plans for the coming weeky
preparing for the Mustang-Monter-
i ey game.
"The Lamesa victory gave the
Mustang team the beginning of a
I fight for the district title," Smith
I said, "and now it is up to the Boost-
< er Club to provide the backing and !
i spirit of the fans for a winning '
! team." lie declared, 111 urging a
large turnout lor the meeting.
Coach Turner, meanwhile, said
his team came through in good
shape from the Lamesa tiff. Guard
Clyde Jones, who was shaken up ;
| near the end of the game, may !
miss some action early this week. ;
Texas Conference
Teams Strive
For Moire Wins
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Texas Conference is still
dodging championship games, with
diree more outside matches 011 the
schedule this week.
Howard Payne, boasting the only
undefeated record in the confer-
ence, meets Louisiana Tech at '
Brown wood. McMurry tackles Abi-
lene Christian College at Abilene I
and Eastern New Mexico hosts
Midwestern at Portales, N.M.
Last week the three-team loop
won two and lost one. Payne crush- j
ed New Mexico A&M 34-12. Mc-
Murry came from behind to beat
Midwestern 21-20 and Eastern New
Mexico fell before Adams State of
Colorado 21-13.
Payne, undefeated but marred by !
Iwo ties, beat New Mexico A&M |
on the hard smashes of Dave i
Smith and Joe Tyler, each scoring I
twice on short plunges.
McMurry had to overcome a 13-0
lead to edge Midwestern. Elroy j
Payne, leading grouir1 gainer in !
the loop, slashed seven yards for !
a touchdown, quarterback Bob ;
I llayworth passed for one touch-
down and sneaked for another.
but is expected to be ready by
Friday.
"A team that wins usually comes
out in fine shape," Turner com-
mented. Bobby Hartgraves and
Harroll Hobbs, the Mustangs' "Mr.
Inside and Mr. Outside." have
combined to score all but six of
the Mustangs' points this year.
Hobbs has 44 points 011 six touch-
downs and eight conversions, while
Hartgraves tallied four times
against Lamesa. End John Wilkin-
son has the other six-pointer, re-
covering a fumble in the end zone
against the Tornadoes.
Monterey High, which has won
two and lost two games this year,
has an even record in district play,
with one loss against one victory.
After dropping a 27-0 game to Sny-
der. the Plainsmen bounced back
to flatten Plainview. 27-7.
The Plainsmen boast seven let -
termen inherited from Lubbock
High School, and have a tough de-
fensive line, with an offensive
' sparked by fullback Don Cathe.v,
who saw considerable service With
! the Lubbock Westerners last year.
Monterey has a sound and ex-
| perienced coaching staff, headed
i by Bill DuBose, former assistant
coach at Texas A&M and the Uni-
versity of Texas.
only a little to the latter, which,
already has lost two conference challenge the migh y Iigeis mr
games and can be considered I possible district title.
eliminated from the race, but it's
a real big one for Texas. The
Longhorns will be making their
start in the title drive.
As the field swings into full con-
ference action, Baylor will be re-
turning to intersectional strife. The
Golden Bears, losers only to
mighty Maryland this season, jour-
ney to Seattle for a crack at the
sensations of the West Coast. Wash- j
ington. It was Washington that j
whipped Southern California in a 1
decided upset last week. Southern
Cal trimmed Texas 19-7 two weeks j
ago.
The league really went to town
intersectionally last week, winning j
With the district-leading Snyder | Duro is at Lamesa and Plainview
Tigers taking a week off, the 1-AAA is at Vernon.
spotlight turns to two other games Snyder toyed with Vernon, in
this week, when Big Spring collides j taking a one-sided 22-0 decision at
with Levelland and Sweetwater
takes on Monterey of Lubbock.
The winner of these two games
will emerge as top favorites to
Dallas To Honor
Baseball Player
DALLAS UP)—Dallas baseball fans
will honor home-towner Ernie
Banks, Chicago Cubs star, tomor-
row night.
Banks set a major league record
for home runs for a shortstop this
year as he banged 44.
He will be presented a plaque
by the Dallas Chamber of Com-
merce. a hat by Mayor R. L.
Thornton, and an automobile by
a group of local fans.
The pit'sentations will be made
before a game between the major
league all-stars and the Negro
American League all-stars. Banks
plays with the barnstorming major
leaguers.
Three-fourths of the calcium,
nearly half of the vitamin ribo-
flavin and one fourth of the pro-
tein in the country's food supply
come from milk.
The lumbering Big Spring Steers,
possibly the district's largest team,
after two lethargic performances
against Andrews and Ysleta, rous-
ed themselves for an easy 33-7 vic-
tory over Amarillo Palo Duro. Al-
ways a slow starter, the Steers
gave evidence they may be ready
to make their move toward a third
district title, which they have
shared for the past two years with
Breckcnridge.
Levelland's high-scoring Loboes,
momentarily stymied by a 14-14 tie
with Sweetwater, resumed their
40-point per game average, with
a 45-0 rout over Palo Duro.
Comparative scores would give
the Loboes a 19-point bulge, but
they will face probably the tough-
est defensive line they have en
countered, and will play at Big
Spring.
The Mustangs of Sweetwater
shocked a well-regarded Lamesa
team. 33-13. and held a 27-0 lead
going into the fourth quarter. Im-
proving steadily after two straight
defeats, the Mustangs held Level-
land to a 14-14 tie, then rolled past
Lamesa,
I11 the Plainsmen of Monterey,
the Mustangs will be meeting a
team with some of the finest per-
sonnel in the district. A new
school. Monterey inherited seven
lettermen from Lubbock High
School and a great number ol
outstanding B team members of
1954.
Coach Bill DuBose started from
scratch in welding a team, and
the Plainsmen should prove tough-
er each week of experience they
get behind them.
In other games this week, Palo
Vernon last week. The Tiger de-
fense held Vernon outside the Sny-
der 30-yard stripe throughout the
game.
Monterey rolled to an easy 25-7
victory over impotent Plainview,
rolling up nearly 400 yards rush-
ing and passing.
Jesse Sudderth, swift little Lev-
elland halfback, scored once and
booted three extra points to in-<£
crease his scoring total to 59 points.
Teammate Joe Kennedy took over
second place with 48 points, while
Sweetwater's Harroll Hobbs and
Snyder's Joe Baxter are tied
for third with 44 points each.
This Wii'k's Schedule
Lubbock Monterey nt Sweetwater (c)
Levelland at llltf Spring Icl
Amarillo I'alo Duro at Lamesa (c)
l'lainvlew ;;l Vernon (c)
Snyder, open (kite
District Standings
Train
Snyder
Bit? Spring
Sweetwater
Levelland
Monterey
Lamesa
Vernon
W I.
2 O
1 O
1 O
1 0
1 1
1 1
0 1
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I'd rrs oi*
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0 1 000 33
1 .750 47
1 .750 50
O .500
0 .500
0 .000 O 22
0 .000 7 78
0 .000 20 00
lints
T PTS Ol'
1 158 21
05
54
46
74
20
81
20
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0
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1
1
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27
II
;m
40
27
47
27
02
4 0
lilts
80
90
4fi 148
Hand I
Sprin
Vernon 0
33, Lamesa 13
, Plainview 7
, Palo Duro 0
l, open date
l.< ;i(linu Scorers
1 loiibi
Dux to
Hart i!
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Harm
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/tSTOMD/M 10W PR/CBS
ON ALL MODELS!
/
BEST DEAIS
W TOWN!
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"My Business Is Your
Unfinished Business"
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from Post Office
Phone 3111
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Naturopathic Physician
207 Pecan Street
Phone 3291
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Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 240, Ed. 1 Monday, October 10, 1955, newspaper, October 10, 1955; Sweetwater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth284563/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.