Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 66, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 29, 1952 Page: 11 of 20
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I
I
7
SECTION TWO
■■■■■■■■■■■■■
w?
j
r'~“
NT Golfers Point
■*T
For Mexican Wins
coached by
U.S. Riders Show
first being a chiller over Paris,
ton 0; Sherman 7, Highland Park
Hoag Selected
Back Of Week
4a
80
30
S3
0
*
EX-DENTON
GRIDDERS IN
NO. 1 SLOTS
Attendance In
Southwest Almost
Same As In 9 52
%
S3
aa
ISMS' &
JOB CONRAD
.. . Champ In 1950
STRANAHAN DEFENDING
ot the lead and. a later shot at
Denison, the loop’s king-pin right
now.
Sherman owns a 20-0 victory over
Two ea-Denton High Scheel
qrMders ore serving out e
spot for themselves In college
ploy this fall.
Dick Castleberry end Wayne
Lewrie, both members of the
ItSl Brones Seem, are current-
ly playing for Tarleton - State
end each are regular mon.
In fest It wes Castleberry
who made the winning touch-
down against Ranger Junior
College last wook.
—-— ■■■ ■ ■■ ' ~
. j passed
touchdowns in the last
and his ability with an aerial aU
INJURIES HAMPER BRONC
DRILLS FOR GREENVILLE
Denton Record-Chronicle
DENTON. TEXAS. WEDNESDAY AFTlftNOON. OCTOBER 29, 1952
.....-- ......................—.............„ ....... ■u.w’U..-.....................a................
FOR EAGLESJJfOP OPENER
TRINITY GETS ROUGHER!
Passing Attack
MO
.000
.000 20
.000 37
NEW YORK m - Charlie
Hoag, slashing Kansas halfback
whose one-man offensive display
dazzled Southern Methodist last
Saturday, today was named the
Associated Press’ back of the week.
Hoag, the greatest ground-gainer
in Kansas’ history and one of the
best all-around athletes in football
this year, had the Mustangs going
around in circles as he ran for
one touchdown, passed for another
and was the key man in two more
scoring drives in Kansas’ 26-0 vic-
tory.
Here’s what the 20-year-old sen-
ior from Oak Park, HL, did:
Sprinted 14 yards over right
guard—without a hand being laid
on him—for the first Kansas score.
Passed 13 yards to Paul Leoni
for the final touchdown.
Kept the other Jayhawk scoring
drives going with his running and
pass-receiving, winding up with a
total of 79 yards gained rushing,
74 gained catching passes and 13
passing himself for a total of IM
yards.
Ability In Clutch
first throe events at the week-kmg
show.
The American triumph came
right where it was needed the meet
—in the middle, and most difficult,
event of the low-score competition.
Coupled with Monday night’s flaw-
less ride, in which they loot the
blue ribbon on time, it gives them
an aggregate total of no faults.
Runner-up Mexico has nine faults,
all picked up last night
The paired event called far two
riders to take their mounts over
a nine-jump course while keeping
abreast. Mrs. Durand and McCash-
in rode in unison 'in a brilliant
display of horsemanship.
Mexico, which had won thd first
three events of the show on the
basis of their slightly speodMr rid-
ing, needed two attempts before
the veterans Gen. Humberto Ma-
rilee on Chihuahua II and Capt.
Victor Carrillo on Hesorte II could
get by on a knockdown apiece plus
one fault for failing to take a jump
abreast.
Going into the final event Friday
afternoon the low-score standings
have the U. 8. team followed by
Mexico with 3 faults, Ireland with
9Vi. France with 10, and Canada
with lOtt.
The five teams compete twice
today fdr individual honors and the
Maj. Gen. Guy V. Henry and Gov-
ernor’s Challenge Trophies.
. '.nKKfc.). j.
1
7th, 8th Grade
Gridders Post
Double Victory
Denton’s 7th and Sth grade foot-
ballers made a clean sweep of
visiting McKinney teams Tuesday
night here, winning by scores of
38 to 13 and It to 0.
The 7th graders, with JaeUe
Doyle and BiUy Witherspoon spark-
ing the attack, carved out the 28-
13 win and the Sth Graders posted
the 18-0 shutout.
Both teams are
Travis Duncan.
Doyle and Witherspoon each
counted a pair of touchdowns in
the 7th Graders’ triumph while
Gary Shaw, Don Chaney and Grady
Cultom split up the Sth Graders*
three scores.
The double win evened the local
youngsters up for the year, bal-
ancing out looses at Grand Prairie
last week.
Witherspoon bounded from his
fulback hole, straight up the mid-
dle for his tallies while Doyle op-
erated his TD’s from the quarter-
back Blot.
MEXICO CITY UF) — Mexico’s
17th national amateur golf cham-
pionship got under way today with
defending champion, Frank Stran-
ahan, Toledo, Ohio, again the
favorite.
But the three-time winner is up
against tight competition in the
championship flight of 58. Among
the top entries are BiUy Maxwell,
North Texas State, and 1851 U. A.
Amateur champion; Al Mengert,
U.S. Amateur finalist; Count Hen-
ri de Lamsze, European cham-
pion; Joe Conrad, North Texas
State, who won the 1850 Mexican
title; and Texans Buster Reed,
Dale Morey and Marion Hiskey.
Others in Coach Fred Cobb’s
group from NTSC other than
Maxwell, Conrad, Reed and His-
key are Stan Mosel and Monte
Sanders. This gave the Eagle
champions a six-man team in com-
petition that started today
Flight Captain Fernando Sala
Gurria called the group “excellent”
and the outcome difficult to pre-
dict. But it was his opinion that
Stranahan today is the world’s
number one amateur golfer, knows
the flat 8,615-yard Mexico City
Country Club course thoroughly,
and is determined to take the title
a fourth time.
Fifteen Mexicans are competing
in the championship flight. They
are headed by Carlos Belmont,
tournament veteran who won the
title in 1944, was finalist the foUow-
• Denton’s High School Brones
stepped through a contact session
this afternoon aa coach Zeke Mar-
tin called for the first and prob-
ably only heavy driU of the week
as the locals prepare for Green-
ville's invasion here Friday night.
i Because of the swarm of Injuries
and bruises received in last week's
Paris game, Martin has-been
cautious all week in order not to
cause more.
BUI Carrico and Billy Kenaa, the
two starting guards, were ticketed
to check in with a doctor today to
see if they wiU be able to go Fri-
day. Oliver Rankin, the bruising
200 pound fuUback, is still out with
a back injury and Bill TiUey may
not be able to go because of a
lingering knee injury. Carrico and
Kenas got head injuries last week.
The Greenville clash wiU be a
battle of tile ceUar, Greenville hav-
ing lost two District 3-AAA outings
and Der.ton one
The headline game of the league
sends Sherman to GainesvUle in a
game of undefeated teams. Both
units will be scrapping for a sUce
McKinney while Gainesville last
week pinned a 47-21 defeat on the
hapless Lions.
Meanwhile, favored Denison is
not expected to encounter any
major trouble in its game with Mc-
Kinney at Denison.
Denison, like Gainesville, has
two straight district triumphs, its
7-0. Paris is idle this week.
SEASON STANDINGS
Team— — ‘ ~
Denlaon 4 3 .887
Parts
Gainesville
Greenville
Denton
Sherman
McKinney
I>lf—-
Team
Danteoo
Gainesville ....
Sherman
Paris
Denton ...
Greenville
DALLAS. — Southwest Con-
ference football attendance is al-
most the same as last year.
To date 21 home games have
been played this season with at-
tendance of 725,141. Last year for
the same period 20 games had
been played that drew 603,280.
The average per game this year
has been 34,538. Last year it was
34,663, meaning only 133 fewer per
game for 1952.
Arkansas has shown an incroase
of 13,900 for four games in each
period Baylor ia up. showing an
average of 34.815 per game thia
year compared to 18,828 in 1951.
Ken Davis Posts
KO Ring Victory
CLARENDON (fl — Kenneth
Davis, Clarendon knocked out
Timmi Rivera, Nuevo Laredo,
Mexico., in 1:35 of the first round
last night.
CAPTAIN JUMPS—Capt. Lewis M. Magee of Ireland's
Army team i« shown taking Greenore over a jump in
preparation for the 64th National Horse Show to be
held in Madison Square Garden, Nov. 4-11. The Irish
will compete against U.S., Canadian, French and Mexi-
can military teams.
IN FRONT
'..... ■ ;
kttk —■*—1
au, ... A-
■?
HARRISBURG, Pa. O — The
United States equestrian team,
weary from more than a yoefr of
almost steady competition, has
shown it still has the abUity to
win when it counts the most
The Americans, who won the
three-day international low-score
jumping competition at the past
two Pennsylvania National Horse
Shows, turned in a perfect ride
last night to move out in front
again this year.
Mrs. Carol Durand, Kansas City,
Mo., on Pale Facn, and Arthur
McCashin. Pluckemin, N. J., came
up with a faultless performance
to snare the paired jumping event.
The victory- snapped the Mexican
Army team's domination of the
Nobody at North Texas State’s
grid camp this week is selling the
Trinity University Tigers "short.**
From out of near obscurity, the
San Antonio Bengais have bounded
back into the limelight of Texas
football the last two weeks. In
whipping two opponents — Texas
A&I and Lamar—the Tigers have .
- soared W points ■■nights of the,[College, has
touchdowns coming via air.
Coach Odus Mitchell sends his
Ftoek against thia aerial-minded
outfit Saturday night ia Eagle
Stadium as NTSC opens defense
of its 1861 Gulf Coast
* title.
In early season ratlags, NTSC
carried a big stick in the polls and
SECTION TWO
-_
'J*1 • ‘
.........itiMW
< ' J'■: sj
2 4 433
I 4 .200
I 4 .200
. 0 6 .000
ISTMCT aTANDINGO
3 0 1000
2 0 1.000
1 0 1000
1 I ‘
...........Zoa
McKinney o 2
RKMI.TS LAST WEEK
Denison 35. Greenville 7; Gaines-
ville 47. McKinney 21: Parts sTK£
ton 0; Sherman 7, Highland Park
(Dallas) 3S.
THIS WBEK’R SCHEDULE
Friday — McKinney at Denison.
Sherman at Galneavllle. Greenville at
Denton. Farts (open date).
W. L. Pct. Pta.l
‘ 2 - 88 ;
4 2 .687 170
....3 2 .600 1S7
" ---- 72 143
52 181
60 114
65 170
W. L.""Pct. Pta.Op.
“ “ * — -- 7
34
6
7
53
60
07
Trinity went along according Io the ‘
experts — dropping games. Thee*
suddenly, following a tough tussle?
with TCU, the Tigers whipped up
a scoring attack aad have been
pounding the TD gate fcver since *
Alvin Beal, a rifle-armed T-
quarterback from Tyler Junior
1 tor eight
last two games
tack'ia causing the highest cam!
cern at Eagleland this week.
For through the air is where
NTSC’s defense has been punc-
tured the most this year. In last
week’s rout of Memphis State, the
only two scores against the Eagles
came via air aa they posted a 38-14.
win.
Saturday night's game will be
the first GCC test this year. NTSC
meets Midwestern Nov. 27 in the
final league skirmish. The Eagles
are favored for a repeat perform-
ance thia fall. ”*’"*3'
Tuesday afternoon the squad
split up with the backs and line-
men moving through fundamental
drills at Meh end of the practice
field.
Mitchell had the offensive backs
running individually and unpro-
teqtd into defensive halfbacks in a
tackling drill while line coach De
Walker sent hi« men through
blocking and tackling work.
With the exception of one or two
old injuries the squad is in top
shape. . . ., .
Trinity enters the game with •
2 4 record while the Eagles carry
a 3-3 record into the initial league
contest
W. A. McElreath, who played
schoolboy footbaU at Greenville
high school, is to his first year of
coaching at Trinity. McElreath
moved in from Tulane and appar-
ently has the Tigers coming around
to Ma system.
Winion Knowles, who eame to
the San Antonio University from
Tulane also, is a NTSC graduate
and played center hero hi the
193O’a.
ing year, and again is back in top
form after recently winning the
Guadalajara title.
The 18-hole qualification round is
played thia morning The 3G-hole
final is Sunday.
Fancy Bonuses
May Be Slashed
NEW YORK (fl — Payment of
fancy 1100,000 bonuses to untried
youngsters to sign with major
league baseball chtbs may be
sharply curtailed in 1853.
Major and minor league clubs,
at their joint December meeting
in Phoenix, Artz., will be asked
to vote on a proposed new bonus
rule that would limit auch pay-
ments to 16,000.
The new proposal follows the
shelling out of vast sums by major
league clubs on green talent dur-
ing the past several years. During
the past 18 months, for instance,
the Boston Red Sox spent some
$430,000 for high school and col-
lege stars.
Two of the highest bonus players
are pitchers Paul Pettit and Billy
Joe Davidson. Pettit, property of
Pittsburgh, received an estimated
$100,000. Davidson reportedly re-
ceived $120,000 for casting his lot
with Cleveland. Neither has yet
made thq majors.
The new proposal was drawn up
yesterday by a special recommen-
dation committee of the game’s
Major-Minor Executive Council.
Committee members and the
council met in Com miss ;oner Ford
Frick’s office here. Afterwards
they declined to say what was
discussed, but it was learned that
the bonus was the main topic of
discussion.
The new proposal provides:
1. Each major league club owner
would agree—in a sort of a “gen-
tlemen's agreement”—not to offer
a bonus exceeding $8,,000 to any
player.
2. Violation of this agreement
would subject the transgressed to
a year’s suspension, a $500 fine and
loss of the player.
3. Minor league clubs would en-"
ter into a similar agreement with
$6,000 as the ceiling for open class-
ification, triple and double A loops,
$4,000 for double A and $3,000 for
B, C. and D organizations.
4. All bonus players regardleu
of the amount they received, would
be subject to unrestricted draft
if not called up to their major
league club within one year.
5. Clubs would be forbidden to
make special payments to parents,
friends, relatives or agents in
forms of cash, homes or automo-
biles.
SPORTS^OPE
— w jim con —. .
Ever read the short, more or leu filler type stories often tossed
in a page for make-up purposes? Going on the assumption more don’t ►
- than do we pulled from the Associated Presa’ regular run of this
service the following question and answer . . .
A Question Of Minutes
How long during a regular 60-minute football game is the ball
actually in play? , The answer is U minutes . . . Know that? . . .
or did you ever atop to figure it . . . This fact comes from the au-
thority of Lynn O. (Pappy) Waldorf, coach of the University of Cali-
fornia in a story, “Twelve Minutes of Football” ... The rest of
the time while the clock is running the teams are calling signals,
huddling or getting ready to put the ball in play ... If you'd like, to
check this yourself, just take a stop watch to the next game you see.
With only 12 minutes of actual playing time, it stands to reason that
each team has only a'few minutes of actual offensive action . . .
However, some teams are able to control the ball longer than others.
The average times for a team to have possession of the ball is 13
during a game . . . Waldorf recalls the 1946 Notre Dame-Northwestern
game in which the Irish got the ball in the second half and kept it
12 1/2 consecutive minutes without losing it or being forced to punt.
During that time they made 23 plyas and brought the ball to North-
western’s one-yard line—but did not score. Notre Dame won, however,
27-0 . . . Looking back to those actual 12 ihinutes of offensive motion
—no wonder we now have such explosive attacks as well as varied
ones ..
Yanks Under-Pay Batboy
The New York Yankees—who through World Series history—are
the best paid ball players in the nation, should be blushing . . . And
all because of their batboy . . . Joseph Carreri, who handled this job
for New York, received $300 as his share of the Champions’ victory
this year . . . But do you know what the losing batboy for the Brook-
lyn Dodgers got as his share? . . . The Bums voted to Charl-s Di-
Giovanna, a half share which amounted to $2,100.31 . . .
Eagle Cagers Open Next Week
Basketball peeks its head out next week at North Texas State
when Pete Shands sends his current crop of cagers against Sheppard
Air Base of Wichita Falls . . . The game will be played Saturday
evening (Nov. 8) In the Men’s gym following the afternoon Home-
coming football clash between NTSC and Texas Tech . . . This is an
annual feature developed by Shands during Homecoming festivities
since the 3,500-seat gymnasium was opened two years ago . . .
Sheppard Air Base To Be Foe
Sheppard, who goes by the tag name of the Jets, is well represent-
ed by past college and university stars with Norman Pilgrim, ex-
Oklahoma A&M spark as the player-coach . . . Pilgrim, who was
named to the All-Missouri Valley team, is backed by an Aggie team-
mate, Joe Bradley, who waa also big shakes with Hank Iba’a crew
not ao long ago . . . Bob Alston, Xavier Univeraity flash and Barry
Arney, Arizona State, are also with the team. ... The Jets were
runner-upe in the Air Force’s World Wide Basketball Tournament last
winter in Omaha, Neb. . . . Five of the men who played on thia squad
are returning to Pilgrim’s unit thia year . . .
SBOA Meeting Is Scheduled
All members of the Southwestern Basketball Officials Association
(SBOA) are elated to meet Monday (Nov. 3) in the Student Union
building at North Texaa State . . . Jerry Pooler, top booster of this
group, urges all members and non-members who have ideaa of joining
to attend and hear the discussion of new rules and the organizing
for the coming season . . .
-e . '
Passing Attack
Worries Coaches
JOE SKILES, ATTORNEY
Brent C. Jackson and Joo Skiles
announce the firm of
JACKSON 0 SKILES, ATTORNEYS
Mr. Skilee will continue Hm practice ef lew to
Office No. One, Firot Steto Bonk Annex «8
has been dissolved. ’
for more Hwn ton yens*.
This MStneroMp continued
,ooro. The diccototion is friendly
end the raspsetivo pertnors toko thb moons cf
oxprominf appreciation to our dints und to oc-
tend to cock other host wichec for tho futoro.
Suite 302-4 Morric Buildmp, Io pertnerehip with
Mr. Robert Hol Jeduoa, under the nemo
JACKSON fr JACKSON, ATTO8NIYS
I
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NM — • -----
THURSDAY
OCT. 30, ONLY
0NLY20C
SUPER
DJOGf
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The SECOND
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HARPOOL SEED HOUSEd
DAVE'S
O 1830 N. ELM ffj
El Cor. Highway 24
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Time to change . . . time to enjoy footwear corn*
fort that only superior craftsmanahip and premium
leathers con provide. . . Make your choice from
our wonderful variety of seasonal stylos to "suit
your suit."
i»
Freeman Prices
•*’
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 66, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 29, 1952, newspaper, October 29, 1952; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1348801/m1/11/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.