The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 73, No. 242, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 13, 1954 Page: 9 of 24
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85
652
2nd-Period Eagle Spurt
Whi
Odessa, 54-46
By DON OLIVER
Reporter-News Sports Writer
The Abilene High Eagles got the
maximum mileage out of a red-
hot second-quarter scoring spree
and then battled in the final two
periods like they’ve never done
before this season to hand the
Odeasa Bronchos a convincing, 56-
46 loss at Eagle Gym Friday
night.
The win, the third loop victory
for the Warbirds, set the stage for
tonight's season finale against the
winless Midland Bulldogs. Odessa
has a 3-9 record in 1-AAAA play.
Odessa, which had won the first
game played between the two
schools in Odessa, 50-42, jumped:
off to a 17-12 lead at the end of
the first period and appeared to needed win. Heroes of this second-
be on the way to an easy win
However, the determined Eagles’
changed the Broncho's tune in a
hurry at the start of the second
and were never headed after they
pulled out front, 18-17, with 5:05
left in the half.
The Warbirds reached the
heights of greatness in this second
period surge, hitting 16 points
themselves while holding the in-
vaders to only one field goal and
two free throws, all by lanky Roy
Davis. This broke the spirit of ing boosted Abilene into a 19-17
the red-clad Bronchos and the Za- lead which was cut slightly
VICK ELECTED
EAGLE CAPTAIN
Joe Vick, senior southpaw
guard, was elected captain of
the Abilene Eagle basketball
team Friday night prior to the
Warbird-Odessa contest
Vick played an important
part in the team victory regis-
tered by the Eagles, hitting
eight points for the night to
celebrate the occasion.
gles romped home for the much*
period thrust were Charles Row,
' Ronny Mulhern and Joe Vick. Row
I hit seven points. Mulhern five and
I Vick three to boost the Warbirds
into their lead.
Mulhern opened the explosive ac-
tion to cut the Odessa margin to
14-17 with a jump shot, then Dan
Boyd hit a free throw, Mulhern
another two-pointer. Row a free
throw and Vick a free throw be-
fore Odessa was able to score a
single point. All of the above scor-
as
1 0A THE ABILENE REPORTER-NEWS
V-A Abilene, Texas, Saturday Morning, Feb. 13, 195
itamford, C-City -
Sain 4-AA Finals
Avoca Drubs Hawley
In 20-B Playoff Tilt
STAMFORD, Feb. 12. (RNS) —
Coach G. E. Hastings' Avoca Mus-
tangs moved within one game of
the District 20-B championship
here Friday night, dropping the
Hawley Bearcats, 56-37, in the
first game of a best of three series
for the crown.
The second game of the series
wiu be played Monday night in
Stamford at 7:30. A victory for
Avoca would give it the title and
a berth in the Region 11-B tour-
nament at Brownwood.
Snyder Beats
Breck, 57-47
Kenneth King paced the Mus-
tangs to their 33rd victory against
only one loss by tossing in 24
points. Bud Shelton was next with
13
W. T. Baker tallied 12 points
to lead the Hawley attack.
Avoca jumped off to a 16-7 lead
at the first quarter’s end, upped
the margin to 32-20 at halftime,
took a 49-32 margin moving into
the final stanza and won the bat-
tle hands down.
In the night's opening game,
Lawn defeated Aspermont, 56-37,
to capture third place in the tour-
nament.
Ray Hudson dropped in 15 points
to pace Lawn while David Thorn-
ton and Oscar Galloway shared
honors for Aspermont with eight
each.
Davis hit the second of two free
throws with 3:28 to go.
Row slipped homa a couple
more baskets to aid the Warbird
cause before Davis hit his only
field goal of the period with 1:85
left for Odessa. Vick stole the baU
and romped home for another
bucket for the Eagles with 56 sec-
onds left, with Mulhern adding a
free throw and Row another buck-
et sandwiched in between a lone
free throw by Davis. The War-
birds led, 28-21, at the half.
It waa more of the aame in the
third, although Odessa whittled
away at the margin, pulling to
within three points at 33-36 with
1:50 left. Then Abilene rallied to
the cause with Ash and Mulhern
boosting the cushion to 33-40 and
relieve the tension. The scoreboard
read, 41-35, as the third period
ended.
If there was any doubt about
the game, it was settled quickly
at the start of the final quarter
as Vick and Boyd dropped in two-
pointers each to provide the Ea-
gles a 10-point margin at 45-35.
And the two clubs had an even
exchange of points the rest of the
way.
High point honors, were split
three ways with Abilene's Boyd
and Mulhern and Odessa's Davis
all hitting 12 points. Carl Schle-
meyer, who has been a top scorer
for the Broncs all season, scored
11. Twyman Ash was next in Una
for the Eagles with 10.
The Abilene High Eaglets, paced
by David Bourland with 21 points,
edged past the Odessa B unit, SB-
54 in the exciting opener. Bill
Ward waa high for Odeasa with
12 points.
ABILENE (56)
D. Boyd . ...
Row .......
Winkles .....
Vick .......
Barnett .....
Ash ........
Colby .......
Mulhern ......
Strange .....
Perry .......
Totals ........
FG FT PF TP
44312
3 359
0
13
3
•
M
TP
DAN BOYD
JOE VICK
ANSON, Feb. 12. — The Colo-
rado City Wolves and the Stam-
ford Bulldogs gained the playoff fl.
nals in District 4-AA here Friday
night with convincing vletorioa.
Colorado City waltzed over An-
son, 60-52, in one semifinals con-
test while Stamford’s rugged Bull-
dogs were slaughtering the Rotan
Yellowhammers in the second, 64-
28.
■ Tournament finals are elated
Saturday night The Rotan and
Hamlin girls clash st 7 p.m. for
the girts titto with the Colorado
Sandies Stay
. In Running
City-Stamford boys game to follow
at 8:15.
Don Flippen, Billy Simmons and
Billy Willlama paced the Wolves to
the victory ever Anson although
Tiger flash Murrey Owens took
high point honors in the game with
27. Flippen and Simmons scored
16 each for Colorado City with wil-
liams hitting 14. Sidney Wyatt waa
second for Anson with 18.
Colorado City led. 33-27, at the
half and kept in control until late
in the fourth period when Anson
pulled to 43-46 with three minutes
to go. Then the Wolves started hit-
ting again and coasted home.
The Wash boys, Wayne and
Mike, paced Stamford ever Rotan
with 18 and 15 points, respectively,
with Charles Coody adding 14.
Doyce Waddell hit 11 for Rotan.
Stamford jumped off to a big 26-
7 leadsat the end of the first period
and at halftime led, 50-19. At the
CANYON, Feb. 12 (RNS)
Amarillo, still in the thick of (he
District 1-AAAA basketball race,
nosed out Borger's Bulldogs, 56-52.
In the West Texas State Field
. House here Friday night.
three-quarter mark the Bulldog!
held a 53-32 cushion.
Frosh Coach :
Doan Resigns
Al McMurry
Doyle Dean, 25-year-old McMur-
ry College assistant coach, has re-
signed effective at mid-term.
Dean, the last of Coach Wilford
Moore's three assistants to be
named, worked with the freshman
toam thla past fall and served as
scout
He had been attending school,
working on a masters degree, and
coaching at the same time. He
found he waa unable to continue
work on the degree at present be-
cause of personal financial reasons.
Dean said he did not plan to seek
a coaching job elsewhere and that
he waa not sure of his plans. He
added that he hoped to remain in
Abilene, however.
Dean’s freshmen won their only
two games last year, over Good-
fellow Air Force Base and Cisco
Junior College.
Dean la a former star quarter-
back at McMurry College.
Mooro said Friday he had no
plans at present for replacing
CHARLES ROW
BILL PERRY
Midland Tilt Tonight
Last for 4 Warbirds
BRECKENRIDGE, Feb. 12 - Am , .
(RNS) - Snyder retained third 0 Brien Defeats
place in District 1-AAA and dump- v POD
ed Breckenridge into a tie for the
cellar here Friday night, thump-
ing the home town Buckaroos, ST-
47.
Ray Courtney paced Snyder's
attack and captured individual high
point honors in the tilt with 20
talites. Sonny Everett led Brecken-
ridge with 19.
Snyder took a 15-12 lead moving
into the second quarter and held
on for a 29-26 advantage at half-
time. Breckenridge cut the margin
to 40-38 at the start of the Anal
stanza, but the Tigers roared back
to score IT points while allowing
the locals only nine
Score by quarters:
Snyder
Breckenridge
15-29-40-57
12-26-38-47
SWC Leadership
Rides on 3rd Tilt
Between UT, Rice
HOUSTON, Feb. 12 (fl—Leader
ahlp in the Southwest Conference
basketball race will be on the line
tomorrow night when Rice and
Texas meet for the third time
A Texas victory would stamp the
Longhorns a strong favorite to win
the title. The Steers would hold the
equivalent of a two-game lead with
five to play.
Rice, the pre-season favorite,
must win to retain more than a
mathematical ahot at the title. A
victory would send the Owls into
first place on a percentage basis
but for all practical purposes would
throw the two teams into a tie.
Texas has a 5-1 conference record.
Rice 5-2.
Rice used second half speed to
overcome a Texas lead and defeat
the Longhorns, 65-58 in the finals of
the pre-season conference tourna-
ment Dec. 30. The situation was re-
versed Jan. 15 when Texas won,
74-66, at Austin.
Weinert to Take
13-B Round Robin
O’BRIEN, Feb. 12. — O'Brien
Bulldogs wrapped up the District
13-B round robin title Friday night,
rolling past Weinert in the district
finale, 44-36.
The two teams open a three-
game playoff series Tuesday night
at O'Brien. Second game will be
at Weinert Friday and the third
game, if necessary, at Munday
Saturday.
Billy Denton and Paul Gothard
hit 13 each to pace O'Brien to the
win while Vernon Hargrove and
Clyde Childress scored 10 each for
Weinert.
O'Brien won the girls game, 30-
29. Barbara Hines scored 16 for
the winners and Estalynn Edwards
17 for Weinert.
Winters Rips Chiefs
For Third Place
in District MA
WINTERS, Feb. 12. (RNS)—The
Winters Billiards sewed up third
place in the District 8-AA basket-
ball race here Friday night,
closing out the season by dumping
the Lake View Chiefs, 55-38.
The victory gave Winters a 3-5
record in loop competition for the
year while Lake View finished
with a 2-8 mark in 4th place.
Calvin Helm and Johnny Green
paced Winters' attack, tallying 13
and 11 points, respectively Bobby
Williams led Lake View with nine.
In a preliminary battle the Win-
ters B team nipped Lake View,
48-41, with Lynn Phillipa leading
the way with 11 points. Eddie Bow-
ers paced Lake View with 16.
Gerald, Dallas Man
Plan Coaching School
DALLAS, Feb. 12 (—Directors
of the Texas High School Coaches
Assn. meet with Dallas officials
here tomorrow to make prelimi-
nary plana for their annual clinic
and school here Aug. 9-14.
Those present will include
THSCA president Pat Gerald,
Southern Methodist athletic direc-
tor Matty Bell, and P. C. Cobb,
director of athletics for DaUas pub-
lic schools. _______________
ODESSA (46)
Schlemeyer , ......
Davis ........
Gillespie ..........
Ward .............
Henderson .........
Vaughn ...........
Whetstone .........
Moody ...........
Gamblin ...........
Totals ..........
Score by periods:
Abilene .................12 28 41 56
Odessa 17 21 35 46
Free throws missed: D Boyd 4, Row 1.
Vick, Ash, Mulhern 3; Davis 3, Gillespie 3.
Henderson 2, Vaugh.
Officials: Billingsley and Burns.
Abilene High School closes its
1953-‘54 basketball season here Sat-
urday night at 8 p.m. against Dis-
trict 1-AAAA‘s cellar dwellers, the
Midland Bulldogs.
For winless Midland, the game
Angelo Drubs
Midland, 66-36
ABILENE B (56)
Bourland .......
Pierce . .......
Colwell ........
Boyd ..........
Welch .........
Swafford ......
Long ...........
Lockerd ......
Totals .......
ODESSA B (54)
Gorrell .......
FG FT PF TP
10 1 121
a i
■ M
3 5
1 4
3 •
15 M
FG FT PF TP
mam .....................20 1
Johnson ...................1 2 2
Hitt ......................4 3 2
Cutbirth .................2 0 2
Ward .....................a « s
Scott .....................4 2 5
Totals. ............... 21 12 17
Officials: Burns and Billingsley.
MIDLAND, Feb. 12. (RNS.
Behind a 34-point performance by
guard Milton Nickel, the San An-
gelo Bobcats captured their fourth
District 1-AAAA basketball victory
here Friday night, blasting the
lowly Midland Bulldogs, 66-36.
The loss was Midland's 12th
straight in loop play without a
win while Angelo all but sewed
up the district’s sixth position.
Score By Quarters:
San Angelo: 18-29-45-66
Midland: 5-13-23-36
: Army Gets Spencer
4
u
is
M
presents the next to last opportun-
ity to crash into the black ink side
of the cage ledger. Already holding
a 0-12 record. Midland has only
one more game after the Eagle
clash Saturday night
For four Eagles, the Midland
game to the last one. Center Dan
Boyd, forward Charles Row, guard
Joe Vick and forward Bill Perry
are seniors.
Although AmariUo led most of
the game, Borger tied the score
and then took a two-point lead,.
43-31. at the end of the third quar-
ter. The Sandies staged a 15-point
drive in the final stanza, however,
to gain the victory.
Amarillo's victory gives it an 11-
1 record for the season, just one
loss behind undefeated Pampa in
first. Borger, with a 9-3 record
for the conference chase, is out of
the picture.
Amarillo meets Pampa in Can-
yon Saturday night in the big
game of the year.
High pointers in the Friday night
game here were Bub Farrell with
19 for Amarillo and Allen Simpson
for Borger with 17. Borger's Ger-
ald Meyers meahed 18 for runner-
up honors.
Score by Quarters:
Borger: 13-28-43-52
Amarillo: ,17-34-41-56
7 Cities Field Fencers Here
Today in North Texas Tourney
Top - flight fencers from seven
Texas cities will participate in a
North Texas Division Tournament
of the Amateur Fencers League
of America Saturday at Rose Field
House.
WICHITA, Kas., Feb. U W—
Daryl Spencer, New York Giants
infielder, will report for army In-
duction Monday.
Saturday night's action in the
district will close out the season for
Abilene and San Angelo, but the
other six teams have one more
night of it Tuesday.
— The big game Saturday night
to at Amarillo where the undefeat-
ed Pampa Harvesters invade the
Sandies' lair in a contest matching
the No. 1 and No. 2 teams in the
loop. An Amarillo victory would
throw the race into a two-way
tie between the two teams while a
Pampa victory would clinch the
title for Pampa.
Other games Saturday night pit
Borger against the Westerners at
Lubbock, Odessa at San Angelo.
Tuesday's games send Borger to
Pampa, Amarillo to Lubbock and
Odessa to Midland.
In case of an Amarillo victory
over Pampa Saturday, the Borger-
Pampa and the Amarillo-Lubbock
tilts would be all-important Tues-
day.
Rice Sets Grid
Clinic in March
HOUSTON (—The annual spring
football coaching clinic at Rice
Worth Baugh, tournament direc-
tor and coach of Abilene’s team,
said entries also will be on hand
from Lubbock. Wichita Falla, Dal-
las, Stephenville, Denton and Fort
Worth.
The tournament, which will be
the first of ita kind over held in
the Key City, will begin at mid-
morning, Baugh said, and run
through Saturday night, with
matches being held without a
break.
A majority of the action will be
individual struggles, with only
i three cities to compete in teem
matches. These team matches will
be between the Dallas Blades, Abi-
lene Swordsmen and Texas Tech
Red Raiders.
Individual matches will be in
open class dueling, swords and
novice sabres.
tourney at Dallas; BUI Brazzil, By-
ron Vaughn, Bill Bassett, Jimmy
Herrington and Baugh.
Trophies will be awarded for
dueling and sabre matches and
team awards will be presented to
winners.
second and third place in
The Tarleton State College
Knights will represent Stephen-
ville while North Texas State will
represent Denton.
Fencers from Abilene entered in
the tourney are Gene Allen, who
won first place in novice foil com-
petition last week in a similar
NOTICE
Change of Address
ROGERS &
SCHROEDER
DRILL STEM TESTING
NOW LOCATED
2937 S. TREADAWAY
Ph. 3-3572
Lostitute will be held March 4, 5,6
with the Rice athletic staff, headed
by Coach Jess Neely, lecturing on
grid tactics for the benefit of high
school coaches of the Gulf Coast
area.
Climax of tho school will be an
Intrasquad football game by the
Rice teams now in spring training.
Assisting Neely will be Joe
Davis, Cecil Grigg, Dell Morgan
and Red Bale, Rice assistant
coaches, and freshman coaches
Charlie Moore and Harold Stock-
bridge. Eddie Wojecki, former
Olympics trainer, will lecture on
treatment and prevention of in-
juries.
SCHWINGER NO. 1 IN SOUTHWEST
LaSalle’s Gola, Kentucky’s Hagan
Top List of All-Am erica Can
By TED MEIER
AP Newsfeatures
NEW YORK - Selection time
for the 1954 Associated Press col-
legiate basketball AU - America is
just around the corner.
Four players on the 1953 team
have been graduated, throwing
the field virtually wide open. Al-
ready the experts sre giving the
onceover to candidates la every
section of the country
Walter Dukes of Seton Hall;
Johnny O'Brien from Seattle; Bob
Houbregs of the University of
Washington and Ernie Beck at
Pennsylvania, 1353 AU - Americas,
have received their diplomas, but
Tom Gola of LaSalle to back.
LaSalle, as a team, hasn't done
as well this year, but Gola individ-
uaUy has been brilliant. Thus, ho
must be ranked high among the
promising AU-America candidates.
If he repeats he will join Ralph
Beard of Kentucky and Easy Ed
Macauley of St. Louis in that cate-
gory. Beard and Macauley were on
the 1948 All - America, the first
picked by The Associated Press,
and repeated In 1949.
Cliff Hagan and Frank Ramsey
of Kentucky’s undefeated team are
back in action after a year’s en-
forced absence due to the suspen-
sion of Kentucky. They are show-
ing the form that earned Hagan a
berth on the 1952 AU-America and
Ramsey a place on the second
team that year-
Four players on the 1853 second
team, Bob Pettit of Louisiana
State: Don Schlundt of Indiana's
NCAA champions: Frink Selvy of
Furman and Paul Ebert of Ohio
State, again are hitting the nets in
formidable style. Obviously they
must be given serious considera-
tion
rtes
Clyde Trims
Baird, 50-38
BAIRD, Feb. 12. (RNS) — The
Clyde Bulldogs flashed to their 10th
District 16-B triumph here Friday
night, whipping the Baird Bears,
50-38.
It wss the 25th victory in 27
starts this season for Coach Beans
McCasland’s Bulldogs, who have
already sewed up the 16-B crown.
Freddie Kniffen, lanky Bulldog
center, flipped in 28 points for
high - point honors. Loonie Law-
rence led the Bears with 14
points, followed by teammate John-
ny Bullock with 10
Clyde ran away with the game
in the second half after the Bears
had held the Bulldogs to e 24-22
halftime advantage.
The Clyde girlstrimmed the
Baird girls, 31-19, with Anita Black
sinking 17 for the winners and
Patsy Betcher leading Baird with i
nine.
ANNOUNCING
THE OPENING OF
“THE BOWLERDROME”
THIS FALL
Located s. 140 San Angelo Mghway. A
beautiful bowling center, complete
with modern automatic equipment. T.
V. lounge, private lounge, coffee shop,
leeker and shower room and seceme-
dations for private bowling clubs.
Large parking area. Plenty ef reem
league and Ml bowling. Must
have at least 100 league teams signed
by May 1st for league play IB Sept.
1954. S.9. John Prioggropresentstiye
wind meg. ser deed. 22 MI s am.
Why Wait?
YOU CAN HAVE
LENNOX
An Season Air-Flo Air
Conditioning NOWI
ABILENE SHEET
METAL |
844 Ple
Phene 4-4718
Haskell Defeats
Albany Lions, 42-37
ALBANY, Feb. 12. (RNS)—Bor-
de Worsham bucketed 15 points
here tonight to lead the Haskell
Indians to a 42-37 district 8-A bas-
ketball victory over the Albany LA
oas.
Albany's Douglas Mead paced
the Lion scoring with 14 points.
Albsny won the B game, 54-33,
paced by Richard Fox's 13 count-
ers. Wayne Joslett topped Haskell
B scoring with 11 potato.
TOM OOLA
WATCH FOR THIS....
FRANK SELVY
A HORSE HITCH
Will Be la Abilene Feb. 18 * nth
QUALITY BABY CHICKS
From Pure Strain Blood Tested Flocks.
HATCH-OFF EACH WEDNESDAY.
FEED - SUPPLIES — REMEDIES
WILSON & CO. HATCHERY
757 North 2nd._______________Phone 4-5261
CLIFF HAGAN
BEVO FRANCIS
DON SCHLUNDT
only recently Schlundt, still a
growing youth, set a Big Ten rec-
ord by scoring 47 points against
Ohio state. Schlundt, 6-9 last year,
thia season la 6-10.
Selvy and Pettit are battling for
the individual scoring crown for
major colleges. Selvy has been av-
eraging 38 points per game: Pettit
34. Ebert also is among the top
ten with 25.
Other All - America candidates
are Arnold Short of Oklahoma
City Bob Leonard of Indiana: Bob
Metheny of California; Johnny
Kerr of Illinois; Bob Mattick of
Oklahoma A&M; Cleo Littleton of
Wichita; Dick Garmaker of Minne-
sota and Cari Cain and Deacon
Davis of Iowa.
Neither can you overtook Togo
Palazzi of Holy Cross; Lee Mor-
ton of Cornell, Gene Schwinger of
Rice: Elliott Kraver of George
Washington; SI Greene of Duques-
ne; Dick Hemric of Wake Forest;
Bob Waller of Oklahoma; Werner
Killen of Lawrence Tech and Joe
Rosenthal of Notre Dame.
Then there's Lou Tsioropoulos of
Kentucky: Joe Belmont and Rudy
D’Emilio of Duke: the Holup
brothers — Joe and John — of
George Washington; Dan Finch of
Vanderbilt; B. H. Born of Kansas;
Dick White of Indiene; Joe Ber-
trand of Notre Dame; Bill Uhl of
Dayton; John Clune of Navy; big
7-3 Swede Halbrook of Oregon
State; Dick Ricketts of Duquesne;
Gene Shue of Maryland and Larry
Costello of Niagara. .
And bow about Ed Conlin of
Fordham: Bob McKeon of Califor-
nia: Bob Schafer of Villanova;
Buxx Wilkins of Virginia: Tom
Marshall of Western Kentucky and
Walt Walowac of Marehall not to
mention Clarence (Bevo) Franeia,
of Utile Rio Grande College in
Ohio?
Francia, who gained national
fame a year ago by scoring 116
potato against Ashland (Kyi only
to have the record thrown out later
by the NCAA, gained e berth on
the Associated Proas third team in
1353. It will be interesting to see
how he fares this season aftor hav-
ing played against major teams.
There are scores of other nom-
inees.
Dick Boushka of St. Louis, who
was out for a time because of ill-
ness, returned to time to help the
Billikens snap Wichita’s 14 - game
winning streak.
Dean Larsen of Brigham Taung,
leading scorer in tho Skyline Con-
ference, and Jesse Prisock of Kan-
sas State sre among other candi-
dates—ho must he kept in mind.
STROMBERG CARLSON TV
- PANAROMIC VISION WIDE ANGLE
VIEWING IN TELEVISION
A THERE 18 NOTHING FINER THAN A
D STROMBERG CARLSON
"TELEVISION"
FRANKLIN MOTOR CO.
ABILENE’S OLDEST AUTOMOBILE DEALER
South 2nd & Elm Phone 2-7877
BRUCE M. PORTER, M. D.
ANNOUNCES THE REOPENING
OF HIS OFFICE
AT
1325 HICKORY
FOR PRACTICE OF OBSTETRICS AND
GYNECOLOGY (Diseases of Women)
OFFICE PHONE — 3-2101
Residence Phone 2-9881
If No Answer 2-2811
9
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The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 73, No. 242, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 13, 1954, newspaper, February 13, 1954; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1652658/m1/9/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Public Library.