Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 250, Ed. 1 Friday, October 21, 1955 Page: 2 of 8
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■iter?
peakiig of Sports i
iy HOY SCUPPAY g
Variety, as the man once said, is the spice of life. How-
ever, uncie Louie claims that he prefers Marilyn Monroe
for his spice, and that variety can go hang. Be that as it
may, other than the top three teams, the Dallas News and
Fort Worth Star Telegram AAA high school grid polls
are at wide variance.
for what it's worth, the Dallas
News poll is probably more repre-
sentative, since sports writers
throughout the state are polled for
Their top 10 teams, thereby getting
a fairly good cross-section.
The Ft. Worth rating, on the other
liand, is the handiwork of Herb
Owens who rates the teams ac-
cording to his own statistics, which
sometimes, prove a little more
than somewhat obtuse to even the
most clearheaded reader.
Here are the standings, after
last week's games, of the Dallas
News poll: 1. Garland, 2. Alice. 3.
Texarkana, 4. Leveliand; 5. San
Antonio Edison; 6. Grand Prairie
and Brownwood, tied; 8. Snyder:
9. Lufkin, 10. Beaumont.
Sweetwater, incidentally.
12th, behind Palestine
prove my .700 average of last week,
on 14 winners and six losers.
Sweetwater vs. Vernon — The
Mustangs are generally favored in
this one, and win it they can—if
they tend to their knitting. But too
many times, the Mustangs have
gone into this one favored, only to
come out on the short end of the
score. Sweetwater by seven points,
but a shaky seven, without the ser-
vices of Bubba Meyer.
Lamesa vs. Big Spring — The
Steers .were a disappointment
against Leveliand, and Lamesa
proved it could come back against
Palo Duro. Since it's played at La-
mesa, the Tornadoes by 13
points.
Snyder vs. Plainview—Plainview
is badly crippled, but the Bulldogs
was | would be badly overmatched any-
j way. Snyder smells a district title.
The Tigers by 26 points
trying to stop Ranger after this
warmup; Eastland over Gorman—
The Mavericks don't have much,
but they at least have this much;
Ranger over Rising Star—the star
will set, and may never rise again.
Owen rated the teams this way
1. Garland, 2. Alice, 9. Texarkana, Monterey vs. Palo Duro—Mon-
4. Brownwood: 5. S. A. Edison, 6. terey has a much better team
Kilgore, 7. Grand Prairie; 8. Lufk- than the 34-7 defeat by the Mus-
ing. Palestine, 10. Beaumont South ! tangs reflected. Palo Duro hasn't j
Park. done much of anything, while the
Plainsmen should continue to im- i
Owens has always taken a dim ! P, ove Monterey by 13 points.
view of West Texas football, year
after year, sticking close to east ; Abilene vs. Pampa—The Eagles
and south Texas teams, only to ! scream, they're on the beam.
have to revamp his ratings as the Odessa vs. Amarillo—The Bron-
West Texas teams usually wade t chos get back on the winning track.
Texas A&M vs. Baylor—This one
I would really like to ignore. The
Aggie fans will descend on me like
a plague of locusts after this. But
a tremendously improved Baylor
team may catch the Aggies a trifle
flat after their tremendous per-
formance against TCU. Baylor by
six points. (Really, Aggies, this
probably insure an A&M victory).
Texas U. vs. Rice—If the stumb-
ling Longhorns are going to win a
game this year, this appears to be.
it. However, Rice's Jess Ncely was
somewhat perturbed, to say the
least, over the Owls' 20-0 loss to
SMU, so the Owls will be out with
blood in their eye, and the Long-
horns happen to be the closest vie-
I tim. Rice by 13 points.
SMU vs. Kansas—The Mustangs
i would have been favored even if
! they hadn't punctured Rice. Now,
i it looks like "Riot in Cell Block
; 11." The Mustangs by a double
; handful.
TCU vs. Miami—Playing tonight
1 at Miami, it's hard to tell how
TCU will react after the loss to
A&M. If they rebound in style,
they should win Miami, whose sea- •
; son stopped, for all practical pur-
poses, when they lost to Notre
Dame. TCU by 10 points.
Arkansas vs. Mississippi — The
; Razorbacks are improving, but it
I is doubtful if they are up to this
I task. However, they did it last
j year when they weren't supposed
to. either. But the chalk says Mis-
] sissippi by seven, and that sounds
! about right.
usfangs Tackle Tough Vernon Lions
Crucial Grid Clash Here Tonight
Beefy Lions Prove Nemesis
To Ponies In Past Years
Sweetwater Mustangs
Vernon Lions
No.
Name
Wt.
Pos.
Wt.
Name
No.
77
Jimmy Feagan
170
E
170
Bennie Goodrum
80
73
Bobby Weems
183
T
250
Jerry Bristo
75
(>
Bryce Hartgraves
l(i8
G
180
Jackie White
07
57
Edwin Etheredge
182
C
170
David Coleman
50
«4
Patrick Gerald
100
G
105
Don Davis
01
83
Dale Littlcfield
185
T
170
Wylie Hannah
70
85
Bubba Meyer
165
E
145
Dan Hill
81
87
Don Aiken
170
B
140
Keith Morris
21
33
Harroll Hobbs
158
B
170
R'ard Christopher 40
44
James Harvey
140
B
180
Billy Dillingham
11
37
Bobby Hartgraves
105
B
175
Roger Coats
33
through to the state champion-
ship.
He ignores district 1-AAA entire-
ly, preferring to include Kilgore
and Palestine. The suspicion is
always strong that even many of
the also-rans of district 1-AAA are
considerably stronger than the
best East or South Texas has to of-
fer. , F'rinstance. Lamesa. Big
Spring or even Monterey, on a
good day could probably take the
measure of anything in the top 10
as rated by Owen, with the pos-
sible exception of Garland and
San Angelo vs. Borger—The Bor-
ger bubble is tossed on the rubble.
Midland vs. Lubbock—The Bull-
dogs have more bounce to the
ounce.
'End of poetry corner for today.)
Haskell over Anson—The Indians
win back everything but Manhat
tan: Colorado City over Hamlin—
The Wolves are rolling again;
Hamlin's Doug Ford isn't enough
alone; Stamford over Rotan—The
Bulldogs already have an eye on
the playoffs; Albany over Mun-
Snyder Cubs Tumble
Local Junior Teams
In Grid Twin Bill
The Sweetwater Mustangs, gunning for their third
straight victory in an effort to keep their unbeaten record
in district competition intact, meet their modern-day neme-
sis here Friday night at Mustang Bowl, when the brawny
Vernon Lions will attempt to take their fourth victory over
the Mustangs in the last six years.
The Lions, who have split even in
Sweetwater Reporter, Texas, Friday, October 21,
I95S
Aggie-Bear Game Determines
Southwest Loop Leadership
EDWIN ETHEREDGE
. . . Rugged two-way lineman
Texarkana. two fine football teams, day—it'll be a blue Munday on
Snyder. Leveliand and Sweetwat- i Friday; Merkel over Roby—Roby's
er would give any of the top 10, i bloody, but still trying; Throckmor-
including Garland and Texarkana j morton over Roscoe—the Plowboys
a full afternoon or evening of foot- | face tough sledding from here on.
ball.
Owens, incidentally, picked Ale- Ballinger over Comanche—These
Callum of Austin and Harlingen as Indians get sent back to the reser-
the state's two top AAA teams at ; vation: Brady over Coleman—
the start of the season, and they These Bulldogs have title ambi-
have both since sunk out of sight. | tions, also; Winters over Lake View
He also picked Palestine to wade i The Blizzards were warmed up to
through to a state title with a mini- a gentle spring breeze by Colora-
rnum of trouble a couple of years do City, but should be ready to put
ago, but Palestine laid a big fat the frosting on Lake View.
egg and never made a move, even Breckenridge over DeLeon—Mur-
toward a district title. der, the man says; Mineral Wells
over Cisco—it'll be close, but not
Well, it's time to go to the guillo- close enough: Graham over Stepli-
tine, again, and try to pick some enville—the rambunctious Steers
winners. After last, iveek. it would ! are real woolv this year.
be nice to ignore the entire thing. Cress Plains over Wylie—Cross
hut it behooves me to try to im-! Plains has the unenviable task of
The seventh and eighth grade
teams of Reagan Junior High took
it on the chin in a doubleheader
with Snyder Tiger Cub teams
Thursday night at Snyder. The
eighth grade Colts lost a 21-0 de-
i cision to the bulky Snyder Cub
team, while the seventh graders
dropped their first tilt of the sea-'
; son. 7-0. j1 ace'
four games this year, will throw
probably the brawniest team
against the Mustangs that the Pon-
ies will face all year, with the pos-
sible exception of the Big Spring
Steers.
On offense, the Mustangs will
spot Vernon a weight advantage
of eight pounds per man. The Lion
eleven will average 174 pounds per
man, compared to the Mustangs'
167 pounds. There will be an
eight-pound per man advantage in
the line, and the same advantage
in the backfield.
Vernon holds something of a jinx
over Mustang teams of the past
few years, copping victories in
1951. 1952 and 1954. with the Ponies
able to take wins only in 1950 and
1953. Both the 1952 and 1954 vie
tories were instrumental in knock-
! ing the Mustangs Out of the title
After holding the Cubs to a 0-0 ;
Vernon took a stunning 6-0 win
plays left ball' in the split-T of- j
fense. is the team's top runner and >
is a line punter and pass receiver. I
The bulky backfield is rounded
out with "Pee Wee" Morris at!
quarterback, Billy Dillingham, 180
pounds at right halfback, and 175-
pound Roger Coats at fullback,
Although end Bennie Goodrum is
the lone starter back from the 1954 ;
Vernon team, which finished c)ose j
behind Breckenridge and Big ]
Spring, who tied for the title, the i
Lions have fashioned a rock-tough
defense, spearheaded by two king- ;
sized tackles, 250-pound Jerry Bris-
to and 220-pound Gerald 'Gust
Guthrie, former Sweetwater resi :
dent, who was the outstanding de- I
tensive player in Vernon's victory j
over Plainview.
Vernon, whose running game 1
hasn't been spectacular this year,
may take to the air, having scored
r
tie at halftime, the Colts gave up I heavily favored 1J52 team. |Wjcc against Plainview on aerials,
a score in the third quarter and ! vv^£" eve"tually cost the Mustangs i The Lions gained 145 yards on six
two more iri the final period. Sny-' a °' f ' . 111 _ • Completions against the Bulldogs,
j der took over the ball on the Colt %)' . i Mustangs winners ot two Goodrum. Christopher, Dillingham
20 and drove for the first touch-! rl'sti-ict games against no defeats, anc| hacks Larry Ilamm and Dick
down in the third quarter, and .ernfJn 'V'" , ,a a,him"..° I Veteto are all good pass receivers,
j marched for two more scores in ' pereat, Coupled with_ injuries 5? J with Morris and Coats doing most
, the final quarter against Colt re- , pla£'erf; including Harroll j o(-the pitching.
I serves, who plaved the entire Hobbs, ,ht> Mustangs never regain-
j fourth period ed their early-season torm.
Outstanding for the Colts were Vernon has won one and lost one
Ruben Armendariz, Robert Par- in distritt competition. The Lions
sons, and Jimmv Watson in the dr0PPed a hard-fought 22-0 decision
: backfield. Ray Williams and Tiny|to Powerful Snyder, then came
| Sparks in the line and reserves t back to take a 19-13 win over Plain-
! Billy Fisher and Billy Johnson. i view, to even their conference ree-
The seventh graders were hanviPrd V 9ne Win and one loss. In non-
pered by fumbles throughout the 'i'slriet play, Vernon dropped a 27 6
game. Snyder recovered a miscuc j verdict to powerful Wichita Falls.
I on the Colt 30 and drove for the lone °t 'he state's top AAAA clubs,
only score in the first quarter and won over class AAAA Pampa,
Snyder never threatened there- 13-12. *
I after, and several potential scor- Both the Mustangs and the Lions
are working with new coaching
staffs. Pat Gerald, former Mus-
tang coach, had previously been
RICHARD FERRELL
. . . Defensive starter
By HAROLD V. RATLIFF
The Associated Press
The top spot in the Southwest
Conference football race goes on
the line at College Station Saturday
when Texas A&M battles Baylor
in a game matching two litle-
hun, teams.
The young Aggies again figure
in the big one. Last week they
whipped TCU 19-1(5 in a major up-
set to tie for the lead with Baylor
and SMU.
SMU plays an intersectional
! game. Thus the winner at College
Station will become the top outfit
with more games won.
A&M is a mild favorite to win
for the first time in eight years.
Texas and Rice play at Austin
and the loser here will be elimi-
nated. Each has dropped one.
The three other teams will be
playing intersectional games. TCU
starts the weekend off by testing
Miami at Miami Friday night.
SMU will be in Lawrence, Kan.,
Saturday to play Kansas. Arkan-
sas goes to Oxford, Miss., for a
scrap with Mississippi.
The Baylor-A&M melee will be
a clash of fast-moving teams, the
Aggies on the ground and the
Bears in the air, and a couple of
lines that haven't yet been handled
will be at it hammer and tongs.
Baylor needs a championship the
most. The Bears last won one 31
years ago. It has been a decade
and a half since the Aggies flew
a title banner.
The winner Saturday will be-
come a big favorite for the crown
although both teams have plenty
of games to play.
Rice, beaten 20-0 by SMU in an
upset last week, is a paperedgc
favorite to hand Texas its fifth
loss in six game. As usual, this
one is expected to be very close.
TCU's game with Miami looks
tough. The Frogs may not play up
to standard in view of a let-down
after the spirited battle with Texas
A&M.
Arkansas and Mississippi should
battle all over the lield at Oxford.
Since we hit only one out of four
last week there's nothing to worry
about with this week's selections—
they just couldn't possibly be as
bad:
Baylor-A&M—A weak vote for
the Aggies in a high-scoring game.
Rice-Texas—'The Owls are better
than their 20-0 loss to SMU indica-
ted. They'll bound back and beat
Texas by a touchdown.
TCU-Miami—Sounds like treason
but the choice here is Miami.
SMU-Kansas—A handy victory
for SMU.
Arkansas-Mississippi — Arkansas
is rolling at last; a touchdown vic-
tory over Mississippi.
Midland Holds
Golf Matches
MHJLAND UPI — An exhibition
match today highlighted prepara-
tions for tomorrow's U.S. Ryder
Cup-Challenge team matches tour-
nament.
Ben llogan and Dizzy Dean met
in the 18-hole match.
Ryder Cup Capt. Chick Harbert
turned in a two-under-par 70 in
practice rounds.
Two challenge team members—
Bo Winninger. Oklahoma City, and
Billy Maxwell. Odessa—turned in
scores of 73 and 71.
Members of the winning team
will earn S600 and the losers will
" ' _' Team
Beaten By Bulky
Big Spring, 21-6
ii hi ........v.. ... ........ .v^ ...... receive 3400 from the purse of $12,-
Blackwell Ploys ICQ 'loss ill six game. As usual, this 500. The Ryder Cup Tournament
*pl'h'pi i /c i -pi hi .i, ' one is expected to be very close, will receive a profit of S2.000 re-
l J.ACK\Vfe,LL (Jspl i— 1 ne uiacK-.j gjyju js )|le heaviest favorite to j gardless of who wins.
j well Hornets, six-man football j win its game. Kansas has been Scotch foursome play—with the
team, will play Ira here Friday j smashed hither and yon while two partners using the same ball
nirrht ii nimk-veii fieto which was I SMU, victim of Notre Dame and I —will begin tomorrow*morning and
recentlv lighted Georgia Tech, started moving in I match play Sunday will conclude
' the way expected two weeks ago. the two-day meet.
ing drives by the Colts were halt-
ed by fumbles.
this hat says Adventure
your Lee says
Adventure9 too
THE LEE ADVENTURE $10. How lightweight
can a hat be? So light you'll hardiv know you're wear-
ing it.
Just one reason why so many men call Adventure a
true adventure in hat wearing.
Pre-shaped to hold its good looks forever . . . yet
deceptively soft and easy-wearing. Water-repellent
treated, too.
A good time for you to enjoy
the Adventure is during Lee's
National Hat Week — Oc-
tober 22-29-
We'll have a tull range of
sizes, ovals and colors for your
selection.
WE GIVE
S & H
Green Stamps
Sooner 2nd Team
Shoves Top Eleven
Into Background
NORMAN, Okla. iff) — When it
The Big Spring Yearlings fresh-
i man team, outweighing the Sweet-
, water C team Ponies by a conxid-
I erable margin, staged a second
hall rally to take a hard-fought
21-B victory at Big Spring Thurs-
I dya night.
Beat the rush...
V V 4-
Vernon mentor for several years,
and a keen rivalry had built up
between the two schools.
Vernon Coach Spot Collins re-
signed last season, and was re-
placed by Bab Percival, head bas-
ketball and assistant football coach
for several seasons. His assistants
are I. D. Russell, former SMU
star, and Vernon Townsend, ex-
comes to pluck and hustle, Okla- j head coach at Hamlin.
™ma's elite Sooner eleven is be- Ehvood Turner succeeded Gerald
ing shoved into the back seat— as head man of the Mustangs, and
by the second stringers. after a nuncertain start, has
Bud W ilkinson tor years has j brought the Mustangs through to
stressed speed and depth in guid-j one tie and two victories in their
ing his Sooner squads to seven j iast three starts.
straight Big Seven championships The Ponies will be in probably
and the dizziest heights of college j their poorest physical condition of
football. the year. Although doctors have I
This, year is 110 different. Wil- j given the go-ahead for end Bubba
kinson s shock troops are an eager ! Meyer to see service .the big end. 1 ^ r _■
bunch of sophomores and juniors j an all-district candidate, will not j On Fofe Of" Team
who are periormmg like veterans, i af jujj effectiveness, as he was'
admits the held, °Vt of rougi1 work «',n las,l| SAN FRANCISCO W - Pacific-
admits the wtll-pi imed alternate ; week. fie received a painful neck j Coast League directors vote todav
team is largely responsible for iniiirv in the Mnnterev came ' iT.u . < " •
nw-,hr,rr,.,'c. J „ i ,. t ^ • . luoiiu.rc.v game. . on whether to donate the San
Oklahoma s prolonged v 1 c to r y Donme McNeal, a fine defensive Francisco Se-ils' fr-tnehise to Hank
march and No. 3 rating in the hack • • ... — I *' ancisco iicais 11 antmse 1.0 nank
nation.
The alternate team is composed
of five sophomores, five juniors and
a single senior.
The YeaVlings scored first fol-
lowing an unsuccessful on-sides
: kick by the Ponies. Big Spring re- J
: covered the short kick 011 their 40
and drove 00 yards for the score.
The Ponies bounced right back
on a long drive, sparked by a
; series of pass completions to ends
Don Bishop and Pat Fralev. From
the Big Spring eight, fullback
.lames Parker scored.
t.ate in the third quarter. Big
Spring scored 011 a pass play, the
only completion for the Yearlings :
: in the game, and adder another
tally in the final quarter for the
victory.
Vote Is Slated
GET YOUR
PRESTON E
RIGHT NOW !
ANTI-
FREEZE
sprained an ankle in Tliurs- Greenberg, general manager of the
days workout, and may lie side-1 Cleveland Indians.
lined Icr the Vernon game. Guard Greenberg said he-was prepared
and tri-captain Larry Summers ; |0 lakc. ovo|. lh(. financially bat-
has seen no game action since the j tered club, debts and all. and put
opening game against Abilene, and j Up $150,000 of his own money in
quarterback Don Aiken and end | operating capital for next season,
j Jimmy Feagan are both nursing The former home run slugger
j charley horses. , declared that eventually he want-
Richard Ferrell. hard-hitting et) t„ bring big league baseball to
halfback, will replace McNeal as gan Francisco. But his first two
a linebacker, while Aiken and [objectives, he said, were to revive
feagan both will he ready lor interest in the game here and "get
] duty, although they will not be at I the city or county or somebody to
I lull effectiveness. , pUt up a new stadium which would
The Mustangs wtil depend pri I K(!!tt 45,000."
■ marily 011 the fast-striking ground '
1 game that began rolling against j
j Leveliand, then shifted into high
against Lamesa and Lubbock Mon- :
Here's what the subs have ac-
complished to date:
; Held North Carolina to a stand-
\ still while the regulars regrouped
| for a last-half assault; ran and
; passed for 183 yards against Pitt
and scored one touchdown; put
down two Texas drives: ran wild
for three touchdowns against Kan-
j sas.
Riojas Slugs
Way To Victory
HOUSTON, Tex, i/Pl—Ray Riojas. 'terey. |
135. turned slugger last night to j .Spearheaded by halfback Harroll
win a unanimous 10-round decision ' Hobbs, imssibly the district's fast-
over Boland Abrams, 134. of Phil- [est, the Mustang attack has rolled
adelphia. to 81 points in three district games,
The victory set up a Nov. 8 meet- j an average of 27 points per outing, j
ing here for Riojas with Orlando ■ Operating with Hobbs in the Mus-
Zuleta. the world's sixth-ranked 1 tang secondary will be Bobby j
! lightweight. Hartgraves. hard-driving full- j
Riojas, Texas lightweight cham-1 back, and James Harvey, fine all-
plon, crowded his more experi- I around halfback. and offensive | 1
i enced opponent from the opening 1 threat 011 his pass-reception as :
bell to win despite a late-rounds i well as his running. Don Aiken, a
comeback by the slender Philadel- \ vastly-Improved quarterback, is j
i phlan. ; proving one of the conference's top ]
Texas Boxing Enterprises Match- T-format.ion quarterbacks.
maker Ralph Smith announced aft- 1 Key man 111 the Vernon versatile
I er the fight that he would try to offense is halfback Richard Christ-
1 get Riojas the Nov. 8 match with 1 opher, speedy 170-pounder. an ex
(•client all-around threat. Chrlsto-
TAKE HOME
A HANDY
CARTON!
Zuleta, a national TV figure. |
i&ueeturatpr ^Reporter
Published every evening except ,Saturday, ami Sumlny morning by th«* Sweet-
! ovater Reporter. Inc., at Sweetwater, Texas.
Entered os Foeond clasn matter at poj t. office In Sweetwater, under act
of March 3. 1872
Any erroneous reflection upon the character or reputation of any person, firm
i or corporation, which mav appear In the columns of the Sweetwater Heporfpr will
| be gladly corrected upon \tr being brouKht to the attention of the publisher.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
«
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Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 250, Ed. 1 Friday, October 21, 1955, newspaper, October 21, 1955; Sweetwater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth284573/m1/2/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.