Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 263, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 7, 1951 Page: 2 of 8
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JPress
Preparing
Pass Defense
For Tornadoes
defense—something the Sweetwater Mustangs
i't needed to concentrate on in their first seven games
season—is being hammered hard in the Pony training
up this week in preparation for Friday night's battle
Ith the Lamesa Golden Tornadoes.
The Mustangs hope to
smother Lamesa's Jerry Mill-
: sapps in the District 3A-1 tus-
sle scheduled at Mustang
Bowl. The brilliant Millsapps,
one of West Texas' top pas-
sers, has looked great in both
victory and defeat this sea-
son.
If the Ponies hope to regis-
ter their second conference tri-
umph and remain in the dis-
trict title fight, their major
task this week will be to stifle
Lamesa's deadly one-two punch
—Millsapps' passing and End
Rav Taylor's catching.
Other Tornadoes figure prom-
inently in the Lamesa attack-
namely End Marshall Crawford,
Halfbacks Jimmy Robinson and
Jerry Howell and Tackle Alvin
Smith—but Millsapps and Tay-
lor are the "ring-leaders."
Feagan Connects
Millsapps has thrown 12
touchdown passes in seven
games, while Taylor has tallied
66 points to lead the district.
Joe Feagan, the Mustangs'
number one quarterback, was
impersonating Millsapps in
pass drills Tuesday afternoon.
And Feagan was connecting
with End Dell Greer and Half-
back Freddie Armstrong with
amazing accuracy.
Feagan was throwing 'em
long and short, giving his de-
fensive teammates quite a work-
out on pass defense.
Coach Pat Gerald had Hal
Byrd, Joe Smith and Steve Ste-
phens in the defensive second-
ary, with Mark Bishop and
Charles Wilson at linebacker
posts. On the line were Derle
Rudd, Harold Green, Ira Hill,
Loyd Ware. Billy Stone and
Jack Leonard.
Hill and Leonard were caus-
ing Feagan (Millsapps) the
mcst trouble with their rushing
tactics, while Byrd and Bishop
nabbed several interceptions.
Imesa Formations
Feagan was chunking 'cm
from the straight T. double wing
and spread formations.
Later the Mustangs worked
on their own offensive attack.
Feagan, of course, remained at
the quarterback slot. with
James Butler and Dqn Reagan
at halfbacks and Mark Bishop
at fullback.
On the line were Ends Derle
Rudd and Hal Byrd, Tackles
J. W. Patten and Alan Thomp-
son, Guards, Ira Hill and Pres-
ton Dill and Center Lloyd Ware.
Fullback Angel Olvera is
nursing a cut lip. after missing
FOR SALE
By owner this brand new
two bed room home just com-
pleted. Corner of Silas and
View. Will carry large F. H.
A. loan.
N. D. REEVES
REAL ESTATE
Phone 2879 Night 2986
two teeth in last week's Plain-
view game, while Guard Frank
Glass is sidelined with a pulled
muscle. Both boys will probably
see action against the Torna-
does, however.
Following is Lamesa's scor-
ing plays in each of their seven
games this year:
Lamesa 27, Paschal 13
Quarterback Jerry Millsapps
passed 22 yards to End Ray
Taylor; Halfback Jimmy Rob-
inson plunged over from one;
Millsapps passed 31 yards to
Taylor; Millsapps ran 46 yards.
Lamesa IS, Brown wood 40
Millsapps passed to Taylor,
play covering 85 yards; Mill-
sapps passed nine yards to End
Marshall Crawford.
Lamesa 72, El Paso Jefferson 0
Millsapps passed 12 yards to
Taylor; Millsapps passed 31
yards to Taylor; Halfback Jerry
Howell ran six yards; Halfback
Bobby Burnett plunged two
yards; Robinson smashed one
yard; Millsapps carried for 79
yards; Millsapps passed 53
yards to Taylor; Guard Glen
Crecelious blocked punt and
carried 20 yards; Sub Quarter-
back Johnny Jones passed nine
yards to Fullback Don Harp;
Burnett ran 35 yards; Millsapps
ran 44 yards.
Lamesa 12, Arlington Hts. 26
Millsapps passed 21 yards to
Crawford; Taylor caught an Ar-
lington Heights fumble in the
air and raced 55 yards.
I^amesa 27, Mineral Wells 6
Millsapps ran 12 yards; Mill-
sapps dashed 71 yards; Robin-
son ran 45 yards; Millsapps
passed 23 yards to Taylor.
Lamesa 7, Midland 34
Millsapps passed to Taylor,
play covering 66 yards.
Lamesa 34, Big Spring 0
Robinson ran 32 yards; Mill-
sapps passed seven yards to Tay-
lor; Howell trotted seven yards;
Millsapps passed seven yards to
! Crawford; Taylor ran 21 yards
Ion end-around play.
Grid Slate
District 1-AAA
Lamesa at Sweetwater.
Plain view at Vernon.
Midland at Big Spring.
i Mst riot u'.\ .\
Colorado City at Stamford.
Snyder at Anson.
Hamlin at Rotan.
District 8-A
Albany at Koscoe.
Throckmorton at Merkel.
Haskell at Munday.
Rohv, idle.
District 5-B
Loraine at Coahoma.
flobbs at Ira.
Robert Lee at Trent.
Hermleigh at Bronte.
! NOHTIf-SOl TH TOl'llNKY
P1NEHURST, N. C.. Nov. 7—
(UP)—Defending champion Sam- j
my Snead, who captained the |
United Stares team to a lopsided]
triumph over Britain in the Ry-
der Cup matches here during
| the weekend, headed a field of
111 that teed off today in the
49th annual North and South
| Open Golf tournament
Cate-Spencer Ambulances
Dial 4717
SPORT A
purtS
5-B Leaders
Prepare For
Stiff Tests
SPORT
ANGLES
Bish
Despite being responsible
for the most colossal blow-up
job in major league baseball
history, Chuck Dressen has
been re-hired by the Brook-
lyn Dodgers.
And how it must burn ihe
Dodger fans!
"Get rid of Dressen" is the
tone of brash response to a
contest being run by a Long
211
throw to the batter- -the run-
ner on second starts for third
and the runner on third
starts for home, but the run-
ner on third does not move as
fast as the one who is on sec-
:>nd, the result being that the
two are between home plate
and base at the same time.
"The batter may bunt the
ball or let it pass, but the re-
Island newspaper to decide i su't 's a'jvays the same. The
_ pimnAt* ti'hr.'f" f w i Y*r\ in ♦ o rr.
how best the Dodgsrs can
improve the 1952 picture.
One woman, instead of
writing a letter, sent along
a package of mud from an
Arkansas river bottom to be
rubbed on Dodger pitchers'
arms. "I'tll give them guys
control for a change,' she
says.
A male member of the
Faithful suggests the Brook-
lyns doll up pretty models in
Bikini bathing suits, use
them as ushers.
"The undressin' will take
my mind off Dressen," he
writes.
One baseball genius wrote
how the Dodgers could stop
losing one-run decisions. His anv solutions for their base-
secret: ball woes. But the M. & M.
"With runners on third and ;cal solve your clothing prob-
second and one out and|lems. Drop by today.
when the pitcher starts to ;
runner who's on third is tag-
j ged out by the catcher, but
\ the runner who's on second
j slides in safe, for the runner
j who was on third has taken
i out the catcher, who is now in
no position to tag the second
I man.
"This play never fails if
properly executed. What the
| Dodgers lack is color. My
i kind of baseball gives you
I color."
j Another letter urged that
1 the Bums keep Manager
j Dressen. The author, it de-
i velops, is a Giant, fan.
The M. & M. Men's Store at
200 East Broadway in Sweet-
water can't offer the Dodgers
Football Near Finish
It hardly seems that the foot-
ball season is at the halfway
point yet, but did you realize
that the 1951 Texas schoolboy
gridiron race is near an end?
Maybe it's because the baseball
season — with the National
League playoff between the Gi-
ants and Dodgers, then the
World Series meeting of the Gi-
ants and Yankees — extended so
far into the pigskin campaign
and created more interest local-
ly than in previous years.
Anyway, it seems to us that
the '*51 football year has been
cut short.
Yet, one could very well rea-
son that we're all wet with that
belief. Sweetwater's profession-
al baseball "season" ended way
hack in August when the floun-
dering Swatters were mired deep
in the second division with no
hope of recovery, which should
cause more time for football
thinking.
Maybe our abbreviated foot-
ball year hinges on the fact that
the Mustangs waited until Oct.
5 to win their first game (over
San Angelo). Come to think of
it, that must be the solution.
Sweetwater High has lost only-
one game since Oct. 5.
—SS—
Strange, isn't it, that San An-
gelo and Big Spring can field
such all - conquering pro base-
ball teams, then come out with
such feeble high school football
squads.
Of course you can reason that
one out .
A city can buy a good base-
ball club or import one from an-
other country. But in high school
football they have to play only
their native sons (or a boy who
has resided in their community
for at least one year).
San Angelo, with a population
four times larger than Sweetwa-
ter, has been unable to hold
its own against the Mustangs
I on the gridiron since 1930.
We don't remember the last
| time Big Spring High accomp-
j lished a victory over the Pon-
j ies. Midland won a football game
i from the Mustangs last season
! for the first time in about 10
j years.
They raise some pretty tough
footballers in Sweetwater 4Sam-
my Baugh, Clyde '•Bulldog'^. Tur-
ner, V. T. Smith, Marion Flan-
agan, Dugie Turner, Red Sher-
idan. Buster Mitchell, Jake Web-
ster anil James Timmons. to
name a few).
—SS—
The school's present, prospects
j indicate that there'll be no down-
| ward trend in Sweetwater's foot-
j ball fortunes in 1952.
In fact next year promises to
' be one of the best in Mustang
i history, with nearly the entire
j 1951 "crop" returning.
Therefore, Sweetwater High's
j bigger rivals might as well pre-
pare for more victory drouths...
Can't resist reprinting a cou-
ple of items appearing in Rob-
bie Robinson's column in the
Lamesa paper-
Ail Ozark hunter was asked
what gauge shotgun he used. "I
can't exactly call the number of
it, but it's a pretty big gun," he
j said. "Whenever it needs clean-
in'. we just grease a groundhog
and chase him through the
| barr'l."
Clarence Sharp, a resourceful
duck shooter from Kentucky, has
a gun, he says, that kills so far
up he lias to put salt on the pel-
lets to keep the birds from spoil
intt before they hit the ground, j
New Tulsa Manager
Tl'LSA, Okla., Nov. 7 (UP)—
j.loe Schultz, 33-year-old manager
I of the Wichita, Kans., Western
League team for the past two
seasons Tuesday was named
manager of Tulsa's Texas League
| baseball team fo. 1952.
Orayle Howlott, president' of
the Tulsa Oilers, announced the
appointment. Uowlett has been
looking for a new manager since
graying A1 Vincent resigned at
the end of the Tulsa's dismal
1951 season.
Schultz, a native of St. Louis,
Mo., gut, into the bossing end
of baseball when he served as
player and coach with the St.
Louis Browns in 1948. He was
a coach only for the Browns in
19-19, and moved to Wichita
next year.
Wichita was in last placi.
last June 20th but wound
third be-t in the Western
cuit.
The topsy-turvy District 5-B
football circus may become a lit-
tle more dizzier — if that's pos-
sible — after this week's sched-
ule of games.
Hermleigh and Robert Lee,
tied for first place with 4-1 rec-
ords, will tackle some stiff op-
position Friday night and if
their opponents emerge victor-
ious, District 5-B can lay claim
to another "southwest confer-
ence" circuit.
Hermleigh's Cardinals journey
to Bronte and Robert Lee's
Steers travel to Trent for im-
portant engagements Friday
night. On the basis of their past
records, victories by both Bronte
and Trent would not be too sur-
prising in the unpredictable dis-
trict.
Hermlcigli Rebounds
Hermleigh opened the 1951 sea-
son with three straight setbacks
—including a 21-0 shellacking by
district foe Hohbs. But the Car-
dinals — paced by Backs Floyd
Hacker and Dickie Wall and End
Jimmy Cooper — have rebound-
ed with five successive tri-
umphs.
The Cards' victory skein in-
cludes upset victories over Co-
ahoma, 14-0, and Robert Lee,
13-6.
Robert Lee's Steers also start-
ed the season in slow-motion.
The Steers dropped thre e
straight before catching fire.
Coahoma, the overwhelming
district favorite before confer-
ence activity opened, suffered its
second district loss last week in
bowing to Robert Lee. 25-12.
Trent and Bronte join Coa-
homa with 3-2 title records.
Hobbs has won two, lost three;
Loraine. sports a 1-4 slate and
Ira has dropped five straight.
The chart:
District .VR Standings
1
CATCHY NUMBERS—Texas end, John Adams, hemmed in by Kentucky defenders, Harry Jones, left,
and Miles Willard, overcame 2-1 odds to snag a pass good for 26 yards. A UCLA player made it tough
for Illinois end, Joe Vernasco, dark jersey. The chinlock prevented completion, but. interference was
not called. Minnesota freshman back, Mike Sullivan, leaped and intercepted a pitch by Noi thwestcrn
quarterback. Boh Rin-cnn JntWnrm
Novein bei
Texas, Wednesday
Reporter
Sweet watei
Indiana Without
Football Coach
1A-8 Crown Hinges On
Roscoe-Albany Battle
Team
Hermleigh
Robert Leo
Coahoma
Trent
Bronte
Hobbs
Loraino
I ra
—All—
\V I.
5 a
A 4
-District-—
W I.
Itciiiaininu Schedule
— Loraine at Coahoma. Herm-
Bronte, Robert Lee at Trent,
Ira.
Trent at Hermleigh, Robert
Nov.
leigh ;
Hobbs at
Nov. 16
Lee at Bronte
at Hobbs
Last Week's Kcsults
Hermleigh 13, Loraine 6; Robert Lee
2."i, Coahoma 12: Trent in. Hobbs * ;
Bronte .'13, Ira 0.
Ira at Coahoma, Loraine
Bob Neyland Is
Coach-of-Week
NEW YORK. Nov. 7 (CP) —
Fellow coaches rate his team the
best, in the nation while he wor-
ries about beating Washington
& Lee.
He thinks the world is coming
to an end every Saturday and
on Sunday mornings some of his
battered opponents think it did.
He's the United Press Coach
Of The Week, Bob Neyland of
| the unbeaten and untied Ten-
nessee Volunteers, who now
have won 10 games in a row.
So far the only rap against
them is. that they don't always
j play the toughest teams available
| and that criticism makes Ney-
I land go into a stern burn.
"We name our schedule to suit
ourselves ami not to suit any-
i body else," he said. "What's more
| we could get beat this week
when we play Washington &
Lee. Remember they won the
Southern Conference champion-
ship last year and Gil Boeetti,
their quarterback, is one of the
best .split-T operators in the busi-
ness."
Nevertheless, folk.- who remem-
ber the Virginia Generals more
for their sprightly school son^'
"The Washington & Lee Swing"!
than for consistently heroic |
gridiron exploits, don't think
there is much chance for an up-
set .
Colls Play Abilene
Sweetwater's Junior High
Colts will play Abilene South
Junior High at Abilene Thurs-
day afternoon.
It will be the Colts' seventh
game. They have won two. lost
four.
The Colts \v i 11 complete their
season play here next Thursday
against Winters.
Sweetwater Reporter
Published each afternoon except Satur.
lay. Also Sunday morning by the Sweet-
water Reporter, Inc.
Entered as second clau matter at puat
office In Sweetwater, Texaa, under act of
March 3, 1879.
Coach M. W. (Moe)
sends his once-beaten
Plowboys against the touted Li-
ons of Albany Friday night at
Roscoe in a game that will set-
tle the championship of District
1A-S for all intents and purposes.
Albany, undefeated in confer-
ence play, can practically put a
lock on the 1A-8 title door with
a victory over Roscoe, while the
Plowboys need a triumph over
the Lions to gain a three-way-
piece of the championship.
Roscoe's lone loss this season
was to district foe Merkel, 25-
H. The Plowboys have beaten
Haskell, !!)-(), Throckmorton, -18-1
0, and Munday. 18-12. as well as
non-title foes Abilene B, 25-7, Ro- i
tan, 27-18. Colorado City. 21-0. and
Hamlin. <>-<).
Albany's Record
Albany owns a (i-2 season |
mark and a 1-0 district slate, i
In title play the Lions won ov-1
er Throckmorton, 3o-(S. Merkel. j
20-10, Munday. to-fi, and Rohv, ,
38-12. In practice games, Albany j
downed Ballinger. 12-fi, and Elec-
tra. !i-7, then lost to
21-7, and Anson, 8-0.
So, Albany needs a victory ox -
er Roscoe Friday night and an-
other over Haskell oil Nov. Hi
in the final district game to lie
the undisputed champion.
A Roscoe victory over the Li-
ons would throw the Plowboys.
Albany and Merkel into a tliree-
j way deadlock for the top spot,
i The Merkel Badgers will meet lit-
i tie resistance in their final con-
! test against Throckmorton this
week, while the Plowboys should
have an easy call over Rohv
next week.
Hedrick i Backs Clifford Burnett.
Roscoe I (Teetles) Buekner and
('ceil
Jesse
Ratliff will lead the Plowboys
against Albany. The Lions will
counter with their "big three"
of Backs Jimmy Allman. Bon-
nie Miller and Fred Morrison.
. The chart:
District l \ v Slaiulinus
Albany
Roscoe
Merkel
Haskell
Roby
Munday
Throckmorton
item {tilling Schcdnlr
Nov. !♦ — Albany at Roscoe;
lorton at Merkel; Haskell ;it
Nov. 10 — Roby at Roscoe;
t Throckmorton: Albany at Ha
Last Week's Results
Albany :IR, Rohv 12; Roscoe IS.
2: Merkel 27. Haskell 7.
Thrork-
Mun<la\.
M unda.v
skell.
Munday
BLOOM 1NGTON, In;;.. Nov. 1
(UP)—The chairman of the Uni
versify of Indiana's athletic!
committee said today he didn't j
think the school has anyone in |
mind to replace head football |
Coach Clyde Smith who resigned]
yesterday under fire.
I Smith submitted his resigna-
tion. effective the end of this
season, to Athletic Director Paul
J. "Pooch" Barrell. The Hoosiers
'< have three games left — Minne-
sota. Michigan State and Purdue.
Smith has received strong crit-
! icism from university students
land alumni groups. Last month
unidentified students distributed
j mimeogj ..phed pamphlets asking.
"What's wrong with our football
■: learn?"
I Alumni leaders in Chicago al-
• so have said they weren't satis-
i tied with Smith's coaching job
| but previously indicated they
| were going to wait until the
season s end "to see how hi> rec-
[ ord looked, then."
Since he became coach three
! years ago Smith's teams have
I totaled eight victories against 2-1
; defeats and one tie. lie succeeded
Not Big Business,
But Bad Business
Says Dodger Boss
NEW YORK, Nov. 7 (UP) —
President Walter O'Malley of
the Brooklyn Dodgers, calling
organized baseball "not big busi-
ness, hut bad business," said to-
dav that his club lost 8129,318 in
1950.
That sum was a deficit incur-
red for operation of the entire
Dodger system from the parent
club down to and including the
lowest farm team. O'Malley said.
Figures for the 1951 reason have
not yet been completed.
The Dodger president made
the disclosure in contending that
"baseball is not an evil mono-
ponv. Actually this club and oth-
ers are subsidizing baseball to
keep it a national game."
O'Malley said, in defense of the
farm system method of opera-
tion. that the Dodgers would pre-
fer to have working agreements
with minor league teams instead
of owning them.
"if we could find local citizens
willing to absorb losses," said
O'Malley, "we would be only too
| happy to have them take over
i the clubs and have a working
agreement with us. But we can't
j find citizens to take over the
clubs. Actually, all the clubs we
own were taken over from peo-
ple who no longer wanted to go
on losing money."
Major League Draft
To Open On Nov. 19
CINCINNATI, O.. Nov. 7 (UP)
Baseball players from .'1(59 teams
in 4!) minor leagues, including
the Pacific Coast League, will be
subject to draft by major league
clubs here Nov. 1!).
Players selected from the
AAA leagues will cost $ 10.0(H)
each. Those picked from the two
AA leagues will move up for $7,-
500 each and those from the four
Class A circuits can be selected
for $6,000 each.
The Jast place St. Louis
Browns of the American League
will get first choice.
jAlvin
j whom
! I n illl
hi
i!
McMillan
M ved as lim
. l<i:S8.
under
roach
k
1 m'
Life Insurance
* Kdaoatloul
* Retirement
* Boatneaa
C. S. Perkins Jr.
Southwestern Life
117 iasij Bldg.
Phone 4MS
Jlii
Gi;
l rv
IIIVIN ST HI Iv KS Ol'T
NEWARK. N. .1.. Nn< .
Mone 11 \ in. slugging No;
fiplder of the New York
struck out in his first
j politics
Monte polled 07.872 \
Stamford, I fourth highest on the
'! Democratic ticket whit !i
overwhelmed by incumbent
publicans
Assembly
11'
11 '
out-1
mts,
at !
tes —
12-miin |
was I
Re-1
in the contest for tlie j
in Kssex Count v.
AMARILLO
$1(1.80 One Hay, Plus Tax
2 Flights Pally
A I R x L I N E S
Phone 3507 for information and reservations-or call your travel agut
Boy And Girl Stout
Fund Is Now $7,367
The Nolan County annual fi-
nancial campaign for the Boy .
and Girl Scout .810.000 program i
is now up to S7."iii7. it was re- i
ported Wednesday.
Workers said that collection
of cards now out seem to be the
principal dela\ in closing tne
campaign and a successful con-
clusion soon is predicted.
What could be Fairer?
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B liner
Allen
Wright
Baker
Publisher
Editor
the
■ on
up
<ir-
Any erroneous reflection upon the
character, standing or reputation of any
person, firm or corporation, which may
appear In any of The Reporter's publica-
tions will be cheerfully corrected upon
being brought tr «tt*nfion of Um
1 publisher
PREtniuSJ
November Special
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Baker, Allen. Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 263, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 7, 1951, newspaper, November 7, 1951; Sweetwater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth290590/m1/2/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.