The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 64, Ed. 1 Friday, August 12, 1960 Page: 4 of 4
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SPORTS
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Wichita Appears
The Campus Chat
Headed for Cellar
Friday, Aug. 12. I960
LARRY SMITH
inivkhhity or wii hit*
IM# H«k 4al«
M*p! 17
Hepl 21 Xevter (().)
()r< I Mnitlani Mat*
Met IS f'inrinfiali*
Of( il N#w Mtaf*
Ort 2*
Ma* 5 TaUa*
M«V 12 Draft*
N«t, It Narth Tfiw Ht U*
N . 24 Wm« T*im Hlala
'ItfUtttM MVr «a*n#4
Ham*
Tk#r#
TH*r*
TH r
Mania
Th*r*
T iar#
Hnm>
17 Lettermen to Greet
New Head Grid Coach
Tfc h llw ihird in • aerie* of | from North T>xa* .Sutf, 12 0. and
futir artkUv that will apprar <«i Houston
■(■btrn of th* Mianoori Vallr) Wichita ha* a 10-K m#- aehedule
on ta|>. Th«- Hhoekera will play 5
If any team now appearn doomed of th#* 10 under the liifht* and will
tor the I1W0 Mmaouri Valley ton- j also go aKaiimt 5 new opponent*,
ferenre cellar, it i the L'niveraity ! The new foe* incl ude l enver,
of Wichita That'* almost where Xavier. Montana State, New M'-x-
the Wheatahockera finished lent j ieo State, and Went Texa* State,
season with an 1-21 record, but i I.a«t season, Wichita posted a
managed to escape by one j{ame fi t-1 showing Th Whentshockera
The Shwkart have Isscn tabbed kno*k tl off Kan*a* Stat. 10-0;
in almost all pr. seaaon polls for Mardin Simmon*, 27-13; Oeorife
th<- last position, but have been Wa«h P(ftori, 21-0: and Tulsii
selected a mild upset-favorite over I .<•*«.. ' me from Oklahoma State,
Cincinnati The two team* battled ' • N. Utavton, IK 13; N'TSt', and
to a m-2* draw last fall. Houston, '/H 13 The lone tie was
Wichita anters the IJW50 mason j
with a new head roach. Hank Fol-
bertc, former all-American end with
the Army tennis of the mid-40*
Folbertr will corrie to the Kansas
school fr >m assistant job* at fur-
due, Texas A and M, and Florida.
The WheaUhockeri will have 17
returning lettermen to ^reet their
new mentor and bolster soma kind
)f ghry. Pollnrif will 0[>erate from
the multiple-T offenae, usinK t* th
the balanced and unbalanced line.
Wichita is suffering from lack
of depth at the tackle, Kuard, arid
enter positions and the Shocker
coach is expected to turn to his
junior college transfers and fresh-
man waduatea.
Showing promise at renter is
Tommy Tooker, transfer from Ty-
ler junior college. Also available
is Roland I.akei (8-4, 245-pound
senior), one of the returning let-
termen
Ther«- appear^ to be little to of-
fer outside the two senior guards.
Larry Stoeljtinu (0-1, 206) and
Paul Jones (6-0, 196> will prob-
ably carry the load, but. lack of
competent backing will hurt the
team.
A similar situation exists at
tackles. The entire job there ap
parently will have to be handled
by senior Kill (larger (fi-4, 220)
and junior Mi!l Heigh- (fl-2, 212).
Wichita could well offer the sur
prine of the MVC from the quarter
back alot. Sophomore Alex Zys-
kowski (6-2. 186) has moved ahead
of senior veteran Dick Johnson
165) in showing good passing
and running ability.
Probably the liest manned posi-
tion of the team is the halfback
slot. Veterans Willie Mallary (5-10,
1M( pound senior) and Jack Hayes
(5-9. 175-pound senior) will lead
the list, but should get top-notch
backing from sophomore Ken Berry
15 10, 175) and Juniors Cary Wy-
ant (6-0, 165) and Gilbert Graham
(6-10, 170).
The Wheatshockers knocked off
Tulsa last fall 26-21 in one of (he
Valley's top upsets. Losses came
"Wmw
- Chat Photo by EVANS
"LOWER YOUR HEAD a little more" teems to be the statement Bill Lewit it malting te Rosemary An-
dr.rton, Lab tchool student. Eddie Anderson and Jerry Cdldwell loot or, as the NTSC lifequard shows
Rosemary some special swimming techniques.
Clark Injured
In Exhibition
David Clark feels that a thumb
injury will not prevent his making
the Olympic trip to Rome next
month according to Winton E.
(Pop) Noah.
The NTSC pole vaulter sprained j
his thumb while umping in an
exhibition meet in Eugene, Ore.
Soreness in the thumb kept Clark
from gripping the pole properly |
in the practice meet and he fail -d
to clear the 14-foot mark.
Should he not recover. Coach
Larry Snyder could possibly droj
Clark from the squad and replace j
him with the alternate, Snyder has
said that he will take the measure
if necessary to replace any mem- j
her of the U.S. team before it
leaves.
Clark will enter another exhibi-
tion this week-end before leaving
for New York. Noah said he heard
that Hark hud tied for first place
in last week's meet at 14-6.
The team in due to depart for
Rome later this month.
Sp&dinq OJiih SmM
For Lifeguard Bill Lewis . . .
Neches River Serves
as Swimming Instructor
by LARRY SMITH
t hat Sport* Kdi'or
When you hear that someone is
a swimming pool lifeguard, you
immediately ihink of a person who
has taken his share of swimming
lessons from a qualified instructor.
Hut that's riot the case with Hila
Lewis, 26-year-old NTS'; lifeguard.
He learned the hard way. He was
thrown in the Neches river and
j told to "Swim or sink!"
He swam.
"My uncle and I were down at
the river orie day when I wtis only
5 years old when it happened," Bill
recalls Hi< uncle, who worked in
the oil field, was a fairly large man.
"When I started sinking, tie jump
ed in after me," Bill suys.
"I was more scared of him than
the Neches river, so I took off to
the other bank." But the 6-2, 176 the following year. of them were getting tired and
pound graduate student has never He taught a class of senior life- ' soma just got scared," he adds,
regretted the incident. He has been :ivers his senior year at NTSC and Sw>rnming isn't the only athletic
iwirrinm.g ever since and enjoys is teaching a group of Lewisville event in which Bill has competed.
Oklahoma Sooners Named
Golden Era Football King
Oklahoma's Sooner* have gained
themselves another crown. The
Sooner* have been named as the
collegiate football king for the last
26 years, football's "golden era."
Cincinnati was the only Missouri
Valley team on the list of the top
26 squads in the nation The Bear-
cats rated number 22 with a 25
season mark of 129-82-14.
Oklahoma launched its campaign
back in 1935 under Col, Biff Jones
and since that date, the Sooner*
have scored for three national
championships, undefeated records
in six rmgular seasons, and 17 con-
ference titles. Their quarter-cen-
tury mark is 192-48-13.
The top 25 teams include Okla
home, Notre Dame, Tennesee, j
Army, Michigan State, Ohio State, j
Duke, Penn State, Georgia Tech, |
Michigan, Mississippi, Boston col
lege, Alabama, Texas, Princeton,
Clemson, Holy Cross, Southern
California, Georgia, LSH, UCLA.
Cincinnati. Utah. Miami (Fin.),
and Colorado.
every minute of it.
This i* the third year for Bill
to serve us a lifeguard. He served
in 1967 and 195M He graduated in
the latter year and then spent two
years in the Army
After finishing his Army "ca-
reer" in June, he enrolled again to
work on his master's, and wan
signed to his old lifeguard posi
tion once again.
When asked what he did in his
spare time, the crew-cut guard
said mildly, "Go swimming." Few
can blame him after he sits in a
high-chair for five hours per day
in typical Texas summer weather
in order to become a lifeguard,
one must receive an American Red j
Cross life saving license. Bill earn-
ed hi* senior license in 1956 and
then received his instructor's title
Boy Scouts each Monday. While at Hillcrest, he was a four-
But the NT lifeguard job isn't ; year letterrnan in football, a two-
ihe fiist for the Dallas product.
While attending Hillcrest high
school. Bill was a lifeguard at the
Victory park swimming pool.
Hill said there have been no prob-
lems at the local pool this sum-
mer "We have a real nice group
of kids," he says. "One of the main
reasons why we have few problems
is because of the limitation on the
number of people in the pool."
The pool is not open to the city
year letterrnan in baseball, and a
two-year letterrnan in track He
was named to the all-greater Dal-
las football team.
He majored in education with
teaching fields in physical educa-
tion and biology. Now he is work-
ing on his master's in administra-
tive supervision of the secondary
school.
Bill will take the position of jun-
ior high coach at Garland this fa!!
but 'inly NTSC students, faculty j and will also teach nclence. He and i
members and their dependents and i his wife, the former Miss Donna 1
Lab school student*. "We have i Click of Wylie, plan to move to:
pulled a few out this summer. Most ! Garland following summer school. |
Chat Spoits Editor
THERE HAVE BEEN ARGUMENTS and almost fi«t
fijfht;* anvnff xports fans recently as to who has the best
football section in the state. We have been artruinjr that
East Texas is I he best, while th« editor of the Chat says
that honor belongs to West Texas.
Apparently, most of the so-called experts agree with
him because they have published a book now telling grid
fans that fact and trying to point out proof.
* • •
WE HAVE FINALLY decided to drop the high school
subject, not because we gave in. but simply because we
found a much better argument to throw at West Texans.
Who has the best junior college teams?
Well, checking back through the records, we think
vot: " ill find that East Texas has produced most of the top
iuco souads in the Lone Star state. What will the football-
fever fans out in the Golden West have to say to that ?
* * ♦
ONLY TWO JUNIOR COLLEGES have ever made a
name for themselves to our knowledge—Ranger and Howard
County. Of course, you could go a little deeper into the
very bottom of the West, wherever that part of the coun-
try starts and stops, and pick up San Angelu.
Very seldom will you find a West Texas team listed
on the national polls, while East Texas squads almost dom-
inate the listings. During the past few years, the nation's
number-one team has come from the piney woods country.
♦ * *
THE NATIONS MOST POWERFUL conference—at
least that's what we have read—is located in the heart of
East Texas. That, of course, would be the Texas Eastern
conference composed of Kilgore, Tyler, Texarkana, Paris,
Henderson county, and Lon Morris.
During one particular year—1958—three of the TEC
members were rated in the top five: Tyler, number one;
Texarkana. number two, and Kilgore, number four. The last
three years have seen a TEC member playing for the na-
tional grid championship.
•
THE BOWL RECORD is fantastic. The Tyler Apaches
have played in the Junior Rose bowl, Texas Rose bowl,
NJCAA bowl, and Hospitality bowl. Kilgore's Rangers have
been to the Junior Rose bowl, Hospitality bowl, and Indus-
trial bowl. Texarkana has played twice in the NJCAA bowl
and once in the Pine bowl. Henderson county went to the
Hospitality bowl last year and appeared in the Industrial
bowl once.
* * *
IN BASKETBALL CIRCLES, East Texas has again
dominated the scene. Tyler, Kilgore, Lon Morris, and Paris
have sent squads to the national meet and have brought
the crown back to the piney woods four times. Only San
Angelo can claim a crown for West Texas or somewhere in
that area.
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Petit, Burle. The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 64, Ed. 1 Friday, August 12, 1960, newspaper, August 12, 1960; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth307167/m1/4/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting UNT Libraries Special Collections.