The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 44, Ed. 1 Monday, February 20, 1956 Page: 5 of 8
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r
Mustangs Can Clinch
SWC Title This Week
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1954
By WHITEY SAWYER
The AmmIiM Frees
SMU galloped into this week's
play with I chance to clinch the
Southwest Conference basketball
title.
seeopd-place Arkansas is *8-2 in
conference play. The Mustangs
’■•oast the season lead with a 19-21
reco-d v -
The Mustangs really had to be—^
versatile 4ast week. TCU tr.ed a
1
THE ORANGE LEADER
--
i
•
SPORTS S
1EC1
ION
1 —
1
Collegiate^ H it Show^wn Mate:
TheBA^SKFre« ' WlWcat* Ada- .r Utah (8-2 > can pose to titllst dtoeh lte^^t M^Suey ^
...: the current leader at 9-0, pictures if it can whip Aa ond- this week. Should the Couaari <a
State:
Sports Briefs
NEW YORK (Apt - Memphis
State 18-4 for* the season and the
fourth-best scoring outfit in the
nation, today was named as an
“at large" entry in .the NCAA
’Basketball Tournament.
The Ponies host Baylor at Dal- deep freeze, the general idea be-
1 as Tuesday and Arkansas Satur- ing (t0 keep the Mustangs from
day. If SMU defeats Baylorv it shotting. SMU managed to sneak
clinches a tie for the croWn and .ahead in the second halj then!
a victory Saturday means the.' vent into a stall of its 0wn for a
championship.'' ; 26-22 victory.
With “the season ending next Saturday the Ponies clashed-
week, SMU has a 9-0 record and with Texas A&M and had to pour ,j
'em through the hoop for a 92-80 !
I victory.
Dick O'Neal of TCU netted on-
ly 13 points in the 26-22 debacle,
but hung onto the scoring leads
it. both srasori and conference
play wit*- 529 points for the seas- j
on and 24? in conference play, j
Ray Downs, the bright spot in j
what's otherwise a pretty dim !
TAMPA. Fla. (AID—Managers! fseason for Texas, is setohd in
j both lists with 460 points for the
season and 203 in league play. ,
Arkansas secured second place |
t'-n th conference standitigs by dc-
I fc.ifjng AM 61-52 and Texas 79-
, 69. The two triumphs edged out,
Rice, wiurh ot.lv played once last
week Rice beat Ba> lor 63-58 as j
Joe Durcnburghrr collected 28 '
[>•' '•' i -
Day >.;• rarr.e l.,«h Satin day
,'nj:;h> to slam TCU 1)4-68. Jerry
MiUlett ho for JHt points be WHY
being pulled along with the rest j
„cf ii.e first team early in the sec-
ond half
This week EMU hosts Baylor at
U V Ws and Texas meets Rice at
rtistin Tuesday. Wednesday Tex-. I
A&M visits TCU at Fort]
Worth. Friday Texas A&M goes
against Rice at College Station.
I >f
$
am
■S'
By ED WILKS
The Associated Press
College basketball has a
of showdowns this week as con-
ference contenders make bids tor
titles and tickets to the NCAA
Tournament. " ~
Only two conference champ? are
home free so far—Marshall in the
Mid-American and Connecticut in
the Yankee, a
They join two "at-large” selec-
tions in the NCAA title chase-^
(9-1). The Wildcats meet
bama. the current leader at
flock Saturday. j
Idaho State can cinch its fourth
straight Rocky Mountain crown
(8-2) can pose to titlist
,—«5s if it can whip k ond—
place Brigham Young (7-Jfpa.fjri*
d*v in the Skyline.- so*
■------ Texas Tech (6-2) could rela; In
oy sweeping a pair from Colorado the Border by beating Te*W
College (0-6) tonight agg tornor- Western tonight and New Mexi 9
clinch Its first Mo-Vs Her erown
this week. Should the Cougars (8-
2) falter. St Louis (7-8) or Ok-
lahoma A&M (4-3) could sneak
In. . ,
UCLA seems sure of an NCAA
. . „ A ■ ----berth in the Pacific Conet Confer-
A&M tomorrow......Western inH ence. The Bruins, 10-0, shouldn’t
A&.M aj* tied for second at 5-3. T-pressed until March t-l when
In the- Big Ten, Illinois and^
■t
row.
In the Big Seven. Kansas State
and Iowa State, tied (or first at, ___________< _______ r-
6-2. meet at K-State Satin-day. Iowa still head the pack with theiCalito
Southern Methhdist (9-JJ) can showdown apparently set ,r"‘■ 1 ’rv-
. - - - -............... /cinch thing* in the Southwest by March 3 at Iowa
Memphis State, named today, and beating runner-up Arkansas (8-2) I Houston, meeting Bradlev to-
Holv Cross, named Saturday Both at naiia« .«— »-J night and Wichita Saturday/cwj^
1
'M
Marty Marlon *rti his first look
at the lfRHi Chicago White Sox
today. A If of the regular pitch-
ers and /atrhers, a sprinkling of
v e t e f-a n infieldrrs and out-
fielders /hhI 21 rookies are in
camp. UT
Sf* ---------
Ml Fla (ATi -1.mi Kiet-
!f>v-. Kanaas (JtT Athletic pitch-
er. finaU/b&iTlffTfafecI from the
i raiss "*Ati<l won the National
Baeball Pty' n • Go.lt ’Dauna-
ir.ent. After.’Ring deliberation, he
stroked in a 3-foot -puft on the
17th to have the hole and elm e
nut defending -champion Ah in
Dark 2 awl 1 yesterday.
Gloves Crown
Holv Cross, named Saturday. Both
independents have 18-4 records.
T)ie NIT. which may pick up
the Missouri Valley and Skyline
runners-up. named its eighth en-
try. Niagara (17-5), today. Earlier
pick< were Dayton, which smack-
ed fellow-..NIT entry Xavier of
Ohio 85-75 yesterday for a 20-2
record; defendirig champ Duques-
ne; Seton Hall; Louisvylle, the only
dub to beat Dayton: St/Francis of
Brooklyn, spilled from an 18-game j
winning streak Saturday bv $t. i
Joseph's (Pa.); and Marquette. H
Tonight the Southeastern Con-
ference gets to the showdow n I
-business with Vanderbilt (10-1) m ~Ar'
a return match with Kentucky
at Dalian^ the same night. And
Tigers Need Just a Little Luck
the current runner-up.
48-2).
them «nd Atlantic
Coast Conference • decide theur
champa and NCAA entile* In
tournaments beginning March 1.
I
T.
Detroit has Nucleus of Fine Ball Club-Harris
By BUCKET HARRIS
Manager. Detroit Tigers
LAKELAND. Fla. uPi — With
i Boone and Bill Tuttle. We re well Gromek and Ned Garver are over
balanced in all departments and , 30 but they’re winners. They drop-
, , ... . _ - t' we get a little more power- ped some heartbreakers last vear
*">n‘ufckv*t.*1'. the Tl«er* are maybe from Earl Torgeson and | the kind they could win th^time
fhifvear “ PCnnarU raCC House - were gomg to! with more hitting support.
We certainly have the nucleus!- Virgil* Track*!' whom*1 w^got And weve"go‘t I'fme” ung rrOO
°^*eHarvey r£ Lelp 2? P*tchers, tom.-Billy Hoeft and
our pitching staff.
<3
rv
wr
Hh
_ ES
ICE FROLIC—Olympic women's skating champion Tenlev Al-
bright and runner-up Carol Heiss, rigiit. get a ride on a sled used
to ferry beer barrels at Garmisch-Partenkirchen. Germany, during
a warmup for the world figure skating championships held there.
The sled is pushed by runner-up Ronnie Robertson, left, and
Olympic champion Hayes Alan Jenkins. (AR Wirephoto)
Littler Leads Tour to Houston
After Taking Texas Open Title
Steve, Frank Lary both did well last
season. .Then there’s Bob Milter,
the young bonus kid. who looks
as though he’s going to make
his year. We’re also
it
?ear. Were also expecting.
Paul For tack and Jim Bunning to
make the grade, v
House will be my regular, catch-
er but I'm also going to try to con-
I ahead of Lloyd Mangrum. Apple
Valiev. Calif., who fader) to eet in i _a?". f?lm. 8*ainst lcft-h*nded
At Stake t onight Deer Endure
Winter With
FORT WORTH (API —It looks
like Amarillo and Fort Worth will
fight It mi) tonight for the team
. ’victorxAn the annua! Texas Gold-
in Gloves tournament finiiN
Amarillo has 11 points and two
,--v-j.-n left, Fort Wurth. 10 f**iws
and two men while lloiisum is
•fhird with nine points and om.
man left. Each victoi v <oun’s one
point
lb av> weigh' Roh lh igiro-e 240.
Waco, meets Dub M.u is. l')3. W:-
hme in the heavyweight diveien
Other final matches
Flyweight: Bryan Daughcrtv.
113. Dallas, pe‘e Melendn;. 113
FI Paso
Bantamweigl-.t l»a Ron' P..rk
GO. Fort Worth: Raul Ramircg,
! 18, Amarillo.
Featherwrieh’ Tom Crump 127,
Amarillo, Ferral Snider, 126, For:
Worth
Lightweight! Te(id> Shore' 148,
Dallas; Paul Patm. 148. Beau-
mont
Midd’eweigh' Mickey Brown,
159, Houston; John Kelley, 161
Waco.
Light 'heavyweight: Jack Fowl- ,
er. 176, Waco; F 'gene Mcrnman. 1 s,om‘it 11
174, Wichita Fall'
fiecorthSel in St. Petersburg!!
Women's Tourney; Low 287 Score
4
Few Losses
A!’STIN .ASul)—Texas
herd- apnarentlv have <‘iniured
the recent severe winter weather
wtihout maior losses, according to
• he directoi of wildlife n-’toralwi
for the t la ire and Fish Comm is-
t? ct-oionr | shot a blazing 7-under-par 65 on
' r uf.!* i, I 4>e last 18 holes yesterday* That
gave him a 12-under par 276 for
^__________________________
LS Cage Leaders
Tangle This Week
By ASSOCIATED PRESS
_______________ _____—.— S t p p h-g-ft—F.—Atrstin—and—E35f
tournament tecurd of 28(, U liege ntudtnt j u 11 mTo The ! R ^ -rtTfi'W/e n Wednesday j Texas State, the one-two teams
SAN ANTONIO. Tex. ( APt—x72 holes and $3,750 His total v irt-
Young Gene Littler. who came j nfngs of *7.225.00 pushed him
from five strokes back with a ahead of Llovd Mangrum J
By ASSOCIATED PRESS j closing rush to win the Texas | Valley.'Wif./ wholETto ge7in i ^a,USe 9™. *«ai
, Rl'r> ^slheurr and Eddie Machen 1 Open, headed the golf tour toward the monev here. Mangrum now is ! pi chors at Umes. .
1 ° un^ea^en y°un8 prospects of * Houston today as leading money in second placV^yith $6,504 The Tigers finished behind New
winner of the year. { Littler had no fTOuble with the Yofk'Cleveland, Chicago and Bos-
The Palm Snrinps ruif a, 11.,.. 6.566-vard Ft. Sam Hu,‘lj'] season. I expect, those
' course as he strung seven birdies
| great promise, get a chance to
] climb a little higher this week
Ihf-ll' riiyitir.il
ST PETERSBURG, Fla (AP)-
The St, Petersburg Women's
Open Golf- Championship, a
year-old Lake Worth pro racked
it up in decisive fashion
The former Florida Southern
in ineir myuini^
Calhoun winner of
meets Angelo De Fendis of Brook-
lyn. who has lost only t0 Calhoun
in 13 pro bouts. Their bout is the
main event tonight at St. Nicholas
Arena in New York.
Du Mont will telecast.
* Machen, a 22 - year-old San
Francisco heavyweight, has won
11 in a row. He expects'to make
. .,c*c,r,v.m.cs ,;‘ubs 10 °<* rignx up mere agaia
13 pars and, wound up two ! U11' >oar but not in that order*
—J - ■ ■ Boston certainly helped itself by
dtiu—nttd-AtMh)- irri7P'mf>n7 v. jiTI belong
to Kathy Cornelius today.
It was the tu-st big tournaui'pt,
victory lor Mis Conn ?ius. Tin- 23-
SW Ball League
Expected Strong
EL PASO ( \p Pp .dci.:
\V J Du e. Viid M-.-t-rou- his
i,i v. ; fl-'o.v-. O.i" B South-vcst -
cin Baseball I.eagoe ■. ill l>r one
flie siiongc • oi rumor leasTlie
bast hall
All of then; an fn-a’a m!L
. u'.il and vie *• as-ured thev
11 operate fhmu' hout the entire
;,><>•!." Green lol ! a meeting of
leagu ■ official1
Ue said all U) clubs have marie
.1 c nXcessary deposits anri are
cn3v to* operate tor the season
Mo-1 of the league comes fiom
•Me' We t Texas-New 'Mexico
a ml Longhorn Leaguer Ballinger
i flic only city which didn't field
a team Inst vc:u
Other team1 in Re jeagie are
Hotibs. rarlrbad. Roswell and
Clovis. NM. and ..Midland San
Angelo, P.tnr.pa Plainvie-.v ahri E!
--.-Rain...................—
Florifla Stab’s new <rM-tan)
football coach. Hugh (Bones)
Ta.vlot. formerly starred for ’he
pro Washington Redskins.
ARhougli mfoimatiori m aa-oe -
iJe’e. he saul no icporC Me'i been
■; reeriyer! of n,air,r casualties t'om
th,e cold allhough some die-off
had beep, noted tG pnnv na!
ueec range, m 'h(‘ M !' Count:'.
The (iiieUor said Bifilogct Jan
IVei reports from that :<rra 'ha:
ran asses of several river, pi e.- urn-
■ a'nlv vic’inis of a combination of
cold, wet weather ann malnutn-
lion, had eaten maituv dried o:C'-
Quite leaves, di led post oak !e,n ,j'
and dried grass, with verv littjc
i green foovi.
■ It is usually churn)'«i ••• ’ic o|
d< er lost during 'he winh-r r' < -
off that they succumb with a hill
he,, explained. “But
their stomach contents simple did
not eomprcc the uvlit f• m>> 1 M:'l-
nutiitiun is the usual primary
ca ise of death in these instance* "
The director *nid .deer herds,
mainly in the Bill Country, stdl
.ii'f suffering from the eumirintive
effects of prolonged mod shortage.
"One good food production '-'.i-
con in four simnlv has not ix'di
enough especial o m Inc .oem
where overporuiliition has been
accompanied with droughty rang-
es." he added.
Field men have been studying
carcasses of deer apparentli lo-i
because of a combination ol
\vi abler and inalnuti itiun and aie
constantly on the alert foi any
evidence of anv new mortality
factors. Thice • carcasses were
taken to Texas A AM College this
week for exhaustive post mor-
tem-
•The next monili will pretty
well tell the story for the deer
In ids all over Texas.” said the. di-
rector “The feeding months of
w inter when food is short and
herd strength is at its lowest ebb
is alv avs the hardest for deer.
Then it- is the survival of the fit-
test. ,
Santee Plans
Court Fight
NEW YORK(AF
A t i ;i , ■ f.
" lone 4-W!>;
■ > e s',' V !
i i; a i n . i
1 'moo
or th<
aiiRi i-
eb
A....... u
‘ms ic,
fiom ti .c v fir bfe
I he A M biot) r ('>,
!,.«!, lk- K'.ciubi,- Co
■ terday after tu
.•in mvestigalicxi corn-
S -ntei expense'- The
found about . M.-TOn
said, was “occ.i age.'1
bv
i ep >(’!
n IP.) i n
comuvttei
which, i
A'ID, tie
111 llill:
Hoc
ig a
■ i iii i
ilhl
the a’,’ro;,:cd c.x-
!>c'
•P
e,>u i:
r u b 11
an
ic, G 1 Me’
through as ,i
lie leinsiated as
i r sport, bu'
t rack
k
C: y .ug out
hi- a'tor-
. ot Now
the -a:n,>
all
HECHES RADIATOR (0.
Doy or Night . . . Phono 4-3181
1099 PINf, BtAUMONT, TEXAS
• Quality Woil • Fair Pric**
• Good S^rvict
tSund.’iY4 h? Appointment)
KIDS—Reddy Kilowatt says:
FLY KITES SAFELY
1 KEEP KITES AWAY FROM ELECTRIC WIRES
and T.V. AnUnnat
2 USE DRY COTTON STRING not Motol
3 NEVER USE METAL ON KITES or KltoTaili
4 NEVER CLIMB POLES at anytime
l>i n
U: , h,
II"
,1- ateor
ne\ ■ >■ eg.co
\V, •-,!., p
on ,.n ll.e A AC from ,
\V< ' ' > - oo;m n " •"orf
nex Cjv,rh < !’ Gi u u
Yoi k ' <i,oD- entiop.
that we have hr, n making
along --that the Executive C'oni-
mit'cc of the AAU docs net have
the authority in the case, that it
should be birned b , to the Mis-
souri Vc 1'i-y A" n
If the AAU's act.-’ii c'atids up.
it means, that Santee, who«e 4 (6)5
is the closest any American has
come to the 4-muune mile, is out
of the Olympics. He was the
Cniti ,1 Stales' main! hope.
■| i
Fish Colored
To Save Self
AUSTIN CSpl) -Nature has it'
own wav of camnuflngmg fish to
foil| feathered predators, reports
the chief aquatic biologist of the
Game and Fish Commission in a j
letter to a Columbus man who
inquired about varying colors of
fish for varying waters.
lie wrote: "As to the color of
1960, says Athletic j fus)ies coming from,:.the various i
types of water, fish taken from |
mudde waters will always be very-
light in color, whereas fish taken
from clear water will be very dark.
This is due to what is known as:
protective coloration. A light col-1
ored fish swimming in clear water j
would be easily observed from |
jutbove by fish-eating birds, but if!
(he fish is dirk colored on its
j hack, ihen it is hard for the birds j
I to snot him. When fish are in |
1 muddy water there is no need for ;
such protection." j
To which the wildlife restora-
tion department adds “Amen" j
since Nature likewise ’ camoij- J
flages the land based speies. Fawn ;
deer, for example, are born with
a mottled body color blending into !
Iho natural setting and protecting
the young ones until they are able j
to become mobile and to fend for
themselves, 4
b-r-d Saturday w.th a 68, -six un-
der par for the t\116-yard Sunset
Cour: e, She cinched a four-stroke
victory; by shooting 72 yesterday.
Through the tourney her putting
anri chipping we re outstanding- '
Mari! \ n Smith of Wichita. Kan..
". ,,n set ond plat e and 5630 by (m-
,. rung . with 71 for 291,
Patty Bag of Chicago, the de-
ft'tuu.-.g cfsatnpti.n. hot a nspeet-
ah’e p: r 74 and -took third with
293 I’ha! «e(rr>- v. on for Mis*
B, rg :n 1955 and was the toures-
'•i.cnt record untv Mr-. Cornelius
came .along. Miss Berg won S540.
L'-uise Suggs, s a Island. Ga :
Jone F.iikc. M’atcrford, Wis.
and Fe\ ii iy 11 in.-fii. Apple Valley,
Calif . bed for ffnirth at 295.
Quail Wings
Needed Now
AUSTIN (SnD -Texas hunlerx
ga'hi'ring quail wings for studies
bv Ct.ame and Fish Commission
technicians were urged by the
assistant du et tor of wildlife res-
toration to (toward them prompt-
H- s.'U'l th.e w.nsr receipts now
:,|>onucli a new high total foi
this c, operative prograbi but add-
ed. from experience, they believe
some hfrri'ers have not yet sent
in then' collections
The wings are studied by tech- „
ns ...ns to determine the age and d
'ex of • ht- tiuail, and to accumu-
late other vital data needed foi
game management projects.
against Julio Mederos of Havana. | X Lone Star CoXence bas!
Meobros, w ho has stopped Ro- : ketbal! race, each plav one game
land La Star/a and Harold John- this weok in the league-s race t0
the. wire.
The Austins meet Sam Houston
and East Texas tries Lamar Tech
Monday might. S. F. Austin is first
with, an, ,5-2 league record while
Fas* Texas hss an 8-3 mark.
Th week East Texas plays La-
mar Tech. Sam Houston takes on
S,F. Austin. Southwest Texas
clays TexaA A A-1 anri Sul Boss
i-'ay? . Austin College Monda>*.
Tuesday Sul Ross plays Austin
College. Wednesday Lamar Tech
takes on Sain Houston. Saturday
it's Lamar Tech against Southwest
Archie Moore Fights
Reno Boxer Tonight
MICHIGAN TO PLAY l Cl A
EAST LANSING, Mich (AF1) —
Rncp Rnv.l opponents Michigan
State an<T UC'LA ma\ sign up for
a homr-and-home football series
in 1939 anri .. . . '
Director Biggi,e Munn of MSU.
“We want to keep on playing one
coast team a year,’’ says Munn.
Michigan State concludes a two-
year pact with Stanford this vear.
then plays California in 1957 and
1958.
SAN FRANCISCO UP.-Archie
Moore, the light - heavv champ,
meets Howard King of Reno in a
10-round non-title bout at Winter-
land tonight. The fight will not
be televised.
The state boxing commission ^servom averaged abont
denied a request from the British *" ..... ’ '
Boxing Board of Control that the
bout he called off.
Jaek , Solomons. London pro-
moter said Moore had signed a
contract, promising not to box be-
fore a championship bout sched-.
ulcd March 13 against Y’olande
Pomprv in London. Solomons
manages Pompey.
son. won his last from Claude
Chapman.
Mai hen has knocked out 1,0 Of
11. gr„ng the route in his last
star*. Dee 12 against Ben Wise.
Waterfowl
Toll Eyed
ALS1IN _J.Sc! l — Death of sey-
1 era I hundred waterfowl- anuarent-
! iv from a neglected D'rivafe rtser-
’.,),r in southeast Texas'was re-
ported to the Director of Wildlife
Re-(oration,for the Game and Fish
C' ■omission'.
1 he tragic observation seas
wade by J R Singleton, water-1
Uwi specialist, who said the water
deuth iii the impoundment 'aver-
aged about three inches and was 1
"a thick oea soup green color.'*
He s;,,d the owtjcr. notified of
the toll, promptly drained the
death trap and arranged to have
an adequate supply of fresh water
pumoed into the reservoir,
“We counted 382 mallards. 287
pintail." 5 gad walls. 3 baldpates.
and 1 shoveller." wrote Singleton
In addition, there were at least
87 unidentified birds out in the
reservoir which we could not get !
to
Also, there were at 'east 60 siik
K'ks along the edge of the reser-
voir.
A total of 59 goose remain* wert ,
counted—29 snows, 27 blues, and
3 yvhite-fronted geese, as well as
8 sick or crippled geese.
It was suspected most of the
geese were crippled through hunt- ,
ing. since some of the remains
were at least two weeks old and
were well dried Some of the pin-
tails may have died a' a result of
wounds, but most of the mallards j
had died of botulism. Water in the
three ’
inches over approximately 50 to
60 acres and was a thick soup !
green color. There had been so |
much manure deposited in the vva* j
ter that the oxygen content was
below normal and a few fish had
died. i
with
strokes ahead of the field.
Frank Stranahan of Toledo., who
| had a stroke taken away from him
; for playing a provisional ball out
of a hazard, finished with a 68
and tied for second place at 278
’with Ernie Vossler. Fort Worth,
l Tex,, and Mike Fetchiek. J.laho-
'•a'\ NY. who had ■ fine closing'
66. The trio won $ 1 .,600 each.
Four players tied for fifth place.
Lionel Hebert. Erie, Pa., shot a
closing 68. while his brother Jay
of Sanford, Fla., had a 67.
Tied with the Heberts at 279
were Doug Ford. Kiamesha Lake.
NY, the Texas Open leader at 54
holes, who finished with a 73. and
Freddie Haas, Claremont, Calif.,
who wound up with a 71. Each
won S850.
getting Mickey Vernon and Bob
Porterfield from Washington. And
'he Yapkees didn't do themselves
any harm by picking up Mickey
McDermott from the same club.
I don't believe that Chicago nr
Cleveland will be tougher.
I don't want to belittle Baltf-T
more. Kansas City or Washington
but let’s face it. they are not as
good as the rest.
Finished Strong In ’58
I can't, sa v that I was altogether
displeased' by the Tigers in 1955.
We finished strong to just about
knock Cleveland right out of the
pennant race. And our young Ka-
line improved tremendously to
win the batting title. Torgoson
looked good after we picked him
up from the National League and
Lary was one of our league’s best
rookies.
RIVERAMA WITH SPEED
DETROIT (AP) — Riverama,
Detroit’s civic water show organ- j
ized in a hurry last year, will in- I Tha next challenge round for
elude the Gold Cup and Silver i the famed Davis Cup tennis tro-
Cuo speedboat races on the De- phy will be played in Adelaide,
Texas and Sam Houston vs Tex-jtroit River this year. Tentative ' South Australia late next Decem-
aS'A&I. dates are Aug, 15 and Sept. 1. ber.
So much
that’s New
Johnny Jordan is in his fifth
season as Notre Dame basketball
coach. In four years his teams
have won 71 of 99 games.
Smoky Burgess hit 20 homers
for Cincinnati last'season and tied
Ernie Lombardi's record for most
homers ever " hit by a Rcdleg
catcher Burgess also hit A one
home for the Phillies before he
went to Cincinnati last season.
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11
MAN OVFIt THE DAM
ALLENTOWN, Pa. (/Pi — Tier- i
bert Garrison, 39. of nearby Nort-1
Hampton had evidence to support
his big fish story.
While fishing in Hokendauqua !
creek he hooked one that he said
“was so strong it pulled mei right
off the edge of the dam" —fa 15
foot fall to. the base of the dam.
, Garrison wps treated at Sacred
Heart Hospital for a possible frac
turod nose. ,. .
GULF STATES Utilities Co.
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Fori Worth
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at savings like these:
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Aflonta 15 50 27 90
Philajolphia 38 55 51.40
Choyonno 25 25 45.45
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SEVENTH
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 44, Ed. 1 Monday, February 20, 1956, newspaper, February 20, 1956; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth560987/m1/5/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.