The Texas Aggie. (College Station, Tex.) 1921-current, December 09, 1946, Image 1

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    ‘“
FROM THE
REVIEWING STAND
POSTMASTER: If undeliverable
for any reason, notify sender stat-
ing reason on Form 3578-P, postage
‘First Presbyterian Church of Bur-
THIS GUY GETS AROUND, OR
THE LIFE OF A CLIPPER PILOT
Nov. 17, 1946
Dear Aggie:
When my last change of address
was sent in April, you were kind
enough to write and to request a
story on my activities with Pan
American Airways. My journalis-
tic talent is very limited and so is
my time. You may edit the jum-
ble of facts I'm about to give you
and perhaps glean something of
interest to the Class of ’41—the
EE’s in particular.
Between trips as a co-pilot for
Pan American, I conduct a gener-
al and life insurance business in
San Francisco and Burlingame. It
would be difficult to find a busi-
ness where one is more susceptible
to being appointed or elected to
various “boards”, “committees”, et
cetera. The enclosed picture il-
lustrates one of my “committee”
jobs—that of Committee Chair-
man of Troop 156, BSA, Burlin-
game. This job followed closely
my being elected an officer of the
Eckert and Friends
lingame and the Church decided
to sponsor a Scout Troop. The
picture shows the Troop on a Sat-
urday morning tour of the Pan
American Base adjacent to Mills
Field (San Francisco Municipal
Airport).
On a recent overnight stay in
Manila, our crew arrived in the
lobby of the Manila Hotel five
minutes after Filipino political
leftists had fired a fusillade into
the lobby and killed an American
businessman. Even after having
seen the appalling and utter de-
struction of Hiroshima last May
on a Tokyo to Shanghai flight (a
slight deviation from track to see
it), we were amazed at the sham-
bles of Manila’s former business
district. Probably Aggies helped
to build" the temporary bridges,
across the Pasig River which bi-
sects the city. Although the Phil-
ippines have rich gold and other
ore deposits, as an independent
country, it is doubtful if their
cities are rebuilt in less than a
decade. Flying over Corregidor,
I thought of Bill Hamilton (CE
’40) and the scores of Aggies who
weren’t as fortunate as Bill, whose
names appeared in the Silver Taps
column.
Clipper crews are composed of a
Captain, co-pilot, navigator, engi-
neer, radio operator, steward and
stewardess—the latter an innova-
tion with PAA which improves
passenger relations and crew mor-
ale! If PAA is awarded domestic
routes across the Continental USA,
by the CAB, I will be transferred
to Miami, for upgrading to DC-3
Captain, In any event, we expect
to be down by next fall.
Next time I'm in the Los An-
geles area, I'll try to see C. A.
Wright and others mentioned in
the October 1 “AGGIE”. PAA
operates daily flights from Bur-
bank to Honolulu and I am as-
signed that trip occasionally. It
was good to see Wally Keller's
Tulsa address so we’ll know where
to send his Christmas card. Is
H. G. “Beans” Rice still in Mara-
caibo, Venzuela? (Pet. E. 42).
Had a letter recently from Joe G.
Fagan (Aero. Eng. ’42) with the
REA, 100 E. 18th, Big Spring,
Texas. Geo. Van Etten, ’41, (Grad.
Student Instructor, M. E.) has re-
cently come back to PAA Pacific
Division from Atlantic. He has
been a flight engineer over four
years.
Looks as if I'll eat Thanksgiving
turkey in Suva, Fijii, or in Auk-
land, New Zealand, and Christ-
mas may find me in Chicago, at
the Air Line Pilots convention. In
between those dates, I'm scheduled
to represent the pilots at a Pilot-
Management Conference in New
York City.
Florence and I send our greet-
ings to O. M. Martin, Bob Hoff,
“Ted” Duce, Howard Shelton, El-
bert Wheeler, Jack Simpson and
all others of Class of 41. We'd
like to hear from you——even if
it’s only a card at Christmas, we
promise to reply. We have a spare
bedroom for Aggie visitors out
this way, too; we're in the phone
directory.
Best wishes,
Roy F. Eckert,
314 Aviador Ave.
Millbrae, Calif.
P.S. Prof’s. M. C. Hughes and
R. P. Ward (are Rode and Dilling-
ham still around?) may be inter-
ested to know that I'm still an
AIEE member and attended a
meeting in San Francisco recently
for an interesting lecture by Prof.
Terman of ‘Stanford U..on his war-
time Harvard radar counter mea-
sures work,
The Sports Parade
Basketball takes the stage with
football bowing out of the confer-
ence scene for everyone but Ar-
kansas who meets L.S.U. in the
Cotton Bowl and Rice who goes to
the Orange Bowl to play Tenne-
see. The court season is unpredic-
table with every team in the
league certain to be much stronger
and returning service men making
prognostications too difficult. De-
fending Champs Baylor will get
tough competition from Texas,
Rice and Arkansas. The Aggies
are certain to be better than they
have been the past several sea-
sons, but will find their competi-
tion equally as improved. Marty
Karow will field an aggressive team
but it is strictly a dark-horse so
far as the conference race is con-
cerned.
The Thanksgiving Day game
was curtains for only four regu-
lars of the Aggie squad. Tackles
Monte Moncrief and Leonard Dick-
ey and backs Leo Daniels and Wil-
lie Zapalac have completed their
eligibility. Tackle will be one of
the thin spots in the 1947 Aggie
squad with only Bob Tulis re-
turning. Tulis, Moncrief and
Dickey played practically all the
tackle play of this fall. George
Kadera and Joe Leguenec, a pair
of freshmen, may have gained the
necessary experience this fall and
Jim Winkler might be moved from
his regular guard position,
Waleman “Cotton” Price, great
passer and quarter-back of the
1939 National Champions and ace
agmarter of the Miami pro football
team, underwent an operation late
in November for removal of a
blood clot on the brain. Later news
dispatches indicated no clot was
found. His many Aggie friends
will be pulling for his speedy re-
covery.
Despite an earlier defeat by the
Aggies the Texas U. cross country
team was an easy winner in the
annual conference meet. The Ag-
gies finished second with Baylor
and T.C.U. trailing.
Joel Hunt and Siki Sikes, Aggie
grid immortals of the 1925 and 1927
championship teams, will both be
in Bowl games this year. Hunt
returns to Texas as backfield
coach of L.S.U. in the Cotton Bowl.
Sikes goes to the Sugar Bowl as
end coach of Georgia. Hunt’s
running and passing sparked the
Aggies to two titles. Sike’s great-
est feat was a 98 yard touchdown
run against Texas on Kyle Field
after a pass interception on
Thanksgiving Day 1925. The Ag-
gies won that one, 28-0.
Twenty Five Years Ago in the Texas Aggie
(Taken From The Texas Aggie
File of 1921)
The Thanksgiving game at Kyle
Field was a scoreless tie and the
Aggies started preparing for the
Southwest's first big post-season
game, pitting the Texas Aggies
against Charlie Moran’s football
famous “Praying Colonels” from
Centre College. The Thanksgiving |
game was witnessed by Kyle
Field's greatest crowd, about
15,000 spectators.
With football out of the way
basketball took the center of the
athletic stage. Lettermen include
Pay Dwyer, Flop Hartung, Hootie
Williams, Dutch Ehlert, and Slime
Magarity.
Reporter’s
Dr. D. J. Hankenson has re-
cently joined the teaching staff of
the Dairy Husbandry Department
at the College. He comes to the col-
lege from the staff of Sealtest,
a subsidiary of National Dairy
Production Corp. / Paul W.
Beck, New York City, has been
added to the College Library staff
as Assistant to the Chief Librar-
ian. . .. Dr. T. D. Brooks, dean of
the graduate and liberal arts
schools at the college, was the
guest speaker at the meeting at
Baylor University in Waco re-
cently for the American Associa-
tion of University Professors.
W. W. Caudill, Professor of
Architecture, has received national
recognition when one of his recent
series of low-cost houses appeared
in the October issue of the Archi-
tectural Forum. His house was
also featured at the recent State
Notebook
Fair of Texas. ... Col. T. J. Ma-
roney, of the Republic National
Bank, of Dallas, was the guest
speaker at a recent meeting of the
A.&M. Economics and Business
and Accounting Club.
Walter W. Cummings, of Hous-
ton, a senior animal husbandry
student at the College won the
Swift Company essay contest and
enjoyed a trip to the International
Livestock Exposition Show, in
Chicago, from November 30 to
December 7. . . . John E. Stan-
ford, executive secretary of the
Kentucky Farm Bureau Federa-
tion with headquarters at Louis-
ville, Ky. visited the campus re-
cently for the first time in five
years. The Stanfords lived in the
College community for many years
while he was connected with the
Extension Service.
for which is guaranteed.
THE TEXAS AGGIE
for any reason, notify sender stat-
ing reason on Form 3578-P, postage
for which is guaranteed.
POSTMASTER: If undeliverable
VOLUME XIII
COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1946
NUMBER 18
Commandant Meloy and the Aggies on His Staff
Pictured above are A. & M. Commandant, Col. G. S. Meloy, Jr., West Point, ’27, and A. & M. men
who are assigned to the Military Department of the College.
In the group, first row left to right are:
Major John M. Cook, ’39, Infantry, who saw service in the Southwest Pacific with the 11th Airborne Div.;
Lt. Col. Wm. A. “Bill” Becker, ’41, FA, who saw service in the Southwest Pacific with the 1st Cavalry Div.;
Col. Meloy, Commandant; Major Leonard E. Garrett, '39, Inf., who saw service in the Southwest Pacific
with the 32nd Div.; Capt. Roy E. Smith, ’38, FA, who served in the European Theater with the 90th Div.
Second row, left to right are:
Major Lester Hanks, ’30, QM, who saw service in N. African, Middle East-
ern and European Theaters with Headquarters ETO; Lt. Col. Dexter L. Hodge, ’39, AC, who served with
the Middle Eastern, European Theaters and 44th Bomb. Gp.; and Lt. Col. Lawrence E. Sommers, 34, FA,
who served in the Mediterranean and North African Theaters with the 88th Div., and the Caribbean De-
fense Sector.
Youngest Division
Engineer
Francis C. Turner, ’29
The youngest Division Engin-
eer in the Public Roads Adminis-
tration of the United States is
Francis C. Turner, ’29, who heads
a new division office just estab-
lished in the Philippines with
headquarters in Manila. Announce-
ment to that effect was recently
made by Mr. Thomas H. MacDon-
ald, Commissioner of Public Roads.
The new division will plan, de-
sign, restore and build roads,
streets and bridges in the Philip-
pines as are deemed necessary for
national defense and economic re-
habilitation and development.
A native of Fort Worth, new
Division Engineer Turner grad-
uated in 1929 in Civil Engineering.
He went immediately with the
Public Roads Administration and
served that agency in various ca-
pacities, From 1943-1946 he was
on the Alcan Highway as consul-
tant to United States Army Air
Forces and Canadian Army Forces.
Special Committee
Meets With Council
To Discuss Athletics
A special committee from the
Council, governing body of the As-
sociation of Former Students, has
been named by Association Pres-
ident C. M. Gaines, San Antonio,
to discuss athletic matters with
the Athletic Council at a council
meeting on Nov. 2. President
Gaines last week announced the
committee as follows: J. P. Ham-
blem, ’27, Houston, Chairman, Lu-
ther Bell, ’32, Dallas, Lt. Col. Tom
Dooley, ’35, Ft. Sam Houston,
George V. “Barney” Holmes, ’34,
Gonzales, and Sid Smith, '44, Bry-
an.
The Board of Directors of the
College has also requested a thor-
ough study of the athletic and phy-
sical education set-up of the col-
lege by President Gibb Gilchrist,
with his report to be made back
to the college board at a later
date.
In discussing the purposes of
the special Ex-Student Athletic
Committee Chairman Jake Ham-
blem said, “We are not going into
any meeting with the Athletic
Council of the college with any
‘fire Norton’ attitude or other rad-
ical ideas. We plan to meet with
the athletic council in a spirit of
helpfulness. We have the power
only to discuss and suggest to the
council. Any action will have to
come from that body.”
The Hamblem committee met at
College with the Athletic Coun-
cil on Dec. 8, in what may be the
first of several meetings. In dis-
cussing the study requested by
the College Board President Gil-
christ said that he plans to assem-
ble information on the athletic and
physical education programs of a
number of other schools before
making recommendations to the
Board.
AMONG
A. and M. MEN
Pioneers
Dr. F. E. Giesecke, 86
New Braunfels
A. N. DeMaret, 79, has retired
and lives at 3712 Alice Circle, Dal-
las 5, Texas,
898
T. L. Smith, Jr.
308 Hyde Park, Houston
The many friends and class-
mates of Rev. Glenn L. Sneed will
regret to learn of the death of his
"Dr. P. B. Pearson, Professor of
Animal Nutrition at the College
presented a paper at the American
Society for Animal Production in
Chicago in November. . .. A group
of Agronomy majors accompanied
by several staff members attended
the American Society of Agronomy
in Omaha, Nebraska, in late No-
vember. . .. Dr. A. A. Jakkula, Ex-
ecutive Director of the Texas A.
& M. College Research Foundation,
has accepted an appointment as a
consultant without compensation
to the Industrial Research and
Development Division of the Office
of Technical Services, Dept. of
Commerce.
wife, Mrs. Sneed, at their home in
Athens, La. on Dec. 1. Burial was
in Dallas. Besides her husband,
she is survived by a son, one
grandchild, three sisters and one
brother. Rev. and Mrs. Sneed had
just recently moved to Athens, La.,
following Rev. Sneed’s resignation
as pastor of the Presbyterian
Church in New Orleans. He served
the Trinity Presbyterian Church
in Dalls for 23 years before going
to New Orleans in 1930. . .. Henry
Abbott writes he still lives at 3115
Douglas Street, Dallas. . . . H. H.
Tracy operates Tracy’s Hotel —
health resort—at Post City, Texas.
Prof. H. W. South, who coached
our first football team, lives at
614 West Main, Houston. At eigh-
ty he is still active and enjoys a
bird hunt whenever opportunity is
offered. . . . Gen’l. Geo. T. Bart-
lett lives at 309 Terrell Road, San
Antonio. He attended our Mus-
ter at College last April 21st. He
will be 92 next April.
Addresses of other members of
the class follow: T. L. Smith, Jr.,
Class Agent, Box 1321, College
Station; Stansel T. Brogdon, Route
3, Cleburne; W. H. Burges, 599
Langham, Beaumont; Dr. W. E.
In a recent talk to the Brazos
County A.&M. Club, Col. Meloy
gave many interesting details of
the rejuvenation of the R.O.T.C.
program at A.&M. Every branch
of the armed service that was on
the campus prior to 1942 has now
been reactivated and an air unit
has been added. Units include: In-
fantry, Field Artillery, Coast Ar-
tillery, Signal Corps, Ordnance,
Quartermaster, Chemical Corps,
Cavalry, Army Air Forces and En-
gineers.
Students taking the basic cour-
ses are furnished complete uni-
form, including shoes and jackets.
Students taking the advanced
courses are furnished uniforms
and in addition are paid the basic
ration allowance which now is
approximately $20.00 per month.
The Military staff of the Col-
lege includes a total of 20 officers
and 38 enlisted personnel. Both
officers and enlisted personnel
have had overseas service.
Modern combat equipment is ar-
riving at the College and will be
used for instructional purposes.
Col. Meloy, himself, is no stran-
ger to the many A.&M. men who
knew him during the time he
served at Camp Hood before going
overseas.
Longhorns Win Turkey Day Classic
Aggies Place Fourth in Conference
Arkansas and Rice emerged from the completed and hectic 1946
football race in a tie for the title, both suffering one defeat in league
play. Texas finished third, the Aggies fourth, S.M.U. and T.C.U.
in a tie for fifth and sixth, and Baylor in the Cellar without a con-
ference victory.
Aggies, both pre-season favorites
lived up to expectations.
It was a disappointing season for Texas and for the
along with Rice. Only the Owls
The Aggies will lose few men from this fall’s squad. Among
those who played enough to letter
only tackles Moncrief and Dickey
and backs Daniels and Zapalac will be lost by playing out their time.
Brightest spot of the fall for the Aggies, and bright spot in future
prospects, is the fine passing late
Stan Holmig, a pair of freshmen.
Football Banquet
To Be Held Jan. 10
Sports Fans Invited
The annual Aggie football ban-
quet will be held at Sbisa Hall on
the night of January 10. The big
party will be staged by the Brazos
County A.&M. Club in cooperation
with the Athletic Department.
Dancing will follow the banquet
and short program. The annual
party honors players and coaches
of the football team and the cross-
country team.
Tad Moses, 20, is serving as
acting general chairman, pinch-
hitting for J.T.L. McNew, 18, who
is recovering from a recent illness.
The party will start at 7 p. m,,
with the program due to be over by
9 after which dancing will be in
order until 12. Music for both the
dinner and the dance will be pro-
vided by the Aggieland Orchestra.
The party is open to all sports
fans and friends of the College.
Tickets are $2.00 each which in-
cludes both the dinner and the
dance. They may be secured from
members of the Brazos County
Club or by writing to the Athletic
Department. Attendance is lim-
ited to 900 and Chairman Moses
urges those planning to attend to
order their tickets without delay.
Mike Barron, ’36, Bryan, is ticket
sales chairman.
C. D. Ownby Named
A.&M. Athletics
Business Manager
C. D. Ownby, assistant business
manager of A. & M., has been ap-
pointed business manager of ath-
leties, it has been announced by
the college athletic council this
week. P. L. Downs, who now holds
this position, has been named sec-
retary of the athletic council,
Ownby has been assisting Downs
during the football season, while
Downs has been holding down both
jobs. Since the athletic depart-
ment has several improvements of
athletic facilities under way, the
job of secretary now requires a
full-time man.
Downs, a former member of the
Board of Directors, was on that
body at the time Kyle Field was
built. Ownby, formerly business
manager at John Tarleton College,
was with the soil conservation ser-
vice from 1935-43 before coming to
A. & M. as assistant to the busi-
ness manager.
Among A. and M. Clubs
NEW BRAUNFELS
Association President C. M.
Gaines, ’12, San Antonio, presented
the New Braunfels Club its char-
ter at a ladies’ night on the even-
ing of December 2. Club President
E. P. “Pete” Nowotny, ’26, pre-
sided. The New Braunfels Club
plans a Christmas party and there-
after will hold quarterly meetings.
Crow, 1028 Medical Arts Bldg.
Dallas; C. B. Donaldson, Traveling
Auditor, Mo. Pac. Lines, Kyle,
Texas.
Jasper N. Ferguson, 3130 Ala-
mogardo St., El Paso; Jake Hirsh-
feld, 303 West 9th, Austin; Dr.
J. G. Kerr, 2210 Long, Beaumont;
E. C. Moon, 8604 188th St., Hollis,
L. I. N. Y.; Harry E. Rawlins,
Box 198, Lancaster, Texas.
C. Guy Robson, La Grange; J.
Ed Winston, Iowa Colony, Texas;
Edward S. Woodhead, 3009 Bagby
St., Houston.
John W. Burney, who was Cap-
tain of Co. D., 1895-1896, is a
building contractor in Austin. For
many years he resided in Califor-
1899
A. C. Love
1408 Hartford Rd., Austin
To The Ninety-Niners:
John E. Wittman, Sr., RFD 1,
Boerne, Texas, is general time-
keeper for the Houston Lighting
and Power Co.
Jesse W. Maxwell advises that
his El Paso address has been
changed to 2734 Silver St.
To the Ninety-Niners: .
I have just received a letter
from C. B. Soles, P. O. Box 481,
Escondido, California, who has
been lost to the class for 25 or 30
years. He was finally located with
the assistance of Joe Abrahams,
’00. Solo writes “Boy, I really
appreciated your letter. It brought
up the dim and distant past which
I had allowed to fade into oblivion.
I have been entirely out of touch
with A.&M., and in fact the whole
state for more than 25 years. No
Continued on Page 2, Col. 3.
A
Beaumont
Eber Peters, ’40, 2075 Tulane
St., was named President of the
Beaumont A. & M. Club when
election of officers was held at
that club’s monthly meeting in Oc-
tober. Other officers chosen to
serve include: Jimmie P. Cokinos,
’40, 947 Hazel St., as 1st Vice
President; Hugh W. Hillis, ’30,
2320 Ave. B., as 2nd Vice Presi-
dent; Jack Gore, ’44, 2300 Mec-
Faddin, Treas.; James H. Allen,
’40, 1007 Harriott St., Secretary;
and Tom N. Felton, Jr. ’44, 2350
Broadway, Sgt.-at-Arms.
Retiring officers: Geo. B. Mor-
gan, ’18, President Wendt, ’27,
Vice Pres.; W. J. Balmer, ’36,
Treas.; F. O. Dollinger, ’31, Sec.;
and C. H. Wallace, 43, Sgt.-at-
Arms.
Shreveport, La.
The Shreveport, La. A. & M.|13
Club has announced a change ‘of
meeting date for their club. They
will meet the second Monday even-
ing of each month for dinner meet-
ings at the Caddo Hotel at 7:00
p. m. All A. & M. men from the
adjoining cities and towns are
cordially invited to attend.
Officers of the Club for the cur-
rent year are: Pres.: Frank S.
Kelly, Jr., ’26, Box 1734; 1st Vice
Pres.: Frank W, Grant, ’32, 525
Rutherford; 2nd Vice Pres.: Sam
B. Grissom, ’25, K.C.S. Railway
Shops; 3rd Vice Pres.; Charles B.
Foster, ’38, 247 Preston Ave.; Sec.
W. N. Petzing, ’26, 906 Mitchell
St.; Treas.: Dr. J. N. Brown, ’37.
Last year N. N. Burlington, ’26,
served as 1st Vice. Prey. and Chas.
B. Foster, Jr. as Treas.
Wichita Falls
Julian McFall, Jr., ’44, 1616 Til-
den St., and Jack L. Hammond, 41,
Box 848, both of Wichita Falls,
have been elected President and
Secretary of the Wichita Falls A:
& M. Club. The Club is plan-
ning an active program and in-
vites all A. & M. men of the Wich-
ita Falls area to join in its acti-
vities.
four.
in the season of Buryl Baty and
Texas 24-Aggies 7
GAME AT A GLANCE
First Downs
1 Yards Gained Rushing...
134...0.0.. Yards Gained Passing .......... 190
6 of 11... Passes Completed... ...... 11 of 21
1 Passes Intercepted 0
6 for 43.8... Punts, No. Avg......... 7 for 31.7
7 for 55 Penalties, No., Ydge....6 for 45
It was Texas, 24-7, and Long-
horn Day Thanksgiving. Before
the largest crowd ever to see an
athletic contest in the Southwest,
the Steers regained their early
season form to whip the Aggies,
to give D. X. Bible the best pos-
sible present on his retirement
from active coaching, and to re-
trieve some consolation from their
disappointing season. 48,000 fans
crowded Memorial Stadium and
saw one of the toughest, hardest
fought battles in the long Aggie-
Steer series.
Indicative of the viciousness of
the game were several penalties
for roughness and numerous fum-
bles, Texas lost the ball three
times by fumbling and the Aggies
The Longhorns held a clear
edge most of the way but the Ag-
gies never quit fighting.
Brightest spot for the Aggies
was the final period passing of
Freshman Stan Holmig who com-
pleted 8 of 14 attempts, the last
one being a 31 yard toss to end
Charley Wright for a tally. He
was aided by fine receiving by
Cotton Howell, Jess Burditt, Pres-
ton Smith and Wright.
For the Longhorns it was Bobby
Layne on the offense and a line
that roundly outplayed the Aggie
forwards. Layne put the Steers
ahead with a field goal in the first
quarter, then put it on ice with
a second quarter touchdown. The
Aggies were never able to capital-
ize on their scoring opportunities
until that last minute drive via the
alr.
The starting lineups:
Pos. A&M TEXAS
L.E.—Howell Bechtol
L.T.—Dickey Wetz
L.G.—Stautzenberger ..............c..u.... Collins
Cen.—Gary Gill
R.G.— Winkler Weedon
R.T.—Monecrief .... Kelley
R.E.—Higgins ..................... Schwartzkopf
Q.B.—Faty eap
L.H.—Welch Ellsworth
R.H.—Anderson ..................... Baumgardner
F.P.—Zapalac Layne
Score by periods:
A&M 0 0 0 7T—17
Texas 3 7 7 T—24
Scoring—Layne (Texas) kicked field
goal from 21-yard line in first; Layne
drove over from one-half-foot line in sec-
ond: Guess kicked extra point from place-
ment; Jores (Texas) drove over from one-
yard line in third, Guess kicked goal; H.
K. Allen (Texas) drove over from one-
yard line in fourth, Guess kicked goal;
Charles Wright (A&M) took 31-yard pass
from Hollmig for touchdown in fourth,
Ballentine kicked goal.
Substitutions :
Texas A & M, ends, Hooker, Shefts, C.
Wright Whittaker; tackle, Tulis; guards,
Overley, Scara, Turley; centers, D. Wright,
Johnson, Flowers; backs, Hallmark, L.
Daniels, Scott, Burditt, Goode, Torno, Bos-
well, Ballentine, Dusek, Smith, Hollmig.
Texas, ends. Holder, B. Proctor ,Bum-
gardner, McCall, King, Blount; tackles,
McCauley, Demp, Harris, Hames, M. Jones,
E. Heap; guards, Mitchell, Jungmichel,
Simmons, Neal, Vasicek, L. Procter; cen-
ters, D'ck Harris Marshall, Callan; backs,
T .Al'en, H. Allen, Evans, Cromer, Jack-
son, Schutze, Halfpenny, Raven, R. Jones,
Lardry, Lawler, Guess, Samuels, Gillery.
Official~: Ray McCullough (TCU), ref-
erce; Jimmy Higgins, (SMU), umpire;
Gene Bedford (SMU), headlinesman ;
Charles Swartz, (Rice), field judge.
SEASON STANDING
Ww
Teams— . L.-T. Pts. Op.
Tedash a6 18. Soll din. & 8 2 0 290 68
or AROER WEE Se 8 2.0, 2387 562
A ERRNEAS Le Se EN 6 3°71 1365592
Seow. Methodist' ...~0.. 00000 4 5 1 114100
Texas A&M L000. 200 4 n60 0 135 11%
Texag , Christian «ou... mein. 2 T.v} 90 148
Baylor Pit. $2 1100 de 1ERR%0 56 181
CONFERENCE STANDING
Team— W. L.'"T. "Pts. Op. Pet
Ricey iM... Ll. soiss, 0 117 43: .833
ATRANSAS 1) fool oeredes 1:0. 74:34 '.8383
Teas “ge ..con- 2 0 98.49. ..66%
Texas” AGM "22. .5 SH-0 62 “ 58" .500
Sou. Methodist 4701" 7508073 .333
Texas Christian ..2 4 0 60 107 ..333
Baylor .c.ceeicieecartas 6 6 29 144 .000
Last week’s results:
Texas 24, Texas A&M 1.
Tulsa 14, Arkansas 13.
Southern Methodist 80, Texas Christian
Rice 38, Baylor 6.
Elwell Presents
Bell Co. Charter
Association Vice President Clar-
ence Elwell, ’23, Austin, presented
the Bell County Club its club char-
ter at a meeting in Temple on the
evening of November 21, Also
present for the occasion was As-
sociation Secretary E. E. McQuil-
len. Elwell was introduced by W.
E. Wade, ’30, who represents the
Bell County Club on the Associa-
tion Council. Club President Frank
Matush, ’39, presided. Other of-
ficers include O. F. Brewster, 40,
Vice President; and Jack Boling,
87, Secretary-Treasurer,
FORT WORTH
One Hundred members of the
Fort Worth Club were present at
a stag buffet dinner at the West-
brook Hotel on the ‘evening of
November 26. Association Sec-
retary E. E. McQuillen presented
to the Club its charter. H. E.
“Buck” Cuningham, ’32, Club Pres-
ident, presided. Entertainment
was presented to the Club by Lynn
Clark, 25, expert amateur magi-
cian,