THE BATTALION 3 LUCCHESE BOOT CO. Made to order Boots, Belts & Shoes. Write in for or der blanks. 215 Broadway, San Antonio, Texas. tfl COME TO GIBBS’ “The Biggest Little Store in Bryan” For Wilson Bros. Haber dashery at their low price levels. Packard’s Superb Oxfords Now $6.00 Booth’s Smart Oxfords Now $5.00 Dunlap’s Superb Hats Now $5.00 “Gen Keds” Athletic Footwear Things cheaper are high at any price. SMOKING COMFORT— You will find in our win dow many articles that will add much to your pleasure of smoking. Lighters Cases Ash Trays Rumidors Rum or Brandy refills for your Rumidor—25^ SANKEY PARK DIAMONDS SILVER WATCHES Check from homz got wings? It seems so! But it can be in duced to linger longer . . . to leave behind enduring memories of that fleeting ac quaintance. Penney's is as satisfactory a nesting place as you'll find for such money. For in return you get values in clothes and other needs of college life that are happy compensa tion for the pain of parting. J. C. PENNEY Company, Inc. Sport Sidelights By W. J. Faulk SPOTLIGHTS Saturday night will write finis to a basketball season which rivals the best in conference history and boasts of one of the greatest ar rays of versatile stars of the hard woods ever assembled in the loop. While there is an abundance of ma terial for every berth on the mythi cal five, there is a preponderance of brilliant pivot-men. So many in fact that it would be an unjustice to leave any of the three, Dietzel, Strickland, or Sexton off the first five. Since there can be only one center on a team, then it is necessary to shift the other two to some other position, pre ferably forward because both are great scoring machines. Joe Merka’s rapid improve ment over early season form makes him easily the choice for the center post on the sec ond team, and had he played the entire season as he has the past four games, it is not highly improbable that he would not be the possessor ot a berth on the first all-confer ence quintet. The final gun, or the whistle if Captain Lyons gun fails, will con clude along with a basketball game and season, another of Ag- gieland’s fighting Captain’s ca reers, which matches well his pre decessors in brilliancy. And the ca reer of none other than Captain Charlie Beard’s who by his undying fight and determination has won lasting admiration from all who have seen him play in his three years on the Varsity. Despite his size he has kept pace with the best the conference had to offer thro ughout the season and has upheld in every sense the title of a “fight ing Captain of the fighting Texas Aggies.” Lester “Squawk” Veltman will accompany Charlie Beard in making his final appearance as a member of the Aggie cage team. However, he will not “wind-up” his athletic career but will assume his duties as leader of the “Horsehide” nine. Eyes of the Southwest will be turned toward the diamond at Kyle field as the champion Aggies pre pare to open their 1932 schedule early in April. The Aggie team of 1932 is due to be the source of vast amounts of conversation and won derment; and the target for each of the five other conference schools as they swing into action headed toward a second successive pennant in as many years. The question arises—with a wealth of sophomore material cou pled with several veterans, includ ing Marshall Shaw who pitched the boys dizzy in the conference last season. Will the Aggies repeat? The schedule calls for 16 gam es, or the maximum number that could be scheduled, while TCU and S M U scheduled only ten games each. Uncle Billy Disch and his Longhorns, diamond kings of the conference for very nearly a score of years with a single interruption, will again be the chief competitors and the schedule favors the Steers with the last two games to be played in their “Corral.” While Varsity Spring train ing has just gotten underway in good style, the Intramural football season closed officially when the Cavalrymen battled the First Battalion Infantry Our SALE Sensational OF FINE UNIFORM EQUIPMENT will continue all next week Take advantage of these extremely LOW PRICES NOW — WALDROP & CO. College Store to a scoreless deadlock, to win their second title in five years by a margin of one half game. A few men were outstanding in the season just passed but weather conditions so handi capped the schedules as a whole that very few were able to demonstrate their prowess in the games played. Those rampaging riflemen con tinue to set the pace among the nations leading small bore indoor teams as they have just completed another week’s firing in which they have bettered all previous records. Crass capped the situation by- setting an all-time mark of 3eB out of a possible 400 for A and M riflemen. Although records have not been returned from the foui’th week’s “shoot,” reports from Lieu tenant Nachman are that the team has beaten the score set in the week previous. North Dakota, who is tied with A and M with two legs on the National Intercollegiate Cup seems to be definitely out of the running as they fell to the lowest of the ten teams last week with a bare 3519 points. Optimism seems prevalent in the camp of the Longhorn “waterboys” over in Austin as they announce their intentions of taking first place in the first Southwest conference swimming meet this spring. Word comes that the Orange and White can boast of several possible Omympic prospects. Well, there is always a possi bility, but remember the Ag gie swim team has lost only two matches since it’s organi zation, and the team appears to be fairly strong in nearly every event this year. Thursday, Friday, Saturday — Palace — “Dancers in the Dark.” Boxing-Wrestling Student Government Starting Next In Talked Of As Press Intramural Events Club Plans Program Intramural boxing and wrestling will get underway early next week, ors as soon as tournament sche dules can be completed after parti cipants have finished weighing in on the afternoon of Thusrday and Friday this week. A plan which differs slightly from that of former years is to be inaugurated in the scheduling of the matches this season in that the boxing and wrestling bouts will be staged on alternate instead of the same afternoons. This plan will provide plenty of time for full at tention to be given each sport. Seven classes will be offered in each sport. They are: 115, 125, 135, 145, 160, 170 pounds and the heavy weight. Contestants will be allow ed to enter classes in which they are within four pounds of the weight either way. Individual med als wil be given to winners of their respective classes. A possible plan for student gov ernment in which officers of the student body would be elected to replace the student welfare com mittee but whose authority would not interfere with that of the class officers under the present system was discussed at a meeting of the press club held Thursday, Febru ary 11, in the Asbury Room of the library. A committee was appointed to invited John Lomax, famous lectur er and authority on national folk songs, to visit the college and lec ture to the studevres on cowboy songs. Lomax was formerly asso ciated with the Department of Eng lish here. Thursday, Friday, Saturday — Palace — “Dancers in the Dark.” The Aggieland Barber Shop The place for a hair cut and a Tonic. Expert Work at all times R. W. IVY, Prop. Frogs Play First Game As Sport World Speculates Conference history will be made when the Aggies open their 1932 baseball season as defending cham pions of the Southwest conference for the first time, facing a sche dule of sixteen games on the road to a second triumph. Furnishing the brunt of the op position will be the dethroned Longhorns, Rice Institute’s Feath ered tribe, and Baylor’s wearers of the Green and Gold. Four games with each of the aforementioned are listed on the trail which the Aggie machine must travel and master in their title march, while two games each will be played with Southern Methodist and Texas Christian Universities. Sbakp off Those. 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