ON KYLE FIELD By E. C. “Jeep” Oates Battalion Sports Editor Owens “Slick” Rogers Is Back At A. & M.; Football Poll Places Cadets In Fifth Place Owens “Slick” Rogers, the Aggie quarterback and captain of last year’s grid team, is back at col lege. He and Charlie Trail, sen ior yell-leader last year, are rep resenting the Fidelity Union Life Insurance Company and have of fices over Aggieland Pharmacy. Slick lettered in football for three years and was secretary of the “T” Club. Football Team Leaves Tonight The sports writer’s poll has the Aggies in fifth place this week. Tennessee is still rated at the top, but they fell off a lot in votes' on account of their sorry sched ule. Tennessee plays about two good opponents each year and the other games are against , small, easy teams. It is so bad that even the Tennessee students, fac ulty and exes are griping about it. Arkansas Has Basketball Players At Ends; Band Going To Ozarks Is Fine Move The Porkers have some of the tallest ends in the country in Frieberger and Britt. Frieberger stands six feet eight inches in the ozone and weighs something like 230 pounds. All of the veteran ends go over six feet two inches. That is some contrast over the Ag gies’ little Herb Smith who has to put on high heels when he goes to a dance so that he will be as tall as the girls! Here is a bet though, Smith will give a bqtter account of himself Saturday than any of the Porker ends with their height and weight. The entire Aggie Band will go to Arkansas this week and make the ball players feel that they are playing before a home crowd. Everyone who had anything to do with making this possible is to be complimented. The faculty is also due a vote of thanks for granting authorized absences for seniors to make the trip. The faculty voted to a man for it. Aggies, Baylor, S.M.U. And Fordham Favored In Games To Be Played Saturday Evening Texas A. & M. will be favored to win over Arkansas by about 18 points. The Cadets have beaten T. C. U. by 14 points and the Porkers barely nosed them out 14 to 13. Baylor gave the Razor- backs a good lacing and the Cadets beat the Bruins by 20 points. Villa- nova beat Arkansas 7 to 0 and the Cadets trimmed the Wildcats by 26 points. S. M. U. will stop Jack Crain enough to win. Coach Matty Bell of the Ponies will have a defense that will keep the Steers from running wild. He always does stop the opposition. The Ponies rate right along with Notre Dame and Oklahoma, and Bible’s crew are not so high. Baylor and T. C. U. are about even and the game may go either way by a small margin^ but it looks like the Baylor line will be' a little better than the Frogs can weather. Wilson and Witt should give the Bears enough points to win. Rice plays Fordham and it looks like another reverse for Kitts and his once-touted Owls. The Rams will not beat the Owls as much as lots of people think. Predictions A. & M. 19, Arkansas 7 S. M. U. 14, Texas 7. Baylor 13, T. C. U. 6. Fordham 20, Rice 13. TEXAS LONGHORNS WILL STRIVE TO RETAIN TOP CONFERENCE BERTH Riding in an unfamiliar posi tion atop the Southwest Con ference standings, with the Texas Aggies as company, Dana Bible’s surprising Texas Longhorns plan ned this week to carry their come back fight into an enemy camp at Dallas. It will be the first con ference start for Matty Bell’s Southern Methodist Mustangs, who tied Oklahoma and held Notre Dame to a one-point victory earlier in the season. Texas has defeated Arkansas and Rice in the conference, won intersectional games from Florida and Wisconsin and dropped one to Oklahoma, 12-24, a foi'tnight after the Mustangs tied the Sooners 7-7. The Pony back who scored that tying touchdown against Okla homa, junior Ray Mallouf, is out for the season with a severe injury, while Texas has taken on Pete Layden, versatile sophomore full back who had been out of action a month before going into the Rice game last Saturday. Layden scor ed a touchdown the first time he handled the ball, completed six out -of nine passes, kicked off well and picked up several nice gains from scrimmage. Layden and Noble Doss, sudden ly flashy soph halfback from Tem ple, teamed with Cowboy Jack Crain to give Texas its punchiest attack of the season'. Crain con tinued his spectacular running, racking up a 32-yard and an 80- yard run from scrimmage, return ing a punt 42 yards and swelling his net gain on runs, passes and punt returns for the season to about 700 yards. The Longhorn line played its best game against Rice, with guard Ted Dawson and tackle Park Myers outstanding. The injury list was almost extinct this week, although tackle Don Williams still was having knee trouble and center Red Goodwin was banged up, as usual, after an afternoon of crash ing line-backing. By winning their second confer ence game, the Longhorns doubled their quota of the last four sea sons. They scored a single South west win in 1935, 1936, 1937 and 1938. After he ate 301 clams at one sitting, Mike Spano of East Islip, N. Y., claimed a national record. Henke Teams With Robnett At Aggie Guard Positions By Jimmie Cokinos Charles Henke started out as a tackle on the Aggie grid team but was concert ed over to fill a guard post. He is teamed with Robnett to give the Cadets two of the best guards in the conference. This pair’s work has come slose to the same caliber of performance that Joe Routt and Virgil Jones used to turn in for the Aggies, same caliber of performance that Joe Routt and Virgil Jones used to turn in for the Aggies. Henke’s six foot two frame car ries his 204 pounds around the gridiron in a speedy fashion, and he is able to pull out of the line in good style to lead interference for the fast Aggie backs as they start round their opponent’s ends. He lettered last year as a tackle playing behind Joe Boyd. But this year Coach Norton in spring prac tice looked ahead and saw that if Henke stayed at tackle he would not see any too much action. So he tried Henke in the guard spot and it seems that Henke liked the move very much because he has been turning in some spectacular play at that position. Because of his ever-alert of fensive playing, Henke is able to detect weakness in the opponents’ line. He reports his finds to the signal-caller who in turn tries a play over their weak points, the results usually being quite favor able. He won a fish grid numeral in 1937, and his play this year has improved by leaps and bounds over that of preceding years. Ag gie railbirds have noticed this im provement and are saying that he is the most improved player on the Cadet’s 1939 squad. 40 Players Scheduled To Make Jaunt Aggie Team Faces Third Conference Foe In Arkansas By E. C. “Jeep” Oates Coach Homer Norton will leave this evening at 6:10 p. m. with about 40 football players for Fayetteville, Arkansas, where his charges will meet the Arkansas Razorbacks Saturday afternoon before a large homecoming crowd. It will be the third conference game for the Aggies and the fourth for the Porkers. The Ca dets have won both of their games by scoring 40 points to the oppo sition’s six. The Porkers have won over T. C. U. but have lost to both Baylor and Texas. The Hogs won over the Frogs with a last minute score, but then lost to the Steers in the same manner. Baylor just tromped the Porkers. A. & M. has beaten the team that Arkansas nosed out and then swamped the team that beat the Hogs. A. & M. beat Villanova 33 to 7 and last week Villanova beat Arkansas with an 80 yard run in the third quarter after the Porkers had outplayed the Wildcats all the way. Arkansas is known as the “pass- ingest team in the nation,” but their passing has been stressed to such a point that they have for gotten to run power plays and they are now suffering from the effects. The Southwest Conference is noted for its passing, but a pass ing team alone has never won the title. It takes a balanced ball club to win anywhere. That is what is taking the Aggies through the mill in good shape this year. They have next to the best pass ing in the conference and the best running attack. This coupled with the best defensive team in paying dividends. Norton is taking some 40 men with him. All of the players are in playing shape, but he wants to be prepared to take advantage of his reserve strength if 'it is need- Battalion Sports PAGE 2 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS NOVEMBER 2, 1939 INTRAMURALS With Hub Johnson INTRAMURAL SWIMMING MEET POSTPONED Due to the fact that a great number of students anticipate be ing off the campus this weekend, the intramural department deem it advisable to postpone the in tramural swimming meet which had been planned for the weekend. The event will be held at a later date to be announced in the near future. Football scores— F Field Artillery, 12 to 0, over G. Infantry. C. Cavalry topped A Chemical Warfare, 7 to 0. D Field Artillery dropped 7 to 0 to C Infantry. Basketball games of the past two days— L Infantry surpassed 1 Combat Train 29 to 6. 2 Combat Train fell 9 to 4 to C Field Artillery. M Infantry, 26 to 5, over B Cav alry. E Coast Artillery held the lead of 18 to 16 over H Infantry. Some fine games have been seen on the basketball court this sea son but Monday seemed to be the all-round day. At 4 o’clock E Coast Artillery and H Infantry met in a fast game that saw the Coast boys mark up a 13-to-6 lead in the first half and then slow their pace with the pressure applied by Bob Lane- dale as he led the Infantry team to a 10-point rally in the last perid. This was the best of the day. Later that day L Infantry held First Combat Train to four points in the first half and to two points in the last half, and with Kirby in the lead ran up a score of 29 to 6. M Infantry (the Infantry boys seem to play in the best games) ran up a 26-to-5 score over B Cavalry. The game was inter esting even though it was a bit topheavy. The Infantry boys took over the score board and kept a more accurate account than the scorekeeper. Cawling was the high-point man of the game with nine credits. When two Field Artillery bat teries meet anything can happen, and it did. It looked like a game of football and only half as many fouls were called as could have been. Both managers agreed that it was the roughest they had ever seen. Both teams were rough and fought, tackled, hacked, and trip ped right up until the last whistle. The final score, C Field 9, Second Combat Train 4. has been played. Records show that the Cadets have never won a game from the Porkers at Fay etteville. Several hundred Cadet students are planning on following the team Friday afternoon and they may furnish that something, that the team has been needing in the Ozarks. ed. He wants to win a ball game in Arkansas and he will use every thing he has at his command to do so. These two teams have met on the field of battle 12 times. Arkansas has won seven frays and the Aggies four. One tie game Second Headquarters Field Ar tillery won the only tennis matches of the last two days. Beati and Jensen won over McMillan and Fitzgerald of C. Chemical War fare. The other match was a forfeit by the Chem boys. FOR Eye Examination And Glasses Consult J. W. PAYNE DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY Masonic Bldg. Bryan, Tex. Next to Palace Theater Williamson Picks S.M.U. Over Texas By Paul Williamson This week should be a relative ly quiet one compared with some of the hectic football weekends just past. Most of the games should run true to the William son scientific football rating. The consensus may consider some of the selections by the sys tem as probably radical. They all should be hard battles and closely fought. If mathmatical ratings are followed, however, the system’s favorites should win.- Best long shots of the week, which should not be such big up sets after all, are Georgia Tech to upset Duke, Louisiana State’s Ken Kavanaugh to snag a few passes more than Tennessee can handle, and for Oregon State to upset mighty Southern California. Here are the picks. The favored team in CAPS. The letter “T after a team means a possible tie or upset. TEXAS A. & M. 96.2 Arkansas S. M. U. 91.8 Texas BAYLOR 87.2 Tex Chris. ABILENE CHR 64.6 Austin Col. U. C. L. A. 89.5 California SO. CAL. 94.2 Oregon St. OREGON 88.2 Wash. St. ARIZONA 78.9 Centenary FORDHAM 88.0 Rice NOTRE DAME 92.7 Army 93.9 Ga. Tech. DUKE GEORGIA VILLANOVA MINNESOTA OHIO STATE IOWA MICHIGAN DARTMOUTH PITTSBURGH NAVY 85.7 86.9 85.0 57.8 86.3 91.4 85.4 77.4T 82.3 84.4 88.8 68.5 85.3 THE NEWLY-ORGANIZED Puerto Rico A. & M. Club will hold its first meeting tonight after yell practice in room 110, Aca demic Building. PALACE Thurs. - Fri. - Sat. > asms with CHARLES WINNINGER GUY KIBBEE Directed by Busby Berkeley -Produced by Arthur Freed? ^cVK^oldLMjn-\\zy£x picture m. Preview 11 p Saturday Night 82.4 Mercer 86.3 Detroit 88.0 Northwestern 88.0T 93.1 Indiana 89.0 89.3 Purdue 88.0 99.3 Illinois 81.0 87.2 Yale 85.1 87.7 Temple 84.0 86.9 Penn. 86.OT 6O0W GOINGS ON UNDER THE BIG TOP! r* >« ADAYatrt* 1 '^ Shown Sun & Mon. DYERS HATTERS AMERICAN* STEAM IAUNDRY DRY * ♦ CLEANERS PHONE 58 5 BRYAN Patronize YouT Agent in Your Organization fi/JjGREAT BANOS A PRESENTED BY CIGARETTES AMpBLONDIE MONDAY NIGHTS IIJ p 1111 illl -MM T~^EATURING Columbia Pictures* stars — -■- Penny Singleton and Arthur Lake — as Blondie and Dogwood Bumstead. A thirty- minute program of laugh-getting, tear-jerking home-town comedy. Tune in and chuckle at the latest antics of the trouble-happy Bumstead family. CBS NETWORK 7:30 pm E. S.T. 8:30 pm M. S.T. 9:30 pm C. S.T. 7:30 pm P. S. T. LONG-BURNING COSTLIER TOBACCOS MORE PLEASURE PER PUFF... MORE PUFFS PER PACK! PENNY FOR PENNY YOUR BEST CIGARETTE BUY Copyright, 1939, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. O.