THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 13, 1944 THE BATTALION Page 3 Annual Football Banquet Monday To Honor Ag Gridmen By Harold Borofiky Battalion Sport* Bdttar Ag Cagers Drop Close Tilt To Baylor Bears 48 To 43 Again last Tuesday night it was a story of too much height as the Aggies dropped their second con ference game to the Baylor Bears. The Ags showed marked improve ment in all fields of play except free tossing. The game was closely fought most of the way, Baylor never forging ahead by greater than a ten point margin. The game was played at Waco, giving the Bears a slight advantage, but the youthful cadets kept them on their toes all the way. Buddy Ekas was high point man for the Ags, dropping in a total of ten points. Most notable im provement that must be made is in making the free tosses good. The Ags missed fourteen of twen ty-two free throws given them. Charlie Wright also played an out standing game for the Ags, as did Salibo, Stewart, and Burditt. The annual football banquet should be a gala affair this year. Among other notable differences this year has. seen in Aggie foot ball is the fact that this past year’s team was the youngest ever to represent the college. The team won seven, lost two and tied one in a full season of play; not bad for a bunch of high school kids. All of which reminds us that the Ags are not going to be caught napping when the 1944 grid sea son opens. Nothing is definite, but the great little back from Goose Creek, George Walmsley, may be on the field for the cadets. Other high school stars will also be coming to Aggieland, and you can bet that they will be out there scrapping all the way. —INCOME— (Continued From Page 1) ported to T. R. Timm, economist in farm management for the A. and M. College Extension Service. The wife of the local Internal Revenue representative handled the office details. Paid-up members of the farm organization got the service free, while non-members were charged a fee of $3. County Extension agents provided gener al educational information to far mers of the county. Prior to filing final returns on March 15, 1943, 29 counties set up somewhat similar offices with local farm groups, cooperating with the Extension Service and the office of Internal Revenue to as sist with the big task. Timm says that if local farm groups desire this service for the final 1943 return due not later than March 15, they might consult with their county Extension agents and near est representative of the Internal Revenue Service. AMERICAN HEROES BY LEFF High on a Tunisian cliff a Free French soldier lay wounded. A litter squad started up. Enemy bullets spatted against the cliff. The squad went on. In a whining hail of lead they brought their ally down. For that exploit Staff Sergeant Roy L. Bates of Fairfield, 111., and Privates Hobert Branscum of Delta, Ky., Anthony P. Coll of Johns town, Pa„ and William B. Griffin of Sylvester, Texas, won Silver Stars. They deserve your War Bond backing. &IWGIN6 THE *OL£ BEU.' FOR ATH LETIC WINS AT FURMAN U IN SOUTH CAROLINA IS A TRADITION THAT CATES BACK TO CIVIL WAR CAYS WHEN IT WAS RUNG AFTER SOUTHERN VICTORIES. oiotsr collbgb song YEARS AGO STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD SANG *HAC IN ANN I JANUAf EASTMAN SCHOOL STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER RECENTLY REVIVED TFTE SONG BASING THEIR TRANSCRIPTION ON THE ORIGINAL MUSIC LOUPOT’S LOUPOT’S A Little Place . . . Trade Wtih Lou — ... A Big Saving He’s Right With You! SPORTS REVIEW By R. L. Weatherly For some unknown reason peo ple think that hare-fist fighters of the old days were much more pow erful and dangerous than fighters of this day and time. Perhaps they think this because of the long round fights that were staged, and when today they are only limited to 15 rounds. But little do they know that the rounds of those days were not as long as the three min ute rounds that are fought today. The round ended when a man hit the floor; and this often happen ed to give a man resting time. Whereas today, a man can hit the floor 60 times before the round is up. Then too, the big men of yes terday trained on beer and big black stogies, while today fighters go into stiff training months be fore a fight. We think that fight ers of modern times are just as good, if not better, than pugilists of yesterday. There have been many great fights in the history of the prize ring. The Sullivan-Corbett bout, the Combett-Fitzsimmons fight, the Dempsey-Willard bout, the Dempsey-Tunney bout, and the Louis-Conn fight all rate as great and colorful fights in the history of prize fights. But we think that the Louis-Schmeling match tops all great fights. In the spring of 1936, Joe Louis, for the first time, walked into a ring overconfident. He still car ried his poker-face and he still had his nonchalant style, but nev- er-the-less he was overconfident. Louis looked like himself in the first two rounds, but in the third round Max Schmeling let loose a blow that set Louis sprawling to the floor. He got up, but his legs looked like rubber strings. Schmel ing took the upper hand in the fight from then on, for in the seventh Max let go a while clout that caught Louis napping and put him in a daze that stayed with him the duration of the fight. In the twelfth round the crowd saw Louis take his first knock-out of his career. Louis hit the canvas like a dead log. Louis went on to win the Champ ionship from James Braddock. He was immediately ..challenged ..by Schmeling. Louis agreed to fight him because he wanted revenge. And revenge he did get. No ..one knows why Louis was so bitter, but he was. Perhaps it was ..because Schmeling was a Nazi, or because Louis wanted to save face, ..but whatever it was it really inspired Louis. For when the bell ..ring Louis was out of his corner like a cat preying on a mouse. ..When 2:04 minutes of the first round was gone, Schmeling was a mass of bloody bulk and Louis remained the World’s Champion pugilist Pruning Is Great Factor in Growing Fruit Trees, Vines Good fruit, both in quality and yield, is obtained through good care of trees and vines. And, ob serves J. F. Rosborough, horti culturist for the A. and M. College Extension Service, pruning is one of the most important items in the creed of odchard management. Grape vines, of which Texas has abundance, must be pruned every winter, and January is the most suitable time of the year to do it. If they are cut too early in the fall, or left until February, they are likel yto lose say from prun ing, Rosborough says. A normal plant can carry 30 or 40 bunches cf grapes of maturity. But if too much growth is left, the bunches will be small and many small branches are likely to die on the plant in the latter part of the growing season. Accordingly, he recommends selecting 30 or 40 of the best side branches and re moving all other growth. Cut back the remaining branches, leaving two bunds on each shoot. Normally, blackberry and dew berry vines should be pruned in June, but if the job was overlook ed it should not be delayed fur ther. Before applying the shears, all weeds and grass around each plant should be removed with a hoe. Then select three of the best and largest canes and cut out all ethers. If the remaining canes are more than three feet high, top them with the shears or a sharp knife- Young and boyser berry vines should be cut back to three runners on each plant, each run ner not exceeding six feet in FEATURED ON WTAW New Year means new programs, new talent, new types of enter tainment for BLUE Network listeners. Which, in this year of 1944, will include an absorbing daily serial about life in a typical Ameri can town. The title is “Sweet River,” and the gifted lady who will play the lead is Betty Arnold, nicely pictured above. felipe Garcia Beraza q Raiz Velaro u Saenz de Baranda IS A SENIOR AT macalester college, SAINT PAUL, MINNESOTA. St/rvJtZt 2n, 8UY WAR mV$ h PETRIFIED DINOSAUR, EGG WAS ADDED TO TH& HASTINGS (NEB.) COLLEGE'S FOSSIL GROUP o THIS SUMMER. ^HE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI WAS LOCATED IN BOONE COUNTY BECAUSE THAT COUN TY OFFERED THE LARGEST CASH INDUCEMENT IN 1839. Princeton has°a fossil of a BAT SAID TO BE 60,000,000 YEARS OLD/ “ACTION IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC”—Shown above is a scene from the movie playing as the Saturday midnight show, Sunday and Monday at Guion Hall Theater. Humphrey Bogart, Raymond Massey, and Alan Hale are included in the cast of this thrilling war picture. length. Fig trees in the Gulf coast area, especially the Magnolia variety, are pruned rather heavily. As a result the fruit ripens over an ex tended period which is a con venience to those using it for canning. The Brown Turkey and Celestial—the little blue variety— require little pruning. One objec tive of pruning is to train the plants into single bodies with tops resembling those of well grown peach trees. Often a large number of sprouts are allowed to grow where a fig tree has been killed back. The resulting large growth seldom produces a good crop of fruit. To correct this select the best single sprout and cut off all the others. i JANUARY 22, 1944 Lettermen Named, Awards Given, Coaches Honored Monday night at 7:30 p.m. in the banquet room of Sbisa Hall the annual football banquet will be held. This year sixty- six Aggie gridmen will be honored at the banquet. The long-awaited list of lettermen will be released and —CROOKS— (Continued From Page 1) year of 1941, he made a coast-to- coast tour of the United States and Canada, sponsored by the Metropolitan Opera Company. He made twenty-four broadcasts for the Firestone series, and two guest performances. This Town Hall program will begin at 8 o’clock Thursday. Re served seat tickets cost 2.00 for the performance, and general ad mission is 1.00. Tickets may now be purchased at the Student Activi ties office in the basement of the Administration Building. —STUDENT— (Continued from Page 1) the ex-students’ publication, THE TEXAS AGGIE. You may desig nate any objective for which you wish your gift to be used. This year’s fund doesn’t close until May 31, ’44, and already over 6,000 men have made contribu tions amounting to over $40,000, according to E. E. McQuillen, edi tor of THE TEXAS AGGIE. 6,277 members of the Fraternity of A. & M. men joined hands last year in a splendid start toward making a Golden Dream come true. Will you be one of ten thousand this year to bring this dream still closed? Your gift will go into War bonds ... to smash our ene mies now ... to make a great dream come true when the war is over. "♦■special awards will be given to those men elected team captain, most valuable player, and best blocker. Also honored will be head Coach Homer Norton, line Coach Bill James, Backfield Coach Man ning Smith and Freshman Coach Lilburn Dimmitt. These men, who built the Aggie grid team from an insignificant beginning to a great ball club have done a wonderful job and fully deserve the praise of the corps. The following is a' list of the men to be honored at the banquet. Tickets for others may be pur chased at the mess hall or the athletic office for $1.00. Barnett, J. C., Beesley, E. G., Brennecke, H. M., Grollier, B. A., Brown, W. A., Brunow, C. L., Bryant, G., Bunting, B. F., Bur- chers, S., Burditt, J. N., Butchof- sky, R. L., Callender, R. E., Cherry, R. L., Darnell, G. S., Deere, D. R., Eberle, A. A., Flanagan, M. D., Gary, R. J., Geer, W. E., Gibson, C. B., Gilbert, W., Granzin, O. C., Gold, G. P., Goltz, E. M., Gunn, W. W., Hallmark, J. L., Hohn, C. M., Hughes, D. R., Jones, R. F., Jordan, W. D., Keeney, W. S., Kunkel, R. L., Langford, C., League, T. T., Levy, M. M., McAllister, G. T., Mc- Curry, B. G., Mizell, T. L., Mon- Phonetics, inductive method learning, and native Japanese speakers are involved in Brown University’s four-month course in Japanese. crief, M. P., Muehlhause, E. H., MiU’nane, S. G., Neville, H. A., New ton, J. M., Overly, C. R., Pogue, K. F v Rutherford, T. B., Sacra, J. R., Schmitz, J. N., Schodde, R. L. , Setegast, M. E., Sheldon, J. S., Shira, C. N., Sims, O. H., Soyars, W. M., Spencer, R. B., Spider, G. P., Taylor, H. L., Turner, S. S., Turley, H. E., Uthoff, C. H., Wiley, J. E., Wiliams, J. S., Wimpee, J. D., Wright, R. C., Wright, C. E., Yeargain, C. W. Texas’ lumber industry employs about 18,000 workers annually in DO YOUR PART * BUY BONDS woods and mills. HEY, AGGIES! Before you leave school at the end of this semes ter, be sure and let us buy your used equipment. We will give you top prices. Rationing and priorities make it necessary for many Aggies to buy second hand materials—so leave the things you won’t be needing with us to sell to the next classes. STUDENT CO-OP One Block East of North Gate WE’RE BUYING AGAIN- It’s getting close to the end of the term—so we want you to make plans now to sell the equipment and material you won’t be needing next semester to Lou. We’ll pay you top prices for your used equipment. Many items are short due to the rationing of material, so if there are books and equipment you won’t need—sell them to Lou so he can pass them on to the one who will need them next semester. LOUPOT’S TRADING POST “Trade With Lou—He’s Right With You”