FRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 1947 THE BATTALION Page 3 From This Angle Aggies Break Even In Holiday Contests LARRY GOODWYN CONFERENCE BASKETBALL RACE Just one week from today, the 1947 Southwest Conference Bas ketball Race will get under way with all seven members of the loop slated to see action over the weekend of the 10th and 11th. With pre-conference play draw ing to a close, one team stands head and shoulders over the rest of the field, and, unfortunately, it wears the colors of the Orange and White of T.u. The ‘Sips whipped through a rugged December schedule in great style, including among their ac complishments an all -victorious swing through the East. The Steers now have a eight won and one loss record, the one loss com ing at the hands of the defending National Champions, Oklahoma A. & M., 40-39 in the semi-finals of the Oklahoma City Tournament. On the Eastern jaunt, the ‘Sips knocked off Long Island, which had previously beaten the Okla. Aggies, Depaul and Canisius, three topflight cage powers. Off that performance, Coach Jack Gray’s club looks, from this angle, to be miles in front of the rest of the circuit. As for the other six teams, a mad scramble from first divis ion berths looms. This year’s edition of Arkansas’ always good, always tall Porkers is just as tall as usual, but their early season record indicates they’re not up to the standards of the ’38, ’39, ’40 teams. Baylor, the defending confer ence champions, has its two high scoring freshmen of last year, Jackie Robinson and Bill Johnson, back to pace the ’47 team, but the Bears are in need of additional help to get into the conference pic ture in this season of vastly im proved caliber of competition. Rice, boomed as a pre-season co- favorite with the Longhorns, seems destined to be involved in a three and possibly a four-way fight for second place. The Owls have been the big disappintment in the conference — disappointing to Rice fans, that is. We don’t be lieve any residents of this section are going to shed any tears over the Owls mediocre record to date. The big surprise of the current campaign has been Southern Meth odist’s scrappy Mustangs. After dropping their first three games this season, the Ponies, who didn’t win a game in conference play last year, have done a complete a- bout face to win five straight games and if they keep improving, may give the Orange a run for its money. The Aggies, with little Bill Batey tossing them through the hoop in pleasing fashion^ a little better off than tf ™ tabbed before the seaso: but still have plenty of to make up before eras" the top four. Lack ofj again is plaguing Mart; ' crew. , T.C.U., still searching its first win of the sea our vote for the conferen Hub McQuillen’s bunch haven’t got the experience talent to play winning this league and no relief is sight until next year. V :: ■l ■ Intramural Cross Country Winners ■ ■ ■■ Cape Sleeve Two Piece Dress This two - piecer has cape sleeves . . . one of the newest and nicest of ideas. The jacket has one large square, jewel-cut crystal button to complete that well-bred look. Not to be overlooked is that superb tailoring and better- than-usual workmanship that always distinguish a Perez Casual. Smart rayon strutter cloth in Blue Nite, Forest Green, New Brown and Black. Sizes 10-20 Despite winning two games on the last day from their rivals, the Southwest Conference took a back seat to the Big Six Conference in the Oklahoma City Invitational Basketball Tournament, Dec. 28-29, which featured the holiday cage fireworks in the Southwest. Kansas, Oklahoma, and Mis souri finished second, fourth and sixth respectively, with the South west’s Texas, Baylor and Rice nailing down third, fifth and eighth, respectively. Oklahoma A&M of the Missouri Valley Conference, the defending National Collegiate champions, won the tourney by beating Kan sas after having taken the feature game from Texas, 40-39 in the semi-finals. Texas blasted Okla homa 62-65 to win third-place hon ors and Baylor knocked over Mis souri, 58-51 for fifth place. Tulane defeated Rice, 60-57 in the battle for seventh and eighth places. Veterans Administration is at tempting to restore nearly 160,000 disabled veterans to employability under the Vocational Rehabilita tion Act. TBfnaiiifi i^ t i |1, C. H. Hardie and A. L. Bailey who finished first, second and te, J. Turcotte and L. G. Maxfield, who finished in that order Basketball Contest Coupon Below is the first and most important coupon for the Batt’s season-long basketball contest. Put in the blanks the final order of finish of the SWC basketball race as it looks to you now. This portion of the contest will count 50% toward the final total. The remaining 50% will be divided , up among the Aggies’ conference games. Before each game, a coupon will appear in the Batt. The coupon below must be in the Student Activities office before January 10: Basketball Team Wins Two Games; Places Third in Houston Tournament During the Christmas holidays, the Aggie basketball team whip ped Stephen F. Austin Teachers College and Texas Tech and bowed in defeat to Pepperdine College and the University of Houston. In tournament play at Houston the Aggies trounced Stephen F. Austin 58 to 53 and defeated Texas Tech by a 51 to 46 score to gain third place in the Houston tournament. Pepperdine, winner of the Houston tourney, won from the Aggies to the tune of 53 to 36 while in a separate game played on December 28, the University of Houston whipped the Aggies by a 62 to 41 score. Leading scorers for the Aggies were Bill Batey, forward, who on good nights has been dropping bet ter than twenty points through the hoops, and G'arcia, guard, who has consistently scored in the neighborhood of ten points per game and in the Pepperdine game was high point man with six teen points. In the Texas Tech game Batey was high man with 21 points, he was alsj/X^g^point man in the Stephs^ F _ game. / Voiding, C^fingsworth an( j Adams, the y -<"c )1; } ier three Aggie starters, h§^. e b een playing steady ball ang improving with each ~gam£r Aggie Cagers Play Brooke Army Medics On Saturday Night Marty Karow’s Aggie Cagers take on the Brooke Army Medical Training Center team from Ft Sam Houston, Saturday night in .De ware Field House at 7:30 p. m. Little is known concerning the previous record of the army team, but in past years most of tjne bas- feitiau cMsr ir and abound >2™. Antonio have dealt the Aggies plenty of misery. San Antonio is noted for its many army teams and competition among these clubs is so keen that nearly any of them can be expected to put up a tough fight. The medical training center has been expanding until now it has thousands of men in training. With that many men to pick from, capable coach usually can come up with a fair ball club. Members of the Aggie basket ball team were vacationing from December 28 to January 2 and may not appear as sharp as usual. Coach Karow has indicated that 'he will start Batey and Collings worth at forwards, Voiding at cen ter, and G'arcia and Adams at guards. This will probably be the Ag gies last game until the opening of the Southwest Conference race. On January 10 the Aggies journey to Fort Worth for a game with Hub McQuillan’s T.C.U. Horned Frogs and on the following night they take on Coach Whitey Bac- cus’ S.M.U. Mustangs in Dallas. The first conference game to be played in College Station will be January 15 when the Baylor Bears come to Aggieland. FOUR STUDENTS ATTEND WORLD MISSIONS MEET Four A. & M. students, Tommy Gould, Leonard Holder, Jesse Ward, and J. M. Jones, attended the third quadrennial Youth Con vention on World Missions, held in the War Memorial Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee, December 27-30. The group left for Nashville on December 26 and returned from the convention on December 31. No Game! Wet Ground Baseball has long been pla gued by wet grounds and cold weather’s causing postponement of ball games. Last Friday night. Coach Marty Karow’s thoughts must have wandered back to his baseball coaching days as the A&M—LSU bas ketball game was canceled be cause of “a wet floor”. The floor in the Sam Hous ton Coliseum, where the game was to have been played, is tacked onto the ice arena used by the Houston hockey team. A differential in outside and inside temperatures caused the floor to sweat. After repeated sweepings and large doses of resin failed to help, the basket ball game was canceled. $14.95 They Played in Post Season Games rap Smart Shop BRYAN Willie Zapalac, back, Monte Moncrief, tackle, and Leo Daniels, back, all played in post season football games. Zapalac and Moncrief played on the West team in the East-West Shrine game in San Francisco. Dan iels played for the South in the annual North- South battle which is held annually in the Crampton Bowl at Mont gomery, Alabama. Nil Batey Heads SWC Basketball Scorers Although the Aggies haven’t been grabbing any headlines with their basketball abilities of late, one member has crashed into the limelight on the basis of his in dividual performance. He’s Bill Batey, the Aggies lit tle ace of the one-hand shots. Ba tey has poured 154 points through the hoop in the Aggies 11 games this season to lead all scorers in the Southwest Conference. John Hargis, T.u.’s towering shotmaker is in second place, far behind Batey with 136 points. No other member of the Aggie squad is among the first ten leading scorers. Veterans Administration pro cessed over 11,500,000 pieces of in coming mail during October in its program of serving veterans and their dependents. RESULTS OF HOUSTON TOURNEY Final Standings 1. George Pepperdine College. 2. North Texas State College. Scores of Games A & M 58 S. F. Austin 53 A & M 36 Geo. Pepperdine....53 A & M 51 Texas Tech 46 As a result of the season’s play so far, the Farmers have lost more games than they have won. This was attributed to a disastrous road trip in which most of the re gulars came down with injuries and colds. Now that the team is back at full playing strength, play has been better and the Ag gies have been giving a good ac count of themselves. 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