The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 17, 1947, Image 3

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    I'
I
Martin
fact, it looked foil awhi
Southwest Confer< nee
" Rice Belatedly Shows 1
■ • y • ' , f • . K
] Anything can happen || in 5 out! ^
!- ! west donference 'circles -and oft< p
does. The events of the past jvee|f-
N end* only go to prove tliafr at ai^y
given time any team ir |h< cop-
f e r ti idje c ain
beat anjy other
E team,' .. I -I. • ^{k
No; f pls e t'«
were ill the of
fing.' , |n [ this
necH i of the
Woodsi jbiit' the
statistics phefi
didn’t |u
to fo il.
tramf Ifljd j Atk*-
ansas hut they
didn’t?; lbrfcez|
through. IW
e| like the
lorkers
Steer Tussle Next on
-• jj ' ■ ' * ' ' ’ ’I
Afgli Usttortho ||
Men, we ll be» you 2 tor I" tHol PAl
Hollow Ground blades, thoOgh exeep-
•ipnolly low in price, will ig ve you Ihe
kind of shaving iotisfail ^n lyovj’ve
been looking for! > ; | / ]
U-14-
Millions of men know Pak qbicj dean, j eSs f Neely’s charges have, only
.cool, economical shaves. Bjit flpi .be the , !j n | IjkJ last three weeks, fcegujn
it a I n mnr ir wlnrinv/ rtnrl \irti i ! r' Jl i_i I ii _ % itJ Jx.. i _ J L
judge! Get o pock^odoy on4 if you
don’t og/ee, return 'em to ts and weii
send you DOUBLE your mpne^j) black!
Yob win either woy. j
'f '■ jf. \ y i
4 for 10c . 10 for 25c ..25 for 5W!
ees No Upsets;
? treligth
uldi wi id up on the heavy dnd
thei sotre. John Barnhill’s lllpgs
rk the initiative early, racking
e first
the fijlst stanza. It was not bn-
66 miiutes of playing time had
elapsed ijhat Pony fans were dble
tt> breathe freely. In the mean-
me, the| contest was too close ;for
infopt. jThe: final score, 14-6^ is
ite repiresentative the playing
ne hy ithe two teams.
In Auitm, -Texas University
betterMob onfthe visiting Ttuu
[bfned frogs th'^n they were Sup-
osed t4—according to the djope.
ie Steers only triumpth-
the
ited
i $>ass defense failed to jstop
®r’evert hamper Texas’ pigdkin-
|lingingi Bobby Layne.
5 As fojr the run-away score of the
Aggie-Oiwls clash, there is ncj eix-
tute orino reason to have an ex-j
Cusp. The Cadets were" out-rushed,
but-pas|ied, and out-scored. The A|
6 it. [pass defense, admittedly
Weak, was" unable to stop the: Owl
tossos. Apparently, their best ef--
fort toward stopping the passes
was irj rushing the passer. This
|5core represents- the greatest ;mar-
jgin of victory ever racked u|) be-
-tween :the two squads since j they
first started playing each other ip
|l9{14!. Previously, the biggest mar-
jin'jwds a 32-7 shellackihg admiri
the Owls bj^ the Fayi
Aggies Now Prepare for Thanksgiving
Day Classic With Once-Defeated ’Sips
__ . _' __ . '.V v
only one coh-
il season to a
the highly-tooted Texas
ual Thanksgiving day
the first game.
Farmers
T~
Netters Triumph
Over Houston U. In
Pre-Season Battle
jshowiijg the promfse that led pre-
| season forecasters to tote thein
at thq top in the SWCi Prior to
kf* • ' 1 i
^ 1 , By ANDY MATULA
The Undermanned Texas Aggies, boast..
ference win, bring a spasmodic and unsuces;
close November when they m
University Longhorns in the 4 nnua ^ Thanksgiving
classic. Topping their list of losses-
this season was the 41-7 defeat
administered by the Rice Owls in
Houston last Saturday, the heaviest
beating taken by an A&M team
since 1901. r
The largest crowd ever to as
semble ip Rice Stadium watched
the Owls, [14 point favorites be
fore the game, sweep over the
marodn and whitje team and rack
up six touehdbwtis, more than a
substantial lead to overpower The
Aggies. Not only did the Owls put
on a showy offense but their tight
defense held the Farmers to a net
23 yards rushing and 125 yards
passing. Ik ■
The only bright spot i of the
whole game wals Stan Hollmig’s
punting. The big Htfhdo quarter
back kicked .eight times for an
average of 43.2 yards per boot. In
the third quarter with the wind to
his back, .-Holllmig .quick-kicked
twice, each , time- catching the Rice
safety man offguard. The first
kick sailed and bounced 67 yards,
and the next one, a few plays later
was good.for 5-lt yards.
A&M’s bnly sjeore came early in
the third quarter. Odell iStautzen-
berger pounced bit an Owl fumble
on the Ripe 19 yard line. From a
box formation, Hollmig faded back
to about the 35J got plenty of pro
tection and shot a (Gullet pass to
halfback Bob dloode on the three,
who galloped bver the only Rice
man near him for a touchdown.
John Ballentipe put the ball
through the uprights for the extra
point. j ' ' i *
\
p; Owls Run WM
t ★ ★ ★
■Tops Week-End Sports
i
am
of Longhorns
■i:, ■
■■ k
:
m
... and for real econ
50 fal Bj©d« S
K ■ 4L
IIh
HOUOW GROUND RAZOR BLADES
that, ian impressive 33f0 Victory |
elai
to faime. Starting in I (the tussle
The Owls started their scoring
t .< , rampage aftel- an exchange of I c bling match,
over Tulane was the.r pnly claim purits in the first quarter Taking i
The Aggie netters nosed out the
University of Houston Saturday in
their first big pre-season tourna
ment, taking five matches to four.
After losing the first two singles
matches to the Cougar’s top
players, the Aggies took the re
maining four matches. J In the
doubles, A&M took one match
which Was the margin of victory.
- Playing for the Aggies ia the
following order were Bill Bennett,
Rodney Sellers, Bennie Stafford,
Duffey ^ Stanley, Jimmie Wallis,
Hal Stringer and C. A. Austin.
Following are the results: Glen
Hewitt of the U. of H. beat Ber.-
pett? 2|-6, 6-2, 6-1; Jason Bjlorton
of the U. of H. over Sellars 6-4;
6-2; Stanford defeated Jack Lan-,
hanj, 6-2, 5-7, 6-4; Stanley dropped
Dop Napier, 5-7,} 6-4, 6-4; Wallis
took James K&Fcer, of the U. of
H-, 6-3, 6-2, anjl Dick Lamb of
the U. of H. dropped his match j
to Stringer, 6-3, 6*2, in the singles. <
k In the doubles, Morton and;
Hewitt defeated Benpett-Stanford ,
6-2, IB-8; Lunham-Mercer beat!
Sellate-Stanley, 3-6, 16-4, 8-6, and
Stringer-Wallis took Lamb-Hast-j
ings, 7-5, 6-2, irr whaj. was the de-i
k •:; ^
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Tkl
lils
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Freshman Clash Pre-View
Tilt; Cadets Drop Fourth
: By art Howard
With the Aggie varsity team idle, tfy
with the Univeiisity of Texas Shorthorns ;.
arday will be th(e major sports attraction o| the week. •
The Rice $lue Bolts were spark-plugged by Fret
reshman’s
tin6
Austin this Sat^^
t .vl
V
Vernon Glass to ia 33-6 win overA
the Aggie Fish-Bbe team on Kyle
Field Friday afternobn. The filue
Bolts were tied by the,.Fish in
the second quarter but from then
on it was their bjdll game. /
Glass, an all-s^te high school
player last year, completed 17 of
28 passes for 36 ! yards. Four of
these pitches wer; for touchdowns^
His bullet throws were too accur
ate and fast for the Aggie secon
dary to stop and were the margin
of victory fyr ths -Blue Bolts.
The “B” team started,for A&M
and threatened toj tie up the game
after Rice had made its first touch
down when Bruce Wallace com
pleted three passjto to set his team
on the visitor’s ten yard line; fitot
and goal. But the Bees could nqit
make it and Rich took oyer ,pn itis
own three. The| Frep team 1 ,? thop
went in.
On the next ifllay fullback
Moore, crashed through,
Mue Boltfs line to block and
ver the fvick and five the \
blocked) the SMU f
y last Week. In ad-
stjj often
i>!trs on
the Fil
had
.te pas
sto,
i
J
ed iyito scofi
“ le oUtsU
was gualrd I
,,
■ . - a
„ attdek.
so tumed iii
hdlpp
ntlg
bBckbr.
BOBBY lAyNE, rifle-armed tailback on the Texas Uni
versity football squad, has sparked the Steers to every win this
year. The blonde senior will be playing his last game for the
Longhorns and will hie trying to preserve his record irt passing, a
feat in which he now leads the conference.
o . .usaie
-with Texas Tech in Whi<:h thp Owls
pa/ Hollow Groi/nd has'
"Wge"
It
Starting in the
hid
triumjithed; 34-7 and then staging
a 26-$ slaughter of the Arkansas
Porkers on the following week, the
Blu0 jmd gnfy began u{)|settihg the
apple'cart of not-a-few rating sys-
temte.j r- , , f • Ij.
Thijj is only as ‘it should be for.
reading the Rice team roster isl
like reading a list'of AH-Anierican
canjdiilates. On the squajd roster of
sonle (58 nveny there are 26 letter-
mjeiijand all but two. haye had
prelvibus college experience. The
muiids of Eikpnberger, Magee,
Tv
Dorm 9 Downs Hart Hall 12-0 to Cop
Lead in League B Flag Football Race
next time-they had possesion of | After
the ball, they inarched 68 yards | (j|own the
sparing
around' ( up and 1 harjded the ball off to Machmehl
in the firjst half, I whb pasked to Turner fjbr tbe six
the ball oh thieir own twenty and
using a combination of runs and
passes, they moved the ball down
toThe Aggie itS. Then Tobin Rote r--.- ---—-«>—y - ” t-.ni worm v gameu possesion i oi me , ..
flicked a thirtjy yard pass to Frog-1 tense: withj Kenny and Hhester do-1 situation in Use last half to beat I For Hart Hall, Quierry was the!
gie Williams, (who slipped past Ed; 111 g the ball-carrying to add up, HaH . Hall 12 t0 q for the! lead wf ( spark of the team, but a hard
Dus^k, the only Aggie able to I another toven points The jAggjes j r j n the Intramural Flag charging Dolin 9 lino kept, his [
>catch him, add botinded into pay- took to the air, only .< to find a p 00 tbal! program. Both teams passing (accuracy down. In the line
through_a disintegrating^ Aggie d^Dorm 9 gained possesion of the poihts. N.
\ 1
es 4 6-$Hie. Modre waa the
t * * - —
point,
he is one of the
e and j defensive
e freshman squad.
never stopped fight-
not been for Glass’s
ng, they might have
. Behind 20-6 in the
third quarter, they
g only to have their
by twb pasp intor-
the Blue Bolts turn-
iding Aggie lineman
uddy' Mplberg who
w down Rice’s run-
'enfcr Bill Meyer al
to good job as line-
i/
dirt. Williamfe then converted.
Before the; period was up, the
Owls cracked over again. The very
conference hbnors. Texas,
ing out TCU holds an Undisputed
second place with oilc loss. Rice
tight 1 Ric([ pass defense staring I
them in tlje face. The Aggibs took ]
possession' of the ball on their own
20 after the touchback and Holl
mig’s first pass was intercepted
in v;dg-' by Anderson who streaked
played a hard fil'd half,! passing
most of the time, but the half end
ed in a 0 to 0 tKv)
-'x.
for Hart, Voting was the outstand
ing figure.
Jgrry Bean, Machmem, and Tur-1
ngr, hacks for the winning team,
ted! rommg hack in the x second halt,j n Sfi ““m* 8 lul LI, c
r„ t , the ball changed hands regularly ? foi‘med';the backbone of the de-
aoj i - t . .r ... i feiisive fand offensjve play.
another touchdown. ’ with neit ^r team able to gain a
Thp half-time .score was 34-0. in intoe n game‘w h^ iS! | • j TWO WIN NOBLE BRIZE |
J STOCKHOLM, Nov. 17 -t-OPt—I
.... . . , », . ) a pass thrown by Erviit Bilder- This yeaFs noble prizk in physics
t u - . bw° "’ill j two talleys. The Aggies put an a nd ran it back 15 yards for I has -beJn awarded to Sir Edward
j in s leaves SMU untjied and un- tangle next Saturday in Y t. Worth improved ball club on the field for, a touchdown> , The secot j d touch- Appictctii of Cambridge University.
I deffeelted and vnth a gjjiod shot at to dedide while Retakes on Bay- the second, half. The husky maiqon down was scored on the last play j The prize in literature went to
fcr in HoiMrnn and t hrmtian and white me stonned un 'MMa'! r ,1 ». » ».
SiiKL^nknown^n^sSi^e I *"3 eaeh ^ oa . sti " g ^ j»ses | favor of the blue and .grey wM ; ^^1 'foi^Dcfm ^"^3^ STOCKHOLM,
Kenn|y are well known Fin sportijpg at j^ fcwto wink battle for third and j Keer(y and |[elly making the first ! _ r
D3
\
Kenny are well known lin sporting and two wins battle f<
j cirjlcis in this, part of tjhe (jountry- fourth places. These
; Th s'leaves SMU untjied and un- tangle next Saturday i
drieit m«
If. XI
I When you wear
(jKfucuHsm.
Waterproof
Rainwear!
r t . V'" x.
ton,,
lv
|V
» ^ l
You cap’t get wet!—
because Alligator
Waterproof Rainwear
sheds watert—
can’t absorb lit!
Treated by an
exclusive water
proofing process
that fillk every fibre
of the cloth! Pliable,
crushable, (rollabte,
packable without stick-
, ing or cradkihg! Full,
smart draipe. Wear it oyer
suit or outorcoat depending
on the weather! See it!
rm
■ f. ;
FQR TUE^
Prices in )ther litigators $10.00 to $30.
\Mi:
ft sump
X X
l.'kv. ■ V
I Colk *P «*‘l BO'an
,1 / ^ \ ■
k>r in Houston and Texas Christian and i white line stopped up j 0 f
meets SMU jn Fort Worth as final that the forward wall of the Owls
efforts op the following week-end.! had opened so easily in the first
Arkansas and A&M stand at one half. Quite often when Walmsley,
win, three lc(sses, and one tie with J Kenny, or Anderson would come
the Porkers j having ended confer-1 ploughing into the scrimmage line,
ence play-..Tljitdr final game is with ! they would be solidly met by Jim
Tulsa next'week-end. A&M tangles ' Winkler, Hub Ellis or Ralph Daniel.
! with highly'touted Texas Univer-j Only seven more points did the
sity m..;;'the ■ Annual Turkey Day Owls score in the last half as
classtcfon November 27. their ground game was forcefully
BaylofvteHes the cellar spot with met! and their aerials faded to
ofie win, three losses^and SMU i click. Late in the fourth quarter,
and Rice yet to play. The hapless ! Easter’s pass to Miner, who made
Bruins started off by upsetting and ] a sensational leaping catch, car
routing a fajvored Parker aggrega.! ried to the six yard line and Jacobs
tion but dropped all 1 the others. went over two plays later,
the game when Jerry Bean Ahdre Gide of .France.
■to
“He wouldn’t let me che
v
V5
$
I
/
.“I walked out R>rjhe right io enjoy all the *wa!l-
tatting Dentyhi Chewing <flum l want, ajnd I’w
been walking oh cjloudii elyir »ince! Boy,'what a
flavor! Afid Dentytie help*(keep my teeth white,
too!” to, I •;]] , X, .
iiiijt—Madhj Only By A<Umi
Dentyne Gjui
1 V
V
/
K
1
L"7
A
• College men
» v . \ , j ! •
who sot the pace • •
tifft-MOtid 1
.
$
/
Jiisi like Social Security.
Only quicker. Pepsi-Cola
pays up to .? 1 for jokes,
gagk, quips and sueli-like
for this page. Just send your
stuff to Easy Money l)e-
par Uncut, Box B, Pepsi*
a Company, Long Island | Ijeavy! (jlf sfart a npa hdbhjj
—collcrth ig rejection slips
^ e'll lp*fp you out-fon
... , u\]
ooinr tint f roperty df IViwi-
( bla Company. We (pay*
olrtlv for those we print.
(11 jiiktof: 'Pepsi-Cola" into
yjourgagj icjdentally, vfon't
hurt volui cjiances a bill)
ry’f Get dojiffh-
Cit\. N. V., ulpng with jour
Manic, address, sc.Ikk)! and
clajss. All contributions be- way or th: other.
.1 j
■ v.
to
Enjoy the lavish lather ot
^Seaforth Shaving Soap,
to} the heather-fresh exhilaratioji of
r y ,-^i | Jr ' j
Li! Seafdrth lotion. Try thepi joon
EFIMTI0NS
E-SHE GALS
to C M 'If
These and other Seaforth essentials.. j
i. . i,» , , to \ . j | ,
each packaged in handsome stoneware, only 81. Gift sets, $2 to $7..
Sejaforth, 10 Rockefeller Plaza. New York 20, N.VV
Here’s a column inspired by one of
uraii’s most fundamental motivations—
his primitive urge to make a buck. And
why not/—a buck's a buck. Gel daffy,
chums.
* * *
• to *
Synonym—the word you use when you
eauT spell the word you want.
Pedestrian—a married man who owns
a car.
[ Hangover the; penalty for switching
' from Pepsi-Cola.
Snoring—sheet music.
* * *
you’re really got us to the wull trhen
u e’/l pay a buck apiece for these.
But that’s the deal. SI each for those
we Ittty.
GOOD DEAL ANNEX
Sharpen up those gags, gagsters! At lire
end of the year (if we haven’t laughed
ourselves to death) we’rC going to pick
the one best item we’ve bought and
award it a fat extra
Know a fle-She gags If you think
it’s funny, send it in. if we think it’s
funny, we’ll buy it—for three bucks.
\\ c’ll even print} iG sheer altruism.
Take teOT-and sec iryou don’t come
up with something sharper than
thrjse soggy specimen
pul out (hat '
sit here beside
She: W hv don’t you
light and cbmc
me?
He: It's the be*jt offer I’vC had to
day- hut I'd
Pepsi.
Get Funny
Ret Darting, is
’ do to i|uk<
sb&p. DT.
Hi-: Dl I). I'.?
She: Yeah --ite
She: (lightly '
j
*+++*+****++**+
■'j I"
met hi
ionir.
ig ItUl, tlark and hand-
Uq;
Shh:
^.sh! \jle?
V"i K iiiy—i
mix!
It; ere nothing I can
j|ou care/
1
,1 ! j
fijjlead twice!
IS-to-Tj XJ !■ I
m infeyested in
IXX
1 5
tesi-Cola!
i i
ire par l/ij'ee bucks apiece
yz-
for any of \ //i|ei
Ltd ii
j: i ■•S
... Win Money .,. W
toX!
$100.00
FOR SEAFORTH SETS
-See-.. \\ •']
107 N. Main l
to
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. • ., * 1 T
'c
j r Bryan
• 4+**+*+**+**++*+*+*+*+*++*+++++++***
y I
Little Moron Corner
I, bar n
c other
gkls'a!
iv<nti(
using
< 2 Murgatrwyd was drawing
Ij the large! with a IxUtle of
Murgatroyd, onr massive/moron, was
observed the other afternoon working
out with the giyis' archery team 1 . Some-
what unconventionally, however—
instead of ifijing bow and arrow,
a bead on
. , Pepsi-Cola.
When asked ’"Why?” by our inform-
: ant, wbo should have known bletter—
, ’’Dumiuuuuh," rc«|sKtdcd Murgatroyd
brightly, "because Pepsi-Cola nits the
s|>ot, stupid!’!)
\ S2, legal tender, for any of these
we buy. Brother, inflation is really
9WHf—t****f*t—t****ewtH I
rite a Title
I
I
m y/
A
■ r- „
. ! . >1
W hat’s the right caption? We don’t kuow. Vow tell us.) tor the line we buy /
we’ll ante $5. Or send in a cartoon idea of your
... $15 if you dra w it... if we buy It.
m
\
•r . I'
bw i. ;$D) for just the idea
J
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