;> Cadet C 4 r if n ii ! •—if! ~ -■ , i'i Six S Fives i This Three 1 team: a t fi «: THURSDAY, JANUARY lii, 1{J48 win s re feated in thej con£pr(jnc-e fh as Southwest! basketball neh the close of its secofiu ^veek dlf :Oi)ly the Ai kansaj T^tzort>|i :-ji chan slalje is i i ppeisnij^ dan^i’ fthe Workers late on irrcF;(le(f SMlj. in two Confere ii ii , tilts (fay a lid iSatur lay ni|hts^ SMjl the ^nly defeated tea nif hat*,is en aii outside ihah^e,'!fo " the ^ i’erence Grown I. if f horns eijiterta n Austin. uTOU vfill re natn i' le (fay highlt wh(n thejt iii Fort Worth. CONI fcKE? CK The U]niVen ity 4l I < >xa s_ Baylor, tjhe ot her 'tM«j> Undefiatild quyitets, tlang c . with ! f tirly Wtj k opponents. The Roalivt meet t! io twice defeated Ricgt skvh in Biioij si- ton Friday night/ajljl jtlie Lpijg- -Ht ion // j Page 8 ' ¥■ ere Loomed zh •i Texas A&Jt t 1 W l b gntil n- njeet Bhyjar STA t Te-xas ! Arkansas Baylor I Amu- Rice Tcu At4M i 21 0 2{ 0 1 1, u ;{ By FRANK tlCK AP Newsfeatures Sports Editor YORK—Foresight is a wonderful thing, hng on the occasion of the 11)36 Winter lyntpics. at Garniisch-Parteilkiitchen, Germany. |i Despite Eurppean unrest, the Olympic Games I Committee then Ivoted that the 1S)40 Winter Olym pics again would Me held at G^irmisch and that the remainder of the jl940 program wculd be in Tokyo.! Of course, the war disrupted those plans. I 1 LP It ’.was lack (M’mpicsjat T -j. w . *■' 1 .■ i '!'! ndin e Ctam„k>n Stors Tangle In A ~|lii)d4Ele!Bltra fjonigliorais Hosts of In Gregory Beginning at Ruled the Last Olympics id/.J-L. ’ • i rj -.m lil . I _ 1' i.'-l.k . ii Twj 4ity-eight countries had! 1,51)3 athletes in the 4 ••‘ri ii I i* . one Blip DENTON, chief Intralmural offic&ilsj his full charge of scheduling the juimeruuK Int ramuriil Activities funL on the campus. Hej is a ;Phj>s|ilal jo \ 'Ed,senior aiid hails froi»t Dallas. i— -44- VDINiG.S T.R ft 104 115 U)0| KM! 4-ll • >7 r xm All in Une Day MYS2WCOVV; Poland take their sports stef ll p! ,| iously; A, crowd oil .sport|i Ians iji Silesian ■ towrjt recviijti; attii e and injuk’d uitfootba|l i mpird memhers of tine of -the |)(;iy Squads, jtnd wound up Uy tryl if i the umpire? it: j J ' ' ..■‘drown riverT i / DIAMDND POCKET ' \ | & SPOR^UNG GOOD j Hillyrest Ilardiirare 2013 College Road •T Intraniural Notek Denton Is Man W ho Says W hat, Who, When. Where 1!> ART HIENG^T 1 Allen E. “Bud” | Dent m i is ithe man whl>. Keeps tjhe ball; rolling down at the! Intralmural >prtsj. lie is Chief S(Jhedu|iijg 0 fijer atul ik responsible for j plan ling - thd year's schedjule, when they! will be played, and [who w 11 play jwho. i Hailing frli.in “Bijr, D.” BUd origi nally lived ih Cleveland, Tennessee where he was gradua'eq from j Bradley High Scho( 1 in ID-ill, While attending B|adl(;y, Bud etjtered in base hail- aiui teiuiH and Ui$t 'wifltfet* games. Nazi-dominated Germany headed thl* list!wpith 164. , A few days before the start (|f the games the Nivzi gpVei nment decreed that “because the games piiimaijl.! are international athlet.it competitions, if 1 is: the k ish that spectators wear Isports clothes and n<(t ilnitfbims.’’ This was regarded as a move to ti(pie down the Nazi flavor of the Olympics. ; The diecree was promulgated by cabinet minist-i eifi Hri Vjilhelm (Frick and Rudolf Hess. Frick waS hpnged as a war criminal at Nuernberg in 1946, :and Hiss,I who parachuted into England during the war, Whs sort teheed to 1 life imprisonment Oct. 1, 194(^4! Spajudap prison, Germany. - 1 Stptu I Secretary Hans Pfundtiier was in dharge ;ofS meatiines to insure frictSonless runnipg of the events,' ^qd District (Leader Adolf Wagner handled pgrty kiijiiters involved in the games/ 1 1 Piiifflirltner retired as state secretary in August], KRUl, iind Wagner’s death was announced the folloWt ing April. : i ! _: i ‘y' ] The 1936 giimes proved spfiealthful attraction for (ilklOd Bavarians, many of whom were employed in ,fai-torj(jH an(| deep m|ngTollierieS or us scrub women. iTheir iroLlml trip transportation from Munich—where 'Hitler hegan his hder hall putsch—cost only $2 per person and imdddedi meals and admission to the vairious; cu-nts. The low rate was made possible by membership' in a gigantic recreation organization kni)W'fi : jd$ “Strength:Through Joy.’’! Fbr the regular tourist ham find eggs with coffefj I'pst the (Hjuivalont of $1.20 iiji Garmisch dtf spitc the promise rtf level prices. Sidles displayed the sign!, “the German greeting, Hdil Hitlei, is used here.’’ However, the Bavarian .salutation. “Gruss (loot,” was heard frequently. 1 Thfre was an undercurrent of propaganda. l|. jQn;|)[‘i‘ning day. as each dilegatiort marched past jC&apeeilor Hitler, the former paper hanger gave the 1 N|>z| sainte. It was teturned in pronounced fashion 8 tar ted Dbii’t Be Sclili {S; selllifeh to fe- iibrkify. . . L a ‘M4qessit;t bobby on wfhich Jnf still .f ftreat 4T >y I stamps. I j j j ‘ During h|s days. in !th)( Corps ill 19H-12, IBud wlas in j‘A” wn bobs, provided the sharp runners did not damage |thy course As it turned out, Ivan Brown and A lab Wash- bond won the two-man bob championship for Ameri- iea’s only title at the winter games. On the closing day of the games, two persons jwere injured, several fainted and a number were bruised in a nulling erdwd of iJO,000 compelled to, (remain in.the ski stadium for riiore than two hours until Hitler, and other Nazi officials had left. ! Nazi in uniform locked arms and kept the crowd in the seats or narrow passageways. Frequently they • began a concerted push against the throng. Many (fans were standing ankle deep in-mud. Streets were guarded by the elite guard during •Hitler's arrival and departure on the final day. He (was accompanied by Herman Wilhelm Goei'ing and, Paul Joseph Goebhels, his two chilef aides. Just before the final mob scene, loud speakers! blared out the German winners and many stood with their arms outstretched in the Nkzi salute. That was all most of the onlookers saw of the j 'games that day. . ,, DON. ENG ELK ING Seeking their first Conference victory of the season the Texas Aggie Gage Squad journeys to the forty atTes for a| game With the all victorious and ' highly touted University of Texas Longhqrns. The contest will start at 8 o’clock Saturday night in Gregory Gym. Relying on their speed and de ception,! the Steel’s use a fast breaking attack that ledves their opponents flat-footed and giv.es their three “mighty mice”: (Slater Martin, A1 Madsen and Chick Zom- lefer) numerous chances to rack- up the points. Mfidsep, Martin and Zomlelor, all members of TU’s staking quintet, are! all five-foot ten-inches or under.! Martin, the highest Scorer olj the three, and Madsen, a two-time All-Crtnfeie»ce performer, were starters oh last years team. Zomlejfer, a Steer base ball star, is taking his first try at college basketball. Rounding out the Texas quintet is John Langdon spefdot seven- inch center and Tom Hamilton six- loot three-inch forward, Who is at tempting to fill the shoes of AH- Ailjerican John Hargis. Both Ham ilton arid Zomlefer also were start ers on the Longhorn baseball team last spring; Hamilton at first base and Zomlefer at Shortstop. With a gaudy record of 12 wins against only one defeat so .fair this season the Steers are confident that they are in for another good year in basketball. The lone Texas loss was a one pointer to Oklahoma A&AI. Charged with the job oj! stopping the defending Southwest Confer ence champions, Aggie Coach Mar ty Karow will probably start Billy : Turnbow and Sam Jenkins at for-i Texan Promising In Fight Circles li\ JACK HAM) | NEW YORK, Janl n—'.T' \i'i;n Iliyich, a clear-jeyed kid from ifjairifvlew. Texas, is qne ex-service- jfian with a real chaiice in the greedy bjbxing business. Hailed as !‘tRookie ,of Mie Yeat” and “'Pride <|f tkje Jvlarines,” : Rbath now has l^tien engineered into a main bout ii|tf Maqiiori' Square* Garden. The knj tjesti (for the 159-pounder is j»Wajil*-V I • ’ The Sbl’awjling plains of the Lone S\ar ; State i haven’t developed a c(|ampmn Since Lew Jenkins dnder- A&M Gagers Have Won Five, Lost Ten; Statistics Indicate Closer Margin A Season statistic: finds the Texas I dropping in nine fielders and nine La-.[ Aggie hardwood, qjintet lagging in out of ten charities.! j • all departments except personal Highest score this season was fouls. 1 l . ! j" the 65-55 win; over :Sam Houston Guard Bill Batijy, recently con-1 in which 27 field goals fvere scored. verted from forward,'is high-point ' Lowest opponent soon, was the 37 Freshman Cage Squad 12 Strong L' 1 I Twelve meiv make up tlije squad roster of the Aggie freshman bas ketball team that, along' with the B team, has won three and lost ope game this season. The nien who make up this year’s Fish aggregation and will, in part, g6 to make up next year’s varsity are Chilton Battoir, Robert Carl son, John DeVVitt, Marvin Martin, Norman Francis, James Melcher, Truettj Mobley, Wallace Moon, Tom •» Cl i V4 f JiJgtii-jtfUiiiv l V v. wap «» i 1 i UU L L| ifl UUIC/, 9V UllUlXU UIVUIl, 1 VUl | man with 188 billies which also totaled by Boutheiistem Oklahoma Pipkems Jr., Fred Sommers, Ken-J places him number four in confer- Teachers as the Aggies ground out: ngth Sutton, and Guy Wallace, ence scoring. J j j a 40-37 victory. Iti this game, the! Cailton Batton, six-foot five-'' Foinvarel Bill Turnbow, number Oklahomans scored only 11 baskets, inches, lettered three years in nry- two On the list,! has scored the' Nineteen free throws w^re com- an, made All District in 1947 and' most number of points In any pleted Tuesday night "agairist pay-i All-TaurnamOit at- Cortroe. single game this, season. His 27 lor to set a new record in charities. : tallies against Baldwin-Wallace al-! This beat by one point fhe free w. o.,.w ^ v „ .„ v , V ,„„ V4 . so sey a new scoring record at the | throw record against Baldwin-AVal- took the round trip from oblivion i Cleveland Arena. The husky eager j lace. Lowest number of charities to| fame. Roach could be the next ill Co. K. 'MPth Infjantiy! Regiment rtnd served ijn Italy! in tht Mediter-' ijanean Theatre of! Operi-wons. He I 'iU eived the Combajt Infaicryman's •R-ailge, the ;M. T. 0. ribbon, with ! three brtttlq stars,' and ! tjhe Good 1 ondtict Medal. Jl— :.vi T t ' T 5 ' '1 x • , • |ik that your Photograph To. those who lov| you i AGCJLLAM) SI LDIO i I ! 1 1 RinttHHill : 'Ii. L u ■ •: . ! - : • ■ : i 1 .: ''r-. -v-f"”' ! •. 1 1 ^Jhe Same Same accuracu e (7 VI Hi at teste j ii BOMB Slfims Du.ring tKe War.j ^ utebost pte,cision.Vr. . assu bombi: baiic timing standard used ini is ,used here to check . the! atek when our.re; TIUS PROTECTI your uatch FI j ,|! -t-l—; :[ . t McCWjewelw ■xo;suee4.ed. rtbulig: Roach, whlo Says hi 1 will foe! 22 neijkt month, has lost; only iorire in iijj little over, i two yedrs of pip battling. But thb only “names” on hisj record were added in 1947 I'.'foen he won 11 straight, three by fcnockduts. Tlui (jiae loss was to Artie Townt* in Xij\k" York, Jan. 28. 1946. Since then;'tie has| copped 17 in aj row. I He knoirked 1 out Indian Gfomez,! A'ie Aitiato and Sul Richie) last ybjar 'ajrtd also dgeislotted Billy Arnold!;)ind Hbrbie Kronowitz. It was the Kronowitz will that l|ut hini in the Gardfen against! Toby Janilrt of YoungslowTi, Ohio, in jrriday’s 10-rouijd star bout.; ’ Wpeii he outpoinjtedj the veteran ! I'Njorpi Rubio at Ebbels Field Lst dsiiipiner he donated bis entire (purse | j |Of, §4,200 to trie Damon Runyon j I Icancdr K(jlitT Fund. The Giarden j 'll shot Will Ibe hi’s biggest payday, j r ~ At 17} j'perc'eiu he figures to come who shoots in the [high 70s. He was aV'ay with around $7,500 for his : an amateur boxer around home hut eijd. iLJ ' j' J never took.it up seriously until he Baqk home in 1’lainview, they bumped into .Johnny Abood, his know 1 more about La vein as « high co-manager, at tjne Cherry Point sqhbuil football player and a golfer (X. C.) Marine from Perrin is dlso holding the I scored against was seven by SMU season record foi| the most field j in the F'ort Worth Tournament. | goals, most free throws, and best j The Aggies also Ret new highs percentage of free throws. All four j and lows in personal; fouls by total- records were made in the tilt with i ing 29 against Sant Houston and Baldwin-Wallace.[ with Turnbow 12 against Set dm Hall. :j. f- I Fg Fta Ft Pi Tp Bill Briley, g j 68 ' 57 46 30 188 Billyh Turnbow,, f 52 62 39 47 143 Bob Kamperni(m, c 133 60 37 40 103 Gene Schriicktil, g j32 30 L'4 32 78 Sam Jenkins,; f ' 29 ' 25 18 38 71 Mike Garda, g |25 33 8 39 68 Gordon MooreJ, f ! V).. 15 • 4 j 21 28 Don Voiding, t i 10 10 4 11 24 Rufus Williamson, C I 6 10 0 16 16 Bill Townsenq, f [ 1 4 0 ' 2 Bod Hovel, c ; i 0 0 0 0 Joe Pettit, g 1 0 0 0 1 0 Totals ! 266 304 189 277 721 Opponent Totals 294 321 200 269 . 788 isc. MaxwelLCup Given W alker for Great Grid Performances 4- r H-**' 4- ii: i If BASEBALL f N 1 ! • : i ,, : : j.: SEASON PASSES I jl: ! i|! Applipations are naw being taken for 1948 Lone Star League Baseball Season Passes for the official season I; - i / ;j ,,m' i ' parting April 20, 1948, at $40.00 each. This repre sents a saving to each season pass holdejr of $12.50. Th ese tickets WILL BE TRANSFERAB l fji f ' I 1 j i • j Terms available if vented—$10.00 at titne of a;ppli- cation and $10.00 oiji [first of February, firfet of March, l!*: I !• ! ' :l fiijst of April. i Applications : should be accompanied by ab initial pay- ■ ! US I :U ment of $10.00 which will ONLY be returned by the i; : i ''• i 1 i i 1 • ? ml ’ association if 300 applications are notreqeived. t' 1 f u i • 16 ;j! ' lit BRYAN BASEBALL ASSOCIATION PHONE 24656 .E, n l ] f i • 1 i 1 j. : 'fff nied i I' jf' lil 1 * By ORLO ROBERTSON j 'PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 15 CP>-_ Ewell lioak Walker., Jr., has never 'been known to choke up when the going became tough on a football field but he found, receiving the Maxwell Club Award as 1'947’s out- standing gridiron performer just Valuable’ piayer~A\va'rd. about all he could take. After hearing his coach, Matty Robert CafIsoin, six foot four, is Irom Houston where he letter ed in 1947 a; John Reagan. Johri DeWitt, «ix-foot four, hails from Waco where be made All- District in basketball in 1946 and 47 and All-State in 1948 in. busq- Oali. He has iwo brothers, botfo of them playing on the Baylor rqqnd- ball team. Norman Francis, six-foot ope, 'is from Bryan. He lias made All-Dis- tijict for the last three years. Marvin Martin, Six-loot three and one hall, is from Houston. He lettered two years at Davis and Made All-District in 1947. Janies Melcher, five foot eleven, is from Dallas where he lettered last jteav at North Dallas. Truett Mobey, five-foot eleven, hails fi’oni Austin. He made All- District two years in basketball and AH State in baseball. Walace Moon, five-foot eleven, is. j from Bay, Arkansas. He lettered j for three years. Also plays short-, j stop in baseball. Tom Pickens Jr., five-foot, nine, ' is from Amarillo where he lettered for three years and made honorable mention lor All-State. Fred Sommers, six-foot four, is from Houston, where he lettered three years at San Jacinto, j Kenneth Sutton, six foot five land one half, is from Goose Creek, where he lettered for three years and made All-District. - v < Guy Wallace, live-foot nine and one half, is from Dallas. He letter ed at North Dallas in 1945 and 46,' made All-City, National AAU All- Tourney, and was given the Most home decoration, complete your dfyirtg new Acme prtirtl) j trims—in tints and col jrs interior decorators! ijn modern wei have iq selection bl pc ints to coloi scheme. Durable, quick- . iulniturei woodwork, wal s ,c. selected by America's forei lost On [furniture land wk> d\) ork.! Acmei Enatnol-Kote mckes ij easy for you td> have! the j seen in your mvorite ; itti>gj< Smooth, even finini. A4 bright and glcpming.i hew decorator-chosen col harmonize with colorsjbf BIR HOME ril ILD1 , Bell of Southern Methodist Univer- 1 sit.v. and President Bert Bell i sity, and President Bert Bell rtf the Maxwell Club laud his perform- tances as a player and leader, the 121-year old All-America halfback | stepped to . the* center of the dais i amei smart color harmonies you’ve zinep. Eveiii beginners, can g>t P thfcitils easy to wash, easy to Itoop } In today and see the alor o that Cemt-Ton !* and SUPPLIERS Burgess-ljfugh Warehouse SouthsitU* bv k ssouri Pacifiic R.R. .• . ; ■ . I I :; I. 1 J J Ii!" i last night to receive the coveted j trophy. | j i. He stuni&led through the first j fihv lines of his speech, fumbled j words frequently but, then like a i luoken field runner, picked speed at the end .and closed with this tag line: “I thank you from tjhe bottom of my heart,” Doak concluded, “and ! coming from a Texas heart that is mighty big.” The veteran coa^h of SMU’s un beaten Mustangs Raid “there have betn faster backs, better passers arid runners but none that could match Doak in all-around Ability combined with, leadership and de fensive play that riiade his team mates want to cooperate to the full est extent.”,! , f - Ten teams an aiMime high- operated in the National Hockey q League in 1930. If-—pi tj ; '•T ■ (• -4- RECORDS! RECORDS! RECORDS! j BETTER HOME5 HAS) A COMPLE TO SUIT EVERY CLASSICAL: The Airborne Symjjihon.y Lenore Overture N6. 3 POPULAR: Civilization Near You TE I4NE OF RECORDS , tasS ; • ’ ' r 1 STRING: What Is Life Without Love Remember Me. T' v * t -i- - - - - »!• -■-I i COMEDY; Move It Over.i...i.J..:.'.j.,! I’m the Guy That Found the Lost ....J....;..q.4.j..L..A I. -- Chore randi>a Jones nmy Duran Come in and listeii to these atyd jnany Hb -e ib private sound -proof listening boe Wl i ER BRYAN ! ' 1 % IT L : L 1 j Blitfcstiqn Beethoven Danny K^y f C T Eddy Arnold Tf xas jTylw *. H :l ll ii'l Ml m u mi T .1 I ! • • « Phone 2-1542 ; r 4 .Fiji