The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 17, 1949, Image 4

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    i
Conference PE
Men PlanMeet
\ ' ■ T
The Southwest Conference
Physical Education meeting
will be held at A&M October
17 and 18.
i | Main objective of the or-
Mniution in to Improve touch,
init und offering! In required phy.
ricnl oducaiioti. Intramural!, rec-
roatlou uml teacher education pro*
. grams.: ' '
Representattvea from the achoola
of the Southwest Conference will
attend and take Part.
I
Harrington. Trotter
Attend Conference
Dr. Mi T. Harrington, dean of the
School of Arts and Sciences and
dean of the college and Dr. Ide P.
Trotter of tne Graduate School
will attend a work conference to be
held in Savannah, Ga., 0ct» lC-17.
The conference is oh graduate
study in southern 'schools and is
aimed at some long-range planning
for regional cooperation in this
^ie)d» • . • ’ I
, The conference is sponsored by
the Commission in Development of
Graduate Studies of the Board
of Control for Southern: Regional
Education.
^,
LA
U!
TE MODEL
SED CARS
1948 CHEV. TOWN SEDAN
Two-tone grey — Like
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1947 CHEV. SPORT SEDAN
\ Radio & heater.
y • “] • • ] '
1947 FORD TUDOR .
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Radio, heater and seat
covers.
1946 CHEV. SPORT SEDAN
] ‘ • • ■ v .
Lots of extras.
1946 CHEV. 5-PAS8EN(3ER
COUPE
11;
Radio and heater.
1946 CHEV. FLEETIJNE
AEROSEDAN
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’
Perfect condition and
loaded with extras.
Vi
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1946 CHEV. TOWN SEDAN
Low mileage and extra
clean.
j» . i ■ : j .
1946 FORD TUDOR
Heater and seat covers
' All cars cash & carry
A SO day guarantee
CORBUSIER
Chevrolet Co.
. I
Coulter & Cavitt Drive
PHONE 3-6558
-NOT!
(Continue
OU Has Tough One
Oklahoma had a harder time than
it expected but: the Sooners clat
tered to a 48 tjo 26 verdict over
Kansas }in | dfefflnse of their j big
seven champi(ins|hip.
Other clubs that gained stature
during the d»y included Northv^est-
ei[n, Which up-ended Michigan, 21
to 20:; MinpeBOta, by a lii to 0 I
conquest of Ohio State; and Cor
nell. iThe big RoiJ pounced od yale,
48 to 14.: 1 ] J ‘
lojvu.. piled up its highcHt score
a| dtdadfi to bang another de-
Southwest Conference by
g defending champion
Southern A^ethodist 41-27 in a raz-
x zle-dazzle off
featiqn Indtaria, 35 to 9, and W1h-
conslri, putt hg <>n a comeback un
der thje cpaenihg of Ivy W|illiam»on,
sank the Navy, 48 to 13. -
pennsylvanln kept, in step with
Cofrtell in the Ivy circuit by
thrashing Cohinihia, 27 to 7, arwt
Dick iKaTtmaiir | made Princeton’!
27 tO 14 conquest of Brown a per
sonal affair. Kaizrnaier set Up two
"early touchdowns with passes and
scorecj a third himself.
I Rice Upsets SMU
offensive battle.
Charlie Justice and his unbeaten
North Carolina mates Had to come,
from behind to spill Wake Forest,
|28 to 14. It was the fourth de
feat of the year for the Deacons.
Diake, beaten. last week by Navy,
speaked backj into the win col
umn, 14 to 13L over North Carolina
State, j
William & Mary traveled all the
way to East! Lansing, Mich., for
y ja 42 13 lashing by Michigan
State. [ I
Thorp was but little action in
the SpUtherr Conference where
Tennessee am Alabama deadlocked,
7 to 7, und Georgia Tech’s light-
. : i;
- AGGIES
(Continued from
yar5a needed for the Ij
were 13 ruilmlng plays,
and three offside
forth*
quarter t
minutes and IS second* ol
fer’s try for
wide.
The- thi
i
weights handled Auburn, 35 to 21
Iowa State! stayed atop the big
•seven circuit with Oklahoma, by
trimming Kansas State, 25 to 21.
It Was the first time in 11 years
■that lowans hud won three cen-
.ference games in a row. The cir-
iCuit lost two non-conference tilts
and Missouri smashed Illinois, 27
to 20. Nebraska was overcome by
Pepn $tate, 22 to 7, and Oregon
Ricp pulfed an qmazing upset mastered | Colorado, 42 to 14.
' if 1
I
ii- an
USED BOOKS
He |Kiy the highest pi u r> (Ur l -nl P.noKs—
He maintain uhohs;»le and retail lists the
year 'round.
GKl OI K PKK KN Kl lOKI; S|;|J |\(;
THE E\(U\>(,E ■:
"Serving Texas Aggies"
th* extra point
quarter was t
_ r .. 15 second* old when
Berry led t|he Christians 00 yards
on four passing plays and rang up
the third Ip. Berry was rifling
passes perfectly and qilmaxed this
sudden display of ahowmanship
when Archer made n spectacular
circus eaten deep in the end xone,
To score twice In the third as
they did In the first the Berry-
led Frogs began another series of
pusses that saw paydirt after the
fourth one. . ,
Berry again cocked his rifle arm
and let fly this time to Wilde who
was standinjg in the end zone some
15 yards distant. ,
With the Frogs playing an al
most errorless ball game, even the
do-on-die spirit displayed by all
concerned could not withstand the
steady drives that were cracking
the seams pf the Aggies as they
withheld thp attacks of the invad-
ers - ! i i|}[!; ■ , ]
Greiner and Flowers
The greatest mainstays in the
Cadet forward wall were Max
Greiner, whd used his speed along
with his rushing deception to
break up several plays; Jimmy
Flowers, who came near scoring
once when be intercepted a Berry
pass while taking time off from
plugging the holes in the line;
Carl Hill, wjho has shown consis
tent improvement throughout the
season and turned in a creditable
performance! at the end post; and
Sam Moses, James Fowler, and
Will Rush,, who are standouts each
week and J were steadily biting
away at the foes defenses.
Moving to the backfield and stM
bestowing honors and commer|da-
tions on deserving Aggies, Jwe
would first see Yale Lary, who is
a very consistent punter. H e
brought out a 38 yard average
from Saturday’s game and it would
have been greater had he not tried
to punt out of bounds on each oc
casion, causing many of the beau
tiful punts] to fall short.
Bob Srhith, sensational ground
gainer of previous weeks, was an
other Cadet turning in a brilliant
performance at the line-buster and
hole-pluggeh slot.
Charlie McDonald, billed ath
letically as a defensive specialist,
is proving himself worthy of this
notation by virtue of his defensive
work on pass plays and his line
backing ability,
"Bull" Lawson, who was In the
game but * short while, exhibited
| great offensive potentialities ns
the defense that was set up to
thwart his repeated stabs at the
heart of thb Hne began to sag and
at times seemed to disintegrate as
he powered through.
GAME AT A GLANCE
T.r.ll. AIM
First downs . j 11 9
Net yards gained rushing. .120 cs
Forward paftseis attempted 24 15
Forwiird papsejs completed 13 5
Yards forward) passing... 179 33
Forwards Intercepted by.. 3 | 2
Yards gained runbuck
interceptlohs ....'.. IS 48
Punting-, averai* . J 32.4 38
Total yards, all kicks
1 returned i 124 15.3
Opponent fumbles recovered 1 1
Yards lost by] penalties .. 90 65
D"
For Style... Smartness...
and Comfort, too!
to feel right., a T-shirt
^'oamWhite.NsvyBlue,
Bahama Blue, Rope
Tan, Sun Yellow, Reef
s'Gtq* Shoal Green
■ n
fteis Anzacs are so popular. The Reis
' label is your assurance of high
quality msterijal and workmanship...ol
top value for yoUr money. Swell with
slacks or shorts. Youll want
two or three ,to give your sports
wardrobe a repertoire.
I: I ]
I..I-
;! '!!: j
♦ngep
“Servinx Texas Areies*;
i, v Texas Aggies'
Main Campus —TWO STORES- . A.&M. Annex
What’s Cooking
- ’MURALS -
(Continued frorp Page 3)
. | I I I »
A Infantry, sparked by stellar
play from (Art Gorman and Jack
Prince, defeated B Cavalry 3-0.
The hardest match of the day
was between the powerful B Quar
termaster and A Vets. The] Quar
termaster finally won 2-1 after
a long and hard fight with Sher
man Hink and Breese Baker as
standouts.
Bob Hunt and James Conrad
paced a A (Composite team to a
2-1 win over B Vets, while A Sig
nal*’ led by Jack Jones and Don
Rogers downed B Coast.
AGGIE CHRISTIAN FELLOW
SHIP Wednesday, 7:15 p. m., Stu
dent Lounge, YMCA.
9807th VOLUNTEER AIR, RE
SERVE SQUADRON, FLIGHT A,
Mondoy 7:30 p. m. Room 301,
Goodwin Hall.
CAMPUS STUDY CLUB, Tues-
-CONFERENCE-
(Continued from Page 1)
vice in industry!. The discussion
will be conducted as a “confer
ence,” with “a panel ef the whole.”
The entire group is expected to
participate.
The following questions are in
tended to guide the discussion:
What isfthe most effective or
ganization—by skills, by jobs, by
industries, by fields of work?
What should be the balance be
tween basic technology and ap
plied skills? Should it be differ
ent for different jobs, fields, and
industries?
Are the answers to the above
questions the same where a few
Industries are prominent, and where
farm youth is moving to the cities?
How and where cun a junior col
lege secure guidance on facilities,
stajulurds, und planning?
Fifth Hessian Tuesday evening,
October 18, South Solarium, YMCA,
7130 p. m. v
Deep Ide P, Trotter, A&M, pre
siding.
Address given by Dr. Lawrence
L. Bethel in open forum discus
sion.
Sixth session Wednesday morn
ing, October 19 South Solarium,
YMCA, 9:30 p. m.
Prof. G. B. Wilcox, A&M, pre
siding.
Panel Discussion—“How Far and
For What Reasons Should A Jun
ior College Specialize in Its Term
inal Vocational Curricula.” Pres.
George H. Gentry, Lee College,
Baytown, Pres. Murray H. Fly,
Odessa Junior College, Odessa,
Prof. C. H. Groneman, A&M.
Panel Discussion—“How Far and
For What Reasons Should A Jun
ior College Specialize in Its Of
ferings to Part Time Students?”
Director J. R. D. Eddy, Division
of University Extension, Univer
sity of Texas, Prof. Roy W. Bur-
dett, Arlington State College, Ar
lington, Prof, Riley A. Godwin, Al
vin Junior College, Prof. James U.
Jeter, Paris College, Paris.
Sumarrizing statements — Dr.
Lawrence L. Bethel.
Committee reports.
day, 3 jfc m., YMCA Chapel.
ENTOMOLOGY SOCIETY, Tues
day, 7:3(1 P- Room 10, Science
Hall. slj
FIVE-0-CLUB, Tuesday, 7 ] p.
m,, Bryaifl Country Clubhouse, c<j>v-
•ered dish supper.
GALLERY COMMITTEE Mon
day, 7 p.^n., Room 157, Bizzel Hall.
IE CLt)B, Tuesday, 7:30 p. m.
ME Sho&. a J ] |
JUNIQR CLASS EXECUTIVE
COUNCIL, Monday 7 p. m., Rbom
319, Dorfnitory 10.
KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS,
Thursday* 7 p. m., St. Mary’s Chap
el basement.
KREAM AND KOW CLUB,
Tuesday, 7:30 p. m., Room 203, Aca
demic Building.
NEWCOMERS CLUB, Wednes-
•dav 2 p. m. Cabinet Room, YMCA.
RODEO CLUB, Monday, 8:15
A&I Library.
SPANISH CLUB, Tuesday, af
ter yell practice, Room 123, Aca
demic Building. ,
WEATHERFORD A&M CLUB
Monday, 7:30 p. m., YMCA Chapel.
Pictures of 1939 Aggie team will
Inc showh.
YMCA CABINET, Monday, 7:15
p.m., YMCA Chapel. Two movies
will be Shown. Open to public.
Battall
CLASSIPlE
Page 4
SHLL WITH A BATTALION
AD. JUtM ...)«• word per I
with a 23c minimum. Space —
Classified Section ... (Oc per colu
Inch. Send nil claaslfleds with r«
tance to the Student Actlvltlea Of
All ads should bo turned In by 1
a.m. of the dap before publication.
COMFORTABLE furnished bedroom. A(l
Joining bath, linens furnished, new caijv
pus. Professor or graduate studen
preferred. Telephone 4-9724. [
— -t+— ■+-*— ; 1 I -T
MONDAY, C pBER 17, 1949
“4V STCDEBA
. ceptior ally clei
St Gate 3* r fe& a
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with private bath. 110 t
Ave, | South Oakwopd, prone 4-8659.
HOYAt, portable typewriters, from, jfotu
exclusive authorized Royal dealer, that
give* you the factory guarantee, ('onx
in, (ry, and buy, from a typewrlWi
apecljUUt—easy term*. Bryan Buslheiil
Machine Company, 209 Nor(h Main, Bry
an. Late model rentaia, all maitea.
Study Club Officers
Meet, Plan Book Fair
Officers of the Campus Study
Club hold business meeting last
Tuesday morning in the home of
Mrs. A. W. Melloh, club president,
said Mrg. James E. Poore, report
er.
Plans for the Book Fair, to be
held October 29 und 30 in the high
school gym at College Station, were
discussed. The Book Fair will be
held for the purpose of raising
money to buy books for a library
at the College Station Consolidated
School, i ; j:; i
; -NEWS- j
(Continued from Page 3)
A QMC B FA ' I 2
SR CO C AF I! 8
I) AF B INF -I 4 !'
C INF A ENG 5
HORSE SHOES—Military
Team va Team Courts Tlr
A INF B CAV 1,2,3 8:1
SCHEDULES FOR TUESDAYS
BASKETBALL—I
Team, vs Team Cbqrts
15 15‘ II:
I'lAW TCVV U'B’j
Hillel Fish gameU l 2
Entomology
Rio grande 4
TENNIS
Team, vs Team Courts
Milner Walton j 1 1,2,3
Legget Puryearl !' 4,5,8
16 Mitchel 7,8,9
NAL: introducing Mr. Harlfy and
four-way half shaping method. For
yi ller hulr-dq, c^H Mr. Hai]|ey to-
Prultt'a Beauty and Fabric Shop.
FOUND
oil pant* Monday
Djirm 12 parking
t Joe Herndon,
*■ f il
With Your flmuU Problr
R TUESDAY]
Non-iqilitarir!
Courts Time
m
Prosperity
]cononiatic Units
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Odorless . . Clbaner .. Brighter,
and jlopg lasting
j] i to 2> Pay service j
Fashion' Gleaners
New shipment of
Esquiiie Socks
ONLY,
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And Thty’r* Pre-Tested 5-Ways Par Added Wear!
Before we can even sell these socks to you, the con
struction In each one Is pre-tested 5 different ways.
An abrasion test, a size test, a fade test, a laundry
test, and a strength test. Result, you can actually
squire!
after mile of wonderfully comfortable wear.
|.oads of exciting, colorful patterns to choose from,
designed by Fifth Avenue experts. In longs,
all sizes and colors. Only 55c and up—
count on each of these Esquire Socks to give you mile
offer mile of wonderfully
Loads
Each <
LEON B. WEISS
;
North Gate | (Next to Campus)
■■ ' ]' | ' J I. j,. • j . I] j I | jjj •/ [
“If you're going to say something say
! ■ ■ • - | , i I ■ ■ 1 ■, i ! • v: I j:!
'• I M ; l- I . j, . • j V • J
Plain English and then sign your ;
1 ■ ' I I l! ’ ' •. r ; \ i:. «'
ABE LINCOIN
! : •• . I : : 1 Ml
t
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Particularly does this appl]
local merchant who wishes
TT. i - vJi;
lie to be aware of his met
and prices. The best abviai^ye can
eive to businessmen is to
6 j - t [ • irn.,
in the daily paper - j- where your mes
sage is lasting ... and your name in
black and white for all to sgc
-a
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The Battalion
VISUAL ADVERTISING jT
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