,:2'4 ' { < '-I- -' j , ‘v - i ^aul Campbell will be playing his last game Tor the Texas Long horns when the Aggies meet them on Kyle Field Thursday after noon. The Steer’s starting quarterback, Campbell halls from Brecftenridge and weighs in at 175 pounds. t Pro Roundup.. < Cleveland Wins A-A Title Again, Eagles, Rams Lead in National New Yore, Nov. 22 (AP)—Football fans are the bene factors in the |)ro-grid war but they would like to see.the con flicting factions smoke the peace-pipe for just one game—the Cleveland Browns .vs. the National League champions. The Browns have won the All-America Conference title feyr. ihe fourth successive season. ♦——f —— V -• 4- M' w ) •'I Battalion M IJ' - ■ M ■ i PORT - )AY, NOVEMBER 32,1949 ■ i I 1 " I- Page 3 / Top Five Still Lead illiamson Ratings still i Dame homa, &M, six Thvo J-tbok -'bs: week’s The Clevelanders retained the crown Sunday while the Philadel phia Eagles and the Los Angeles - Ramis went about their business of winning the National’s Eastern and Western division champions, res pectively. l ~ ’’ i Ever since the Browns picked up the Marbles in' 194G, the AAC’s first year 'of operation, “the cus tomers have been wondering what they would do against the nation’s finest. i According to rumors the two leagues will arrive at some .sort of an agreement during the winter, perhaps after the owners receive their year-end bank statements. Otto Graham directed Cleveland to its clinching triumph by passing AGGIES and FRIENDS | Get Your AGGIE -SOUVENIRS, 4 SHAFFER’S \ “T w SHIRTS COLLEGE pets SCARVES EMBLEM JEWELRY PENNANTS 1 STATIONARY SHAFFERS Book Store > •:. North Gate the Browns to a 31-0 triumph over thie New York Yankees. \ 'Graham threw 34 passes gooc for 382 yards and was a prime factor -in every scoring drive.! Mac Speedic caught 11 passes which he darried for 228 yards, both loop records for a single game. The defeat dumped the Yanks out of second into third place. The idle San Francisco 49ers moved into! the runner-up slot. Buffalo defeated the Chicago Horpets, 10-0, fto replace the Hor nets in fourth place, the last play off slot. Former Hornet Bobby; Livingstone scored the only touch- ; , down when he sloshed 80 yardjs through the mud in the second peif- J iqd, . The Hornets fell into a fifth | , place tie with the Los Angelas; I)oiis who whipped the Baltimoije j Colts, 21-10. George Talifertjo j steered the Dons home by scoring | twice and aiding in the other pawl; off! drive. Philly Wins ’ . , i Philadelphia pounded New York^s | hapless Bulldogs, 12-0 with Steve! Van fiuren eating up yardage as a kid does ice cream. The Eagles’ path was eased by thi|i Detroit Lions 'Who upset Steve Ovsen’s New York Giants, 45-21, before blinking New Yorkers. The reversal dumped the Nejw ’kers from second into third •e with the Pittsburgh Steelejrs ping up by knocking off the n Bay Packers, 30-7. he Los Angeles Rains fought Chicago Cardinals to a 28-281! standoff to protect their western half lead over the Chicago Bears J Tljb Bears clubbed the Washington Rejdskins, 31-21. Johnny Lujack and Sid Luckman toftk care of the Red Skins. Pupil Liijack tossed three touchdown passes and teacher Luckman one. Saimmy Baugh, the Washington passing artist, chucked two six point passes for 1 the. once powerful skins. . ' ■'! ! ’J If! , I -I I ■; Williamson’s top five teams re gained Jatop the, nation’s grid heap week with Notre ading, followed by Okla- alifornia, Army, and Rice, ough idle, slipped a notch second! in the rankings, teams—Baylor and Tulane over places in the second virtue of defeating last sixth and eighth ranking elevensi Virginia and SMU. Bayhr regained the top ten ranking after falling to the eight eenth spot when the Bruins lost to Text s The week before the Wy oming game. With the Bears boot ing thef Mustangs and taking sixth place, Michigan remained in its seventh position. Henry Frnka’s Green Wave dis posed of previously unbeaten Vir- jjijiia and claimed the eighth slot. Minnespta, lastj week’s tenth team, switched spots with Santa Clara and grabbed ranking number nine. The Slimta Clarans dropped from hine tq ten as they lost to power house pklahomp by a scant 21-to- }28 mai gin. j [ ' • ^nies Rated Twelfth SMI landed in the twelfth posi tion af the Pohies, vanquished by Baylon replaced the Methodists in the sriect tenl Ohio State, co champ ons of the Big Ten with Michigan, moved up to the elev enth spot in the listings by virtue by tying the Wolversines, 7-to-7. 'UCLA held its niche at the thir teenth despite a 7-to-21 licking at the hands off Southern Califor nia. Tie Southern Cal eleven could only ipove from twenty-seventh to twenty-fourth Pn the basis of the win—“sometimes there just ain’t no justictj 1 ” ]!• j Close on the heels of the West- wood (Bruins was Texas in the four teenth slot. Actually, the earned rating of the two teams .was the samel (93.1) and both were just barely ahead of Kentucky in fif- teentil with a 93.0 earned rating. Big Jump Down Considerably more than a “step” down | the rankings ladder were the rest pf the Southwest Conference gridiBon teamp. The TCU Horned Toads restored absolutely nothing to thjeir rating by holding potent Rice |to a close margin. The Cow- toWrs^ dropped Wuv nieces to forty} sixth ohi the scale. Arkansas, twenty-fifth last week, tumbled to forty-third after Wil liam ! and Mairy trounced it over the weekend. The Indians did their scalping up i ight, moving from the seventy-second place last week to SWC Cross Co Held In Austi v £T f : 1 (Mr '■ffw ■Wl 4 /# ntry Mee H This Afternoon A&M’s Cross Country team left this morning at 9 foi I a lofty (comparatively speaking, of course) forty-first spot in the No vember 22 listings. The Aggies brought up the rear with their sixty-second place in the ranking. Traditional Games Only the Penn-Cornell Turkey Day classic is considered more tra dition-clad than the Aggie-Steer clash by Williams^!. The prognosticator siid, “an other old classic ought to find Texas running over Texas A&M by two or three touchdowns. That] is what the difference in ratings would indicate. But this is a game in which time has shown that per centages frequently show up of dif ferent on the field than they do on paper.” In other conference tilts SMU is expected by Williamson to take the measure of the TCU Froggies despite having to face Meyer’s Men on Cowtown turf. Arkansas is favored to defeat Tulsa. * Rice, current league leader, is favored by “the system” in its; all-important clash with Baylor in Houston. With the winner of the Bayou City tussle slated to represent the loop in the Cotton Bowl, South western fans are expecting one of two other outsidp games to pro duce the SWC opponent. The games involve Tulane-LSU and Oklahoma-Okla. A&M. Williamsoii picks Tulane and OU to win. Beat TU I , Rice, Baylor Vie For SWC Crown ft** By The Associated Press The Southwest Conference foot ball championship will be owned by Rice or will be ^ joint affair between Rice and Baylor. These two teams meet next Sat urday at Houston with Rice need ing a tie or victory to clinch the title. A loss would throw the teams into a deadlock for the crowd but would mean Baylor would be host team in the Cotton Bowl. Rice beat Texas Christian 20- 14 while Baylor was licking South- em Methodist 35-20 Saturday to m«ce it definitely a two-team championship. . The Standings Team— W. L. Rice ....-5 0 Baylor 4 1 Southern Meth 2 2 Tex. Christian 2 3 Texas 2 3 Austin, where it will Southwest Conference Coaches Frank Andersoi the team. Anderson said yesterday that* Jerry Bonnen, Julian Herring, Jim McMahon, John Garmany,! Howard Jones, Alexander Ortiz, kvA Cal* vin Hubert would compose the team that will run today. J. In the meet today, the defending champion Aggie team will be a slight favorite to repeal because of its win over Texas week before last. But Arkansas appears to be the dark horse in the' meet. Last week, the Razorbacks place five meh ahead of SMU and TCU run ners in a three-way ipeet held in Dallas. Julian Herring, second in the conference meet in 1948, leads the ;gie squad. The individual title will probably go to Herji D compete thig, afternoon in Cross Country meet, arson and -Ray Putnam accompanied Teat Advance > pro- A&M will pit its sophomore quarterback, Dick. Gardenia! against Texas University when the two teams meet here Thursday after noon in the annual Turkey Day Classic. A 165 pounder front Port Arthur, Gardemal’s signal calling, ball liandling, and passing have shown added improvement with each succeeding game this Y\ '' Agt ng or to Steer sophomore star Topi Rogers, who nudged Herring in; the meet held between A&M and Texas at Aggieland. The meet will be run over the streets of Austin, Anderson said yesterday. He went on to explain that each conference school has its course is run wherever the meet is held, . / All seven .Southwest Conference schools have entered men in the meet but only four, A&M, Texas, SMU ami Arkansas hgve entered complete seven-man teUms. The others have entered individ ual runners. Until last year, , the j Texas team, had won the Cross Country confer ence title 18 consecutive years but A&M snapped’ it then. It ap-; pears that the real battle tomor-. row will be between A&M and: Texas and that the other schools! will either assist or hinder one of those teams in the final scoring. ! Beat TLN : According to Welch, Director of Int Athletics, the rtecentl; npunced recreational gram which is in the process of being set up among the various schools of the Southwest Confer, epee is one of the greatest improve', ments. in athletic competition ip some time. Welch said that this program i# an opportunity for the average col} lege student to compete in various athletics in the realm hetj^etn in tercollegiate and intramuiral ath- jetics. ! ■ Welch stated that these recrea tions clubs which will compete with jike dubs in ojther conference k. .schools are the coming thing at the present time. He emphasized that . competition that these clubs offer will not replace intercollegiate of intramural athletits, but will sup- plertient them. - | To Complete Soon V - MURAL \ NEWS SEASON STANDINGS BASKETBALL - MILITARY Arkansas Texas A&M t. Pet. 0 1.000 0 .800 1 .500 0 .400 0 .400 4 .333 1 .100 <4 -eague A QMC 3-0 AF 2-1 NF 2-2 :a 1-2 ENG 0-3 League (t B: FA 4-0 El INF 2-0 A AF .,.3-2 A CA 2-3 CiCAV 6-3 AiSIG 0-3 League $ II AF 4-0 Cj AF ,..3-0 SR CO.. .2-2 b!comp.J:-2 A! TC .1-3 Aj FA .0-3 iLeague G ' CAV J3-0 ATH 3-1 QMC 2-1 INF .1-2 AF .Jt-2 FA 1-3 League B E FA .3-0 A INF 2-0 B AF 1-1 B TC ....... 1-2 League I) E AF 4-0 A CWR 3-0 A VET 2-2 C FA 1-3 E VET 0-2 A ENG .0-2 League F A ORD... 2-0 I) INF 3-1 A ASA....2-2 K AF 1-2 D VET 0-2 League H A COMP 3-0 A CAV....2-0' G AF 2-1 I AF 1-3 B VET 0-4 ill i ! ' 11 i] I ^ , -f, e EiPtil BASKETBALL’ N0N MILITARY League A League B Puryiar...|4-0 17 .5-1 m..: 134 y Law 3-2 ifi 2-2 „ TCVV 2-1 Ip, il-4 Legett..... 1-1 itchell. ;0-4 Milner 1-2 Walton . ..0-2 FOOTBALL—Military / 'll! MUMS for the Came. I, — aiso — Special Semi-Fprmal Corsage for Tommy (Dorsey Dance, Concert!, and the bonfire. ! 1 Good for all three events. j - i SEE YOUR DORMITORY^ REPRESENTATIVE f ij '4 L'f! v;v' : Student Floral Concession :v c;v .-j' — Phone 4n|208 1; f.. 't i . i-,.; > ‘ I • ;;i- •'' < ■ |-V' igue A! INF 3-0 AF ... 1-0 CAV .1-1 FA. 0-2 iORD. ... 0-2 League U CO. —i .4-0 League B A QMC. 3-0 E AF 2r0 E VET 1-2 B FA 0-1 A CAV...0-3 League D B INF 2-0 Tigers Prepare For Cage Tilts la December Basketball workouts/for the 194 9 Consolidated" High School Tiger team 7 are being; held daily in the' local high Four district champions will be determined Thursday! the Jlgiers prepare then the battle for Texas Schoolboy football titles in two divi-1 fo o f "tV ig ^dSs^reporting sions will be on the way. ]; j . , i • , i X I -L 1 7 ” • • ■ Two of four district crowns already are being warm in the city conference while 14 of 16 districts in Class A A have standard-bearers. •* — %— — 1 Battle For Texas Schoolboy Grid Crowns On The Way BY HAROLD V. RATLIFF Associated Press Sports Editor Sunset of Dallas is champion of District 1 in the city conference and its foe on the first round of the state play-off will be deter mined Thanksgiving Day when North Side plays Paschal with the Fort Worth district title in the balance. If Paschal wins it will be cham- piqn. But a loss would throw the rafe into a three-way tie between Arlington Heights, North Side and Paschal. San Jacinto is the Houston dis trict titlist. Its opponent in the play-offs will be either Thomas Jefferson, Bl'ackenridge or San Antonio T^ch. These three teams could finish in a tie for the San Antonio district, title. Then, the' wirtner would be picked on a statis. tical basis. Jefferson plays Brackenridge §f§ Thursday. If Jefferson wins it can take the title Undisputed. * In class AA theke district champions await the play-off: District 1—Pampu, District 2— Wichita Falls, District 3—Lubboc District 5—Abilent, District G/— Breckcnridge, District 7—PaHs District 8—Highland Park (Dal las), District 9—Marshall, ^strict 10—Conroe, District ^-r/CJuWes- ton, District 13—Corsicaiwi, District -Alice!, Dis and Ysleta will finish in a tie for i the title. Then the dinner will be I decided by the flip of a coirr. i The District 4 champion plays l Lubbock in the bi-district round. ‘ District 11 will crown its king Port Artl; daily, nine ale returning letter- men from/ last season’s' district 6G-B chapfpionship team. Dick Rowell, 1,65 pound six foot er, will be shooting for his fourth basketball letter and; Royce Rogers and/Lloyd Gay each ivill be seeking a/third letter. ! . Other returning monogram wiu- Vievs are George Johnston, Bill Cooner, Jake Magee, James .Durley, Bobby Williams, Bob Barlow, and Kermit Schlameus. All except Mp- gee, Dowell, Willianis, Cooner apd Gay have reserve letters, Under the direction of Coach Othel sharpening up their shoot ing, and Coach Chafin has not Wen pleased with thie way the bpll is evading the basket. \ Rough Schedule Recreation ciubp from the differ ent; schools will begin! competing soon in the following sports: soc cer, handball: tumbliUg,, rodeo, weight HfUbk. volley ball; and w’ater polo.; According to Welch, the various clubs which will com- ' ^)etie \n these sports will all be sponsored by the Intrpmural De- paiLm e rt and Student Activities ice. ^Velch closed by stating that all persons interested in competing in any of the above sports listed above [ | should contact the sponsors of the clubs in which they wish to par- ticlpate. ' j ; 4 Soccer Club — Paul ■ Andrews, PE Dept.; Handball Clilb—Herman SegresR PE Dept; Tumbling Club —Jim Hill, PE Dept; Rodeo Club -j-BoW Schrode, Genetics Dept.; Weight Lifting Club and Volley Ball ({Hubs—Barney Welch. Intna- miiral Office; and Water Polo Cliib —Art Adamson, PE Dejpt. Let us m --mm* it pin Thursday w’hen Fort Arthur and Beaumont, both unbeatei/ in conference play, clash at Port Ar thur. The winner will fday (Galves ton, - / {. V Sites Set Sitt^ and dates foi/five of the bi-district games have been set They are: Wichita Falls dt Pampa, High land Park at /Paris, Conrad at; . . if Marshall and (mrsicana at Austin, 1 . i Tigers face a rough rt’lve- Dec. 2; Brcdcenridge at Abilene,!‘^ s ™ 90n ’ al d Partculariy Dec. 3. Alice and Harlingen do-' th * hr9t thr .?f **«}* "} Janua i y cide where and when they will "hen they will compete in the Na- play today. • vasota tournament the first week, The,"San Antbnio District win ner Ivill be the favorite for the ; "Cek, ahd city" conference i championship. In CJass AA Port Arthur and Lub- ock are the conference chainpion- Beat TU ® Jerry Bonmm, senior harrier on the A&M Cross Country team, will be running his last cross country race for A&M when the Aggie team competes in the Southwest Conference meet in Austin today. Aggie Fencers Skin Cougars c AF 1-1 D AF ../ 1-1 B ATH 0-2 A VET . 0-2 League E A CA ...2-0 G AF 2-1 C INF....Vi-lY B VET...,V2-l , /> A CWS-. l-l A CA.„. 2-0 League G C FA 4-0 A INF 2-0 B CA 1-1 B QMC....0-3 I AF 0-2 A COMP. 04 1 - D AF . F AF... C CAV A TC. 3-1 .....1-3 .no-2 League F B ENG....2-0 B AF.: 2-1 D VETL.1-1 K AF..ii.l-2 SIG. League H H AF..L...3-0 A ASA.. ...1-0 D INF.I..1-1 B COMP: 1-1 B COMp.1-1 E FA..;...2-1 1*- i DO YOUR CLOTHES LOOK ! DROOPEY? BRING THEM TO — !■ ■I ' T.' I' i , I i ill v CAMPUS CLEANERS! ji EXPERT WORKMANSHIP QUICK SERVICE Over The Exchange Stare 14—Austin, District 1 trict. 16—Harlingen./ i The District 4 title will be de-; The, A&M Fencing Team skinned termined Thursday" when El Paso i the University pf Houston’s Cou- High plays Austin (El Paso). If j gats sword-swingers to the tune Austin wins it will all be over but of 21-6 in. a meet held Saturday. The foil team of the Aggies spiked the Cougars 6-3. Bill Abbot of the U. of H.’s, team was the only serious threat when he took one point from Gus Mistrot and Jerry Monks. John Gottiob only : dropped one touch in this* division. ; Curtis Wislon, Joe Mayes, and Texas Monks out touched the epee men if El Paso w>hs, Austin, EL Paso Fish, Shorthorn Statistics 11 First” Downs 181 Net ards rushing 19 Yards gained passing 7 Passes attempted 3 Passes completed 1 Passes intercepted by 7 for 40.2 No. punts avrge 5 for 37 8 penalties j 4 50 , Yards penalized ! 27 8-1. Mayes Was the only Aggies who didn’t have a perfect score in the epee division; he won 2-1. Carrol Bell got his first taste of varsity competition in the sabre 5 Opponents fumbles recovered 0 1 of the bouts. 0 division, when he replaced^ John Happ in the last bout. Gottlob won 2 and lost 1 in sabre. Happ won 1 and lost 1, and Mistrot won all three We pay the highest prices lor Used Books-- We maintain wholesale and retail lists the year round. GET OUR PRICES BEFORE SELLING THE EXCHANGE STORE "Serving Texas Aggies" ” , . 2 ^ 4-- tournament their own tournament the soeppd week, and the Huntsvillo, toUrtia- ment the (bird week. / I! District irompetitipn begins Tues day, January IT, and the champion for this zone of thej 8-team circuit must be decided by Feb. 18. Coajch Chafin hopes to card pre-district games with Navasota, Hearne, Franklin, Caldwell, and other neir- by towns, beginning: early in De cember. 1 \ Football injuries j still are ham pering cage practice to some ex tent, Magee remainjs crippled with a b -oken bone in his foot suffer ed in the last game of the season and Donald Royde}* is unable 1 to prac tice because of; a broken col lar bone suffered; in a set’ mane late in the, season. KHpple, who suffered a sim Iry in the first game of the is ready to go; but still weUr- against m inju son, irfg further injury to his shoulder. : Jan. ’Jan. 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