To Open Golf Course Tickets for A&M-Georgia Cup Game, On Sale Today Tickets for the A&M-Georgia Presidential Cup football game at Washington Dec. 9, go on sale here today. Persons in Texas may obtain tickets from the A&M Athletic Department at $6.60 each for section five and $4.80 each for section 3 in Byrd Stadium, University of Maryland, where the game is to be played. These sections are reserved for Texas supportrs. Texans outside of Texas may obtain tickets by writing the Presidential Football Game, Mezzanine Floor, Willard Hotel, Washington 4, D. C., A&M Athletic Director Barlow Irvin said early today. Irvin said that 35 cents for handling and postage should be included ip each order for tickets. Beat; TU Giants, Bears Win Big Games In Nat’I League Marlene Bauer Alice Bauer These two lovely linksterettes will be among the many distinguish ed guests who will perform for the opening of the new $75,000 golf course on the A&M Campus, Dec. 6th.. Together with the famous-and-round-the-world known Bauer sisters will be the 1923 SWC golf Championship team—the first golf title won by A&M. Ag, NTS Cagers To Open New Gym When This Happens to You- Come See Us .,. FOR 1ST CLASS CLEANING . . '. CAMPUS CLEANERS “Over the Exchange Store” A new North Texas State men’s gymnasium, seating 4,500 will be officially opened in Denton Fri day night when Coach H. G. Shands’ Eagles meet a strong A&M cage team. A program arranged for the official opening will include pre sentations of Jesse Brown, student president, Dr. Y. J. McConnell, college president, and S. A. Kerr, Conroe, vice-chairman of the board of regents. Fonher students of A&M and students of TSCW have been in vited to attend and form a yell ing section for the Aggies. Located west of the main cam pus, the new gymnasium will pro vide space for spectators other than students for the first time in many years. Attendance in the old ..gym been limited to students. season Tuesday night in Sherman (See EAGLES, Page 4) New York, Nov. 27 New York Giants and Chicago Bears won the “big” games yester day in the National Football League. The Giants upset the Philadel phia Eagles, 7 to 3, in New York to tie the idle Cleveland Browns for first place in the American Conference. The Bears took the lead in the National Conference by drubbing the Los Angeles Rams, 24-14, in Chicago.. The defeat all but eliminated the Eagles, defending league champions, from the 1950 pen nant picture. Their hopes now hinge on a possible tie since they are two games behind with only two games left. The Rams, defending Western Division champs, have somewhat better hopes than the Eagles since the Bears have to whip both the Chicago Cardinals and the revived Detroit Lions. However, it is strictly up to the Bears now re gardless of what the Rams do. Victories over the Cards and Lions will give the Bears the div isional races, the Green Bay Pack ers beat San Francisco, 25-21, and Washington outlasted Baltimore, 38-28. Clay Scores for Giants A crowd of 24,093 saw the Giants parlay a 16-yard touch down dash by rookie Randall Clay, graduate of Texas Univer sity, and three goal line stands into victory. A 24-yurd field, goal - by 'Cliff Patton in the first quarter gave the Eagles a temporary 3-0 lead. This lasted only long enough for the birds to kick off and the Giants to cover 80 yards in four plays for the winning touchdown. Start With 58-Yd. Run Clay, started it; with a 56-yard end run. Gene Roberts picked up six, Clay two more, then Clay (A*)—The again got loose around end for the ID. It was the first time in eight years that the Eagles failed to score a touchdown. The Beta's, thriving in 33-degree temperature, snapped the Rams’ six-game winning streak before 43,478. 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In the only cage contest of the afternoon B QMC sank a poorly outclassed G AF team, 26-4. Sharp- shooting Dick Lenzen paced both quintets with eight counters. Pat Richman hooked in six tallies for the victors and runnerup honors. Cowan and McDowell scored the only points for the airmen. a Football In a hard fought gridiron bat tle, the hustling gridders of E FA ‘edged past A TC, 7-0. Quick opening’ plays over the center of the TC line proved to be the best weapon against the transporters. The TC team found the FA ends very, vuinei able to Wide sweeps by their backs. B AF drove past the C Cavalry squad, 6-0. The airmen led in penetrations 4-2. E Infantry ran wild in downing D Vets, 20-0. Each time the infan trymen were inside the Vet 20 yard line they tallied. m Tennis Company 10 waltezed past Com pany 9 on the intramural tennis courts three sets to none. Willi ford, Vernon, Warden, Lindvict, Griffin, and Mott turned in vic tories of 5-0, and 5-1. A CAC stopped B Engineers, 2-0. Herbert and Hubbell of the engineers were defeated Winn and Halton of CAC 5-0. Wicker and Childress of the artillery outplayed Evens and Park, 5-1. Horseshoes Forrest Simmons, Don Wooden, Roger Turk, and Dick Walker turned in the necessary two wins to hand B CAC a win in horseshoe play over C Infantry. A QMC stopped B Infantry in three straight matches to annex another win. Wendland and Carter won the “rubber” game from Patton and Krueger as the pitchers from A Signal edged H AF, 2-1. The Rams, with Bob Waterfield’s passes to Dick Hoerner eating up most of the yardage, went 68 yards to the Bear’s two before losing the ball on Tom Fear’s fum ble. Another fumble, this time by Waterfield, set up the Bears’ first touchdown. Bill Wightkin recover ed on the Ram five and on fourth down Julie Rykivoch bucked over. Thereafter the Bears took charge and piled up a 24-0 ; lead before the Rams averted a shut out with two last period scores on Norm Van Brocklin’s eight-yard pass to Ed Champagne and Hoer- ner’s three-yard line plunge. —!-Beat TU SWC Harriers Compete Today On Ag Course A&M’s! Gross Country team took to the 2.7 mile course today at 3 p. m., defending its Southwest Conference title which it has held for the past two years against league oppon ents—University of Texas, Ar kansas, Baylor, Southern Metho dist and Texas Christian. Rice has n’t entered a team. Barring unforeseen circumstan ces the Maroon and White harriers, led by SWC Champion Julian Her ring, should annex the title for the third straight year with the Arkansas Razorbacks a close sec ond. Entries for the Cadets will in clude Herring, John Garmany, Alex Ortiz, Jim McMahon, Charlie Gabbriel, and Sophs Marshall Laz- arine and Charles Hudgins. Arkansas will probably be tab bed as the favorites since they bested the Farmers in a dual meet three weeks ago by one point, but the Aggies are just rounding into shape and will rate an edge on their home course. Top runners for the Ozark team will be James Brown, James West, Bill Cairns, Oliver Gatchell, and Torn Hardin. TU Threat Texas will be a threat to both the title contenders,, but, with only two-or-three top performers, won’t be in a position to win the crown. C. A. Rundell, TU’s No. 1 man, will give the leaders trouble, and Lowell Hawkinson should also be ripe. The Baylor Bears and the SMU Mustangs arc also entering teams and only a lone entry from TCU. Baylor and SMU won’t offer too much opposition to the three lead ing teams but Norman Alsobrook of the Bears may make a high bid in the individual standings. Alsobrook is a former State mile champion. Beat TU Baylor, TCU Win . . . Two Upsets Registered In SWC Two games—two upsets. One can’t beat the Southwest Conference for upsets; except maybe the Big Ten did Saturday when it registered three upsets in three games. After Baylor dumped Southern Methodist, 3-0, with a 20-yard field goal in the final four min utes of play, and Texas Christian with the aid of Bobby “Jumping” Floyd and Gilbert Bartosh defeat ed Rice, 26-14, the SWC showed that it produced more than its regular slated one upset per week. The T'exas Longhorns, who won the conference title’ last week, hold undisputed first place in the league while the Aggies and the Bruins are tied for the second position. Baylor, A&M Second Baylor, who along with the Ag gies were rated at the bottom of the conference race outcome, has played heads up ball since its opening conference loss against Arkansas, now has a 3-2 confer ence record. The Razorbacks who hold undisputed cellar position in the conference, finished the season with a 13-28 loss to the Tulsa Hur ricane, and the poorest record it has had in many a record, 2-8. A&M is also in second place with three wins and two losses. Thurs day’s battle with the Steers may determine whether or not the Ca dets Will remain in that position. The Mustang's, a favorite which maded in the homestretch, are tied in league play with Texas Christ ian and Rice for the No. 4 spot. Smith Leads Among the individual leaders, A&M’s Bob Smith is still tops in scoring with 84 points and leads Battalion SPORTS MON., NOV. 27, 1950 Page 3 the individual rushers with 1,225 yards in, 178 .trips., Buriosh took over the leadership on total offense. Kyle Rote of the Ponies is sec ond in scoring with 72 points fol lowed by - TU’s Byron Townsend, 66; Baylor’s Buddy Parker, 54; TGU’s Bobby Floyd, 54; A&M’s Yale Lary, Andy Hillhouse, Billy Tidwell, and Rice’s Bill Howton and George Glauser, all 36 points; and the Aggies Darrow Hooper with 34 points—all PATs. This week’s schedule for the conference includes the Lwo grudge battles of the Southwest. A&M Meets TU in their, .annual Turkey Day fray at Memorial Stadium in Austin Thursday, and Saturday, SMU meets TCU and Baylor clashes with Rice. Baylor 3, SMU 0 A long, lazy field goal by Henry Dickerson with only three minutes and thirty-seven seconds left gave Baylor a 3-0 victory over South ern Methodist and probably knock ed the Methodists, out of a bowl invitation. It had befTn heralded as a scor ing duel between two great pass ing teams but each bungled all sorts of chances for touchdowns and it remained for Dickerson to do the job the great Larry Isbell of the Bears and Kyle Rote of the Methodists couldn’t put across. The field goal came from the SMU 20-yard line as the crowd of 50,000 sat hushed for the only time of the day. With it went SMU’s hopes of getting a bid to either the Orange or Sugar Bowl games. SMU Consoled -The Methodists had the consola tion only of setting a new inter collegiate record for pass com pletions. SMU ran its completions to .148 for the season and that was one more than Mississippi made in 1947 in hanging up the record. Student Co-op Agent tor MIDWAY CLEANERS Can help you with your cleaning needs. North Gate College GRUMBACHER ART SUPPLIES m We Now Feature the Work! m m Famous GRUMBACHER Line of Artist Material BRUSHES, OILS, PASTELS ART PAPER, ETC. Tiic Sherwin-Williams Co. Hi _M Ph. 2-1967 Four times each team threaten ed. SMU got to Baylor’s three- yard line twice, losing the first chance because of a penalty and failing on the second when Rote fumbled. Baylor once got to the SMU four but Buddy Parker fumbled over the goal line in a try at tackle and Val Joe Walker recovered for a touchback. Another time Baylor reached the seven but could get no further and it was here that the Bears called on Dickerson for the field goal that won the game. Baylor smashed to 220 on the ground and passed for 94. Southern Methodist got 80 rushing and 171 in the air. Passes completed ... Passes intercepted Fumbles lost Baylor SMU . 19 18 .220 80 . 94 171 . 21 27 . 9 15 . 1 0 . 5 6 . 42.5 37.8 . 3 1 . 83 60 The faking and wizard ball-hand ling plus some of the greatest kicking the Cotton Bowl has seen made Isbell stand out for Baylor. He averaged 42.3 on his punting. Buddy Parker, lithe little Baylor halfback, was the leading ground- gainer with 67 yards on 15 carries. Rote picked u-p 30 yards rushing and caught five passes for 51 yards. He also kicked for an aver age of 27.8. Fred Benners, the SMU passer, completed 14 of 24 throws for 160 yards. Isbell connected on nine of 21 for 94 yards. Raggedly Played Game It was a raggedly played game as the 143 yards in penalties will attest. The Methodists seemed quite adept at messing themselves up each time they got a drive un der way. Baylor wasn’t much bet ter. Both teams threatened twice in the first half. Southern Methodist took the opening kickoff and with Rote leading the charge smashed to the Baylor 11 where, on fourth down, Rote passed to. Pat Knight on the Bear two but the Methodist full back dropped the ball. Baylor threatened seriously early in the first period, running and passing, with Isbell as the engineer, to the Methodist four on a 70-yard surge. But here Parker rammed into right tackle, the ball squirted out of his hands and bounded across the goal line where Walker of Southern Methodist re covered for a touchback. Baylor Goes Again -■‘Baylor again endangered the SMU goal shortly afterward on a 60-yard drive with Dick Parma and Jim Jefferey doing the running and Isbell the throwing. But from the Southern Methodist 14, Isbell went back to pass, was hit hard and dropped the ball and Neal Franklin recovered on the 32 for SMU. Then the Methodists put on a drive that probably missed a touch down because of a penalty. Ben ners came into the game for the first time and started passing Bay lor dizzy, Rote caught three of the throws in a surge that carried to the Bear 12. Here, on fourth down, Bill Sullivan faked a field goal try and Benton Musslewhite dash ed to the Baylor two for a first down. But Southern Methodist was penalized 15 for holding and a fourth down pass by Benners fail ed. TCU 26, Rice 14 Jumping Jack Floyd made hurd les out of would be tacklers while scoring four touchdowns as Texas Christian defeated favored Rice, 26 to 14. Floyd teamed with Quarterback Gilbert Bartosh, both sophomores, to give lightning thrusts to a TCU attack that otherwise was hamper ed by Rice recoveries of six out of eight Frog fumbles. After Rice twice had taken first leads, Floyd kept the Fort Worth team even with touchdown runs of 34 to 63 yards. In the second half he plunged over from the three to climax a 73-yard drive and then took an 18 yard pass from Bar tosh. The TCU defense kept Rice deep in its own territory throughout the third period and permitted the Owls to cross midfield only twice in the final quarter, each time to the Frog 27. Howton Scores First End Bill Howton put Rice into a first quarter lead, scoring on an ehd around play from the 12 yard line. Safety Rex Proctor gave the Owls their brief 14-7 lead by in tercepting a Bartosh pass and re turning it 84 yards. Homer Ludiker kicked the first two TCU extra points but missed both second half attempts. Billy Wright converted twice for Rice. Rushing yardage Passing yardage Passes completed . Passes intercepted Punts Fumbles lost Yards penalized Rice TCU 15 23 131 379 76 169 . 18 '20 . 9 13 . 2 3 . 6 i 43 38 . 1 6 50 65 Bartosh, who figured prominent ly in three of the TCU touchdown drives, finished the game with a ■total net gain of 343 yards, rush ing and passing. He ground out 174 yards while carrying the ball 20 times and completed 13 of 20 posses for 169 yards. Floyd got 155 yards on 16 car ries. His 63-yard scamper came on the first play after the kickoff following Rice’s second touchdown. He took a handoff from Bartosh, skirted left end and at the Rice Bryant’s Visit To TU, Insignificant Austin, Tex., Nov. 27—OP)—There is no significance in Coach Paul Bryant of Kentucky coming here Thursday other than to scout the Texas football team, Athletic Di rector D. X. Bible of Texas said yesterday. Commenting on recurring imports that Bryant 'was to confer with officials on the Texas coaching job, vacated by Blair Cherry’s re tirement, Bible reiterated: “There isn’t any significance at all connected with his coming down here so far as the Texas coaching job is concerned. He is coming down here to scout Texas because Kentucky is the first game on our schedule next year.” Shaves you better • Costs you PROVE IT YOURSELF AT OUR EXPENS Make this test. Don’t risk a penny. Buy a packag ) • Use as many as you wish. Then if you don t agree they re your best blade buy... more shaves, better shaves, at lowest cost... return the dispenser to us for refund of full purchase price. (If your dealer can’t supply you, send us his name and address. Order type blades wanted and enclose pay* ment. We’ll reimburse dealer.) Pal Blade Co., Inc., 43 West 57th St., New York 19, N. Y. Fit your injector razor perfectly (D Ground I'k® a barberi ,aior Usual Bled* —ground like a jackknife 0#£, TWO- • ■ OW BLADE TV HEW" Edge PAL single or double edge in regular packing, 4 for 104 SLAVING ' id 35 yard line he jumped over a Rice player moving in for a tackle and then raced untouched down the sidelines. He returned to his hurdling tac tics in the third period as TCU broke the 14-14 halftime deadlock with a 73-yard touchdown drive in 10 plays. Bartosh began the drive by fumbling on the 27, but back John Morton recovered for a 24-yard gain. Bartosh then tossed a 16- yard pass to end Wilson G’eorge and another for 11 yards to end Teddy Vaught on the Rice 22. Bartosh got seven yards before Floyd, hurdling players on two carries, moved to a first down on the eight. Another jump carried him to the three from where he scored on a plunge. TCU threats were stopped by fumbles on the Owl 6 and 15 yard lines. A pass interception stopped another on the Rice 12 and the Owls took over on downs on the 3 to halt another Frog attack. -Beat TU Townsend Spark In TU Machine Byron Townsend, Texas Uni versity’s No. 1 back, will be the big spark in the Longhorns’ ground gaining machine in the Annual Turkey Day football game between a Harry Stiteler and a Blair Cherry coached eleven. Last year, Townsend caused the Cadets misery and woe, scoring three touchdowns in TU’s greatest win over the Cadets since 1898, the score be ing 42-14. The 190-pound fullback also gained 138 yards in 23 carries to lead the ground gainers. Aggie partisans are wonder ing if he can do it again. TOYS FROM SHAFFER’S A VERY SELECT GROUP OF TOYS FOR ALL AGES .-v-v —from $1.25— Educational and Mechanical Complete Selection of— CHILDREN’S RECORDS in all speeds —form 25c— SHAFFER’S BOOK STORE Across from the P.O. N. Gate CHEVROLET FOR 1951! It’s going to be a smash hit here. That’s for certain. 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