The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 05, 1950, Image 3

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Jolly
St. Nick
S a y s
Get Your (jifts
at
PAltm-ASTIN
HARDWARE COMPANY
Bryan
JOE FAULK ’32
. . . owns and operates Lack’s Associate Store at 217
South Main Street in Bryan, handling all sorts of
Auto Parts, Accessories, Crosley Selvador Refrig
erators, Freezers and Ranges.
Joe also has one of the finest repair garages in the
Bryan-College Station Area.
LACK’S ASSOCIATE STORE
217 So. Main Bryan Ph. 2-1669 .
The Battalion
QUARTERBACK CLUB
‘Champ-Maker’
Coaches ’Dogs
Presidential Cup Game Will
Open Aggie-Bulldog Series
Wallace Butts, whose Georgia Bulldogs battle high-
scoring Texas A&M December 9 in the Presidential Cup
classic at College Park, Md., is truly the “Bowl Master.”
The Presidential Cup game will be the seventh time this
45-year-old Cracker, a native of Milledgeville, Ga., and
former star athlete at Mercer University in Macon, Ga.,
has landed Georgia in a post-season classic.
Here’s Butts’ Bowl record:
1942 Orange Bowl — Georgia 40 Texas Christian 26
1943 Rose Bowl — Georgia 9 U.C.L.A. 0
1946 Oil Bowl — Georgia 20 Tulsa 6
1947 Sugar Bowl — Georgia 20 North Carolina 10
1948 Gator Bowl — Georgia 20 Maryland 20
1949 Orange Bowl — Georgia 28 Texas 41
The Presidential Cup game will be a curtain-raiser for
a home-and-home series previously arranged between the
Bulldogs and Aggies. Georgia meets Texas A&M at Dallas
(in the Cotton bowl) October 3, 1953, and in Athens’ Sanford
stadium October 2, 1954.
Wallace Butts, since he took over the coaching reins at
Georgia in 1939, has compiled the best championship record
in the conference, turning out SEC championship teams in
1942-46-48, not to mention seven teams to win post-season
game invitations.
Butts was the passing pacesetter in the Southeastern
Conference. His Bulldogs are the only SEC team ever to
complete more than 100 passes in a season more than once:
122 in 1942, 112 in 1946 and 107 in 1947.
His most famous proteges were Frank Sinkwich, All-
America tailback (Georgia used single wing then) in 1941-
42; Charles Trippi, All-America left half in 1946 (Butts
switched to T-formation in 1944); John Rauch, All-America
T-quarterback in 1948, and Joe Geri, all-SEC left half in
1948.
In 1942 Sinkwich set a total offense record of 2,187
yards which stood until this season. Trippi still holds the
SEC scoring record for three varsity seasons: 186 points.
Rauch twice gained over 1,000 yards passing: 1,352 in 1947
and 1,307 in 1948.
Trademarks of Butts’ teams are superb conditioning
(the Bulldogs don’t sit down during timeouts), pulverizing
blocking and tackling, and tremendous will-to-win.
The team Butts will send against Texas A&M in the
President’s Cup game owns the finest defensive mark of
any team he has coached at Georgia.
Back in 1941 Butts’ Bulldogs allowed 10 foes only 59
points and went on to wallop Texas Christian in the Orange
Bowl. This year’s hard-tackling crew has given up only 58
points in 10 games during the toughest schedule in Georgia
football history. Only Tennessee, which has given up 57
points in 10 games, has a better record in the SEC. It is
the best defensive record at Georgia since the 1921 Bulldogs
allowed 10 foes only 31 points.
Although he does not play on Georgia’s defensive team,
perhaps the Bulldogs’ most valuable defensive player is
senior punting specialist Pat Field of Republic, Pa., recently
voted the SEC’s greatest punter. Field is both a great
punter for distance and for accuracy booting out of bounds.
Coach Butts has gone on record calling this year’s club
“probably the hardest tackling team” he has coached.
Quarterback Club To Hold
Final Meeting of Season
The Battalion Quarterback Club will hold its last meeting of
the season tonight at 7:30 in the Assembly Hall. First and second
place winners in last week's score-guessing’ contest will be named.
First place winner will receive a pair of tickets to the Presidential
Cup Bowl game in Maryland, while the second place winner will,
get a Frank Medico Smoker’s Kit.
Rob Smith
Fullback
Bob Rates
Linebacker
CONGRATULATIONS
to the
Fighting Aggie Team
For a
GOOD SEASON
You’ll have a good season, too,
if you choose gift items for
your family at . . .
212 N. Main CLOTHIERS Bryan
MAKE HIM PROMISE . . .
to bring you HERE after a hard day in the
kitchen! Top off a wonderful meal with a
slice of our delicious pie and you will have
him promising from now on.
He’ll be glad to bring you . . . for our prices
are tailored for his pocketbook.
KELLEY’S RESTAURANT
210 S. Main Bryan
Music! Music! Music!
FOR THE BEST IN MUSICAL
INSTRUMENTS SEE
PETERS MUSIC CO.
RECONDITIONED PRACTICE PIANOS
Prices & terms to suit your
pocketbook.
NEW PIANOS
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS SHEET MUSIC
Estey — Gulbransen — Cable
Sohmer — Krakaver
Rent or Buy
BAND INSTRUMENTS
New & Used — Rent or Buy
Opposite Bryan Post Office
YOUR SENIOR RING . . .
Let Us Set a Diamond iiv the Shield of
Your Senior Ring
THREE SIZES OF- STONES — $35 — $45 — $55
CASH OR CREDIT—$10.00 DOWN—$5.00 MONTHLY
Not Flawed Stones
AGGIES ...
You’re Always Welcome
— SEE US TODAY —
POTT S JEWELRY STORE
Charlie Potts, ’45
102 N. Main Bryan
to
OLD,
exan
Bryan - College Station’s Most Modern Drive-Inn
Noted For:
• TENDER STEAKS • HAMBURGERS
• COLD BEVERAGES
JOIN THE BOYS FOR ALL
THE FUN AT ...
3L5e
r exan
Between Bryan & College Station on College Road
Aggies:
We Are With You
All The Way
“Your Friendly Ford Dealer’’
BRYAN MOTOR COMPANY
415 N. Main
Bryan
i
Give the tamily a treat and a wonderful day away
from the household chores and the kitchen—Bring
them here for a taste-tempting dinner. Delicious to
the taste—superbly served in pleasant surroundings.
Open — 11 a.m. - 2 p.m.
4:45 p.m. - 8 p.m.
HOTARD’S CAFETERIA
311 N. Main ' Bryan