Lessons Learned On Football Field Help Later—Hines By FRANK N. MANITZAS Battalion Sports Editor “Discipline, loyalty, stick-to-it-ism, and victory are the important things which you learn on a football field which prepare you for your future days,” Rev. John H. Hines said to A&M’s football players, the cross country team and guests Saturday night in Sbisa during the Annual Winter Sports ban-1 quet. “What you do on a football field,” the Bishop-Coadjutor of the Episcopal Diocese of Texas, continued, “is more important to my son’s will as to what he wants to be then some of the things that I myself may tell him. He looks for someone like you who can lead him to fame immortality similar to that which you have gained on the gridiron. From Manitzas Y 011 he will find the leadership and the path to follow. Show him the right way.” Rev. Hines commended the Aggie spirit saying that it was “a quality of immortality.”—And on athletic achievement, the closing point of his speech, he added, “the essence of athletic achievement is as you will it.” We believe that Rev. Hines was one of the best speakers we have ever heard and the best which the banquet has pro vided for many a year. His speech could be repeated to all Exes, and even the coaches themselves can take to heart the phrase “the actions performed by you are under constant surveillance of my son and others like him. Show him the right way.” Awards Produce Pleasant Feelings The presentation of the awards at the banquet produced a pleas ant feeling among the football team members present and others who Were in similar positions 11 years ago when A&M was the top team in the nation. Along with the giving of the “T”, bars, sweaters, and blankets, another present was given to the lettemen and a new award was named. The gifts to the lettermen included a spur clip which was pre sented by Chase Holland, Sr., owner of The House of Holland, a jewel ry company in San Angelo. He. himself is not an A&M graduate, but Mr. Holland did remem ber that although this team was not No. 1 in the nation as in 1940 when he presented the Sugar Bowl champs with spur clips, he was glad to present the Presidential Cup Champions with a similar gift. The spur clip was filled with a golden resemblance of the cup and the word “Aggies” written across it in silver. We take our hats off to Mr. Holland for not forgetting. Dallas Club Starts New Award From Dallas, another award was started. Along with the regular Lipscomb-Colson Awards for the co- captains and the most valuable player and the Bert Plaff award for the best blocker, the former which has been presented for the past 20 years, the Dallas A&M Former Students are providing an award for each graduating footballer from Dallas. The award is a gold medal which bears the individual’s name and the inscription which in part states “for outstanding athletic achieve ment.” Perhaps in the coming years similar awards will grow to give not only the football players but other Aggies competing in intercolleg iate sports added recognition for work well done. Ted Mohie Cage Award Started In basketball, a step is being made in that direction with the presentation of the Ted Mohie award to the outstanding basketball player. The award is being offered by Ted Mohie of Houston, class of 1921. These awards aid the spirit of the individual players on the learns and provide greater goals for the participants, and, in the long run, greater athletic teams will be the results. . SPORTalk From Here and There . . . Action in 1st SWC Victory A&M, Baylor 'Gagers Clash Tuesday at Waco Jewell McDowell (10) grabs a rebound and sinks same during the Aggies 51-39 shellacking of the Rice Owls last Thursday night. McDowell leads the Cadet scorers with 150 points. Photo by Battalion Chle£ Photographer Sam Moiinary Buddy Davis (16) and John DeWitt (11) of the Aggies seem to have everything pretty well under control on this rebound which occurred during the Rice-A&M game. Davis is second to Mc Dowell among the Aggie scorers, having tallied 147 points. By FRANK N. MANITZAS Battalion Sports Editor A&M’s rapidly improving bas ketball team will meet Baylor, the defending co-champion of the Southwest Conference, tomorrow night in Waco. / The Cadets hold the conference lead over the Bears, having won their opening game over the Rice Owls, 51-39, while the Bruins have been beaten twice, 59-58 by Texas and 66-37 by Southern Methodist. Against the Longhorns, the Green and Gold lost a heartbreak- er as the game went into two over times before the Steers were able to sink the winning, marginal field goal. When the Aggies top scorer, Jewell McDowell takes to the hard- Season Standings W L Pet. Pts Op. Navasota Wins 5th Annual Kiwanis Meet woods, it may prove to be a scoring dual between him and B a y 1 o r’s Ralph Johnson, who leads All-Con ference McDowell by one point in scoring, 151-150. May Be 4th Straight Should the Farmers win this game it will be their fourth straight victory, and their seventh of the season. Coach John Floyd had the team in top shape for the Owls, having- worked the cagers during the Christmas holidays. The Cadet quintet received only a three day Christmas vacation, but it seems that the hard work exerted by both the coach and the players will pay off in the long run. Although Floyd doesn’t think that the Aggies are yet “out of the woods,” he believes that no team will ever again beat the Ma- roon and White with a score sim- Bradley Leads Unbeaten Quintets With 14 Wins An unlucky number of 13 teams remain among the undefeated bas ketball quintets in the nation . . . the unbeaten list includes Bradley, Oklahoma A&M, Wyoming, Mur ray (Ky) State, Duquesne, Long Island Univer. Hamline, Wash ington, Columbia, Princeton, St. BonaVenture, Washington and Jef ferson, and Providence . . . Brad ley holds the longest list of wins —14 . . . Babe Didrikson Zaharias^ the greatest female athlete of the first half of the 20th century, has been named female-athlete-of-the-year . . . Babe polled 315 votes ... in second place was glamorous Gussie “Lace Panties” Moran, the tennis star, with 126 votes . . . two votes below Gussy Was Marlene arid Alice Ag Fencers Win 4 of 6 Places Fencers from A&M, Rice, and Galveston engaged in a novice sabre and epee meet here Saturday in the Memor ial Student Center, and the Cadets finished first taking 4 of 6 matches. The epee competition ended in a tie between A&M’s John Gottlob Rice’s Horace 'Platt. The tie was broken’ with Flatt finally edging Gottlob, 3-2. Dick Jones, a former Aggie, placed third while Mally Slathers and Aden Magee, both of A&M, also gave good accounts of them selves with the latter reaching the finals. Sabre was won by G'oueher of Rice with Ted Fields of the Ma roon and White taking second. There was also a tie for third among Magee and Aggie Joe Mayes and Jones, with Mayes plac ing thU'd, having the least number of hits against him. Magee was fourth. Fields showed lots of promise while fencing for the first time iu competition and won seven bouts while losing-only two. Mayes, Ma gee, and Jones each won live and lost three. Bauer, tho golfing sisters who vis ited A&M in early December dur ing the opening of the golf course. Babe, by the way, won the $3,000 Ponte Vedra Club Open, being held at Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla . . . in second place was Marlene . . . The NCAA will hold its big meeting in Dallas next week . . . the big hub-bub which is being stai-ted, as it always is, includes mainly the sanity code . . . the Southwest Conference wants the NCAA to let the different confer ences settle out the problem con cerning an athletes tuition et al in its own area . . . the trouble seems to be that although convertibles are okay in California, the sportsters in Michigan prefer cars with tops . . .they may have a point . . . the NCAA itself, however, is not exact ly on the square ... so says Mack Green, director of athletics at Wil- berforce State College—an all-Neg ro school ... he claims the NCAA is discriminating against him and othci-s like him by holding the meeting in Dallas where Negroes cannot be lodged with whites by Texas laws , . . Greene continued, “some of the Negro members have been told they will have to ride the freight elevator to get to the NCAA, meeting's” ... it seems as if the NCAA should take care of its meetings before it starts wor rying about the sanity code, which may soon be called the insanity code. . . Bye now. ■ Beat Baylor—— By CHUCK NEIGHBORS The fifth annual College Station Kiwanis Club Invita tional Basketball Tournament ended Saturday evening at the A&M Consolidated High School gymnasium with Navasota winning its second tournament in four years. Teams. invited to participate in the tournament were from the East-Central Texas region and in cluded Navasota, winner of the tourney; Woodville, the number two team; Rockdale, third place winner; Hempstead, the consola tion prize winner; besides these four teams, Waller, Cypress-Fair- banks, Somerville and A&M Con solidated also participated. Picked by the coaches of the respective teams, the All-Tourna ment Team included: Robert Mc- Minn of Somerville, Rocky Tyler of Cypress-Fairbanks, John Rei- mer of Navasota, Bobby Williams of Consolidated, and Hugh Pitts of Wptodyille. „. , Cypreas-EauLanks, who didn’t do much in the way of winning in this contest, had the highest scor ing player in Rocky Tyler. Tyler scored 21 points against Woodville and 28 in the Consolidated game. Cypress-Fairbanks was the de fending champion but was de feated in the three games in which they played. In the play-offs, Navasota beat Woodville to come in first. Wood ville, by dint of their loss to Navasota was second; and Rock dale beat Somerville to take third place. Hempstead slaughtered a tired Consolidated team 35-19 for the consolation prize. One game was played by each team on Friday night with the re mainder of the games played off Saturday. The College Station Kiwanis Club Invitational Tournament was be- bun in 1946, to further good rela tions between Class B teams in this, region. Eight SWC Football Stars Lose Further Eligibility Eight members of the Southwest Conference lost their eligibility to compete further in conference athletics after playing in the Senior Bowl tilt Saturday. The South finally won the game, 19-18, although the North squad which was composed cf stars from the Southwest and other surround ing regions, outplayed the winners considerably. Kyle Rote of Southern Methodist had a good and bad day as he starred with his running, yet failed to kick any of three chances for points after touchdowns. He did however, score once for the Rebels; Vanderbilt’s Rangy End Bucky Curtis was the stand out in the game as he led the winners to gain a 20 per cent greater portion of the gate receipts. In leading the victors, Curtis, caught two touchdown passes, and set up the score With another long Aerial. Members of the conference school to lose their eligibility by participation in the game include Rote of SMU, John Champion of Southern Methodist, Ray Cook of Baylor, Ben Proctor and Kenneth Jackson of .Texas, Brown of Arkansas, Buddy Rogers of Arkansas, and Frank Boydstun of Baylor. ilar to that registered by Duquesne, 73-36, at the earlier part of the season. The conference, as usual, is moving along in a topsy-turvy man ner. The favorite, Arkansas, was (See ARKANSAS, Page 4) Team T C U 8 4 .667 700 607 SMU 8 5 .615 736 675 A&M 6 6 .500 560 597 Texas 4 7 .462 661 662' Arkansas 5 7 .417 530 547 Rice 5 7 .417 750 739 Baylor 5 8 .385 686 683 Last Week’s Results Rice 58, Georgia Tech 51. Texas, 59, Baylor 58 TCU 57, SMU 46 A&M 51, Rice 39 SMU 66, Baylor 37 TCU 42, Arkansas 31 Texas 56, Rice 54 Leading Scorers (Season) Player FG FT TP McDermott, Rice, c ....72 41 185 Dowies, TU, g 62 44 168 McCleod, TCU, c 60 46 166 Brown, SMU, f 57 45 159 Gerhardt, Rice, f 57 41 155 Johnson, Baylor, g ....61 29 151 McDowell, A&M, g ....61 28 150 Walt Davis, A&M, c 60 27 147 Mullins, Rice, g 50 38 138 J. D. White, Rice, g 50 36 136 Box Score For A&M McDowell, g Davis, c Martin, f DeWiltt, f Miksch, f Heft, g Farmer, f Walker, g Cax’penter, g Williams, f-c Garret, f Sandlin, g LAST TIMES TODAY “SIERRA” Tuesday & Wednesday Top Gager to Gain Mohie Award A Ted Mohie award has been established at A&M for an out standing basketball player, D. W. 'Williams, .chairman of the A&M Athletic Council, has announced. The award in 1951 will be a gift certificate which may be used for the purchase of a watch, gun, camera or article of the recipient’s choice costing approximately $50, The player will be picked upon his value in winning basketball teams as an individual and team defensive player. Character, spirit, hustle, leadership, scholarship and cooperation with other team mem bers and with the coaching staff 61 60 28 31 150 60 59 27 55 147 24 29 19 36 67 21 22 14 25 56 22 23 12 28 56 13 13 6 17 32 9 16 10 27 28 3 6 3 16 9 0 3 2 10 2 1 2 1 9 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 212 234 122 255 550 This Week’s Schedule Monday—SMU vs Arkansas at Dallas. Tuesday—Rice vs TCU at Fort Worth; A&M vs. Baylor at Waco, Friday—SMU vs Texas at Aus tin. Saturday—Rice vs Arkansas at Little Rock; A&M vs TCU at Col lege Station. J! Queen will also largely determine the winner. j The. award is being offered by Ted Mohie of Houston, class of 1921 and a certified public ac countant. Mohie also gives an award to an outstanding account ant student and another to a non accountant business major. Battalion SPORTS TODAY & TUESDAY FIRST RUN —Features Start—• 1:25 - 3:08 - 4:51 - 6:34 8:17 - 10:00 sms isms NEWS — CARTOON How About Some Bowling? ONE OF THE BEST SPORTS FOR RECREATION AND EXERCISE! The Y.M.C.A. Alleys Four Lanes Certified by American Bowling Congress Reservations for Special Clubs or Parties CALL 4-7584 GG Boxers Meet Tonight al 7:15 The Golden Gloves boxers of this area will have a meeting tonight at 7:30 in Room 301 of Goodwin Hall, Harold Williams, coach of the College Station area team announced early to day. Two divisions, novice and open, will make up the tourna ment. Awards will be given to the winner of each division with the open champion being award ed an expense paid trip to Fort Worth for the finals. LADIES! Looks like Big Chief Shootin’- the-Bull has somebody’s scalp. From the way he looks, he might have gone on the warpath and . 4 scalped his wife because she was §• V£ spending too much wampum on groceries. SHE COULD HAVE SAVED HER HAIR if she had consulted The Bat talion before going grocery shopping. With, the wampum she saved on Batt-advertised bargains she could have bought her man a shirt to go with that pair of pants he’s wearing, too. Well, maybe out there on the reservation she didn’t have the opportunity to read the Battalion. But you, Mrs. College Station Housewife, do. The Bat talion reaches you Thursday afternoon in plenty of time for you to plan your grocery shopping trips to save the most on car expenses as well as groceries. You don’t have to shop around in each store—you can have your purchases planned before you leave the house. And, you can get your SHOPPING done EARLY Friday morning, leaving the rest of the weekend for leisure time to spend with your family. Your tribe will be happier, too. You’ll be n more pleasant companion if you’re rested and relaxed. That’s the way you’ll be if you shop th^ Happy Hunting Ground of Bat talion grocery ads. Make It Your HABIT to Shop For GROCERIES I N Battalion Grocery Ads Save You . ■ • MONEY * trouble WORRY The Battalion