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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 12, 1952)
Tuesday, February 12, 1952 THE BATTALION Page 3 ises ’Ian utions, and (3) would China although the have repeatedly said ; not participating in r ar. nd ieated South Korea luded but have given of possible modifiea- 11 propose, usly with Tuesday's ‘Voice of the United nand” broadcast from the stage now is set 3 truce” if the Com- “stalling progress." ast said: H Sacrifices s accepted the U.N.C, entially a three-point,! or a subsequent gov- solution to the Ko- icy would have to sacrifices. . . the Reds have . . with the obvious ig to drag a variety into future Korean e wording as it was mist original would ; to inviting discus-' !' scores of problems at the present time, it they had any di- n the Korean war. rently, is exactly nunists want—a fur- ity to becloud the settlement with oth- ilch the Communists vorld arc at logger-' ) SHOWING 3S. PRESENT Tij Danny | lliomasj HELVIUE SHAVEISON and JACK WSEi curtiz :csr#! 1 MOWING ^ Walt Kelly e emwv&vx ?EsiMNsiry1 3I2M CbUMim By A1 Capp Aggies Bothered with 4tli Period Fade; Bow To Razor back’s Fast Break, 49-40 A&M-Ark. Box Score FG FT PF TP By BOB SELLECK Battalion Sports Editor A bothersome fourth quarter fade plus a 15-point sec ond half scoring spree by Arkansas’ Walter Kerns cost the Aggies their fifth straight setback in Deware Field House last night, 49-40. The Cadets started fast jumping to a 11-6 lead at the end of the first period. They held on in the second quarter despite tlje fact they were outscored 10 to 7. Arkansas caught fire in the third and fourth quarter scoring 16 and 17 points; with Kearns starting the fireworks with a one-handed set shot to break a 26-26 tie. From then it was the Hogs all the way, even applying a stall in the final minutes that continued to net them points. Six Quick-Ones It was little Tyron Lewis that broke lose to add six quick points to the Arkansas’ 44-38 lead with les^ than five minutes to go. In the first half the Cadets had complete control from the free throw circle. Don Binford flipped in four straight, while Davis add ed four more before the string was broken. Binford finished the night’s ef forts by completing six out of sev en charity tosses plus four field goals for 14 points. Davis Scores 19 Big Buddy Davis tied for high- scoring honors with the Hogs’ Kearn at 19 each. Davis also toss ed in nine gift shots missiing six others. This time the Cadets were ahead in re-bounds, 31-28, and came out on top in the ffee-throw depart ment, 16-15, but still couldn’t score enough’ to finish on top. The Razorbacks hit 17 field goals to 12 for the Cadets. The fouling was even except you could n’t tell whether the referee had a travelling. mania or if it was the two quintets. A&M (40) Miksch, f .... Binford, f .... Farmer, f .... Houser, f .... Davis, c Addison, c .... Walker, g .... Heft, g Carpenter, g Darling, g Williams, g Totals 12 16 29 40 Arkansas (49) Adams, f Smith, f Lambert, f .... FG FT PF TP .... 1 .... 1 .... 0 Elkins, f 3 „Kcarns, c 7 Lewis, g 4 Sagely, g 1 Totals 17 15 27 49 12 3 4 A&M 11 7 11 11 Arkansas 6 10 16 17 Free throws missed. A&M Miksch, Binford, Davis 6, Houser, Walker 2. Arkansas: Sagely. Elkins, Kearns 6, Handball Club Meets Feb. 13 A&M students who desire to be come Jtembers of the A&M hand ball club are to meet in the physi cal education office, DeWare Field 'House, Wednesday, Feb. 13 at 5 p. m. announces Herman Segrest, sponsor. For Your Yalentine DIAMOND RINGS ■fizd/uwz, /fcadmy tf'tmeu- CAMERON Ring Also $150 and 250 Wedding Ring 12.50 SEE OUR AWARD-WINNING' KEEPSAKE COLLECTION, NOW AT, SANKEY PARK JEWELER 111 N. Main Bryan “T” Club Meets Today There will be a meeting of the “T” Association tonight at 8 p.m. in the C. E. Lecture Room according to Jack Simp son, president of the organiza tion. JUNIORS PICTURE SCHEDULES FOR AGGIELAND ’52 January 16-17 A-B-C January 18-19 D-E-F January 21-22 G-H-I-J-K January 23-24 L - M - N February 4-5 O - P - Q - R February 6-7 S - T - U - V February 8-9 W - X - Y - Z February 11-12 MAKE-UPS All First Sergeants and staff members will wear garrison hats. All juniors will wear Number 1 uniforms with GREEN ties. Please try to conform to this schedule so we can get the 1952 AGGIELAND out by next September. Non-Military Football Champs TU 9 Frogs Set For Possible Title Bout Referee Hesitates After watching the continuous resitation cm part of the referee prior to his decision, it could have beqn a disease of the referee. Binford, Woody Walker, and Ed die Houser turned in a fine defen sive game for the Aggies in the earlier stages of the game. Walker was one of the steadier men on the court through out the whole battle. Don Heft, Cadet guard tossed in a 35-foot field goal with about five minutes left to go in the game to throw a brief light on the Ag gies chances. It made the score 44-40. The last hope was stopped cold when the Hogs went into a deep freeze to finish the game. Lewis was second high scorer fd?’ the Hogs with nine points, six coming in’ the fading minutes of the game. LeRoy Miksch, Heft, Davis, and Binford helped the Cadets control the backboards over the taller Razorbacks until Miksch was forc ed to the sidelines by way of the foul route. Houser also fouled out for the Cadets. Only Arkansas’ Marvin Adams was forced from the game, but Lambert, Elkins, Kearns, Lewis, and Sagely all ended the game with four each. Saturday night, the Aggies will play host to the SMU Mustangs in DeWare Field House. Puryear was the winner of the 1951-52 Non- and Harold Davis, Military football title. Members of the team Keith Slocombe, Ch included: (front row) Kenk Askew, Neil Bryan, Thompson, and Bob Walter Davenport, Bill Davis, Richard Pigett, k row) L. P, Delvisio, Telson, Phil Tenis, Dan Upperclassmen horseshoe champs, B Atii'.etics have won their second clear title for, the 1951-52 intramural season. Included on the t . .u are: (front) Miller Barber, Ralph Ellis, Jerry j lick, and Ted Mohle. (back row) Ji m Dishm' Malcolm Douglas, and Sam Rowland. ' an ’ BASED ON AP REPORT The Southwest Conference bas ketball chase reaches an excite ment peak next Saturday night in Fort Worth when the leading Uni versity of Texas Longhorns take on second-place TCU in the battle that may decide the conference championship. The Longhorns edged into first place in the league standings Sat in day night with a 57-49 victory over'SMU, but had to come from behind a 26-25 deficit to do it. The same night Baylor was up- . . ng A&M, 52-45, and Rice was spinning a surprise with a 59-55 victory over Arkansas. Texas Christian played only one game last week, a 52-41 win over the Aggies,.while all other quints except Rice were playing two. Hogs Tie For Fourth Arkansas bounced out of the cellar into a two way tie for fourth place with a win over the Aggies 49-40 in College Station last night. This leaves Rice and Baylor on the bottom. Baylor plays Texas Tuesday night While Rice is play ing TCU. Wins by Texas and the Frogs will set up a thriller-diller for Fort Worth fans Saturday night. A Rice-Baylor game in Houston Friday night may decide the last place team for the season. Although he made only eight points in the lone Frog game of the week, center George McLeod managed to bang onto scoring hon ors. He leads the season’s scoring for the Southwest with 314 points to 280 for Baylor’s Ralph Johnson. Aggie center Buddy Davis took over temporary lead in the con ference with 118 points followed by Walter Kearns with 111 points. Both lads scored 19 counters in the A&M-Hog battle last night. SWC Standings Season Standings Team— W L Pet. Pts. Opp. TCU 15 3 .833 1089 885 Texas 14 5 .737 1060 945 S MU 9 9 .500 893 931 Arkansas 8 11 .421 954 1022 Rlce 7 12 .368 1060 1121 4 & M 6 12 .333 812 871 Conference Standings Team— W L Pet. Pts. Opp. Texas 6 1 .857 372 322 TCU 5 1 .833 339 270 SMU 4 3 .571 336 327 A&M 3 4 .429 309 317 Baylor 2 5 .286 329 395 Rice 2 5 .286 341 381 Arkansas 2 5 .286 354 362 This Week’s Schedule Tuesday—Baylor vs. Texas at Waco, Rice vs. Texas Christian at Fort Worth. Friday—Baylor vs. Rice at Houston. Saturday— Southern Methodist vs. A&M at College Station, Tex as vs. Texas Christian at Austin. Leading Scorers (Season) Player— FG FT TP McLeod, TCU 119 76 314 Johnson, Baylor 107 66 280 Davis, A&M 107 59 276 Dowies, Texas 86 82 254 Leading Scorers (Conference) Player— FG FT TP Davis, A&M 42 34 118 Kearns, Ark 42 27 111 McLeod, TCU 40 28 108 Johnson, Baylor 38 31 107 Dowies, Texas 38 26 102 Tennis Opens March 15 March 15 A&M’s All-Sports Day, will be the 1952 debut of Coach D. M. Dowell’s tennis team. The netters first match will be with the University of Houston Cougars. use the New" MICROTOMIC -the Absolutely Uniform DRAWING PENCIL ©Absolute uniformity means drawings without "weak spots;’-clean, legible detail. Famous for smooth, long-wearing leads. Easily distin guished by bull's-eye degree stamping on sides of pencil. At your campus store! mac MARKS RED. U.5. RAT. ORE, TAKE A TIP FROM ME . . . Have Your Clothes Taken To . . . AGGIE CLEANERS North Gate , • - ne -tV'DQ And ttets Ao \ BeHapfy- fio lucky! LUCKIES TASTE BETTER! 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