The Collegian (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 14, Ed. 1, Friday, January 7, 1938 Page: 4 of 4
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-.
Roamm the Sideline
LIROY QARRITT
The Billies left taut Wednesday on
a long 1600 mile Journey that will take
them through Nacogdoches Com-
merce and Canyon. In Nacogdoches
they met the Stephen F. Austin
Teachers. The East Texas Teachers
furnished the opposition at Com-
merce. Coming home for only a few
hours the boys in the Blue and White
leave Monday for Canyon where they
are to clash with the "World's tallest"
Buffaloes at West Texas.
The next game In the home corral
will fall on January 15. By that' time
the Billies will have eight games be-
hind them. It would be mighty nice
if the boys could take the floor with
no worse record than when they left
Brownwood but it seems that such
is now impossible.
The boys on the trip arc Leo Eng-
lish L. M. Waters Nubbin Payne
Billy Stewart Raleigh Bratton Wil-
son Lewis George Allcorn and Hugh
TniBsell. Stewart Is the only letter-
man on the sauad. The boys will be
back in Brownwood next week end for
a game with the San Marcos Teach-
ers an added attraction to the Daniel
Baker invitation meeting for high
school basketballcrs.
Texas Christian University is hav
ing a little trouble keeping their pres-
ent wonder coach Leo "Dutch" Mey-
er. The wise mentor has been offered
better positions by a number of instl-
' tutlons. The purple and white officials
are arranging to pay Mr. Meyer a
higher salary. If the officials think
that they might lose "Dutch" it
might be well to place the sky as the
limit for the raise in salary because
If the "Froggles" want to hold their
position at the top of the rough and
tough Southwest Conference Meyer
is the man they want.
Marquette University is to take a
big dose of Texas football next year.
Matty Bell's Mustangs from South-
ern Methodist will meet the eleven in
the early part of the season. The
Mustangs with several prospective
sophomores will boast one of the
strongest teams in the loop. Likewise
the T. C. U. Frogs are expected to
show plenty of strength again and
they meet Marquette. The Red Raid-
ers from Texas Tech arc the third
Texas team to furnish opposition for
Marquette. Could that school have
selected a tougher trio against which
to pit their strength?
Guns roared loud at the Cotton
Bowl last Saturday as Coach Jimmic
Kltts' Rice Owls rolled up 28 points
to defeat the highly touted Buffaloes
from the University of Colorado
28-14.
Colorado rolled in 14 points In the
early minutes of the game ... the
first quarter to be exact . . and added
many gray hairs to the head of Kltts.
But with tremendous power plays
built around Ernie Lain the Rice ag-
gregation quickly ran up 28 points to
knot the score climb on top and
send the rough and tumble undefeat-
ed Colorado team home minus a few
adjectives.
Ernie Lain roundly outplayed the
Whiz of the Rocky Mountain confer-
ence Byron White. Yes White Is ail-
American but as his coach Bunny
Oakes stated it was just' his off day.
Presuming the coach is right you can
have the "Wlzzer" I'll still take
Ernie Lain. The Rice sophomore
averaged seven yards on his 28 line
plays tore the Colorado line to shreds
as he led his team to 23 first downs.
Passes burled by the young fellow
were unusually good and accurate
three of his hurls were good for
touchdowns. He carried the ball
through tackle for the fourth marker.
One sports writer in Dallas went as
far as to say that there were only two
real football players at the game
White and the ex-T. C. U. football
hero Sammy Baugh. Could that be
the reason that certain newspaper is
looking for a new sports writer or
should I say "A sports writer"?
Santa Clara again kept a New
Try Us for Prompt Courteous Service 24
Hours a Day for We Never Close.
Your Patronage Appreciated
KARL DERRICK CAFE
Texas Conference Members Will Begin Play
January 1 3; Hill Billies Are To Be Matched
With TWC in Daniel Baker Gymnasium
ABILENE Jan. 4 St Edwara-B
and Trinity University teams will
lash In Waxahachie Thursday night
of next week to send the Texas Con-
fcicncc basketball race off to a later
start than usual.
Members of the nine-school cir-
cuit' are docketed for 81 championship
games running through March 1. This
list docs not include the Intracity
series between McMurry and Abilene
Christian College dates for which are
yet to be fixed. The Abilene entries
will be among the latest starters.
Their openers will be with Howard
Payne near the end of January.
The schedule follows:
Jan. 13 St. Edward's vs. Trinity at
Waxahachie.
Jan. 14 15 St. Edward's vs. Austin
at Itasca.
Jan. 17 Trinity vs. Southwestern
tit Georgetown.
Jan. 18 Trinity vs. St. Edward's at
Austin; Austin College vs. T. W. C.
til Fort Worth.
Jan. 21 T. W. C. vs. Daniel Baker
at Biownwood; Southwestern vs. St.
ICdward's at Austin.
Jan. 22 T. W. C. vs. Howard Payne
at Brownwood.
Jan. 28 Trinity vs. Austin at Sher-
man; Howard Payne vs. A. C. C. at
Abilene.
Jan. 29 Howard Payno vs. Mc-
Murry at Abilene.
Jan. 31 McMurry vs. Daniel Baker
at Biownwood; Trinity vs. A. C. C.
at Abilene.
Feb. 1 McMurry vs. Hpward
Payne at Brownwood; Trinity vs. A.
C. C. at Abilene.
Feb. 3 Daniel Baker vs. Trinity at
Waxahachie.
Feb. 4 T. W. C. vs. St. Edward's
at Austin; McMurry vs. Southwestern
at Georgetown; Daniel Baker vs. Aus-
tin at Sherman; A. C. C. vs. Howard
Payne at Brownwood.
Year's resolution by toppling Louis-
iana State 6-0. It was the third
straight loss for L. S. U. in the annual
Sugar Bowl Classic. Last year Santa
Clara defeated them and in 1035 Tex-
as Christian won 3-2 a field goal by
the school's present freshman coach
Jack Roach.
Our editor did get one more good
smile before 1937 came to a conclu-
sion and a large number of other
students got the same thrill. The
place: the Coggin Auditorium. The
time: a few days before Christmas.
The plot: the tunc "Peruna" played
by a visiting band. The Climax: the
editor (and cvetynnc else) Is still
smiling when the event is mentioned.
What now? Farewell!
D. D. MoINROE & CO.
Realtors - Insurance
Loans
Telephone 173
PALACE
DRUG STORE
for
HOT DOGS AND
COFFEE
Come to
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II OS. Brady Ave.
Phone 1 423J
A PIGGLY WIGGLY STORE
121
Feb. 5 Daniel Baker vs. Austin at
Sherman; T. W. C. vs. St. Edward's
at Austin; McMurry vs Southwestern
at Georgetown.
Feb. 7 Daniel Baker vs. A. C. C.
at Abilene; Austin vs. Trinity at
Waxahachie; Howard Payne vs.
Southwestern at Georgetown.
Feb. 8 Daniel Baker vs. McMurry
at Abilene; Howard Payne vs. St. Ed-
ward's at Austin.
Feb. 9 St. Edward's vs. Howard
Payne at Austin; T. W. C. vs. Austin
College at Sherman.
Feb. 10 Trinity vs. Daniel Baker
at Brownwood.
Feb. 11 Southwestern vs. A. C. C.
at Abilene.
Feb. 12 Southwestern vs. A. C. C.
at Abilene; Daniel Baker vs. T. W. C.
at Fort Worth.
Feb. 14 15 St. Edward's vs. Daniel
Baker at Brownwood.
Feb. 16 Austin vs. Howard Payne
at Brownwood; St. Edward's vs Mc-
Murry at Abilene; Southwestern vs.
Daniel Baker at Georgetown.
Feb. 17 Austin vs. Howard Payne
at Brownwood; St. Edward's vs. Mc-
Murry at Abilene.
Feb. 18 T. W. C. vs. McMurry at
Abilene; Austin vs. A. C. C. at Abi-
lene. Feb. 19 T. W. C. vs. McMurry at
Abilene; Austin vs. A. C. C. at Abi-
lene; Southwestern vs. Trinity at
Waxahachie.
Feb. 21 A. C. C. vs. Daniel Baker
at Brownwood; Howard Payne vs.
T. W. C. at Fort Worth.
Feb. 22 Howard Payne vs. Trinity
at Waxahachie; St. Edward's vs.
Southwestern at Georgetown.
Feb. 23 Howard Payne vs. Trinity
at Waxahachie.
Feb. 24 Southwestern vs. Daniel
Baker at Brownwood.
Feb. 25 McMurry vs. Austin at
Sherman; A. C. C. vs. St. Edward's
at Austin; Southwestern vs. Howard
Payne at Brownwood.
Meres
more pleasure
fir'38...
a happier new year
. and more pleasure for the
thousands of new smokers who
are finding out about Chester-
field's milder better taste.
Mild ripe tobaccos and pure
cigarette paper are the best in-
gredients a cigarette can have
. . . these are the things that give you
more pleasure in Chesterfields
CdpTfishi I9M Immtt ft Mvm Tobacco
ANNUAL DANIEL SAKBR
(Continued from Page 1)
the third place winner. It will be the
Billies' first home game since the
Christmas holidays and will bo their
second home appearance of the cur-
rent season.
Favorites Numerous Now
Evant winner of the meet in 1938
and Brownwood high school who won
the contests four years ago have al-
ready sent in their entries for the
contest. No report has been received
from Crews Runnels county winner
of the meet last year. Loving runner-
up in the last tournament has not
been heard from at this time.
Evant and Brownwood are the fav-
orites among the teams already en-
tered. Both have won the meet In
former years and both are possessors
of strong teams every year. Brook-
smith is expected to give some of the
strong teams a lot of competition
during the course of the tourney.
Zephyr Is another team that Is iccelv-
ing glances of doubt from the favor-
ites. Tuscola will be something of a
dark-horse for contenders In this sec-
tion of the country and will receive
quite a bit of attention from all con-
cerned. Other squads have been show-
ing strength during the present sea-
son and until play actually gets
under way it will be difficult to pick
a winner though most of the side-
line coaches like the looks of Brown-
wood so far as present entries arc
concerned.
Coaches Gene Taylor and Tricky
Ward will have charge of a large
part of the work in connection with
the presentation of the meet. Officials
for the games have not been announc-
ed but will be presented before play
starts.
There are said to be only about
214000 Christians in Japan's 90000-
000 population.
Pumice Is a porous frothlike vol-
canic glass.
Feb. 26 McMurry vs. Austin at
Sherman; A. C. C. vs. St. Edward's
at Austin.
Feb. 28 March 1 McMurry vs.
Trinity at Waxahachie.
Co.
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NSB 'Living Theatre'
Project Is Receiving
Support of College
Colleges In twenty states have al-
ready accepted the invitation of Fed-
eral Theatre to cooperate in the exten-
sion of the Living Newspaper tech-
nique throughout the country it was
announced today by National Service
Bin call the play and production clear-
ing house of Federal Theatre at 1697
Broadway New Yotk City.
A series of bulletins Is now In prep-
aration which will be sent to all tho
colleges of the country outlining in
detail the principles of Living News-
paper which have given a new flex-
ibility X the American stage.
Initial reactions In the drama de-
partments of the colleges disclose an
exciting interest In this service of
Federal Theatre which has been hail-
ed by many Instructor as a signifi-
cant contribution to Anicilcan educa-
tion. One drama department head wrote
that the Living Newspupcr technique
which originated with Fudcial Thea-
tre offers the "most directly motivat-
ing and energizing stimulus to the
young playwright" yet developed In
this country. The opportunity for
collective work by research specialists
of the faculty In cooperation with
dtamatists from the student body
atti acted special comment and ap-
proval from the colleges.
It was only a week ago that the
National Service Bureau announced
its plan to cooperate with the colleges
In the creation of Living Newspaper
plays based on regional experience
and study. In addition to a scries of
bulletins on the technique of the
Living Newspaper the Federal Thca-
ttu also agreed to give production to
acceptable campus-wi Itten scripts by
Fcdcial Theatre units at the usual
Federal Theatre scale of royalties.
The National Service Bureau points
out that since the production of "Pow-
er" "Injunction Granted" and "Tilplc
A Plowed Under" Federal Thcatic
has been deluged by inquiries about
this technique. A play from that
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(chesterfield
.. you ff find MOVE PLEASURE
in Chesterfields
milder better taste
makes almost no demand for conven-
tional scenery It is often described
as a March of Time technique adapted
to the stage; a quick series of factual
blockouts paced by exciting music and
shaded by deft lighting with the ax
position spoken and amplified by an
unseen announcer. Sometimes the an
nounccr assumes the role of the an-
cient Greek choregus and engages la
parley with actors scattered in the
audience who serve as a chorus.
From Alfred University New York
Piofcssor C. Duryea Smith conveys
Ills unstinted approval of the Living
Newspaper program In the colleges.
"In my opinion" he writes "this offer
of professional production to college
students who create suitable Living
Newspaper scripts should provide the
most direct motivating and energising
stimulus to young Inexperienced play
wrights. This idea of the Federal
Theatre seems unique suitable to the
progtcsslvo cultural development of
democracy." And he adds In comment
on the fusion of playwritlng and
scholarly media and skills: "These are
factors close to the heart of expand-
ing university Ideals."
Sister Mary Regis dean of Mount
St. Clare Junior College Iowa Informs
the National Service Bureau: "We
have a group of Interested students
whose efforts I have engaged to spon-
sor." Miss Marion Leeper of Montana
Northern College has undertaken to
guide the completion of a Living
Newspaper play via the college dra-
matic organization an active extra-
curricular group.
m i
BAKER GIRLS ORGANIZE
(Continued from Page'l)
price of a theatre ticket.
Girls who have reported for the
(quad are Mildred Reed Dorothy Nell
Baker Evelyn McDanlel Elaine
Harms Evelyn Boler Gene Hardin
Gene Kenedy Ernestine Lovelace
Maebclle Fitzgerald Imogene Farris
Fletcher Perry Thelma Splvey and
Imogene Hall.
Captains of the team have not been
selected but officers of the organisa-
tion will be named at the next meet-
ing of the group. Other plans for the
future of the squad will be made at
that time.
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The Collegian (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 14, Ed. 1, Friday, January 7, 1938, newspaper, January 7, 1938; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth100164/m1/4/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Howard Payne University Library.