The Thresher (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 16, Ed. 1 Friday, January 15, 1932 Page: 4 of 4
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PAGE FOUR
vac lies iiiaiiii
FRIDAY, JANUARY IS, UH
Jake Hess And Mates Upset^ Dope, Spilling Aggies 40-29
LI TTLE
JOE....
By JOE ARTHUR KOCUREK
Threther Spirts Editor
SOUTHWKST BASKETBAIX
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■ I !,,,'■ ill:-:; ir U'l'rtlU* decorators
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l;.ng Was apt
mini i,r-„,i!i- ,,,iioni'.'u:/ tl,e papyri:. and
;,,, ii:,"..V,..it ,i\r ■■'•<',in;g tlvng-V liiw
utl ;< '.v; :i :i • :.||!| p<, relied up on top
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. • : p|,iv in •thi* rmifi'i'i'Miv.
i.'i mi, ".he i-c-l5;it iilntih'
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oi. Jfijtfj lii.'.ss,JiJs
1Hiy|;:>o, r lit 1 t'llfpi of
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i A icM,' i\m«- i - no reason
1 ■' .1.0 l ' l ho- Owli' cilliiuit knock
: i ,r "IV;-..! I nf;;h.i,ii;,nSi .>iid Southern
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H«!>«i.'-ii Real Lender
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. i.;l iiij oe w i> <inH eoiitijiut.liy ad-
hat ,,i,e ilo .jmil vvlipn.
. .hi hirln.-iii'e that Rice litis .1
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i1 Hi ,t:.i.'.ii!]y ,iiicIptlt'S' I; pupijifj
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, • I , yviifiinii-i" a^j If -spurt for
|t 1 lo oi'i);<■') n;ei11 ■ 'i.itnl Biee
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or thfiy : 1 'i/iilii he .'ii. iniieh interi'Sled
thi iiiip'oo.i'i:iia>'iit as the bWf IIh(M
n l lie i , .iiTiiriyeil i;i> that the lair
woyltj h.'iv a : niniTi: iieeess tn this
111to 1 ile oxeiei■ o at, the phy..ieal etlu-
11 Km', j4i> - h iiI ti.,iitiui>2 and other moil '
hi'mi;' at, lliei
At piosetil the phy^-ieal i-iluention '
,: -t have to pay $13.50 a nitjht for j
a- • wirrimmi? pool they fire using.:
Flock Fights To
Fell Favored
Farmer Five
Flashing a good offensive with a
very tight defense, Coach "Pug" Dau-
; gherity's Rice Owls surprised even
their staunehest supporters with a
rousing 40-29 triumph over John Reid's !
Texas Aggies in the conference opener !
Saturday night at the City auditorium.
Tlie Rice slimes lost a preliminary tilt
to the Second Presbyterian five by a
19-12 count.
Led by a fighting captain, Jake Hess,
who was good for 16 points, the Rice
team was never headed from the time !
Virgil Dixon arched a beauty in for
the first score of the game, Only once
die' flu.: Aggies threaten. With tibout
five minutes of play gone the Rod and
White drew up on even terms at 5-nil.
lull when the Hess-Dixuii combine
started functioning again the result was
hardly in doubt.
lime's, forwards accounted for 2U
points; and thereby bangs the tale of
Mime splendid floor work. Hess broke
away from bis guard three times to
dribble down the court for crip shots.
Dixon made two or three lung shots
lor counters, but, as a whole, he work-
ed with Hess like a machine.
Many more nights like that and we
could have a couple ,of pools. A swinj-
linng pool would pay for itself in a
short time. Organizalions could be
.'cased the pool for their activities in
the suniiner. llouhion does not have a
single large, beautiful pool to its
credit. Will Rice Institute save the
day-
Did You Know That:
•Ut'.'e has a new tennis quoen'' Yes.
IT' Katbryn I'V arson We predicted
thai a while back, but didn't expect ,
her to come through this soon?~.-Very
lew colleges can boast of two such
feminine: aces a., Gladys Schill and the i
new champ"
Joe iiisby. former Rice freshman last
year, is a forward oil the Aggie fish
team'. He made half of his team's:
point.': aijainst the Bryan high school-
five last week',' fifteen to be exact''—
Kelly Scott, varsity hall back, spends
most, of his time at the Field house'.'---1
ll he's not., pressing dip college latin- j
drv lie ii; woiking out on the track un-
der Coneli Hjertberg'' The Marshall
boy is showing real prospects on the
cinders"
Dr, Harry. Seilitt and J. T. McCants,
ot Rico, and W. E. Motzonthin of Texas
university have been appointed as a
committee to find means of collecting
Sfi.OOO:' -Don't'get excitedll!-' Tlint sum
is the quota the Southwest conference
'a to raise for the 1932 Olympics?-—
Hobeit "F.Suli" Scliulzo is going to give
Rice .uiotlier classy half-rnilor?—"Ger-
many will tc'fim up with Ray Harbour
in suppiyir,^ Rice with the best sot of
HHO-vard men in the conference'.'--In-
OUR FUTURE FOEMEN FACE US
HI &
ipiit
Fred Raatz To Head
Civil Engineers
Frod Raatz of Houston was eloctod
president of the Rice A. S. C. E. (civil
engineers) at their meeting Tuesday
evening at Autry house. Others
elected were Clayton Meadows, vicc
president, and Bob Nahors, secretary-
treasurer. Retiring officers are Mar-
vin Urbantke, N. A- Hicks, and Paul
Edmundson.
Baptist ■■■
March, and April are the beat.
"Our organization is important, and
herein we compare well with others.
But individuals are greater. We need
Dr. Angell. Let us work for a greater
spirit and grow from the inside out,"
she went on to say.
For averages for the month of De-
cember, Temple Rice class took the
engraved ribbon with the following
report: 1V/4 enrolled; 8% present; 7
on time; 2la Bibles; 0% giving; 2%
piepared lessons; 7% attending preach-
ing; 1% visitors; \a new member; av-
erage of 49 per cent.
(Continued from page 1)
Twenty Rice Baptist students are
tithers, and sixty-two have pledged
financial support.
Announcement of 0 meeting of the
publicity committee to plan for Dr.
Angell's appearance was made ny
Corralyn Lcavell, chairman. "Student |
Night" news was handled during the
holidays.
"We havo 210 Baptist students at-
tending Rice," stilted Bill Coleman, B.
S. U. president. "Ten points are re-
quired to attain the "first magnitude" |
goal, we are lacking in two of those.
We must enroll 75 per cent in one type ;
of unit organization. Church budget
requirements, for which we have 43
members to go, call for 50 per cent of
the students to sign pledges."
Must Maintain Record
Mildred Wheeler added this: "To se-
cure this honor, we must maintain the
record for a period of three consecu-
tive months. Seemingly February.
Freund-
(Continued from page 1)
Spread his light with joy" . . .
"The somewhat more robust fare of:
Voss, Leopold Stolberg, Buerger was
recited in such a fashion that no one i
had reason to complain. But all of a
sudden it was as if the reader had
been seized at tiis head by the sa;.ui
of mockery, and I could imagine I saw
the Wild Huntsman in person before
me. He read poems which were not in
the Almnnach at all, hexameters, iam- j
bics, doggerel verses, everything pell
moll . . . What did his fancy not in-
vent on the spot. Now and then so
splendid ideas occurred to him that
the authors to whom he ascribed them,
ought to have thanked God on their
knees if these had come to them at their
desks. As soon as the joke was no-
Fountain Pen Hospital—Pens and
pencils repaired—AH makes—<501 Kress
Bidg.
ticed, a general spirit of mirth spread.
To all the persona present he dealt
some hit Including myself in my role
of Maecenas which I had always con-
sidered my duty towards young schol-
ars, poets, and artists. As much as he
praised it on the one hand, he did not
forget to deal me a little thrust lor
sometimes making a mistake in the
choice of the individuals on whom I
bestowed by support. Therefore in a
little fable composed in doggerel at
the spur of the moment he compared
me to a good-natured and unmeasur-
ably patient turkey who possesses and
hatches numberless eggs of his own as
well as such of foreign origin, but to
whom it happens and who does not take
it amiss that occasionally an egg of
chalk is laid below him instead of a
real one.
"This is either Goethe or the devil!"
I exclaimed to Wleland who was sit-
ting opposite to me.
"Both," was Wieland's reply, "to-
day he is once more obsessed by the
devil; he is like a restless foal then,
striking out in front and behind, and
people are well advised not to come
too near him."
KYSER'S CAFE
4318 SO. MAIN
1 Meat j
2 Vegetables
Salad-Drink 1
25c
I Thank You,
M. M. (Jack) Kyser
* ^ J _ A ^ ^
Rhea • Williams. S M. IJ. above, will
endeavor to make the Owls' life mis-
erable Monday night at Dallas. We
wish him luck you know what kind
Below. Captain "Doc" Sumner of the
Tt C. U Homed Frogs. We'll see him
Saturday. 1
cid#ntally what a two-mile team Har-
bour, Schulze, Gayhor Pearson and
Henry Harbordt will make this year?—
We just can't see any other school in
that event?—
The quartet run in the Thresher last
week was the 1-mile relay team?—
The distance of 440-yards is to be run
by each man and not by the whole
team jis was inferred?—Say Harbour
objected so strenuously to the idea that
he was supposed to run anything un-
der the quarter-mile, that we hasten
to make the correction?
Fountain Pen Hospital—Our desk
sets line i.s complete—all makes—601
Kress Bldg.
BOOKS
Humphrey ( linker
95c
Vicar of Wakefield
90e
Caleb Williams
$2.50
Sense and Sensibility
50c
1
Lamar Book Store
1021 MAIN -ST.
1
|
X?.
r"V'
as
(
® ft
if'
,3'YvX
■ ,. .: >* 0 Jf.'o ~
0 10 *Jk4 H'i'v - -
"W\ - *
'% .Vsv "W'zt
■'* A-.T- <1>", \ Q
F-mT ^ fry
Duke I nivernity
SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
Durham, N. C.
Applications for admission to
the first and third year ihedical
classes entering October 1. 1932,
should be sent as soon as possi-
ble and will he considered in the
order of receipt. The entrance
qualifications are intelligence,
character, two years of college
work and the requirements for
Ifrade A medical schools. Cata-
logues and application forms may
fltc obtained from the Dean.
, FOP THAT ,
GONE" FEELING./
AT IO-<2 & 4 O'CLOCK
"A STORE YOU'LL LIKE"
Before catching a ride out to RICE - - - stop in—get a new supply
of soap, and tooth paste—anything.' We'll have it!!
WATCH FOR OUR EXTRA BARGAIN PLAN
LAMAR DRUG CO.
MAIN AT LAMAR
Club life, restnu-
rnnt. free swimming
pool. gym. library.
spacious lounges.
roof garden, separate
floors for men and
women.
Six minutes fro m
Penn or Grand Cen
tral Stations
GEORGE TURKEL
Manager
KENMORF HALL
l-Ta I • • 2 VI St N e W Yi ilk ( it y
Just t U5 t </t L <2_ X i I 1/5 t O 11 Av'V
GRartifi < y
m
1
Coot., 19311. Th#
American Tobsccw Co.
HE BOBIED UP SMItlNO
Bob Montgomery hoi ba«n an Iron
worker, dock hand, railroad
mechanic and a booed-at extra
in Hollywood ... He zoomed to
the top In nolte-reelt became the
gall were cuh-raiy over hit grin
, . . And they'll go completely
tooey when they tea Him in hit
lateit M-O-M, "PRIVATE LIVES"
. . , He't ituck to IUCKIES fftete
lait 7 yean ,. . Not a buffalo
nickel was paid for hit ttatement
... He gave it |yit for a pleatont
"Thom^ou."
There are
no better cigarettes"
"I have always used LUCKIES—as far as I am concerned
there are no better cigarettes—congratulations also on
your improved Cellophane wrapper with that little tab
that opens your package so easily."
"It's toasted"
Your Throat Profctlon*-oqqln t Irritation—against counh
And Moiatun-Proof Cellophane Keeps that "TmiM" Flavor iw Frth
TUNE IN ON LUCKY STRIKE—60 modern minute* with (he icorld'i finest dance orchestras and Walter Winchell, whose gossip
of today becomes the news of tomorrow, every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday evening over N. B. C. networks.
*>1
4 o
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The Thresher (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 16, Ed. 1 Friday, January 15, 1932, newspaper, January 15, 1932; Houston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth230221/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rice University Woodson Research Center.