1% XUm ©A«fALIOM AGS DROP TWO; TEXAS TRACKMEN TO NATIONAL MEET SWIMMERS CLEAN UP AT GALVESTON MEN DUE FOR TRIP Wendt and Mills Hurl for Ags. 3-1 AND 5-2 HERE AND THERE We hope no one doubts the fact that this college seriously needs an all-time baseball Coach. ❖ :|c The Intra-mural Department will hold its annual swimming meet next Saturday. The events will be: 50 yard free style. 50 yard breast stroke. 50 yard back stroke. 100 fard free stroke. Fancy diving. There will be three dives required and one optional. The required dives are: front, jacknife and back. :Js The swimming team has received offers to place them for the summer. It is very unlikely that they will ac cept. FINAL CONFERENCE STANDING P. V/. L. Pet. Texas 20 16 4 .800 Baylor .750 A. & M 15 9 6 .600 T. C. U 20 8 12 .400 Rice .350 S. M. U 19 3 16 .156 RESULTS OF LAST GAMES Texas 3-5; Aggies 1-2 Texas 11-13; Rice 10-2 Baylor 7-8; Rice 0-1 T. C. U. 19-4; S. M. U. 3-0 INTRAiURALS COMPANY H—BATTERY D TIE FOR INTRAMURAL TRACK CHAMPIONSHIP Battery D tied Company H, win ner in ’28, for high honors in the an nual Intramural track and field meet staged last week on Kyle Field. Com pany H led all the organizations un til the last event was turned in and Battery D managed to find enough points to equal the 26 that the In fantrymen had piled up. Troop C came third with 22 points and was (Continued on Page 11) Need Larger Pool For Training SWIMMERS SPLASH TO WIN Texas Aggie 100 yard relay swim ming team cut four seconds off the National Y. M. C. A. record Saturday night in an exhibition swim staged in the Houston Y. M. C. A. pool. The team, Suggs, Cox, Sproule and Homa- son, covered the distance in 47:5. The old record was 51:2. Sunday the Cadets again copped first honors in the annual Gulf Coast swimming championships held annual ly at Galveston, bringing back to Ag- gieland a handsome 12 inch silver lov ing cup for their pains. This trophy is to be the permanent possession of the swimming team. This is the sec ond time in three years that A. & M. has placed first in this meet. The Aggies accomplished the deed by winning 42 out of a possible 63 points. Herman Cox, coach, placed second in the 50-yard dash with N. C. Starr third. Curtis Everts and A. A. Sproule finished in the order named in the 100-yard affair, while Sproule was first and Everts second in the 220-yard race. The 100-yard race was covered in 56:5, a new Gulf Coast record. Everts also emerged first in the half mile swim, besting the pride of Galveston, Leroy Colombo in this event. Dan Humason followed Evert’s ex ample and set a new Gulf Coast rec ord in the 100 yard back stroke race, covering the distance in 60:8. Carl Clardy, a former Aggie swimmer but now with a Galveston surf club, plac ed second. R. C. Suggs finished first in the breast stroke, Humason placing second. N. C. Starr and R. C. Rucker took first and second respectively in the fancy diving class. This is the fifth swimming meet that the Aggie team has entered in the past three years, and it has yet to taste defeat. Saturday night Everts swam in a meet as a member of the Houston Y. M. C. A. team, wanning both the 100 and 220 yard dashes. Council to Act With the conference championship safely stowed away, four members of Coach Anderson’s champion team are seeking other worlds to conquer. Thompson, Farmer, Slocomb, and Flos^d are working our orally in prep aration for the National Intercolle giate meet, to be held in Chicago early in June. If the Athletic coun- cill will allow them to make the long- journey, it would not be surprising to see these men make a remarkable showing, if w r e compare their best performances with those turned in at the meet last year. In 1928, only three men in the country beat Slocomb’s time of 23.6 in the low hurdles; and two of these have finished their collegiate com petition, leaving only Cooper of Mi chigan, who has made 23.5, to re turn this year. His time is only one- tenth second better than Slocomb’s, and Slocomb made his mark after- running the highs. Judging from past performances, the slim sopho more has an excellent chance of plac ing high in his event. The javelin throw was won last year with a heave of 216 feet, 7 in ches, and only three of the six men placing went over 200 feet. Floyd made a throw of 204 feet, 4 1-2 inches in the conference meet, and this mark would have placed him third las't year. However, he has been able to do his best under strong competition, and it is quite possi ble that he might better his mark at Chicago. Although his time is not as good as that turned in at the National meet last year, Thompson would have an excellent chance to place. Brunson of Rice placed third last year, and Thompson took his mea sure at the Conference meet this year. Thompson paced the half mile in 2:00.2 on a muddy track, and with a stiff wind blowing. He is agreat fighter, and should be able to make a good showing. Farmer set a new record in the (Continued on Page 11) The Aggies dropped two hard fought battles to the Longhorns on Monday and Tuesday, the first game by a 3-1 score, and the second, 5-2. This gives Texas the Conference championship, as they hold a half game lead over Baylor. The young Aggie team acquitted themselves nobly in the series, as “Uncle Billy” Disch has a great ball club. Prospects for next year are ex ceedingly bright, as only Austin Bray will graduate, leaving almost the entire team intact; and they will be ably re-enforced by several mem bers of this year’s “Fish” squad. First Game Pete Wendt and Johnny Railton hooked up in a hurlers’ duel in the first tilt, and each pitched a wonder ful game; and in ordinary circum stances, either performance would have been good enough to win. But the breaks were on the side of the slim southpaw from Texas, and Pete lost a heart-breaking contest. The Aggies fought a hard battle all the way, and but for a questionable de cision in the ninth round, might have won, when the umps declared Har ris out when he attempted to score on Pete’s hit through second base. Incidentally, Pete was doing much to win his own game, as he collected two hits during the afternoon. Brooks Conover demonstrated that lefthand ers hold no terror for him, by get ting two licks. Pampell made a sen sational play in the fifth when he grabbed a hard hit grounder, tagged, who was on base, and then threw to first. Besides his great pitching and timely hitting, Wendt fielded his position perfectly, getting seven as sists. For the Longhorns, Higgins and Hopkins starred to help Railton. Higgins got three of the seven Tex as hits, while the Longhorn captain played his position flawlessly, rob bing several Aggies of seeming hits. RECREATION - 4-: 3 O - 5:30