Conference Baseball Season To Open Friday T.C.U. Will Win Second Place in Baseball According to Willard Ridings’ Publicity It may have been known all the time, but it is news to me to find T. C. U. taking what honors are left after Billy Disch’s Texas Longhorns finish their annual bus iness of winning the diamond flag. J. Willard Ridings, publicity shark of the Fort Worth school, is quot ed as saying just that. He says the Frogs will have a veteran squad and that is true, but flops are flops regardless of whether they are veterans or not. The Frogs will open their con ference season tomorrow against a weak team from S. M. U. Rifle Team Wins Eighth Corps Area Championship Over Oklahoma A. & M. C. A. Lewis, W. E. Lewis, Bert Burns, Stanley Krogstad, and W. T. Guy got together for the Wil liam Randolph Hearst trophy match which is the same as the Corps Area matches and took first place with a 938 over Oklahoma A. & M. which was second with 931. Arizona was third, New Mex ico A. & M. was fourth and New Mexico Military Institute was fifth. Awards will be given to the three top teams. The Aggies have been second in this match for the past few years, but this time they whipped out and grabbed top honors. The national champion will be selected in these matches from the winners of all corps areas. The win ning team having the highest score will be placed at the top. A funny thing is the fact that the high school teams always have a much higher score than the se nior college teams and we have found out just why this is. The matches are fired by mail “Sears Roebuck style”, and tb! scores are certified by an officer or instructor. The high-school lads fire all their targets from a prone position and thus run up large scores. The instructor certifies them and there they are. It is said that all the high schools do it and they must con tinue to do it to have a chance with schools that do it anyway. In other words this high-school shooting is a big laugh and so are the instructors that certify to a plain and simple lie. The sports calendar shows that the Aggies play Rice in a couple of baseball games Friday and Sat urday, the tennis team meets Wayne University here Friday af ternoon, the track team goes to Austin to run Texas Saturday and the golf team meets someone here Monday. The freshman baseball team is due to play this week if the ground is dry enough. Survey Shows That Medical Profs Go By 336 Different Titles Long known for their two-bit words and ominous sounding phras es, the medical professors of in stitutions of higher learning have come in for a bit of ribbing be cause of them. Western Reserve University’s Dr. Frederick C. Waite made a special survey recently and found that 55 U. S. medical schools have devised 336 different kinds of titl es for their 2418 professors. Here are a couple of stumpers from his list: “professor of cardio- vascularrenal diseases” and “pro fessor of otOrniolaryngology.” Of the 435 departments of engi neering in U. S. colleges, 75 per cent do not require theses for bach elor degrees. “SHOES THAT FIT” FOR MEN Genuine Friedman-Shelby shoes are made over the finest fitting- casts for men, by careful workmen to make them fit and look good—and they’ll wear too, because they’re genuine all leather. $2.98 (A) . Walk on air in this new perforated cork sole, a new sports shoe for slacks and dress, in light tan. $4.98 (B) . A genuine Friedman- Shelby all leather in antique finish brown or black. Also in wing-tip style. $2.98 (C) . A sport shoe—in tan calf and white buck. Just the shoe for sport or dress. AA to D. $4.98 $4.98 LEWIS SHOE STORE SHOES THAT FIT 105 N. Main Next to Waldrop’s Aggies Meet Owls On Kyle Field To Open League Play Coach Marty Karow’s baseball team will open its conference sea son here Friday afternoon at 3:30 when they meet the Rice Owls from Houston. The Owls lost two and won one to the Cadets last season, but that one win put the Aggies out of the running for the Conference flag. These same two teams will meet again Saturday afternoon with the game called for 2:30. The Owls will not be at full strength as Placido Gamos, Frank ie Carswell and Pepper, three of their stars, are still tied up with basketball. Coach Cecil Griggs has been playing almost every male student at the Institute in an effort to find nine men who can play top- notch ball. In one tilt he used almost thirty men in an effort to find a combination that would work. The Owls have lost games to Grand Prize, a team which the Karowmen split a two-game play. A. & M. has veterans at almost every position. Pugh is new at first base, but he is a letterman brought in from the outfield. At second base Jack Lindsey and Mar land Jeffrey, two letterman, still are dividing time. “Red” Bal- low at short is a new man, brought in to fill the shoes of Chubby No len, but it looks like the little man can hold down the position in good shape. Bob Stone is playing his last year at the hot corner and he can fill the bill with the best of them. A new face in the outfield is John Scoggins, but it looks like he may be the leading hitter of the team when June rolls around. Captain Dave Alsobrook is a fixture in center and he is the top center fielder in the league. Jack Cooper, conference batting champ in 1938, is in right field. In “Red” Kirkpatrick and Jack Doran, the cadets have the class of the conference behind the plate. The pitching staff of veterans Walter Bass, Roy Peden and Ralph Lindsey is bolstered by Lefty Bumpers and Charlie Stevenson, two boys who should win lots of ball games. In games to date the cadets have split with Grand Prize, won from Randolph and lost two to Beaumont. Just who Karow will put on the hill is a guess, but he will prob ably start Bass Friday and Stev enson Saturday. Rice may start one team Fri day and have an entirely differ ent one Saturday. INTRAMURAL HIGHLIGHTS HUB JOHNSON A week’s vacation should have been enough but it seems as though many outfits took another day. As a result more forfeits and double forfeits were rendered than actual games played. Something new seems to be un der way for an Engineer soft- ball team. Gunter Koetter is planning on leading his A Com pany Engineers against a team from a Houston softball league. The plans are to play the game in Bryan some night soon. This was tried by Jack Fugate’s Aggie Cleaners this summer when they traveled south to play a church team in Houston. Tonight the semi-finals in both classes of boxing come off with 26 good bouts for the bill. Jacobs, 159 champ, will meet some of the toughest blows yet this year as he defends his title against Lippard . . . Howard, the Boxing Club president, will face an eager and sly Castleberry al so in the 159 class . . . Kerr, who has been wrestling and boxing “A Good Haircut” ASK ABOUT OUR SPECIAL SCALP TREATMENT Y. M .C. A. Barber Shop BATTALIONi) THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1940 PAGE 5 Cadets of “West Point of the Air” Vie with Grey-clad Corps at U.S.M.A. Close-up view of one of the platoons of Flying Cadets passing in review during a recent military ceremony held at Randolph Field, Texas, the “West Point of the Air” and home of the Army Air Corps Primary Flying School. In addition to being taught to fly a plane, each Flying Cadet must also learn the rudiments of close order drill. Commanded by Cadet officers chosen from the upper classmen at Randolph Field, these future pilots of Uncle Sam’s planes compare favorably, on the parade ground, with their grey-clad brothers of the United States Military Academy at West Point, N. Y. New classes of Flying Cadets begin their training at Randolph Field every six weeks. While in training these picked young Ameri cans between the ages of 20 and 27 receive $75 per month, uniforms, board and lodging and other services. A. & M. Rifle Team Wins Hearst Trophy At Eighth Corps Area R.O.T.C. Match The A. & M. rifle team won the Eighth Corps Area National R. O. T. C. Rifle Competition, the William Randolph Hearst Trophy for 1940. The team riot only fired the highest team score in the match, but also the second highest indi vidual score was fired by a mem ber of the Aggie squad. The number one Aggie team, three teams being entered, won the first place, with the number 2 and 3 teams placing seventeenth and eighteenth respectively, in a field of twenty-three teams. The colleges which entered teams in the match were these: Texas A. & M., Oklahoma A. & M., University of Arizona, New Mexi co A. & M., New Mexico Military Institute, John Tarleton Agricul tural College, Colorado School of Mines, and Texas Technological College. The Aggie team’s win ning score was 938; highest indi vidual score was 191. The William Randolph Hearst match is held each year in the Eighth Corps Area. The trophy in intramurals for the last four years faces Golden in the 129 classic with Riordan and Pendle ton battling it out for the sec ond spot ... In the heavyweight class Joeris takes on Blessing, the only fighter of the class who has actually fought and won a fight this year (he defeated Russell), and Smith goes up against the heavy wrestler Carson . . . Davis and Florence and Bownds and Mc- Larty fight it out in the 149 class, and next to the 159 division, these should be the best of the evening . . . For places on the 179 branch, Ramage tangles with Smith and Reeves goes up against Holzheauser . . . Newton and Harvey throw them in the 139 with Kielman and Lowry in the second . . . Casey goes to fight and not bat this time as he takes on Taylor, and Hernan fights Blankenship in the 169 classics . .. already in Class B, Grigsby and Cain are standing by waiting for the finals as they were the only two entered in this weight. A close-out in horseshoes was the height of the program Tues day afternoon and yesterday many of those games scheduled were cancelled due to the swimming meet. A Engineers defeated L Infantry 3 to 0 with Nalley, Val entino, Fuqua, King, Prejean, and Koetter throwing the curved shoes for the castle boys. Other games were H Infantry’s forfeit to Machine Gun Cavalry, M Infanry and 2nd Combat Train’s double forfeit, and B Signal Corps 2 to 1 win over D Cavalry. is usually in the form of a plaque with a service rifle and other shooting equipment in bas relief around its outer edges. These trophies won by Aggie rifle teams in these meets add greatly to the military prestige of A. & M. and form an important part of the school’s military history. The members of the winning Aggie team are: Charles A. Lewis, William E. Lewis Jr., Stanley F. Krogstad, Bert H. Burns, and William T. Guy. New Uniform Blouse Now Being Displayed A uniform blouse, cut to the newly authorized pattern, is now on display for the cadets in the window of J. B. Lauterstein’s Mil itary Supplies Store at the North Gate. The new regulation concerning the tailoring of the service coat was issued by Col. George F. Moore, Commandant, a few days before the holidays and this is the first coat made according to the new specifications for the corps to see. The pattern for the new coat calls for a bi-swing back, and the model on display has a piece of silk-webbing across the back of the shoulders to allow further action. The purpose of the new design is to make the coat more comfort able as well as improve its appear ance. The Commandant has ruled that old style blouses may either be worn until no longer serviceable, or be altered to follow the new specifications. Dallas Utility Firm Interviewing Seniors J. B. Norvell, assistant secre tary in charge of personnel for the Dallas Power and Light Com pany, and Mr. Davis, another com pany representative, have been on the campus for the past few days interviewing senior students in electrical engineering, mechcanical engineering, and accounting. The interviews were arranged under the supervision of Lucian Morgan, head of the placement bureau. The work of the placement bu reau in arranging such interviews between students and prospective employers is only a small part of the work of the bureau. Mr. Mor gan has now gathered into folders the personal leaflets of those se niors who had them made, and the placement bureau is now prepar ing to send' these departmentalized folders to companies in Texas which need to employ men. More than 400 of the graduating seniors had personal leaflets printed. Oklahoma Aggies Down Fellow Texas Aggies With Smashing Tennis Defeat With the gravel tennis courts too wet to play on, the Texas Ag gies and Oklahoma Aggies moved over to the concrete ones yesterday and the visitors plastered a shut out against Coach Manning Smith’s Texas netters. The Oklahoma Ags won all four singles and the two doubles matches. The Texans were at a loss on the faster concrete and the Okla homans took advantage of their faster game. In the singles Counts trimmed Mitchell 6-2, 6-1; Karlovich beat Givens 6-love, 6-2; Malayhy turn ed back Giles 6 love; 6 love; and Williams beat Campbell 6-3, 6-1. In the doubles, Counts and Wil liams teamed to beat Mitchell and Givens, 6-2, 6-4. In the number two doubles, Karlovich and Malay hy paired to trim Adams and Krez- dorn, 6-1, 6 love. THANKSGIVING TO BE NOVEMBER 21, SAYS PREXY’S SECRETARY Illinois Wesleyan University’s football manager believes in tak ing no chances—so he recently wired President Roosevelt: “I and hundreds of other foot ball managers over the country would like to know the exact date for Thanksgiving in 1940.” A presidential secretary wired back: “The date will be November 21, 1940.” MR. H. P. SMITH OF THE Texas Agricultural Experiment Station will lecture on “Mechani cal “Cotton Pickers” in the as sembly room of the Textile Engi neering Building on Thursday, March 28 at 10 o’clock. Mr. Smith is regarded as an authority on this subject and everyone inter ested in this field is invited to at tend. Expert Radio Repair STUDENT CO-OP Phone No. 139 North Gate The Texas Cadets will come back Friday afternoon and try their luck against the strong Way ne University team which is play ing a series through this section. Wayne was undefeated in compe tition in 1939. Coach Manning Smith is hoping that the weather will permit the use of the gravel courts for this match as well as all the remaining ones. E. B. “ERNIE” MEYNARD, SE- nior engineering student, was re cently featured in the Southern Pacific Bulletin, the official or gan of the Texas and Louisiana Lines of the S. P. Along with his picture was given a short sketch of his achievements at A. & M., which include being on the list of “Who’s Who Among Students in American Universities and Col leges”. His Stars of the Radio » WALTER K CUMMINS Corps Dance SAT. 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