The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 18, 1940, Image 3

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    t.C.Jcep' OATES
BATTALION SPORTS EDITOR
You Can Wrap Up The Bunting And Send
It to Austin in Care of Billy Disch
You can wrap up the conference
baseball flag and mail it to Texas
right now if you like. The Aggies
were the only ones who appeared to
have anything to say in dispute of
taking it before the season started
and they have fallen by the way-
side in their last two times out to
put them out of the race. While
the Cadets have been dropping
games to inferior opponents, Tex
as has been playing “Hitler” and
their shock troops have gathered
in about three-quarters of a
hundred runs in the last week.
A. & M. still has a chance, but it
means that Texas will have to be
knocked over at least three times
and the Aggies have three games
with the Steers, so they will have
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to win all three of them which is
out of the question.
If A. & M. wins over the Steers
here Saturday it will take the help
of the entire student body and the
band in addition to the baseball
team. Several times we have seen
Texas blow up here when the racket
got to going in full sway.
Coach Karow said after the Rice
game that he didn’t mind being
beat by a better team, but to let
teams like Rice and T. C. U. do it,
was just too rough.
NEW INFORMATION FROM
HOUSTON YACHT CLUB
I have received some new dope
from the Houston Yacht Club in
regard to their races to be held
June 7 and 8. There will be about
four or five boys selected for the
races. There will be a small en
trance fee. The boys selected must
have had some experience in sail
ing. I would like to see some of
the boys who contacted me about
the races several days ago.
BEAUTIES
HIT TOWN!
tf you want to see some
I patterned shirts that are
real beauties . . . shirts
that are absolutely tops
in style . . . just drop in
today and see our swell
new collection of Arrow
shirts. $2 up.
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WIMBERLEY • STONE DANSBY
CLO£Kl£RS
BRYAN
J^ARROW^y
INTRAMURAL
HIGHLIGHTS
By Bob Myers
If s Do Or Die For Aggie Nine Saturday
**>ic:(c:i<>('**:|:**:f::|:4::i‘:is** ****** ******
Gridsters Present Autographed Football To Actress
With all of the diamond in oper
ation and plenty of sunshine, play
ground ball takes the lead in intra
mural sports. Competition Mon
day and Tuesday showed L Infan
try on the long end of ibu 13 to
5 score with C Field Artillery;
A Field Artillery in a 8 to 6 win
over 1st Corps Headquarters; A
Infantry winning from D Field Ar
tillery, 9 to 3; F Engineers over
2nd Combat Train Field Artillery
in a close 37 to 5 game, 3rd Com
bat Train on the heavy side of a
7 to 3 scrap with the Artillery
Band; Milner Hall over B Engineers
9 to 2; Infantry Band taking 1st
Headquarters Field Artillery 9 to
7, a 9 to 6 game for K Infantry
with E Field Artillery, 2nd Head
quarters Field Artillery over C
Infantry 7 to 4, and D Cavalry los
ing to D Engineers by four runs
in their 22 to 18 tilt.
A fast speedball game between
E Field Artillery and I Infantry
was the singleton for this issue
and ended in favor of the Artillery
team 9 to 2.
Ping-pong picked up this week
as sixteen teams showed up for
eight games. Half of the matches
ended with a score of 2 to 1 and
the other four came out 3 to 0„
In the first classification G Coast
Artillery won from A Cavalry,
Headquarters Signal Coi'ps took A
Engineers, B Coast Artillery top
ped C Engineers, and H Infantry
H ( >7
Gan Your Shirts Stand A Close-Up?
All shirts at a distance look more or less
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their trim, good-looking Arrow collars.
Arrows are precision cut, evenly stitched,
and shaped to fit the curve of your neck, with
the pattern on the collar points symmetrically
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No unsightly bunching or collar-curling has
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today, before your next date ... $2 up.
ARROW SHIRTS
A. & M. MUST WIN'
TO KEEP CHANCES
FOR FLAG ALIVE
Win by League-Leading
Texans Over Aggies Will
Sew Up Conference Race
It will be do or die for the Texas
Aggie baseball team when they
meet the league leading University
of Texas Longhorns here Saturday
afternoon at 2:30 o’clock.
The Cadets were leading the race
until they took to the road and
lost games to T. C. U. and Rice,
and the Steers went ahead by
scoring three-quarters of a century
of runs, almost as many as a cham
pionship team will score in a full
year.
Coach Karow’s Aggies are pla
gued with batting slumps, and un
less they begin to hammer the ball,
they will have to depend on out
standing hurling and a tight de
fense.
A victory for the Longhorns will
just about sew up the bunting for
them and eliminate the Aggies as
contenders.
Chax-lie Stevenson, Austin, soph
omore righthander, or Walter
Bass, Houston, junior letterman
righthander, will draw the pitching
assignment against Melvin Deut-
sch, ace of the Longhorn staff.
Texas has always had trouble in
beating the Cadets at College Sta
tion. Usually the stands, seating
5,000, are crammed with rabid,
yelling fans and the 210 piece
Aggie band, a combination that is
hard to beat when it gets warmed
up. It has been at home that the
Cadets have won their four games
with little trouble and the Steers
will have their work cut out for
them Saturday.
The Aggie lineup probably will
find Cecil Ballow, Stephenville, at
shortstop; Jack L. Lindsey, Kurten,
at second base; Bob Stone, Hol
land, third base; John Scoggins,
Collinsville, left field; Dave Also-
brook, Brenham, center field; Jack
Cooper, Dallas, right field; Marion
Pugh, Fort Worth, first base; Jack
Doran, Midland, catcher; and Char
lie Stevenson, Austin, or Walter
Bass, Houston, pitcher.
BATTALION
THURSDAY, APRIL 18, 1940
PAGE 3
A. & M. YS. HARVARD ... A. & M. WINS!
Aggie Fan Praises The Battalion’s
Defense of ’Lampooned’ Actress
Ex-Aggies and A. & M. suporters everywhere are taking
up the fight in behalf of the Harvard-slandered, glamorous Texan
Ann Sheridan. Running neck-and-neck with the editors of Har
vard’s Lampoon are “Backwash’s” contention that the Warner
Bros, “oomph gal” is definitely “the belle who HAS succeeded
in the hearts of Aggies everywhere”, and a recent Battalion
editorial of similar tone. Leading the parade of comment is the
following letter from a native Houstonian, addresed to columnist
George Fuerman:
•
“I have been a great fan and follower of the Texas Aggies
since 1927, and also have kept in contact with A. & M. news as
much as possible. In reading a late copy of The Battalion at
the home of a friend who has a son in your school, I noted
with interest what your column and an adjoining editorial
had to say in respect to Ann Sheridan.
“Miss Sheridan is a Texas girl who has recently made good
in Hollywood. In my opinion, the cheap attacks on her abilities
made by the editors of the Harvard paper were purely publicity
gags on their part, as well as being wholly unfair. It is my belief
that the editor of The Battalion, you, and the Aggie student body
are to be highly congratulated on coming to the defense of this
truly capable Texas girl.
*‘I am not able to read your column or The Battalion’s edi
torials as often as I would like, but I am especially glad that
this issue came to my attention.
“In closing, I want to say that your statement that ‘the
Sheridan belle is the girl who has succeeded in the hearts of
Aggies everywhere’ is the absolute truth, as far as I can tell
from conversations I have recently joined in here in Houston.
“Wishing you and the editor the best of luck in your con
tinued defense of Texan Ann Sheridan, I remain.
Yours very sincerely,
WM. T. JOHNSTON.”
The regular Friday afternoon
Aggie Clambake will be held to
morrow afternoon over WTAW
from Guion Hall beginning at the
usual time, 4:30.
Ask La Sheridan To
Be Aggies’ Hostess
In Los Angeles
Five Texas Aggies and a travel
ing representative of Warner
Brothers Studios, Henry Krumm,
will leave College Station tomor
row noon to go to Dallas and
present movie star Ann Sheridan
with a football autographed by
members of A. & M.’s national
championship team, inviting her
to be the official hostess and spon
sor for the Texas Aggies when
we play U. C. L. A. in Los Angeles
next October.
John Kimbrough, All-American
back; Walemon Price, Herb Smith,
Ernie Pannell, and George Fuer-
mann, Battalion columnist, will
represent the corps on the trip and,
following the presentation, the
cadets will attend the annual stag
party of the Dallas A. & M. Club.
Miss Sheridan, who was recently
stricken ill, will be unable to be
present in person and the foot
ball will be given to the steward
ess of the California-bound air
liner to go direct to Miss Sheri-
'dan.
Recently attracting national pub
licity through The Battalion’s and
Backwash’s defense of Harvard-
slandered Ann Sheridan, the af
fair will come to a climax next
October when Miss Sheridan acts
as host to Aggie footballers at the
U. C. L. A. game to be played in
Los Angeles.
The controversy originally began
when the A. & M. riflers, national
intercollegiate champions, gal
lantly paved the way for a coed
victory on the part of T.S.C.W.-ians
through a large handicap.
A campus visit on the part of
Miss Sheridan is expected sometime
within the next few months.
There will be a meeting of the
junior class Thursday night at 7:15
in Guion Hall so representatives of
various boot companies can give
bids on senior boots for next term.
It is important that every member
of the class be present, junior
president Ele Baggett stated.
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ALSO
UKX
went above B Engineers. Group
two included H Infantry over A
Cavalry, D Cavalry over Head
quarters Cavalry, G Infantry over
F Coast Artillery, and C Field
Artillery over 2nd Combat Train
Field Artillery.
Volleyball tripled this time as
B Infantry and M Infantry play
ed a 2 to 0 game with B Company
winning; F Field Artillery took one
from E Coast Artillery 2 to 0; and
A Chemical Warfare got a 2 to 0
victory over A Field Artillery.
SEE FOR
YOURSELF
You can go over your
car with a magnifying
glass when we get
through servicing it—
and see for yourself if
it doesn’t satisfy every
standard.
SUMMARIZED
SPRING SPECIAL
Grease and Oil changed,
car washed and greased,
wheels packed, interior
vacuum cleaned and ra
diator flushed.
$4.75
AGGIELAND
Service Station
Phone College 123
We give S&H Green
Stamps.
2400 Texas School
Boys Will Be Here
For F.F.A. Meeting
Early next Sunday morning the
first of 2,400 Texas farm boys
will arrive at A. & M. for the an
nual Future Farmers Judging con
test. This vast army of Future
Farmers, representing 400 high
schools of Texas and recruited from
all over the Lone Star State, will
probably not reach full attendance
until late Sunday afternoon.
According to the Agricultural
Education Department, adequate
preparations have been made for
caring for the boys during their
short visit. The bulk will sleep
Sunday night beneath the football
stadium while some few will stay
in Foster Hall.
The judging work to be done by
the boys is divided into 10 sepa
rate divisions with each division
being supervised by the A. & M.
Department in that subject. There
is a wide variety in types of agri
cultural judging, the principal ones
being with the number of students
entered given as follows: Dairy
Husbandry, 390; Livestock, 375;
Poultry, 360; Farm Shop, 126; En
tomology, 150; Cotton Classing,
160; Wildlife, 135; Crops Judging
330; Horticulture, 180.
After arriving Sunday the boys
will spend most of the day tour
ing the campus and becoming
familiar with the various build
ings so as to facilitate activities
Monday. Sunday night they will
be entertained in the gymnasium
by the A. & M. Senior Collegiate
F. F. A. chapter.
The high school agricultural
teachers arriving with the boys
Sunday, numbering 400, will hold
a meeting Sunday night and an
other Monday at noon at which time
they will meet jointly with all the
area supervisors in Texas, and
teacher trainers of the various
agricultural colleges. Dr. L. A.
Wood, state superintendent of edu
cation, will probably be present.
A large number of Aggies will
assist in the contests and score
cards will be graded as fast as they
DR. BACON ADDRESSES
A. & M. BIOLOGY CLUB
Dr. C. S. Bacon, professor emer
itus of obstetrics in the University
of Illinois Medical School, address
ed the A. & M. Club Monday night,
on the subject “The Processes of
Human Reproduction.”
A motion picture illustrating
reproduction in mammals was
shown in conjunction with the lec
ture by the well-known visiting
speaker.
The Biology Club extends to all
other science clubs on the campus
an invitation to participate in the
regional meeting of the Texas
Academy of Science to be held May
3 and 4 at Nacogdoches. The Biol
ogy Club is affiliated with the
Texas Academy and several of its
members are planning to attend.
are available to the graders. Ten
tative results of the various con
tests will be announced Monday
night, but complete results will
not be available until the follow
ing Saturday.
After completing their judging
work Monday the future • farmers
will be entertained Monday night
with a free show at the Assembly
Hall. After the show they will
disperse for the rest of the night
and leave for home sometime
Tuesday.
Dr. Grady Harrison
DENTIST
North Gate
1
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