THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 26, 1945 THE BATTALION Page 3 3rd Co. Beats Dorm 6 to Tie Up Hot League B Volleyball Race B Co. Holds League A Lead With One Game Left to Play By Robert Reese Third Company got a chance to even things up this week as they handed Dorm 6 their first defeat to tie up the lead in League B of the volleyball race. B Company is leading League A with the only undefeated record left in either league. Dorm 6 had been the only team to beat Third Company, taking them down in two straight games earlier in the volleyball competi tion. Third Company turned the tables, winning in two straight games with a hard-playing team of 0. Baker, Garrett, Tergus, Fer guson, Hodges, and Golden furnish ing the winning punch. Playing for the losers were English, Davis, Khakis cleaned and pressed Better work at Holick Cleaners We charge more Prater,' Ross, Hightower, and Grogan. In other games in League B, Fourth Company won two straight from A Company and two straight from First Company, while First Company took A Company for two straight. The Fourth Company team was made up of Noonan Prince, R. E. Prince, Gene Hazel wood, Howard McMillian, Joe F. Leediker, Wendel Witten, and the company commander, Scott Hag gard. Playing on the First Com pany team that beat Company A were Caraway, Murray, Adams, Adair and Bell. In League A Sixth Company was the busy team for the week as they downed Fifth Co. in a hard- fought battle 3-2 and then went on to beat Second Company in two straight. Manning, Berkraslany, and Goode paced the Sixth Com pany squad in their two victories. In the other League B games, B Company, led by Woods, LaRue, Bell, and Backer defeated Second Company in two straight games, and repeated the performance yes terday against Fifth Company. Third Company and Dorm 6 will now have to meet in a playoff for League B championship, the win ner to meet B Company or L Company of League A for the intramural championship. INTRAMURAL VOLLEYBALL League A Team W L Pet. B Company 3 0 1.000 L Company 2 1 .667 5th Company 2 2 .500 6th Company 2 2 .500 2nd Company 0 4 .000 League B Team W L Pet. 3rd Company 4 1 .800 Dorm 6 4 1 .800 4th Company 3 2 .600 1st Company 3 2 .600 A Company 0 4 .000 7th Company 0 4 .000 SJR-H WALLETS by KKKOK Au then tic Western designs tooled bn genuine leather make these attractive Hickok Bar-H wallets. Others at $3.50 and $5.00 7 tyc?. t~\ ■viMOtaicv • »tom« ■ aBMl wTCrrXf ClOCHlCftS College and Bryan 2nd Co. Beats 7th to Take Over Loop B Softball Lead; 1st Co. and Dorm 6 Advance on Idle 3rd Co. in League A Second Company won a close ^softball game this week, beating Seventh Company 5-4 to take over the League B lead from Fifth Company who dropped to a second- place tie by virtue of a 9-4 defeat at the hands of Company B. In League A First Company nosed out Sixth and Dorm 6 stopped A Company to tie for second place against the idle Third Company, who have played only one game so far. LEAGUE A Dorm 6 Stops A Co. 6-3 With Darnell in the pitcher’s box Team W L Pet. and Aikman doing the catching, Third Co. 1 0 1.000 Dormitory 6 again slid into the First Co. 3 1 .750 winner’s column with a 6-3 victory Dorm No. 6 3 1 .750 over A Company. Cavitt did the Sixth Co. 2 2 .500 hurling t and Cooper the receiving Co. A 1 3 .250 for the losers. Co. L 1 4 .200 6th Co. Tramples A Co. 18-9 League B In a slugfest that saw 6th Com pany hitting a little harder, Wil- Team W L Pet. Hams and Janda pitched and caught Second Co. 2 1 .667 the 6th Co. ten to an 18-9 win over B. Co. 1 1 .500 A Co. Friday. Cavitt was on the Fourth Co. 2 2 .500 mound and Cooper behind the plate Fifth Co. 2 2 .500 for A Company. Seventh Co. 1 2 .333 1st Co. Noses Out 6th Co. 4-3 Crouch pitched a good game for First Co. and was aided and abetted by a tight defense Tuesday as 1st Co. beat 6th Company 4-3 in a close ball game. McMahan and Janda were the 6th Co. battery. LEAGUE 6 2nd Co. Slips By 7th, 5-4 Second Company won the League B lead by a hair as Bostwick did the mound duties in a close 5-4 decision over 7th Company. Glass MAIS & COFFEY RADIO SERVICE Highway 6 and Walton Drive — East Gate COMPLETE RADIO SERVICE Serving Bryan and College Station AUTO RADIO HEADQUARTERS REFRESHMENTS ARE BEING SERVED GEORGE’S CONFECTIONERY To quench that summer thirst, try a long, cold drink at our place, in the New Area. caught for the winners, while Bar rera and Stolfe were the 7th Co. battery. B Co. Slashes 5th Co. 9-4 With Backer on the mound and Banman catching, B Company stepped out with a 9-4 victory oyer 5th Co. to jump from the cellar to a second-place tie with 4th and 5th Companies in League B. SOFTBALL League A —NEIGHBORS— (Continued From Page 2) trade comprises exports of petro leum and import of equipment for the oil companies. Puerto Cabello is one of the best in South America. Venezuelan Cities Caracas, the capital and chief metropolis of Venezuela, is a mod ern city. Built on the sloping val ley on the northernside of the coastal range, she is one of the principal industrial and commer cial cities of the nation. Her colo nial buildings mark a sharp con trast with the modern buildings, the parks, and the well paved streets. Maracaibo is the second largest city and the leading commercial center of the western part of the country. Valencia, third in size is the focal point of a. flourishing agricultural and mineral district. Other important citiec are: Ciudad Bolivar, Maracay, Puerto Cabello, Cabinas. Education is compulsory in the primary schools. Progress in edu cation has been hampered by lack of trained teachers. The University of Caracas offers work in medi cine, law, pharmacy, dentitry, en gineering, theiology and diplomacy. Other schools are located in the capital for the teaching of agri culture, commerce, and modern languages. Museums, libraries, academies and similar educational institutions are maintained at gov ernment expense. The Venezuelan War Effort Venezuela’s contribution to the war effort has been a significant one. From the oil wells of Vene zuela under the water of tropical Lake Maracaibo, flows enough of this strategic war material to sup ply the needs of the Allied Na tions. Aside from the fact that she produces oil and is thus im portant in a warring world, Vene zuela’s location is strategic. Facing on the Caribbean she is not far from the eastern part of the Pana ma Canal. She has broken relations with the Axis nations, frozen Axis funds, put interned Axis ships into inte-American commerce and regu lated Axis-owned business. Troop 102 Wins Scout Swim Meet Winners of Events At Downs Pool to Compete at Hudson Troop 102 garnered 64 points to win the Brazos County district swimming meet staged by the Boy Scouts of America at Downs Na- tatorium last night. Troop 411 was second with a total of 43% points, with Troop 148 a close third with a score of 41%. Winners of the two top places in each individual event, as well as the first-place winners in the relay team events, will be eligible to enter the Boy Scout Council meet at Camp Hudson near Hous ton on August 21. A troop pennant will go to Troop 102 for their vic tory in last night’s district meet, while individual winners will re ceive ribbon awards. The meet at Downs Pool was well attended, with approximately 150 persons witnessing the com petition. The chairman of the com mittee which arranged the affair expressed the appreciation of the Boy Scouts for the co-operation of Art Adamson, Carl Tischler, and W. L. Penberthy for their assis tance in the project. First-place winners of the swim ming events are as follows: CUBS: 20-yd. free style, P. E. Darnell; 20-yd. back stroke, Wally Penberthy. JUNIORS (Ages 12-13): 20-yd. free style, Herschel Lester; 20-yd. breast stroke, John W. Howell; 20- yd. backstroke, Herschel Lester; distance plunge; Homer LaMotte; front diving, Bill Chambers; back "diving, John W. Howell; 80-yd. free style relay, Troop 102; 80-yd. back stroke relay, Troop 12; 80- yd. medley relay, Troop 102. INTERMEDIATES (Ages 14- 15): 25-yd. free style, Wally And erson; 25-yd. breast stroke, Aden Magee; 25-yd. back stroke, Wally Anderson; distance plunge, John Ed Parnell; front diving, Wesley Stevens; back diving, Wesley Stevens; 80-yd. free style relay, Troop 411; 80-yd. back stroke re lay, Troop 411; 80-yd. medley re lay, Troop 411. SENIORS (Ages 16-17): 25-yd. free style, Bob Wright; 25-yd. breast stroke, Bill Moss; 25-yd. back stroke, Bob Wright; distance plunge, Bill Moss; front diving, tie Bill Moss and Bob Wright; back diving, Bob Wright. Eighty Guests Attend Poultry Visitors Day Last Tuesday Dr. D. H. Reid and his Poultry Husbandry Department welcomed visiting poultry men from all over the state to the Poul try Short Course visitors day. Over eighty hatchery men, vocational agriculture teachers, and members of affiliated fields attended for an interesting and instructive day. The programs held in the Agri cultural Engineering Building were planned to give as complete cover age of the poultry men’s questions as was possible in-the one day. In the morning session, under the di rection of R. M. Sherwood, six speakers talked on topics of major interest. Among these were C. G. Schietinger, who emphasized the duty of the hatchery man to his community; G. B. Winstead, who advised honesty and attractive ness in poultry advertising; and Dean C. N. Shepardson, who com pared careful cattle breeding with poultry breeding and suggested that the same care in choosing stock should be used in both fields. Other speakers were H. H. Drumm, Prof. R. B. Thompson, and R. B. Jones. In the afternoon session, of which S. A. Moore was chairman, Jones outlined the improvements developed by the U. S. Department of Agriculture, Joe Fechtel warn ed of smaller markets where bet ter quality will be essential to sales, and Prof. Thompson advised his audience to use the long pro fits they are getting now to im prove their building, both for the health of their produce and the at titude of customers and the com- wins WHERE YOU ALWAYS CET A FAIR TRADE Tigers Win Again, as Pirates and Military Pluck Orioles Aggie Band Meets Coach Norton at Railway Station That good old Aggie Spirit really showed itself when Coach Homer Norton was greeted by the Aggie Corps and Band at the Southern Pacific station Friday. Both the Coach and Mrs. Norton were visibly moved, and both ex pressed their appreciation for the reception and the flowers sent by the cadet corps to the Coach at the Mayo Clinic, where he under went a serious abdominal opera tion. The Coach, a little grayer aruond the temples, but showing a good tan, announced he would have to take it easy until September; he also added, “Oh Labor Day we will be on the practice field.” Coach Norton will spend from the latter part of this week until September 1 at the coast. Ex-Aggie Prof Gets Lieut. Colonel’s Leaves from Clark Promotion to lieutenant colonel and the honor of having the new silver leaves pinned on by General Mark Clark, the U. S. Commander in the Mediterranean Theater were the recent happy experiences of D. W. Williams, who is on leave from the position of head of the Animal Husbandry department of Texas A. & M. Colonel Williams, in an interest ing letter to his family, reported that he was flown from his sta tion in Austria to Verona, Italy where General Clark, just returned from the States, had summoned the outstanding officers in his cpm- mand to personally announce pro motions and other honors. Colonel Williams was one of but 8 officers in his command receiving promo tions on this occasion. During the ceremony, General Clark spoke of Colonel Williams’ fine work and had much to say of Texas A. & M. Colonel Williams is one of sever al college staff members who col- unteered for service as experts in the several fields required by the U. S. Army occupying forces. Go ing overseas in December, 1943, Colonel Williams has played an active part in planning the agri cultural program of devastated Europe. The most recent experience re ported by Colonel Williams was a trip into Germany with a Nobel prize winner, an expert in produc ing gas from wood, who is engaged in developing meat substitutes and ersatz foods which, Colonel Wil liams reports, do not taste too bad and are of much importance in the tremendous task of feeding the people of Europe. Commentihg on some of the European farming practices, Col onel William writes, “These farm ers do it the hard way. Most of the wheat is cut with sickles and bound by hand. The women over here are a husky lot and the bulk of the farm work is done by them. They use oxen on the carts and the cows Ray Perryman’s Tigers beat Col. Frank Anderson’s Yankees 7-3 Friday to maintain their lead in the city soft- ball race. In the other game of the simultaneous double-head er which featured Friday’s community picnic, Tommy Ter rell’s Pirates came from behind to overtake a long lead by Oden’s Orioles in the last inning and went on to win in an extra frame. On Monday, the Military Department won from the Orioles 12-4. four-bagger. The Orioles went out in their half of the extra inning without reaching first base, and the Pirates won the ball game when Lamb went down on an error and scored in a very close play of Hickerson’s hit. The Tigers started in typical fashion by scoring two runs in their first turn at bat and scored three more in the third and two in the sixth to maintain a com fortable lead. Andrews led the bat ting attack with three out of three, while a tight defense and steady pitching by Dahlbery and Lloyd held the Yankees scoreless until the sixth, when they put on a three- run rally. The Pirate-Oriole fray was one of the most exciting ball games played thus far. The Orioles start ed the scoring with a single tally in the third inning. In the fourth the first three Orioles walked, fil ling the bases. Develle and Oden scored on Brison’s hit, and Lan caster and Brison came in on an error. The Yellowbirds scored again in the fifth to take a six- run lead. The Pirates came to life in the sixth when Guthrie opened with a single. McGhee went to first on an error, and consecutive safeties by Terrell, McCoy, and Lamb started the runs pouring across, stimulated by an infielder’s error on Hickerson’s grounder, to cut the Oriole lead to 6-5. In the seventh, Stiles went to first on an error and came home on a triple by Terrell, who was out in a close play as he tried to stretch it to a The Military Department scored in each of the first three innings Monday and went wild in the sev enth to score seven runs. The Ori oles could not find their batting eye, and trailed the Soldiers all the way through. The league-leading Tigers face a tough game tonight when they take on the dangerous Indians. If the Tigers should win, Terrell’s Pirates will have a chance for clear second place by winning from the Yankees Friday evening. The rapid ly-improving Military Staff will take their crack at the Tigers Mon day. CITY SOFTBALL Team Tigers Indians Pirates Military Staff 2 2 .500 W L Pet. 3 0 1.000 2 1 .667 2 1 .667 Yankees Orioles 1 2 .333 .000 PENNY’S SERENADE By W. L. Penberthy Back in 1926 we took our foot ball team to Dallas to play SMU in the State Fair. It was a corps trip, so almost the entire student body was present. The teams were pretty evenly matched but we definitely o u t - played SMU in every stage of the game but came out on the small end of the 9-7 score. All of the A. & M. support ers were heart sick over the out come of the game —it was one of those kind of games. After the game, I think I am safe in saying that every one from the head coach on down made a solemn resolution that if we won only one game the follow ing year it would be the SMU game. The following fall both schools had great teams and there Penberthy live in a part of the house in many places. In the summer the cattle are kept far up in the Alps and then in the early fall moved back to the barns. “The winters are very rugged. They speak of 20 and 30 below zero and snow for 5 months with depths of 5 to 10 meters.” One night, Colonel Williams writes, he was duty officer and at about 1:30 a.m. some trucks re ported to his headquarters with 9 tons of gold and silver coins and bullion just unearthed in a walled- up portion of a cave. was a tremendous amount of in terest in the game—state and national. Before the game when Coach Bible called our team to gether for instructions he looked at his men and said, “Men I need not say a word to you. I can see by the look in your eyes that you are ready.” That day we defeat ed a fine SMU team 39-13 be cause we were ready. In the present war ye hear of many high ranking officers who at the beginning of the conflict were lieutenants. We may be prone to think that these promo tions were due to pull but I am convinced that for the most part these men had “something on the ball.” True they might have been at the right place at the right time but if they had not been ready for the promotion it would not have come. The old saying is that “opportunity knocks but once” but if we are ready one chance is all we need. It has been my observation in officiating that the official or the team that waits until the day be fore a game to start getting rea dy usually does a poor job on the day of the game. We never know when \he gold en opportunity may come so it behooves us to get the best train ing possible and pay the price in hard work so as to be ready when our chance does come. munity. Roy McDonald and E. G. Albers also spoke. After each speech there was a discussion to supply special information to the visitors. L. Jurcak and Reid both com mented that the day was very suc cessful, both for the Poultry de partment and for its guests. FINE UNIFORMS LAUTERSTEIN’S PHONE 4-4444 STUDENT CO-OP Bicycle and Radio Repair PHONE 4-4114 The Exchange Store SERVING TEXAS AGGIES”