Page 4 Thursday Morning, April 18, 1946 The Battalion Norton Says First String Gridders Will Get Rest Periods This Fall With 1946 Spring- football train ing at Texas A. & M. College a thing of the past, Head Coach Homer Norton and his staff sat down to figure out what they can expect to have as material next September. They wound up the 30-day train ing period and found approximately 80 candidates on hand, but they also found that a total of 22 out of the 50 or so on the A Squad are subject to decisions of their lo cal draft boards before the next football season opens. Several of these are counted upon as members of the first team of that squad and potential starters for the 1946 Ag gie grid team. Coach Norton and his staff were well pleased with the work accom plished in the few hours they had to work with the gigantic squad. “Right now the team is better fixed for reserve material then since 1941. On the face of that it looks like all jobs are filled but that is not so. Anyone, high school graduate or letterman, will have an equal chance to make the team next Fall. Asked about the formations to be used next Fall, Norton explained that he “intends to use the T formation plus.” Asked to explain that “plus”, he said that while the T would be the basic formation he and the staff have worked out several other plays which will call for a different formation when they are used. Asked if he intended to go back to his double-wing and box formation of pre-war days, he answered that such plays could be included in that “plus” but right now they are not planning such a —MUSTER— (Continued from page 1) homecoming, and twelve have as sured college authorities they will be on hand. They are: Brigadier 1 O. B. Abbott, George H. ‘ Knickerbocker, Nat . vTfine, John L. Pierce, John A. Warden, Jerome J. Waters, and Major Generals Andrew D. Bruce, Howard C. Davidson, O. P. Wey- land, and Robert B. Williams. Degrees will be conferred on those who cannot attend as soon as they return to the A. & M. campus. NO FRIDAY BATT This special issue of the Bat talion takes the place of Lath Wednesday’s and Friday’s edi tions for this week. Regular tri-weekly schedule will be re sumed next week. Fit to be TIED! A rrow ties are made to x\.knot perfectly — no puff ball knots and no knots tiny as a pearl. See our choice variety of Ar rows — some are spicy, some sleek, some subtle, but all smart, all wrinkle- proof. $1 and $1.50. 7 t t ^ T\ WIMBERLEY • STONE • PANSBV CLOrKlERS College and Bryan UearfObacA ittomerJorfon move. He added that with 1941 and 1942 backs in the game he would “not be too surprised if they come out of a huddle some time and line up in almost anything." At the close of training, Norton’s first Texas Aggie team lined up as follows: LE-Clarence (Cotton) Howell, Nacogdoches, 1944 letter- man; LT-Leonard Dickey, Alto, 1941-45 letterman; LG-Odel Staut- zenberger, San Antonio, NTAC let terman 1942; C-Herbert Ellis, Kil gore, letterman 1944-45; RG-Jim Winkler, Temple, letterman 1945; RT-Monte Moncrief, Dallas, letter- man, 1943-44-45; RE-Walter Hig gins, Galveston, letterman 1944- 45; QB-James (Babe) Hallmark, Kilgore, letterman 1943; LHB-Rob Goode, Bastrop, letterman 1945; RHB-Julian Pressly, Fort Worth, Allen Academy letterman 1941; FB-Willie Zapalac, Bellville, Let terman 1941-42. Of those, Howell, Ellis, Winkler, Moncrief, Higgins and Goode have not been in the armed services as yet. Second team lineup included: LE- Charles Yeargain or Dan Fold- berg, Dallas; LT-Bob Tulis, Fort Worth; LG-Bill Hart, Beaumont; C-Bill Yeoman, Glendale, Ariz.; RG-Johnnie Davis, Vernon; RT- Bill Juett, Amarillo; RE-Dick Avery, Dallas; QB-Earl Beesley, Dallas; LHB-Preston Smith, Bry an; RHB-Ed Dusek or Tom Pickett, Temple; FB-Dennis Andricks, Houston. Of those Yeargain, Fold- berg, Yeoman, Juett and Smith could be lost to the services before Fall. Asked about who might be ex pected back from the service, Nor ton said he had heard from Burl Baty, Paris; George Wilde, Gra ham; Marion Flanagan, Sweetwa ter; Don Luethy, Monahans; and Barney Welch, Stephenville. All except Luethy, a tackle, are letter- man backs of better than ordinary calibre. (Welch is the only Aggie ever to carry the ball across the goal line in Austin against the Longhorns on Memorial Field and he did that in 1942.) Norton said his A squad teams were about of equal ability and proved his point by recalling that in the only game scrimmage held the second and fourth teams had defeated the first and third, 14-13. ' The Aggie mentor would not point out any player as a “find” of the training season but when new men like Stautzenberger and Pressly move in over lettermen then he must have found some thing. Both are good players and should see a lot of service next Fall,” was Norton’s only comment on them. • • • • On Kyle Field • • • • By Marion “Dookie” Pugh Battalion Sports Editor PORTRAIT OF A FOOTBALL To homecoming Texas Aggies athletes of bygone years and to the mighty Twelfth Man which ac companies them back to Aggieland for the 1946 Muster, Kyle Field extends a hearty “WELCOME BACK”. For our contribution to the spirit of this special edition of The Batta lion and the 1946 Muster, we can offer no more fitting tribute than the story of a football which was passed on to us back in March 1 of this year. Last March, Bill Duncan, who played end on that ’39 team, and is at present head coach at Belton High School, was visiting the cam pus. Bill and I were watching the spring drills on Kyle field, and nat urally the conversation drifted around to that 1939 ball club. We were discussing the different men who played, where they were, what they were doing, etc. Bill said, “I have a story that would interest you for it made me stop and think, and wonder about many things.” His story went something like this: “You remem- (See KYLE FIELD, Page 5) DON’T FORGET Call for Your SMOKES—DRINKS SANDWICHES While On the Campus at GEORGE’ S CONFECTIONERY WELCOME AGGIES! FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH R. L. BROWN, Pastor College Station, Texas SUNDAY SERVICES 9:45 a.m.—Sunday School 10:50 a.m.—Morning Worship 6:15 p.m.—Training Union 7:15 p.m.—Evening Worship A CORDIAL WELCOME TO ALL