TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1947 THE BATTALION Page 3 ■ON KYLE FIELD by PAUL MARTIN Intra-Collegiate Sports for All Sports for everyone are becom ing increasingly popular at A & M and the field is being broadened so that anyone who wishes to parti cipate may do so in almost any event. The intramural program is now being enlarged so as to take in men from almost every area, some of whom didn’t get the opportunity to enter last se mester. D e - spite this, the program at A & M w a s the largest in ggl the world with l&fo some two thousand men partici- pating each week. In ad dition to this, the Physical Education Department is now organizing or has already organized several athletic clubs to include such sports as handball, badminton, volleyball and weight- Martin lifting. The latter was voted to be the most popular by the P. E. stu dents when asked what kinds of clubs they would like organized. A meeting for this purpose is to be held Wednesday evening in the gymnasium at 5 p. m. W. M. Dowell, sponsor of the badmin ton and fencing clubs and chair man of recreation, has plans for enlarging the scope of the clubs and staging matches with not only the local teams but out-of-town teams as well. Members will be permitted to make the trips and arrange matches if they so desire. There has, for some time, been a movement on this campus to give more support to minor sports and local competition in which every- o n e who wants to can find some good, healthy activity. De spite the fact that no academic credit is advanced to those who participate in intramurals as it was at one time, the number in volved is the largest in the schools history. Football Team Prepares For Work Football spring training is only a month away and preparations are being made for a winning team. In addition to Zapalac, Moncrief, Daniels and several oth ers who played on the A team last semester, Norton is losing Scott, Shefts, Johnson and Dick Wright for next year. The latter are dropping out of school although all are in good scholastic standing and will be permitted to re-enter in the fall if they desire to do so. Five former Aggie gridders are returning including four backs. Those returning are Bobby Goff, halfback, Paul Y a t es, fullback, Jimmie Cushion, quarterback, Don Nicholas, back, and Bill Walker, guard. Goff was outstanding as a punter and ball carrier while Yates excelled as a blocking back. Cushion handled the brains depart ment in calling the plays and toss ing the passes to emerge with the Most Valuable Player award for the 1944 season, the first year the T was used at A&M. In the line-up will also be Julian Pressly, great 1946 prospect who missed the season because of an injured knee. Houston County Club Will Elect New Officers Feb. 6 New officers will be elected for the Houston County Club Thurs day, February 6, George E. Darsey, president, has announced. The meeting, will be held in Room 305, Academic Building, at 7 p. m. Bears Trim Aggies 44 to 39 in Waco The Aggie cage squad lost for the second time to the Baylor Bears Friday night and dropped from fourth to fifth place in con ference standings. Playing in Waco the Ags trailed 15 to 22 at the half way mark and ended the game at 44-39. \ Opening fast, the Bruins paced the Cadets seven points before the latter were able to score. Inability to connect with free throws seemed to be the great weakness of the visitors for they made only five points that way as compared to 16 by Baylor. At the beginning of the second half the Farmers showed improve ment and out-scored their oppon ents by chalking up 24 points to 22 for the hosts. However the Bears held at least a five-point lead throughout the match. A&M (39) Fg Ft Pf Tp Batey.f ..... 0 0 3 0 Weinbaum.f 0 0 1 0 Turbow.f 3 1 0 7 Jenkins,f 0 0 0 0 Voiding,f 3 0 2 6 Moore, f 0 1 1 1 Smith,c 5 0 0 10 Kamperman,c 1 0 0 2 Klutz,g 0 0 0 0 Adams,g 2 2 4 6 Garcia.g ....: 2 1 5 5 Thornton,g 1 0 2 2 Total 17 5 18 39 Baylor (44) Fg Ft Pf Tp Johnson, f 1 2 1 4 Gonzoles.f 0 0 0 0 Owens,f 3 1 1 7 DeWitt,f 0 0 1 0 Pulley,f 1 4 1 6 Shearin.c 2 1 4 5 Preston,c 0 0 1 0 Hethington,g 3 3 1 9 Marino,g 0 0 5 0 Robinson,g ..... 4 5 2 13 Total 14 16 17 44 HALFTIME SCORE: Baylor 22, A&M 16. Free throws missed: Voiding 3; John son, Hethington, Tumbow 2; Robinson, Smith, Kamperman, Garcia 1. Officials: Curtis, referee; McDonald, umpire. Thousands Injured Permanently About a third of a million Amer icans suffer permanent injuries in accidents every year. Ace Shot Putter on Aggie Track Team Franklin Carter Young, senior civil engineer ing student from San Antonio, is one of the reasons why Coach Frank Anderson hopes to make a strong bid for conference honors this year. Young is a 6 foot.l inch, 220-pound shot putter who averages 44 feet and dropped it 45 feet T'/z inches in the Texas meet. He lettered three years at Bracken- ride High School and in 1946 at A. & M., winning first place at the Laredo and Fort Worth meets while in high school. . Aggie Bee Schedule Feb. 8—Air Trng. Com., Kelly Field, College Station * Feb. 12—Rice “B”, Houston. * Feb. 15—U. of Texas “B”, College Station. * Feb. 18-19—Open. Feb. 22—Thomas Jefferson (ten tative), College Station. Feb. 8—Open, College Station. * March 1.—Open, College Station.* *Denotes double header. HEY ARMY- Increase those grade points by getting a review outline and college outline series. We have them for practically all courses. 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That’s when I learned how much I appre ciated Camels!’’ ' ; EXPERIENCE TAUGHT ME THE BIG DIFFERENCE IN CIGARETTE QUALITY. I' LEARNED THAT CAMELS SUIT MY'T-ZONE'TV A'T' * * • $ (farfwi ; OW4 ' CHAMPION EASTESK ICt YACHTING ASSOCIATION Camels YOUR “T-ZONE” WILL TELL YOU T for Taste... T for Throat... that’s your proving ground for any ciga rette. See rf Camels don’t suit your “T-Zone” to a :‘T." IBi Cagers to Play in Double Header Here Next Saturday On schedule this week-end for the Aggie cagers is a double header to be staged in DeWare Field House Saturday night. The main event, featuring the Aggie A squad and the Houston Triangles, will begin at 8 p. m. following a preliminary engagement between the Aggie B team and the Kelly Field Air Training Command quintet starting at 6 p. m. Aggie Fencers Lose 13-5 to Houston In First Tournament A. & M.’s Mask and Foil Club was defeated 13-5 by the Houston Fencing Club in its first post-war tournament held in Houston’s Cher ry Hurt Park on Saturday*evening, February 1. Thd clubs were divided into two teams with three men each; then each member fenced every other member of the opposing team. Charles “Sandy” Sanderson, Ful ton Dye, and Tony Mistrot com posed the Aggies’ first team, against Houston’s Charles Holland, Harold Hall, and William Wait- kens. These bouts went to the Houston club, 6-3. The Mask and Foilers’ second team, composed of William Phil lips, Russell Roach, and Warren Robertson, met Paul Ferguson, Jimmy Albright, and Lee Greb. In the last two bouts John “Dusty” Florio substituted for Ferguson on the Houston team. Score for the second round was 7-2, in- favor of Houston. A. R. Rodner, Houston profes sional who has been instructing both teams, officiated the matches. Statistics for the matches are as follows: A. & M. W Phillips 1 Roach 0 Robertson 1 Sanderson 1 Dye 1 Mistrot 1 Total 6 Houston W Holland 3 Hall 0 Waitkens 8 Ferguson 0 Florio 1 Albright 3 Greb 3 L 2 3 2 2 2 2 L 0 3 0 1 1 0 0 Total 13 Rodner will be at A. & M. again on Sunday, February 9, for a reg ular coaching period. Instruction will be held at 3 p. m. in DeWare Field House. All members of the club and stu dents wishing to join are requested to attend. Practice meetings are held daily at 5 p. m. in the gym. Aggie Track Mentor On NCAA Group Frank Anderson, head track coach at Texas A&M College, has received notice that he has been appointed to membership on the Track and Field Rules Com mittee of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) as the representative of District 6, one of the eight divisions into which the nation is divided. At the same time Arthur Adam son, swimming coach ^t Texas A & M. was reappointed to the Swim ming Rules Committee of the NCAA. He also serves on com mittees on swimming in the Ama teur Athletic Union (AAU). Both have been appointed for terms of four years. ■ Head Coach Marty Karow an nounced the engagement with the Triangles, a non-conference bout, to make up for the unplayed tilt against LSU that was canceled be cause of wet floors during the Houston Invitation Tournament. The Triangles are an amateur team that includes such cagers as Bill (Jitterbug) Henderson, all-time Aggie great of pre-war years who holds eleven letters in five sports, Bill Henry, great Rice hardwood ace who holds the all-time record in the Southwest Conference indi vidual for scoring, both average per game and total points, and Hal Lambert, another Rice great. Coach Johnnie Frankie of the B squad succeeded in arranging for an opponent only last Friday for that week and states that the Kelly Field quintet is a tough club. Fran kie also announced the addition of five new men to his squad, all of whom entered at mid-term. These men are W. R. King, 6 foot 6 inch center from Fort Worth; G. M. Brown from Tarleton; A. S. (Bud) Saunders from Greenville; L. R. Walker, a returnee from the war time Kiddie Corps; and H. E. Steu- ssy, a scrappy 5 foot 5 inch guard from Port Arthur. The acquisition of these men gives Frankie an ade quate number of substitutes and reserves to compensate for the possible loss of Buddy Moore to the A squad. Weight-lifting Club to Be Organized Wednesday W. M. Dowell of the Physical Education Department has an nounced that a meeting will be held in the gymnasium next Wednesday at 5 p. m. for the purpose of or ganizing a weight-lifting club here on the campus. Membership is not restricted and all those wishing to join are urged to attend. At a meeting some weeks ago of members and students of the P.E. department a vote was taken to determine which clubs the students would like to see organized and weight-lifting proved to be the most popular. 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