THE BATTALION, College Station (Aggieland), Texas, Saturday, May 24, 1947: :Page Three Baseball Statistics AB R H TB RBI BA A E W L Texas ....526 134 150 219 108 .285 166 38 14 1 Opp ....511 68 116 169 59 .227 196 49 Baylor ....473 112 128 184 90 .270 176 35 9 5 Opp ..4177 67 118 156 56 .258 154 49 A. & M. ....506 129 146 227 114 .288 166 41 8 6 Opp ....477 89 119 168 78 .249 150 44 S. M. U. ....459 73 114 147 53 .248 143 49 5 9 Opp ....495 91 137 195 70 .276 160 40 Rice ....495 65 118 143 50 .238 161 55 4 10 Opp ....509 141 144 185 110 .282 180 42 T. C. U. ... ....520 79 127 171 63 .244 187 41 3 12 Opp ....526 126 149 213 100 .283 159 35 Aggie Track Men to Participate In National Meet in Salt Lake June 21 Col. Frank Anderson’s t r a c k-fr track squad is not through for the season—or at least some members of it. On June 21 in Salt Lake City, Utah the national meet will be held and Col. Andy has an nounced that he intends to take George Kadera, Art Hamden, and possibly several others. Art Haws who has been carry ing the hopes of the maroon and white in the high jump this year has been taking all comers and get ting some good heights. If Haws repeats his performance in the Corpus meet, he is undeniably na tional champion material. In that meet, Haws went out at 6 feet 6 and one-quarter inches. Since that time, he has been jumping be tween six feet and six-three. Broad jumper James Hill is an other who has been turning in con sistently good performances. He has gotten 23 feet or better at almost every meet though he went out at 22 feet 11 inches to take first at the SWC meet Saturday. Manager Mix-up In the last issue of the Bat talion in the story concerning the lettermen in spring sports as announced at the Brazos Co unty A. & M. Club banquet Mon day night, W. L. Pollard was mentioned as having received a managers letter in track. The Battalion erred in this re spect as Pollard received a man agers letter in baseball. Warren Gilbert was manager of the track team and as such received a track managers letter. Our apologies to Messrs Pollard and Gilbert. Ag Baseball Lettermen Announced Having wound up a partially suc cessful season the Texas Aggie baseball team were honored last Monday night along with athletes in other spring sports. Coach Lil Dimmitt at that time announced the team captain, the most valua ble player, and the lettermen for 1947. Leo Daniels of Bryan was elec ted team captain by his mates and as such received the Lipscomb- Munnerlyn Trophy along with Charles (Tex) Thornton who was named the Most Valuable. Lettermen named, in addition to these two, were Earl Beesley, Dal las; James (Cal) Calvert, Dallas; Robert Fretz, Houston; Roy Gib- bens, La Pryor; Stanley Hollmig, Hondo; Dewey Jacobs, Fort Worth; Young B. Johnson, Coleman; Clif ford Lindloff, Waco; Hubert Moon, Holland; Stanley Turner, Beau mont; Claud Vass, Houston; Har old (Frog) Walker, Dallas; Rob ert Wasson, Dallas; Walter Wil lingham, Seagraves; and a man ager letter to L. W. Pollard, San Antonio. Finishing third behind Texas and Baylor, the Aggies won eight and lost six, to get an average of .571. ★ Conference Records Harnden Given Top Honors PECK VASS, lanky left field er on last seasons’ baseball nine landed among the top when sea son statistics were averaged, and, in regard to hitting, was among the dream team as re leased by Executive Secretary of the Southwest Conference James H. Stewart by virtue of a .338 batting average and a .826 field ing average. Player AB RR H RBI Avg. Moon ..43 11 17 14 .395 Fretz ..50 19 17 15 .340 Vass ..62 17 21 15 .338 Hollmig ..54 18 18 17 .333 Thornton ... ..45 12 15 9 .333 Willingham.. 39 9 13 11 .333 Lindloff ..28 8 8 3 .285 Daniels ..29 6 8 6 .272 Walker ..34 4 9 9 .264 Beesley ..16 3 4 1 .250 Calvert ..21 • 4 5 2 .238 Mays .. 5 3 1 2 .200 Wasson ..26 3 5 6 .192 Jacobs ..15 3 1 0 .066 Gibbens .. 9 3 0 1 .000 Johnson .. 3 0 0 0 .000 Turner ... 3 1 0 0 .000 Hughes .. 2 0 0 0 .000 Maltz .. 2 0 0 0 .000 Brown ..... Burditt .. .... Pressly ..15 3 2 3 .133 TEAM: 506 129 146 114 .288 ART HARNDEN, crack Aggie track star, is shown being awarded the JACK DEMPSEY ADAM HAT TROPHY after be ing selected by the coaches as the outstanding athlete of the year at A. and M. Harnden was undefeated in conference competition throughout the year, both as anchor man on the mile relay team and as a 440-yard dash man. Head Coach Homer Norton congratulates the cotton headed Aggie as Track Coach Frank Anderson stands at center. Harnden was also named captain-elect of the 1948 track team and awarded the Bert Pfaff trophy. A Infantry, B Field Take ’47 Intramural Crowns Cliff Ackerman A Infantry upper classmen re ceived the honors of being the Class A Intramural winner for the 1946-47 season. The hard fight ing upperclassmen dominated class A Intramurals all the way to take the championship in a burst of glory. Charles A. Mattel from San An tonio is the Athletic Officer and the Assistant Athletic Officer Guinn Fergus. The Class B Intramural cham pionship for the 1946-47 season was taken by the freshmen of B Field who out-pointed their nearest rival A CWS by 46% points. The men responsible for the fine freshmen teams are Athletic Of ficer Clarence M. (Cotton) Howell, Assistant Athletic Officer Newton Butts and the freshman Athletic Officer Ed Hodges. The winning units will receive the Intramural Banners at retreat in a Victory ceremony in which the Corp will pass in review before the winning units. The Athletic Officers of the winning outfits will be honored by the inscription of their names in the Court of Honor. Following are the final stand ings in the Class B race: FINAL INTRAMURAL STANDING Class “B” As of 4-6-1947 PHILIP MORRIS is so much. better to smoke! "It’s always fair weather when good fellows get together” . . . with PHILIP MORRIS! It’s true ... if every smoker knew what PHILIP MORRIS smokers know . . . they’d ALL change to PHILIP MORRIS. Yes, the PHILIP MORRIS smoker really gets what other smokers only hope to get . . . PERFECT SMOKING PLEASURE. So for perfect smoking pleasure... try a pack today! ALWAYS BETTER-BETTER ALL WAYS Place Organization Points 1— B. Field Artillery 806% 2— A. Chem. War Serv 760 3— A. Field Artilery 755 4— D. Infantry 713 5— E. Field Artillery 703)4 6— A. Infantry 702% 7— A. Air Corps 700.375 8— B. Engineers 675 9— C. Field Artillery 670 10— E. Infantry 666 11— A. Signal Corps i 655 12— D. Field Artillery 642 13— G. Infantry 640% 14— F. Infantry 640 15— D. Cavalry 637% 16— C. Cavalry 627% 17— A Cavalry 617% 18— B. Infantry 617% 19— B Cavalry 607)4 20— A Coast Art. Corps 605 21— C. Infantry 601% 22— C. Engineers 574% 23— A. Ordnance 530 24— F. Field Artillery 510 25— Field Art. Band 509% 26— Infantry Band 470% 27— A. Quartermasters 425 FROM THIS ANGLE -by LARRY GOODWYN Goodwyn INTRAMURAL WEIGHT LIFTING CHAMPS The first Intramural Weight Lifting contest was held Thursday with six men winning champion ships in six weight divisions. The winners are as follows: 123% lb., Royce Riddle, Dorm 5. 132% lb.,Lee M. Duggan, C Field. 148% lb., Don Fitzgerald, E Field. 165 lb., J. C. Elrod, B Engineer. 181% lb., Raymond G. McCavley, Dorm 5. Heavyweight, M. G. Rolnick, C Field. Events were held in the military press, snach, and clean and jerk. Intramural medals went to the winner along with an AAU Weight Lifting Certificate. Time Schedule Of Final Exercises Baccalaureate services for the graduating seniors will be held in Guion at 10 a.m. Fri day, May 30, F. R. Jones, chair man of the commencement com mittee announced. The proces sional will form in front of the building at 9:30 a.m. The Commencement exercises take place Friday evening at 6 p.m. in Kyle Field Stadium. Graduates are asked to form promptly at 5:30 p.m. at the main entrance of the field. In the event of inclement weather, the Commencement program will be held in Guion Hall. CHANCE TO PILE UP FOR THE FALL TERM Call on buyers, executives and businessmen with a war surplus merchandise service they've been asking for. For full information about how you can earn substantial profits this summer, send both your school and home address to: NATIONAL MERCHANDISE UNDERWRITERS, U. V- 17*0 K STREET, N. V. WASHINGTON ft, D. C The athletic season, 1946-47 is,-t for all practical purposes, all over but the shouting. Only the ten tative “Duel of Champions” be tween Big Six Confer ence and S outhwest Confer- ence track- men and the A. A. U. Track Meet in San Antonio, both scheduled for June, remain on the slate. All collegiate competition in - the Southwest Conference is over, last Saturday’s tract meet in Waco and tennis meet in Austin ringing down the cur tain. Looking back over the year, it can be said that the Aggies didn’t exactly cover themselves with glory. The football team, expected to be strong, was a hot and cold outfit that won four, lost six. The basketball team, expected to be weak, was good, but even then took a back seat in the conference picture. Ditto the tennis team. The swimming team, after setting the league on fire all season, lost the title in the conference meet to Texas. The golf team, likewise potent during the pre-championship season, folded in the conference meet and bowed to teams it had beaten earlier in the year. The baseball team, expected to be in the middle of the scrap for the title, suffered too many ear ly season reverses and late-sea- son injuries to its mound staff to be a contender. Only the track team, steadily improving from the first meet on, came in the clutch. Not a record to look back on with pride; but not exactly one to be ashamed of either. The im portant thing, right now, is the prospects for next year. The 1947 football team will have these distinct advantages over this year’s squad: The coaches are, at long last, familiar with what they are working with and this should result in much less idle substitutions than in ’46 when a sub or two was running out on every play. This, in turn, will re sult in the Aggies fielding a team composed of 11 guys who know what to expect of each other, rath er than a squad of about 30 who had scarcely played together—as was the case last fall. Moreover, the Aggie attack, the sore spot in the grid set-up last year, should be vastly improved. Better balan ced the Cashion, Dusek (or more probably Paul Yates) Goff and Smith (or Welch) combine should cross the goal much more frequent ly than any one of last year’s six or seven different backfields. In Cashion, the Aggies may well have the sparkplug, the ab sence of which, cost the Aggies their chances to win the Tech, O.U., and Arkansas games last year. As for basketball, Coach Marty Karow has most of last year’s team plus some new faces around which to build the ’47 cage quintet. Only Homer Adams of the ’46 team will be missed. Back for another crack at conference opponents will be the colorful and consistent Mike Garcia, tall, dependable Don Void ing, equally tall and equally de pendable Ray Kamperman, Tex Thornton, and Sam Jenkins and, of course, Bill Batey one of the Aggies’ chief point-makers last year. With Texas definitely weak er than its championship squad of this year, the Aggies, with luck, may be coming home with the SWC cage crown next February. As for baseball, all the Aggies need for a title team next year are a few breaks and one dependa ble pitcher. The Aggies had prob- a b 1 y the best-balanced diamond squad in the league this year—even Texas ball players have admitted that. But the lack of pitching strength proved decisive. With a little luck in rounding up a hurler, Coach Lil Dimmitt may well pilot his crew to a title. Its not only possible, it may well happen—very easily. As for track, the outlook is as bright as a new silver dollar. Of the 59% points the Aggies scored in winning the loop crown in Waco last week, men who accounted for all but one of these will be action again next fall. Only Joe Vajdos, who placed fourth in the 880, will grad uate. In addition, Jack Simpson, one of the prize high school plums ever picked by A. & M. will return to a Maroon uniform next year. Simpson, who is quite capable of a 12 foot 6 inch vault, a six foot, 4 inch high jump and a near 23 foot broad jump, first came to A. & M. in ’45 but was declared sch olastically inelgible before he ever got a chance to compete in con ference meets. In addition, another pole-vaulter- high jumper - broad jumper - named Rix who performed here in ’43 will return. Performing in the same events as does Simpson, Rix should help give the Aggies one of the fanciest group of field event men this league has ever seen. Check this group for power: Pole Vault—Bodeman, Tate and Quirey (currently the league three top men) Simpson, Rix and Davis; Broad Jump—Hill and Jay (one- two in conference meet) and Simp son and Rix; High Jump—Haws, Simpson and Rix; Shot Put—Ka dera and Young; Javelin—Kadera and Goode (’46 SWC champion); and Discus—Kadera. There’s gold in them hills, people, plenty of gold. As for the minor sports, the Aggies should again be up there in swimming and golf. The Farm ers’ surprising third-place finish in the conference tennis tourney indicates definite strength for next year. The cross-country team, which copped the title last fall, has reason to expect a repeat perform ance again this year. All in all, ’47 could be one of A. & M.’s most successful in SWC history. Whether it will or not remains to be seen. But, anyway, come what may, we’ve got a buck or two to spare (or maybe we can borrow some) that says the Aggies will take at least two major championships next year, and two more minor ones. Wanta bet? Used Supplies Wanted We are in the market for your Drawing In struments, Slide Rules, Tackle Boxes, T-Squares, Study Lamps, Dissecting Sets, Hand Lens, Etc. Check the following list and see what you want to sell. Retail We Pay No. 1156c (Old No. 576c) Commander Dr. Set.$29.50 $17.70 No. 1166 (Old No. 576n) Commander Dr. Set 23.00 13.80 No. 1186 (Old No. 586) National Dr. Set 18.50 11.10 NCK 795-8 Minusa_ Drawing 34.50^^^20.70 No. 9125-2 Mimisa Drawing Set 21.00 12.60 No. 794 Excelsior Drawing Set 32.00 19.20 No. 4081-3 Log-Log Decitrig Slide Rule 16.50 10.00 No. 4081-3L Log-Log Decitrig Slide Rule 18.00 10.80 No. 4083-3 Log-Log Vector Slide Rule 16.50 10.00 No. 1732 Log-Log Decimal Trig Slide Rule 16.50 10.00 No. 1732L Log-Log Decimal Trig Slide Rule 18.00 10.80 24" Celluloid Edge T-Square 2.25 1.35 42" Celluloid Edge T-Square - 4.25 2.55 Steel Tackle Box - 2.00 1.20 I. E. S. Lamp (New Model) 5.75 3.50 Dissecting Sets and Hand Lens 60% of List THE EXCHANGE STORE “Serving Texas Aggies”