Tuesday, May 8, 1951 THE BATTALION Page 3 Banquet to Honor Ag Cage Champs The men and the players who led A&M to its first share of a bas ketball crown in 28 years will be honored tonight at 7. The event ? A banquet in Sbisa Hall, one suitable for the Southwest Conference Tri- Champs who went into the NCAA playoffs. With the Athletic Department footing the bill, the cagers will listen to Newt Hielscher emcee the program. Hielscher, who doubles as ah E. D. prof and sports enthus iast, gave the play-by-play report for Bryan’s KORA during the reg- * Golfers Try To Keep SWC Title from SMU For a last bit of homing be fore the Southwest Confer- . ence Golf Meet, the Aggie v . Golf team will play host to the SMU Mustangs tomorrow ^ afternoon at 1 on the A&M Golf ajCourse. The Aggies, who have all but cinched the No. 3 spot in South west golf, cannot knock the Ponies out of second position, but they can either hand the title to the first , place Longhorns or keep SMU in that No. 2 position. If the Aggies should score more than one and one-half points on the Mustangs tomorrow, the title will automatically go to Texas. On the other hand, if the Ponies should take five of the six matches they would be the champs. A four and one-half point win to SMU would put the Red and Blue in a first place tie with the Steers. The SWC meet, which starts Friday morning on the A&M Golf Course, will be staged to de termine the Individual Golf Cham pion. At 8 a.m. at least 25 as- * pirants will tee off on the first round of 18 holes. The tournament will be 72 holes of medal play, 36 holes on Fri day and 36 holes on Saturday. Luke Harrison, instructor in Physical Education Department, will serve as the tournament’s dir ector. A release from the Office of the Executive Secretary of the South west Conference stated that “each member school may be represented by not more than six players.” il Opportunity Unlimited... For men of high caliber and university training, Douglas offers limitless opportunity. Today, as for the past thirty years, our future depends on men who can continue to help pioneer in the field of aeronautics. University and college gradu ates have made important con tributions to our progress, and have found Douglas a good place to work. As we push forward the development of aircraft, guided missiles, and special classified projects for the Government, we shall always be interested in men trained as aeronautical, mechani cal, electrical and civil engineers... physicists... and mathematicians. DOUGLAS AIRCRAFT COMPANY, INC. SANTA MONICA, CALIFORNIA ula,r basketball season and also during the conference’s playoff for a slot in the NCAA, tournament. Guests at the banquet will in clude members of the last team to grab the SWC cage title be fore Coach John Floyd’s 1950- 51 squad turned the trick. The 1923 champs present will include Eugene Darby of Pharr; Harry Duckett from Houston; King Gill and Ceburn Megority of Corpus Christi, Lowell Keen of Corsi cana, and Paul Washburn, now of New York City. Each of the 1923 basketballers who attend the banquet will be introduced by Master of Ceremon ies Hielscher and will speak brief ly to the attendants. Trainer Bill Dayton will also be honored at the banquet. The banquet will mark the last appearance of three members of A&M’s championship squad. Mar vin Martin, Glenn Williams, and John DeWitt have trotted out on the home court for the last time. They will be the only men who will leave from this year’s team, although Jewell McDowell has only one semester of eligibility remain ing. McDowell, starting guard on the team, gained All-Conference honors, All-District 9 (NCAA) received honorable mention on several All-America teams. Remaining, in addition to Mc Dowell, will be All-Conference cen ter Walter “Buddy” Davis, for ward Leroy Miksch, arid five guards—Don Heft, Raymond Walk er, Bobby Farmer, Don Garret, and Bill Carpenter, The Cadet basketballers wound up the conference with an 8-4 rec ord, which included the first win over arch-rival Texas since 1946. Their season total was 14-10, ex cluding the one game against Washington in the Kansas City NCAA playoff. A&M finished SWC play in a three-way tie with Texas and TCU. The cagers took TCU in Waco, then came home to beat Texas, making it the second time they had beaten the Longhorns in DeWare Field House during the past season. Losing the next tilt of the three- game Texas series, the Ags then edged the Steers in Gregory Gym in Austin to become official SWC guidon-bearers in Kansas City. The win marked the first time in 17 years the Aggies had beaten Texas on their home court. Tickets for tonight’s banquet, selling at $2 per plate, may be ob tained in the Athletic Office. The event is open to the public. ’Mural News By JOE BLANCHETTE Battalion Sports Staff G AF pushed across four' runs in the; final inning to edge past E Infantry, 4-3. George Martin, airmen hurler, was touched for three runs by the Infantry hitters in the first frame but he' strengthened after the shaky start and shutout the In fantry ball club the remaining five innings. Wert Love started for E Infan try and| seemed peerless throughout the first five rounds of play but wildness in the sixth was his downfall. Martin opened the fatal frame by walking, Tom Spadachene was alsft walked by Love putting two men on the basepaths. Bob Far row, Air Force second baseman, popped out, but K. D. Hallmark walked to load the bases. L. M. Kaplan lashed a single deep to ceriter field to send Martin and Spadachene romping across the horneplate and racking up the first two tallies of the afternoon for G AF. Donny Joseph followed Kaplan and was issued a free pass to once again jam the sacks. This time Jack Bryant lined a single off Love’s hurling to drive in the two inning runs. Jack Tanner, Business Society (See TURNS IN, Page 4) TODAY & WEDNESDAY oooooooooooooo g ^Charlie g ! Giaplin § 0 0 o W O o o 0 in One of the Funniest q 0 Comedies of All Time! q o ;cnr lights’ o o o O Written, Directed and Produced q 0 by CHARLES CHAPLIN q O Released thru United Artists q OOOOOOOOOOOOOO Little Man, Big Bat Freshmen Nine Grabs 5-4 Win Over Baylor The Aggie Fish nine squeezed by the Baylor Cubs, 5-4, in an unus ually wild game .in College Station last Friday afternoon. The game was highlighted by numerous Baylor errors and their failure to score runners on bases. The Cub nine faltered five times in the field and left 12 of their players stranded. The Cubs had e A&M ab r h Marin, If 3 1 1 Hunt, 2b 4 0 0 Cunningham, lb 1. 10 0 Leissner, ss 4 0 0 Selman, lb 3 0 1 Robinett, c 4 10 Lawrence, cf 4 11 Fuchs, rf 4 0 0 West, xx 2 11 Sills, p 4 11 Smith, xxx 0 0 0 Totals 32 5 5 Baylor ab r h Boren, If 4 0 0 Smith, cf 110 1 1 1 1 3 Schneble, rf 2 0 2 Reid, p 4 0 0 Eisenberg, p x 0 0 0 Goody, 3b 5 0 Benge, c 3 Sullivan, ss 4 Davenport, lb 5 Foote, 2b 5 Totals.. .33 4 9 Henry Candelari . . . has played sterling baseball for the Aggies this year at third base. Better known as “Hank” or “Yogi”, the little man with the big bat and the sharp glove is a good reason why the Cadets still have a chance for first place in the Conference and are almost assured of second. iiiiia Major League ManoitW' AMERICAN LEAGUE Boston 002 000 000—2 4 0 St. Louis .... 000 000 000—0 2 1 Nixon and Rosar; Garver and Lollar. HR—Nixon. WP—Nixon (1-0). IP—Garver (3-2). Washing .. 010 550 000—11 17 1 Cleveland.. 000 430 012—10 13 0 Consuegra, M. Harris (6) and Sacka; VanderMeer, Fahr, (4), Ro- zek (5), Zuberink (5), C. Harris (7), Gromek (9) and Hegan. HR —Doby (2), Clark. WP—M. Har ris (2-1). LP—VanderMeer (0-1). New York 111 020 001—6 10 1 Detroit 003 201 04x-10 10 1 Byrne, Sanford (5), Ferrick (9) and Berra; Rogovin, Bearden (3) and Ginsberg. HR — Woodling, Berra, Bearden, Kryhoski, Evers. WP—Bearden (1-0). LP—Sanford (0-1). Only games scheduled. Standings Won Lost Pet. G.B. New York 14 5 .737 Washington 12 6 .667 IVs Cleveland 11 6 .647 2 Chicago 10 7 .588 3 Boston 10 9 .526 4 Detroit 7 8 .467 5 Saint 'Louis ...... 5 15 .250 9% Philadelphia .... 3 16 .158 11 NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis.. 000 100 001 1—3 9 5 Brooklyn 010 000 010 2—4 9 0 Staley, Brazle (9) and Rice; Roe and Campanella and Edwards. HR—Rice. WP—Roe (4-0). LP— Staley (3-21. 3KE V.'.V.V.'.VV.Y.V.W Bryan 2‘8S79 NOW SHOWING j/jue-r m! queen NOW SHOWING iisutte Sff WMNE ion MQgRiS HMISHT Standings Won Lost Pet. G.B. Saint Louis .... 10 Boston 13 Brooklyn 11 Pittsburgh 9 Philadelphia .... 10 Chicago 8 Cincinnati 7 11 New York ........ 8 14 4 .825 9 .591 9 .550 8 .520 10 .500 9 .471 .389 .364 1 IVa 2 1 / 2 2 1 / 2 4 5 Today’s Pitchers Saint Louis at New York — (night)—Brecheen (2-0) vs Jan sen (1-2). Chicago at Brooklyn — Schultz (2-1) or Schmit (0-2) vs Erskine G-2). Pittsburgh at Philadelphia — (night)—Queen (1-1) vs. Heintzel- man (1-2). Cincinnati at Boston—(night) — Raffensburger (0-2) vs. Surkont (2-1) . Commissioning Exercise Set for Friday, June 1 Commissioning exercises for June military graduates will be held Friday, June 1 at 1:30 p. m. Col. E. W. Napier said yesterday. A speaker for the ceremonies has not been named, however, a high ranking military figure is expected to be secured within the next 48 hours, Col. Napier said. In 1938 Ted Williams, Boston Red Sox star, led the American Association in hitting with a mark of .366. Ted was playing for Min neapolis. Big ‘If’ Can Do Or Don 7 For Ag Nine With a single victory over SMU and a twin killing at the expense of Baylor, the Aggie baseball teain is a almost solid bet for second place in the Southwest Conference standings and even has an outside chance for first. A&M with a record of 7-wins- and-4-losses, plays Rice a doub le bill this weekend at Houston and then meets Texas, who has a record of 9-and-l, the follow ing weekend bn Kyle Field. IF the Steers should lose one of the games to SMU or the sirigle contest to TCU, and THEN lose a two-game sei’ies to the Aggies, A&M could tie the Longhorns for first—IF the Ag.s take Rice twice first. TODAY LAST DAY FIRST RUN —Features Start— 1:30 - 3:12 - 4:54 - 6:36 8:18 - 10:00 DICK POWELL HE’S OH THE PROWL! NEWS — CARTOON STARTS - WE DNESDA Y FIRST RUN UCHTNINC SIRIKUMICF ALSO STARRING Richard TODD-Mercedes McCAMBRIDGE AWAJwit mca Ncruu ——a iiiT'rTnujaaTBj NEWS — CARTOON Spring Time Is Y Time The time when all smart men turn to Puritan “T” fashions in sportswear. In warmer weather when you want to look your casual best, you’ll find that Puritan sportswear will help you cut a trimmer, taller, more tapered figure — a Mr. “T” figure— approved by leading fashion experts. And Puritan gives you a lot more than a dashing figure. In sports shirts, T-shirts, sweaters or beachwear, every Puritan item is made for really relaxable comfort and it’s expertly constructed of light weight material of the finest quality. Yessir, get Puritan sportswear — the choice of all Americans—at your Exchange Store and you get leisure wear designed for ease and good looks at very attractive prices. Choose from our wide variety of exciting colors and handsome patterns. Remember, it’s Puritan “T” styles at your Exchange Store. The Exchange Store “Serving Texas Aggies’’ previously lost to ho one, beating the Fish in Waco. Sills pitched and wpn his first nine-inning job this year. Al though allowing nine hits and the same number of walks, he was ef fective in the clutch. Reid was the Cagers Set Final Game Wednesday Aggie basketball fans will have their last chance , this, year to see the team in action when the Ma roon and White squads clash tomor row night in DeWare Field House at 7:30. This inter-squad game will high light the 1951 Spring training ses sion, apd Jewell McDowell, all conference guard, will swing into action again as captain of one of the squads. On the team which McDowell captains will be Don Heft, return ing letterman arid one of the most promising members on the squad. Buddy Davis, last year’s star cen ter, will not participate since he is now handling the high jumping chores on the track team. Other squadmen on McDowell’s team will be Don Dinford, James Addison, Bill Carpenter, Ronnie Dwyer, Allen Davis, Bill Williams, Richard Harris, Pete Steinman and Jim Ashlock. The competition will be keen, \yith an opposing tearri which is evenly matched arid led by Bobby Farmer and Leroy Miksch, who are returning to next year’s team with high hopes and great possibilities. Taking the court with Farmer and Miksch will be Raymond Walk er, Roy Martin, Don Garrett, Pat McCrdry, Ken Murry, Stan Baker, Vol Montgomery, Thomas Darling, James Gallemore and Fred Scott. losing pitcher for the Baylor nine and had to be relieved by Eisen berg in the last of the ninth inn ing. Despite being out-hit, 9 to 5, by the Cubs, the Aggie freshmen hit timely in the top half of the ninth inning to send West across the plate with the winning run. Don’t Be ‘Shocked’ on MOTHER’S DAY Get Electrical Appliances from GRIESSER ELEC. CO. 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