l . ICO - n . ■d -r' it* ' r iv >• -U { Goi rors, tt "T ; ■ N s Help Calse'i t-t 'll, *1 * 1 itting tjir^e costly er- ■1 newljr on anized Ag gie soljball biain^ lost |. the^r opening ganiQ to- 1 the ^ T ixon Clay Cdllegiatei cf Austin 4’' to 1 heste last; Friday. | The gltme, phlyeil uni er the lights o^i the ne y. SoftbU 1 dia mond, was praccide? by |i brief cereinony L "in'augjuiiati ig . tht 1 field. Higjhlighit of the) cnenony t as the tosBing pif ;fhe |firstlpitch ■ jy the President .'if flu (follegei, Gibb Gilchrist. j L !' i - ^’ i ; The seven inpiig ltame turned out to be a pile iei|s duel! a» B. »' J. Lloyd, tfie Aggie^ 1 mound^tnan, ,\l allowed ostlyf t>v< i hits whjile his mates Collected < nh thretf blows off of the offeringi of 1K > Col legiate; hurler, (leoifee Wi lace. Scoring pile rini iii the firs^in- ,rii;ig oh d walkl. tin frror, j stolen baafi aijjd a-plasdid |>all, fjie Ccd legtans! took th .ej Iliad ait never headed. I A * | The--] Austin teun sepreid ifhree . . moi-e ri ns in tjhi.tup half' fourth i n an e.nro % a bit, .aj n _ i -play ami some head s-up. b|ise\run- mng. j s j Oneiof the Aggid hits, i :i|. G/«y Whips Aggies mgurated } h i t: ■ . . . M&L, : 'V m. Longhorns Play Purdue, Temple ^’49 And’50 AUSTIN, June 21 f/P>—A home- and| home football agreement be tween Texas and Purdue Univer sity- the first such agreement in history between Southwest and Big Nihe Conference teams—was announced today by Texas Athletic Director D. X. Bible* run by : Les Pain er|in the inning^ accounted |f Aggiei: tally. The Ihext gain? vft mcmd HVednesdar n ifEil Texas.';! team will be lujr.e on the|| mcmd HVednesdar night y Rush Aflotor'COiina ly Ivom fourth or •Uil* lone . LES PALME MuT^thp 4KRie n ^nvoJknocked one of (jleorge Wallace’s ‘ pitched out of tpe park last Fri day night on the new Aggie softball diamoijd. The game, first of the season for |he Ag gies, saw Palmer's blow go in vain ds the Aggies lost to the Nixon Clay Collejgiates 4 to 1. Aggie ew dja j ith the Conroe,; C-RovvWii^TlKiIii College V few] Ball list Week ; lie's illll.eagi tHeir l Thj' losirlfe 4th when they, icc rtTi H ■ winning pitcliw' wj» Sinil . loser Showuliier 4- -ti—i 14 to • of -Sim flxi' firs v tli' Col in in h g mn.yjg.in thf j game which wilp\ be pai't dlf the rmelon t’estival. XaVasota will' be l 1 : -I i 19. The f % BILL TH?)UNION ; B-Ocjd and A-F.v; :n opjned the softban season in Collg jcy Vieu lidt Tuesday with a bail game thttl lasted two hours i nd a 'half, tin findl steore being 24 to H^'ame turned into ; hitt.ii thon fj'ith B-Odd idmiiij top. Tlje winning pi chei' i as Fhui Ugan, ]|tlie Ibsen Mas Wiy. , Thi game haV Cppk,i j leDan (fl, ‘Shel jton anil Lakpus of B-Qdd son .pfj A-Evjcn -rfct 1 5 for pLate. : - C-R|'W defeated! fJ-Evei behinq the 8-hit p. fching mens last Tuesday in game; J for both lege View Soffh scoreq mosti of the 3if|l ihnipg, Was .lliitnesr C-I®w nqupdl'd font. 1 tops Hi-Odii 15! t i i last Tliiusda: forHNeir secoild win in tf ree'day. C--Ro\fi had thjei J third baseman softball team, 4-1: Law Wins Third Straight Gam In’Mural Pla n I : j. I IP The Boilermakers of Purdue will play the Longhorns here Sdpt. 30, 1950, and Texas will go to Laf ayette, Ind., in 1951. Bible also announced several other intersectional games which will give the Longhorns foes from the east and west as well as the midwest new opponents will be Temple and the University o{ Ida ho. Temple University of Philatlel- lihia, Pa., will be host to Texas Law Hall canie from behind to beat Leggett 13 to 9 last Friday and registered their third straight victory to retain first place iq the Campus Softball League. Don Fischer, Law Hall’s ace pitcher, clubbed a home run in the third inning with the bases loaded to send his team into a lead which they retained for the remainder of the contest. Leggett took an early lead iiji the first inning by driving across) two runs, but the men from in back of the Exchange Store didn’t threat en again until the last of the sixth when they scored four times.; Fischer, who went the route for Law, registered his third straight pitching triumph. Law meets winlcss Walton Hall this afternoon while the Tijailer Camp and Dorm 14 tangle id an other league qpntest. In what should be the best game of the day, undefeated Puryear Hall meets the strong Bizzell team which has been beaten only by Law. Mitchell tangles with Leggett in Ji ■ I ! r Jy V; ' j | I ■ . ' ; rnden Takes Second i eter; Kadera Wins Thir ' ■ H. !• — ■4 f •f r Battalion PORT MONDAY,’JUNE 21, 1948 Page 3 Baylor Bears Lose to USC In Western NCAA Baseball Finals have two setbacks to mar j their records. Aggie Nine To Play Here With Sept. 24,' 1949, and will come to 1 game scheduled Austin Oct. 7, 1950. Their visit f 01 ’ tomiy- Both of^ these learns will mean the return to the South west of Ray Morrison, who brought razzle-dazzle to t|ie Southwest Conference with hisj extensive upc of passes as head coach at South ern, Methodist University in the I thirties. Morrison is head coach at Temple. j The University of , Idaho, now coached by ex-Rose Bowl hero Dixie Howell, will challenge the i Longhorns here Oct/ 1, 1949. j Three non-conference foes are ! already signed for 195 f l and prom DENVER, June 21—W— Sou thern California’s powerful Tro jans won the Western NCAA base ball championship Saturday night with a 1G-3 conquest of the Baylor Bears in the final game of the double elimination playoffs. The Baylor Bears, with Little Jim Blair almost blowing an eight run lead, squeezed past the Okla homa A&M Cowboys Saturday af ternoon in the semi-finals of the playoffs. Blair, a 140-pound sophomore from Dallas, held the Cowboys to two hits in the first seven innings. His wildness in the last two frames almost cojst him the ball game as he walked eight men, hit onie batter and uncorked three wild pitches. • . J) j- • Trailing 9-1 at the start of the eighth, Oklahoma pushed across fiVe runs to jump back into the running. i ■ ! Baylor got eight hits off three Oklahoma pitchers, including a three run homer over the 380-foot right field wall in the fourth in ning by Hal Harris, 19-year old shortstop'. Rush Motor ~ : Oklahoma. M-• * • j ^ h i The (Complete 19)49 and 1950 | Aggie softball fansyyill get their j Texas schedules aqnopnced today: ; second taste of j night .softbUll on), 1949: the ncy Aggie d amend Wednesday . ■ Sept. 17—Texas Tech'at Austin. ! wheii i he Rush Motor Company of ! Sept. 24—Temple! University at ' Conroe sends the ir team to College ; Philadelphia. ■' ; Station for a grme with the once Oct. 1—‘University of Idaho at defeated'Aggies, ’ >. j Austin. The Conroe aggregation is ^ne ' } Oct. 8—University of Oklahoma of the) many tei ms beingi lined-up jariDallas. ’ i r j for ti)e Aggies to play. Friday Get. 15—University of Arkansas , . night !Taylor Wilkins’ squad Will; a t Little Rock, Aiic g an at a- | play host to Steve’s Circle Cafe! Oct. 22—Rice Institute at Austin hut oi op Waco. Game time, for bbth I Oct. 29—8.MU at Dallas. games will be-cjt eight o'clock. | Nov. 15—Baylor ; Universitjij. at be free to all TrrT J. diamond Nov. 12. TCU at Austin. • ' uiumono N()V _ 2 4—Texas k&M at College Station.' 5 at t)u i -Kor runs -;it, Admission will • l ’' l‘cih ^ ftba 'l games o \ the new a '‘ ( ' ‘ ' however, the coiucirtsjon .stand \yill /.sell cold drinks for top cents so ’J-that there will some source of 1950: \ g' Sept. 23—Texas! Tech at Lub bock. - j. $ept. 30—Purdujo' University at 111.-. juiis.., Tf. ops', fh money for the team’s uniformsiand {traveling expensed;- Saturday the Aggie nine ‘will [pastin' I 'X : ffoui ney ty San d ntonio where they j 0ct . ’ 7_T e mple University j at j k’lll play addoiib e header with one Austin. • : id the leading teams in-the Citj Oct. 14—Univcrsiiv of- Oklahoma I jMajor Jjcagik'. j , , ( at Dallas. The Grand FT t(>n -and the Aggies will [nmrf i' 1 Navasota Momla v. July 5fh for a - c Navasota Watc jCaniie time in i 5:3(1 p. m. 4—- ze teani of llous- 'WC ^ mtk \ * & Wit- yi » . . , ' ' . ' Tf Oct. 21—University cif Arkansas at AUstin. Oct. 28—Rice Injstitule at Ileus- { ton. 4. ~ ‘ ' Nov. 4—SMU at! Austin. \ Nov. 11—B,aylori University at l Waco. : M - ' Nov. 18—TCU kt Fort Worth. Noy. 39—Texas )A&M at Austin. I JERSEY JOE WALCOTT, standing, is shown as he floored JOE LOUS, partially seated, in their first title bout. The two heavy-weights meet again Wednesday night with the world's heavy-weight crown at stake, laiuis qecisioned Walcott in their fifteen round battle last fall, Fresh lUltur pi Y Ci ' Jt'S Wanjt idiot L es I liat Are Cleaner. 1. 2005 Sojith Cjtlkgt! I load. Pressed? FAMOl'S SANITONE EAMIKG SERVICE . HE' BEST-IN TOWN! i. V PERFEc rO GLEANERS ■ Rhone 2*866,') “*T ■ i;\ y 1 ■ j “Smat i . 5 Taiilt at hwv your Brym • Tf ' hiid ini [egg. wel eir . . loimatiic L ; T 7 s e « I <; t ^ ‘ T -T I O ' 1 Walton, Mitchell Win Openers In Campus Volleyball { 1J> BILL THORNTON 1 I Purytar and Dorm No. 14 got forfeits, with only two games be ing played in the) Campus Vcilley- I ball League last Thursday. Walton and Leppeu settled the 1 dispute of who was the best for the day when Walton defeated Leg gett 15-7 and 15- j.:Ditmar of Wal- kon played heudi-up ball as did Collier and Stewaft of Leggett. The big game iof the: afternoon was the Mitchell tind Trailer Camp gime which had to go the full 3 games to decide) who the. victor would be with Mitchell pulling out of a. tight spot and winning the last game. 15-11. j, The other two games were, won «v the following j order. Mitchell took the first oilie .15 to 4, then Trailer Camp cable back to take the , second ope )l|5-ll. The last game was close nil, the way with ; for scv^ai*days’ .1 . | each tcatn holding, the lead a num- i-ber of times. j j ;■ , The Trailer Gamp crew wax I well supported by Seawald and Koenning both^ playing excellent l ball. Holland and Dixon sparked 1 the Mitchell teajn with Holland making some' nicq kills and Dixon i setting them up for him. Docusen Meets Robinson For Crown Tonight CHICAGO, June 19 —CP' When/ —and if—welterweight champion Ray Robinsoni gcts into, tht( ring at Comiskey Park Monday night, he’ll be ready for raw meat, literally and figuratively. Robinson belatedly is scheduled to take on 21-ycar-old Bernard Docusen of New Orleans in his third title defense, IF: 1. The champion can make the 147 title poundage at today’s sec ond weight-in for the fight. 2. He doesn’t call tlje whole thing off and go back in 4 huff to New York, causing the; Illinois! Athletic Commission to ddclure his title vacant. i ^ 4 3. It doesn’t rain again jas at did last Thursday night when the 15- round title go originally Mas sche duled. Tho commission scales began be ing a night-marish contraiption for Robinson last Thursday! upon when he peeled off everything ejxccpt his skin to hit 147 on tho head—and that after starving and ‘[sweating Campus Softball Team Law Puryear Bizzell Milner Trailer Camp Mitchell Leggett W alton Dorm 11 , Lost TEXAS LEAGUE 0 . ■ W. L. Pet. 0 Houston 39 26 ;600 1 Tulsa : Fort Worth ... . .. .37 26 .587 1 .36 30 .545 1 San Antonio . .. .31 33 .484 »> Shreveport ..... ... .31 34 .fill •J Dallas ...... .29 35 .453 «> Oklahoma City .. 27 86 .429 weakening .weight-trimming sche dule. But the champion, who has put up $10,000 as a performance guar antee and another $1,000 as a weight forfeit, apparently: thought the losjs of £11,000, plus a good chance of meeting middleweight champion Zalc if ho kayoes po- cusen, would bo much more,pain ful than whittling away a stub born pound or two of flesh. League Standings Beaumont 88 NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L, 34 22 32 23; 30 23 29 26 Boston Pittsburgh St. Louis New York ■•.i -.27 ...j. Philadelphia Brooklyn ... Cincinnati . Chicago 1. AMERICAN LEAGUE " t Of the 600,000 Jewish settlors now in Israel, about 3,000 ci originally from the United States. 1 Washington Cleveland ...34 New York L Philadelphia .1: Boston 1.. ...32 .33 .27 Detroit L ...28 .421 Pet. .607 .582 .345 .527 .474 .442 .414 .411 Pet. .654 .582 .569 .50ft .506 .439 points in the 27th Minneapolis, Minnesota Hamden, Southw for the past three year*, 8 points by taking second ijn meter daah, Norman Rue :i University of South Caro i nosed out Hamden for fi was clocked in 47.2 secop Placing 1 third behind Gordien of the Univeijs Minnesota and Victor I n Yale University, Kader: the remaining 6 points Aggies as he twirled th^ 155 feet U/z inches. • The fourteen points so Hamden, and Kadera wei e to give tHe Aggies llth the team standings. The University of Mir pre-meet underdog, capi team title for the first, ti According to a photo N|cn at the finish of the 100 nut®] 1 dash the results of that race! have been changed as folio v«; Mel Patton. USC, first; Don {.Undei son, California, Record;]. Don Campbell, Colorado, thi'dJ P; Bienz, Tulane, fourt P, 1 Cowic, Princeton, fifth; (harle Parked, Texas, sixth, ij ‘ This changes the Unitersilty of Texas’ point total fruti 40 |t 35. USCSecon Place llth Aggies Art Harnd they were definite Oly fflliic iti 1 11 ; ■ y CAA 400 ' Discul u Kadera showed that they garnered fourteen track and field meet at JikT j T . erenc|e 440 yard! dash champ )er |AA £ ed b 'tioug ace i(|it sota, a tla in tt history of the meet as tpcjj sed a total of 46 points. vevsity of Southern Califoniia, pre-meet favorite, came ill secoU with 4Hi points. The University of Tjeiis fin ished third with 40 po mth. Thq Longhorns’ leading poi U! jgettei was Flyin’ Charley Pa klqr whq scored 14 points as he ond in the 200 meter third in the 100 meter it Jerry Thompson addek points to the Steer’s t itiil race PH BC w» J point ihan of. the) theet as ha tri umph (d twice by winning the 100 nd 2p0 meter dushes. Patton all th^ way V> bent Don Andei of ihti University of California Parkqr in a 10.4 sjecbnd 100 4el h'ards as he coprifed tho 200 20.7 secohdk. ofArk new i te Jr*. Patton beat Pgrkcr by th ds | as e ni 2 Clyde Scott o|f ihe University ansas se ecords as firstjiijn the 110 les T]th a time) of 13.7 Scott’ii time eclipsed the he licit Friday in the _ arie i when he clipped one tenth of 2. second off the record of 14.1 seconds set by Forest (Spec) Towns in 1936. T! Otl ier , Southwest pohferenccl ath- leU's who placed in the .meet were: John 1 Robertson of Texas (fourtil I in the) broad jump), Frank Guesd of lekas (thiril in the .Javelin throw 1 and Vem McGrew of Rico Instrute (tied fop thi I'd in the high jump]), RaHolbrook of A&M and Fer ry S; muels and Robert Wultcru of • Texan, other Southwest Conference enjxi if), failed to qualify in their resptjciivc events. Augie Erfurth, Rice’ i crack hurdler, qualified in the jjlO meter high hurdles but ■> failcjUto place in tile finals. /tajy individual who placed as lug, ijas sixth in this meet is cli- gible to compete in the fbial- Olympic trials to be held at Evanston, Illinois- on July 9 and 10. H irfiden and Kadeni from Ai&M, ; T (See TRACK, Page 4.V ■1 % Robinson and his entire rctinufi j hollered loudly; but unsuccessfully I when tnc commission saidj he would j have to weigh in agaiiCtqday. Robinson’s manager, G c (i.r g 1 Gainford, at first .said Robinson would forget about tlie whole thing, rather than undergo another I' !■. I,, .a 1 • (je t A Shoek? r MUCH AS YOU THINK! is- lie li rst eai (And y< r nuw ITT 1( f that’d come in u’ll bo pleasantly Surprised aiifl hw quickly we can service But if in ti)) jtop ruimi|i ni " bid it is. EE & CO. nisi SERVICI / CLEANING - PRESSING x ALTERATIONS ! AT THEIR BEST — AT . 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