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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 19, 1949)
•w m 24 Out For i. M : r-- osts ■fri BackfieW Coach Dick Todd will havo 24 men from which to fill the halfback and fullback slots in the Aggie backfield this fall when football practice starts Sept. 1. ’ Of these 24 men, 17 are sophoV mores, five nr© juniors, and two , arc seniors. ' ; When senior:B6hby Goff had his knee operated op (this summer, it threw open for aWhilc anyway, the position that he had virtually sew- «Td up during spring drills. J Goffs knee is coming along better than expected now but it is expected that he[will see little . or no Mtjjce at the right half back position until the third or fourlli. game, this fall. \. Goff, who halls /rom Kennedy, wuh tttoved from full tjo hnltbnck tin spring, training. Last fall, he led air tho Aggie Tmoks In numhtft' of yards galnetl with a 5$1 total, although he was Injured the latter pnpt of the seUson. lie was also eighth In the conference In total yards gained rushing.’ Bight behind Goff uiid trying for the position of right halfback last spring were two outstanding prosjwots, Doylo Moore find Bob tthneucr. | • Moore, a 180 pound Aophomore from Austin, was ineligible last year and could not play for the varsity. He played in the backfield \ of the Aggie Fish teanvin 1947. Moore.has spebd on offense,anjl id he looked especially J other back whe -u'- '-ir i k[whp will seel sone . - Ir ,. v left htdfback posit on this year is Frank Tomo, Bob Goode’s Understudy in the p(Unt n« department last fall. • j if ijho coaching staff had liTorno selected to do most of the point ng during spring training but’he told ged as them that heTwould rather dp more r "“'" than jusjt the punting, and he prob- A junior six-footer from (jjlimer- on, Torno will get quite ![a[ few chances j to carry the ball with his 180 pouhds this fall. Ho will also have most of thej punting fdutics. I W :• -W i add speed to the Aggie ir they’re play- defense. ck, slot in om Beak defense- an \ *good in spring trainings ■ Shacffyr was the extra poinjl \ specialist' for the Fish team las ! year and 'played at a Uaifbaek no* • sition. " 1 Mr " y' * One of the fleetest backs on the Jot Aggie, squad, Shacffer got thaf way being one of ,the| outsUind ing liijO-yard dashers in the stal i in the sprtng of 1948. Shaetfer’s speed is what will put him in the games this fall, both on offense and defense. His .. defensive tactics against pass- /. i ing attacks were outstanding in spring drills. »He will probably take over mdst of the extra point making for the varsity this fall. It I goes witjhbut Glenn Lippmati, the !‘lGallopin' Ghost from the Gulf Coastj’' has ihe left halfbaick positjoh practi- »raUy sewed up. v * Dippman,is expected to be the best back to play on an Aggie team since Dick Todd aiiid John Kimbrough, in lull that, a coach •could ask for.i Speedy, shifty, smartlyppmaU Ts all that. f Weighing in 170 and standing five feet, sev^n inches tall, he' pos sesses the nmlitjy to stand thje de fensive team on its respective noses as he goes. past. . •> Lippman was a class A all- state hack inj'high school and - all- Twp iSOjwund sophomorgis from southeast Texas, Augie Sake pnd C'harlio McDonald, arc sililo given good hchancds of seeing a , lot of service In the lef 7 I Saxe, who is won n Fish football 1948 «ynd will probably naive h on < tlieat i me Miund. - j •«iiv a^xriiiariivuT Pcift iXtlnUTi waw inullglhic, Inst year beeuusd he hud played the previous sent)3it with LamuriiJunior College, lie will be used mjn'i' nH a defensive sfieeialist thjan anything else. He looted ex- ecjptionnlly good in the pnitH inter- eeipting deparlment last spring. Back; i\vross In tho riglt half- ack slot again, Gary Aidprson nd Bobby Dew arc nlsd Mfing tenUapcd ns goo<i prosptjct* for hat position. ii Anderson, from San was W mcm- icr of the Fish backfield last fall. 1c was state City OonfeTehec 100- •ard dash charhp in high schobl in 918 and has speedy to bum,, I. Dcwi a 175 pound junior* from Covsicana, was expected to do a iot or] the punting last fall 1 but didn’t got to play because |>f a knee injury. He 1 will 'sec some setwieb as a punter this Tall. 1 Five other soph , make up the ' remainder of the packs heading for a halfback slok. June Clark, Rodney East, Karl Hol)ier, Clar ence Parks, and j Don Pfefler- whether offense or For the fullback, slot in the Aggio backfield this fall, a big block-busting 195 I pounder from Houston, jBob Smith, has been tag- starter. Ineligible last season, Smith is a sophomore whose hard running has been'compared to that of Jar- rin’ Jawn. Besides being a hard line bustir, Smith has been clockeo in the lb)-y»rd dksh in 10.6 which is good for a boy being groomed for fullback. Smith's work on defense is also good, especially against passes.' | While n Lamar High School in Houston, Smith won honors in track and football. Pushing Smith for *he Mart- ing aas gnment at the fullback blot thli fall will be iwo moro outHtaming fullbacks, Jim Vowt and Clfi nco "Hull” Lawson. Voss, i 100 pound senior from Gatesvilh, is especially good in broken liedd running. Fast for a fullback, his defensive specialty in backing up the line. WHilo in high! school in Gatesville, Voss was nnnw ed ull-di itrict back. UWso i, a fullback on the Fish team Innl year, Halls from Wichita Falls.! lie looked especially good at tho post in spring training. Weighin { in at 170, he will be used a lot ot offense. Othe lull backs who expect to sec service this fall are Paul Yajtes, a 190 pound senior from For^ Wurth who looked good at times ast fall, Bernard Lent-; mdns, vho played tjh« same spot in the Fish backfield last fall, ana Jim Dobbyn. another soph who was one of the faster men in the first-year team’s back- field last ycXr. : ■ ' ■ \ PI ;U vj; riite • . , ’*!? i r FRIDAY, Battalion PORT lltl T'u AUG. 19,1949 PageS Campus Cham ‘HiftbaT :rmined j\ Th will be d ii# ted thiH al or Mondf ft ball League depending on the outcome of today’s Milper-Mitchell affajr. The winner of the College View League was determined last week with j&Odd again coming out on top. The Standings ner wlbi over the Mitchell ys todays then the College nship will Iki detoi-mlned in ii gaptc on tho Utti^'iHnd B-0« if Miichon w above art the mem be of the College VI lectured softball team _ „ row, left to right, they are, Jack Holt, Wray Whittaker. E. I, Ely. W. M. FrfU (Mfr.j and rs of the C-West lew League. First Mwitxer. T. M. Biol wrenee and A. c. Charles LSU Hopes To Have Better? Defense on Gridiron in ’49 4 IttMlHMi By BILL HAILE Blasting the line from the full-J the Tigers could look like this: back position will be Ebert (broth- [left, end, Sam Lyle, 205; loft! LSD's hopes for a ; winning .team j ov 0 f the Eagles’ great Steve) Van le, Joe Baird, 2o5; 'left Walsh, 205; center, Joe this year arc looking up. In 1948 j Buren and Zollie Toth, a 215 the Tigers had a disappointing pound blaster of the human tank season, losing _all but three of j variety. OLthei! candidates for the post, their games. Their defense was include Billy Tidwell from Hearnc, so leaky at times that five of a 180 pound bpy who was pne bt .heir opponents got through the' meanest said roughest backs 33 points or more. meanest said the Fjsp team had last year, and George iRoberts, a 190- pound soph- oirndre rrom Austin. ;l SW Conference Schools Expect Record Grid j Crowds This Year Dallas, Aug. 18-4^)—Ticket offices throughout thje: Southwest Conference aro as busy as one-armed paper hang-; The Advance ndance come maw uaiA in mikh was hdccU’d flur the .second American high A xonlmmori) hackx lust year ground guimngi mostly for offc school ieum. he lop the Fish in scoring and He will be used nse. Ij Of the two, the most ex per •rr' ers with the hjeat. i ulicates a record Atte outs were forecast. Three schools willing iriijlte what they will draw mdri,* than 800,000. declined to apecu atd. itehind Lippi nuh for tlu> left halfback npit dutriblJtwi GIijIbIutv- sen atid Gharlld Royalty. Hnyalty / nowiesst‘s once. A HHbjjound tl'h<’ all-time record Wad 171 for 34 home games list I year. It was the jfirat time for the con- forericei ipark. 8h iThc other uth retja to go over the sale of football ducats , . . all. At least seven sell-, ,r alanls r . f; ; J to esti4 showed" four 1,099,- ihillion ulnn I hern Methodist to dfng in 460.009 f „ boittF gumCH, all I IpIXyed in the Cotton Bowl seats 76,OOO. Lenter Johnson, SouthCfi odist, business manager letlcs, is (Ired df tiollmi mzo junior from Fro sport, he scored the second Aggie touchdown lust sea son in his fflbt varsity I game, that •ligninst Villanoya in Philadelphia. Kaynlty’s experience and speed : , are expectod Ao lie n big factor in his playing ttois^yenr. He wcighifl only 148 last season, and that plus his experience, is ex pected to improve his playing this year.. , ChrisUTwcn | w’as thy hard luck man of the Aggie squad last sea son. He didn't make -the varsity [ squad until just before the LSU game last year. Howcveiyhe wasn’t allowed to play in that one because __of a conference ruling that statys that a man’s name has to bt‘ an nounced a week before be, can play •in n game. i i ' ’ Against TCU, the ‘first, game in which he played last year, Chris- tensen made a name for himself Lwith his brilliant-defensive work. ' Thefi, in the Baylor game the next • week,V ho’ received a back injury and was forced to quit playing for,the season. rom Galveston, Christensen ighs F8<) pounds and stands feet, eleven. He w|U prob- j ably see a Tot of defensivc work in the backfield this fall. • !.• * Southern MethodiH tlekots <»nly wtky they can see thik is J to buy season tickritu. Hami> way with the Texas i Tjc> takp Metli- ••fh* dean Stockton, jUulif, Aug. 18— IVJ*)—(AmoH Alonzo Stagg, 87, of American college th«T wh't I* nnr'tt’— ■i>ik«4'”iip I*«i lfc ** Wrv- lamc- The game li’s ga the inic. « up all pf xpects hothe Priority- groups will them. The University of Texas i 240,000 attendance for five ■antes with the Rice^game a scll- uC of 65,000. Also, Texas already as sold its allotment for the kluHojma-Tcxns game at Dallas. Texas A. and.hjl. predicts 122,- 000 for its fouii. home games. There are no tickets'left how for the Thanksgiving jDny game with Texas, with 10,000 due to sec that one. The Aggies think 4 jNr they’ll set a new opening game record when they play Vtllanova Sept, ll The rltcoW is 17,500, hung up! in 1947, but 22;000 arc expected for ViBanbvh. 1 Arkansas would hot predict on attendance biit said the Texas’ game a( Little Kock should be a sell-owt. of j 35,000 and the Texas Christian npd Texas A. and M. games at Fayptyiljle could be since thu [stadiuni therk is smaller. It handles about 20,PQO. ; aylor still islf|uiling ticket| re sts And wpn’t he gh estimate until | lateri Wftlnl iroh fltlll vigbr left'. Loat from the 1948 team are such key men as Abner Wim all-Sohtheastern end, and- (Rip) Collins, fullback and leading punter. Also lost were most of the Ben* gal’s better guards, but LSU coaches think the addition of such outstanding newcomers as halfr >ack Lee Hedges and Ray (Moose) Potter, 225 tackle from Peabody, Mass., may compensate for the osses. I » j LSU had the country’s fullest nfusion .df new. blood in coaching of any major college, retained Gayncll Tinsley as head man, bht brought in Ed McKeever as backfield coach -and Xorman Cooper as!, line .coach. MidKecver has seen duty with Noire Dame, Cornell, San Fran- dsco j»nd the Chicago Rockets, hooper has hfid his duty at Kan- ;aK U. and Vanderbilt., Helping Cooper with the line will be Alf oattdrl'ield. ' | ' l . j The Tigcis have »o>rui good prospecU eomirtg up from the 1948 freshman team to help out the 28 returning letterimT, bine of which are xeniors. Tlie two hoys being groomed : to take on (umrleiibHck duties arc ■ - -j The first and second team lines should average about 208 while the backfield may go as high as 180. Although the line may have the weight, it is sadly hurting for experience. The only position on the line that Will have much experience are the ends. The most efficient of these ends is team captain Sam Lyle. Following him closely and probably taking over the other epd post will be Ray Bullock- - ij The rest of the hnc will be fill ed in with some powerful sopho mores. At tackles will be Moose Potter and Curtis Baskin, 235 and 225 pounds respectively. Even with all that height these two boys (bet around pretty fast, and a l6t is ex pected of th< Another big to aec right guard, Dick Bradley, igg; right tackle, Curtis Baskin. 226, or Moose Potter, 235; right end, Ray Bullock, 190; quarterback, Charlie Pevey, 165, or Ken Konz, 176; right halfback, Billy Baggett, 165; left halfback, Dale Gray, 174; fullback, Zollie Toth, 215. N&v York ‘too ,.«• Cleveland ,/g67 Philadelphia 62 Dntmlt - A.1 Qillcaffo w.. Washington). 8t, liOula NaUonal League St, Louia 60 Brooklyn ...08 New York 57 Boston. ..............^.57 ladelphla t.67, urgh ctnnall Chics go Texas League Fort Worth ;,.77 Tulsa ..75 Okla. City ^69 ~t)reveport 65 an Antonio 60 louston 48 leaumont 48 Pot. 0 .630 .506 I .588 6 .044 10 .643 10 Mllnfr, t cnmpuH d. ns Jhis ion tho •fbornoon, ■ . . Milner boys will have L> taka on th«J Winner of the TOVV-Dorm bobtesl which Was played UaV. If ncccHfavy. then th will be playe I) Moiula ’wotaar will mt«i the |] of the icampud diamoiulie^ 14 yester. this game’ d the f? ? s lia :rcXc"iTi‘ t a ll .622 b .613 1 .614 12 .509 ViH .500 iS’-i :‘5?p ; .374 28 . 6 02,|} j, •581 ;2>A .539 ‘M .512 11% 469 II .384 27% .381 28 cm. of u miin fresh out of dol- Stagg went through his cuktoilmry duv Wednesday with ,no special activity evoh though it wait riw 87th birthday anniversary. Biit Stagg and his wife were kept uisier than usual answering tho t dephone and doorbell to re ceive birthday greetings. As usual, he is looking forward not backward. He doesn’t know how many football games his tcjajm! have played but he knows that soon he will start his third seasoi at Susquehanna University in SulingsgroVe, Pa. As for the future he says: Aj; long as we can keep our and keep them healthy, wc soph that is ex pected to dob plenty of duty! is Red Walsh. Walsh is a guard that tips the scales at 205 and has more than just possibilities. The most brilliant sophomore, however, is lice Hedges. This half back is plenty fast, evasive ahd powerful, and will he a headache for more than one. opponent. • j . As It looks nouf, the Bengnls will be better offensively and de fensively than last reason. Yot (his may not Ik- quite enough to win them (.he conference. • j LSI! may. find itself in a unique situation this fall—too good to take the mcrcilcxa heatings of Ijist year and not good enough to bc a contender for tho crown. How ever, there is one thing that ; is definitely in its favor. As always, the Tiger schedule is loaded wjith tough teams, but they play eight of them at homo and seven; of those will be under the lights: A probable starting line-up (for Cuban Fails In Channel Swim „ Calais, France, Aug. 17— Other backfield material will —Jose Cortinas failed to- today b hia 00th KrW-1 „„I|"p;vnTth»t" , |"’"htl plyaly'of 8t»80n. ; speed and was a fine breakaway displaying the pep and runnoF. lifting ttprlng practice, Konz was moved up behind the was coritpr and his pitching ^us very impressive, Pevey hantlled the quarterback duties last year and did most of the passing for the Tigers. Al- though he did most of the ^ussiijig, it wasn’t any too good. Hit throw ing this year has improved grimily under the guidance of backfield cwch McKeever. Pevey suffered a spring should er separation, however, and Louisi ana State will be in a toijjgh spot if forced to depend entjjrely on; tlic inexperienced Konz. ■j ft and won’t bo dblc to give - j quests at] CStmiaiv u^itm| lave*. Hire said tlie on».v game loom ing as a sell-out there was (he Texas A. and M. 4Ut When 31,000 sport); „ will' develop bicn with fibre—men j halfback and Billy Bugge who ire lablo to 'take it.’ ” Heroman taking over t SUlgg recalls that 70 years ago I half slot, when he was; considering a career in the-ministry he said that if he had charge or si church “I would have a gymnasivim in conjunction Wifo itir- ] T T :• j’NjQir; that; isj just what many - ^j elude speedsters Dale Grtty, Lee day ill an attempt to SWim wim Hc(lgcs i and Jinjmy Bartor) at^lcft the English Channel but said tiwo and; Al right IfMHiKWtt Join The Parade ■■■■-" or.] . T - i ■ ■ ■ ■ ‘ i Well Dressed People Taking Their Clothes to!, . ■ , ll ajre expected. Tfic advance ; sale of tickets is the ;best in the his tory of the school. | Texas Christian University of ficials; saiid it was tbo jtarly to the Season attqndance because season [tickets sold jt could not be de- if qny gamds isould be } ' .[ I ii if■ Jim Leonard, now footb|»ll coach at VKinnova, onco was grid coach of the professional! I Pittsburgh Stdclers. } ]• ' . predict ahd" that are being termined Iscll-outs. ■ fr -Ji Gumpus “OVor tho m Ovaners; /JSgdutnffo Btoro" a 1, ||': j|||: BEOOBDS • KAMOS Sdtool ft Office .1,1 SuppUce -MkMt ulmin llAyW hma 'a ir ti s ' : P' TT :■ : J: . churches are |doing,” he added. Project House f jus First, 64 Project House woiji its first game of- Die semester Thursday when it defeated Walton^ Hall 6-1. iWalton sluggers pounded out 10 hits for four runs but the hits werd all too, scattered. jPitpject Hope came to life in the first with three runs off three hita and scored two mor^in the and one more in thosixth. w was the winning pitcher, ,ing ten hits and Tit(lc was the! o»er, allowing eight. Van Wagner was the leading hit ter with a perfect day at the pliaf', gettlnji: three for throe. He also had five HBI’ii to his credit. Nforo by Inolngs: pWitct I .’Kia oot o 8 6 j Bryan Base: Be Reorgani (niton ,001 020 X—10 4 0 4T1LK8 I LOHUt HIIOP J J3 8. Co logo ltd—Ph. 2-0188 ip^tOMl^T pKUVBRY and WIRE SERVICE /1/! ■ i' fi' l Stiles ’48 AUhritton ’61 L. P. Coffee, president of the Bryan, Baseball Association an nounced yesterday that ui less 600 citizens put up $100 tj> $l]s0| a pice and form a new baseball tion. then professional would 'not continue in Brjja Coffey’s appeal came associa- bijscball . ter! it became apparent that no enu wish ed I to buy the franchise of fhc club. Hc'said that if the new associa tion was organized, a jperson would be able to own <mly one share of stock in it. Coffey proiKwed a ipeting in Bomber Park Saturday^ night to organize the new assoc at ion if ustf^od capped ng be- it enough interest could be among the citisonf; Of B Thd club has [been hud financially from-the l>egli|i| i\ttuse of tho high cm costs iincurml in bnlldim Hark at a time when a pi were,way out of llius G eluded. ™f ombor epata I’ll try again in about tit' weeks/’ j ] i •] The powerful Cuban, 32. tackled the 21-milc stretch of water soon after midnight. He swam about half the distance to Dover) in six hours. Then, suffering from cramps, ho was pulled from the water by the accompanying boat men arid returned to Calais, h Cortinas said that for the last part of his attempt, he was shim ming with his anps alone because his legs were paralyzed by cramps. Cortinas was beaten by the| bit ter cold and adverse winds that tolled heavy waves, directly, into his face. (When the boat that accompanied him returned to Calais, Cortinas wiis lying on the deck adloep, lyi ?.a Consult Dr. Carlton R. lee /inavntffwwwDig'f Problem* 2-1862^ With Youir , 203 8. LL covered with blankets. His pretty wife, Elda, stood over him. “He was magnificicnt,” on$ crew-member exclaimed. Einilic Ranson, official timer who made tho trip in tho boat. jjaid: , ■ j > l f “Cortinas is a superb swimmer. I am sure he would have biutcii tht* record if conditions had been any good at all. It was too cold, that is whut boat him/’ . j The, youngest) V, S, umatour golf cjhamplon was Bob Gardner who was 19 when he won the first of his two titles in 1009. Li I kMl Mew York Ctfe 118 8. MAIN I BRYAN Texas to Keep Nearly All Its Bowl Games By WILBUR MARTIN AP Staff The NCAA is goin£ Ifc leave the sugar in, but take some of the spice out op the bowl business. That means Texas will probably lose its reputation us the “Bowl- ingeat” state in the nation. It probably won’t be able to! send Its usual ten or more t«ums to tho firing line in early Dteembbr for New Year’s engagements. ■j‘ ! There’s little (loybt that Texas will keep most of Its bowls, The Cotton and .Sun conform tjo the regulations the NCAA is sjild t’o be demanding of bowl ai'dmwrs. The Texas Rose Bowl gives junior collagos a break unri the Cattle Bowl provides Negro ulevent With a poftt-Kfuson game. The Alamo Bowl took the count niter ono trip, and so did t|ic Oil Bowl. There’s bo«fn no seriogH at- I tempt in Texas in the last of yours to stall a .major game..' ’V.'/r The National Colli^iatc Aihlctic Aesociation's avowed Effort t» trim the numlier of bjowls will lake a lot of humor out of the mush rooming post-season football plct- ■ufe. ' . j, !: ' ■ j l! ) Hardin-Simmons probably \ won’t be able to go to) its usual two or throe bowls. This is something of a shame, for Warren Woodson’s Cowboys put on a colorful show and the trips arc a break fqr.thq plpyers. i > L Just for the sake of gjetting some of the bowls in print once more, assume that Texas Twh came up with an undefeated, un tied football team. Del Morgan could gather the Red Rjaidcrs round him and jput the cards on the table 'this wjay: “Tho Cotton ijs picked arid the Rose is plucked, But wo may g^t the Sugar if we I Isct#' xmplc bowl THURSDAY’S RESULTS ! .Vnioriean League J i Washington 4, New’ York 5. Detroit 2, Chicagb 0. Cleveland 14, <81. Louis 4. |Only games scheduled. | ' National League. Chicago 0, Pittsbdrgh 2. Philadelphia 9, Brooklyn 5.! i New 1 York 6, Boston 10. Only games scheduled. j Texas League * Shreveport 0, Tulsa 6. Houston 2, Dallas! 5. ; Beaumont 1, Oklahoma City 11. 8an Antonio 7. Ft. Worth 2, WHERE THEY IT,AY TODAY gnjono Tgeoda. .1 , hamplon- ester oat ege v edr. It had six vie- lories ngains. hue defeat to Iti ?f?Ml.ncr ,vL its game ovc Mitchell today, it will make th sixth time in: tpe last two yean that it has w on the campUsehamp ion ship. Two ()f [those times, teams from Milner jwlpt on to win the Colloge chumpidnshlp. f iMilner stnlrtfri its jitring of -Wins In the Spring of , 1948 When it Won the campus championship; theiir in the Sufiimer of the same year, it won iho College jehampum- ship both semesters. X gain l&st! silking, Milner the "campus cfiampionship; th^n it repented last semester. JB-Odd defeated Milner for Be College championship last ,semest er and in doing so, became the ir he t College View ,College frown. team American League , PhllHdefphlH at Nfw York, night Boston at Washington, night Cleveland at Chicago, night Delrolt at 8t. Louis 2 gaiumii” night l National l/ngne • j. : j Brooklyn at Boston, night Now York at Philadelphia, night; ^SrifintL. Ht, Louis at PUtiduirgh, nig ago at longue [Chjcago at Cincinnati, night Tcxm league Houston at Dallas, dan Antonio at Fort Worth Shleveport at. Trilsa. i Bciiumont at Oklahoma Giif - Mitchell Defeats Law Hall 8-6 Mitchell Hall defeated ,1 [LaiJ Thursday 8-6 to remain set for Ufa; big game today with Milner. MU- , ner has only to defeat Mitchell Ui r. I ."j Miji |.i ripe and it’s no|t is willing if wc have some luck. 7 The Orange is at night, And the Lilly think it all right The Dixie is dead, but there’s more in the fire. The Ice, Pineapple, Tarpojn and Fish, Even the Delta, Oi Icandc •, and I believe the Gar. The Cigar is smoking but Match isn’t lit. / There’ll be more offers wait “just a, bit. 111 Now, bos, remember it’s you. iWc beat the Longhorns, don't care w hat you do.” today to win tho campus cham pionship. Mitchell. coUectejl eight runs off Hank Vornkahl while Von Rosenborg allowed five scattered hits for six runs. Errors hurt Taw’s chances yes terday when four miscued balls) were allowed to get the better ;w •Law fielders. 7 1 •• -pf ' •j’P Mitchell had iLj big innirig the sixth when Frederick doub, to right and scored WhiUen, * onson, and Fulbright. Whltwe scored earlier on a fielders chql by Rex-Fox. ; ) l j f.|i pailey of Law drove in two; <il tlie three runs His;team got In th second when he singled right, scoring Goodmm and nenberg. Frederick of Mitchell wap ;! leading hitter with two for Intramural Standings C'AMl’L'b leaqlt; Tmun r J Milner ! fCVV borm 11 ... l^egfett Mitchell rvryw 4« iWalton jt<aw project House !_ I C'OLLEOK VIEW LEAGUE Team T j. ■ W , B*Od(| I...M [..>(•<.Ml. 1 .1 1 ..,I...8 • >« •••#•••• ^^.y.3 o C. •• • «« *■•*••• •••• «l eat ven (kl . ven (Ven rid . C.Rnht *«ri ••****’• m j‘ • 9»<,«•• • •,’»#. • • l* , MfM* A *• •••••»• > *1 * l*W»* r WinsOve, pUrtillaUM 4- 'f *T ' ' L ,,• Puryear Hifll managed to above water long enough to dp Hart I bill, 0-4 Thur|day. Dove Thomps, tho wi cher. wTip alvo i hr edited i w borne niri in the ilf|th that s a rally for Puryear that rium. j . J ! I Not sn|.isii( , jd W’iUji that, Pu: camp back li| tlie sixth to i I jjjjfttur more rims, three of five hi(U f|?(1 j coming , dm a triple;/by Hd Peach w th the bases loaded. ;.! Dave Thomas, With a homiir a single [to hip Credit j took bat honors, ‘ h I an- i i r: m m od s 3 idO 110056 4 at the T>ldte., ; Score by innings: Mitchell I ^ l’ (1 i , , . ; .) JJ : h| : ; !i Sam Sneed, 37, Minnie the |otd«i(*t player ever to wl i the PGA 1 championship whipcopped , i crown this year. 111 l 1 111 "• i J1 ■ 1 1 ■ !' Everyone’s Talking About Our Rapid Cleuniiig& Pressing Servi 'S:! Horry! MUlOr .was the losing cheri giving Mb ten (hits for nihs. j,i j L „ j[ . <s ') Score by innings: Puryear ! 000 051 x—] Hart : ; 000 (J010- HWrs rm wtewta? t! It- r=^- ; >1 I* i , y /JbuUuiido iv ii:- 1 to jl, ! Rcudy for wearing ^ TW (ii - j TODAY Here’s) the Pitch - it ! ill -If - jritchcir Each thn Ho jcamti Htriki But I Iota: t'Jirh With 1 like. a tried to h t timo that all will i ho .1 X- •- ■;] it H; 1 . ’ ii ‘ i ii'ii 1 .. '!■! ' .1 Fi ; j h