L- Wrestling Slated For Today in G lly FRANK N. MANITXAH Twvnty wrwtllng rnttchm were comiilvUKt yoiivnUy in the tittle >tym with the eitnie number of inocUiiRH echeduled for today. The hoavywetyht, Iflll.pound, add 170- pound dlvlaionM formed the match- cm played yeaterday. In the two hoavywela-ht fhatehea Btovons of H Air Force I’toet to Whit* of l Flight with Whitt* pin ning Stevene Tn the latter part of the round, while .Petereon of C Infantry won by forfeit over Ball from B InfanU-y. The 1.69-pound clana ate up the majority of the matches with ten grapplera .advancing to (the next -round. Adair of A Flight came through with a win over Dyer of A T'ield, Gay of A Ordnance scored with a forfeit on Briggs of A CAC, G Flight’s Reed lost to Bocia of Chem Warfare in the most comical event of the after noon, Middleton of A Air Force put the drop on Graham of C Air Force, and Vehon of A Cavalry matted Waldrop of I Flight. Five other matches in the 169 weight division included Oliver, who defeated Emshoff of A Oird- nance, Sebesta of B Infantry poop ed out and lost to Smith of Walton Hall, while Bradford of B En gineers bobbed Blaekkaller of C Flight to the canvas, and Windham of B CAC lost to Schubert of A Quartermaster in- the final match ! in this class. Ten Medium-Heavy Winners The medium heavies of the 179- pound class advanced 10 matters to the second round among which were Griescke of B Transportation who pinned Atchison of D Infan try, Henshaw of B Flight dropped JCeene of A CWS from the run ning, Cayitt of B Engineers lost to Rand of K flight, while Pierce of D Air Force matted Wacker of B Engineers, and Hoover of D •" Infantry won over Davidson of F Air Force. ■ ir . The. longest match of the day featured' Parr’s win. over Perkins of I Flight in the second overtime; Parr is in E Air Force. Cbmier 0 f B Transportation drubbed Davis of B CAC undl Terry of D Vet climaxed the matches with u win over Tucker of A Engineers. Since the Intramural handball guinea began only one of the sche duled matches was played day, and flv* forfeits were in for the flrat two daya at This unusual large amount of forfeit* la preventable and should be avoided by all teama since they are assessed penaltiei of tan points for each match put off in this manner. Although handball was shown to be very popular when! 819 Aggies entered the open tour ney. a great number of outfits are unable to form six man teams. The team handball games will still be played every night as scheduled. ; i 7 Battalion SPORTS WED.. FEB. ig, 1080 Page i Golden Gloves Begins Tonight FORT WORTH, Tex.. Feb. 15. —tlA’)—The 14th Annual ; Texas Golden Gloves tournament Swings underway here tonight with 161 entries seeking eight open division titles. The field is studded with cham pions and former champions and some like three-time light heavy weight Champion Tom Adams Abilene—will be fighting in a dif ferent class. Adams is going after the heavyweight championship this year. For popular favorites, it’s hard to beat Tobe and Roy Harris, the brothers from "Cut and Shoot, deep in East Texas’' piney wods. Fights today, Thursday and Friday wU trim the bid field to quarter-finals size. Semi-finals and finals will be held Monday night. The eight champions will rep resent Texas in the national tour nament at Chicago. Twenty different regional tour naments are supplying the large field of entrants. Dallas, long a stronghold of Golden Glove i box ing, is.; expected to find hot 'com petition from Fort Worth. Abilonio, and other top fistic centers for the Texas team title. Texas A&M won six of it* first seven homo basketball games tl|iis season, Visiting teams have aver aged only 40.8 per game on the Aggie court. I /l 1 Hi .Jb PNOOtfCT OF f OL-MVEW BUTLER'S MADE EVERYTHING BUT THE TEAM /- SINCE HE STARTED USING VlTAUS/ You'll be th« star in the gals'-eyes—if you use your head—and •‘Live-Action” Vitalis care. Give that mop on top the famous “CP-second workout." 50 seconds scalp massage (feel the differ ence!). ... 10 seconds to comb (and will the wimmin see the dif ference!). You’ll look neat'n natural. Bye-bye loose flaky dandruff and dryness, too. So latch on to Vitalis—see the man at the drug: store or barber shop pronto. "60-Second Workout" '■( r •'**. I !:'■ - Sure.*.. BAIT ALIGN CLASSIFIED J ADS do toy selling . job for me . • ... and they’ll sellfor you too! "v CALL 4-53 24 Battalion Gassified Ads J [ / i; >! Platoon Be Dropped Near Future By IftlGH FULLERTON, JR. New York, F«b. 1ft (Ah Lou Little ha* a new word for li — two-platoon "hyaterla.” . . . That may Hound strange, coming from football’s leading advocate of free substitution, but here’s how Lou puts It: ‘Tm in favorj of free substitution as the pros' have it becaufe it helps the coach with a small squad if he can juggle his players any way he wants. I; be lieve this platoon hysteria will die down before long and more players will be playing both on offense and defense. But you can’t limit Sub stitutions much and play the game we have now; you’d slow It dowfai too m|Uch.” Little is equally enthusiastic about the new rule restricting the use of forearms in blocking, whidh was conceived by Duke’s Wallace Wade. . , . “If the officials enforce this rule and if the coaches teach their players to observe' it, fnoat of the roughness should be elimi nated. . . . Why, last season it; was getting so all the linemen Were crying for nose guards for protec tion from those forearm and elbow block*.” A j The lads) in the AP bureau In Miami „ thought somebody 'was slightly gojofy recently when (they received a message reminding them to cpver a national hotkey league meeting in Florida. 1 . . One pf them thought he’d take a chance and call Bob Balfe, sports editor of the Palm Beach Post- Times. . . , “Sure, I was just about to call yod,” replied Bob. “They’re meeting here. Said they wanted a long-range view of problems.’? wmm •Mm 5 T’ Men Schedule Barbecue, Meeting A barbecue will be held at pie-h ard Cullender ami Jimmy CaaNion’s cabin on the Nuvasota Riveljr on Friday, February 17. 1 . ’j 1 The “T” Association will j hold its meeting after the barbiocuc. Anyone' without means of trans portation will be provided Tor. Items to be discussed at! the meeting are plans for the Spring F ?•' Working on his greatly Improved backboard tip-ins is Leroy Miksch, 6’ 5” freshman center from Waelder, who is fish scorers with more than 100 points. Miksch is the prospect from this season’s fish quintet to make the varsl year. Baseball Practi With Pitching ce Starts ro; Milhollin, Scott Lomax Off For State Tourney •xaa Aggie* ham Dick Scott, djE* and won :r® ( recant hton Lor ional i nton Milhollin, x—Aggies who onship* in the n Glove* com ing by car .ment in Fort ■ Finding a capable and chooaing two or Ing pitcher* wilt be lama confronting C< row when ho *tart* tie# for the Toxaa Aggie* ~ here thla afternoon. , R / Karow himself will! have little timt to *pcnd with the horsohld 'for the next two weeks as 1 currently busy keeping the gle basketball team In the title race. He will take over active full-time supervision of the hns«- •» ^ recent Bryan Gob petition—left this for the state tout Worth. I / The three men weighed in be- r een 11 a. m- and 2 p. m. to day. Pairings until after completed, was bi Gloves Fort Worth. not to be made lghing*in was iminary work the Golden naiid gym in onal tournaments held during past six weeks in almost every rea of Texas. Each of the t^ree will be faced by the class winners of 20 other regfi—* the; area Scott, who won the Bryan heavy weight title for the second con secutive year, is a football letter- man on the varsity squad. His play during the grid season was good enough that hej was nominated for national lineman of the week honors following the Cadet-SMU battle. Scott is Contender The trim Murchison fighter tips the scale at over 200 pounds and might prove to be a strong con tender in the Lono Star state com- a Hart Hall sen- arc Formal and sports Day. Pancho Gonzales Aggie Sharpshooters Busy A&M is going to place some outstanding Records on the books during the next two weeks against big schools all over the country. And the Aggies will do it without making a singly "road trip”. They’ll engage | much schools as, Princeton, Army, Cornell, Mich igan State, Arizona,'Utah State, Wisconsin, Illinois, Nevada, Yale, Dartmouth and Citadel In a serle* of “postal" rifle and platol matches. Against some of the team*/named above alnd others tfye Aggie* have been shooting at a fast dip. The A&M rifle team, ('(Cached by M-Sgt. William R. Reese, holds 12 victories In 18 matches and the Aggies’ platol team coached by Lt. Col. Frank ftwoger has Won 13 of Its 16 matches. Both teams are among the best in the country. Lust year the rifle team won the Fourth Army Hearat Trophy match and over the figl season took 2-1 of 31 matches. The pistol team was victorious in 32 of 37 dual postal meets during tho 1918-49 campaign. Kramer, Gonzales Play in Houston Professional tennis promoter Bobby Riggs will bring the world’s foremost tennis players to the Sam Houston Coliseum in Houston, Fri day, February 24. More than 500 reserved seats have been set aside for students in order that they m*y witness this exhibition of cljiampions. 'The feature attraction will be a match between Jack Kramer, world professional champion, and Pancho Gonzales, Uj S. amateur champion. The two court-titans have play ed before capacity crowds in ev ery place that supervisor Riggs, himself a former champ, has strung a net. Pancho Segura, player with an unorthodox but amusing two-hand ed back-hand drive, and former amateur bulwark Frankie Park er complete the lineup. Segura and Parker play a preliminary match and then combine with Kramer and Gonzales for a doubles match. Mail orders are now being ac cepted by sending self-addressed, stamped envelope to Ted Roggen, P, O. Box 1151, Houston 1, Texas. Tickets are priced at $3.60, $2.60 and $1.95, tax included. Aggies may purchase their tick ets for $1.00, which' includes tax at the above address. 1 SWEET SIXTEEN O B SPRY SIXTY V, Bowling is the sport for the youthful of all ages! And the cos|t is small for a full evening of play. Our alleys are slick and sure, and well lighted. — COME TONIGHT — Bryan Bowling Center Tickets arc now on salq at Bond’s and Osham’s Sporting Gbods store in Houston.; Gonzales, who won the National title for the second straight year at Forest Aills, New York, in gruelling competition with Ted Schroeder, will pit his power-driv en service against,. Krapier’s all- around court ImagiC. Riggs hac) to go all the way to, bring Gonza|lds into the fiscal fold. He guaranteed the Latin. American netter $60,000, against 30 per cent of the gross, to turn professional. Last year, in his first, tour as a money winper, Kramer earned $120,000.; Hje is working for 25 per cent of the gross this time. The meeting of Gonzales and Kramer i is ^ throwback to earlier -bitter tennis rivalries. There were Perry and Vines, Budge and Vines, Tilden and Cochet. Now comes Kramer versus Gonzales. There can be little doubt that this meeting—Gonzales vs. Kra mer— will produce the best tennis of any pro tour. Here's why: Gon zales has taken up the [search for loot at thq peak of his career when he is 1949, Stobbs compiled an 11-6 record against a 5-4 slate for McDermott. Along with Parnell (25-7) and! Dobson (14-12), a good year for the two young hurler* could make it ai^fasy Boston year, Bucky said. -j Bucky picked the Yanks, Detroit and Cleveland to round but tee flri»t division. ' ( "Player* like DIMaggio, Henrich and Rizzuto are Inspirational plny-j er* and they could have banne* 1 year*," he added, ‘’but| after In*! ■oason It would be •ui-prlHlng tc see them make It again. ’ '“fcXiwX'.rU-,.-., b.ck for hi* senior aaaaon, waa brilliant Ih hurting victories ovar Baylor and the Houston Buffs laat sea son but erratle^tg'eiv’eral othar games. With Itftfifoved control, he could become tn* Aggie*’ ace pitch er and one nr the top mounaam.en In the south went Conference. Pat Hubert and Blanton Taylor, lettermen right harlder*. return, and up from the freshman range come Sam Blantpn and Bob Tnnkera- ley. Several untried new com era also will see pitching Jobe. pitching re hurled hia dut 8-7, In 1018 In one of tbe lowest scoring basketball game* in South] west Conference history^ \ 7 . " ; • ’ v '■ • . • * ■ * • | • } .1';' . •• • ‘ . r Fret* Big Lees Big gap in the mound staff was created when Bobby Fret* grad uated last Jun«r Fret* had the best record in the conference, team to a 6-1 dedlaion over NCAA champion Texae and also clubbed the ball above .800 all season. Also graduated were Infielders Clifford Lindloff and Rubs Mays. Catcher Jack Graham has turned pro. Bill McPherson of Fort Worth, who lettered as a utility man last season, and | Lester Lackey of StephenviUe, up from the frosh • ranks, are considered leading can didates at third base. However, Karow may shift another player to that position. ' BASEBALL SCHEDULE March IQ-11—Brooke Army Medics at College Station. March 20-21-22 -Ohio State at College Station. March 23—Oklahoma University at College Station. March 24-25—Minnesota at Col lege Station. ,|. March 28 Sam Houston State at College Station. “April 1—Baylor in Waco. April 5—Houston Buffs at Col lege Station. ’ •April 8—Rice in Houston. •April 11—Texas at College Sta tion, ' . '"’April 14-15—SMU In Dallas. •April 17--TCU in Fort Worth. ] April 22 Sam Houston Mate : at Huntsville. •April 28-29 TCU in Collie ; Station. c T \L •May 1—SMU in College Sta tion, | ‘ ; •May 0-8 Rioa at ‘Oollage St a-1 tlon. I •May 11-12 Baylor at College : Station. •May 17-18 TYxhh nt Austin. •Denote* BWC game*. ., ■ ■ -r € r t. >££*»• _ • jvT-ittw *»«.— • fSEataT.M V" ssrsMsvssa,. We Give Green Stamps We Give; mm. HARDWARE OTMPANT Stamp* Ml' ..I. - . I '