Thursday, March 15, 1951 THE BATTALION Page 5 Fite Nile To Offer One Floyd Proud o/Ags; Says ‘They’ll Do All Right In NCAA’ Of Biggest Mural Shows By JOE BLANCHETTE Batt Sports Staff One of the biggest sports shows » to be witnessed on the campus this year will be unreeled at De- Ware Field House tonight begin ning at 7:30. Among the many •• events will be a weight-lifting show, a gymnastic exhibition, and the finals of Intramural Boxing and Wrestling. * Boxing In the finals of the heavyweight boxing class J. D. Guidry of A Vets will match punches with ' Jack Harper of Mitchell. Guidry gained the finals by a decisive win in the semi-finals over A AF’s Strong. In this bout some of the hardest and most effective upper cuts in the tournament Avere toss ed by the experienced Guidry. Harper was not forced to fight in the semi-finals as he drew a bye to fight in the finals. Harold Williams of C Vets will battle Dick Randell of Company 2 in the finals of the 177 pound class. Williams has considerable exper ience in Golden Glove matches and Avill enter the ring tomorrow night a favorite to defeat the freshman pugilist. Akridgc Meets Kirk Roy Akridge of Company 11 will .swap blows with Bob Kirk of A AF to determine the champion of the 167 pound class. The freshman battler gained the finals of the middleweight class ■ by besting Mathews of the Com pany 8 organization. In this bout the classy scrapper displayed strong left jabs and hooks to gain the nod over his rival freshman boxer. Kirk reached the finals of the 167 division by defeating Ander- »son of the Freshman Band. Kirk apparently lost the first round of the battle but came back strong in the final two stanzas to cop the decision. 157 Round Class Two freshmen, will battle for the rhampionship of the 157 Pound Class. Carl Wilson of Company 4 Ivill meet Jack Fowler of Com pany 3. Wilson gained the finals of the class by besting hist company rival Fulton. Fowler fought in the Golden Gloves this year and gained a win in his initial match before he was defeated. He defeated Childers of F AF in the semi-finals of the 'Mural competition. Jackson Opposes Lucas Joe Jackson of D Vets will at tempt to gain the championship of the 147 pound class by climbing into the ring to oppose Charles •Lucas of Company 3. i In a match that set a blistering pace Jackson gained the finals by ^topping B. D. Manning of Com pany 2. The match was a toe to toe ^ slugging match with Jackson win ning the decision. Lucas I'eached the finals by de feating McDuffie of Milner in match which closely resembled the Jackson-Manning affair. Fans going to witness the Intra mural show tonight will have an opportunity to witness a former Golden Glove semi-finalists in ac tion. Quinton Milhollen of C Infantry will battle Ernie Picazo of A Vets. Milhollen has achieved the semi finals of the Golden Gloves and displayed top form in completely defeating Eby of Company 5 to at tain the finals of the class. The sturdy, former Golden Gloves box er hit Eby with everything in the books. Picazo gained the finals by de feating Fuller of Puryear. 130 Pound Class Weldon Calhoun of Squadron 8 will battle Lee Howard of A AF in the finals of the 130 pound class. Calhoun gained the finals by beating C Vets’ Castillion. Howard defeated Kupfer of Company 4. Wrestling The Intramural Wrestling finals will see such men as Joe Jackson, Wayne Bradford, H. D. Maxwell, Don Grubbs, Bill Lay, Curly Penn, Bob Fletcher, Royce Brimberry, Dick Batten, Dare Keelan, Pete Manos, Rudy Riviera, and A. R. Stoddard in action. Gymnastics The gymnastics show which will be presented at the field house Avill see all of the men who Avill parti cipate at the show for the veterans at McClosky Hospital in Temple later in the year. The matmen and high bar specialist have been woi’king long and hard under the coaching of Nick Pontheiux of the P. E. De partment to give the show. The men participating in the show are Bob Doby, Conrad Webb, Bob Waggoner, Harold Turner, Claude Holmes, Bill Curry, Carl Johnson, Jack Ross, Bert Beecroft, Craig Patton, and Olan Boyd. Walker John Floyd, head basketball coach, is smiling for a good rea son. Tuesday night his men beat the Steers 33-32 to gain a trip to the NCAA playoffs in Kansas City. This is Floyd’s first year at A&M and already he brought the Aggies a piece of the SWC title. Sports Writers Wanted at Batt Anyone interested in sports writing may find a job on The Battalion Sports Staff. See Ralph Gorman or Fred Walker in The Battalion office in Good win Hall. Regis Handily Beats SW Texas At NAIB Kansas City, March 15—— Florida State of Tallahassee pro duced the unexpected by whipping George Pepperdine of Los Angeles Wednesday as four clubs moved in to the quarterfinals pf. the National Intercollegiate Basketball tourna ment. The Florida State Seminoles’ 61- 59 win was the first major upset of the 13th tournament. That form reversal and Memphis, Tenn’s 81-79 overtime victory over Hast ings, Neb, College were the after noon thrillers. As was expected, Regis College of Denver manhandled Southwest Texas of San Marcos, 82-64, and James Milliken of Decatur, Ill., rolled over East Texas Baptist of /Jig Leaguers Show Stuff; Tigers, Red Sox, Phils Win St. Petersburg, Fla. The Detroit Tigers, with a big eighth inning in which seven men walked, scored a 10 to 8 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals today. Until then the Cardinals had things pretty well in hand. Rookie Larry Caiffone, testing out for an out-field job manager Marty Marion figures is open, bagged a home run and two singles in four trips. Sarasota, Fla. Three consecutive walks by right hander Normie Roy in the tenth forced in the run which %ave Boston’s Red Sox a 9-8 vic tory over the Boston Braves. Walt Dropo of the Sox and Walk er Cooper of the Braves each wal- 4oped a homer. The Braves’ Earl ToPgeson cracked four consecu tive hits and Ted Williams got the ball out of the infield for the first time. He rapped two doubles. Clearwater, Fla. A home run with the bases full by Eddie Wait- kus followed by another round trip per by Richie Ashbufn brought the Phillies five funs in the sixth and a 7-6 victory over the New York Giants today. Charlie Bishop, 27, Rookie right hander, was the victim and losing pitcher. San Bernardino, Calif. Bob Lem on poked a two-fun homer over the right field wall in the fourth to provide the margin by which Cleveland defeated Pittsbufgh to- (Sec ROUNDUP, Page 6) SHOWING NOW BLOCK-BUSTING BURST OF tarring PAT O’BRIEN * RANDOLPH SCOTT r.i.o,, ANNE SHIRLEY* EDDIE ALBERT* ROBERT RYAN #<«J»c*d b, I0IUT ftuows • Ou.e.d by tlCIUU WllUCE • Sum* Flay by JONH NIST FRIDAY - F U K VIEW “THI H LLE1! BRUSH GIRL” W. H. FINCHER NATIONAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. ot DaUas, Texas Life, Sick and Accident, and Hospitalization Insurance TELEPHONES J-Pil7 & 0-157)* Marshall, 80-62. With some 200 Milliken rooters in the crowd of 3,500 cheering their team on, Scottie Steagall shot and passed the Big Blue to its second tournament victory. Steagall, one of the nation's leading scorers, got 27 points. But the thrills were provided in the Memphis overtimer. Running along with a 15-point lead the Southerners suddenly found them selves tied 73-all when Chuck Stick- els of Hastings made a field goal and free throw in the closing sec onds. But Bob Griffis got a sleep er with three seconds remaining in the overtime to put Memphis into the quarterfinals. Stickels was the afternoon’s top scorer with 37 points. With Tom Kavanaugh, Dick Petry and Bob Wallace hitting with regularity Regis had no trouble trimming Southwest Texas. Four games Wednesday night completed the second round play. Fusari Loses Title To Johnny Bratton Chicago, March 15—'A*)—Johnny Bratton won the National Boxing Association’s version of the welter weight championship last night by defeating Charley Fusari in a blis tering 15-i'ound battle. One judge voted 76-74 for Fu sari, the New Jersey ex-milkman. Fusari survived two knockdowns to make a courageous fight from start to finish. TODAY thru SATURDAY FIRST RUN —Features Start— 1:23 -' 3:10 - 4:44 6:31 8:18 - 10:05 Starring RICHARD AUDREY CONTE • TOTTER NEWS — CARTOON By FRED WALKER Batt Associate Sports Edittor Head Basketball Coach John Floyd seemed to be more relaxed today than he has been in 28 games. “All the boys did well up there (Gregory Gym), all of them.” Most of the tight lines so noticeable in a coach’s face when he is under a strain were gone. We had gone in to see Flyod, still bubbling with enthusiasm over last night’s game. Five minutes later we were relaxed in his office taking the world in stride. Floyd outwardly appeared to be just the same, but there was a new amount of pride and warmth in his tone when he spoke of his boys. “They’ll do all right in Kansas City,” he said. “The field house seats about twelve or twelve and a half thousand and that means lots of people, but it won’t bother the boys.” We guess he figures that there couldn’t possibly be any more noise in the world than there was in Gregory Gym when i Miksch stepped up for his all-important free throw. Another heartening comment of Floyd’s was that “the boys took it in stride.” A dinner was given for the team last night by their coach and there is another scheduled for them tonight. The Aggies took yesterday off and today’s practice was still un decided, but Floyd maintained that the team would be back in DeWare Friday—working harder than ever. There has been a great deal of speculation going about concern ing Floyd’s tactics of taking the ball out of bounds in place of shooting foul shots. After all, there are so many people in this world who can run the show better than the coach. To all those unhired and underpaid sideline coaches, let us direct the words of Floyd. • “You take free throws when your offense is working. When your defense is surpassing your offense, as otir’s was those two games, yor, 1 try to keep the ball. “The idea is to keep the ball if your offense isn’t right, hut you also want to pick up as many points as you can. Every time you miss the basket, you take the chance of the other team getting the ball. “I had the boys take it out the first night so we could keep the ball as Long as possible. It just worked out that we didn’t hit enough of our shots even under those conditions. “These are theories, and both are gambles any way you look at it. Last night it came out for the best.” (See FLOYD EXPLANS REASONS, Page 6) Oulu ’ The Park A&M Nips Houston 3-1 In Close Ball Game By JIM ASHLOCK Batt Sports Staff Working in a too-cool-for-base- ball-atmosphere, A&M’s baseball team collected three runs to humble the Houston Cougars 3-1 yester day afternoon. Pat Hubert, senior veterinary medicine student and All-iSWC hurler last year, was the start ing pitcher for the Ags. In this, his first appearance of the season, Hubert struck, out six men and allowed only two hits during the five innings he worked. The first inning of play was un eventful, with the first six men up to the plate going down in con secutive order. But in the bottom of second, Russell, Aggie center- fielder, set things off fast by smashing one of Cougar hurler John Boon’s offerings over the left field fence. Bases Loaded Hank Candelari then cropped a single and Joe Ecrette followed with a double. The outlook for well advanced lead then brightened as Hubert drew a walk, loading the Seton Hall Is Team to Beat In 1951 NIT New York, March 15—(JP) Dark-horse Seton Hall “tour nament hot” and rich in re serves, was labeled by rival coaches Wednesday as the team to beat for the National In vitation Bastketball championship. “Those boys are hot as a stove- lid,” said Dayton’s Tom Blackburn. “When a club gets all steamed up like that it’s hard to stop. I’m afraid they’re not going to cool off.” Frank McGuire, Saint John’s coach, threw in an “amen” to this, adding: “Seton Hall has the best bench in the tournament, ten to 12 boys of about equal ability. When one team doesn’t click, another one is thrown in. They’ll be tough.” “We may need Stilts to stop that big hoy, Walt Dukes,” moaned Stanley Watts of Brigham Young. “It may be impossible.” The immediate problem of chill ing this blast-hot surprise entry out of New Jersey happens to fall in the lap of Watts and his gang from Utah, who face Seton Hall in the second semi-final game Friday night at Madison Square Garden. First-seeded Saint Johns and Dayton, another unexpected guest in the round of four, dash in the opening game. The championship will be decided Saturday night. bases and putting All-Conference shortstop Guy Wallace in the bat ters slot. But luck turned away as Hubert went down swinging. The third inning saw the Hous tonians come to life. Taking ad vantage of shortstop Joe Jones’ single, and two walks drawn by John Boon and Felix Fraga, the Cougars quickly loaded the bases and manned the scoring position with only one out to their disfavor. Great Catch UH third baseman Jack Reed connected with a high fly to right field which should have spelled one tally for the Cougars, but Boon was caught too far from second as right fielder Shug Mc Pherson gathered in Reed’s fly. A quick peg to Wallace got a double play which quelled Cougar hopes of overtaking the Farmers in that inning. In the fifth inning Ernie John son, junior transfer student from John Tarleton JC, replaced Hubert on the mound. During the remain- Doing Well Arnold Lost To Longhormns Austin, March 15—'A*) — Texas lost another star lineman today from its 1950 SWC football cham pions. Joe Arnold, who teamed with all- America Bud McFadin at offensive guard, will not play this fall. Arnold suffered a concussion in Spring practice. Coach Ed Price said it would he risky if Arnold continued to play. Arnold had a similar injury previously. Price now has only one return ing first stringer from the 1950 offensive line, end Tom Stolhand- skc. Head Baseball Coach Beau Bell is another first, year man at A&M, at least as a coach. Bell captained the Aggie baseball team in 1931 and also hit a hom er off Longhorn pitching in a crucial game that year to snatch the SWC title for A&M. Bell’s charges have won two of three games this yeai. They split a two-game series with the pro- laden aggregation from Brooke Field and yesterday slapped the University of Houston 3-1. Jimmie Russell, Aggie left field er, broke •the ice for A&M in yesterday’s ball game with the Houston Cougars when he slam med a 350-foot homer in the sec ond inning. Russell has hit one out of five, walked once and sacrificed once. Texas Loses Opening Tilt To Milwaukee Austin, March 15—/—The Uni versity of Texas, NCAA champion for two years, opened its baseball season today with a 10 to 4 loss to the Milwaukee Brewers. The Longhorns meet the Ameri can Association team again Satur day. Jim Basso, Milwaukee center fielder, scored three runs and drove in another. Ed Burrows, Texas shortstop, brought in three men with a ninth inning double. Milwaukee ....003 010 420—10 16 2 Texas 000 000 103— 4 7 1 Hoover, Walsh (4), Little (7), and Baldwin: Hand, Ehrler (7), Scarbrough (8), Deason (9) and Tate, Benson, Arbuckle. TODAY & FRIDAY theYOUNG LOVERS An IDA UJPIN0 Production-An Eagls lion Films Release —also .Second Feature m * * A Movietone*. Production ^ ******** **** ** A NEW BUSINESS TO SERVE YOU, AGGIES! Slick Up the “Ole Bus” Protect the New Car With Complete VETO UPHOLSTERING SERVICE TAILOR MADK SEAT COVERS from $15.00 Up Smart Styles and Fine Quality Patterns Skilled Workmanship Headlining^, Door Panels, Convertible Tops Floor Mats, Arm Rests WK CALL FOR AND DELIVER THE COMPLETED C WITHIN 3 TO 6 HOURS SOUTHWEST TRIM & SUPPLY CO. 116 Hardy Street 3 blocks south of the “Y” between Highway 6 and College Avenue PHONE 2-1 081 “Seat Cover Fasluous lor 1051” der of the game Johnson gave up only three hits, one of these re sulting into the lone Houston score. Ags Score The second Aggie Tally came in the bottom of the fifth when A1 Ogletree latched onto a Cougar fast ball for a triple. A high fly to right by Wallace paid Ogle- tree’s fare home and earned the Aggies, a 2-run lead. Jack Reed collected a walk from Johnson to start off top of the sixth. This was followed by an identical performance by Roland Walton, Jim Moore, Cougar left field re placement, then grounded to Ec rette for a fielder’s choice, while Reed made his bid for the score. Ecrette’s throw to the plate was bad and Reed slid across as the umpire spread his hands palms down. Run No. 3 The final Fanner score came in the bottom of the seventh when Ogletree, stationed on third after working his way around on his single, a single by Wallace and a sacrifice by Johnson, scored on Yale Lary’s single. A return engagement between these same two teams is scheduled for Saturday afternoon in Hous- • Houston Player AB R H PO A Fraga, lb 3 0 0 5 0 Reed, 3b 3 10 0 1 Walton, ss 3 0 0 1 1 Jezerski, 2b 4 0 0 0 0 Payton, rf 2 0 110 Gregg, rf 1 0 0 0 0 Moore, If 2 0 1 2 0 Winfield, If 2 0 0 1 0 Jones, cf 4 0 1 .1 0 Newman, c 4 0 118 Boon, p 10 15 0 Heilman, p 1 0 0 2 1 Totals 30 1 5 19 11 Texas A&M Player AB R H PO A Wallace, ss 4 0 13 2 Baker, cf 4 0 110 Lary, lb 4 0 1 5 (1 McPherson, rf 3 0 14 1 Russell, If 2 1 1 2 (I Candelari, 3b 4 0 111 Ecrette, 2b 4 0 1 2 3 Ogletree, c 4 2 2 2 9 Hubert, p 0 0 0 2 0 Johnson, p 1 0 0 7 1 Totals 30 3 9 29 17 Double plays—McPherson to Wallace; SB—Wallace; Umpires Colson and Bevins. We Are Right At YOUR Back Door ... and Invite You to Drop By & Pick Up These Food Bargains. Friday - Saturday Mar. 16th & 17th Decker’s Tall Korn BACON Ih. 49c Kraft’s Kay Cheddar Zi Pound Cello CHEESE . . 29c Del Monte—Picnic Tin Adolphus — RICE . 2 lbs. 31c Pinto BEANS . . lb. 13c Pillshury’w—114 Lb. Pkg. PANCAKE MIX 15c Bud—12-Oz. WAFFLE SYRUP . . 15c $10.00 COUPON BOOKS $9.75 COTTAGE FOOD MARKET i/z Block East of College View Apts.’—Next to the Laundromat