Wednesday^ August 22,1951 THE BATTALION Page 3 On the Gridiron TV to Have Most Of ’50 Squad Back Under New Coach By ANDY ANDERSON Battalion Sports Editor (Editor’s Note: With this, the last regular edition of The Battal ion and our last article for the paper, we thought it appropriate to give forth with football information on ye old arch rival, The University of Texas, better known as TU.) Looking forward to the opening of grid practice on Sept. 1, TU will have most of the 1950 squad back under the tute lage of Ed Price, the coach named to replace Blair Cherry after last Fall. Price is introducing the Split-T forma- ] tion for the first time this year and accord ing to reports after Spring training, it did 4 1 not go over too well. But as usual, Texas | : will probably come up with one of the strong est teams in the conference although most of the sportswriters are picking them for either the second or third spot in the SWC race 11 this Fall. Price will have a job replacing most of his offensive starters, lost by graduation and one by signing a pro baseball contract. He will be looking for replacements for All- lerican Bud McFadden, Ken Jackson, Ben Proctor, Dick owan, Gene Vykukal, Bubba Shands, Lew Levine, Joe Ar nold, Billy Porter, Jim Pakenham, Johnny Allred, Bob Rick man, George Gentry and Ben Tompkins who signed a baseball contract, only to be drafted almost the moment after he inked the pact. McFadden, incidently, was named the outstanding play er of the All-Star-Cleveland Browns massacre last Friday night in Chicago, won by the pros, 33-0. Anderson TU Will Have Stars Galore Texas will abound with stars— but it appears the running game men like Byron Townsend, Gib may be better balanced. Dawson, Bobby Dillon, Dick Ochoa Townsend, who set an all-time and a host of others in the back- NCAA record for number of car- field. In the line they will have, ries in 1050, was about the only Don Menasco and Tom Stolhandske running threat last year although at the end slots; Bill Wilson and Dawson and others aided in the 4 Jim Langford at tackles; Don Cun- running department. Spring train- ningham and June Davis at the ing games indicated there would v guard positions with probably Jack be more long gainers than Texas Barton at the center post. could generate from the tight T. , Probably the largest job Price Townsend, Dawson and Stolhand- tvill have is finding a man to re- sk e are the onl y returning offen- \dace Tompkins at the man-under S U®, starters, iole. An altogether different type Linebackers Davis, Menasco and of play, the Split-T requires a Cunningham probably Will- be de- Jian who can either run, pass or f ens iy e specialists, again although fake handoffs and they had that Cunningham may be used on in Tompkins offense' as well as defense. As was Best bet to take Tomnkins role the CaSe last Fal1 ’ Dillon should «* « e " sive ‘•a*’'"" ,, • . ., his fancy stepping on punt re- age is a senior with one varsity tu an | pass ^ de fehse. etter while Jones also owns one eV m ^ mber of the defensive letter although only a junior. that started, against Ten- Big, seasoned blockers up front nessee in the Cottojf Bowl on Jan. will be missed when TU starts 1 will return to the squad but only trying to put together a strong four of them will concentrate on ground game. This might be fur- defense this year. It was this that ther toned down by lack of a major caused Price to doubt whether he threat overhead. There will be less would be able to field a two-platoon emphasis on passing in the split-T system. Houston Tourney Will End Season For CS Swimmers By RAY RUSHING Battalion Sports Staff Coach Art Adamson and his College Station tankers journey to Houston this week-end to make their last championship bid of the season at the Golfcrest Open Swim ming Meet. Lasts Through Sunday The three day meet slated to last Friday through Sunday, Atlgust 24-26, will be divided into three divisions which will be Jun ior Boys and Girls, Girls 16 and under and Women, and Boys 16 and under and Senior Men. The Junior Boys and Girls events will be held Friday, the Girls 16 and under and Womeii Saturday,' and the Boys 16 and under and Senior Men Sunday. Adamson’s championship tankers are going to be fightihg a hard fight in the coming event because of injuries and absence of swim mers. Coach Undecided When last contacted, Coach Adamson hadn’t decided who would swim in each event, but announced the' swimmer's that' he planned to take on the trip. Judy Litton, Mary Lou Ergle, Martha Terrell, Beth Penberthy, Linda Potts, and Martha Shawn will represent College Station' in the Junior Girls events. In the Junior Boys events, Leigh Price, Stuart Helvey, Ben Trotter, Bobby Wilkins, Dick Hick man, and Norman Floeck will swim for College Station. Tom Barlow, Wally Penberthy, Tom Terrell, Pete Hickman, Joe A&M, Hog, Okie, Baylor Grid Slates Texas will, as usual, play quite, ermakers of Purdue, who last Fall, a rough schedule with none of the after upending mighty Notre Dame games considered breathers. Open- in a 28-14 upset, failed to win , ing with Kentucky in Austin on but one other game. This will ^ Sept. 22 before an expected crowd probably be the easiest game on i)f 50,000 or better, both these the Texas slate, teams are loaded on defense. Ken- Following the Purdue contest, lucky, as you will recall, snapped Texas takes on North Carolina the -great Oklahoma’s 31-game win- an d follows up the next weekend liing streak by defeating them 13-7 in Dallas against Oklahoma, al- in the 1951 Sugar Bowl game. They ways counted on to come up with will be paced by Vito Parilli, one a rough team. The six weeks fol- of the slickest ballhandlers in the lowing will find the Longhorns de- business. fending their 1950 SWC title in The following Saturday at La- what should prove to be the great- fayette, Ind., they meet the Boil- est year in the Conference. 1951 TEXAS FOOTBALL SCHEDULE Date Team Time Place Sept. 22 Kentucky 2 p. m. Austin 29 Purdue ’ day Lafayette, Ind. Oct. 6 North Carolina 2 p. m. Austin 13 Oklahoma 2 p. m. Dallas 20 Arkansas 2 p. m. Fyaetteville 27 Rice 2 p. m. Austin Nov. 3 SMU 2 p. m. Dallas 10 Baylor 2 p. m. Austin 17 TCU 2 p. m. Fort Worth 29 A&M 2 p. m. College Station Editor Sticks Neck Out Since this is my last article for Contrary to beliefs, A&M does- The Battalion, I am going out on n’t have the strongest team in the a limb and try to second-guess the Conference but they do have the second-guessers as to the outcome strongest potential of any squad, of the 1951 SWC football race. A&M’s season record should turn This is the way I see them: Bay- out to be 8-2 or possibly 7-3, de- lor (1), A&M (2), Texas, TCU and pending of course on many things Arkansas (tied for 3), SMU (6) that at this time can’t be taken and Rice (7). into'account. ' ' Look for the Aggie’s hardest If things all turn out for the game to be with Arkansas in Fay- best and A&M gets the “breaks” etteville. The Hogs will have advan- during the year, it might be the tage of being underdogs—it’s Aggies could wind up champions homecoming day for them and as of the nation, ibut for psychologi- will be the case in every game the cal vea^ons, who wants to be pick- Aggies play, they will be laying ed for that ranking now. Wait until for the pre-season favorites. December 1 and then let us know. .For your convenience, The Bat talion is herewith publishing the 1951 football schedules of the teams to which a special column was not devoted. We regret we "were unable to obtain informa tion on the three schools, Baylor, Arkansas and Oklahoma, in time to devote an entire article to them. Also included is the schedule for A&M. A&M Sept. 21 29 Oct. Nov. !|! UCLA Los Angeles *Texas Tech Dallas ^ Oklahoma ♦Trinity TCU Baylor Arkansas SMU Rice Texas Home San Antonio Ft. Worth Home Fayetteville Home Houston Home OKLAHOMA Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Wm.-Mary Norman A&M College Station Texas Dallas Kansas Norman Colorado Norman Kan. State Manhattan Missouri Iowa State Nebraska Okla. A&M Columbia Norman Lincoln Norman ARKANSAS Sept. Oct. Nov. Okla A&M Stillwater Ariz. State Fayetteville ♦TCU Little Rock Baylor Waco TU Fayetteville ♦Santa Clara Fay’Villq Tex. A&M Fayetteville ♦Rice Houston SMU Dallas Tulsa Little Rock BAYLOR Sept. 22 Oct. 6 Nov. Dec. ♦Houston Houston Tulane New Orleans Arkansas Waco Tex; Tech Waco A&M College Station TCU . Waco Texas Austin Wake Forest Waco SMU Waco Rice Houston ♦—Night Ransom Jackson, third baseman for' the Chicago Cubs, was a star baseball and football player for both Texas University and Texas Christian University. A-Odd College View Softball Champs BOGART BACAllj# Dave Steen Robert Cleland and Bonnen will represent College Sta tion in the Boys 16 and under events. Girls, Women’s Entrants In the Girls and Women events, Jean Penberthy, Kay Parnell, Ann Copeland, Nancy Hale, Marilyn Floeck, Louise Street, and Martha Ergle will swim for College Sta tion. Van Hereford James Baker, Gayle Klipple and Dick Weick will swim for College Station in the Senior Men’s division. Adamson stated that this meet will wind up a successful season for the youthful tankers and he is looking forward to a good season next year. Feller First 20-Game Winner; Giants Stretch Skein to Ten By Associated Press Bobby Feller has reached the second of three goals set before the start of the 1951 season. The 32-year-old righthander of the Cleveland Indians set 20 vic tories, a world series triumph and a no-hitter as his prime targets for the season. He got his no hitter against Detroit on July 1. Feller realized his second ambi tion last night as he became the major’s first 20-game winner and the way the Indians are traveling these days he stands a good chance of attaining the other. Indians Triumph 6-0 The no-hit master pitched the Indians to a 6-0 triumph over the Washington Senators and preserv ed Cleveland’s one game edge over the runner-up New York Yankees. The Yanks hammered the Detroit Tigers, 11-4, while the St. Louis Browns upset the third place Bos ton Red Sox, 6-4 and the Chicago White Sox defeated the Philadel phia Athletics, 13-5, in other Amer ican League games. Giants Trip Reds 7-4 Meanwhile, in the National League, the New York Giants stretched their winning streak to ten games, beating the Cincinnati Reds, 7-4. The Philadelphia Phils nipped the Chicago Cubs, 3-5, in 12 innings in completing a sus pended game of July 22 and then downed the Cubs 4-1, in the regu lar scheduled night game. The Boston Braves clipped the Pitts burgh Pirates, 3-1. Rain washed out a game between St. Louis and Brooklyn in the third inning. ‘Sailor Bob ’ Favored to Win Light-Heavy Crown Tonight Carroll Cop Honors New York, Aug-.- 22—(A 5 )—Joey Maxim risks his light heavyweight title for the first time tonight against powerful Irish Bob Mur phy and the odds are 5 to 7 the champion will become the sixth boxing king to lose his crown this year. Rising support for the strong, hard-hitting challenger may boost the price favoring the California redhead to as much as 1 to 2 by the time their 15-round scrap gets under way at 8 p. m. (CST) in Madison Square Garden. When the fight was first made Maxim was installed as a big favorite. The hard-hitting but awkward Murphy figured to be a cinch for the clever champion. But that was before the tall Clevelander absorbed a thor ough shellacking from Ezzard Charles on May 30. This is Joey’s first outing since and he hasn’t showed much im provement over his Chicago form. He has looked very slow afoot in his camp drills and fast footwork is a must for the defensive-minded, counter-punching 175-pound boss. He’ll need all his elusiveness to evade the bull-like rushes of the •free-swinging San Diego sailor 1 Cribbers Given Chance to Go To Notre Dame South Bend, Ind., Aug - . 22 — (AP) — An unidentified “very wealthy man” will send any of the 90 recently expelled West Point cadets through the University of Notre Dame. There are two strings attached— they must avoid' varsity athletics and show financial need. Notre Dame disclosed the offer yesterday and said the anonymous “wealthy man” said he made it 13GC2IUS0 * “I feel with millions that in the American tradition a man who makes a mistake should have a reasonable chance to rehabilitate himself.” Notre Dame called the offer ”in keeping with good Christianity.” Among the 90 cadets dismissed from the. U. S. military academy at West Point were almost all members of the Army football team. Army and Notre Dame, long time gridiron rivals, haven’t met since 1947. TODAY LAST DAY FIRST RUN —Features Start— • 1:36 - 3:42 - 5:48 - 7:54 - 10:00 On // /, ooniight u I Starring GORDON MacRAE DORIS DAY NEWS — CARTOON Bill Hartsfyeld hurled A-Odd ond six-weeks as both teams wound to an 11-3 victory over C-Odd yes- up with identical 5-1 records for terday afternoon, as the champion second 'half 1 play, of College View softball was de- Monday afternoon, trailing 12-11 termined. in the last inning, A-Odd added two These two teafns met to deter- runs t.o gain a 13-12 victory and the ihine the champion of Summer In- right to play a sUdden-death game tramural softball in the College to determine the over-all champ- Vi,ew' area. ion. C-Odd won the championship of in yesterday afternoon’s game, the CV area for the first six- jf was Hartsfield who provided the weeks and A-Odd was victor for necessary punch for the men from the semester just ending. A-Odd as he pounded out a triple A-Odd had to win a tyo-out-of- and two singles in three times at three playoff from C-Odd to de- the plate to contribute to his own termine the champion for. the sec- 'caase, ip* STARTS THURSDAY FIRST RUN EVERY MONDAY i) KORA Try *. * > * * Fighting mm. 8:00 P.M. AMERICAN LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS with BRIAN D0NLEVY FORREST TUCKER ELLA RAINES * MPUIUC PICTVtf; NEWS — CARTOON who has knocked out 55 of his 65 opponents. Although the bout shapes up as a natural with the boxer meeting the puncher, only about 10,000 fans are expected to pay to see the gladiators in the flesh. One reason fot the probable small gathering is that the fight will be broadcast and telecast over the CBS networks. Another is the falifarfe over Randy Tur pin, British holder of the middle weight title who meets Sugar Ray Rdbinson in a return bout here Sept. 12. Turpin arrived only Monday but there has been enough spontaneous chatter about the coming return fray that it has completely over shadowed the lightheavy contest. Another Englishman, Don Cockell, muscled into the spotlight yester day. The British and European 175- pound champ arrived from London to scout tonight’s show and chal lenge the victor. Bennett, Anderson, Golf champions were named yes terday afternoon in Intramural events, with the completion of play in the championship, first and sec ond flights. Joe Bennett and Miller Barber were supposed to meet for the championship f,light finals but be^ cause Barber failed tb show, Ben nett was declared winner by de fault. In the first flight, Andy Ander son was awarded the first place position when Lester Smith did not make'ari appearance after two afternoon’s wait by Anderson. In the only flight in which act ual play determined the champs, Bill Carroll eked out a 2-up vic tory over Bob Gbdfrey after God frey had defeated Bill Harris to gain the right to play in the finals. Winners of the flights will be given intramural medals at the beginning, or soon after the begin ning, of the Fall Semester, Joe Fagan, pro-manager of the A&M Golf Course said yesterday after- Feller allowed only six singles and was in command throughout. It was Feller’s first 20 victory season since 1947 and his sixth in 13 seasons—a feat matched by only five other American League pitchers, Cy Young, Walt Johnson, Lefty Grove, Wes Ferrell and Ed die Plank. The Indians provided Feller with a 5-0 lead at the end of three in nings. Harry Simpson drove home the first run and Ray Boone and A1 Rosen knocked in the next four. Larry Doby ended the scoring with his nineteenth homer in the seven th. The loss was Washington’s tenth straight. Yanks Get 17 Base Blows Yogi Berra, Gene Woodling and Johnny Mize led the Yanks’ 17-hit attack against the Tigers at De troit. Berra poled his third homer in ps many games to open the Yank scoring. Woodling drove home four runs qn as many hits •and Mize featured a five-run fourth inning with a two-run hom er. Little Art Schallock scatter ed seven Tiger hits in going the distance for the first time. Jim McDonald, a former' Red College Pool to Close Thursday ’til September The college swimming pool will close Thursday .and will not re open until school starts in Septem ber, Art Adamson swimming coach announced today. Sox, turned back his old mates on two hits at St. Louis. The Browns clubbed a trio of Boston pitchers for ten hits. Fred Marsh, Ken Woods and Matt Batts drove in all of St. Louis’ runs. Walt Dropo doubled home two Boston runs and Dom DiMaggio knocked home the other two with a homer in the ninth. Chicago ran up an 8-0 lead over the A’-s in the first two innings to win in a breeze. . Luis Aloma, who took over in the third from Saul Rogovin, gained credit for his fifth victory without a loss. Don Lenhardt with a double and two singles led Chicago’s 15-hit attack. The Giants poled three home runs ip the eighth inning and scor ed six runs to beat the Reds. Horn by Ed Stanky and Whitey ca ut r 0 1 Lockman tied the score at 4-4. Wes Westrum followed with a three run blast off Frank Smith to win the game. Home runs by Bob Adams, Connie Ryan and Jim Pramesa accounted for all of Cin cinnati’s runs. Bill Nicholson walked with the bases loaded and none out in the twelfth inning to force home Phil adelphia’s winning run against the Cubs to complete the suspended game. Bubba Church was the winner and Monk Dubiel was the loser. First Fiddle is the only horse to win the.,, $50,000 Massachusetts Handicap twice. TAKE ADVANTAGE! ... of Chapman’s interest in YOUR welfare. 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