Tuesday, August 18, 1953 THE BATTALION Page 3 >rOU ll ¥ By ‘Gar’ Pne Of Wire Loops l Hold That Fish he leaves ''ill require/ le says, suel hloropheno!' ions, he adc IS sprays mr true on everely ski you ever been so tired of not catching fish that eaves were 1 do just about anything to see the cork go under? 1 ncle i' ide. ( try this. Take a four foot piece of strong wire (an ■ - nt eact.tying is about right), put a small loop in both ends, ,| ' l! ion the whole length so it looks like the loop at’the By PETE HARDESTY lariat. Before closing the loop, bait the bottom of •al to be af for™ with a large minnow or a small fish. Tie the end •; better. I'P to your line, use a large cork, and a rather heavy Pi’ays unde hould alsoi about two to five feet deep. Chances are good, if When de in onr of the larger lakes or rivers, of your catching hints are. e roughest and toughest of our fresh water fishes. "‘ expect, of Bourse, the Alligator Gar. 'alist says. Grar is difficult to catch on the standard hook. Al- i ,,ays | am! atching one in this fashion is not impossible, the 'ishirman will become discouraged before he is suc- the loop method, average catches are good. Ap- mmendnir gar °P ens bill to take the bait, the lower t about t below the wire, the upper jaw goes through the cen- lines wil i loo]i. As the fish slowly moves away with the bait •Kins; if ghtJ the loop tightening around his upper jaw. / Good to Eat? i ground Of all the bad things that can be said of the gar, certainly one can not say that they do not give a fisherman a real fight at the other end of a line. We have fished specifically for gars on several occasions and at one of these times on the San Ja cinto River we spent almost an hour trying to get laase from a gar that tipped a pair of cotton scales at 89 pounds. Should such large gars infest the * fish and will • eat any waters where you fish we suggest sh, including game fish, tackle just a bit larger than the scavengers to some ex- standard casting equipment. Long er line too. Gar Will Dive oked the gar will react gave up his boat, all his fishing making long bull-like tackle, and his outboard motor, af- vill pump and shake like ter he and his fishing friend boat ed a 50 pound gar that was not ver hr a shot gun will dead. andy after the fish has For some real excitement and the light. Never pull a some tired arms and legs try ningjy whipped gar into catching one of these monsters even if you are sure he during your next fishing trip. They will strike at almost any time and ofla professional guide will serve to fill the lull between SLake in East Texas who catches of bass or perch. Gay Back From Colorado Jay returned from Color- and some friends caught a stringer a ||story about albino full of large white perch at Camp Creek. They used minnows as bait ve that fish are color- and fished abovit eight feet deep near some dead willows in the up per part of the lake. Ed Holder and Robert George, follow £ ato t Gar is not thought anufactun ’ goo,i to eat ' Howe ver, mid theu- n Arkansas trying its nee the ; ,ve b y canning . i '/ The! skin and scales are i, and tales are told of r mally, 5. 5 fariners us j ng . the skin 11 Gob material for their ploy is been re ' Mt! ars Lttain a huge size. unty age: u L u 4. j in ■ th V have been reported as f«'liantsS ,r ® f et rp f nd Weighing up they are a very unds. Gray returned from Wy- ^y^eUowptone National Park and theil . wiv spent the week 1 BSHfout for us and stor- e n d at the Gulf. They did not seem impressed with the salt water fish- reported that he ing and their catch was not large. jK-oleeping under blankets. Long . wiraraers Win Honors NQW'ing in the big Southern ates Junior Division of ■jor BOlympic. Swimming Grady Pool in Houston || the younger group of ge Station Swimming many individual honors 4th in team standing in and under, 2nd in Girl’s ider and 6th in Boy’s 12 divisions. 500 children were com- this Swimming Meet, of fthe local children are i fine. ndividual winners wei - e: *i2 aid under, 50 yd free- 4 place, Jimmy Potts; 50 froke, 3rd place, Jimmy ,4 0 yd breaststroke, 6th r ,Wl Afmistead; 150 yd indi- edley, 3rd place, Jimmy 5th place, Howard Mitch- d medley relay, 6th place, Armistead, Jud Rogers, and Fred Brison. Girl’s 12 and under, 50 yd back- stroke, 5th place, Sue Simpson; 50 yd breaststroke, 2nd place, Gail Schlesselman; 150 yd individual medley, 2nd place, Judy Litton; 150 yd medley relay, 2nd place, Litton, Schlesselman, and Mary Varvel; 200 yd freestyle relay, 1st place, Varvel, Simpson, Schlessel man, and Litton. Boy’s 10 and under, 75 yd indi vidual medley, 5th place, Tom Fer guson, 75 yd medley relay, 2nd place, Jack George, Bob White, and Ferguson. Girl’s 10 and under, 25 yd breast stroke, 2nd place, Linda Chalk; 75 yd medley relay, 3rd place, Mary Ann Kk'kham, Chalk, and Sally Lehr; 200 yd freestyle relay, 3rd place. Lehr, Sandra Covey, Sue Howell, and Chalk. ... So let’s get busy on that decorating ^ problem . . . wwi,m>0RT •vice for WALL SATIN rubber paint $5.08 per gallon, convenient TEXOLITE $3.50 per gallon. Jliapmaii’s Paint & Wallpaper „ e ert** BR ^ AN Kyle Field Made Ready For 1953 The Texas Aggies will open the 1953 season in a somewhat larger and more modernistic Kyle Field. By scrapping the old press box and expanding the stadium an ad ditional 2,500 new seats will be added. This includes 178 box seats which will be in the area of the old press box. Some 2,500 option rights have been made available for these new seats. According to Pat Dial, busi ness director of athletics, only about 1,500 of these had been sold up to the drawing held recently. After completion the stadium’s seating capacity will be 41,594 seats including 2,400 temporary seats. However these temporary seats are usually only put up for the Thanksgiving Day game. Razorback Troubled When Boys just Don’t Want to Play By HAROLD V. RATLIFF Associated Press Just what Arkansas will have in football this season is hidden by pessimistic statements both from Coach Bowden Wyatt and the Ar kansas publicity department. You actually feel sorry for the Razorbacks after reading these laments. The football booklet that has gone out says it will be a year of change and that it must be devoted to player-experimenta tion, a situation not conducive to winning football with the advent of the single platoon. It quotes Wyatt as saying there are not enough top-flight boys to win in the Southwest Conference. Spring training, comments the coach, was too short for the job demanded. He spent most of the time, he says, in seeing “which men really wanted to play foot ball, and not where they could play.” Otis Douglas, when he resigned as coach at Arkansas last winter, declared the main trouble he had run into was finding boys who actually wanted to play football. It’s a strange situation and causes you to wonder just why boys in Arkansas are so different from those in Texas as far as football is concerned. Since Wyatt has gone to Arkan sas, 13 boys have been lost to the squad, most of them because of scholastic difficulties. But quar terback Bob St. Pierre signed a baseball contract with the St. Louis Cardinals. Little was heard about St. Pierre, and 1952 season statis tics don’t indicate he did very much for the ball club, but now that he has gone, his loss becomes as acute as if he had been All America. Football is like this: a boy is most valuable indeed when he leaves. “The morale of the squad was very low, and I assume that this will account for several of our good boys failing to pass the re quired numbei - of hours for eligi bility,” Wyatt says. The record of two victories and eight losses in 1952 undoubtedly acounted for the drop in morale. Anyway, there appears nothing that a few victories won’t cure— Arizona State on Probation iVotre Dame andMichigan State Receive Stiff Warnings From J\CAA CHICAGO — (A>) — Notre Dame and Michigan State received a sharp slap for violations of the athletic code Monday night and little Arizona State at Tempe was placed on two year’s probation by the powerful policy-making group of the nation’s colleges. The National Collegiate Athletic Association’s 17-man council meted out no specific punishment to the two larger universities but, in ef fect, warned them to be good henceforth—or else. Notre Dame was “severely cen sured and reprimanded” for per mitting ’ tryouts of prospective football and basketball players. This is a violation of the NCAA constitution. L.4- CATCHES BIG FISH ON FLY ROD—Jack Means of Denison, proudly holds up this 54-pound catfish that he caught August 9 below the Denison dam on Lake Tfexoma. He caught the big fish on the fly rod shown beside him, on a worm-baited No. 2 hook and 25 yards of line. After fight ing the fish for an hour and ten minutes, he maneuvered him into a rock shelf and when another angler tried to gaff him he miss ed and the cat snapped the lead er. Means dropped his rod and dived for the fish. With the help of two other nearby fishermen he managed to wrestle him on to the bank. Affidavits of the catch ai’e being rushed to various national sources to check the record, believed to have broken existing fly rod marks. md Opening .... TRIANGLE SERVICE STATION rth 3:46 P 111 • ONE FREE GALLON WITH EACH 5 GALLONS Purchased On Saturday and Sunday ® CARRYING ALL MAJOR OILS Reg. 23-9 H . Ethyl 24-9 As for Michigan State, the coun cil said it supported the action of the Big Ten Conference, which placed the Spartans on Probation. MSC had the nation’s Number 1 football team last fall. The Spartans, also charged with giving tryouts to three basketball players not named, were given un til next Feb. 22 to explain opera tions of the so-called Spartan Foundation, which the council charges has been giving aid to athletes. The NCAA constitution states that athletic aid must be admin istered by the college. If Michigan State fails to meet these demands before the deadline, the college then would be subject to more severe punishment. The council can forbid other colleges to play a member not in good stand ing, as in the recent case of the University of Kentucky’s basket ball team. Arizona State on Probation Arizona State got the roughest treatment, being placed on proba tion for the two years, beginning Sept 1. Also Arizona State’s ath letes were ruled ineligible for NCAA championship events for the college year of 1953-54. The Ari zona State can continue to play football. The Arizona institution was charged with permitting pay to athletes and transporting prospec tive players to the campus for tryouts. The NCAA’s amateur code forbids payment to athletes above tuition and reasonable board. The council said Notre Dame, one of the nation’s football pow ers, conducted tryouts for pros pective athletes in both football and basketball over an extended period of time. These tryouts, the council added, consisted of wind sprints, calisthe nics, reflex tests, running and passing in football, and basket shooting in basketball. The action by the council failed to mention the case of Charlie Sticka, a stand out Trinity College freshman, who showed up on the Irish campus but later left when Trinity officials raised a furor. Tr inity is in Hart ford, Conn. Commenting on the NCAA ac tion, a Notre Dame official said coaches had used a “modified type of try-out” but that the university stopped the practice orr learning of it last January and invoked “disciplinary measures” against the coaches. Added a statement by the Rev. Edmund P. Joyce, CSC, executive vice president: “It is ironic to be subjected to public opprobrium for a minor offense which was decisively han dled on the university level. There are many areas of really serious abuses in the intercollegiate ath letic world toward which the NCAA could have much more prof itably turned its attention.” Held Basketball Tryouts The powerful 17-man council said Michigan State held tryouts . fox- three prospective basketball play ers, one in 1951 and two in 1952. The players were not named. The council also found that there existed in Lansing, Mich., fx-om September 1949-November 1952, an incorpora ted organization known as the Spartan Foundation and another organization known as the Century Club. These organizations, the council added, collected ' funds in the amount of at least $55,090, “osten sibly for the purpose of assisting talented and worthy young per sons to attend Michigan State Col lege.” The report added that these funds were not administered by the college and that evidence be fore the council was that the monies x’aised by these organiza tions were used to aid these ath letes. The council asked Michigan State authox-ities to provide a com plete accounting of the funds not later than Feb. 22, 1954, the tex’- minal date of the conference’s ac tion. In the case of Arizona State, the council also cited a founda tion known as the Sun Angel Foun dation, a non-profit corporation with offices in Phoenix, Ax-iz. This group was said to be made up of friends and alumni of the college living in Phoenix and the sur rounding area. that is, if Ax'kansas can get a full complement on the field this fall. The way the folks at Fayetteville talk it would appear that a return to one-platoon football is the best thing that could have happened. Arkansas ought to be able to get 11 boys out there who do want to play. 23 Letternxen Return A glance at the squad roster in dicates that Arkansas isn’t any where as bad off as anticipated. Surprisingly, Arkansas has 23 let- letrmen, which is as many as any other team in the conference. There are four ends, five tackles, thx-ee guards, two centex- and nine backs. In this group are 15 seniors. If all of these fellows want to play football they should be able to make a respectable showing. There are no more talented play ers in the conference than Lamar McHan, the quartex-back. He was great as a sophomore, didn’t do very well last year, mostly because he was injured much of the time, but he’s sound now. McHan Leaves Wyatt Cold They say Wyatt doesn’t think too much of McHan as yet. That is understandable in view of what he accomplished last season. But McHan can play top-flight foot ball. Obviously Wyatt won’t take any other kind from his boys. He moves on the theory that boys in the peak of condition will play coxxsistent football and he’s going to drive the Razorbacks hard. John Baxuxhill tied for the cbn- fex-ence title in 1946, his first year as coach at Axkansas, because he had the team in top condition. The boys didn’t like so much hard work —— there were x-eports that some x-ebelled—but when it was all over, they probably thought it Had been worth it. Arkansas will be the only team in the conference using the single wing this seasoxx. Southern Meth odist and Texas Christian gave it up for the T. If Arkansas could make a good showing it would x-e- tux-n the single wing to favor. Cex-- tainly it ought to be a real test— one team against six. If you like fresh, neat looking clothes— Take Your Cleaning To . . . CAMPUS CLEANERS YEARS AHEAD OF THE Don't you want to fry a cigarette with a record like this ? 22 YEARS A CHESTERFIELD SMOKER Chesterfield Quality Highest 15% higher than its nearest com petitor and 31% higher than the average ot the hve other leading brands... based on recent chemical analyses giving an index of good quality for the country’s six leading cigarette brands. The index of good quality table—a ratio of high sugar to low nicotine — shows Chesterfield quality highest. No adverse effects to nose, throat and sinuses from smoking Chesterfield. From the report of a medical spe cialist who has been giving a group of Chesterfield smokers regular examinations every two months for well over a year. CHESTHIHilD BesrfOff you